A New Chapter Begins
Obesity is a complex disease driven by poor nutrition, sedentary lifestyle, hormonal imbalances, and psychological factors. When diet and exercise alone aren't enough, bariatric surgery offers a proven medical intervention. Our multidisciplinary team — surgeon, dietitian, psychologist, and endocrinologist — evaluates every patient to determine the safest, most effective approach.
Multidisciplinary Approach
Every patient is evaluated by a team of general surgeons, endocrinologists, dietitians, and psychologists before surgery. This ensures the right technique is selected and that you're physically and mentally prepared for the transformation.
Surgical Techniques
Sleeve Gastrectomy (Gastric Sleeve)
Approximately 80% of the stomach is removed, creating a tube-shaped stomach. Reduces appetite hormones and stomach capacity simultaneously. Benefits include reduced cardiovascular disease risk, lower blood pressure and cholesterol, and significant weight loss.
- check_circle Laparoscopic: Minimally invasive, small incisions.
- check_circle Dual mechanism: Reduces both capacity and hunger hormones.
Gastric Bypass (Roux-en-Y)
The stomach is divided and the small intestine is rerouted to create a small pouch that connects directly to the intestine, accelerating satiety. Recommended for patients with severe eating behavior issues or associated conditions like Type 2 diabetes.
- check_circle Rapid satiety: Bypasses most of the stomach and upper intestine.
- check_circle Proven long-term: 1–2 year significant weight loss trajectory.
Adjustable Gastric Band
A silicone band is placed around the upper stomach to create a small pouch that fills quickly. The band is adjustable via a port under the skin. A reversible option for eligible patients.
- check_circle Reversible: Band can be adjusted or removed.
- check_circle No cutting: Stomach anatomy is preserved.
Your Treatment Journey
Pre-Op Assessment & Diet
Full metabolic workup, psychological evaluation, and a pre-operative diet plan with our dietitian to prepare your body for surgery.
Surgery & Hospital Stay
Laparoscopic procedure lasting 45–90 minutes. Hospital stay: 2–3 nights. You'll begin a liquid diet immediately post-surgery.
Long-Term Support
Graduated diet plan from liquids to solids over 6 weeks. Monthly check-ins with dietitian and surgeon for the first year. Vitamin supplementation protocol.