Children aren't just small adults, their ears, noses and throats behave differently, and so should the doctor seeing them. Our pediatric ENT clinic is built around calm, kid-friendly examinations and conservative-first treatment.
Recurrent ear infections, mouth breathing, persistent snoring, the same six-week-cough that won't quit, foreign body in the nose, pediatric ENT covers the everyday and the dramatic. The most important thing is that a child gets a careful, unhurried examination from someone who is comfortable with kids.
Both Dr. S.T. Hemani and Dr. Vimal Hemani see children daily. We don't reach for surgery quickly, many things genuinely improve with the right medication, allergy plan or watchful waiting. When surgery is the right answer (commonly tonsils + adenoids + grommet for the chronic ear-fluid kid), we do it as a single combined day-care procedure so your child has only one anaesthesia and one recovery.
A clear, no-jargon walk-through of the symptoms that lead to surgery, and the exact steps inside the operating theatre.
Don't wait if you see:
Calm, parent-present examination is the rule:
A realistic timeline of how Rajkot patients typically recover, what's normal, what's not, when to call.
Same-day discharge. Cold drinks/ice cream from a few hours after waking.
Soft food, paracetamol as needed, light play.
Most children back to school.
Follow-up examination. Most parents notice quieter sleep and clearer breathing.
Common pediatric ENT pricing in Rajkot:
Not always. Many children outgrow recurrent ear infections by age 6-7. We watch the pattern, treat acute episodes well, and only consider surgery (grommets ± adenoidectomy) when the frequency is genuinely affecting hearing or schooling.
Loud snoring in a child is not normal. It usually means enlarged adenoids and/or tonsils blocking the airway during sleep. A simple ENT exam plus a sleep history is enough for diagnosis. Adenotonsillectomy is highly effective when needed.
Usually no. Allow 5-7 days off school for adenoid/tonsil surgery. Adenoid-only surgery sometimes allows return in 3-4 days.
No. The immune role of tonsils and adenoids peaks in early childhood; by the time we operate (usually age 4+), the rest of the immune system is well established.
Don't try to dig it out at home, that often pushes it deeper. Bring the child in promptly; in OPD we have the tools and the calm setting to remove it safely.
Same-day or next-day OPD slots are usually available. Call directly or fill the form on the contact page.