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

Dr. Ajay Kambariya

Dr. Ajay Kambariya
I am working in vraj hospital critical care and icu , jam-khambhaliya, gujarat
Doctor information
Experience:
4 years
Education:
GRMSU
Academic degree:
MD (Doctor of Medicine)
Area of specialization:
I am an MD in medicine and kinda always drawn to the full-body puzzle type of cases. Like not just focusing on one system or organ but seeing how everything connects—or messes with each other when stuff goes wrong. Internal medicine’s all about that. You get someone with fever, fatigue, rash, maybe borderline sugar and odd labs... and it’s your job to untangle the mess. I actually enjoy that part, weirdly. I deal with all sorts of conditions—diabetes, hypertension, thyroid stuff, infections, metabolic imbalances, liver probs, you name it. Chronic issues too, where you don’t “cure” them but manage and guide. That part’s just as important imo. I try not to rush things, sometimes ppl just want quick answers but in medicine, taking time actually helps. Listening properly. Checking old reports. Asking small questions that others skip. It’s not flashy but it works. Sometimes it’s frustrating, yeah. Like when symptoms don’t line up or response to meds is all over the place. But you just keep looking. Keep learning too—guidelines shift, new drugs drop, older protocols get updated. You gotta stay in loop or you fall behind fast. Internal medicine doesn’t really let you coast, which maybe why I stick with it. Keeps you sharp. Keeps you humble too.
Achievements:
I am someone who’s always kinda curious about patterns in disease and what causes what. I wrote two publications focused on infectious disease—both were based on real cases and a bunch of late-night reading, rounds, re-checking lab values (and yeah, rewriting drafts more times than I wanna admit). One looked at uncommon bacterial resistance trends, the other more about clinical challenges in early diagnosis. Didn’t think they’d get published tbh, but they did... and that felt pretty solid.

I am a critical care doctor who’s spent the last 4 yrs working in a private hospital—mainly inside the ICU where honestly every minute counts. Working in that space kinda changes how you see medicine, and maybe even life? I mean, you’re not just treating patients, you're stabilizing crises, managing vents, adjusting meds by the hour (sometimes by the minute) and yeah, constantly watching vitals like a hawk. Most days were unpredictable. You walk in expecting one thing, next thing you're managing multi-organ failure or sudden drop in saturation—things shift fast in intensive care. I’ve handled everything from sepsis, acute MI, CVA, post-surgical complications to dengue shock and poisoning cases. There’s this constant need to stay alert, you can’t zone out even for a sec—one missed sign and you’re playing catch-up. I worked with a solid team of nurses, interns, duty docs and yeah, even families who were sometimes scared, confused or just trying to make sense of things. Communication mattered as much as the treatment. Explaining complex stuff without scaring ppl...not easy. But I tried my best to make sure they understood what was happening to their loved one and what we were doing to help. Protocols were tight—ventilation strategies, sedation plans, infection control, ABG corrections, all of it. I also had to take rounds outside ICU too sometimes, for cross-consults and followups. But ICU was always the main focus. I wouldn’t call it easy, tbh it’s draining at times. But when a patient walks out of that unit after being on life support for days... you just feel quiet for a sec. Not proud, not heroic, just... relief maybe? This phase taught me a lot—not just about medicine but also about limits, instinct, and staying calm when your brain’s screaming. I'm still learning—cause in critical care there’s always smth new around the corner.