Dr. Deepak Khandelwal
Experience: | 6 years |
Education: | Sawai Man Singh Medical College |
Academic degree: | MCh (Master of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working in trauma care, joint replacement, arthroscopy, sports medicine and Ilizarov fixation—each one kinda demanding its own mindset and skill set. With trauma, it’s often about acting quick but still precise… from complex fractures to polytrauma cases, you don’t get a second chance to get alignment right. Joint replacement is more about planning every detail—hip, knee, sometimes shoulder—balancing surgical accuracy with rehab that gets ppl moving again without fear.
Arthroscopy’s something I enjoy for its minimally invasive edge, fixing ligament tears, meniscus injuries or cleaning up joints without big scars. In sports medicine, I deal a lot with athletes and active ppl—helping them recover from injuries, prevent re-injury, and keep performance high. Ilizarov fixation is a diff zone altogether—great for limb lengthening, deformity correction or stubborn non-union fractures—it’s slow work but the long-term results can be life changing.
Each area pushes me to adapt, choose the right technique, and think beyond just “fixing the bone”—it’s about restoring confidence in movement. |
Achievements: | I am actively involved in both state & national level ortho conferences, which honestly keep me on my toes with the latest updates in the field. Over the years, I’ve presented my work, discussed tricky cases with peers, and picked up fresh insights from senior surgeons. One highlight for me was winning the Best Paper Award at CEZCON 2023—felt like all those late nights refining data and slides finally paid off. These platforms push me to keep learning, sharing, and growing as a clinician. |
I am an orthopaedic surgeon by training and by heart, having completed my MBBS and MS Orthopaedics from Sawai Man Singh Medical College, Jaipur—yeah, one of the most reputed govt. institutes in India, and honestly it shaped a lot of how I look at medicine. For the last 4 years, I’ve been working full-time in orthopaedics & joint replacement, treating everything from fractures that walk into the ER at 2 AM to complex knee and hip replacement surgeries that need months of follow-up. My work isn’t just about the operation theater. A big chunk of it is diagnosing joint problems early—whether it’s osteoarthritis in a 60-year-old, ligament tears in young athletes, or those stubborn shoulder and spine issues that just won’t go away with basic rest. I try to balance surgical precision with rehabilitation planning, because if a patient can’t get back to living their normal life, then the job’s not really done. Joint replacement is one of my main focus areas, and every case feels different—alignments, bone quality, muscle strength, even the patient’s lifestyle all change how I approach it. I work a lot on pre-op counseling too, making sure patients know what’s ahead rather than just jumping into the procedure. And yes, I spend plenty of time on post-op recovery, physio planning, and tracking progress. Alongside surgery, I’m still actively involved in general orthopaedics—fracture fixation, sports injury repair, arthroscopy, and managing chronic pain cases. The learning never stops; I keep updating myself with newer implant systems, minimally invasive techniques, and evidence-based protocols. In the end, the goal is simple: make movement pain-free again, whether that’s with a small correction or a full replacement. Sometimes the fix is quick, sometimes it’s months of slow progress, but that moment when a patient walks back in smiling—it makes all the long hours worth it.