Dr. Himani Gupta
Experience: | 4 years |
Education: | Panjab University |
Academic degree: | MS (Master Of Surgrey) |
Area of specialization: | I am into all things ear, nose and throat — the classic ENT trio that people don’t realise are so damn interconnected till one of them acts up. Whether it's chronic sinusitis, weird ear pressure, or that scratchy throat that won’t chill, I’ve kinda trained myself to look beyond the usual stuff. And ya, vertigo. That’s a big part of what I do now.
I’ve done a fellowship focused just on the assessment of vestibular disorders — basically figuring out what’s making you feel dizzy, off-balance or like the room’s spinning when you’re not even moving. Vertigo patients often come in frustrated coz the symptoms feel vague, and even harder to explain. I get it. I’ve seen it. Sometimes it’s the inner ear, sometimes not. That’s where proper evaluation actually matters, not just giving anti-vert tabs and sending them off.
I’m not into rushing people. I like piecing things together—history, signs, subtle clues others might ignore. It's like solving a puzzle where the pieces keep shifting around a bit. ENT isn’t just about small organs—it’s about big impact. Hearing. Breathing. Swallowing. Balancing. Everyday stuff, but you only notice when one of them stops working right. And when they do—I try to be the guy who helps fix it, or at least figure out why it’s happening in the first place. |
Achievements: | I am an ex-Senior Resident from AIIMS, and honestly that phase kinda shaped a huge chunk of how I think as a clinician. The exposure there—it’s not just high volume, it’s high complexity. Real-time decisions, packed OPDs, long rounds... it pushes you, you know? And you don’t always get time to breathe or double check stuff—had to rely on sharp clinical judgment and just move.
That place doesn’t just hand you responsibility, it throws you straight into it. But yeah, I learnt fast. |
I am an ENT surgeon… and no, I don’t feel like listing every single thing I’ve done or seen over the years, coz honestly, I’d rather let my work speak louder than words ever could. Ear, nose, throat — sounds simple on paper, right? But ask anyone who's ever lived with sinus pain for weeks or couldn’t hear their kid clearly… it's not that simple at all. And that’s where I come in. I’ve spent enough time in OPDs and OTs to know that real care doesn’t come from a checklist, it comes from actually *listening*, really seeing what’s wrong, and knowing what not to ignore. Sometimes it's infections that won’t quit. Sometimes a snoring issue that’s more than just annoying. And sometimes it’s a polyp hiding somewhere deep where you wouldn’t expect. Whether it’s endoscopic sinus surgery or a quick ear procedure, or just guiding someone through meds that finally work — every case, every patient, kinda teaches you smething new, if you pay attention (and I do, probably too much). I’m not the loud type. You won’t see me posting surgical pics with hashtags or writing long bios about where I trained and which conferences I went too (though yeah, I did all that — doesn't matter much here). What matters is: when someone walks into my clinic barely able to speak, or scared of what their reports say, they walk out feeling understood, not just diagnosed. Let my hands do the work. Let the outcomes talk back. Let the silence after a successful ear surgery or the relief on a parent’s face after a kid’s tonsil problem gets sorted — echo more than any award or degree ever could. That’s me. ENT is what I do, and trust me, I take it seriously… even when I don’t write it all down perfectly.