AskDocDoc
/
/
Dr. Yogesh Jain
FREE! Ask a Doctor — 24/7, 100% Anonymously
Get expert answers anytime. No sign-up needed.

Dr. Yogesh Jain

Dr. Yogesh Jain
Lucknow
Doctor information
Experience:
11 years
Education:
IMS BHU
Academic degree:
MS (Master Of Surgrey)
Area of specialization:
I am mainly into sports injuries, joint replacements and yeah, the whole range of general orthopaedic stuff too. I deal a lot with ACL tears, meniscus repairs, shoulder dislocations—basically the kind of injuries that sideline people from their routines. I like digging into movement issues n figuring out what exactly’s not working, not just patching things up. In joint replacements, I focus mostly on knees and hips… and trust me, no two surgeries are same, every joint has it's own story. I try keeping up with newer minimally-invasive methods, but I don't blindly follow trends unless they really help recovery. And general ortho? That’s the backbone of everything honestly. Whether it’s fracture management, chronic joint pain or alignment issues—I've seen how even small corrections can change lives. I'm not just looking to operate. I listen. Test. Rethink if needed. Some days are straigtforward, others messy. But that’s what makes it all real.
Achievements:
I am lucky to have done fellowships in sports injury at few places that honestly changed how I look at joints n movement. Started with Centre Orthopédique Santy in Lyon—France was a bit overwhelming at first but the exposure was crazy good. Then trained at Max Saket, Ganga Hospital in Coimbatore, and Deenanath Mangeshkar hospital Pune. Each place added smth diff… techniques, perspective, even the way patients talk abt pain. All that shaped how I treat today, and I still go back to those learnings.

I am an orthopaedic surgeon with around 10 years in the field, and honestly, the more I work the more I realise how much there’s always to learn. My main focus areas are joint replacement, sports injuries, and general orthopaedics... but I’ve always found myself especially drawn toward helping active people get back on their feet (literally) after injuries—whether it’s a torn ACL or long-standing shoulder pain that just doesn’t quit. My early training came from some of the top medical institutes in India—yeah, the environment was intense but also kinda shaped my whole approach. I did my fellowships and later took on senior residency roles, which gave me the kind of academic and practical mix that, looking back, was really valuable. Those years really sharpened my skills with both high-volume trauma cases and more planned surgeries. For the past 6 years I’ve been working as a Consultant in a corporate hospital setup, where my practice mostly revolves around joint replacements and sports med cases. And when I say replacements, I mean everything from total hip and knee to complex revisions that don’t always follow the textbook. In sports medicine, I’ve managed both surgical and non-surgical treatment for ligament tears, meniscal injuries, rotator cuff issues etc. depending on what works best for each person. I’m not the kind of guy who rushes into surgery either—sometimes people expect that, but honestly I believe treatment planning has to be deeply patient-centered. Sometimes rehab and patience do more than a scalpel can. But when surgery is needed, I try to make sure the latest minimally-invasive techniques are used... precision matters, and I’ve seen how much recovery can change just by doing things in a slightly better way. Some days the work gets hectic. But then I remember someone who ran again after years, or went back to the gym without fear, and I kinda feel like okay yeah this all makes sense.