Dr. Bhupesh Garg
Experience: | 13 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University Of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | MCh (Master of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am a vascular and endovascular surgeon, also working a lot with diabetic foot care, and over the years I came to handle a really wide range of vascular problems. My work goes from simple varicose vein procedures like EVLT, RFA, venaseal or sclerotherapy to more complex stuff like arterial bypass, angioplasty or hybrid endovascular repairs. I spend time on dialysis access too – AV fistulas, grafts, permcath insertion, even fistula angioplasty when things dont work as planned.
Many of my patients need central or peripheral venous access, like chemo ports or PICC lines, and here precision really matters. On arterial side I treat PAD with thrombectomy, stenting, endarterectomy, sometimes open bypass with vein graft. Trauma and emergency vascular repair is another area where fast judgement counts. Stroke prevention by carotid endarterectomy or stenting, aneurysm management with EVAR/TEVAR or open repair, all fall in my scope.
I also work in venous interventions like IVC filters, balloon venoplasty, treatment for DVT and pulmonary embolism using thrombolysis or suction devices. Vascular malformations I treat with embolization, sclerotherapy or excision. Imaging and duplex scanning help me plan accurately.
What keeps me grounded is the diabetic foot & chronic wound care part – limb salvage, ulcer management, these are very personal for patients and outcomes matter huge. Alongside, I also manage vascular medicine conditions like Buerger’s disease, vasculitis, atherosclerosis. Sometimes bleeding control procedures like uterine or bronchial artery embolization, and visceral artery interventions on renal, SMA, or celiac artery also come my way.
It sound like a lot, and honestly yes, vascular surgery is vast. But for me the aim stays simple – restore circulation, prevent complications, and keep patients mobile and safe. |
Achievements: | I am a life time member of VSI, and for me it’s not just a title but a way to stay connected with the evolving field of vascular surgery. Being part of this society gives me constant access to updated guidelines, peer discussions, workshops and academic forums where new techniques are debated and old methods are questioned. Membership keep me in loop with research and also allows me to contribute when needed, whether its sharing my own expereince or learning from colleagus across india and abroad. |
I am working in the field of vascular and endovascular surgery, right now as an Associate Consultant at Sir Ganga Ram Hospital in New Delhi. Since Dec 2023 I had the chance to handle a wide range of cases here, from complex arterial disease to venous disorders, sometimes emergency work where every second counts, sometimes long detailed procedures where patience and precision are key. Each case remind me how delicate blood vessels are, and how restoring flow changes the whole outcome for a patient. Before this role, I was with the Kidney Transplant Unit at Fortis Hospital, Mohali during 2019–2020 as a Senior Resident. That exposure taught me not only the surgical technique but also the multidisciplinary teamwork it takes for transplant patients to do well post-op. Balancing immunology, infection risks, and surgical recovery was a strong learning curve. In the same year I also worked at Gian Sagar Medical College, Punjab in General Surgery as a Senior Resident, where the variety was massive – hernia, appendicitis, trauma, soft tissue cases, and everything that walks into a surgical unit. Across these years I realised surgery is not just about technical expertise, its also about clear thinking under pressure, good communication with patients and their families, and continous learning. Vascular work in particular keeps me grounded because it needs both open surgical skills and endovascular techniques, sometimes together in hybrid procedures. I see my journey not as separate jobs but a flow of experiences that connect – general surgery gave me the base, transplant work added depth in precision and care, and now vascular and endovascular surgery brings me the platform to apply both with focus. Even today, when I step into OT, I carry some doubts and curiosity, that mix of confidence and caution which I feel is important. Medicine is dynamic, every case is slightly diferent, and every patient has a story that deserves full attention. For me, that’s what keeps the work meaningful.