Laparoscopic Surgery

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Laparoscopic surgery is a minimally invasive technique that allows surgeons to treat conditions inside the abdomen and pelvis through a few small incisions. A slender camera provides magnified, high‑definition views, while fine instruments enable precise dissection, repair, and reconstruction. Because the approach reduces disruption to healthy tissues, most eligible patients experience smaller scars, less postoperative pain, and a faster return to normal routines compared to traditional open surgery.

Why choose laparoscopy

  1. Smaller incisions generally mean gentler recovery, fewer wound‑related issues, and results patients feel sooner in everyday movement, work, and sleep.

  2. In the right cases, a minimally invasive plan can shorten hospital stay, reduce blood loss, and support enhanced‑recovery pathways without compromising surgical goals.

What we treat

Laparoscopy supports a wide range of general, gynecologic, and pelvic floor procedures. In general surgery, common applications include gallbladder removal, appendectomy, hernia repair, anti‑reflux procedures, and bariatric operations. In pelvic and gynecologic care, laparoscopy opens the door to organ‑preserving strategies, meticulous adhesion work, and tailored reconstruction with less collateral tissue trauma.

  • Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
  • Laparoscopic Appendectomy,
  • Laparoscopic Hernia Repair (Inguinal, Ventral & Incisional)
  • Laparoscopic Small Bowel Resections,
  • Hemicolectomies
  • Laparoscopic Fundoplication
  • Laparoscopic Cardiomyotomy
  • Laparoscopic Gastrojejunostomy
  • Sleeve Gastrectomy
  • Mini Gastric Bypass

All laparoscopic pelvic/gynecologic procedures
The service covers comprehensive pelvic and gynecological work, including:
  1. Laparoscopic rectopexy for rectal prolapse and obstructed defecation, restoring support with suture‑based or mesh‑assisted techniques as appropriate.
  2. TLH (total laparoscopic hysterectomy) for indications such as heavy bleeding, fibroids, or adenomyosis, designed to minimize blood loss and speed recovery.
  3. Laparoscopic myomectomy to remove fibroids while preserving the uterus, with planning based on fibroid size, location, and number.
  4. Complex laparoscopic ovarian cystectomy with ovarian‑tissue conservation wherever feasible, including management of endometriotic cysts.
  5. Endometriosis surgery focused on careful excision or ablation of visible disease, adhesiolysis, and anatomic restoration to improve pain and function.

How the procedure works

Under general anesthesia, a small port near the navel is used to introduce the camera. Two to three additional tiny incisions allow working instruments to be placed. Carbon dioxide gently creates space so tissues can be moved and viewed safely. The team follows a stepwise plan that may combine diagnosis and treatment in one sitting. the procedure is done under general anesthesia and most of the surgeries required only one day of admission .
A pre-anesthetic checkup is required regarding the fitness of the patient for general anesthesia

Procedure highlights

  1. Bariatric Surgery: It helps achieve significant, sustained weight loss and improves obesity-related conditions by reducing stomach size and altering digestion for lasting metabolic benefits.
  2. Advanced Upper GI Surgery: Advanced Upper GI Surgery addresses complex disorders of the esophagus, stomach, and proximal small intestine using minimally invasive and robotic techniques for safer, faster recovery.​
  3. Laparoscopic Colectomy: Laparoscopic colectomy is a minimally invasive removal of a diseased colon segment using small incisions and a camera, offering faster recovery with comparable cancer outcomes to open surgery.

Recovery and aftercare

Many patients return home the same day or within 24–48 hours, resume light activity within several days, and step up to full routines over a few weeks depending on the procedure. Aftercare typically includes:

  1. Simple incision care and a clear pain‑control plan.
  2. Early walking to reduce blood clot risk and support bowel function.
  3. Diet advancement as tolerated and guidance on lifting limits.
  4. Timely follow‑up to review healing, pathology (if any), and next steps.

Safety and conversion

Every operation carries risks such as bleeding, infection, anesthesia reactions, or injury to nearby organs. These events are uncommon, and the team takes standardized precautions before, during, and after surgery. If an open approach would be safer at any point, conversion is recommended immediately—this is a safety choice, not a failure of technique.

Who is a candidate

Eligibility depends on diagnosis, prior surgeries, anatomy, and overall health. During consultation, the surgeon reviews imaging, discusses options, and crafts a plan that fits your goals—whether that is symptom relief, organ preservation, or a quick return to work and sport.

If you’re considering surgery or want a second opinion, schedule a consultation. Discuss the full spectrum of laparoscopic

  • Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy
  • Laparoscopic Appendicectomy
  • Laparoscopic Hernia Repair (Inguinal,Ventral & Incisional)
  • Laparoscopic Small Bowel Resections
  • Hemicolectomies
  • Laparoscopic Fundoplication
  • Laparoscopic Cardiomyotomy
  • Laparoscopic Gastrojejunostomy
  • Sleeve Gastrectomy
  • Mini Gastric Bypass
pelvic/gynecologic procedures—including laparoscopic rectopexy, TLH, laparoscopic myomectomy, and complex ovarian cystectomy— learn how a minimally invasive plan can align with your recovery timeline and life priorities.