Dr. Rinaldo
Experience: | 14 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University Of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | MCh (Master of Surgery) |
Area of specialization: | I am trained in MCh Urology and for me this field is about dealing with some of the most precise and demanding aspects of surgery. Urology is not just kidney stones or prostate probs—it’s also cancers, reconstructive cases, urinary tract disorders, endoscopic procedures, and long-term follow up care. The work can shift fast, one moment you’re doing an emergency for obstruction, next you’re planning a complex case with imaging, labs, counseling all tied together.
I handle procedures like endourology, prostate surgeries, stone disease management, reconstructive techniques and I keep a strong focus on patient comfort + outcomes. Urology needs patience, cause patients often come with chronic symptoms, repeated infections, or fears around surgery. I try to explain each option, risks, and why one path may fit better than another.
What I really value in this specialization is the mix of clinical problem solving and fine surgical skill. Every case feels like a balance between science and judgement. And yeah, sometimes it’s frustrating when recovery isn’t linear, or results take longer, but that’s part of the reality. For me, MCh Urology is about giving patients back function, dignity, and quality of life in ways that truly matter. |
Achievements: | I am experienced in laser surgeries, mainly for urinary stones and prostate cases, and that’s an area I’ve put a lot of focus into. Using laser tech makes the procedures more precise, less invasive, and honestly patients recover faster compared to older methods. Over time I got comfortable handling both simple and complicated cases—whether it’s large renal calculi or prostate enlargement causing obstruction. This skill really became one of my key strengths in urology practice, and I keep refining it with each case. |
I am a doctor who started my journey at Stanley Medical College, Chennai—a place that really shaped the base of my clinical training. Those early yrs in govt setup taught me the value of discipline, patience, and dealing with high patient load day after day. After that I moved to AIIMS, New Delhi, where I completed my senior residency. AIIMS was intense, no sugar coating. The exposure there pushed me to think sharper, manage complex cases, and honestly learn how to stay steady when things go wrong at 3am in the ward. Later I pursued urology training at IMS, BHU, Varanasi. That step was kinda natural for me, cause I always leaned towards surgical branches and the fine balance of precision + long-term patient outcomes in urology just clicked. The training covered everything—endoscopic work, stone disease management, prostate issues, reconstructive urology, uro-oncology basics. It was hands-on, rigorous, sometimes overwhelming but definitely worth it. My approach now is rooted in all of that—broad clinical exposure, strong residency foundation, and specialized focus in urology. I see patient care as more than just performing procedures. It’s about explaining options clearly, respecting their worries, and making treatment paths that balance science with individual needs. Working across different institutions also taught me the value of teamwork. Nurses, juniors, seniors, support staff—everyone plays a role in outcomes. Communication matters just as much as technical skills. I still think of myself as a learner. Medicine never really stops changing and urology keeps throwing up new challenges—whether it’s minimally invasive procedures, advances in imaging, or changing patterns of disease. What keeps me going is knowing that each patient interaction is a chance to apply all this training in a way that actually improves their life.