[2] After working on several internships and externships after his graduation, he was pressured by his professor Thoma Ionescu [ro], a Romanian surgeon, to return to the Ottoman Empire to fulfill his "mission" with his Aromanian brothers, which he eventually did together with his wife Virginia Mustață from Ploiești.
[1] There, Mișea joined the Young Turks and became a deputy of the Sanjak of Görice (Korçë; Curceaua, Curceauã, Curceau or Curciau) for the legislatures of 1908 and 1912.
[3] The only non-Muslim Ottoman population groups the Young Turks' Committee of Union and Progress (CPU) ever recruited members from were the Aromanians and the Jews.
[4] In December 1913, Mișea returned to Romania after pressure from his wife and from the Romanian politician Take Ionescu, brother of his former professor Thoma, but also after considering his mission for the Aromanian cause accomplished and to raise his three newborn children.
In the years 1920 and 1921, Mișea became one of the leading figures of the newly established Hospital of Infectious and Contagious Diseases of Buzău, where he worked until his retirement in 1938.