Dr. Stephen R Severance M.D., Gastroenterologist | Gastroenterology
We verify the medical license of each FindaTopDoc Verified Doctor to ensure that their license is active and they are in good medical standing.

Dr. Stephen R Severance M.D.

Hepatologist | Hepatology

5/5(12)
3833 Worsham Ave 300 Long Beach California, 908708
Rating

5/5

About

Dr. Stephen Severance is a hepatologist practicing in Long Beach, California. Dr. Severance specializes in the study of body parts such as the liver, the biliary tree, the gallbladder and the pancreas. Hepatologists manage disorders in these areas and are specifically known for treating viral hepatitis. Patients who have received liver transplants also follow up with hepatologists after their procedure.

Education and Training

Cornell University MD 1967

Board Certification

Gastroenterology (Internal Medicine)

Internal MedicineAmerican Board of Internal MedicineABIM- Gastroenterology

Provider Details

MaleEnglish 51 years of experience
Dr. Stephen R Severance M.D.
Dr. Stephen R Severance M.D.'s Expert Contributions
  • Does yellow skin mean liver failure?

    Liver disease is the most common cause, but not the only cause of yellow skin. It is very important to check your eyes, since if it is due to liver disease the whites of your eyes should by yellow tainted as well. If the eyes are not yellow one common cause is ingestion of large quantities of carrots. The bottom line is that if any doubt a fairlin inexpensive lab test done on almost all annual physicals can give a final answer to your question. If you have no insurance Quest labs has a discounted rate for cash patients, and a very inexpensive resource is Life Extension found at lifeextension.com. Your need either a Bilirubin test or sometimes a "panel" of sever al test called Chem 14 or chem12 gives you several tests for same price. By the way, if you are a heavy drinker, I would not wait to have this looked into., READ MORE

  • Can liver disease lead to cancer?

    Any patient with cirrhosis of any cause is at increased risk for hepatocellular cancer/liver cancer, to the degree that the standard of care of cirrhotic patients includes an ultrasound of the abomen, and (optionally) a blood test every six months, which allows the detection of cancer at an early enough stage in most cases to significantly improve chances of cure, or at least noncurative but meanignfull treatment. Certain causes of cirrhosis, including hepatitis B and C, active alcohol consumption, fatty liver from the Western diet can increase further the risk of cancer in cirrhotics, and conversely significant changes in diet and lifestyle and possibly certain supplements---notably including coffee, can lessen but not eliminate the chances of cancer in cirrhotic patients. READ MORE

  • How dangerous is liver disease?

    Impossible to answer your question specifically without knowing which of the many kinds of "liver diseas" you have, but I can offer some reassurance by saying the that majority of "liver diseases" have a specific treatment (although for the two most common---alcohol and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease---the best treatments involve change in lifestyle---i.e. abstinence from alcohol or very significant change in diet respectively. A few diseases have no good treatment, but are rare, and any liver disease that progresses to cirrhosis can be "cured" by a liver transplant. A more specific answer could be crafted if a more specific diagnosis were available. READ MORE

  • How long can it take to get a new liver?

    By far your best answer to this question is to log into unos.org the web-site for the united organ supply which actually "regulates" the distribution of organs in the fairest way possible. THe most important variable determining wait for transplant is the "MELD" (Mayo clinic End stage Liver Disease) Score which is a complicated calculation best done "digitally" involving 3 or 4 specific blood tests. However, other less importan variables influencing time to transplant include your blood type (strangely a rare type is better!), the cause of your liver disease, certain less common complications of liver disease, and, most unfairly still, what region of the country you might live in. Answering more specific than this would require more information beginning with the diagnosis leading to the need for a new liver READ MORE

  • Is alcohol the only cause of fatty liver?

    Alcohol was considered the primary cause of f atty liver, until several decades ago when Mayo clinic reported that the toxic western diet could cause fatty liver. Indeed they called this condition NonAlcoholicFattyLiverDisease (NAFLD). The good news is that this condition, in absence of concomitant alcohol consumption, can be arrested and often "cured" by proper nutrition, which only a small minority in Western countries are getting. The bad news is that only a teeny fraction of the 30% of Americans afflicted with this disorder seem able to do, consistent with the growing evidence that there is an addictive process at the core of the current "obesity pandemic" and all it's nast associated illnesses---diabetes or pre-diabetes, high blood pressure, trouble with cholesterol, etc.---not to mention an increase risk of at least 15 different types of cancer. A number of medications for this condition are in clinical trials, but none so far are expected to obviate the need for radical change in nutrition READ MORE

  • How to treat a problematic liver?

    Impossible to answer your question specifically without knowing waht your MD means by "not functioning" (this is not a billable diagnosis!) and if it truly is functioning poorly in a measurable way, which of the many kinds of "liver diseas" is causing this, but I can offer some reassurance by saying the that majority of "liver diseases" have a specific treatment (although for the two most common---alcohol and nonalcoholic fatty liver disease---the best treatments involve change in lifestyle---i.e. abstinence from alcohol or very significant change in diet respectively. A few diseases have no good treatment, but are rare, and any liver disease that progresses to cirrhosis can be "cured" by a liver transplant. A more specific answer could be crafted if a more specific diagnosis were available. READ MORE

Areas of expertise and specialization

Liver disease, Nutrition

Faculty Titles & Positions

  • Former Assoc. Clinical Professor University of CA Irvine 2000 - 2008

Treatments

  • Liver Cancer
  • Anemia
  • Hepatitis
  • Cirrhosis
  • Hepatitis B
  • Gallstones
  • Hepatitis C
  • Pain

Fellowships

  • University California  

Dr. Stephen R Severance M.D.'s Practice location

Stephen Severance

3833 Worsham Ave 300 -
Long Beach, California 908708
Get Direction

Practice At 2880 Atlantic Ave

2880 Atlantic Ave -
Long Beach, CA 90806
Get Direction
New patients: 562-595-5421
Fax: 562-426-2862

Dr. Stephen R Severance M.D.'s reviews

(12)
Write Review

Patient Experience with Dr. Severance


5.0

Based on 12 reviews

Dr. Stephen R Severance M.D. has a rating of 5 out of 5 stars based on the reviews from 12 patients. FindaTopDoc has aggregated the experiences from real patients to help give you more insights and information on how to choose the best Hepatologist | Hepatology in your area. These reviews do not reflect a providers level of clinical care, but are a compilation of quality indicators such as bedside manner, wait time, staff friendliness, ease of appointment, and knowledge of conditions and treatments.

Recommended Articles

  • Laminectomy: Reasons for Having One and the Risks It Involves

    What Is a Laminectomy?A laminectomy is a kind of surgery whose aim is to decompress the spinal cord. The lamina (the bone that constitutes spinal‘s vertebral arch) and bone spurs are removed during the operation. Both the lamina and bone spurs can compress your spinal cord leading to:...

  • What Age Group is Affected by Binge Eating Disorder?

    Binge eating disorder is a serious, but curable eating disorder. Common characteristics of binge eating disorder consist of suicide risks, functional weakness and increased rate of the psychiatric condition co-occurring. Body image despair and eating disorders: what’s age got to do with it?The...

  • How to Protect Your Child from Getting Head Lice in School

    Head lice are grayish insects that feed on human blood extracted from the scalp. Female lice release sticky substances that attach all eggs to specific hair shafts. Eggs are laid a few millimeters from the shaft - an environment that offers the idyllic temperature for incubation.Everyone who comes...

  • How Are Imaging Tests Used For Bloody Urine?

    The external physical examination is over, and a detailed medical history has been discussed with the doctor. The next step - urinalysis of the latest urine sample - indicates more than three red blood cells occupying the microscopic viewing arena. The dipstick test shows the presence of blood in...

  • What are Chronic Ear Infections?

    A chronic ear infection is an infection that does not heal for a long period of time, or recurs. It is also known as recurrent otitis media. Chronic ear infections affect the middle ear. The middle ear is the part just behind the ear drum. The Eustachian tube connects your middle ear to the back of...

  • Whole Foods

    Whole Foods Market At the beginning of the 21st century, food production multiplied more than several times in comparison with the beginning of the 20th century. It’s no big secret that this production growth is connected to advancement in the food industry, namely, the inventions and use of many...

Nearby Providers

Nearest Hospitals

LAKEWOOD REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTERl

3700 E SOUTH ST LAKEWOOD CA 90712

3833 Worsham Ave, Long Beach, CA 90808, USA
Head north on Worsham Ave
0.3 mi
Turn right onto E Carson St
0.2 mi
Turn left onto CA-19 N/N Lakewood BlvdPass by McDonald's (on the right in 1.1 mi)
1.9 mi
Turn left after Jack in the Box (on the left)
0.4 mi
Turn left
69 ft
Turn leftDestination will be on the right
95 ft
3700 South St, Lakewood, CA 90712, USA

MILLER CHILDREN'S HOSPITALl

2801 ATLANTIC AVENUE LONG BEACH CA 90806

3833 Worsham Ave, Long Beach, CA 90808, USA
Head south on Worsham Ave
200 ft
At the traffic circle, take the 1st exit onto Cover St
1.2 mi
Turn left onto Cherry Ave
1.1 mi
Turn right onto E Spring StPass by Jack in the Box (on the right in 0.9 mi)
1.0 mi
Turn left onto Atlantic Ave
0.3 mi
Turn right onto E Patterson St
272 ft
Turn rightDestination will be on the right
0.1 mi
2801 Atlantic Ave, Long Beach, CA 90806, USA

COLLEGE MEDICAL CENTERl

2776 PACIFIC AVENUE LONG BEACH CA 90806

Head north on Atlantic Avenue 905 ft
Turn left onto East Spring Street 2654 ft
Turn left onto Pacific Avenue 1325 ft
Turn left onto W 28th Street 371 ft
Continue right onto Pine Avenue 409 ft
You have arrived at your destination, on the right

MILLER CHILDREN'S HOSPITALl

2801 ATLANTIC AVENUE LONG BEACH CA 90806

Head north on Atlantic Avenue 222 ft
Make a U-turn onto Atlantic Avenue 733 ft
Keep right 303 ft
Turn right onto Memorial Med Ctr 116 ft
Keep right at the fork onto Memorial Med Ctr 137 ft
Turn right 113 ft
Turn right 442 ft
You have arrived at your destination, on the right