Dr. Abu Hurera Khalander
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Kanachur Institute Of Medical Sciences |
Academic degree: | MBBS (Bachelor of Medicine, Bachelor of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly focused on internal medicine but over time I got more pulled into areas like cardiology, nephrology and gastroenterology too. Internal medicine sort of feels like the backbone cause you’re not just chasing one problem, you’re trying to see how all systems connect. Heart cases, especially post cardiac ICU work, taught me to pay close attention to rhythm changes, chest pain that don’t look obvious, and those sudden dips that can scare anyone.
With nephrology, I saw how kidneys quietly reflect the whole body’s balance, and how missing early signs can end up in long dialysis discussions that nobody wants. Gastro side is another space where patients come with everything from simple acidity to complicated liver issues and sometimes you don’t know if the problem is primary or linked to diabetes, hypertension, meds... it overlaps a lot.
I like piecing things together, maybe a bit messy at times, but I try to keep my approach practical. Every patient is different, and sometimes the challenge is not just treating disease but helping them manage it without feeling lost. |
Achievements: | I am a doctor who completed my MBBS with first class passout, which for me was not just a grade but kinda proof that the long nights and endless exams actually made some sense. During those years I pushed myself hard in both academics and clinical postings, trying to balance theory with hands-on learning.. sometimes got messy but it helped me see how medicine works in real wards not just books. That result gave me confidence to take forward tougher roles later, knowing I had a strong base. |
I am a doctor who completed my MBBS in 2022 and since then my path’s been kind of shaped by intensive work in critical care. For almost 2 years I was posted in a cardiac ICU, which honestly pushed me more than anything else I had done before. Day and night shifts where you’re dealing with unstable vitals, sudden arrests, ventilators alarms going off every hour, it sort of teaches you to stay steady even when everything feels like chaos. You don’t really forget those moments when a patient comes in crashing and the whole team has to act in seconds. That time gave me solid hands-on with cardiac cases, post-op management, and the whole range of critical situations you only read in books during undergrad. It also made me see how much tiny details matter, like titrating inotropes carefully or just picking up subtle ECG changes before things go wrong. There were days I went home completely drained, wondering if I did enough, and then there were shifts where things turned around and you feel the relief of watching someone actually stabilise. Currently I am working as a resident in Internal Medicine, which feels like a different but connected world. Internal medicine isn’t only about the acute part, it’s about digging deeper into underlying disease, figuring patterns, managing long-term care. I get to deal with a mix — diabetes, hypertension, infections, renal issues, respiratory flares — and also tie them back to how they complicate heart health. That blend of ICU background with internal medicine training helps me see patients more wholisticly, not just as isolated conditions but as a whole picture that needs balance. Still learning everyday honestly. Some cases are straightforward, others confusing, and sometimes you realize patients don’t always follow the protocols we write for them — they bring their own realities, their struggles, and we have to adjust. I try to keep my approach simple, clear communication, no unnecessary panic but also no delay when action is needed. It’s not perfect and I don’t pretend to know all answers, but I keep working toward being better at connecting clinical knowledge with the human side of care.