Dr. Anusha D Correya
Experience: | 6 years |
Education: | SJM Dental College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Dental Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly into Advanced Aesthetic and Laser Dentistry... and honestly, smile designing kinda became my thing over time. There’s something super satisfying about taking a smile that feels “off” to someone, and digitally planning it into something that *feels* like them again. I use Digital Smile Designing not just for accuracy but to show patients a glimpse of what’s possible before we even touch a tool—makes the whole process way more collaborative.
Lasers are a big part of what I do too—whether it's gum contouring, depigmentation, or just making procedures less invasive and more tolerable. I’ve seen ppl flinch at the idea of gum surgery, and then walk out surprised coz it didn’t hurt at all. That's the kinda shift I aim for—both in results and experience.
I don’t believe one-smile-fits-all. Some faces need subtle changes, others want bold fixes. Veneers, reshaping, cosmetic fillings... it depends. But I always plan with the face in mind, not just the teeth. Sometimes I get too picky about shade-matching or midline angling (ok, always)... but that’s the part I enjoy weirdly.
In short, I focus on smiles that feel natural and make sense for *that* person—not just textbook ideals. |
Achievements: | I am someone who kinda always liked going beyond just “basic dental work”... which is why I went on to do a Fellowship in Advanced Aesthetic & Laser Dentistry. That really sharpened my eye for detail—esp in smile designing and soft tissue work. Also did an intensive course in Implant Surgery & Prosthetic Procedures, which was tough but honestly worth it. It gave me a much clearer grip on full treatment planning—placing the implant and restoring it right. Not just the “fix” but the fit too! |
I am Dr. Anusha D Correya—BDS, FAAD—and I mostly live somewhere between root canals and smile makeovers. Been doing this over 5 years now, full-time clinical practice, and honestly? I don’t think I’ve ever had two exact same days. My main focus is endodontics and aesthetic dentistry, though general dentistry always kinda stays part of the picture no matter what. Root canal therapy is a huge chunk of my work—I manage 200+ cases each year, sometimes more, depending on how bad the pain season is (you’d be surprised how ppl ignore symptoms till it’s a full-blown flare-up). I try to make the procedure as pain-free and stress-less as possible, coz really, that dread patients come with is often worse than the actual treatment. At some point, I started getting more drawn to aesthetic cases, smile designing, and just the way small changes could shift the whole vibe of someone’s face. That led me to do my Fellowship in Advanced Aesthetic Dentistry, where I got deeper into veneers, bleaching, cosmetic bonding—all that stuff that kinda blends art with technique. I like the detail work... shaping enamel, matching shade, tiny contour tweaks—it’s the part where being a little picky actually helps. I also use laser dentistry where it fits best—soft tissue contouring, depigmentation, or just to help healing along. It's cleaner and honestly more comfy for patients, especially those who don’t do well with blades or stitches. Not every case needs it, but when it does, I go that way. At the end of it, I’m not chasing perfect teeth—I’m looking to help someone feel good abt their smile, or just chew without wincing. Some ppl want natural, some want dramatic, some just want the pain gone. I listen, plan, and try not to oversell. Dentistry’s not just about technique—though that matters a lot—but about trust too. Anyway, whether it’s fixing a molar or lifting a smile line, my goal’s simple—make it better without making it scary.