Minimally invasive surgery, without the drive.
Robotic-assisted, laparoscopic, and hysteroscopic surgery for the gynecologic conditions that used to mean Houston and a hospital stay. Performed locally, by a fellowship-trained physician, with the modern recovery profile patients now expect.
Minimally invasive surgery is what we do when traditional open surgery is not the right answer — which is most of the time. Smaller incisions mean less pain, faster recovery, and a quicker return to normal life.
We trained specifically in this work. Many women in rural Texas are still told they need an open hysterectomy because the local surgeon does not perform the minimally invasive version. That is the wrong reason to choose an approach. If your case can be done with a hysteroscope, laparoscope, or the robot, that is what we will do.
When we operate, we operate as a partnership with the patient. You should know why we are choosing the approach we are choosing, what the recovery looks like in real days off your feet, and what we will do if we find something unexpected.
What we do.
Each procedure has its own page with the details — indications, what to expect, recovery timeline. The list below is a starting map.
- 01
Diagnostic & operative hysteroscopy
A camera inside the uterus. Used for abnormal bleeding, polyps, fibroids inside the cavity, and as a workup for fertility.
Read more → - 02
Diagnostic & operative laparoscopy
Small incisions in the abdomen, a camera, fine instruments. The mainstay of modern gynecologic surgery.
Read more → - 03
Robotic-assisted surgery
Da Vinci–style robotic instruments for the most complex cases — better precision, smaller incisions, faster recovery.
Read more → - 04
Hysterectomy — all routes
Vaginal, laparoscopic, and robotic hysterectomy, with abdominal reserved for the cases that genuinely need it.
Read more → - 05
Endometrial ablation
An in-office or operating-room option for heavy periods when fertility is complete and hormones have not solved the problem.
Read more → - 06
Myomectomy — fertility-sparing
Removing fibroids without removing the uterus. Often the right answer for women who want to keep the option of pregnancy.
Read more → - 07
Endometriosis excision
Excising endometriosis where it lives, rather than ablating the surface — the gold standard for deeper disease.
Read more → - 08
Pelvic reconstruction & bladder suspension
Minimally invasive approaches to prolapse and stress incontinence — repairs done through small incisions, fast recovery.
Read more →
You might come in for —
- Uterine fibroids
- Endometriosis
- Pelvic pain
- Heavy menstrual bleeding
- Pelvic organ prolapse
- Stress urinary incontinence
- Adenomyosis
- Ovarian cysts
- Intrauterine polyps
- Recurrent miscarriage workup