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Dr. Sandeep Verma
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Dr. Sandeep Verma

Dr. Sandeep Verma
UroHealth Care and Multispeciality Hospital Arya chowk, 805, Police Line Rd, inside gali, opp. Telephone exchange, Civil Lines, Police Line, Ambala, Haryana 134003
Doctor information
Experience:
9 years
Education:
PGIMS Rohtak
Academic degree:
MS (Master Of Surgrey)
Area of specialization:
I am a general and laparoscopic surgeon with qualifications that shaped my path — MBBS, DNB Surgery, FMAS Hernia, MMAS Hernia, FIAGES, FALS, FACRSI, IHPBA. Along the way I worked as Ex Assistant Professor at MMCMSR Sadopur, Registrar at PGIMS Rohtak, and Senior Resident at Apollo Hospital, each step giving me a different lens on patient care and surgical training. My work covers a wide range of disease — gall bladder stones, appendix problems, hernia repair, thyroid surgery, varicose vein treatment, breast conditions, colorectal issues, perianal disease, and cancers linked to these systems. I use both conventional and minimally invasive approaches depending on what’s safest and most effective for the patient. In hernia especially I’ve trained through multiple fellowships — which lets me focus on durable repairs and reducing recurrence. Colorectal and perianal cases are another complex area where precision matters, and I try to keep the balance between surgical accuracy and patient comfort in recovery. Surgery for me isn’t just the technical act of removing or repairing, it’s the whole arc — diagnosis, guiding the patient through options, operating with care, and then ensuring recovery is smooth. Whether it’s a routine appendix or a cancer-related procedure, my goal is always better outcomes and quality of life.
Achievements:
I am trained with MBBS and DNB in Surgery and hold fellowships including FMAS Hernia, MMAS Hernia, FIAGES, FALS, FACRSI and IHPBA — each adding depth to my surgical practice. I worked earlier as Assistant Professor at MMCMSR Sadopur, Registrar at PGIMS Rohtak and Senior Resident at Apollo Hospital. These roles gave me both academic exposure and high-volume clinical hands on. My journey is shaped around complex general and laparoscopic surgery with focus on safe patient outcomes.

I am a surgeon with more than 15 years of clinical work behind me, and my main focus is minimally invasive laparoscopic surgery. I work with abdominal and gastrointestinal conditions — gallbladder issues, appendix, hernia, bowel surgeries — all those cases where precision really matters. Laparoscopy is not just about smaller cuts, it’s about giving patients safer procedures, less pain after, quicker recovery and overall better outcomes. That’s the reason I leaned into it early in my career and kept refining it over years. In theatre I pay attention to details, from trocar placement to energy device handling, because small slip can mean big complication. But outside of the OR, I try to balance the surgical expertise with compassion. People come in scared — they hear “surgery” and immediately think of risk. My job is not only to operate but to guide, explain clearly, sometimes repeat the same answer till the anxiety settles. Clinical excellence for me is not a word on a CV, it’s about how patients leave after the treatment. Do they feel safe? Did we reduce their suffering? Did they heal without major setbacks? These are the markers I count. I see surgery as more than cutting and stitching, it’s a way to restore dignity when pain, illness or fear has taken it away. I’ve been trusted with both routine cases and complex ones, including revisions where earlier surgeries failed or complications arose. Each case brings its own lesson — sometimes technical, sometimes human. And even after so many years, I don’t take that trust lightly. Minimally invasive surgery has changed the way we practice medicine, but it only works if we keep patients at the center, not just the technique. For me, every operation is about combining precision with empathy — two sides of the same coin in healing.