Dr Goyal is a Consultant Cosmetic Dermatologist & Hair Specialist at Bombay Hospital, Lilavati Hospital & Juvenis. He is an internationally trained dermatologist, first and only dermatologist in Mumbai to do so.
Lilavati Hospital and Research Centre, Bombay Hospital
Trained in India, UK and USA. First Dermatosurgeon in India specialising in Skin surgery, Hair Transplant surgery and Lipobodysculpting. He has invented a novel Triple Combination injection for Keloids and Hypertrophic scars
Member of the Society of Cosmetic Scientists. Course Director of Lipo Body Sculpting for DASIL. Heads a team of International Masters of Lipo Body Sculpting which trains Dermatologist across the world in the nuances of this procedure.
He became a Fellow of the American Academy of Dermatology and American Society for Dermatologic Surgery (First Indian Dermatologist). He has acquired the Diploma in Cosmetic Science from the Society of Cosmetic Scientists, UK (First Indian Dermatologist). Lipobodysculpting is now being offered for the first time in India by Dr Nilesh N Goyal.
Dr Goyal graduated from Topiwala National Medical College and BYL Nair Hospital, Bombay Central, Mumbai. He took up dermatology as a postgraduate specialization at Lokmanya Tilak Municipal Medical College & Hospital, Sion. He has done his MRCP UK from the Royal College of Physicians, London. He took up dermatology as a specialization at Royal Liverpool & Broadgreen University Hospitals, Liverpool, UK. He has done his fellowship in Cosmetic Dermatology under Dr Leslie Baumann from the University of Miami, Florida, USA . He returned back to Toronto, Canada to get trained in Hair Restoration Surgery under Dr Robert Jones who is a practicing Hair Surgeon for the last 15 years. He has also trained in Lipo Body Sculpting under Dr Jeffrey Klein at San Juan Capistrano near Los Angeles, USA.
English, Hindi
Dermatology is the branch of Internal Medicine concerned with the health of the skin, hair, and nails. Dermatologists are medical physicians with the highest training and expertise in this field, and they usually combine several activities like seeing patients in public hospital clinics and/or in private practices, teaching, acting as consultants to other specialists, and delving into clinical or basic research. Dermatologists must have expertise in basic sciences including pathology, microbiology, biochemistry, physics, endocrinology, and physiology. As skin diseases are often associated with internal conditions, they must be familiar with all the other medical specialties.
Yes, most forms of skin cancers such as basal and squamous cell cancers as well as pre-cancers are treated by dermatologists. If the cancer is more advanced and has spread to other parts of the body, you may be treated by another type of doctors, such as a surgical oncologist, medical oncologist or a radiation oncologist.
You should visit a dermatologist when you spot a mole that has irregular borders or is changing its shape or size. Moles, freckles, or birthmarks are fairly common. But there is a serious possibility that they could alter over time. A change in a mole or growth on the body that’s itchy or bleeds or doesn’t heal on its own is usually the first sign of skin cancer.
You should visit your dermatologist when you’re losing more hair than usual or when you notice a bald spot. While it’s natural to lose a few hairs here and there, widening part, a growing bald spot, or significant shedding could be signs of something more serious.
You should visit your dermatologist have rough, scaly patches on your scalp, elbows, lower back, or knees. This condition is oftentimes psoriasis, which is caused by an autoimmune disorder where the immune system sends signals that tell skin cells to grow too quickly.
You have itchy, flaky skin that could be more than a seasonal side effect.
You should see a doctor if you have a painful, cystic pimple, which is the result of stress, hormonal fluctuations, and bacteria that is much harder to control.
It helps diagnose fungal infections and scabies.
To distinguish hypopigmentation from depigmentation
To diagnose and define the extent of lesions
To diagnose viral diseases, such as herpes simplex and herpes zoster.
To decide whether erythema in a lesion is due to blood within superficial vessels.
Diascopy can also help identify sarcoid skin lesions.
Acne, Bites, Benign Tumors, Bullous Diseases, Dermatitis, Drug Rash, Hair Diseases, Infections, Inherited Conditions, Papulosquamous, Pigment Disorders, Pre-Cancerous Lesions, Skin Cancer, Erythema Multiforme, Erythema Nodsum, Erythroderma, Granuloma Annulare, Hemangiomas, Hyperhidrosis (Excessive Sweating), Keloids, Keratosis Pilaris, Lichen Sclerosis et Atrophicus, Lichen Simplex Chronicus, Photodamage, Pityriasis Rosea, Scars, Spider Veins, Staphylococcal Scalded Skin, Stevens-Johnson Syndrome, Toxic Epidermal Necrolysis, Urticaria (hives), and Vasculitis, Wrinkles (fine and deep).