City
Epaper

Subrata Roy undergoes successful brain surgery at KDAH

By IANS | Updated: January 10, 2022 16:45 IST

Mumbai, Jan 10 Sahara Group chief Subrata Roy recently underwent a successful neurological surgery at the Kokilaben Dhirubhai ...

Open in App

Mumbai, Jan 10 Sahara Group chief Subrata Roy recently underwent a successful neurological surgery at the Kokilaben Dhirubhai Ambani Hospital and was discharged on Monday.

The procedure was performed by KDAH surgeon Dr. Manish Srivastava last Thursday (January 6) on the Sahara India Parivar's 'Managing Worker' and Chairman.

Roy, 73, was detected with a brain affliction recently and advised for the brain coiling which was done by fixing a stent and endo-saccular device.

On his discharge, Roy lavished praise on the KDAH doctors and staff for giving him the excellent medical treatment, services and ensuring his speedy recovery.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Tags: Sahara ReportersKdahSubrata RoyManish srivastava
Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessAamby Valley, Sahara City: Adani Group Set to Acquire Sahara's Properties

NationalSupreme Court Issues Notice to Union Ministry and Maharashtra Govt on Sahara's Versova Plot as Mangrove Area

NationalSahara matter will continue even after Subrata's death, says SEBI chief Madhabi Puri

BusinessWho Will Handle Sahara Business After Subrata Roy Death, What His His Net Worth

BusinessSubrata Roy's death brings undistributed funds worth Rs 25,000 crore into limelight

Health Realted Stories

HealthOver 11.31 lakh health camps organised under Swasth Nari, Sashakt Nari Abhiyaan: Govt

HealthHigh carb, saturated fat, low protein intake driving diabetes, obesity in India: ICMR study

HealthBangladesh: Three people die due to dengue, fatalities in 2025 rise to 198

HealthIndian pharma exports expected to cross $30bn this year, rise sharply by 2030: Minister

HealthAchieving 30 pc clean air targets can reduce nationwide disease prevalence