

Fortis Memorial Research Institute
gurugram
- Specialties
- 29
- Departments
- 37
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Fortis Memorial Research Institute (FMRI), in Gurugram near New Delhi, is a quaternary multi-super-specialty hospital opened in 2013 on an 11-acre campus. It has 330 beds including 99 intensive-care beds and 15 operating theatres, and is organised around dedicated Centres of Excellence in cancer care, neurosciences, cardiac sciences, orthopaedics and organ transplantation. FMRI is accredited by Joint Commission International (JCI) and by India's NABH and NABL, and is widely recognised for robotic surgery, multi-organ transplantation, bone-marrow transplantation and advanced radiation oncology.
Specialties
Departments
- Cardiac Sciences
- Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery
- Medical Oncology
- Radiation Oncology
- Surgical Oncology
- Hematology and Bone Marrow Transplant
- Neurosciences
- Neurosurgery
- Spine Surgery
- Gastroenterology
- Gastrointestinal Surgery
- Orthopaedics and Joint Replacement
- Urology
- Nephrology
- Organ Transplantation
- Liver Transplant
- Kidney Transplant
- Pulmonology
- Thoracic Surgery
- Obstetrics and Gynaecology
- Reproductive Medicine and Fertility
- Paediatrics
- Neonatology
- Bariatric Surgery
- General Surgery
- Robotic Surgery
- Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery
- Dermatology
- Endocrinology and Diabetes Care
- Ophthalmology
- ENT
- Dentistry
- Rheumatology
- Sleep Medicine
- Physiotherapy and Rehabilitation
- Genomic Medicine
- Preventive Health and Check-up
Procedures
Check-up packages
Golden Age Health Check (Men 60 and Above)
General Examinations
- Consultation
- Audiometry
- Pulmonary Function Test (PFT)
Laboratory Tests
- Complete Blood Count (CBC)
- Peripheral Smear
- Fasting Blood Glucose
- Post-Prandial Blood Glucose
- Glycosylated Hemoglobin (HbA1c)
- Lipid Profile
- Liver Function Test
- Kidney Function Test
- Thyroid Function Test
- Vitamin B12
- Vitamin D (25-Hydroxy)
- Prostate Specific Antigen (PSA)
- Hepatitis B Surface Antigen
- Urine Routine
- Stool Occult Blood
Cardiac Evaluation
- Electrocardiogram (ECG)
- Echocardiography
- Treadmill Test (TMT)
Imaging and Radiology
- Chest X-Ray
- Whole Abdomen Ultrasound
Bone and Body Composition
- DEXA Bone Densitometry
Lifestyle Health Check (Women 40 and Above)
General Examinations
- Consultation
- Audiometry
- Pulmonary Function Test (PFT)
Laboratory Tests
- Complete Blood Count (CBC)
- Peripheral Smear
- Blood Group and Rh Type
- Fasting Blood Glucose
- Post-Prandial Blood Glucose
- Glycosylated Hemoglobin (HbA1c)
- Lipid Profile
- Liver Function Test
- Thyroid Function Test
- Vitamin B12
- Vitamin D (25-Hydroxy)
- Hepatitis B Surface Antigen
- Stool Occult Blood
- Pap Smear
Cardiac Evaluation
- Electrocardiogram (ECG)
- Echocardiography
- Treadmill Test (TMT)
Imaging and Radiology
- Chest X-Ray
- Whole Abdomen Ultrasound
- Mammography
Bone and Body Composition
- DEXA Bone Densitometry
- Body Fat Analysis
International patient services
- International patient office
- Interpreter and translation services
- Visa and travel assistance
- Airport transfer
- Accommodation assistance
Technologies and equipment
CyberKnife M6
CyberKnife M6 is a robotic system for stereotactic radiosurgery and stereotactic body radiotherapy (SBRT). Despite the name, there is no knife and no cutting. A small linear accelerator sits on a computer-guided robotic arm and delivers many thin beams of focused radiation from hundreds of angles. The beams converge on the tumour with sub-millimetre accuracy, so a high dose reaches the target while nearby healthy tissue is spared. Imaging during treatment tracks the tumour continuously, and a motion-synchronisation feature follows targets that move with breathing, such as those in the lung or liver. Treatment is non-invasive and painless, needs no rigid head frame, and is usually given as an outpatient over one to five sessions. The decision is always made individually by the radiation oncology team.
View technology→Next-Generation Sequencing (NGS)
Next-generation sequencing, often shortened to NGS, is a powerful laboratory technology that reads the genetic code of many genes at the same time, quickly and accurately. In cancer care it is the engine of precision medicine: by examining the DNA and RNA of a tumour, it reveals the specific changes driving that individual cancer and points to the treatments most likely to work against it. The same technology is used to test for inherited cancer risk and to support molecular tumour boards, where specialists match a patient's genetic profile to targeted therapies and clinical options. Because interpreting these results well requires specialised laboratories and expert teams, comprehensive genomic testing is a feature of advanced centres, and many international patients seek it out to guide a clearer, more personalised treatment plan.
View technology→PET-CT
PET-CT is an advanced hybrid imaging method that combines positron emission tomography with computed tomography in a single scan, mapping both the metabolic activity and the anatomical structure of the body at once. A small dose of a radioactive tracer, often a glucose analogue, is injected and gathers in cells that are working harder than normal, which is typical of many tumours. Because it can show where a disease is active before it changes the shape of an organ, PET-CT is one of the most valuable tools for detecting cancer, working out how far it has spread, and checking whether treatment is working.
View technology→EBUS Endobronchial Ultrasound
Endobronchial ultrasound (EBUS) is a minimally invasive method that combines bronchoscopy with ultrasound to examine the airways and the tissues and lymph nodes that surround them. A thin, flexible bronchoscope carrying a camera and a small ultrasound probe is passed through the mouth into the airways, where the probe creates real-time images of structures just beyond the airway wall, such as lymph nodes and masses that cannot be seen with a camera alone. Under this live ultrasound guidance, a fine needle can take samples for the laboratory in the same session, all without any surgical incision.
View technology→Brachytherapy
Brachytherapy is a form of internal radiotherapy in which a radiation source is placed inside the body, right at or next to the tumour, rather than aimed from outside. Because the source sits so close to the target, it can deliver a high, very localised dose while the radiation falls off sharply over a short distance, sparing the healthy tissue around it. Modern systems automate this safely: thin tubes are guided to the tumour, the source travels through them along a precise plan, and it is withdrawn at the end, leaving no radiation behind in the body.
View technology→Gamma Knife
Gamma Knife is a form of stereotactic radiosurgery, a highly precise way of treating targets deep inside the head without any cut, incision or general anaesthesia. Despite its name it is not a knife and involves no surgery in the usual sense. Instead, hundreds of finely focused beams of gamma radiation are aimed from many angles so that they all meet at a single point. Each beam alone is too weak to harm the tissue it passes through, but where they converge a strong, sharply shaped dose is delivered to the target while the surrounding healthy brain is largely spared. It offers a non-invasive option for tumours and other lesions that may be difficult or risky to reach with open surgery.
View technology→TrueBeam STx
TrueBeam STx is an advanced linear accelerator, a machine that delivers external radiotherapy to treat cancer with very high precision. It shapes powerful radiation beams to match the exact size and shape of a tumour and aims them from many angles, so that a strong dose reaches the target while nearby healthy tissue and organs receive as little as possible. Because it tracks the target and can account for movement such as breathing, it is accurate to within millimetres. This makes it suitable both for conventional, daily radiotherapy and for advanced focused techniques that treat a tumour in only a few sessions. The treatment is non-invasive and painless, with nothing entering the body.
View technology→Da Vinci Robotic Surgery
The da Vinci robotic surgical system lets a surgeon perform complex operations through a few small keyhole incisions instead of one large cut. Sitting at a nearby console, the surgeon controls tiny wristed instruments and a magnified high-definition three-dimensional camera, while the robotic arms translate every hand movement into precise, steady motion inside the body. The system never acts on its own: the surgeon is in full control at all times. For patients, this minimally invasive approach often means less pain, smaller scars, less blood loss and a quicker return to normal life.
View technology→3 Tesla MRI
3 Tesla MRI is a high-field magnetic resonance imaging scanner that produces exceptionally detailed pictures of the inside of the body. The "3 Tesla" refers to the strength of its magnet, which is about twice that of a standard MRI scanner, and this extra power allows sharper, higher-resolution images, often in less time. Like all MRI, it uses a strong magnetic field and radio waves rather than X-rays, so there is no ionising radiation involved. It is especially valuable for examining the brain, the nervous system, joints and soft tissues, helping doctors detect and characterise problems that may be hard to see on other scans.
View technology→Robotic Arm-Assisted Orthopedic Surgery
Robotic arm-assisted orthopedic surgery is a technology used mainly in knee and hip replacement to plan and carry out the operation with very high accuracy. A detailed three-dimensional plan is built from the patient's own CT scan, and during surgery a robotic arm guides the surgeon's instruments so that bone is prepared and the implant is positioned to that exact plan. The surgeon always holds and directs the instrument; the robotic arm adds steadiness and built-in limits that protect the surrounding tissue. The aim is a joint that fits and balances well, which can mean less pain and a smoother recovery.
View technology→HoLEP (Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate)
HoLEP (Holmium Laser Enucleation of the Prostate) is a minimally invasive laser treatment for an enlarged prostate, a very common condition in older men that can make passing urine difficult. Benign prostatic enlargement narrows the channel through which urine flows, causing symptoms such as a weak stream, frequent urination and getting up at night. HoLEP uses a holmium laser passed through the urethra, with no external cut, to separate the overgrown inner prostate tissue from its outer shell and remove it completely. By taking out the whole obstructing tissue, it offers durable relief and works well even for very large prostates.
View technology→MR-Linac (MRI-Guided Radiotherapy)
MR-Linac combines a radiotherapy machine with an MRI scanner in a single device, so the radiation oncology team can watch the tumour and the soft tissue around it in real time while treatment is being delivered. Standard radiotherapy relies on planning scans taken on earlier days, but tumours and organs shift slightly from session to session and even with breathing. By seeing the target live, MR-Linac lets the team adapt the plan each day and pause or steer the beam as the tumour moves, delivering a precise dose where it is needed while better protecting healthy tissue.
View technology→Location
Sector 44, Opposite HUDA City Centre, Gurugram, Haryana 122002, India
View on Google MapsAccreditations
- JCI
- NABH
- NABL
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