Best Abnormal Uterine Bleeding Treatment Doctors in India

Dr. Nutan Agarwal


Dr. Sumana Manohar


Dr. Shakti Bhan Khanna




Dr. Rooma Sinha




Dr. G.N. Mansukhani

Dr. Anjali Bugga



Dr. Purnima Satoskar



What Women with Abnormal Uterine Bleeding Worry About Most
Heavy, prolonged, or irregular bleeding pushes women out of normal routines: work missed, sleep broken, anaemia setting in. The questions that come up first are whether this is hormonal, whether fibroids or polyps are the cause, whether cancer needs to be ruled out, whether the uterus must be removed, and whether fertility can be preserved. Most causes of abnormal uterine bleeding are benign and treatable without hysterectomy, but proper evaluation matters because postmenopausal bleeding can signal endometrial cancer.
How Abnormal Uterine Bleeding Is Diagnosed
The evaluation starts with a detailed bleeding history and pelvic examination. Transvaginal ultrasound identifies fibroids, polyps, adenomyosis, and endometrial thickness. Saline infusion sonography or hysteroscopy gives a direct view of the cavity. Endometrial biopsy is mandatory in women over forty-five and in younger women with risk factors for endometrial cancer. Blood tests check haemoglobin, thyroid function, prolactin, and clotting. Younger women with anovulatory bleeding may need hormone profiling for polycystic ovary syndrome.
Treatment Options for Abnormal Uterine Bleeding in India
Medical management is the first step for most women: tranexamic acid for acute heavy bleeding, combined oral contraceptive pills or progestin-only therapy for hormonal control, and the levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system, which reduces bleeding by ninety percent and is often a long-term solution. Hysteroscopic polypectomy or myomectomy removes focal lesions while preserving the uterus. Endometrial ablation suits women with completed family and no submucosal fibroids. Laparoscopic or robotic myomectomy preserves fertility for women with symptomatic fibroids. Hysterectomy, laparoscopic or robotic, is reserved for women who have completed family and failed other treatments. Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Medanta, Apollo, BLK-Max, and Manipal offer all options including advanced minimal-access surgery.
Recovery, Success Rates, and Follow-Up
The levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system controls bleeding within three months in over eighty percent of women and lasts five years. Hysteroscopic surgery is a day-care procedure. Endometrial ablation is outpatient with one to two days of recovery. Laparoscopic myomectomy needs two to three days in hospital and three to four weeks for full recovery. Laparoscopic or robotic hysterectomy needs two to three days in hospital and four weeks to return to normal activity. Follow-up depends on the procedure and underlying cause.
How to Choose the Right Doctor
Look for a gynaecologist with focused experience in minimally invasive surgery and a clear preference for uterus-preserving options when fertility is desired. Ask whether the doctor performs hysteroscopic and laparoscopic myomectomy, whether endometrial sampling is part of routine evaluation in women over forty, and whether the levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system is offered as first-line medical treatment.
Support for International Patients
Evaluation and treatment for abnormal uterine bleeding in India, including advanced hysteroscopy and laparoscopic surgery, costs a fraction of equivalent care in the United Kingdom, United States, or Middle East. Cancer Rounds arranges the medical visa invitation letter, airport pickup, accommodation near the treatment hospital, multilingual support in eleven plus languages, and full coordination with the gynaecology team. Patients from Nigeria, Bangladesh, Oman, Kuwait, Qatar, Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania, Ghana, Ethiopia, Cameroon, Mauritius, Mozambique, Senegal, Zimbabwe, Zambia, Guinea, Liberia, Madagascar, South Sudan, Qatar, Chad, Sierra Leone, Congo, Iraq & Uzbekistan, and other countries travel to India for gynaecology care every year.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a hysterectomy?
No, in most cases. Medical therapy, the levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system, hysteroscopic surgery, and endometrial ablation control bleeding while preserving the uterus. Hysterectomy is reserved for women who have completed family and failed other treatments.
What is the levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system?
It is a small T-shaped device placed in the uterus that releases low-dose progestin locally. It reduces heavy bleeding by ninety percent within three to six months, lasts five years, and is one of the most effective non-surgical treatments.
Could this be cancer?
Most causes of abnormal uterine bleeding are benign. Endometrial biopsy is done in women over forty-five and in younger women with risk factors to rule out endometrial hyperplasia or cancer before starting treatment. Postmenopausal bleeding always needs evaluation.
Can fibroids cause heavy bleeding?
Yes, especially submucosal fibroids inside the uterine cavity. These are usually removed hysteroscopically as a day-care procedure. Larger intramural fibroids that distort the cavity are removed by laparoscopic myomectomy.
What is endometrial ablation?
Endometrial ablation destroys the uterine lining to reduce or stop bleeding. It is an outpatient procedure suitable for women who have completed family. It is not used when fibroids distort the cavity or when fertility is still desired.
How quickly will treatment work?
Tranexamic acid works within hours for acute heavy bleeding. Hormonal therapy and the levonorgestrel-releasing intrauterine system take two to three cycles to show full effect. Surgical procedures give immediate relief.









