FAQs
Laparoscopic Hysterectomy with or without Salpingooforectomy
A Hysterectomy is the surgical removal of the uterus. Hysterectomies are performed for a wide variety of reasons. A Hysterectomy is major surgery, but with new technological advances, the discomfort, risk of infection and recovery time has all been decreased.
Laparoscopic Surgery Of Adnexal Masses (Unilateral or Bilateral)
Laparoscopic Removal of an Adnexal Mass refers to the removal of either benign or malignant tissue from the uterus, ovaries, fallopian tubes, or any of the surrounding tissues.
Lumpectomy
A Lumpectomy is the surgical removal of a cancerous or noncancerous breast tumor. A Lumpectomy also includes removing a small amount of normal breast tissue around a cancerous tumor.
Sentinel
Sentinel node biopsy is a surgical procedure used to determine whether cancer has spread beyond a primary tumor into your lymphatic system. It's used most commonly in evaluating Breast Cancer and Melanoma. The Sentinel nodes are the first few lymph nodes into which a tumor drains.
Vaginal Hysterectomy with anterior and/or posterior Colporrhaphy
This surgery involves combining Vaginal Hysterectomy surgery with anterior and posterior repair surgery. It is all done through the vagina and there is no abdominal incision.
Vaginal Hysterectomy
Vaginal Hysterectomy is a surgical procedure to remove the uterus through the vagina. During a Vaginal Hysterectomy, the surgeon detaches the uterus from the ovaries, fallopian tubes and upper vagina, as well as from the blood vessels and connective tissue that support it, before removing the uterus.