Surgeons001

Surgeons001 Surgeons in Mombasa, Kenya | General Surgery, Laparoscopy, Endoscopy, Oncology, Bariatric📞0710355380

28/04/2026

We recently managed a case that reflects evolving surgical epidemiology in our region.

A patient presented with an acute abdomen. Computed tomography demonstrated pneumoperitoneum. Exploratory laparoscopy confirmed complicated sigmoid diverticulitis with perforation, classified as Hinchey Grade III, a presentation historically uncommon in this region.

The patient underwent a laparoscopic sigmoidectomy with formation of a Hartmann’s colostomy. The procedure was completed successfully despite the technical complexity and degree of intra-abdominal contamination.

Contemporary surgical practice must extend beyond technical ex*****on to encompass recognition of shifting epidemiological patterns and adaptation of management strategies accordingly. Evidence-based, timely intervention at critical junctures remains fundamental to optimizing patient outcomes, particularly as the incidence and complexity of diverticular disease increase in previously low-prevalence regions.

Surgeons001 was proud to be part of the just concluded Surgical Society of Kenya Annual Conference 2026 in Mombasa, a po...
26/04/2026

Surgeons001 was proud to be part of the just concluded Surgical Society of Kenya Annual Conference 2026 in Mombasa, a powerful gathering anchored on the theme: “From Policy to Patient: Transforming Surgical Access Across Africa.”

It was a convergence of minds, purpose and possibility where we discussed from policy to patient and everything in between. A golden opportunity to learn, to challenge ideas, to share experiences and most importantly, to reconnect with the people who shape the surgical ecosystem across the country and continent.

Moments like these reaffirm the power of group practice and mentorship. We were inspired to see Dr. Zahra Mohamed, a Clinical Oncologist and mentee of Dr. Ngotho, confidently present her work on behalf of HCG CCK Cancer Centre, a testament to what intentional mentorship can produce.

Equally special was witnessing Dr. Ngotho reconnect with his mentor and accomplished Breast Surgeon, Prof. Ronald Wasike, reminding us that no matter how far we go, we remain students of those who paved the way.

Dr. Abubakar Swaleh also reconnected with esteemed colleagues including Dr. Joyce Nyokabi, the Resident Surgeon at Nairobi Hospital and engaged in meaningful discussions on policy, practice and the future of surgical care with peers such as our very own mentee, Dr. Said Mumekaa.

These are the spaces where ideas are refined, partnerships are formed and the future of surgical care is quietly shaped.

At Surgeons001, we believe that progress is not built in isolation. Progress is built in community, in mentorship and in shared purpose.

Dr. Omar Ngotho has just returned from an Advanced Laparoscopic General Surgery Course at IRCAD Africa in Kigali, Rwanda...
30/03/2026

Dr. Omar Ngotho has just returned from an Advanced Laparoscopic General Surgery Course at IRCAD Africa in Kigali, Rwanda 🇷🇼 one of the continent’s premier hubs dedicated to advancing minimally invasive surgery.

The week-long transformative program encompassing theory and hands-on learning brought together some of Africa’s surgical minds, creating a rare space where top specialists exchanged techniques, emerging ideas and real-world experiences shaping the future of laparoscopic surgery across the continent.

As minimally invasive surgery continues to evolve, platforms like this upskill the craft, elevate standards of care and position African specialists at the forefront of global surgical advancement.

For us at Surgeons001, this is more than professional development. It is part of a broader commitment to remain among the leading voices and practitioners advancing modern surgery in Africa, ensuring patients across the region benefit from safer, more precise and less invasive care.

12/03/2026

Surgical Scrubbing 🆚 Wudhu

Before every surgery, there is a quiet moment most people never see.

At the scrub sink.

Water running.
Fingers. Nails. Wrists. Elbows.
Every movement deliberate.

In medicine, we call it SURGICAL SCRUBBING.

But for us Muslims, it feels very familiar. Because long before the operating theatre, we learned another ritual of cleansing, WUDHU. The Islamic ablution, an act of purification required before prayer (Salah).

For a Muslim, wudhu prepares the body and soul to stand before Allah.
For a surgeon, scrubbing prepares the hands to operate on a vital creation, the human body.

Medicine teaches us that proper washing removes invisible microorganisms that could harm a patient.
Faith teaches us that cleansing the body brings focus, humility and presence of heart.

Two acts that feel so naturally connected:

• Purposefulness – both begin with intention
• Prerequisite – both required as a prior condition for an important act (prayer/surgery) to happen
• Discipline – both require following steps with precision
• Mindfulness – both demand presence in the moment
• Humility – both remind us we are preparing for something greater than ourselves

The lesson from both worlds is powerful.

Before you enter a place of great responsibility, you prepare by purifying yourself first.

Whether it is the prayer mat or the operating theatre, the principle is the same. Purity prepares us for responsibility. And responsibility, when honored properly, becomes an act of service.

Ramadhan Mubarak!

Every day I meet women who are silently carrying heavy burdens such as health challenges, family responsibilities and so...
08/03/2026

Every day I meet women who are silently carrying heavy burdens such as health challenges, family responsibilities and societal expectations. Yet they show incredible strength and resilience.

When we give women knowledge, mentorship and access to proper healthcare, something powerful happens. They regain their health and confidence.

And when a woman rises, she lifts her family and her entire community with her.

This is why supporting women’s wellbeing is not just a medical duty or my gender bias, it’s a commitment to building stronger societies.

On this International I celebrate all the mothers, daughters and sisters who show courage every day 💪🏽🩷

To my esteemed colleagues who continue to support women’s health, let’s continue to give support and care knowing that when women thrive, we all gain! 🙌🏾

Yours sincerely,
Dr. Mwanabule Ahmed

Yesterday marked a powerful moment of bridge-building between faith and science.Dr. Abubakar Swaleh was granted a rare o...
01/03/2026

Yesterday marked a powerful moment of bridge-building between faith and science.

Dr. Abubakar Swaleh was granted a rare opportunity to deliver a Darsa (Educational talk) at Masjid Shariff Ali in Ganjoni, Mombasa. A space traditionally reserved for purely spiritual teaching.

This was a huge statement that holistic wellbeing lies at the intersection of knowledge. Where deen meets dunya and where medical science complements spiritual consciousness.

I sincerely commend the leadership of the Masjid and the programme designers for creating space for such a session, especially during the holy month of Ramadhan 🤲🏾 بارَكَ اللهُ فِيكُم This kind of intentional integration is rare and deeply necessary if we are to nurture a more informed and holistic Ummah.

Addressing over 100 congregants physically present (with many more joining online), the hybrid session explored abdominal conditions that require surgical intervention, while also unpacking the deeper relationship between Science, Culture & Islam.

What stood out most was the active engagement and participation from the audience, Mashaallah! 🙌🏾 Thoughtful questions, open dialogue and a shared realization:

👥 Health education is not just medical, it is communal.
🙂 Understanding leads to acceptance.
👍🏾 Acceptance shapes healthier choices.

When mosques open space for conversations that nourish both the soul and the body, we move closer to a more informed, empowered and healthier Ummah.

May this be the beginning of many more such integrations of sacred wisdom and scientific or secular knowledge for truly holistic lives.

Karibu tuelimishane kuhusu Tumbo, Maradhi, Upasuaji na afya yako kwa jumla. Unaweza pia kufuatilia gumzo hili LIVE Al Ih...
28/02/2026

Karibu tuelimishane kuhusu Tumbo, Maradhi, Upasuaji na afya yako kwa jumla. Unaweza pia kufuatilia gumzo hili LIVE Al Ihsaan TV

🕌 Masjid Shariff Ali - Ganjoni, Mombasa
📅 Leo (Jumamosi) February 28, 2026
🕓 Baadal Asr - Asr inaswaliwa Saa Kumi Kamili 4pm

Ramadhan Mubarak | رمضان مبارك
18/02/2026

Ramadhan Mubarak | رمضان مبارك

“Paka wa Coast” 🐈🌴If you grew up at the Coast, you already know the stories.Cats that stare too long.Black cats that app...
08/02/2026

“Paka wa Coast” 🐈🌴

If you grew up at the Coast, you already know the stories.
Cats that stare too long.
Black cats that appear at the “wrong time”… Nuksi!
Cats people whisper about… uchawi, majini or something unseen.

So let me tell you about the cat I met the other day.

I was visiting a relative in the neighbourhood. As I walked down the stairs, I noticed a cat seated quietly on one of the steps, almost deliberately, as if it was waiting for me. Calm. Still. Unbothered.

At first, I thought nothing of it. Just another paka wa mtaa.

Then I moved closer.

The cat slightly tilted its head, almost intentionally, revealing what immediately caught my eye. A large swelling just below its right ear. For a moment, it looked like a two-headed cat. And yes, I know what some people would immediately think.

I paused.

The cat locked eyes with me. Not threatening. Not mystical. Just…pleading.
If cats could talk, this one was saying, “Please, see me.”

Creepy? Maybe.
Black magic? Not even close.

What followed surprised me even more.

The cat calmly adjusted itself like a well-trained patient, turning its head to give me a better view. When I examined the swelling, it winced slightly. Pain, not possession. Then it requested to climb onto my lap and sat there quietly, trusting.

At that moment, all the cat myths faded away. I couldn’t help but remember how my mother used to call me “Abu Huraira.” Abu Huraira was the nickname of one of the companions of Prophet Mohamed ﷺ. He was a renowned narrator of hadith, whose name literally means “Father of the Kitten.” He was known for his deep affection for cats and for carrying his little kitten with him wherever he went.

Perhaps that’s why my mother chose that name for me.
In today’s language, I suppose that makes me a cat dad 😸

Here is the truth we often forget.
Cats are mammals, just like us. They get sick. They develop swellings. They suffer infections. They form cysts.

What I saw was most likely a Congenital Pharyngeal Cyst (vets will clarify).
A medical condition, not a curse. A problem of tissue, not uchawi. Something that needs care, not fear. Treatment, not stones or whispers.

And it made me think.

How many times do we, as a community, label illness as something supernatural. Whether in animals or even in humans. When it is simply biology? How many people delay seeking medical assistance because a swelling is called “something else”? How many conditions worsen because compassion was replaced with suspicion?

That cat didn’t need exorcism.
It needed medical attention.

And maybe that’s the bigger lesson.

Sometimes what we fear most is simply a cry for help wrapped in silence, stigma and old beliefs. Whether it’s a cat on a staircase or a person in our home, illness deserves understanding, empathy and proper care.

Not every swelling is a mystery.
Not every condition is spiritual.
Sometimes, it’s just medicine waiting to happen.

Let’s choose compassion over fear.
Knowledge over myths.
Care over judgment.

Because healing, whether for humans or animals, always begins with seeing, not assuming.

29/01/2026

If you or someone you care about struggles with OVERWEIGHT issues or OBESITY-related diseases, this is a story worth watching from start to finish. Wafaa’s WEIGHT LOSS journey before and after Bariatric Surgery

The Most Expensive 20-shilling Coin 🪙😰In today’s economy, a 20-shilling coin might barely buy a chocolate or cover a sho...
11/01/2026

The Most Expensive 20-shilling Coin 🪙😰

In today’s economy, a 20-shilling coin might barely buy a chocolate or cover a short distance in a matatu leave alone bodaboda or tukutuk. We often treat them as loose change, forgotten in pockets or left on coffee tables. But for one family recently, this small piece of brass and nickel became the most “expensive” object in their world.

It only takes a second for it to move from pocket to procedure. A moment of curiosity from a child during the back-to-school euphoria and that 20-shilling coin, once destined for a small treat, is swallowed by a child. Suddenly, its “value” changes. It is no longer currency, it is a foreign body ingested in a tiny esophagus presented to Dr. Omar Ngotho of Surgeons001.

The havoc it wreaks is immense:
😬 The Panic: The quiet of the home is shattered by sudden gagging and the terrifying sight of a child unable to swallow their own saliva.
😰 The Anxiety: For the parents, the world stops. The “low value” coin is now a high-stakes emergency.
🤑 The cost of that coin suddenly isn’t 20 shillings, it’s measured in tears of panic, hospital hours and the heavy weight of “what if”.
🥢 The Delicate Rescue: While the coin is relatively small, the procedure to remove it is complex. Navigating a child’s delicate airway to retrieve a metal disk requires precision, steady hands and immense care to avoid permanent damage.

If you suspect a child has swallowed a coin, look for these Signs and Symptoms:
🤤 Drooling: Inability to swallow even their own spit.
👉🏾 Chest or Neck Pain: The child may point to where it feels “stuck”.
🤮 Inability to Eat: Refusing food or vomiting when trying to swallow.
😮‍💨 Noisy Breathing: Rubbing sound or wheezing if the coin is pressing against the windpipe.

Prevention:
🫙 High-Level Storage: Keep loose change in jars placed on high shelves, never on low tables or nightstands.
⚱️ The "Empty Pocket" Rule: Make it a habit to empty your pockets into a secure container immediately upon entering the house.
🎒 School Bag Check: Ensure older siblings don't have loose coins in their bags that a child could find.
🧐 Awareness: During the back-to-school rush or weekend getaways we are often distracted. Stay vigilant!

A 20-shilling coin belongs in a coin bank/money box, not in a throat. Let’s keep our children safe.

🚨If you suspect your child has ingested a foreign body, seek immediate medical attention. Early intervention can make all the difference.

Address

Aga Khan Doctors Plaza, 2nd Floor Room 14
Mombasa
80100

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 17:00
Thursday 09:00 - 17:00
Friday 09:00 - 17:00
Saturday 09:00 - 12:30

Telephone

+254710355380

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