Dr. Abhisek Dwibedy
Experience: | 7 years |
Education: | Institute of Medical Science and Sum Hospital |
Academic degree: | MS (Master Of Surgrey) |
Area of specialization: | I am into general orthopedics but honestly that’s just the surface. I work with fractures, joint sprains, slipped discs, kids with clubfoot, frozen shoulders, arthritis that just won’t quit, and those everyday “my back’s hurting again” kinda stories. But then there's the heavier side—joint replacement surgeries like hip n knee arthroplasty, where we try to give people back their pace (or peace maybe?). I also do spine cases—herniated discs, scoliosis corrections, sometimes complex trauma with fusions. I handle sports injuries too—ACL tears, stress fractures, tendon issues—trying to keep recovery fast n clean. Pediatric ortho’s close to me too, kinda different vibe—more watchful, slower paced. Hand and upper limb stuff? Yup. Carpal tunnel, tendon repairs, shoulder impingement things. Foot and ankle? Yep, from plantar fasciitis to achilles tears. Sometimes feels like every bone’s got a story, and I'm just helping ppl turn the page. |
Achievements: | I am someone who's kinda obsessed with figuring out non-surgical fixes when possible, which is why I ended up publishing a paper on PRP therapy in tennis elbow—it felt right to deep dive into how platelet-rich plasma actually plays out in real cases, not just theory. That study was close to me, because many patients come in with nagging elbow pain that doesn't go away, and we’re always lookin for safer, less invasive ways to heal ’em faster without just throwing meds at the problem. |
I am a consultant in Orthopaedics—mainly focused on joint replacement, arthroscopy and spine surgery, which honestly kinda covers the most frustrating pain areas for many patients. Whether it's a worn-out knee that just won’t let someone walk to the gate without pain, or a rotator cuff that keeps flaring up each night... these things really affect how someone lives their day. And ya, spine issues... different league altogether. They creep in slow but hit hard when they do. I usually start by figuring out how much we can manage conservatively—physio, posture work, medications—because rushing into surgery’s not always the answer. But when that line comes, whether it's total knee replacement or a lumbar decompression or even a shoulder scope to clear up a nagging tear, I want patients to feel sure—like really sure—about what’s next. Clear talk, straight expectations, that kind of stuff. Every joint behaves different depending on who's using it, how they’ve used it over the years, and honestly, how they’re wired emotionally. That’s one thing books never really taught, but real-life cases did. You look at X-ray and it tells you one thing, but the patient's face tells a whole different story. Balancing that has been part of my learning curve and I still catch myself recalibrating things sometimes. Arthroscopic procedures have been a real gamechanger btw—minimal cuts, quicker return to movement, especially for younger, active folks who just can’t stay down for weeks. But even elderly joint replacement patients surprise me with their bounceback if rehab's done right. I try to stay updated with evolving surgical techniques, not like chasing every shiny tool out there, but the ones that actually help recovery and pain outcomes. I keep things practical. Not fancy language, not pushing fear. Just fixing what needs to be fixed, at the pace that fits that person.