Dr. Sabarirajan
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Madras Medical College |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am into Dermatology and Cosmetology — which means I work with everything from rashes that won’t go away, to acne that ruins confidence, to pigmentation that just sits there no matter what u do. Skin, scalp, nails.. even those weird unexplained things people google and freak out about — I handle all that.
Cosmetology is a part I enjoy too, not just for “looks” but because it helps ppl feel better in their skin. I do chemical peels, basic anti-aging stuff, scar care, hair fall treatments etc, but I’m not the kind to push 10 sessions for no reason. If your skin's not ready, it’s not ready.. no filter will fix that in real life!!
For me it’s not just about clearing the surface — I focus on understanding what’s actually *causing* the issue. Sometimes it's hormones, sometimes habits. And yeah, sometimes it’s products that were not meant for human skin at all lol.
May miss a comma or a cap here n there, but trust me, I don’t miss the details when it matters. |
Achievements: | I am someone who never really chased awards, but yeah—getting recognised as a *Young Aspirant in Aesthetic Medicine* actually meant a lot. It wasn’t about big stage n lights or whatever.. more about the kind of effort I’d quietly put in finally being noticed. |
I am a dermatologist with around 2 years of work experience — not decades, but enough to've seen a good mix of skin issues that go way beyond just acne and rashes. People think derm means creams and face packs, but trust me, you deal with everything from fungal chaos to hairfall that’s ruining someone’s peace to skin allergies no one can figure out. Sometimes even diagnosing systemic problems that just *show up* on skin first. In these 2 yrs, I’ve handled all kinds of patients – teens struggling with stubborn acne, adults dealing with pigmentation or chronic eczema, even those scary sudden outbreaks where you don't even know where to start. I focus on getting the diagnosis right before throwing meds around — which takes time but saves a lot of trouble later. Also, I do both medical dermatology and a bit of cosmetic stuff — nothing fancy or oversold, just practical solutions like chemical peels, basic anti-ageing regimens, and scar treatments. But tbh, I never rush to procedures unless I know the skin’s ready. That’s one thing I stick to. Sometimes, patients come in after trying 5 different products they saw online or used someone else’s prescription — and then things get trickier. But I actually like those cases ‘cause they remind me how important it is to listen, like *really* listen. Grammar might slip here or ther (did I spell eczema right lol?), but I make sure the patient doesn’t feel like they’re being judged or rushed. Whether it’s a scalp patch or full-blown flare-up, I try to help them understand their skin better — not just fix it once and forget.