🏥 Expert Hepatobiliary Surgeon — Ahmedabad

Liver Surgery
in Ahmedabad

Advanced liver surgery — resections, laparoscopic procedures, liver cyst removal, and abscess drainage — performed by Dr. Hamikchandra Patel at Shaleen Multi Speciality Hospital, Sola. Precise, safe, and minimally invasive where possible.

500+Liver Procedures Performed
15+Years Hepatobiliary Experience
FellowshipSurgical Gastroenterology
MASFellowship Minimal Access Surgery

When Is Liver Surgery Required?


The liver is the body's largest internal organ — performing over 500 essential functions including detoxification, protein synthesis, bile production, and glycogen storage. When the liver develops tumours, cysts, abscesses, or trauma-related injuries, surgical intervention may be necessary.

Liver surgery ranges from relatively straightforward procedures like laparoscopic cyst fenestration and abscess drainage to complex liver resections (hepatectomy) for primary or secondary liver tumours. Modern surgical techniques — particularly laparoscopic and minimally invasive approaches — have significantly reduced the risk and recovery time associated with liver surgery.

Dr. Hamikchandra Patel's Fellowship in Surgical Gastroenterology equips him with the specialised training needed to evaluate, plan, and execute complex liver surgical procedures safely at Shaleen Multi Speciality Hospital, Ahmedabad.

Pre-Operative Liver Assessment

Before any liver surgery, a thorough assessment of liver function (LFTs, albumin, coagulation profile), liver volume (CT volumetry), and the patient's overall health is performed. Patients with cirrhosis or compromised liver function require specialised surgical planning to preserve adequate liver reserve.

The Role of Imaging in Liver Surgery Planning

High-resolution CT or MRI of the liver — sometimes with triple-phase contrast — is essential for surgical planning. Imaging defines the size, location, and relationship of lesions to key blood vessels and bile ducts, determining resectability and the appropriate surgical approach.

Minimally Invasive Liver Surgery

Laparoscopic liver resection and cyst procedures offer significant advantages over open surgery — less blood loss, shorter hospital stay, faster recovery, and reduced wound complications — and are performed at Dr. Gastro's clinic for suitable candidates.

Liver Diseases Requiring Surgical Management


Dr. Hamikchandra Patel provides surgical consultation and management for a comprehensive range of liver conditions.

Liver Cysts

Simple liver cysts, polycystic liver disease, and hydatid (echinococcal) cysts. Large or symptomatic cysts require surgical drainage or fenestration (roof removal). Hydatid cysts require careful surgical excision to prevent spillage.

  • Abdominal fullness or dragging discomfort
  • Upper right abdominal pain
  • Nausea after large meals
  • Incidental discovery on ultrasound

Liver Abscess

Pyogenic (bacterial) or amoebic liver abscesses — collections of pus within the liver requiring drainage. Most are managed with CT or ultrasound-guided percutaneous drainage and antibiotics; refractory cases require surgical drainage.

  • High fever, chills, and sweating
  • Right upper abdominal pain
  • Nausea, vomiting, and anorexia
  • Elevated white blood cell count

Liver Trauma

Traumatic liver lacerations from road traffic accidents or blunt abdominal injury. Graded from minor contusions (managed conservatively) to major lacerations requiring operative haemostasis and repair. Emergency surgical management when indicated.

  • History of abdominal trauma
  • Right upper quadrant pain
  • Haemodynamic instability in major injury
  • Diagnosed on contrast CT abdomen

Liver Surgery Procedures Performed at Dr. Gastro


Laparoscopic

Liver Cyst Fenestration

Laparoscopic unroofing (fenestration) of large symptomatic liver cysts — removing the cyst's roof and marsupialization into the peritoneal cavity. Prevents recurrence and relieves symptoms with minimal recovery.

  • 3–4 tiny laparoscopic incisions
  • 1–2 day hospital stay
  • Immediate symptom relief
  • Low recurrence with complete fenestration
Interventional

Abscess Drainage

Ultrasound or CT-guided percutaneous drainage catheter placement for liver abscesses — effective for most pyogenic and amoebic abscesses. Surgical drainage reserved for multi-loculated, refractory, or ruptured abscesses.

  • Minimally invasive first-line approach
  • Combined with targeted antibiotic therapy
  • Rapid resolution of fever and symptoms
  • Surgical drainage available for complex cases

Your Liver Surgery Journey at Dr. Gastro


1

Specialist Consultation & Imaging Review

Dr. Hamikchandra Patel reviews your symptoms, examines you, and studies your imaging in detail — assessing the liver lesion's location, relationship to blood vessels, and resectability. Multidisciplinary input (oncology, radiology) is sought for malignant cases.

2

Liver Function Assessment

Complete liver function tests, coagulation profile, viral hepatitis markers, AFP/CEA tumour markers, and volumetric CT analysis ensure adequate liver reserve before surgery — critical for safety.

3

Surgical Procedure

Under general anaesthesia, the planned procedure is executed — laparoscopic or open depending on complexity. Intraoperative ultrasound guides precise tumour margins. Blood loss minimised with modern haemostatic techniques and anaesthetic liver protection.

4

Post-Operative Monitoring

Liver function is closely monitored post-operatively. Drain output, bilirubin, and coagulation are tracked. Pain management, early mobilisation, and nutrition support are prioritised for rapid recovery.

5

Oncology Follow-Up (for Tumours)

For liver tumour resections, regular surveillance imaging (CT/MRI at 3–6 month intervals) and tumour marker monitoring form part of the long-term management plan in coordination with oncology.

Liver Surgery Recovery & Complications


Post-Operative Recovery

  • ICU monitoring overnight after major liver resection
  • Hospital stay: 3–5 days for minor resections; 5–7 days for major
  • Liver function normalises within 2–4 weeks post-resection
  • Liver regeneration complete within 4–8 weeks
  • Return to light work in 2–4 weeks
  • Full activity by 6–8 weeks after major resection

Potential Complications

  • Post-hepatectomy liver failure — main risk in extensive resections
  • Bile leak from liver cut surface — managed with drains
  • Post-operative bleeding — monitored with drains and coagulation tests
  • Pleural effusion — common after right hepatectomy, usually resolves
  • Wound infection — minimised with meticulous surgical technique
  • Deep vein thrombosis — prevented with early mobilisation and anticoagulation

FAQs — Liver Surgery in Ahmedabad


Liver surgery has become significantly safer with advances in surgical technique, anaesthesia, and post-operative monitoring. Risk depends on the extent of liver removal, the patient's underlying liver health, and the surgical team's experience. At Dr. Gastro's clinic, thorough pre-operative assessment and planning minimises surgical risk for each individual patient.
Yes — the liver has remarkable regenerative capacity, unlike any other solid organ. Up to 70% of the liver can be safely removed in patients with healthy liver function, with the remaining liver growing back to near-normal size within 4–8 weeks. Patients with cirrhosis have limited regenerative capacity, requiring conservative resection planning.
Laparoscopic liver surgery uses 3–5 small incisions and a camera — offering less blood loss, shorter hospital stay (typically 2–3 days vs 5–7 for open), faster recovery, and less pain. However, laparoscopic liver resection requires advanced surgical training and is appropriate for specific lesion locations and sizes. Dr. Hamikchandra Patel determines the best approach for each patient.
For resectable liver cancer (HCC or metastatic colorectal cancer), surgical resection is the primary curative treatment. Dr. Hamikchandra Patel performs the surgical component in coordination with oncology and hepatology — providing a comprehensive multidisciplinary approach to liver cancer treatment in Ahmedabad.
Simple liver cysts — fluid-filled sacs — are very common and usually require no treatment unless they are large enough to cause symptoms (pain, nausea, fullness) or grow rapidly. Hydatid (tapeworm) cysts always require treatment. Laparoscopic cyst fenestration is a straightforward procedure with excellent outcomes for symptomatic cysts.

Book Your Consultation with Dr. Hamikchandra Patel

📞 95120 39041  |  82380 92233

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

Liver Disorders

There are many types of liver disease, which can be caused by infections, inherited conditions, obesity, and misuse of alcohol. Over time, liver disease may lead to scarring and more serious complications. At Dr. Gastro Clinic, we offer the best liver disorder surgery in Ahmedabad to address these issues effectively. Early treatment is crucial as it can help heal the damage and prevent liver failure. For those seeking the best liver disorder surgery in Ahmedabad, our expert team is dedicated to providing advanced and compassionate care to ensure optimal recovery and health.

Types of Liver Disorders

Liver Abscess

Liver Abscess is defined as a pus-filled mass in the liver that can develop from injury to the liver or from an intra-abdominal infection disseminated from the portal vein. The majority of these abscesses are categorized as pyogenic or amoebic, although a minority are caused by parasites and fungi.

Hydatid Disease

Hydatid disease, or cystic echinococcosis, is a parasitic infection caused by a tapeworm. It can cause cysts to grow in your liver and other organs. The infection is common in rural, underdeveloped areas where people raise livestock. Hydatid disease is rare in North America.

Liver Cancer

Cancer that starts in the liver is called primary liver cancer. The most common type of primary liver cancer in adults is hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). This type of liver cancer is the third leading cause of cancer-related deaths worldwide.

Liver Cirrhosis

Cirrhosis is scarring (fibrosis) of the liver caused by long-term liver damage. The scar tissue prevents the liver working properly. Cirrhosis is sometimes called end-stage liver disease because it happens after other stages of damage from conditions that affect the liver, such as hepatitis.

Hepatitis

Hepatitis is inflammation of the liver. Inflammation is swelling that happens when tissues of the body are injured or infected. It can damage your liver. This swelling and damage can affect how well your liver functions. Hepatitis can be an acute (short-term) infection or a chronic (long-term) infection.