Internal preview Make keyhole stand out — three design directions.
Three different ways to feature keyhole surgery on the homepage. Each gives keyhole the visual weight; surgical and non-surgical paths sit underneath as secondary cards. Pick T1, T2, or T3 and I'll wire it into the homepage.
T1 Cinematic spotlight · image-led Large full-bleed feature panel for keyhole — bold display headline, three benefit ticks, large key visual on the right. Secondary procedures shrink to small companion pills below.
Featured speciality Keyhole &
Endoscopic Surgery.
Mr. Rath's signature approach — through an incision smaller than a fingernail.
- ✓ Smaller than a fingernail, less tissue trauma
- ✓ Most patients home the same day
- ✓ Faster recovery, muscle-sparing approach
Why keyhole? → Visual: endoscopic instrument /
annotated anatomy illustration
T2 Stat hero · number-led Three large stat tiles dominate the section — concrete, scannable proof points. Body copy explains, secondary procedures sit as compact cards below.
< 10mm Incision Smaller than a fingernail Same day Discharge Home the same evening Muscle-sparing Technique Less tissue trauma, faster recovery
Through an incision smaller than a fingernail, Mr. Rath removes disc fragments, decompresses nerves, and treats Bertolotti's syndrome — with most patients home the same day.
Why keyhole? → T3 Editorial · story-led, numbered procedure Magazine-style split. Left: title, intro, quote. Right: numbered four-step "how a keyhole procedure goes" walkthrough. Premium, narrative.
Keyhole / Endoscopic Surgery
An incision smaller than a fingernail, the spinal cord untouched, and most patients home before sunset.
“The best surgery I can offer is the smallest one that solves the problem.”
— Mr. N. K. Rath
Why keyhole? → - 01
Diagnosis
Personal review of your MRI and symptoms, in a single consultation.
- 02
Sub-fingernail incision
A working channel through skin, no cutting through back muscle.
- 03
Endoscopic correction
Disc fragment removed, nerve root decompressed, with continuous visualisation.
- 04
Home the same day
Most patients walk out within hours; back to light activity within a week.