What is General Surgery?
General surgery is the name of a department in hospitals, also known as ordinary surgery.
In clinical practice, general surgery refers to a department that primarily uses surgical methods for treatment. It deals with diseases of the liver, biliary tract, pancreas, anorectal region, blood vessels, thyroid, breast, tumors, and various traumatic conditions, such as gallstones, intestinal obstruction, appendicitis, thyroid disorders, and disabling injuries resulting from accidents. In essence, it treats conditions that do not involve substantial lesions of vital organs.
The higher the level of a hospital, the more detailed the subdivision of general surgery tends to be—for example, into gastrointestinal surgery, proctology, burn and plastic surgery, vascular surgery, pediatric surgery, and nutrition departments.