Gregory T. Moore is a Gastroenterologist based at St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne in Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
In this role, he looks after people with gut and liver-related health issues. That can include ongoing bowel conditions like colitis, Crohn’s disease, ulcerative colitis, and hemorrhagic proctocolitis. He also helps with problems such as diverticular disease, where the bowel lining gets little pouches, and viral gastroenteritis, which can cause tummy pain, cramps, and diarrhoea.
He works with patients who are dealing with liver conditions too. This may include cirrhosis and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease. Sometimes bowel and liver symptoms can overlap, so he focuses on getting the basics right and making sure the plan fits the person.
Tests are often part of the journey. Gregory provides and supports endoscopy and colonoscopy, which can help doctors find what’s going on and check for inflammation or other changes. At times, these investigations are used to understand longer-term symptoms, ongoing bleeding, or changes in bowel habits.
There are also less common conditions that can affect different parts of the body. In his gastroenterology work, he may be involved in the care of people with issues such as lymphoid hyperplasia and mouth sores or mouth ulcers when they connect to bigger health problems.
He also works in an environment where rare genetic conditions can come up. The hospital setting means he may see patients with conditions like congenital fiber-type disproportion, tubular aggregate myopathy, x-linked lymphoproliferative disease, and x-linked myotubular myopathy, where symptoms can involve more than one body system.
Experience: specific years of experience aren’t listed here, but his current work is based at St Vincent's Hospital Melbourne in gastroenterology.
Education: education details aren’t listed here. The focus stays on practical care—listening to what’s been happening, working out the likely causes, and using appropriate tests when needed.
Clinical trials and research details aren’t provided here, so any involvement in trials is not described. The main goal in the meantime is steady, clear support for people and their families while they work through diagnosis and treatment.