Robotic Surgery

A 3D HD View Inside Your Body

Enhanced Vision, Precision and Control
UroLift

Minimally Invasive Surgical Technique

Treats Urinary Obstruction Caused by BPH
Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate (HoLEP)

Treatment of Benign Prostatic Hyperplasia (BPH)

Minimally Invasive Laser Procedure
Living with Overactive Bladder

Feel Free from Physical and Psychological Pressure

Common with Increasing Age
Green Light Laser Prostatectomy

Vaporise of Enlarged Prostate Tissue

Improve Urine Flow Rate

Laparoscopy also known as keyhole surgery is the art of performing surgeries through the smaller incisions using tiny instruments or telescopic instruments. Laparoscope is a narrow tube with a camera and lens attached to it. The advantages of laparoscopic surgery over the traditional open incision surgery are minimal postoperative pain and bleeding, a short hospital stay, faster recovery, and fewer complications.

Laparoscopic urology involves treating the conditions of genitor-urinary tract using minimally invasive technique, the laparoscopy. The urology conditions may include the conditions affecting kidneys, ureter, bladder, penis & testes.

Advances in the field of medicine and technology enabled the physicians to perform laparoscopic surgeries to treat a wide range of urological conditions with better outcomes and minimal adverse events. Some of the commonly performed laparoscopic urology conditions include:

Laparoscopic simple or radical nephrectomy:  A simple nephrectomy is the removal of one kidney whereas a radical nephrectomy also involves the removal of one kidney together with the neighbouring adrenal gland and lymph nodes. Laparoscopic nephrectomy is indicated in patients with kidney cancer, severe injury to the kidney, symptomatic hydronephrosis, chronic infection, polycystic kidney disease, shrunken kidney, hypertension or renal calculus.

Some risks of the procedure include injury to the neighbouring structures, kidney failure in the remaining kidney, temporary decrease in kidney function if only one kidney was removed, and hernias at incision sites.

Laparoscopic nephroureterectomy: It is a surgical procedure in which the surgeon removes the kidney and the ueter,the tube that carries urine from the kidney to the bladder.  Laparoscopic nephroureterectomy is used to treat patients who have transitional cell carcinoma of the ureter or kidney.

Risks and complications of nephroureterectomy include infection, blood loss, and rarely injury to surrounding tissue and organs including bowel, lung, vascular structures, spleen, liver, pancreas and gallbladder. The procedure may require conversion to the standard open procedure if difficulty is encountered during the laparoscopic procedure.

Laparoscopic partial nephrectomy: It is a surgery to remove a diseased or damaged part of kidney.

Laparoscopic partial nephrectomy is performed in patients with a solid renal mass in a solitary kidney or compromised contralateral kidney, bilateral renal tumours, and in patients with a normal contralateral kidney with small localized renal tumours.

Risks and complications of laparoscopic partial nephrectomy include infection, blood loss, hernias at incision sites, urine leakage, and rarely injury to surrounding tissue and organs including bowel, lung, vascular structures, spleen, liver, pancreas and gallbladder. The procedure may require conversion to the standard open procedure if difficulty is encountered during the laparoscopic procedure.

Laparoscopic Pyeloplasty: It is a surgical procedure which relieves the obstruction between the ureter and the kidney at the ureteropelvic junction.

Laparoscopic pyeloplasty is indicated in patients with obstruction of ureteropelvic junction, junction where the ureter attaches to the kidney. Ureteropelvic junction (UPJ) obstruction can be caused by congenital anomaly (condition present at birth) such as horse shoe kidney, scarring from a past surgery, or a blood vessel which may cause UPJ to kink or a stone that gets impacted in the upper part of ureter. This may result in kidney tissue damage causing pain, kidney stones, infection, high blood pressure, impairment of kidney function, and kidney failure.

Risks of laparoscopic pyeloplasty include infection, blood loss, surgery failure, and injury to surrounding tissue and organs.