Spaying Surgery in Noida.
Spaying is one of the most common veterinary surgical procedures for female dogs and cats. Every pet is different, and our role is to help pet parents make informed decisions with clear guidance, careful planning and compassionate care.
What is spaying, really?
A short, honest overview of what the procedure is, why veterinarians sometimes recommend it and why the decision is always yours to make in consultation with your pet’s doctor.
What the procedure involves
Spaying is a surgical procedure performed under general anaesthesia in which the reproductive organs of a female dog or cat are removed. It is done in a sterile environment with careful monitoring throughout.
Why it may be recommended
A veterinarian may recommend spaying based on your pet’s age, breed, health status and lifestyle. It is one option in a broader conversation about long-term wellbeing, never a default.
Individual assessment
The decision to spay is made after a physical examination and, where useful, diagnostic testing. What is right for one pet is not automatically right for another.
Long-term health considerations
Spaying can influence the likelihood of certain reproductive conditions later in life. The veterinarian will discuss both the potential benefits and the trade-offs in your pet’s specific context.
Population control
On a wider level, spaying helps reduce unplanned litters and the number of dogs and cats without homes. It is one of the tools responsible pet care communities rely on.
Responsible pet ownership
Choosing whether or not to spay is a personal, informed decision. Our role is to help you understand the choice, not to push a single answer.
When might spaying be recommended?
There is no universal answer. These are the common situations that shape the conversation between pet parents and the veterinarian.
Preventing unplanned pregnancies
For households where breeding is not planned, spaying reliably prevents unplanned litters and the health and welfare concerns that often follow.
Certain reproductive conditions
Some reproductive conditions in female dogs and cats become more likely with age. The veterinarian will discuss which of these are relevant for your specific pet.
Lifestyle considerations
Households with multiple pets, outdoor access or shared spaces sometimes benefit more from spaying. Every family situation is a little different.
Population management
For pet parents who care about wider community welfare, spaying is part of a larger conversation about reducing stray populations responsibly.
Veterinary recommendation
A recommendation to spay is always accompanied by the reasoning behind it, so you can weigh it against your own priorities and preferences.
Individual health assessment
Age, weight, breed, previous history and current health all influence whether, and when, spaying is the right conversation for your pet.
Preparing for spaying surgery.
A calm, unhurried preparation phase quietly does most of the work of a smooth surgery day.
- 01
Pre-surgical examination
A thorough physical examination confirms your pet is well enough for surgery today. Weight, temperature, hydration and general condition are all assessed carefully.
- 02
Diagnostic evaluation
Where useful, basic bloodwork or targeted tests are ordered to inform the safest anaesthesia and surgical plan for your individual pet.
- 03
Fasting instructions
Most pets need to be fasted before surgery. The exact hours are shared during pre-surgical planning, adjusted for age, species and any underlying condition.
- 04
Admission process
On the day of surgery, a calm check-in, a moment to say goodbye and clear timing expectations for updates and discharge.
- 05
Questions to ask
Please write down any questions the day before. There are no small questions here, and consent is meant to be unhurried and fully informed.
- 06
Consent discussion
A written consent conversation walks through the plan, the anaesthesia, expected duration, likely outcomes and honest costs, before anything else begins.
What happens on surgery day?
A step-by-step walk through the day, so you know exactly what to expect from the moment you arrive to the moment you go home together.
- 01
Admission
You arrive at the discussed time. Your pet is settled in a quiet space and offered a moment to relax before anything else happens.
- 02
Health check
A final examination confirms your pet is stable and ready for surgery. If anything is off, the procedure is calmly rescheduled for a healthier day.
- 03
Anaesthesia
Anaesthesia is induced gently, with the plan already tailored to your pet’s size, species and any specific consideration flagged in advance.
- 04
Procedure
The spaying procedure is performed in a sterile setting with careful, unhurried technique. Vital signs are monitored continuously by the surgical team.
- 05
Monitoring
After the procedure, your pet is moved to a warm, quiet recovery area. She is watched closely as anaesthesia wears off and comfort is confirmed.
- 06
Discharge
When your pet is fully awake and comfortable, discharge follows with written aftercare, medications and a scheduled follow-up. Nothing important is left to memory.
Recovery after spaying.
The first ten days quietly shape how well your pet heals. Here is where to focus, day by gentle day.
Pain management
Prescribed pain relief is planned for the first few days. Please give it exactly on time, even if your pet seems bright. Comfort is a big part of healing.
Restricted activity
Short lead walks, no jumping, no rough play and no running for the recommended period. Quiet, boring days are exactly what your pet needs right now.
Feeding
Small, easily digestible meals for the first day or two, moving back to the regular diet gradually. Please share any refusal or repeated vomiting with the clinic.
Medication schedule
Keep prescriptions on a written schedule at home. Complete the full course even after your pet appears well, so complications stay avoidable.
Incision care
Keep the surgical site clean and dry. Please check the wound once or twice a day and let us know if you see swelling, discharge, opening or a bad smell.
Elizabethan collar
An e-collar or recovery suit is not optional. It gently prevents licking and chewing that can undo the healing your pet has worked hard to build.
Follow-up visits
Suture checks and progress reviews are planned into the discharge notes. Please keep them, even if your pet seems fully recovered before then.
Signs to review promptly
Refusal to eat beyond a day, persistent lethargy, repeated vomiting, difficulty breathing, wound issues or extreme pain should be reported the same day.
Common questions from pet parents.
A short educational read for anyone weighing the decision to spay their dog or cat.
When is the right age to consider spaying?
There is no single right age for every pet. The best timing depends on species, breed, size and individual health. A calm consultation is usually the fastest way to settle on the timing that fits your specific pet.
How long is the recovery after spaying?
Most healthy pets recover in around 10 to 14 days when aftercare is followed properly. Some cases need slightly longer or shorter, and the veterinarian will confirm your pet’s expected timeline at discharge.
Will my pet’s behaviour change after spaying?
Personality tends to stay the same. Some behaviours linked to heat cycles usually reduce, but the core temperament, playfulness and bond with the family are not expected to change in any meaningful way.
Can my pet exercise afterwards?
Only quiet, short and controlled activity for the first couple of weeks. Regular play, longer walks, running and jumping are gradually reintroduced once the veterinarian confirms healing is on track.
When are the stitches removed?
External stitches are typically removed around 10 to 14 days after surgery. Some cases use dissolvable internal sutures that do not need removal. The plan is confirmed at discharge.
Can older female pets be spayed?
Yes, with careful workup. Age is not a disease. The veterinarian will use pre-surgical bloodwork and physical examination to decide whether spaying is safe, and how to make the procedure as gentle as possible.

Careful decisions, made together.
Dr Kaushal spends unhurried time helping pet parents understand what spaying involves for their specific pet, what the trade-offs are and what timing feels right for the household.
After surgery, follow-up is planned rather than optional. We stay in touch until healing is confirmed to be on track and adjust the plan promptly if anything at home suggests it is needed.
- Careful, patient communication
- Patient-first surgical approach
- Gentle handling for anxious pets
- Individual treatment plans
- Written aftercare instructions
- Planned post-operative follow-up
- Honest cost estimates upfront
- A doctor who remembers your pet
Trusted spaying care across Noida.
Spaying surgery questions, answered clearly.
Related veterinary services in Noida.
What makes Ichi & Ori different.
Four commitments that shape how we consult, how we operate and how we stay in touch between appointments.
Treat Every Pet Like Family
Every recommendation we make is the same one we would make if your pet were our own.
Honest, Transparent Care
We explain every diagnosis, treatment option and expected cost before moving forward.
Evidence-Based Decisions
Careful clinical judgement and appropriate diagnostics help us recommend the right care, not unnecessary procedures.
Long-Term Relationships
From the first visit to senior years, we are here to support your family through every stage of your pet’s life.
Supporting You Before, During and After Surgery.
Whether or not spaying is the right choice for your pet is a conversation worth having in person. Book a consultation and let us help you decide, without pressure and without shortcuts.
