"My pituitary tumour was pressing on my optic nerves and my eyesight was fading. The surgeon in Chennai removed it through my nose — no cut on my head at all. My vision came back within weeks. Medifly arranged everything from visa to follow-up."
Endoscopic brain surgery, also called neuro-endoscopy or minimally invasive brain surgery, uses a thin tube fitted with a high-definition camera and light — an endoscope — to reach and treat lesions deep inside the brain through a very small opening. Instead of removing a large piece of skull, the surgeon works through a natural passage such as the nose (endonasal) or a small burr hole.
It is the preferred approach for many conditions: pituitary and skull base tumours (reached through the nostril and sphenoid sinus), hydrocephalus (treated by creating a new fluid pathway in a procedure called endoscopic third ventriculostomy, or ETV), and intraventricular tumours, colloid cysts, and arachnoid cysts. According to the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke ↗, minimally invasive techniques can reduce surgical trauma and speed recovery for suitable patients.
At Medifly Healthcare's partner hospitals, dedicated neurosurgery and skull base teams — combining senior neurosurgeons, ENT skull base surgeons, neuro-anaesthetists, and neuro-intensivists — perform endoscopic brain surgery as routine, supported by neuronavigation, intraoperative imaging, and modern neuro-ICUs. Explore related care on our brain tumour surgery page.
Whether you have just been told you need brain surgery, or you are dreading an open craniotomy, these are the questions that keep patients and families awake at night — and exactly how we resolve them.
In the USA, endoscopic brain surgery such as pituitary tumour removal typically runs $80,000–$200,000 once you include the surgeon, neuro-ICU, imaging, and follow-up. In the UK private system, expect £35,000–£70,000. In India, the same minimally invasive surgery by senior neurosurgeons costs $5,500–$11,000 all-inclusive — covering the surgery, neuro-ICU, hospital stay, neuronavigation, and standard post-operative care.
Transparent written packages with no hidden charges — surgery, neuro-ICU, hospital stay, anaesthesia, neuronavigation, and follow-up included. Read about medical tourism →
Fear of a craniotomy — having a section of the skull opened — is completely natural. The reassuring news: for many conditions, endoscopic surgery avoids this entirely. Reaching the lesion through the nostril or a small burr hole means no large scalp incision, no visible scar, less pain, and a much faster recovery. Where a lesion truly needs open surgery, our teams will tell you honestly — but for suitable tumours and cysts, the keyhole route is genuinely less invasive.
Senior neurosurgeons assess whether the minimally invasive route is right for you, and explain every step before you decide. Get an expert second opinion →
This is the question every working patient and parent asks. The short answer: recovery after endoscopic brain surgery is usually much quicker than open surgery. Most patients spend a day or two in the neuro-ICU, a total of 4–8 days in hospital, and return to light activity within 2–4 weeks. Because there is little brain handling and no large incision, pain is lower and the body heals faster — many patients are back to most normal activities within a month.
A clear recovery plan from day one — ICU monitoring, structured discharge, and follow-up coordinated with your doctor back home. Meet our neurosurgery team →
Not every brain lesion is suitable for endoscopy, and choosing the wrong approach can be dangerous. That uncertainty is frightening when you are far from a specialist. Medifly arranges a senior neurosurgeon review of your MRI, CT, and hormone reports — so you receive an honest opinion on whether endoscopic surgery is appropriate, what the realistic outcomes are, and where open surgery would be safer. You make the decision with full information, not guesswork.
Real neurosurgeons — not call-centre staff — review your imaging first, so the plan fits your exact lesion. See our consultant service →
Travelling abroad for neurosurgery sounds intimidating. You need an Indian medical visa, an attendant visa for a family member, flights coordinated around the surgery date, accommodation for a 1–2 week stay, daily support during recovery, language interpretation, transport to follow-up scans, and continuity with your home neurologist for years after. Medifly handles all of it as one coordinated service so you can focus only on getting well.
Full end-to-end coordination is built into the package — visa, travel, accommodation, recovery support, language help in 8+ languages, and long-term follow-up. See our coordination process → · Talk to a consultant →
We do not simply forward your reports to a referral panel. We connect you with neurosurgery units that perform hundreds of endoscopic brain procedures every year — and we stay with you for years after you return home. Learn more about us →
Senior neurosurgeons, ENT skull base surgeons, neuro-anaesthetists, and neuro-intensivists plan and operate as one unit — the model proven to deliver the best outcomes and shortest ICU times in minimally invasive brain surgery.
Whether your lesion is best reached through the nose (endonasal transsphenoidal) or a small burr hole, Medifly's network covers the full spectrum of minimally invasive neurosurgical routes.
At select centres, we offer specialised pediatric endoscopic brain surgery for children with hydrocephalus, arachnoid cysts, and intraventricular tumours — with child-sized instruments and dedicated pediatric neuro-ICUs.
For pituitary adenomas, craniopharyngiomas, meningiomas, and clival or skull base tumours, our teams have the volume and infrastructure to take on cases many centres decline.
Written, all-inclusive cost packages before you board. Surgery, neuro-ICU, hospital stay, surgeon's fees, neuronavigation, and standard medications included — with no surprise bills.
Medifly handles every logistical detail — visas for patient and attendant, accommodation, recovery support, language interpretation, and follow-up after you return home.
Understanding exactly what happens during endoscopic brain surgery removes most of the fear. Here is the standard sequence at Medifly's partner hospitals.
MRI and CT scans, plus hormone and vision tests for pituitary lesions, define the size and exact location of the target. The surgeon plans the safest route and loads the scans into the neuronavigation system.
Under general anaesthesia, the endoscope is passed through a natural passage — usually the nostril and sphenoid sinus — or a small burr hole. No large scalp incision is needed for most cases.
Guided by the high-definition view and navigation, the surgeon removes the tumour, opens a cyst, or creates a new fluid pathway (ETV) using fine micro-instruments — with minimal handling of healthy brain.
The opening is carefully sealed (for endonasal routes, the skull base is reconstructed to prevent fluid leak). The patient moves to the neuro-ICU. Total surgery is typically 2–4 hours, with monitoring overnight.
The right endoscopic approach depends on the type, size, and exact location of the lesion, and whether the goal is tumour removal, cyst drainage, or relieving fluid build-up. Medifly's partner surgeons offer the full spectrum.
The most common endoscopic brain procedure — the tumour is reached through the nostril and sphenoid sinus, with no scalp incision. Ideal for pituitary adenomas and many skull base tumours, often restoring vision and hormone balance.
Through the nose · no scarFor hydrocephalus (fluid build-up in the brain), the surgeon creates a new pathway for cerebrospinal fluid to drain — often avoiding a permanent shunt. Performed through a small burr hole.
Hydrocephalus · no permanent shuntTumours, colloid cysts, and lesions sitting inside the brain's fluid chambers (ventricles) are removed or biopsied through a thin endoscope — reaching the centre of the brain with minimal disruption.
Deep central lesionsArachnoid cysts and other fluid-filled cysts are opened (fenestrated) so the trapped fluid drains naturally — relieving pressure and symptoms through a keyhole approach.
Arachnoid & brain cystsFor selected deep brain bleeds (intracerebral haemorrhage), the clot is removed through a small port with endoscopic guidance — a less invasive alternative to open evacuation in suitable cases.
Selected brain bleedsA very small craniotomy is combined with the endoscope to reach lesions that need a little more access — giving wide visualisation through a minimal opening.
Keyhole · wide viewFor children with hydrocephalus, arachnoid cysts, or intraventricular tumours, endoscopic surgery offers a gentle approach with child-sized instruments and dedicated pediatric neuro-ICU care.
Children · gentle approachWhen a diagnosis is needed before treatment, a precise tissue sample is taken from a deep lesion through the endoscope — guiding the next step safely and accurately.
Diagnosis · minimally invasiveEndoscopic brain surgery is recommended for many tumours, cysts, and fluid disorders — particularly those located centrally or at the skull base. Here are the typical conditions it treats.
Adenomas of the pituitary gland — the most common reason for endoscopic endonasal brain surgery worldwide.
Fluid build-up in the brain, often relieved by endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) without a permanent shunt.
Benign but troublesome skull base tumours near the pituitary, frequently approached through the nose.
Cysts in the third ventricle that block fluid flow — removed through intraventricular endoscopy.
Meningiomas, chordomas, and clival tumours reached through endonasal endoscopic routes.
Fluid-filled cysts causing pressure or symptoms, opened endoscopically to drain naturally.
Tumours within the brain's fluid chambers, biopsied or removed through a thin endoscope.
Benign pituitary-region cysts causing headache or hormone problems, drained endonasally.
Endoscopic repair of cerebrospinal fluid leaks at the skull base, sealing the defect through the nose.
Certain deep intracerebral haemorrhages can be evacuated endoscopically through a small port.
Complex fluid compartments opened up endoscopically (septostomy) to restore normal flow.
Very large, vascular, or widely invasive lesions may need open surgery instead — careful assessment is essential first.
Endoscopic brain surgery can treat serious conditions with far less trauma than open surgery — but it is still brain surgery, with real risks. Here is what to genuinely expect, in plain language.
Endoscopic brain surgery is a precise, planned operation — typically requiring a 1–2 week total stay including evaluation, surgery, and early recovery. Here is the standard timeline.
WhatsApp +91 99449 38508 with your MRI, CT, hormone tests, and any biopsy reports. Expert neurosurgeon assessment within 24 hours. No fee, no obligation.
Surgical plan, written cost package, hospital matching, e-Medical Visa, attendant visa, and flights arranged around your surgery date.
Airport pickup, accommodation, in-person consultation, pre-operative work-up, vision and hormone tests, neuronavigation planning, and anaesthesia clearance.
Endoscopic brain surgery (endonasal or burr hole). Typically 2–4 hours. 1–2 days in the neuro-ICU, then ward care. Most patients are mobile the next day.
Ward care, post-op MRI, hormone and nasal checks, medication stabilisation, follow-up coordination with home neurologist, and return travel arranged.
All prices below are all-inclusive (surgery, neuro-ICU, hospital stay, surgeon's fees, neuronavigation) and current for 2026. Indicative — your exact package depends on the procedure, the complexity of your lesion, and hospital tier.
| Country / Region | Endoscopic Brain Surgery (All-Inclusive) |
|---|---|
| 🇺🇸USA (private hospitals) | $80,000 – $200,000 |
| 🇬🇧UK (private) | £35,000 – £70,000 (~$44,000–$88,000) |
| 🇩🇪Germany | €40,000 – €80,000 |
| 🇸🇬Singapore | SGD 60,000 – SGD 120,000 |
| 🇦🇪UAE / Dubai | AED 120,000 – AED 280,000 |
| 🇹🇭Thailand | $12,000 – $22,000 |
| 🇮🇳India (Medifly Partners) | $5,500 – $11,000 |
A typical patient travelling for endoscopic brain surgery saves enough to cover all visas, flights, accommodation, and years of follow-up care — often a life-changing difference between affordable and impossible.
The more complete your pre-arrival package, the smoother your evaluation, surgery, and recovery. Here is the checklist we share with every neurosurgery patient.
For over 15 years, Medifly Healthcare has been the trusted partner for international and domestic patients seeking neurosurgery and complex surgery in India. Read our story → · Meet our doctors →
Senior neurosurgeons, skull base surgeons, and neuro-intensivists working as one unit — hundreds of endoscopic brain procedures per year, the volume proven to deliver the best outcomes.
Surgery only at top NABH (India) and JCI (international) accredited multispecialty hospitals — Apollo, Fortis, MGM Healthcare, Gleneagles, Kauvery, SIMS.
Real doctors review your scans first — not call-centre staff. Your case is understood properly before it reaches the neurosurgery team.
WhatsApp +91 99449 38508 any time. A real coordinator who knows your case responds — not an automated system or chatbot.
English, Arabic, French, Russian, Bengali, Tamil, Hindi, Swahili — communicate in the language you are most comfortable with.
After you return home, our team continues coordinating with your local neurologist — hormone monitoring, surveillance imaging, and long-term care.
All Medifly partner hospitals are NABH-accredited, with most also holding JCI international accreditation. Each has dedicated neurosurgery units, neuro-ICUs, and combined neurosurgery–ENT skull base teams. Compare top neurosurgery hospitals in India →
MGM Healthcare
Neurosurgery Unit
Gleneagles Global
Neuro & Skull Base
Fortis Healthcare
Neurosurgery
Kauvery Hospital
Comprehensive Care
Apollo Hospitals
Neuro Excellence
SIMS Hospital
Tertiary Neuro Care
These patients faced pituitary tumours, hydrocephalus, and brain cysts — and chose minimally invasive endoscopic surgery in India when cost and fear were against them. Each one is thriving today. Start your story →
"My pituitary tumour was pressing on my optic nerves and my eyesight was fading. The surgeon in Chennai removed it through my nose — no cut on my head at all. My vision came back within weeks. Medifly arranged everything from visa to follow-up."
"I was quoted over $140,000 for pituitary surgery in the US and our insurance wouldn't cover it. Medifly arranged endoscopic surgery in India for a fraction of that. The surgeon had done hundreds of these. I was home in two weeks, with no visible scar at all."
"I'm from Patna. My local hospital had no neuro-endoscopy unit and suggested a shunt for my hydrocephalus. Medifly's senior surgeon did an ETV instead — no permanent shunt needed. Six months later my headaches are gone. Total cost ₹5.5 lakh, all-inclusive."
"My wife had a deep colloid cyst blocking the fluid in her brain. The Abu Dhabi quote was enormous. The Chennai team removed it through a tiny endoscope. She was walking the next day and we flew home in ten days. We are so grateful."
"Two hospitals in Lagos said my son needed open brain surgery for his arachnoid cyst. Medifly arranged an endoscopic procedure in India instead. The recovery was so gentle — he was playing within two weeks. The coordinator stayed in touch with our doctor at home for a year."
"The wait at home was long and I was dreading open surgery for my skull base tumour. In India I was assessed quickly and the whole tumour was removed through my nose within days of arriving. No scar, less pain, and I was home in twelve days. The team are still in touch with my GP."
According to the World Health Organization ↗, neurological conditions are among the leading causes of disability worldwide — and for many brain tumours and fluid disorders, timely surgery is the key to recovery.
If you have a pituitary adenoma, craniopharyngioma, or skull base tumour affecting your vision or hormones, endoscopic endonasal surgery can remove it through the nose with no scalp incision.
If you or your child has fluid build-up in the brain, an endoscopic third ventriculostomy (ETV) may relieve it without a permanent shunt — a less invasive option.
If you have been quoted $80,000+ in the US, £35,000+ in UK private, or AED 120,000+ in UAE for brain surgery, India offers the same minimally invasive surgery by high-volume teams at $5,500–$11,000 all-inclusive.
If you have been told you need open brain surgery and want to know whether a keyhole approach is possible, a senior neurosurgeon can review your scans and advise honestly.
For children with hydrocephalus, arachnoid cysts, or intraventricular tumours, India's pediatric neuro-endoscopy units offer a gentle minimally invasive approach at a fraction of Western cost.
If your local hospital has no endoscopic neurosurgery programme — whether you are in a smaller Indian city or a country without these facilities — Medifly arranges your full pathway with an experienced team in India.
The decision deserves the best information. A senior neurosurgeon reviews your scans within 24 hours and gives you a written, honest assessment — whether endoscopic surgery is appropriate, which approach suits your lesion, what it will cost, and how soon we can arrange it. No fee. No obligation. Only clarity.
Send your scans today via WhatsApp. Within 24 hours, a senior neurosurgeon tells you whether endoscopic surgery is appropriate, which approach suits your lesion, exactly what it will cost, which Indian hospital fits your case, and how soon we can arrange it. Then — if you choose to proceed — we coordinate every detail from visa to surgery to long-term follow-up. Explore: brain tumour surgery → · patient blog →