Internal Medicine Specialist, Consultant Physician, Diabetologist
M.B.B.S, F.C.P.S (Medicine)
Internal Medicine Specialist, Consultant Physician, Diabetologist
M.B.B.S, F.C.P.S (Medicine)
Internal Medicine Specialist, Family Physician
MBBS, FCPS Medicine
Internal Medicine Specialist, Diabetologist, General Physician, Endocrinologist
M.B.B.S, F.C.P.S (Medicine), F.C.P.S (Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism)
Internal Medicine Specialist, Diabetologist, General Physician, Endocrinologist
M.B.B.S, F.C.P.S (Medicine), F.C.P.S (Endocrinology Diabetes and Metabolism)
Urologist
MBBS, FCPS (Urology), MRCPS (Glasgow), FACS, Fellowship in Uro-Oncology (Egypt), EUSP Fellow Netherland
Urologist
MBBS, FCPS (Urology), MRCPS (Glasgow), FACS, Fellowship in Uro-Oncology (Egypt), EUSP Fellow Netherland
Cardiologist, Internal Medicine Specialist, Diabetologist
MBBS, FCPS (Medicine), FCPS (Cardiology)
Cardiologist, Internal Medicine Specialist, Diabetologist
MBBS, FCPS (Medicine), FCPS (Cardiology)
Internal Medicine Specialist, Consultant Physician, Diabetologist, General Physician, Gastroenterologist
MBBS, FCPS (Medicine)
Internal Medicine Specialist, Consultant Physician, Diabetologist, General Physician, Gastroenterologist
MBBS, FCPS (Medicine)
Urinary tract stones begin to form in a kidney and may enlarge in a ureter or the bladder.The pain may radiate down the abdomen toward the groin or testis or vulva. Other symptoms include nausea and vomiting, restlessness, sweating, and blood or a stone or a piece of a stone in the urine. A person may have an urge to urinate frequently, particularly as a stone passes down the ureter.