Skip to main content
x
A BME Kind of Love
Posted February 14, 2025

 

Tushar and Mattie Agarwal enjoy traveling together.

 

 

Georgia Tech has not only helped students discover their careers but also played cupid for many. That was the case for Tushar and Mattie Agarwal, two ambitious graduate students of the Master of Biomedical Innovation and Development (MBID) in the Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering.

The two biomedical engineers began their love journey as friends and classmates collaborating on a urology kidney stone prevention device as part of the MBID program.

The one-year intensive program educates students on the lifecycle of medical device development—including research and development, clinical trials, quality assurance, and manufacturing—and prepares them for careers in global product launch.

Free time between classes was spent exploring the city of Atlanta and embracing college life at Tech, including taking part in student activities and catching Yellowjacket football and basketball games. 

“Through study sessions, case observations, product pitches, and shared goals, our friendship became something more meaningful," Tushar says.

So, the two took the leap and made it official.

 

Mattie (top row, second from right) and Tushar (bottom row, far left) pose with their MBID cohort. 

The couple attend a Georgia Tech football game.

 

The couple graduated in 2018. That time proved to be a test of their relationship. Mattie moved back to her hometown of St. Louis, MO, to pursue a career with Boston Scientific in their cardiac rhythm management division. While Tushar relocated to Columbia, SC, to work at PricewaterhouseCoopers in healthcare strategy consulting.

“Starting out in a new city with a new job without your better half was tough,” Tushar says. “We always made an effort to talk to each other daily, even if it was for five minutes, to catch up on each other’s highlights and give each other advice when needed.”

For Mattie, it was sometimes difficult to celebrate personal and professional milestones without Tushar. Facetime sessions and frequent trips between cities helped.

“The hardest part was not being with each other to celebrate the wins and successes! Even doing things with friends and family, it always felt like a piece was missing,” Mattie says. “One of my favorite memories of that time was when Tushar found out he got a job in the Bay Area—he immediately booked a flight to come celebrate with me that very weekend.”

 

Tushar and Mattie blended cultures with their traditional Indian wedding.

A classic wedding pic of the couple with their dog Louie.

 

The long-distance was short-lived thanks to an opportunity in San Francisco where Tushar and Mattie found work. Tushar landed a job at Auris Health (now Johnson & Johnson Med Tech) in the Bay Area—the heart of tech and robotics—and Mattie joined him soon after. 

In 2021, Tushar made things official with a sunrise proposal at Yosemite, surrounded by majestic redwoods and a beautiful mountain vista. They remember their wedding being a beautiful blend of both of their cultures, combining a traditional white dress wedding with an Indian wedding.

The couple also added a new member to their family—their furbaby, Louie.

“His intelligence and playfulness keep us on our toes, and he has become the best hiking buddy in the Bay,” Tushar says.

Tushar currently works as a marketing manager at Moon Surgical, where he is responsible for driving the commercial success of Maestro, a digital surgical assistant. 

Mattie is a product operations clinical education trainer at Intuitive, educating internal product development teams on how the company’s robotic surgical systems are used and the value they bring to their patients and surgeons.

The couple love the vibrant innovation culture of medical robotics and the opportunity to create a meaningful impact for patients worldwide.

“While our story started at Georgia Tech, it’s taken us all over the country and the world, and we can’t wait to see where our next chapter takes us!”

 

Contact

Kelly Petty  
Communications
Wallace H. Coulter Department of Biomedical Engineering

 

Latest BME News

Coulter BME researchers develop 3D-printed, bioresorbable heart valve that potentially eliminating the need for repeated surgeries for adult and pediatric heart patients.

The 2007 BME alum will lead efforts to bring medical technologies to market.

BME graduate leveraging Coulter experience to bridge continents and inspire students

Seven other Faculty Members from Coulter Department Named to Fall 2024 Honor Roll

Researcher Michaël Girard delivers eye-popping presentation at BME Seminar Series

Anant Madabhushi part of Emory team awarded up to $17.6 million to innovate surgery, improve outcomes

 

BME researchers combine precision and simplicity in transforming diagnostic tools.