General Surgery
އާއްމު އޮޕްރޭޝަންތަކާބެހޭ
A painful accumulation of pus, usually caused by a bacterial infection, which can occur anywhere on the body.
Inflammation of the vermiform appendix, requiring urgent surgical removal to prevent rupture.
Immune system filtration glands located in the armpit (axilla) region that can swell during infection or breast conditions.
Bleeding per rectum; passage of blood through the anus, often indicating hemorrhoids, fissures, or lower gastrointestinal issues.
A small pocket of fluid within the upper layers of skin, commonly caused by friction, burning, or infection.
Thrombus; a gelatinous mass of coagulated blood that can obstruct blood flow in vessels.
The mammary gland tissue on the anterior chest wall, subject to surgical benign or malignant lesions.
Acute or chronic inflammation of the gallbladder, often caused by gallstones blocking the cystic duct.
The surgical removal of the foreskin of the penis, traditionally and clinically performed under sterile conditions.
Infrequent, difficult, or painful evacuation of feces, often managed or monitored before and after abdominal surgeries.
Fissuring of the skin on the nipple, often seen in breastfeeding mothers, which can lead to localized infection.
The continuous surgical removal or cutting out of infected, benign, or cancerous tissues, tumors, or organs.
