Dr. Anuj Sharma
Experience: | 27 years |
Education: | Government Dental College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Dental Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly into root canal treatments and aesthetic dentistry, kinda two sides of the same coin for me. On one hand I deal with RCTs, where the aim is to save a tooth that many think is already lost. I focus on making the whole process as pain free as possible, careful cleaning and sealing so the tooth last long and patient walk out relieved not worried. Some days it feels more like solving a puzzle inside the canals.
On the other side, aesthetic dentistry feels more creative, like reshaping or enhancing smiles in ways that look natural. It could be correcting shape, fixing alignment, or just improving shade… small changes that make big diffrence in confidence. I dont chase fake perfection, I try to give people smiles that fit them. Sometimes it take more conversations than procedures, listening to what they actually want.
Together these two areas keep me balanced between science and art. One part is about precision and control, the other about design and empathy. At the end it all comes down to comfort and trust, making sure the patient feel safe in chair and happy when they leave. |
Achievements: | I am proud to have completed CC in implant dentistry and also in Endodontics, both of which shaped how I handle patient cases now. Implant dentistry taught me the precision needed for long term tooth replacement, the kind that feels natural not forced. Endodontics on the other hand gave me depth in root canal therapy, working carefully with details inside tooth structure. These courses wasn’t just certificates, they kinda pushed me into seeing dentistry as balance of skill + patient trust. |
I am a dentist who somehow ended up loving two things the most—root canal treatments and aesthetic dentistry. Sounds like an odd pair maybe, but for me they go hand in hand. One takes away pain, the other gives back confidence. RCTs used to scare me too when i was a student, coz patients often walk in terrified, but I’ve learnt to make them almost painless, quick, and actually reassuring. It’s not about just filling canals, it’s about saving a tooth that someone thought they were gonna lose. That moment when they bite down later without pain—kinda makes the long hours worth it. On the other side, cosmetic dentistry feels like art more than science some days. Subtle changes in alignment, shape, shade… all those little tweaks can transform the way someone sees themselves in the mirror. I focus a lot on natural results, nothing too fake or forced. It’s tricky at times—one smile design might look good clinically but the patient just doesn’t feel it’s them. That’s when you realize dentistry isn’t just about teeth, it’s about listening. I keep patient comfort at the center, coz what’s the point of technical skills if the person leaves anxious or unsatisfied. Whether it’s explaining options, walking them through the procedure, or adding those small touches like checking bite carefully after an RCT—I make sure they feel cared for, not rushed. And honestly, I do push myself to keep improving. Reading journals, watching cases, tweaking techniques—it keeps me grounded that there’s always something more to learn. Over time I’ve realised dentistry is less about fixing problems and more about restoring a sense of normalcy, dignity even. Helping someone smile again without covering their mouth, or letting them enjoy food without wincing, that’s where the satisfaction hits. I wouldn’t call myself perfect, there are mistakes I’ve made, cases I wish had gone smoother, but those are the things that shaped me too. Every patient teaches you something if you pay attention.