🏥 Expert Colorectal Surgeon — Ahmedabad

Large Intestine Treatment
in Ahmedabad

Comprehensive large intestine (colon and rectum) surgical care — laparoscopic colectomy for colorectal cancer, diverticular disease management, IBD surgical treatment, and rectal prolapse repair — by Dr. Hamikchandra Patel at Shaleen Multi Speciality Hospital, Sola, Ahmedabad.

LaparoscopicColorectal Surgery
FellowshipSurgical Gastroenterology
15+Years Experience
ColonoscopyDiagnostic & Therapeutic

The Large Intestine — When Surgery Is Required


The large intestine (colon and rectum) — approximately 1.5 metres long — absorbs water and electrolytes from indigestible food residue, forms and stores stool, and houses a vast microbiome essential to digestive and immune health. When the large intestine develops tumours, inflammatory disease, diverticulosis, vascular disorders, or structural abnormalities, medical and surgical management may be required.

Colorectal cancer is the third most common cancer in India and one of the most preventable — colonoscopic polyp removal stops cancer before it starts. Inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis) affects the colon in complex, recurring patterns that may ultimately require surgical resection. Diverticular disease — small pouches in the colon wall — can progress to diverticulitis, perforation, and fistula requiring urgent surgery.

Dr. Hamikchandra Patel performs the full range of colorectal surgical procedures — predominantly laparoscopically — at Shaleen Multi Speciality Hospital, offering Ahmedabad patients world-class large intestine surgical care with minimal recovery time.

Colonoscopy — Diagnosis and Prevention Combined

Colonoscopy is the most important tool for large intestine health — simultaneously diagnosing conditions and preventing colorectal cancer through polypectomy. Dr. Gastro's endoscopy suite performs diagnostic and therapeutic colonoscopy, including polypectomy and mucosal biopsy.

Early Detection Saves Lives

Colorectal cancer detected at Stage I has a 5-year survival rate over 90%. At Stage IV, it falls below 15%. Regular colonoscopy screening from age 45 — or earlier with family history — is the most important preventive measure. Do not delay blood in stool or change in bowel habit evaluation.

Laparoscopic Colectomy — Modern Standard

Laparoscopic colon resection offers equivalent oncological outcomes to open surgery with significantly better recovery — less pain, 3–5 day hospital stay, earlier return to normal activity, and reduced complication rates. Available at Dr. Gastro's clinic for suitable colorectal conditions.

Colorectal Disorders Treated at Dr. Gastro


Expert surgical management for the complete spectrum of large intestine disorders — from cancer to inflammatory disease to structural abnormalities.

Diverticular Disease

Small pouches (diverticula) in the colon wall — very common in adults over 50. Uncomplicated diverticulitis is managed medically; complicated cases (abscess, perforation, fistula, obstruction) require surgical resection of the affected colon segment.

  • Left lower abdominal pain (acute diverticulitis)
  • Fever and altered bowel habit
  • Rectal bleeding (diverticular haemorrhage)
  • Fistula to bladder (pneumaturia)

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Ulcerative colitis and Crohn's disease affecting the large intestine. Surgical intervention is indicated for medically refractory disease, dysplasia, cancer, toxic megacolon, perforation, or refractory fistulae. Proctocolectomy with ileal pouch-anal anastomosis (IPAA) for UC; staged resections for Crohn's.

  • Bloody diarrhoea with mucus
  • Urgency and incontinence
  • Abdominal pain and cramping
  • Systemic features: weight loss, anaemia, fatigue

Rectal Prolapse & Volvulus

Rectal prolapse — protrusion of the rectum through the anus — and sigmoid/caecal volvulus — twisting of the colon causing obstruction — both require surgical correction. Laparoscopic rectopexy for prolapse; sigmoid resection or endoscopic detorsion for volvulus.

  • Visible tissue protruding from the anus
  • Faecal incontinence and mucus discharge
  • Sudden severe abdominal pain and distension (volvulus)
  • Absolute constipation and inability to pass gas

Large Intestine Surgical Procedures at Dr. Gastro


Oncological

Anterior Resection

Resection of the rectum and upper sigmoid for rectal cancer — with anastomosis restoring bowel continuity. Low anterior resection (for low rectal tumours) preserves the anal sphincter, avoiding permanent colostomy. Laparoscopic approach preferred for suitable anatomy.

  • Sphincter-saving for most rectal cancers
  • Laparoscopic or robotic-assisted
  • Temporary loop ileostomy protects anastomosis
  • Multidisciplinary oncology coordination
Emergency

Emergency Colectomy

Urgent surgical resection for colonic perforation (from diverticulitis, cancer, or volvulus), massive colorectal bleeding, or toxic megacolon in IBD. May involve Hartmann's procedure — resecting the diseased segment with temporary colostomy.

  • Life-saving in peritonitis and perforation
  • Hartmann's — safe option in contaminated field
  • Colostomy reversal planned after recovery
  • ICU monitoring in complex cases

Large Intestine Treatment — Step by Step


1

Colonoscopy & Diagnosis

Colonoscopy with biopsy confirms diagnosis and localises the lesion precisely. CT scan of abdomen and chest provides staging for cancer and identifies complications in other conditions. CEA and CA19-9 tumour markers for colorectal cancer staging.

2

Multidisciplinary Planning

For colorectal cancer: multidisciplinary team discussion with oncology, radiology, and gastroenterology. Neoadjuvant chemoradiation for low rectal cancer precedes surgery. Medical optimisation (nutrition, anaemia, blood thinners) for elective procedures.

3

Laparoscopic Surgical Resection

Complete resection of the diseased colon with adequate cancer clearance margins and full lymph node harvest. Bowel ends rejoined (anastomosis) or stoma created where required. Surgical quality standards — specimen orientation, complete mesocolic excision — followed meticulously.

4

Enhanced Recovery After Surgery (ERAS)

Ahmedabad's modern ERAS protocols — early feeding, early mobilisation, limited intravenous fluids — accelerate recovery after colorectal surgery. Most patients eat solid food by Day 2–3 and are discharged within 4–5 days after laparoscopic colectomy.

5

Oncology Follow-Up & Surveillance

For colorectal cancer: adjuvant chemotherapy as indicated by stage, 3-monthly CEA monitoring, CT scans every 6–12 months, and 1-year surveillance colonoscopy. Lifelong follow-up with the multidisciplinary team.

Colorectal Surgery Recovery

  • Hospital stay: 3–5 days after laparoscopic colectomy
  • Early liquid diet from Day 1; soft food by Day 2–3
  • Normal bowel function returning over 2–4 weeks
  • Return to desk work in 2–3 weeks
  • Heavy lifting and strenuous activity restricted for 6 weeks
  • Stoma (if created) requires nurse specialist education before discharge

Warning Signs Post-Surgery

  • Fever above 38.5°C — possible anastomotic leak or infection
  • Increased abdominal pain or rigidity
  • No bowel function beyond Day 4–5 (possible ileus)
  • Heavy rectal bleeding after surgery
  • Wound opening or discharge
  • Excessive output from stoma (dehydration risk)

FAQs — Large Intestine Treatment


Rectal bleeding is the most important symptom that should never be attributed to haemorrhoids without colonoscopic evaluation — particularly in adults over 40. Other warning signs include: change in bowel habit lasting more than 3 weeks, unexplained weight loss, anaemia without obvious cause, and abdominal mass. Any of these warrants a specialist consultation at Dr. Gastro's clinic without delay.
Colorectal cancer detected at Stage I or II has excellent surgical cure rates — over 80–90% five-year survival. Even at Stage III, surgery combined with chemotherapy achieves cure in many patients. Stage IV (metastatic) disease is managed with palliative intent in most cases, though selected patients with limited liver or lung metastases may benefit from combined resection. This is why early detection through colonoscopy is so important.
The majority of colorectal cancer and diverticular disease surgeries do NOT require a permanent colostomy. Laparoscopic colectomy with anastomosis restores bowel continuity in most cases. A temporary loop ileostomy — protecting the anastomosis while it heals — is sometimes created and then reversed in a planned second operation 6–12 weeks later. Permanent colostomy is only required when the anal sphincter cannot be preserved or the anastomosis is not safely feasible.
Colonoscopy screening from age 45 is recommended for average-risk individuals. With a family history of colorectal cancer or polyps in a first-degree relative, screening should begin at age 40 or 10 years before the youngest affected family member's diagnosis. Patients with IBD (ulcerative colitis) require annual surveillance colonoscopy from 8–10 years after disease onset.
Ulcerative colitis affects only the colon and rectum — surgery (proctocolectomy with ileal pouch) can be curative, eliminating the disease entirely. Crohn's disease can affect any part of the gastrointestinal tract and is not cured by surgery — surgical resection addresses specific complications (strictures, fistulae, abscesses) while preserving maximum bowel length. Dr. Hamikchandra Patel coordinates IBD surgical management with gastroenterology colleagues for optimal patient outcomes.

Consult Dr. Hamikchandra Patel Today

📞 95120 39041  |  82380 92233

Expert gastrointestinal and laparoscopic surgery at Shaleen Multi Speciality Hospital, Sola, Ahmedabad. Transparent consultation, honest advice, and patient-centred care always.

Large Intestine Disorders

Large Intestine Disorders begin at the region just at or below the right waist and continue from the small intestine and up the abdomen. The major function of the large intestine is to absorb water from the remaining indigestible food matter and transmit the useless waste material from the body. At Dr. Gastro Clinic, we provide the best large intestine disorder treatment in Ahmedabad, ensuring comprehensive care and effective treatment plans tailored to each patient’s needs. For those seeking the best large intestine disorder treatment in Ahmedabad, our expert team is dedicated to delivering advanced and compassionate care.

Types of Large Intestine Disorders

Colon Cancer

Colon cancer is a type of cancer that begins in the large intestine (colon). The colon is the final part of the digestive tract. Colon cancer typically affects older adults, though it can happen at any age.

Inflammatory Bowel Disease

Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is a term for two conditions (Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis) that are characterized by chronic inflammation of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract. Prolonged inflammation results in damage to the GI tract.

Colitis

Colitis occurs when your large intestine is inflamed. It can cause pain and other symptoms, including ulcers, bloating, and diarrhea. Different types of colitis require different treatments.

Colonic Stricture

A colon stricture is a narrowing of part of the colon, the organ that forms the large intestine. Strictures can cause a bowel obstruction, hindering your ability to go to the bathroom and eliminate gas and solid waste. They occur in people with colon cancer or inflammatory bowel disease (IBD).

Colonic Obstruction

The Colonic obstruction occurs when the lumen of the bowel becomes either partially or completely blocked. Obstruction frequently causes abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, constipation-to-obstipation, and distention.

Colonic Pseudo Obstruction

Colonic pseudo-obstruction (also known as Ogilvie syndrome) is a potentially fatal condition leading to an acute colonic distention without an underlying mechanical obstruction. It is defined as an acute pseudo-obstruction and dilatation of the colon in the absence of any mechanical obstruction.