हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 30
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. Smita Rai
150
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working as an Assistant Professor at Parul Institute of Ayurved and Research for about 2.5 years now, and honestly, teaching Ayurveda while staying connected to clinical practice is its own kind of learning. In the classroom, I handle both theory and practical sessions – guiding students through classical texts, treatment protocols, case discussions, and the finer points of diagnosis like Nadi Pariksha or Prakriti assessment. It’s not just about giving lectures, it’s about helping them see how each shloka or principle actually connects to real patient care.
Alongside academics, I’m involved in supervising clinical postings where students interact with OPD and IPD cases. This means I get to bridge the gap between their book knowledge and the challenges of actual practice – like what to do when a patient’s condition doesn’t fit the “perfect” description from the texts, or how to adapt Panchakarma therapies based on the patient’s strength and season.
Working in an academic setup also means contributing to departmental activities, curriculum planning, and sometimes even research-related discussions. I believe Ayurveda needs both preservation of its traditional roots and openness to evidence-based validation, so I encourage my students to think critically while staying grounded in the classics.
For me, the most rewarding part is seeing students develop confidence – that moment when they can explain a concept clearly or design a treatment plan that makes sense for a real case. My own practice benefits too, because teaching forces you to constantly revisit the fundamentals and stay sharp. It’s a role that keeps me learning every single day.
Dr. Sajna
437
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor practicing for about six years now, and I’ve kinda carved out my space in proctology—not by choice honestly, but because that’s where I saw so many patients suffering quietly with pain they didn’t want to talk about. Piles (Arsha), fistula-in-ano (Bhagandara), fissures (Parikartika)... these aren’t just physical issues, they mess with a person’s confidence, daily rhythm, even sleep. And I wanted to offer something better than just surgery-or-suffer.
I did my BAMS from KMCT Ayurveda Medical College in Kerala, which gave me the clinical basics but I wanted to go deeper into Ksharasutra therapy. Ended up doing CRAV training in Himachal Pradesh under some seriously skilled hands. That’s where I saw what this parasurgical technique can really do—especially for fistula cases that were labeled “hopeless.” We worked with precision, patience, and yeah, herbal strength too. No major cuts. No long hospital stays. Just smart Ayurveda doing its work.
My method? Root-cause focused. Always. Symptom management is fine for the short term, but if you don’t fix what started the imbalance—diet, bowel habits, lifestyle overload—it’s just gonna come back. I spend time understanding each patient’s pattern, prakriti-vikriti, and then build a plan around that. Ksharasutra when needed, but also basti, internal medicines, post-op healing routines, and very specific food guidance (because no, everyone can’t eat bananas and ghee for healing).
What I care about most is giving people a way out—without fear. Many of my patients had already tried surgery or were scared stiff of it. But with the right Ayurvedic approach, we brought them relief that was natural, sustainable and didn’t leave them feeling broken or dependent.
For me, it’s not about miracle cures. It’s about real outcomes, quiet recoveries, and that moment when someone tells you, “I don’t feel scared anymore to go to the toilet.” That’s when you know the treatment actually mattered.
Dr. Shivani Gandhe
342
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am still grateful for those 8 months I worked as a Medical Consultant at Patanjali… feels short when you say it but in reality it was packed with learning. Every day brought a mix of patients – some coming in with minor seasonal complaints, others struggling with chronic issues they’d carried for years. I wasn’t just reading theory anymore, I was applying Ayurveda in real time, seeing how a well thought-out herbal formulation or a tweak in daily routine could shift someone’s health. My work was never about rushing through cases… I would take time for proper patient assesment, going into their history, looking at the dosha imbalances, sometimes noticing small details they didn’t even think to mention. From there, I’d build personalised treatment plans – herbs, diet advice, Panchakarma if needed, and small lifestyle changes that fit their life instead of overwhelming them.
There were moments where a patient’s progress was slower than expected, and I had to adjust, rethink, and sometimes go back to the basics. That taught me patience, which honestly is just as important as clinical skill. I also got better at talking to people in a way that made them feel heard and safe, not just “treated.” I kept my focus on root-cause healing – not chasing symptoms but aiming for balance that lasts.
By the end of those months, I felt more confident in diagnosis, clearer in treatment design, and stronger in my belief that authentic Ayurveda can still stand firm in today’s fast healthcare world… if practiced with integrity and care. And maybe that’s the part I value most – knowing how to merge textbook knowledge with human reality in the clinic.
Dr. Jagdish Prasad Kumawat
717
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an ayurvedic physician with 7 yrs of clinical practice, sometimes I still feel like I m learning everyday but yes these yrs gave me strong base to understand how body n mind react in diffrent situations. I started focusing on holistic healing early on because I saw that just giving medicine without looking at diet or routine never last long. So gradually my method became more about seeing prakriti, vikriti, even stress patterns before starting any treatment.
I mostly work with lifestyle disorders, diabetes, hypertension, thyroid, obesity.. these come again n again in my opd. Many patients already tried random remedies or crash diet, when they come to me I try to simplify things, use herbal medicines where needed, panchakarma when detox is necessary, but always with diet counselling and lifestyle corrections that actually fit into their daily life. Sometimes even changing sleep pattern or food timing shows bigger shift than a long list of pills.
Digestive issues, chronic pain, arthritis, infertility, menstrual problems also form big part of my practice. I like to give time explaining why imbalance happen, because when pt understand their dosha, their habit, they cooperate better and results stay longer. And yes, stress related disorders are very common now, I keep counseling part included, simple breathing, yoga, small lifestyle reset, these things really matter.
Over these 7 years my goal stayed same – not only to cure disease but to educate. Preventive care is important, and I keep reminding patients that ayurveda is not just treatment but a way to keep wellness alive. I rely on classical knowledge but I also try to connect with modern challenges, like working hours, pollution, sedentary routine, so treatment is not outdated but living. For me the biggest achievement is when a patient says they feel normal life again without depending on constant medicines.
Dr. Dhriti Khandelwal
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5
380
3 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who kinda walks the line between modern surgery and traditional Ayurved… which, yeah, can get tricky sometimes but also makes things really interesting. My focus is general surgery, like the regular stuff—hernias, gallbladders, appendix problems, breast lumps, liver issues, pancreatitis, and all those classic conditions people don’t wanna deal with till they really have to. I also end up treating a fair bit of GI cancers and complications around the rectum n’ anal canal. Not always pretty work but someone’s gotta do it right?
What’s different in my approach maybe is that I try not to jump into cutting if I don’t have to. I lean toward conservative care whenever possible—like really pausing to ask: does this need surgery right now, or can we manage this in a way that avoids it altogether? When surgery is needed, I go for precise planning, clean technique, and solid post-op care. But then again, I don’t stop at that. I work a lot with chronic lifestyle problems—diabetes, BP, thyroid—all that stuff that creeps up slowly and quietly wrecks the body if you don’t catch it early.
Ayurveda is the anchor of what I do, even when using modern tools. I use Panchakarma therapies pretty often, especially in post-op recovery and in people who come to me feeling stuck or exhausted by years of symptoms with no real improvement. And I do try to minimize medicine overload—many times people are just drowning in prescriptions. You clear the junk, the body kinda starts to heal itself.
I was also lucky enough to do two research studies with CCRAS under the Ministry of AYUSH, and that really pushed me into thinking deeper about how to combine evidence-based thinking with age-old Ayurvedic logic. Research didn’t make me “smarter” per se, but it did help me see patterns clearer, and also respect the data side of things a lot more.
At the end of it, my goal is long term balance. Not flashy transformations, but real recovery. You don’t need a dozen pills or huge life overhauls always. Sometimes small tweaks done consistently—that’s what makes the real shift. I’m here to help patients figure out what those tweaks look like for them, step by step, at their own pace.
Dr. Sneha Shaji
297
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with a little over 3 years into clinical practice now—not a lifetime but enuf to say that I’ve seen how deep Ayurveda can work when u actually listen to the patient and not just the symptoms. I usually work with ppl dealing with digestive stuff like indigestion or IBS, joint n spine problems (knee pain, backache etc), skin issues, and lifestyle-related stuff like PCOD or prediabetes. And honestly, every case teaches me something new.
My way is pretty simple—I try to figure *why* someone’s getting sick in the first place. That could mean looking at prakriti, food habits, sleep, stress, digestion, even old patterns. Then based on all that, I plan a mix of Ayurvedic medicines (not always bitter, I swear), Panchakarma if required (but only when it’s truly needed—not pushing it), daily routine changes and diet tweaks. Yoga too, but realistic types—not 2 hrs of headstands or anything like that.
What matters to me most? Making ppl feel seen. Like they’re not just another “skin allergy” or “joint pain” on my list. I try to keep space open for patients to talk—about their health, habits, fears, whatever is showing up. That’s where half the diagnosis happens anyway, in what they casually mention in between.
I keep going back to the classics too, like Charaka and Ashtanga Hridayam—not just reading but applying those age-old principles into modern lives. And when something don’t work, I recheck. I ask. I adapt. I don’t pretend to know everything but I do care enough to dig deeper until something starts to shift for the patient.
At the end of the day, for me Ayurveda isn’t just about disease removal—it’s about making ppl feel lighter, better, more in balance. Even if just 10% better at first. That’s where healing begins.
Dr. Sunil Saini
465
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am practicing as an Ayurvedic consultant right now and honestly—every case kinda reminds me how layered this work really is. People walk in thinking they have just acidity or some ache or sleep trouble, but once we start talking, it’s often a whole mix—stress piling up, food habits out of sync, prakriti totally ignored for years. That’s where I feel Ayurveda gives you a wider lens. I don’t just jump into herbs and churnas, I try to pause and look at the full thing—what time do they eat? How’s their sleep? Are they stuck in a season that's aggravating their dosha and they don’t even kno it?
Whether it’s PCOD, anxiety flares, neck pain that won’t go away, IBS, or fatigue that no lab report explains—I work through each case by mapping their doshic balance, mental state, even the tiniest day-to-day triggers. Not to overcomplicate but because otherwise we just keep chasing symptoms that come back. I use classical Ayurveda meds (mostly time-tested ones, no flashy shortcuts), plus small shifts in diet or daily routines—depends on the person, their life pace, their digestion etc. Panchakarma, when it fits, gets added carefully, not like a one-size-fits-all thing.
I try to explain *why* I’m suggesting a lepa or a vati or a dinacharya rule—not just ask people to follow blindly. Once they get the logic, they’re usually more into it, they show up for themselves in a deeper way, which helps their healing stick. I kinda see myself not just as someone giving meds but helping ppl understand what their body’s been trying to tell them for years. If that part clicks, the rest starts to shift too—even if slowly. That’s what I focus on. Consistent, grounded, personal care that actually holds up over time.
Dr. Nidhi Dagar
778
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a certified Ayurveda doctor, been practicing for around 3 years now — not a very long time, but enough to see how deep and real this science is. I focus on holistic healing, you know, where it’s not just about “fixing the problem” but understanding why it’s happening in the first place. My approach mostly comes down to this: balance. Whether it’s digestion, hormones, stress, or energy — everything has to sync together. If one part goes off, the whole system suffers. That’s what Ayurveda has taught me and that’s what I try to bring into my practice every single day.
I work a lot with people dealing with long-term or lifestyle-related issues like heart problems, diabetes, thyroid disorders, stress burnout, poor digestion, and hormonal ups & downs. Not saying I have a magic formula, but over the years I’ve seen how powerful it can be when you combine the right herbs, diet shifts, and detox methods like Panchakarma with simple daily changes. And honestly, sometimes it’s the smallest tweaks — like timing your meals better or learning to actually chew properly — that end up making a huge difference.
One area I keep coming back to is Rasayana therapy. Maybe because I’ve seen it help restore strength and vitality in people who were just... stuck. Like totally drained, emotionally and physically. Those are the moments that stick with me. I try to create treatment plans that really fit a person — not just general “take this churna” kind of stuff. I go deep into dietetics, look at their dosha, their habits, even sleep patterns.
Over time I’ve helped a bunch of folks not just “get better” from their illness but actually feel like themselves again. And yeah, that takes effort. There’s a lot of education involved — people don’t always know what their body is asking for. So I end up guiding them on daily routines, stress responses, how to listen to their own body better.
My goal? Not just symptom relief. I want people to stay well — to age better, feel more alive, and not always be dependent on pills or quick-fixes. Ayurveda’s not always fast but it’s true. And that truth has helped me stay grounded in my work even when things get a bit messy or slow.
Dr. Aishwarya Mahajan
446
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. Aishwarya Mahajan, and honestly, my journey into Ayurveda wasn’t about just getting a degree—it’s been more of this evolving relationship with how the body heals itself when you actually listen to it. I did my BAMS, sure, but what really changed things was seeing real ppl struggle with gut issues, weird hormonal shifts, daily fatigue—and how Ayurveda had answers that weren’t just about pills n patches.
I mostly focus on gut health (it’s kinda the base of everything honestly), women’s wellness, metabolic mess-ups like PCOS, thyroid swings, even sugar highs—plus lifestyle disorders that sneak in when routines go wild. My way isn’t about giving long list of herbs n telling people to “just relax.” Nah. I try to figure out *why* your system lost its rhythm—maybe your sleep's outta sync, maybe your agni’s down, maybe your work-life cycle is a total mess. Then I build diet suggestions, healing routines, herbal stuff—bit by bit, real life stuff, not Insta Ayurveda hacks.
Right now, I do online consults, which honestly helps me reach patients sitting in cities, towns—even abroad. Doesn’t matter where you are if you’re ready to take healing seriously. My sessions usually go into your prakriti-vikriti state, daily patterns, stress, gut signs—all that. I read between lines, because sometimes symptoms don’t say everything but your story kinda does.
Also, I keep learning. I read. I re-read. I question—like why did this work for one patient and not another? What else does Charaka or Ashtanga say about this pattern? I’m not claiming to know it all—but I care a lot. And yeah, I talk about Ayurveda like it’s not ancient—it’s just timeless. My vision really is to make it feel real, relevant, and not stuck in textbooks. Healing should be natural, but also practical. That’s what I try to do everyday.
Dr. Bhakti D. Kapdi
229
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently doin my M.D. in Ayurveda with specialization in Agad Tantra (yeah the toxicology+forensic branch) from ITRA, Jamnagar — honestly one of the toughest but most respected places to learn this stuff. While that’s my core dept, what really drives me is working on skin n hair-related issues using Ayurveda. Like chronic eczema, psoriasis, vitiligo, hair loss, dandruff, greying – I’ve kinda made it my zone.
My clinical focus usually circles around combining classical approaches like Raktamokshana (bloodletting), Nasya (nasal meds), and even Marma therapy, with what today’s diagnostics offer. This kinda hybrid model — where I use tools from modern medicine but treat through ancient principles — just feels more solid, more real to me. There’s a weird satisfaction in watching a complicated case settle when Shodhana or Rasayana kicks in at the right time, even after they’d tried everything else before. Not all cases work like that tbh but when it clicks, it really does.
I follow concepts like Dosha-Dushya theory, Chikitsa Sutras and I try to stick close to what texts say while tweaking it to fit the person in front of me. I believe in digging deep before just handing pills. And when I say personalized, I mean fully custom—down to diet, lifestyle advice, or whether they need snehana first or straight to virechana... there’s a lot of that mental juggling during consults.
Outside the clinic, I stay involved with academic meets and seminars whenever I can manage time between rotations. I’m not the loudest in the room but I do enjoy those clinical case forums, esp. when we discuss real-world success/failure—not just textbook patterns. I'm hoping to eventually contribute more toward how skin and trichology are understood in Ayurveda without losing the soul of the system. It’s early days, I know, but this direction feels right for now. Maybe that’ll change in future, who knows. But for now this is where I wanna be.
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