Dr. Mohammad Shah Kamal

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Dr. Mohammad Shah Kamal is a Urology, General & Laparoscopic Surgery specialist with 16+ years’ experience. Chamber: Popular Diagnostic Centre, Cumilla (2:30 PM–7:00 PM). Serial: +8801759510500.
Dr. Md. Shah Kamal urologist in Cumilla

Dr. Mohammad Shah Kamal – Urology Specialist in Cumilla/Comilla (General & Laparoscopic Surgeon)

Quick appointment

  • Doctor: Dr. Mohammad Shah Kamal
  • Specialty: Urology + General Surgery + Laparoscopic Surgery
  • Key focus: Kidney, ureter, bladder, prostate, male urology (male sexual organs), adrenal gland-related urology care
  • Designation: Consultant, Department of Urology
  • Workplace: Bangladesh Medical University (BMU), Dhaka (often remembered by patients as Ex: PG Hospital / older BSMMU references)
  • Experience: 16+ years
  • BMDC Registration: A 58412

Chamber (Cumilla)

  • Clinic: Popular Diagnostic Centre, Cumilla
  • Address: House # 57, Laksam Road, Ramghat, Kandirpar, Cumilla
  • Visiting Hours: 2:30 PM – 7:00 PM
  • Serial / Appointment: +880 1759-510500

One-line guidance (voice search style): If you’re searching “kidney stone doctor in Cumilla/Comilla”, “prostate specialist Cumilla”, or “peshab-e jala doctor”, you usually need the Urology department.

Bangla voice keywords (patients often say): “কুমিল্লায় ইউরোলজি ডাক্তার”, “কিডনির পাথর ডাক্তার কুমিল্লা”, “প্রোস্টেট সমস্যা ডাক্তার”, “প্রস্রাবে জ্বালা ডাক্তার”

Patient tip (Bangladesh): “Serial” timing can change due to operation schedules, emergencies, or hospital duties. Calling before you start your journey saves time and travel stress.

About Dr. Mohammad Shah Kamal

Dr. Mohammad Shah Kamal is a General, Laparoscopic & Urology Specialist with 16+ years of experience. He supports patients with common and complex urology problems—especially those related to kidney stones, urinary symptoms, prostate enlargement, urine blockage, and male urology concerns.

In Cumilla and nearby areas, urology symptoms are often described in simple everyday language:

  • Kidney te pathor” (kidney stone)
  • Peshab-e jala / peshab-e koshto” (burning urine / painful urination)
  • Bar bar peshab” (frequent urination)
  • Peshab-er dhara kom / weak flow” (weak stream)
  • Prostate barse” (enlarged prostate)

Urology focuses on the urinary tract (kidney → ureter → bladder → urethra) and also covers male reproductive organs. Dr. Shah Kamal’s training in both surgery and urology helps patients who may need step-by-step evaluation—from tests and medicines to safe surgical planning when required.

At a glance: what patients commonly consult for

Urology (Kidney–Urine–Prostate)

  • Kidney stone and ureter stone pain
  • Burning urination and repeated urinary infection-type symptoms
  • Blood in urine (visible or found on tests)
  • Frequent urination, urgency, “incomplete emptying” feeling
  • Weak urine stream or straining
  • Prostate symptoms (BPH/LUTS) in middle-aged and older men
  • Urinary blockage and urinary retention risk assessment

Surgery & Laparoscopic (when appropriate)

  • Surgical evaluation and planning
  • Guidance on minimally invasive/laparoscopic approaches when suitable
  • Referral coordination for procedures/tests when needed

Qualifications & professional training (patient-friendly explanation)

Dr. Mohammad. Shah Kamal’s qualifications reflect both broad surgical grounding and dedicated urology specialization:

  • MBBS – Primary medical degree
  • BCS (Health) – Government health cadre experience
  • MCPS (Surgery) – Postgraduate training in surgery
  • FCPS (Surgery) – Advanced specialist qualification in surgery
  • MS (Urology) – Dedicated specialist training in urology

Why this matters for you:

  • Strong foundation for accurate decision-making in surgical and urology cases
  • Better ability to explain whether you need medicine, follow-up, lifestyle changes, or a procedure
  • Safer planning for patients with long-term conditions (e.g., diabetes, high blood pressure) who may need extra care around treatment

Conditions and symptoms a urologist usually treats (easy checklist)

1) Kidney stone / ureter stone

Common symptoms include:

  • Sudden severe pain in the side/back (often moving to lower abdomen/groin)
  • Nausea/vomiting during pain episodes
  • Burning urination or frequent urination
  • Blood in urine (sometimes visible)

Why follow-up matters: Even after pain goes away or a stone passes, stone disease can return without prevention and monitoring. Many patients in Bangladesh experience repeat attacks because they stop follow-up once the pain is gone.

Helpful BHA page for Cumilla patients: Cumilla Urology / Kidney Surgery Doctors List (Kidney stone, urine & prostate care)

2) Burning urine, recurrent UTI-type symptoms, and bladder irritation

Patients commonly report:

  • Burning during urination
  • Lower abdominal discomfort
  • Strong smell or cloudy urine
  • Frequent urge to urinate

If symptoms keep returning, doctors may look for root causes such as:

  • Hidden stones
  • Incomplete emptying due to blockage
  • Prostate-related obstruction (in men)
  • Urethral narrowing/stricture

Important safety note (Bangladesh): Avoid taking antibiotics repeatedly without prescription. Wrong antibiotics or incomplete courses can worsen resistance and delay proper diagnosis.

Many men notice symptoms gradually:

  • Weak stream
  • Taking time to start urination
  • Dribbling after urination
  • Waking up at night to urinate
  • Feeling the bladder isn’t empty

Early evaluation helps prevent complications like repeated infections, bladder stone formation, and sudden urine retention.

4) Blood in urine (hematuria)

Blood in urine is a warning sign. It may be due to infection, stones, prostate issues, or other causes. If you see visible blood or tests show blood repeatedly, it’s best to consult a doctor promptly.

5) Urinary blockage / urinary retention risk

Blockage may happen due to stones, prostate enlargement, or scarring/narrowing of the urine passage. Proper evaluation protects kidney function and reduces emergency risk.

6) Male urology & sexual health concerns

Patients may feel shy, but these are common medical issues:

  • Erectile difficulties
  • Pain or swelling in male organs
  • Urinary symptoms affecting sexual life

A private, respectful consultation helps identify causes and next steps.

When should you see a urology specialist (don’t delay)

Book an appointment soon if you have:

  • Repeated kidney stone pain or stone history
  • Burning urination that keeps returning
  • Frequent urination (especially at night)
  • Weak urine flow, straining, or dribbling
  • Persistent lower abdominal pain with urinary symptoms

Go for urgent/emergency care if you have:

  • Cannot pass urine at all (acute urinary retention)
  • Fever with shivering plus urinary pain (possible serious infection)
  • Severe flank pain with vomiting and dehydration
  • Visible blood in urine with clots, or blood with severe pain

What happens at the first visit (simple and clear)

Most urology consultations follow a step-by-step approach.

1) History and symptom review

You may be asked:

  • Where the pain starts and where it moves
  • How long symptoms last and what triggers them
  • Any past stones, operations, or admissions
  • Existing conditions like diabetes or blood pressure and current medicines

2) Examination (respectful and private)

A focused exam helps decide which tests are needed. Any sensitive examination is done with privacy and professionalism.

3) Common tests doctors advise

Depending on symptoms:

  • Urine routine examination (R/E) and sometimes urine culture
  • Blood tests (kidney function if needed)
  • Ultrasound KUB (kidney–ureter–bladder) or other imaging as required

4) Treatment plan + follow-up

Your plan may include:

  • Medicines for pain relief, infection (if confirmed), or urinary symptoms
  • Lifestyle guidance (water intake, diet, prevention)
  • Procedure/surgical referral when tests show stones, obstruction, or other conditions needing intervention

Prevention guidance (Bangladesh context)

For kidney stone-prone patients

Prevention is usually about daily habits:

  • Drink enough water so urine stays light/pale
  • Don’t delay urination for long periods
  • Reduce extra salt in meals (salt increases stone risk in many patients)
  • Follow up when stones repeat—don’t rely only on painkillers

For UTI-prone patients (especially women)

Simple practices help reduce recurrence:

  • Regular water intake
  • Don’t hold urine for long hours
  • Hygiene practices (front-to-back wiping)
  • Seek care early instead of waiting weeks

Why many patients prefer a doctor with both surgery & urology training

In Bangladesh, patients often first visit a general physician for urinary symptoms—and that is a good start. But a specialist is helpful when:

  • Symptoms suggest stone, obstruction, or repeated recurrence
  • Prostate symptoms are increasing
  • Infections keep returning and tests suggest an underlying cause
  • Imaging shows swelling, stones, or narrowing

Dr. Shah Kamal’s combined experience in surgery + urology supports careful diagnosis and safer planning.

Chamber information & booking (Cumilla)

Travel tip: If you are coming from outside Cumilla (e.g., Chandina, Daudkandi, Burichang, Brahmanpara, Muradnagar), try to arrive early—serial lists may close once the schedule is full.

BMDC registration verification (patient safety)

BMDC registration is a key trust marker for patients.

  • BMDC Registration: A 58412

FAQs

Which doctor should I see in Cumilla for kidney stone pain?

For suspected kidney/ureter stone (sharp side or back pain that may move to the lower abdomen/groin, sometimes nausea or blood in urine), you should consult a urology specialist. Dr. Md. Shah Kamal provides urology evaluation at Popular Diagnostic Centre, Cumilla.

What symptoms suggest a prostate problem?

Common signs include weak urine stream, difficulty starting urine, dribbling, straining, waking up at night to urinate, and a feeling that the bladder is not empty. If symptoms are increasing, a urology consultation is recommended.

Burning during urination—should I see a urologist?

If it’s mild and first-time, many patients start with a general doctor. But if burning keeps returning, or you have fever, blood in urine, flank pain, or weak urine flow, it’s better to see a urologist to check for stones, blockage, or recurrent infection causes.

Is blood in urine serious?

Blood in urine is a warning sign and should not be ignored. It may happen due to infection, stones, prostate issues, or other causes. If you see visible blood (red/pink urine) or blood appears repeatedly on tests, consult a doctor promptly.

When is kidney stone pain an emergency?

Go to urgent care if you have severe pain with vomiting, fever with chills, cannot pass urine, or feel very weak/dehydrated. These situations may need immediate hospital-based management.

Can urinary problems improve without surgery?

Yes. Many urinary problems improve with medicine, hydration guidance, and follow-up, depending on the cause. Procedures or surgery are considered when tests show stones, obstruction, or other conditions where medicines won’t help enough.

What tests are commonly needed for kidney/urine/prostate problems?

Doctors often advise:

  • Urine R/E and sometimes urine culture
  • Blood tests (kidney function if needed)
  • Ultrasound KUB (kidney–ureter–bladder)
    Other imaging may be suggested depending on symptoms.

Can I discuss male sexual health problems with a urologist?

Yes. Urology clinics handle these concerns professionally and privately. If sexual problems occur with urinary symptoms, diabetes, blood pressure issues, stress, or prostate symptoms, a urology consultation can help plan evaluation and next steps.

What should I bring to my first appointment?

Bring previous reports (ultrasound/CT, urine tests, blood tests), a list of current medicines, any operation history, and past discharge papers. This helps faster decision-making and avoids repeating unnecessary tests.

Call +880 1759-510500 to take serial/appointment and confirm the visiting hours (2:30 PM – 7:00 PM). If you’re coming from outside Cumilla, calling first can reduce waiting.

Use these pages to compare specialists and services quickly:

Final reminder for patients

If you’re dealing with kidney stone pain, burning urination, weak urine flow, night-time urination, or prostate symptoms, early evaluation is safer than waiting until it becomes an emergency.

Book your serial

  • Popular Diagnostic Centre, Cumilla
  • Visiting time: 2:30 PM – 7:00 PM
  • Call: +880 1759-510500
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