He completed his Masters in Neurosurgery in Malaysia and pursued fellowship training across multiple international centres, with a specific focus on endoscopic and minimally invasive spine techniques.
Where conventional surgery works through larger exposures, the endoscopic approach demands more — a magnified operative view, a smaller entry point, and a level of precision that leaves the surrounding tissue largely undisturbed. For patients, that translates to less pain, faster recovery, and a return to normal life sooner.
He moved into private practice three years ago because the private consultation offers something that matters: Time. Time to review your scans properly. Time to explain what is actually happening and why. Time to walk through every option — conservative, rehabilitative, and surgical — before any decision is made.
Surgery is not always the answer. When it is, it is performed with the smallest possible footprint. When it isn't, that is said directly — and the path forward is mapped out just as carefully.