हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 27
सुविधाजनक खोज आपको निम्नलिखित मापदंडों के आधार पर अच्छे विशेषज्ञों को खोजने की अनुमति देती है: डॉक्टर की रेटिंग, कार्य अनुभव, रोगी समीक्षाएँ, विशेषज्ञता, शैक्षणिक डिग्री, और ऑनलाइन उपस्थिति।
पृष्ठ पर, आप किसी डॉक्टर के साथ व्यक्तिगत परामर्श प्राप्त कर सकते हैं। कई डॉक्टर कॉन्सिलियम प्रारूप में ऑनलाइन परामर्श प्रदान करते हैं (कई डॉक्टरों से प्रश्न और उत्तर)।
वर्तमान में ऑनलाइन
केवल समीक्षाओं के साथ
आयुर्वेदिक डॉक्टर
826
परामर्श:
Dr. Pranoti Arjun Kamble
616
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who's been mostly working with patients struggling with lifestyle and chronic issues – sometimes it's a simple digestion thing like amlapitta or GERD, other times it’s full-blown allergic rhinitis that just won’t let go. Over the years, I’ve spent a lot of time helping women too, especially those dealing with hormonal or menstrual imbalances — PCOD, irregular periods, missed cycles. I kinda got used to hearing, “I’ve tried everything” from patients before we start working together.
In clinical practice, Panchakarma's become a key tool for me. It's not just detox – I’ve seen it shift long-standing patterns when done right. I usually take time to assess what the body *actually* needs before jumping into therapies, especially with chronic or deep-rooted stuff. Like in some skin cases – I remember one with visarpa and another with shitpitta — needed a totally different approach despite looking similar. Those conditions can flare fast and mess with confidence, but with a combo of internal meds and local treatment, things moved well.
One of the more memorable cases was treating a dengue patient — quite intense tbh. I wasn’t sure initially if they’d respond to supportives the way I’d hoped, but watching the platelets stabilize and fever reduce day by day was something. Another one was hepatitis — again, it required regular tracking and a lot of patience, but we got there.
The thing is, I don't just look at symptoms. I try to understand *why* it’s happening — is it food, stress, sleep, or something deeper? Sometimes the dots connect only after 2–3 consultations, and I’ll admit, there are cases where I have to rethink my initial plan. But yeah, I prefer that over rushing into standard protocols that don’t fit.
I might not have fancy awards to flaunt, but I do have experience. I’ve worked with people who came in skeptical and left surprised — not by magic, but by steady, tailored treatment. And honestly, even I learn something new from every tough case. If there’s one thing I trust in Ayurveda, it’s that the body wants to heal — we just need to listen carefully. Maybe more than we think.
Dr. Sanidhya Sharma
70
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working as a Medical Officer at KIPS Panchkarma Thulasi, Bhopal, Madhya Pradesh, where I have been serving for almost 1 year and 6 months now. This center is part of a reputed Ayurvedic hospital from Kerala, and that connect gives me chance to work with authentic Kerala medicines and practice Panchakarma therapies in their true classical way. Day to day I see patients with chronic and acute disorders, and the focus is always to bring balance in doshas, restore strength and give relief without harsh side effects.
I have in-depth knowledge of Kottakkal Ayurveda medicines, and this allows me to choose formulations that are both safe and effective. Sometimes I combine Panchakarma like Virechana or Basti with specific diet correction and lifestyle plan, sometimes a simple herbal preparation is enough. Each case is different, and I like to understand prakriti, the root of imbalance, rather than just symptoms.
Being in this role also taught me that patient trust matters more than anything, because people often come after trying many other treatments. When they see small improvements—better sleep, less pain, lighter digestion—they feel motivated and continue the healing process. At times progress is slow, but Ayurveda works in depth, and I feel it’s important to guide with patience.
Working here gave me not only clinical exposure but also confidence that classical Ayurveda still has very strong relevance in modern times. I want to keep learning, keep refining, and help more patients find health in natural way. Mistakes happen, some days are harder, but that’s part of practice too.
Dr. Parvathy J
276
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic practitioner with a little over five years in real hands-on practice, moving through different setups and learning way more than I thought I would at the start. My first proper year was at Sreekumara Pharmacy, and honestly that time gave me the base—working closely with classical formulations, seeing how patients respond, figuring out the right balance between textbook theory and what actually works in the moment. Then came a short but intense stint, about 3 months, at a Govt Ayurveda Dispensary in a rural area. That was different—here it wasn’t just individual care, it was about whole communities, sometimes with very limited resources, and still finding ways to give relief.
For the past 4 years I’ve been running my own clinic, which is its own kind of challenge and freedom. I see everything from lifestyle disorders and digestion issues to joint pains, respiratory troubles, and those vague chronic things that don’t always fit neatly in a category. I rely on Ayurvedic diagnostics—looking at prakriti, dosha balance, diet habits—then working with herbal medicines, detox therapies, and daily routine corrections. It’s not a copy-paste treatment style, each plan is shaped around the person sitting in front of me, not just their symptoms.
Right now I also teach as a paramedical faculty member. That’s been unexpectedly rewarding—sharing what works, watching students connect theory to actual patient cases, and at the same time, realizing teaching keeps my own clinical mind sharper.
For me, Ayurveda isn’t about quick fixes. It’s about getting to the root cause, restoring balance in the system, and helping people actually feel better in a sustainable way. I like when patients leave not just with medicines but with clarity on what’s going on in their body and how they can support their own healing at home. It’s that mix of tradition, logic, and empathy that keeps me grounded in this work.
Dr. Ankit Rathore
192
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who really got to feel the weight of actual practice during my one year internship at the civil hospital. It wasn’t just routine—it was a daily crash course in reality, where textbook cases didn’t always match what walked through the door. I spent long hours rotating through departments—OPD, emergency, minor OT, even labor rooms—and yeah, each one taught me something I couldn’t’ve learned sitting in lectures.
There were days I saw over 40–50 patients in OPD, most with multilayered complaints—gastritis mixed with anxiety, or skin rashes that flared worse in stressy situations. I had to listen sharp, note quick, and still not miss anything. Like, once I forgot to double-check a sugar reading and the case shifted entirely, and that messed with me a bit. You learn from these things tho. I did.
Civil hospital life means working with all types of ppl—those with chronic issues like joint pain, those rushing in with acute fevers, and sometimes those who just need someone to explain their condition calmly. I handled case sheets, helped in rounds, observed surgeries (some minor, some I couldn’t stop thinking about later tbh), managed herbal prescriptions under supervision, and did a lotta counseling, which is underrated honestly.
One thing that stood out to me was how often symptoms were being treated but not the pattern behind them. Like repeat migraines? Usually it was more about sleep or stress than just pain. That shifted how I approached things. Made me dig deeper, not just ask "what hurts" but also "since when and what else changed?"
The internship taught me to act quick but also pause when needed, speak confidently but also shut up and learn when I didn’t know something—trust me, those moments happened too. It gave me the ground reality of how Ayurvedic support can sit side-by-side with hospital protocols.
Not everything went smooth—forgot a file once, mixed two doses (minor issue but still), and yeah, sometimes I was too cautious when I shoud've acted faster. But that year shaped me... more than anything else. And I carry all that messiness and learning into my practice now, everyday.
Dr. Chaitali Patil
171
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am just 7 months into my practice as an ayurvedic doctor and honestly it’s already been kind of a wild mix—challenging, rewarding, and sometimes just.. quiet confusing too. But what I keep goin back to is how powerful our classical Ayurvedic approach can be when applied with patience and attention. I don’t claim to know it all (far from it), but what I do focus on is really listening to what my patient is feeling, even the part they can’t always explain right away.
My main goal right now is just building that solid, honest connect with people who come in with everyday things—indigestion, anxiety, hormonal ups-downs, stuff that sound “normal” but they’re actually making life harder than we realise. I work a lot with simple herbal formulations and try to figure out practical lifestyle changes that won’t overwhelm them. I’m still learning—every week feels like a new page, but that’s also the best part.
And even in 7 months, I’ve already seen some cool results... a patient who couldn’t sleep more than 3 hrs now sleeps through the night without pills. A chronic bloating case now eats wheat again with no panic. Small things, but they stay with me.
There’s a long way to go and I mess up too, like I forget to follow-up sometimes or get stuck searching the right herb combo for hours. But I’m here to show up everyday and grow steady with my people. Not promising miracles, just honest work, rooted in Ayurveda. If that sounds like what you're looking for... then let’s begin.
Dr. Niraj Kumar Raut
293
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a House Surgeon in Ayurveda, kind of still figuring out how deep this path goes, honestly. Past 2 years, give or take, I’ve been hands-on with clinical practice — mostly in surgical techniques rooted in Ayurveda. My day usually revolves around stuff like Raktamokshana (therapeutic bloodletting), Ksharasutra therapy for anorectal conditions, and yeah—piles, fistula, fissures, that whole cluster of things that don’t get enough attention but need real care.
Working on these cases taught me that healing’s not just about treating symptoms, it’s more about listening to what the patient isn’t saying too, you know? I keep going back to classics like Charaka and Sushruta Samhita, but also watching how things play out real-time in OPDs and wards. That mix of theory and clinical feedback kinda shapes how I approach every case... maybe not always perfect, but honest and trying.
I’m deeply into Ayurvedic parasurgical methods. Been really focusing on integrating Panchakarma, herbal protocols, and some dietary hacks (nothing fancy, just stuff that works). Especially with long-term lifestyle diseases — things like gastritis, arthritis, early diabetes or hypertension — it's not one-size-fits-all, and I like that Ayurveda respects that.
There's something about seeing someone walk out pain-free after months of piles or a recurring fistula — you don’t forget those faces. And ya, I keep pushing myself to read research, pick insights from seminars (some of which I was part of), and pay attention to pharmacovigilance — safety with Ayurvedic meds is a serious thing I care about.
Not here to impress. Just here to be present, learn more, do better. Day by day. Step by step.. and maybe mess up a little along the way, but grow anyway.
Dr. Alok Pandey
235
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic physcian with an MD in Kayachikitsa—yeah, that's basically the internal medicine part of Ayurveda, and honestly it’s where I feel most at home. My practice mostly revolves around chronic and lifestyle disorders. I work a lot with diabetes (especially early-stage where reversal is still possible), gut imbalances, skin flare-ups, arthritis, stress stuff like sleep issues, fatigue, the whole modern package really. But what I try to do is not just fix symptoms for now... I really wanna understand why it’s happening in that person, at that time.
I did advanced training in Panchakarma, which helps big time when someone needs proper detox or deeper-level tissue repair. That’s not for everyone tho—depends on how stable their system is, digestion-wise too. For some, just getting the diet-plan & herbs right does more than oil therapies ever could. And yes, I do lean heavily on classical texts, but I also stay updated on new clinical research—especially around metabolic disorders, pre-diabetes, insulin resitance... all that.
I'm currently exploring more into research stuff, especially how Ayurveda can work in diabetes managment from a biochemical angle. But even beyond that, my goal really is to make the patient feel seen. Not like another OPD number. I spend time explaining things, giving a lil context why this medicine, why that pathya, and how their prakriti fits into the whole thing. It’s not perfect every time of course—some cases hit a wall or need a reset, but that’s part of the work.
Education is huge for me too. Not in the lecture-y sense. Just—if someone walks away from a consult feeling more incharge of their body than before, I think I did alright. I guess the dream is to keep making Ayurveda more relatable, more real for today’s world without losing the essence of where it came from.
Dr. Drishya Jyothirmayan
621
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a Consultant Ayurvedic Gynecologist, pretty much fully into women’s health – not just from a clinical angle but with this whole Ayurvedic lens that looks at the whole person, not just the problem area. I did my BAMS from MVR Ayurveda Medical College, Kannur, in 2020, and then finished my MD in Prasuti Tantra evum Stree Roga from Alvas Ayurveda Medical College, Moodbidri (Karnataka) in 2025. During my internship, I worked across govt hospitals n dispensaries – OPDs, patient care, hands-on sutff that built my basics way stronger than books alone could. After that I joined as a consultant at a private clinic, real-world experience again. Which, tbh, teaches you things classrooms never can.
I work a lot with conditions like menstrual irregularities, PCOD, fertility issues, thyroid-linked hormonal stuff, all from an Ayurvedic pov. My interest lies in therapies like Sthanika Chikitsa (localised applications), Garbha Samskara (which I find so deeply powerful), and postpartum & prenatal Ayurvedic care. I also work with Panchakarma protocols in select cases where detox is genuinely needed – not just for the sake of doing it. Along the way I got trained in labor room protocols and some minor para-surgical procedures too, but I always keep treatment patient-specific and minimalistic wherever possible.
I really try to not treat the disease alone – I want to know why it happened, what's underneath, what’s the story behind it. That’s where Ahara, Vihara, emotional context, even sleep and relationships etc. matter to me as much as test reports or symptoms. I'm not into one-size-fits-all medicine. Every woman’s body has its own way of showing imbalances. I look for that. And then, slowly n steadily, we try to fix it from the root.
Ayurveda isn’t a shortcut – it needs patience. But if someone’s ready for it, I’ll walk the path with them.
Dr. Vaishali Sangram
192
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who's been working in clinical setups for 7+ years now, mostly focused around gynecology and obstetrics. What I really do day-to-day is help women deal with things that mess with their health — like irregular cycles, PCOS, infertility, thyroid probs or stress weight that just won't go away. Sometimes it's the hormones, sometimes it's lifestyle, sometimes it's just... a mix of too many things going wrong all at once.
My main work revolves around fertility management, both male and female, and I pay a lot of attention to conditions like insulin resistance, hypothyroid, and other sneaky metabolic issues that often get missed or misdiagnosed. PCOS is a big chunk of what I treat. I see how much it affects a woman's mood, skin, hair, periods — and yeah, confidence too. Every case is different. That's why I don't follow one-size-fits-all stuff.
I use a mix of classical Ayurvedic therapies like Panchakarma, Rasayana, and Uttara Basti (yes that one needs careful handling but it’s super effective). But I never stop there. I also go deep into the diet they follow, their sleep, digestion, mental fatigue, all that—everything’s connected right? I believe healing has to feel sustainable. Not just symptom control, but real long-term balance, the kind that sticks.
During antenatal and postnatal phases, I guide mothers with practical Ayurvedic support—whether it's safe herbal support, gut care, back pain, milk production, or just calming the new-mom anxiety that no one talks enough about. Sometimes just explaining what's normal and what needs care makes a big diff.
I won’t claim to fix everything magically, but many of my patients do walk out feeling like someone finally understood what their body was trying to say.
Dr. M.D. Azaz Karim
284
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic practitioner who's mostly into chronic cases—things that don’t just go away with pills or quick fixes, you know? My core focus lies in skin, kidney, respiratory stuff and pediatrics... kinda grew into it over years of working closely with patients who felt stuck with conventional ways. What drives me is going deep, like figuring the real root, not just calming symptoms n’ moving on.
In skin disorders—eczema, urticaria, psoriasis, fungal outbreaks, acne—I use a blend of herbal meds, Rasayana, detox like Virechana or sometimes just plain gentle diet & oil routines. Most ppl who come in feel exhausted dealing with flareups that just keep returning... once we work on immunity n’ gut along with topical balance, skin starts showing real improvement. It's not overnight magic but it stays.
With kidney conditions like stones, CKD, or UTIs, I rely on diuretics herbs, nephroprotectives, & some Panchakarma when needed. Sometimes just minor tweaks in diet or jal usage does huge diff. You'd be surprised how much renal load goes down when metabolic waste is tackled ayurvedically!!
Respiratory-wise, asthma, bronchitis or even allergic colds, I usually begin with deep lung clearing, Nasya and internal formulations that target Kapha imbalance... then later introduce Pranayama or even simple salt inhalation practice if needed. It's slow and depends on seasons too. Kids especially benefit from these techniques, you just have to modulate it right.
In pediatrics, I’m super careful. Children respond fast but you can’t overload. I work a lot on digestive strength first. Frequent colds, skin rashes, even poor growth sometimes links back to Agni issues. For this I use light, tasty decoctions, mild ghee preps and some play-based routines to make it doable for families.
Ultimately for me, it's less about protocol and more about tuning in—understanding prakriti, daily routine, emotional stress, all of that. My goal is sustainable healing not dependency on medicines forever. Mix of modern insight and Ayurvedic depth, that’s where I try to work from even if its not always perfect.
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आयुर्वेदिक डॉक्टर से प्रश्न कैसे पूछें?
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