Dr. Gautam
Experience: | 7 years |
Education: | JNMC |
Academic degree: | MS (Master Of Surgrey) |
Area of specialization: | I am an orthopedic surgeon mostly focused on trauma care, joint replacemnt and arthroscopy—things that break, wear out or twist in ways they shouldn’t. Based in Udaipur right now, but my roots are from places like PGIMS Rohtak where I taught as Assistant Prof and BSA Hospital Delhi where I learnt the kind of fast-paced ortho you can’t really prepare for. My clinical work’s pretty hands-on—fractures, dislocations, total knees n hips, even minimal access scopes when needed.
I try to look at the joint or injury not just like a problem to “fix” but something that actually affects someone’s work, sleep, their daily walk... all of it. Evidence-based decisions matter, but I also believe in watching, asking, listening—to patients more than protocols. That balance helps.
Always been into academics too, maybe from my teaching days. Read a lot, try to keep up with the new stuff. Techniques change, materials too, but surgical basics still hold—be precise, be patient, and know when not to cut. |
Achievements: | I am someone who kinda still remembers that weird mix of tension and coffee during the postgrad quiz in 2022—won that one, still feels good tbh. Did my MBBS and MS in Orthopedics, then worked as Senior Resident at BSA Hosp Delhi and PGIMS Rohtak. Later, took on the role of Assistant Prof at PGIMS which really changed how I saw teaching vs doing. Those years shaped a lot of how I approach ortho now, both in OT and in the way I look at clinical judgement, not just protocols. |
I am an orthopedic surgeon mostly into trauma & joint replacement—knees, hips, fractures, implants, the usual messy stuff. Did my MS in orthopedics and somewhere along the way picked up a Diploma in Sports Medicine from FIFA... yeah that FIFA, the football guys, not a joke. That part opened up another side of ortho for me—sports injuries, ligament tears, athlete rehab, and things that move real fast and break real weird. Worked as Asst Prof at PGIMS Rohtak earlier. PG teaching, ward rounds, some crazy OPDs… those days were hectic but kinda solidified my basics. Also spent time as Senior Resident at BSA Hospital Delhi—lot of emergencies, late-night ORs, polytraumas, and the classic ortho chaos where you’re always short on time n tools both. But you learn quick in those setups. You have to. These days I focus mostly on trauma surgery and joint replacement. I try to mix evidence-based practice with what real patients actually go through. Like someone’s knee doesn’t care what the textbook says, it just hurts when they climb stairs. That’s the thing I keep in mind before jumping into decisions—pain isn't always visible on scans. Surgery isn’t always the answer either. I like doing things clean n precise. Joint replacements I treat almost like mechanical work—angles, alignments, pressure points—if you get them wrong by even 2mm, patient knows it before you do. At the same time, trauma work forces you to improvise. You can plan 10 steps and still get surprised in the 3rd one. That unpredictability keeps me sharp. Not here to show off fancy titles, just trying to get people back on their feet—walking, running, living like they used to before injury happened. That’s all really. One good knee at a time.