Advanced Endourology
Procedures
Modern endoscopic techniques for accurate diagnosis and treatment of urinary tract conditions — without large incisions. Greater precision, less pain, and improved patient outcomes.
What is Advanced Endourology?
Endourology is the subspecialty of urology that uses small, high-definition cameras and miniaturised instruments — passed through the body's natural openings or tiny punctures — to diagnose and treat conditions of the entire urinary tract. From the kidneys and ureters to the bladder and urethra, virtually every urological condition that once required open surgery can now be addressed endoscopically with far less risk and faster recovery.
High-Definition Endoscopic Vision
Modern endoscopes carry HD and 4K camera systems no wider than a few millimetres, allowing direct, magnified visualisation of the entire urinary tract lumen. Pathology is identified and treated under real-time vision — dramatically reducing diagnostic error and operative complications.
Laser, Plasma & Ultrasonic Energy
Holmium and thulium fibre lasers, bipolar plasma, and pneumatic lithotripters can be delivered through the working channel of an endoscope to fragment stones, resect tissue, incise strictures, or ablate tumours — precisely and safely inside the urinary tract.
Natural Orifice & Percutaneous
The urethra provides natural access to the bladder, prostate, and lower ureters. Flexible ureteroscopes reach the kidney via the same route. For upper-tract stones and reconstructive procedures, a percutaneous (through-the-skin) tract of just a few millimetres provides direct renal access.
Precision Without the Wound
Because endourology avoids large incisions, patients benefit from significantly less post-operative pain, lower infection risk, minimal blood loss, shorter catheter times, and faster return to daily activity — without compromising the thoroughness of treatment.
Advanced Endourology Procedures Offered
Dr. Anand Utture performs the full spectrum of endourological procedures — covering upper and lower urinary tract conditions across all complexity levels.
Flexible URS / RIRS
Retrograde intrarenal surgery uses a flexible ureteroscope passed via the urethra to reach and laser-fragment kidney stones up to 20 mm — no puncture, no incision. Ideal for small-to-medium renal calculi and lower ureteric stones.
Mini-PCNL
Miniaturised percutaneous nephrolithotomy removes large kidney stones (15–35 mm) through a tiny back puncture. Achieves over 90% stone-free rates with far less blood loss and pain than standard PCNL.
BPKRP / Bipolar TURP
Bipolar plasma kinetic resection treats enlarged prostate (BPH) endoscopically through the urethra. Saline irrigation eliminates TUR syndrome risk — safer, less bleeding, and shorter catheterisation than conventional monopolar TURP.
TURBT
Transurethral resection of bladder tumour removes suspicious bladder lesions endoscopically for histopathological diagnosis. En-bloc TURBT using laser or bipolar energy improves specimen quality and may reduce recurrence rates.
Ureteroscopy & Stenting
Semi-rigid and flexible ureteroscopes access and treat ureteric stones, strictures, and tumours under direct vision. DJ stents relieve obstruction and allow the ureter to recover after instrumentation or stone passage.
Direct Vision Internal Urethrotomy
DVIU uses a cold knife or laser passed endoscopically to incise urethral strictures under direct vision — restoring urinary flow without open surgery. Laser urethrotomy offers improved outcomes in short anterior strictures.
From Consultation to Recovery
Every endourology patient follows a structured care pathway — from initial assessment through procedure and follow-up — to ensure the most appropriate technique is selected and outcomes are optimised.
Consultation & Imaging
Dr. Anand Utture reviews your symptoms, urine flow studies, and imaging — CT scan, ultrasound, or MRI depending on the condition — to map out the anatomy and plan the safest endoscopic approach.
Pre-Operative Work-Up
Blood tests, urine culture, and anaesthetic assessment are arranged. Any infections are treated before surgery. Anticoagulants are reviewed and paused where necessary in liaison with your physician.
Endoscopic Procedure
Under general or spinal anaesthesia, the chosen endoscopic technique is performed. High-definition optics and precision energy sources allow thorough treatment with minimal collateral tissue disruption.
Immediate Recovery
Most procedures require a urinary catheter or stent for 24–48 hours. Once voiding is satisfactory and key vitals are stable, patients are discharged — typically the morning after surgery.
Follow-Up & Prevention
A follow-up appointment at 4–6 weeks reviews imaging, symptom scores, and urine flow. For stone patients, metabolic investigations are arranged to identify and address the underlying cause of stone formation.
Advantages of Modern Endoscopic Urology
Advanced endourology has transformed urological surgery over the past two decades — delivering outcomes equivalent or superior to open surgery, with a fraction of the patient burden.
No large incision or scar
All procedures are performed through natural body openings or tiny punctures — eliminating the wound pain, infection risk, and visible scarring of open urological surgery.
Direct, magnified visualisation
HD endoscopic cameras provide real-time, magnified views of the urinary tract lumen — allowing precise identification and treatment of pathology that open surgery cannot match for close-up accuracy.
Less blood loss
Endoscopic energy sources — bipolar plasma, laser, and ultrasonic probes — provide simultaneous haemostasis as they resect or ablate, resulting in minimal intraoperative blood loss across all procedures.
Shorter hospital stay
Most advanced endourology procedures allow discharge within 24–48 hours. Purely diagnostic ureteroscopy and urethrotomy are often performed as day surgeries with same-day discharge.
Safe for high-risk patients
Reduced physiological stress, shorter anaesthesia time, and elimination of large wounds make endourology significantly safer for elderly patients and those with cardiac, respiratory, or renal comorbidities.
Tissue available for histology
Resected or biopsied specimens from endoscopic procedures — bladder tumours, prostate chips, ureteral lesions — are always sent for pathological analysis, enabling accurate cancer staging and diagnosis.
Faster return to daily life
Patients return to desk work within 1 week and full activity within 2–3 weeks for most endoscopic procedures — compared to 4–8 weeks after open urological surgery.
Treats the full urinary tract
A single endourological skill set addresses conditions from the renal calyces to the urethral meatus — kidney stones, prostate obstruction, bladder tumours, ureteric obstruction, and urethral strictures.
Urological Conditions Managed Endoscopically
Dr. Anand Utture uses advanced endourology techniques to treat the full spectrum of upper and lower urinary tract conditions — many of which can now be resolved completely without open surgery.
Endourology vs. Open Surgery — Why It Matters
For most urological conditions, modern endoscopic techniques now deliver equivalent or superior outcomes to open surgery — with dramatically less patient burden.
| Feature | Endourology | Laparoscopic | Open Surgery |
|---|---|---|---|
| Skin incision required | None / Stab only | Small ports | Large wound |
| Blood loss | Minimal | Low–moderate | Significant |
| Hospital stay | 24–48 h | 2–3 days | 5–7 days |
| Return to work | 1 week | 2–3 weeks | 4–6 weeks |
| Direct tissue visualisation | HD endoscopic | Laparoscopic | Direct open |
| Safe in high-risk patients | ✓ | Selective | Higher risk |
What to Expect Before, During & After an Endourology Procedure
Preparing for Your Procedure
Pre-operative preparation is tailored to the specific endourology procedure planned. Most patients require a urine culture to exclude active infection, along with blood tests for haemoglobin, kidney function, and clotting. Imaging — typically a CT scan or ultrasound — is reviewed immediately before the procedure to confirm the operative plan.
Any blood-thinning medications (aspirin, warfarin, newer anticoagulants) are reviewed and paused in liaison with your prescribing physician. An anaesthetic pre-assessment is arranged for patients with significant cardiac, respiratory, or renal comorbidities.
Fasting for 6 hours before the procedure is required. Prophylactic intravenous antibiotics are administered at induction to prevent surgical site infection and urosepsis.
Recovery & Post-Operative Care
Recovery after endourology is significantly faster than after open or laparoscopic surgery. A urinary catheter or ureteric stent may be in place for 24–48 hours depending on the procedure — allowing the treated area to settle and drain freely before discharge.
Some burning on urination, urinary frequency, and blood-tinged urine for a few days to 2 weeks is normal and settles as the operative site heals. Heavy lifting, strenuous exercise, and swimming should be avoided for 2–3 weeks. Staying well hydrated (at least 2 litres daily) accelerates recovery and reduces the risk of post-operative urinary tract infection.
A follow-up appointment at 4–6 weeks reviews imaging and symptom scores. Depending on the procedure, additional investigations may be arranged — such as check cystoscopy for bladder tumour surveillance or metabolic studies for kidney stone prevention.
Urological condition diagnosed? Consult Dr. Anand Utture for advanced endourology in Mumbai.
With over 27 years of experience in endoscopic urological surgery, Dr. Anand Utture offers the full spectrum of advanced endourology — kidney stones, prostate, bladder, and ureteric procedures — without large incisions and with shorter hospital stays. Serving patients across Mumbai, Thane, and Maharashtra.
Frequently Asked Questions — Advanced Endourology in Mumbai
What is endourology?
Endourology is the subspecialty of urology that uses miniaturised cameras and instruments — passed through the urethra or tiny punctures in the skin — to diagnose and treat conditions of the kidneys, ureters, bladder, and urethra without large incisions. It encompasses procedures such as ureteroscopy, Mini-PCNL, TURP, TURBT, and urethrotomy.
Is endourology suitable for all urological conditions?
Advanced endourology can treat the majority of common urological conditions — kidney and ureteric stones, BPH, bladder tumours, urethral strictures, and ureteric obstructions. Some conditions (such as large bladder or kidney tumours, renal reconstruction, or complex trauma) may still require open or robotic-assisted surgery. Dr. Anand Utture will advise the most appropriate approach after reviewing your imaging and clinical findings.
How long does recovery take after an endourology procedure?
Recovery is significantly faster than after open surgery. Most patients are discharged within 24–48 hours. Return to desk work is typically possible within 1 week; strenuous activity and heavy lifting should be avoided for 2–3 weeks. Burning on urination and blood-tinged urine for a few days to 2 weeks is expected and resolves spontaneously as healing occurs.
Will I need a ureteric stent after an endourology procedure?
A ureteric stent (DJ stent) is placed after ureteroscopy for stones or ureteric strictures to allow the ureter to heal and reduce the risk of post-operative obstruction. The stent is removed as an outpatient procedure under local anaesthesia at 1–2 weeks. Not all endourology procedures require a stent — Dr. Anand Utture will advise based on your specific procedure.
Is endourology safe for elderly or high-risk patients?
Yes — endourology is particularly well suited to elderly and high-risk patients because it avoids large wounds, reduces blood loss, shortens anaesthesia time, and allows earlier mobilisation. The elimination of open wounds significantly reduces infection, hernia, and prolonged recovery risks in patients with comorbidities such as diabetes, heart disease, or chronic kidney disease.
What is the difference between ureteroscopy and PCNL?
Ureteroscopy (flexible URS / RIRS) reaches the kidney via the natural urinary passage through the urethra — no puncture is made. It is ideal for stones up to approximately 15–20 mm. Mini-PCNL creates a tiny percutaneous (through-the-skin) access directly into the kidney for larger or more complex stones where ureteroscopy alone cannot achieve complete clearance. Both are endourological techniques, and the choice depends primarily on stone size, location, and composition.