Carlos Egas, MD is a general surgeon with Integris Health, Oklahoma City's largest hospital system, based at Integris Baptist Medical Center in midtown. He manages acute surgical conditions, elective procedures, and trauma cases; his practice reflects the breadth typical of general surgery rather than a narrow subspecialty focus.
General surgeons evaluate and operate on conditions across the abdomen, chest wall, soft tissues, and gastrointestinal tract. Egas handles acute presentations (appendicitis, bowel obstruction, trauma) alongside elective cases (hernia repair, gallbladder removal, skin lesions). As an Integris provider, he admits and operates at Baptist Medical Center, where surgical suites, inpatient beds, and on-site imaging support same-day and overnight procedures.
The scope of general surgery means initial consultation may determine whether a condition requires operative intervention or can be managed medically. This initial assessment differs from a referral to a subspecialist surgeon (colorectal, vascular, thoracic) where the diagnosis is already narrowed.
Egas accepts referrals from primary-care physicians and emergency departments. Most insurance plans covering Integris Health providers in Oklahoma City will cover his services, but coverage for specific procedures varies by plan and deductible. Verify your plan's Integris network status and any pre-authorization requirements with your insurer before scheduling; Integris maintains a provider line at (405) 949-3000 to confirm in-network status and assist with scheduling.
Wait times for elective surgical consultation typically range from one to three weeks; urgent or acute cases are triaged faster. Ask your referring physician to note the urgency when making the referral to speed scheduling.
Oklahoma City has general surgeons across multiple hospital systems (Mercy, OU Health, Norman Regional) and independent practices. Integris Baptist Medical Center is the largest surgical facility in the region by volume and offers 24-hour trauma care, which advantages emergency cases. If you need elective hernia repair or gallbladder removal, other local surgeons may have shorter wait times for consultation, depending on their patient load; ask your primary care physician which surgeons they commonly refer to and their typical scheduling window.
For complex or rare presentations (large abdominal tumors, extensive trauma), Baptist Medical Center's size and case volume support more on-site specialist backup (interventional radiology, intensive care, vascular surgery) than some smaller surgical settings. For routine procedures in a smaller setting with possibly faster scheduling, independent surgeons or those affiliated with regional hospitals outside Integris may fit better.
Egas's practice suits patients with acute surgical emergencies (appendicitis, perforated viscus, acute trauma) arriving through the ED, as well as those with referrals from their primary care physician for elective general surgery. His Integris affiliation ensures continuity with Baptist Medical Center's surgical infrastructure.
Patients needing a narrow subspecialty (colorectal cancer, aortic aneurysm repair, breast surgery) should ask their doctor whether subspecialist referral is appropriate; general surgeons handle many of these, but dedicated subspecialists operate more frequently in that specific area. Patients seeking a surgeon outside the Integris system will need to choose a different provider.
Initial consultation involves history, physical examination, and often imaging review (CT, ultrasound) if brought from another facility. The surgeon assesses whether you need operation, further testing, or watchful waiting. Bring insurance information, current medication list, and any outside imaging or records. The appointment typically lasts 20 to 40 minutes; expect discussion of risks, benefits, and recovery timeline if surgery is planned.
If operation is needed, scheduling usually follows within one to two weeks for elective cases; emergency surgery happens the same day.
Egas operates from Integris Baptist Medical Center, 3300 NW Expressway. The facility is open 24 hours for emergency care; office consultations run during standard business hours. Baptist Medical Center offers free parking in the main lot and in a garage north of the main building; no special validation is required. Verify appointment times and location (clinic space or hospital floor) when scheduling, as surgical consultations sometimes occur in outpatient clinics adjacent to the OR.
Egas's affiliation with Oklahoma City's most active surgical institution makes him accessible for both urgent and elective care, though choice of surgeon ultimately depends on referral source, insurance, and scheduling fit.
