Dr. Descentra
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Sanjay Gandhi Hospital |
Academic degree: | MD (Doctor of Medicine) |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into infertility and general gynac stuff, though honestly infertility just pulls me in deeper each time — it’s not just medicine, it’s people’s hopes packed into numbers and scans and meds that don’t always behave. I manage both male and female infertility workups, stimulation protocols, ovulation tracking, IUI planning etc. Some days are full of scan-to-scan anxiety, other days you're explaining why periods are irregular again even when everything “looked normal.”
My base is gynaecology, of course. From managing PCOS, endometriosis, fibroids to basic contraception queries and UTI cases—those regular OPDs kinda keep me grounded. I also deal with menstrual disorders and early pregnancy care a lot. Each patient needs diff. amount of time, patience and sometimes just... silence, like not rushing into giving advice too quick.
And yeah, I do rely heavily on evidence, but sometimes gut too — like when everything textbook looks fine and still something feels off, I pause and check again. |
Achievements: | I am done with a Fellowship in IVF—yeah, that phase really pushed me into the deep end of reproductive medicine. Learnt how delicate each step is, like one hormone shift can mess up everything! From stimulation protocols to embryo transfers, it was like living inside a lab but with real people waiting outside. That one year changed how I see fertility care. It’s not just science... it's also timing, tiny decisions and lot of waiting. Not always perfect but every cycle teaches somethng new. |
I am a gynecologist who kinda took the long road—MBBS, then DGO, then DNB in Obstetrics & Gynecology. Somewhere in between, I realised that just the basics weren’t enough, I needed more depth if I really wanted to help couples struggling with fertility stuff, hormonal imbalances, PCOD, etc. That’s what pushed me to go for a fellowship in Reproductive Medicine down in Kerala. It was hands-on, and honestly—tough in a good way. You’re not just reading, you’re dealing with real people trying for years, sometimes with no clear answers. Later I went on to do a fellowship in Endoscopy from Delhi, which honestly changed how I think about surgical approach. Minimal access isn’t just about tiny cuts—it’s about precision, time-saving, and less trauma for the patient. I use endoscopy now even for basic diagnostic cases, and it helps pick things up that we’d easily miss with routine exams. My core areas? Anything and everything under the gynac-obs umbrella, but I do lean a lot toward fertility cases and advanced procedures. I don’t just follow standard protocols blindly—sometimes they work, sometimes not. Every patient needs a slightly tweaked approach, and that’s where my mix of training helps. I try to explain as much as I can during consults, sometimes in broken flow (lol patients are patient with me) but always from a real place. Just want them to feel less confused and more in-control of their own case. I’m still learning, still adapting. New protocols, new drugs, sometimes old ones that still work better than new hypey ones. But yeah, this mix of clinical plus surgical plus fertility has become my comfort zone now.