Minimal Invasive Surgeries

Minimal invasive surgery

Planning your elective lap repair Trust the best Gen Surgeon in Dubai.

Laparoscopy is used for a vast variety of surgeries carried out either through conventional methods or, which is more standard now, minimally invasive means, dealing with issues in the abdominal region, such as the stomach, small bowel, colon, and gallbladder.

Advanced Laparoscopic Surgery

  • Minimally invasive cholecystectomy and treatment of bile duct stones
  • Keyhole appendectomy
  • Laparoscopic varicocele correction
  • Minimally invasive hernia repair
  • Laparoscopic intestinal resection for both benign and malignant conditions
  • Laparoscopic removal of the spleen
  • Minimally invasive surgery for Gastroesophageal Reflux Disease (GERD) and hiatal hernia correction

Lap Hernia surgery

For recurrent, bilateral, or inguinal hernias in women, laparoscopic repair has a clear advantage over open methods in terms of recurrence risk, pain, and convalescence. Laparoscopic or open mesh repair can provide excellent results for unilateral first-time hernias.

Lap Gall bladder surgery

A laparoscopic cholecystectomy is a procedure where the physician removes your gallbladder. The surgery employs various small incisions rather than a big one.

One of these incisions receives a laparoscope, a thin tube with a camera. Through it, your physician can visualize your gallbladder on a monitor. Your gallbladder is removed via another small incision.

Lap Appendectomy

You will receive general anesthesia for your laparoscopic appendectomy. This implies that you are asleep during the surgery. Once the surgery is complete, the surgeon closes your cuts with tiny stitches, staples, surgical tape, or glue.

When you are asleep, the surgeon makes a cut close to your navel and inserts a small device known as a port. The port allows for an opening that your surgeon can utilize to fill the belly with gas, providing room to perform the surgery. Then, a tiny camera is put through the port. The camera displays the surgery on a monitor in the operating room. After the surgeon has a good view, they insert additional ports through which they pass long, thin instruments.

Lastly, they remove your appendix carefully and bring it out through one of the incisions. Most procedures require three incisions, but they may range from 1 (one) to 4, depending on several factors.

Laparoscopic surgery for varicocele

Varicocelectomy is the repair of a varicocele, an enlargement of veins within the scrotum caused by blood backing up in the veins. A varicocele might be painful or heavy, but it usually is not. It might also affect fertility.

The congested veins are severed during the procedure, and the terminations are occluded. Other veins in the groin region become responsible for carrying the blood supply. The method might be performed using laparoscopy or open surgery.

A slender, lighted tube or scope (a laparoscope) is employed with laparoscopy. The scope permits the doctor to operate through a couple of tiny cuts (incisions)

Laparoscopic bowel resection for benign and malignant diseases

The benefits of laparoscopic procedures over traditional surgery for the treatment of bowel malignancy and benign disease have long been established.

This method has resulted in a revolution in how surgery is conducted. Comparing laparoscopic surgery with the so-called open or traditional surgery reveals a chain of benefits in the postoperative course of patients who undergo laparoscopic surgical methods, including:

  • Disappearance of postoperative ileus.
  • Reduced pain and thus less analgesia required.
  • Less postoperative complications.
  • Fewer impairments in respiratory function.

Laparoscopic splenectomy.

Laparoscopic splenectomy (LS) is the gold standard for removing the spleen in an elective patient. The indications for LS have increased at a fast pace, and now it is regarded as the standard procedure for nearly all conditions for which splenectomy is indicated, including benign and malignant hematologic conditions and non-hematologic malignancies spleen trauma, treated laparoscopically, on the rise year by year.

Laparoscopic surgery for Gastro-Esophageal Reflux Disease and hiatal hernia repair.

The surgery is almost always performed laparoscopically, with tiny incisions. Patients are usually hospitalized for the next one to two days and spend 2–4 weeks recovering at home. Ideally, within a few weeks, patients no longer experience heartburn and no longer need to take heartburn medicine.

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