Abnormal vaginal bleeding can happen for many reasons, from hormone changes and benign conditions to problems that need urgent medical review. This page explains when bleeding should be evaluated and how clinicians investigate the cause.
HIPEC surgery combines cytoreductive surgery with heated chemotherapy delivered directly into the abdominal cavity. This page explains when it may be considered, how treatment is planned, recovery expectations, and when specialist review is important.
Uterine cancer — which includes both endometrial carcinomas and uterine sarcomas — is the most common gynaecological cancer in urban India. Postmenopausal bleeding is the most important early warning sign. This page covers types, risk factors, diagnosis, staging, and surgical and systemic treatments.
Chemotherapy uses anti-cancer medicines to treat cancer cells throughout the body. This page explains when chemotherapy may be used, how treatment is planned, common side effects, and when urgent medical review is needed.
Pelvic pain is a symptom rather than a diagnosis and can have gynecologic, urinary, bowel, muscular, or other causes. This page explains when pain needs timely evaluation and when cancer is only one possible concern among several causes.
Most endometrial cancers can be treated with minimally invasive surgery — smaller incisions, faster recovery, and equivalent cure rates to open surgery.