Private Endometriosis Surgery

Endometriosis surgery removes or destroys endometrial‑like tissue to reduce pain, protect organs, and improve fertility. Find the right gynecologist who fits your needs below, serving Canadians in major cities like Vancouver, British Columbia; Edmonton, Alberta; Toronto, Ontario; and Montréal, Québec.
Le fondateur de Surgency, le Dr Sean Haffey, souriant
Révisé et approuvé par le Dr Sean Haffey
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À titre informatif seulement, ne constitue pas un avis médical ou juridique. Veuillez consulter votre médecin ou votre chirurgien.

Comment fonctionne Surgency

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Décidez où aller

La chirurgie privée au Canada nécessite généralement de voyager hors de sa province. La première étape consiste donc à décider où.
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Rechercher par spécialité

Notre application facilite la recherche de chirurgiens par spécialité et par emplacement.
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Planifiez une consultation

Prenez rendez-vous pour une consultation directement sur Surgency. C'est sécurisé, confidentiel et rapide.

What is endometriosis surgery?

Endometriosis surgery is a “keyhole” operation that lets doctors see and treat endometriosis—tissue similar to the uterine lining that grows where it shouldn’t (like on the ovaries, fallopian tubes, or pelvic walls). Through a few tiny belly incisions, the surgeon slides in a camera (laparoscope) that shows a magnified view on a screen. Slim instruments are used to carefully remove (excision) or destroy (ablation) endometriosis spots, release scar tissue (adhesions) that tethers organs, and drain or remove endometriomas (ovarian cysts caused by endometriosis). If needed, they can also treat deep lesions that burrow into ligaments or the bowel surface.

Why do it? The goal is to reduce pain (period pain, pelvic pain, pain with sex), improve organ function, and, for some, support fertility by freeing stuck structures and clearing disease. Surgeons may map lesions with imaging and plan a targeted approach, often focusing on excision for precise removal. Some people also have supportive procedures at the same time (for example, addressing a blocked tube or straightening adhesions) to help the pelvis work more normally. It’s primarily a function‑focused surgery: clean up the problem tissue and restore normal anatomy.

Why do Canadians get endometriosis surgery done privately?

Délais d'attente plus courts

  • Endometriosis is painful and unfortunately common, impacting 1 in 10 Canadian women. Though common, it can take years to receive a diagnosis, and 1-3 years for surgical care.
  • Private centres often line up assessment and surgery within weeks—cutting months of pelvic pain, missed school/work, and repeated ER/clinic visits.

Choix et contrôle

  • Pick a high‑volume endometriosis surgeon who focuses on laparoscopic excision (and deep disease when relevant).
  • Choose clinic location (including out‑of‑province) and schedule around exams, jobs, athletics, or fertility timelines.
  • Discuss a tailored plan: excision vs ablation, management of endometriomas, and whether to coordinate with colorectal/urology if needed.

Tranquillité d'esprit

  • Clear dates, a named surgeon, and a detailed plan (anaesthesia, approach, expected findings) reduce uncertainty.
  • Direct messaging and rapid result sharing help organize time off, childcare, and pelvic floor physio.

Prévenir une détérioration supplémentaire

  • Ongoing inflammation can fuel pain flares, adhesions (organs sticking), bowel/bladder irritation, and sexual pain.
  • Earlier excision can restore anatomy, support fertility goals, and reduce cycles of urgent care visits and strong pain meds.

Soins intégrés

  • Access to multidisciplinary teams (gyn + colorectal/urology + pelvic physio), high‑definition laparoscopy, and advanced energy tools.
  • Option to bundle necessary procedures in one surgery (e.g., endometrioma management, adhesion release).
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Pourquoi choisir Surgency

Pour les Canadiens qui souhaitent une chirurgie en quelques semaines, et non en quelques mois

Surgency est une ressource gratuite, offerte par un médecin canadien du système public, pour vous aider à trouver le bon chirurgien selon vos besoins.

How do I get private endomtriosis surgery in Canada?

  1. Confirmez votre diagnostic. La plupart des patients commencent par consulter un médecin de famille ou un spécialiste qui confirme que la chirurgie est conseillée. Un chirurgien privé peut également confirmer le diagnostic si nécessaire.
  2. Faites des recherches.
    • Vous pouvez trouver des chirurgiens à Vancouver, en Colombie-Britannique; Calgary, en Alberta; Toronto, en Ontario; et Montréal, au Québec sur notre application, et consulter leurs qualifications ainsi que les tarifs.
  3. Planifiez une consultation initiale. La plupart des chirurgiens proposent des consultations en clinique et en ligne.
    • Les consultations sont généralement fixées en quelques jours ou quelques semaines.
    • Remarque : prévoyez des frais de consultation entre 150 $ et 350 $.
    • Nous vous recommandons de prendre 2 à 4 consultations avec différents chirurgiens afin de mieux comprendre vos options.
  4. Consultation. Le chirurgien examinera votre état, vos symptômes et tout traitement ou diagnostic antérieur, comme des radiographies ou des IRM.
  5. Après la consultation. Le chirurgien examinera ensuite votre dossier et vous proposera des options chirurgicales (et non chirurgicales) en fonction de vos besoins; il passera en revue les risques et les résultats attendus; et présentera les options de tarification et de planification.
  6. Planifiez la date de votre chirurgie. Une fois que vous aurez confirmé la procédure et le paiement, la clinique fixera la date de votre chirurgie – généralement dans un délai de quelques semaines.

Endometriosis surgery: what to expect

Diagnostic laparoscopy only (look and map) takes about 45–90 minutes. Laparoscopic excision/ablation of mild–moderate endometriosis takes about 1–2.5 hours. Deep endometriosis or endometriomas, possible bowel/bladder work: 3–5+ hours, sometimes with a second specialist. Expect extra hours at the centre for check‑in, anaesthesia, and recovery. Many cases are same‑day; complex cases may stay overnight.

Étapes de base (ce qui se passe réellement)

Enregistrement et planification

  • You meet the team, review symptoms and goals (pain relief, fertility, organ function), and confirm what might be treated (adhesions, endometriomas, deep lesions).

Anesthésie

  • General anaesthesia (you’re asleep).

Positionnement et préparation

  • You’re positioned safely on a padded table. The belly is cleaned; sterile drapes are placed. A catheter may be used to keep the bladder empty.

Tiny incisions (ports)

  • The surgeon makes 3–5 small cuts on the abdomen. Carbon dioxide gently inflates the belly so organs are easier to see.

Camera in

  • A thin camera (laparoscope) shows a magnified view of the pelvis on a screen. The surgeon inspects the uterus, ovaries, tubes, bowel surface, bladder area, and ligaments.

Treat the disease

  • Excision (careful cutting out) or ablation (destroying spots) of endometriosis.
  • Release of adhesions (scar bands) so organs move freely again.
  • Management of endometriomas (drain and remove the cyst wall).
  • If deep lesions involve bowel or bladder, a collaborating surgeon may assist.

Rinçage et vérification

  • The area is washed; bleeding points are sealed. The team re‑checks organ mobility and looks for any remaining disease.

Fermeture

  • Ports are closed with dissolving stitches or small sutures and covered with dressings.

Réveil et consignes

  • You recover in PACU, get simple home instructions (walking, meds, wound care), and usually go home the same day unless your case was complex.

À quoi s'attendre pendant la période de récupération?

Everyone heals differently—follow your surgeon’s plan. Gentle, steady progress beats rushing.

En général, à quoi s'attendre

Semaine 1

  • Reality check: belly/pelvic soreness, shoulder tip pain from gas used in laparoscopy, bloating, and fatigue. Naps are normal.
  • Goals: control pain and swelling, protect the incisions, get moving safely.
  • Activities: short walks every few hours, deep breathing, sip fluids, protein‑rich snacks. Keep dressings clean/dry; use stool softener and fibre to avoid straining. No heavy lifting.

Semaines 2 à 4

  • Toujours gênant, mais en amélioration.
  • Goals: steady energy, easier standing/walking, gentler bowel/bladder routine.
  • Activities: increase walking distance, light chores, gentle stretching/mobility. Most return to school/desk work in this window (ask your surgeon). Avoid core‑straining moves, high‑impact exercise, and heavy lifting.

Semaines 5 à 8

  • La phase de rythme.
  • Goals: rebuild basic strength and endurance without flaring pelvic pain.
  • Activities: add low‑impact cardio (bike, brisk walks), light resistance (bands/bodyweight), and posture/core control work (no heavy ab work yet). If recommended, start or resume pelvic floor physiotherapy.

Semaines 9 à 12

  • La phase de travail.
  • Goals: confident daily activity; targeted strength and flexibility.
  • Activities: progress resistance and duration; introduce more dynamic movements as cleared. Some return to non‑contact sports/training in this period.

Mois 3 à 6

  • Retour progressif à la « normale ».
  • Goals: full daily function and fitness; tailored plan for sport or fertility goals.
  • Activities: resume higher‑impact exercise and heavier lifting only when cleared.

Signes d'alerte — appelez votre équipe soignante

  • Fever, worsening pain, spreading redness, or foul‑smelling discharge from incisions
  • Heavy vaginal bleeding (soaking pads), vomiting with inability to keep fluids down
  • Mollet douloureux et enflé; douleur thoracique ou essoufflement
  • Can’t pass urine or severe constipation despite meds

How much does endometriosis surgery cost in Canada?

Exact prices vary drastically, depending on how complex your case is (mild spots vs deep disease), whether endometriomas or bowel/bladder lesions are treated, the surgeon’s expertise, clinic location, and OR time. Always ask for a written, itemized quote.

Au Canada, les cliniques privées facturent :

  • Diagnostic laparoscopy only: $4,000–$10,000
  • Laparoscopic excision/ablation for mild–moderate disease:  $9,000–$18,000
  • Complex excision (deep endometriosis, endometriomas, possible bowel/bladder work with a second specialist): CAD$15,000–$35,000+
  • Overnight hospital stays, extra OR time, and multidisciplinary teams increase costs.

In the United States, endometriosis surgery ranges between CA$15,000 - CA$60,000+.

Ce qui est habituellement inclus

  • Surgeon fee (gynecology/endometriosis specialist) and anaesthesia services
  • Accredited facility/OR time, nursing, standard disposables, and routine laparoscopic instruments
  • Immediate recovery care (PACU) and 1–2 early follow‑up visits (varies by clinic)
  • Basic pathology fees for specimens in some bundles

Ce qui n'est souvent pas inclus

  • Initial consults, pre‑op imaging (ultrasound/MRI) and labs if done externally
  • Additional specialist fees (colorectal/urology), advanced energy devices, or robotic platform surcharges
  • Extra OR time beyond the booked block, unplanned overnight stay/inpatient admission
  • Ordonnances après le congé (analgésiques, anti-nauséeux, émollients fécaux)
  • Pelvic floor physiotherapy and longer‑term follow‑up beyond the “global” period
  • Frais de déplacement et d'hébergement si vous êtes hors province.

Conseils pour comparer les devis

  • Ask if it’s a global bundle (surgeon + facility + anaesthesia + pathology) and request line items.
  • Confirm what’s included for complex disease: management of endometriomas, adhesiolysis, potential bowel/bladder work, and whether second‑surgeon fees are bundled.
  • Clarify policies on extra OR time, conversion to inpatient, and what triggers additional charges.

Choisir un chirurgien et une clinique

Choosing your surgeon is a major benefit of private surgical care, here's how to choose wisely.

Ce qu'il faut rechercher

Expérience et volume d'interventions

  • Ask how many laparoscopic endometriosis surgeries they perform per year, and their case mix: superficial vs deep infiltrating disease (bowel/bladder/ureter), endometriomas, adhesiolysis, and revisions.
  • Higher volume and routine same‑day pathways usually mean smoother care and fewer complications.

Qualifications et formation

  • Vérifiez le permis d'exercice auprès de votre ordre professionnel provincial (CPSO Ontario, CPSBC C.-B., CPSA Alberta, CMQ Québec, etc.).
  • Look for FRCSC‑certified gynaecologists with advanced training in laparoscopic excision and, for deep disease, involvement in a multidisciplinary team (colorectal/urology).

Résultats et sécurité

  • Request recent data: unplanned return to the OR within 30–90 days, infection/bleeding rates, readmissions, conversion to open surgery, complication rates for bowel/bladder work.
  • Ask for patient‑reported outcomes (pain scores, quality of life, return‑to‑work timelines) and re‑operation rates at 12–24 months.

Indications et alternatives

  • Make sure non‑operative options were discussed (targeted hormones, Mirena/IUD, pelvic floor physio, pain strategies). Clear indications = better chance of meeting expectations.

Plan chirurgical et techniques

  • Excision vs ablation (and why), approach to endometriomas (cystectomy vs drainage), adhesion prevention steps, and how deep lesions will be handled.
  • If bowel/bladder/ureter may be involved, confirm joint planning with colorectal/urology, and what thresholds prompt resection vs shaving.

Imagerie et planification

  • Use of targeted pelvic ultrasound and/or MRI for mapping deep disease. Ask how imaging changes the plan and team setup.

Accréditation de l'établissement

  • Confirm the clinic/hospital is accredited (Accreditation Canada/CAAASF or provincial program), with advanced laparoscopic equipment, anaesthesia coverage, and a hospital transfer agreement.

Intégration des soins postopératoires

  • Written, phased recovery plan; early mobilization guidance; pain plan; and coordination with pelvic floor physiotherapy and, if relevant, fertility care.

Transparence des prix (privé/paiement direct)

  • Itemized quote for surgeon, facility, anaesthesia, equipment (energy devices/robotic platform), pathology, and follow‑ups. Clarify added fees for second surgeons, longer OR time, or overnight stays.

Questions to ask during your endometriosis consultation

Le chirurgien et le plan de traitement

  • How many endometriosis surgeries do you perform yearly? How many involve deep disease or endometriomas?
  • What are your last 12–24 month rates for significant bleeding, infection, readmission, conversion to open surgery, and re‑operation?
  • Will you use excision, ablation, or both for my lesions? Why?

Team and logistics

  • If you find bowel/bladder/ureter involvement, who assists and how is consent/cost handled in real time?
  • What anaesthesia do you recommend? Same‑day discharge or chance of overnight stay?

Rétablissement et soins postopératoires

  • What’s the expected timeline to normal walking, desk work, exercise, and lifting?
  • What’s the pain‑control plan and bowel routine? When should I start pelvic floor physio?
  • What red flags should trigger a call/ER visit? Who is my direct post‑op contact? How many follow‑ups are included?

Coûts et documentation

  • What exactly is included in my quote (surgeon, facility, anaesthesia, equipment, pathology, first follow‑ups)?
  • What could add cost (second surgeon, robotic platform, longer OR time, hospital admission)?
  • Will I receive the operative note, photos, and a summary for my family doctor/fertility specialist/physio?

Signes d'un programme de haute qualité

  • Shares outcomes and complication rates openly, including deep disease results.
  • Provides a clear, written after‑care plan and accessible post‑op support.
  • Uses accredited facilities with advanced laparoscopic tools and multidisciplinary backup.
  • Offers transparent, itemized pricing with clear inclusions/exclusions.

Endometriosis surgery frequently asked questions

How do I know if endometriosis surgery is right for me?

Endometriosis surgery is a minimally invasive laparoscopy where a surgeon looks for endometriosis and removes or destroys it, and releases scar tissue (adhesions).

Cela pourrait vous convenir si :

  • You have significant pelvic pain (period pain, pain with sex, bowel/bladder pain) that keeps disrupting school, sport, work, or sleep.
  • You’ve tried non‑surgical care (anti‑inflammatories, hormonal birth control or IUD, GnRH/other hormones, pelvic physio, pain strategies) for a fair trial, but symptoms are still a big problem.
  • Imaging or exam suggests endometriomas (ovarian cysts) or deep disease, or your symptoms strongly point to endometriosis and you want a diagnosis/treatment in one step.
  • You have fertility goals and endometriosis may be getting in the way (blocked anatomy, endometriomas, adhesions).

Raisons courantes pour lesquelles les gens choisissent la chirurgie

  • Persistent, life‑limiting pain despite good medical therapy
  • Endometriomas that are large or painful
  • Bowel/bladder involvement suspected
  • Need to diagnose and treat at the same time, or to plan fertility care

Quand la chirurgie n'est peut-être pas (encore) indiquée

  • Symptoms are mild and controlled with meds/physio
  • You haven’t tried guideline‑based medical therapy long enough
  • Other causes of pain haven’t been ruled out (pelvic floor dysfunction, IBS, bladder pain syndrome)

If your pain or fertility is being held back despite proper non‑surgical care—and exam/imaging or strong symptoms point to endometriosis—laparoscopic surgery can diagnose and treat in one go. An experienced endometriosis surgeon can confirm if it fits your goals and map out a plan that makes sense for you.

Ai-je besoin d'une référence?

No, you do not need a referral for a private endometriosis surgery in Canada. You can book a consultation directly with a gynecologist, and they will review your options and diagnostics.

Comment me préparer ?

Les instructions de votre chirurgien sont prioritaires — suivez son plan s'il diffère.

Préparation et optimisation de la santé

  • Symptom prep: Track pain, periods, bowel/bladder symptoms for 1–2 cycles. Bring the log—it helps planning.
  • Move gently: Light cardio (walking) and gentle mobility help circulation and recovery.
  • Stop smoking/vaping: Nicotine slows healing and raises infection risks. Quitting 4+ weeks before surgery helps.
  • Medications: Tell your team about all prescriptions, OTC meds, and supplements. You may need to pause blood thinners (aspirin, warfarin, DOACs), some anti‑inflammatories, and certain herbals (ginseng, garlic, ginkgo)—only if your doctor says so.
  • Bowel plan: If deep disease is suspected, you may get a bowel prep. Either way, start fibre + stool softener 2–3 days before to avoid straining after surgery.
  • Medical clearance: Some people need bloodwork, ECG, pregnancy test, urine test, or imaging (ultrasound/MRI) based on history.

Préparation à domicile

  • Sleep setup: Extra pillows or a wedge to keep your upper body slightly elevated; helps gas pain and swelling.
  • Bathroom: Stock stool softener, fibre, anti‑nausea options (if prescribed), and pads/liners (light bleeding is common).
  • Comfort kit: Loose, high‑waist clothes, heating pad for shoulders/back, lip balm, and a long phone charger.
  • Meals: Prep soft, easy foods (soups, yoghurt, smoothies) and hydrating drinks; avoid super‑gassy foods early on.

Soutien et logistique

  • Une personne pour vous aider : Organisez votre retour à la maison et la présence d'une personne pour les premières 24 heures.
  • School/work: Plan 1–2 weeks off for typical laparoscopic excision (longer if complex). Desk work returns sooner than heavy labour.
  • Childcare/pets/errands: Line up help for lifting, walks, and groceries for the first week.
  • Déplacement : Si vous venez de l'extérieur de la province, demandez quels suivis peuvent être virtuels et obtenez un plan de soins postopératoires écrit.

Préparation le jour de la chirurgie

  • Jeûne : Suivez les règles d'anesthésie (souvent, pas de solides après minuit; liquides clairs jusqu'à une heure précise).
  • Skin prep: Shower the night before and morning of surgery. Don’t apply lotions, perfume, or makeup on surgery day.
  • What to bring: Health card/ID, medication list, glasses (not contacts), lip balm, comfortable loose clothes, and a small pillow for the ride home (to brace your belly).
  • Jewellery and piercings: Remove belly‑button and genital piercings; metal can interfere with cautery and positioning.

Exercices post-opératoires (à pratiquer à l'avance)

  • Roll‑log technique: Practise getting out of bed by rolling to your side and pushing up with your arms (protects your core).
  • Cough/sneeze support: Hold a small pillow against your abdomen when you cough/sneeze/laugh.
  • Walking plan: Map short indoor routes; gentle walks help gas pain and reduce clot risk.

Quels sont les risques associés?

Your personal risk depends on your health, where the endometriosis is (surface vs deep, bowel/bladder/ureter), which techniques are used (excision vs ablation, cystectomy for endometriomas), how long surgery takes, and how closely you follow after‑care. Discuss your own risks with your surgeon.

Courants et généralement temporaires

  • Belly/pelvic pain, bruising, and bloating for days to weeks
  • Shoulder‑tip pain from the gas used in laparoscopy
  • Nausées dues à l'anesthésie; constipation due aux analgésiques
  • Tiredness and light spotting; small incisions can feel tender or numb for a while

Moins courants

  • Wound or pelvic infection
  • Bleeding or a haematoma (blood collecting under the skin) that may need drainage
  • Urinary retention or bladder irritation for a short time
  • Adhesions (new scar bands) that can cause twinges or pulling sensations
  • Port‑site hernia (a bulge at an incision), uncommon with small ports
  • Persistent pain if endometriosis is widespread, very deep, or there are other pain drivers (pelvic floor, IBS, bladder pain)

Considérations spécifiques à la procédure

  • Excision near ureter, bowel, or bladder: small risk of injury or leak; sometimes needs a stent or repair
  • Endometrioma (ovarian cyst) surgery: small drop in ovarian reserve is possible, especially with large/repeat cysts
  • Deep infiltrating disease: may need help from colorectal/urology; complexity raises risk and recovery time

Rare mais important

  • Significant bleeding needing transfusion or return to the OR
  • Caillots sanguins dans les jambes/poumons (TVP/EP).
  • Damage to nearby organs (bowel, bladder, ureter, blood vessels) requiring repair
  • Conversion to open surgery if visibility or safety is an issue
  • Ongoing or recurrent symptoms if microscopic disease remains or grows back

Comment réduire les risques

  • Follow pre‑op instructions (hold meds only if your doctor says; no smoking/vaping)
  • After surgery: walk often, use stool softener/fibre, manage pain as prescribed
  • Keep wounds clean and dry; go to all follow‑ups for check‑ins and pathology review

Signes d'alerte — appelez votre équipe soignante

  • Fever, worsening pain, spreading redness, foul discharge
  • Heavy bleeding, vomiting that won’t settle, can’t pee or pass gas
  • Painful swollen calf, chest pain, or shortness of breath

Endometriosis surgery is generally safe in experienced hands. Most issues are mild and short‑term; serious complications are uncommon but depend on how deep and complex the disease is. A specialist can explain your specific risks and the plan to minimise them.

Quels sont les risques de retarder ou de ne pas subir la chirurgie?

Your situation depends on how intense and constant your symptoms are, where the disease is (surface vs deep; ovary, bowel, bladder, ureter), what imaging shows (endometriomas, adhesions), your goals (pain relief, school/sport, fertility), and how well non‑surgical care works (hormones, pain strategies, pelvic physio). Talk specifics with your gynecologist.

Main risks of delaying or not having endometriosis surgery (when symptoms are significant/persistent)

Douleur progressive et limitations

  • Pain flares can become more frequent and last longer, making school, work, sports, and sleep harder.
  • You may rely more on pain meds, which have side effects over time.

Adhesions and organ effects

  • Ongoing inflammation can cause adhesions (organs sticking together), leading to pulling pain and restricted movement of the ovaries, tubes, or bowel.
  • Deep disease can involve bowel/bladder/ureter, causing cramps, painful bowel movements/urination, or, rarely, obstruction.

Ovarian cysts and fertility impact

  • Endometriomas (ovarian cysts from endometriosis) can enlarge, twist, or rupture.
  • Adhesions and blocked tubes can make it harder to conceive naturally; timing matters if fertility is a goal.

Quality‑of‑life drain

  • Skipping activities, missing classes/work, fatigue from poor sleep, and mood dips from constant pain and uncertainty.

Chirurgie et récupération plus difficiles par la suite

  • Dense adhesions and deeper implants can make a later operation longer and more complex, sometimes needing extra specialists (colorectal/urology).
  • Recovery can take longer when disease is advanced.

Inconvénients liés aux médicaments

  • Long‑term high‑dose NSAIDs, opioids, or repeated hormone changes can bring side effects (stomach, mood, bone, or bleeding issues) without fixing mechanical problems like adhesions or endometriomas.

Quand l'observation attentive peut être raisonnable

  • Symptoms are mild, manageable with hormones/pain strategies, and not disrupting daily life.
  • No endometriomas or organ involvement on imaging, and regular check‑ins show stability.

Quand il ne faut pas tarder

  • Daily or cyclical pain that keeps you out of school/work/sport despite proper medical therapy (usually 3–6 months).
  • Endometrioma on ultrasound/MRI, suspected deep disease, or bowel/bladder/urinary symptoms linked to your cycle.
  • Fertility goals with signs that anatomy is affected (blocked tube, stuck ovary) or repeated failed treatments.

J'ai encore des questions

Si vous avez encore des questions, n'hésitez pas à nous contacter directement.

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PARCOURIR LES CHIRURGIENS

Browse Accredited Private Surgeons for Endometriosis Surgery

Les chirurgiens de Surgency sont vérifiés :

✓ Diplôme de médecine reconnu
✓ Permis d'exercice canadien (LMCC)
✓ Permis d'exercice médical provincial actif
✓ Certification du conseil (FRCSC/ABMS)
MB
Accepte les patients qui résident à l'extérieur du Manitoba.
Sara Hosseini, photo de profil temporaire
Boshra (Sara) Hosseini
Icône de localisation du chirurgien
Winnipeg, MB
Anglais
Accepte les patients adultes

Gynécologue privée à Winnipeg (MB). Effectue des chirurgies de l'endométriose, le retrait des trompes de Fallope (« salpingectomie ») et le retrait des ovaires (« oophorectomie »).