हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 34
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. Shikha
322
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic physican with a lil over 3 years of clinikal experience, mostly in Kayachikitsa (internal medicine) & Panchakarma treatments. I like to go deep into root causes than just dealing with sypmtoms. My practice leans on classical Ayurvedic texts but also looks at the real-life messiness of patients' lives—like stress, food habits, modern routines, etc—cause that stuff matters more than we think.
In my day-to-day work, I handle all kinds of cases. Lifestyle disorders like diabetes or obesity, autoimmune flare-ups, thyroid issues... even those tricky gut-related or joint probs. Most of my patients come in tired of temporary fixes—they want real healing, and I try to give that through proper diagnosis, Prakriti analysis, detox therapies, and targeted herbal meds. Sometimes it’s a long road but worth it when they feel balanced again (or at least start feeling like theirselves).
I work a lot with Panchakarma—both for curative and preventive care. That includes Vamana, Virechana, Basti and more, all tailored to the person not just their disease label. There’s something about seeing someone come in feeling heavy or foggy, and walk out clearer, lighter... hard to explain but that’s the power of Panchakarma if done right.
My way of treating isn’t just protocol-based. Every person has their own patterns, history, resistance... Ayurveda gives the framework, but I listen close to what their body’s telling us. I like to explain stuff to patients too—why we’re choosing a certain therapy, how food interacts with their dosha, etc. Makes them trust the process more.
All said, my goal's always been long-term healing not quick relief. If someone's ready to explore deeper care, I’m here to help them walk that path... step by step.
Dr. Bharathi K S
411
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. Bharati, working in Ayurveda with a deep focus on holistic health, women’s wellness and a lifestyle that actually works with nature not against it. When I meet a patient, I start slow… understanding their Prakriti (how their body & mind is naturally built) and Vikriti (where the imbalance is right now). This helps me create plans that aren’t just for few weeks but for a steadier long-term balance – mental clarity, stable energy, less mood swings, better digestion.. those little but big changes.
My main work is in Ayurvedic gynecology and fertility care. I see women with PCOS, irregular cycles, endometriosis, fibroids, PMS and even menopause troubles. I don’t push invasive stuff, I work with herbs, Panchakarma detox, hormone balancing and lifestyle resets. For couples trying to conceive, I look at both sides – uterine detox, stress control, metabolism support – to help the body be in its best natural state to welcome pregnancy.
Digestive issues are also common in my practice – bloating, reflux, IBS, slow digestion – here I use gut healing herbs, simple but powerful diet changes, and ways to keep Agni (digestive fire) strong.
I also work on urinary health – recurrent UTIs, kidney stones, bladder pain, incontinence – using herbal diuretics, detox and rasayana for kidney & bladder care. Joint pain, back stiffness, arthritis? Yes, I treat that too with oil therapies, massage, internal medicines and movement tips that actually fit into daily life.
Skin & hair concerns, especially when linked with hormones or metabolism, are another big area for me – acne, pigmentation, hair fall, premature greying – all treated naturally with herbs, scalp work, internal detox and diet tuning.
My aim is simple – use Ayurveda to help people feel at home in their own body again, in a way that’s natural, safe and sustainable.
Dr. Neha Suresh Dubal
301
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic physician with an M.D. in Kayachikitsa, and my entire approach is kinda centered on patient-first care that actually respects both the classics and the reality of today’s health challenges. I don’t believe in handing out one-size-fits-all prescriptions. Every case starts with a deep dive into prakriti, dosha state, agni, samprapti—basically getting the full picture before even deciding on the line of treatment.
My core clinical focus is on chronic lifestyle disorders like diabetes, thyroid issues, obesity, anxiety, and stress-related burnout. Alongside that, I work a lot with arthritis, spondylitis, fibromyalgia, and even tricky skin diseases like eczema, psoriasis, and acne. I use a layered method—internal herbal protocols, Shamana therapy, detox where needed, and Rasayana when the body’s ready to rebuild.
Panchakarma is a big part of my work—but I don’t just use it for shodhana. When used right, it can completely shift a person’s healing arc, not just physically but mentally too. I combine it with diet correction, daily rhythm planning, mental wellness inputs, and spiritual care if the patient’s open to it. Everything’s planned with them, not just for them.
I’m also someone who likes staying rooted in theory but not stuck in it. I actively participate in clinical discussions, write-ups, case reflections, and academic circles to bridge the logic of classical Ayurveda with insights from modern healthcare. I believe that evolving Ayurveda doesn’t mean changing its soul—it means applying it with more clarity and confidence in today’s setting.
Right now I’m looking for a role where I can go deeper into both clinical and academic side—maybe teaching, mentoring, or working on research that actually makes a difference in practice. I’m especially passionate about preventive care and long-term disease reversal—not just symptom suppression. If I can help someone understand their condition better and live with more ease, I feel the work is going in the right direction.
Dr. Vidhya S Anand
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5
974
16 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in Ayurveda for more than 5 years now, feels like a long road but also like I’m still learning everyday. My focus has been on treating musculoskeletal, neuro, skin and lifestyle disorders… that’s a wide area but they all connect in some way if you look at root causes. For joint and spine issues—arthritis, cervical spondylosis, lumbar disc trouble, stiffness—I use Abhyanga, Kati Basti, Patra Pinda Sweda, along with internal meds adjusted for the patient’s prakruti. Neuro cases are a bit tricky, like migraine, neuropathy, sciatica, even some early neurodegenerative changes—Panchakarma and Rasayana really helps here, though it’s not a magic button, takes patience from both sides. Skin cases… eczema, psoriasis, acne, fungal infections—I usually start with digestion and detox, then herbs and diet tweaks, it’s not just topical. And with lifestyle disorders—obesity, hypothyroid, stress, diabetes, BP—I try to balance meds, diet, yoga, daily habits in a way they can actually follow (because unrealistic plans just fail). I think what matters most is finding that root imbalance, not just treating symptoms. I like to keep follow ups regular, adjust things if needed, explain what’s happening in simple words. For me Ayurveda isn’t just about “natural” it’s about precise, personalised care that works with the patient’s body not against it. In the end, the goal is they leave not only better but also knowing how to stay well.
Dr. Bhanu Mahajan
435
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am trained in both BAMS and MD Ayurveda from Govt Ayurveda College in Maharashtra—where the days were honestly intense but also shaped everything I know abt treating from the roots. My focus areas are a bit varied, but they connect in their chronicity—like those persistent skin issues (acne, eczema, pigmentation), autoimmunity like Rheumatoid Arthritis, digestion mess-ups (hyperacidity, gas, slow metabolism), and yeah, hair & scalp probs—hair fall, dandruff, that kind of recurring stuff that doesn't go away with just shampoos or short detoxes.
In clinic, I work a lot with classical tools like Nadi Pariksha & dosha mapping. Sounds simple, but it’s what lets me see what’s really not moving inside, what’s overactive, what needs calming. Joint disorders are frequent in my OPD—knee pain, swelling, stiffness, both inflammatory and wear-tear type—and I usually use a combo of internal herbs + external snehana or lepa depending on how flared up the patient is. Respiratory complaints too—like chronic sinus, sneezing streaks, seasonal coughs—I keep going back to classical rasayanas and diet reset instead of suppressants.
Over time, what I noticed is, most people come when their health has become a cycle—bad sleep, bad gut, more symptoms. That’s where Ayurved shines, if we let it. I work a lot with Dinacharya principles, food discipline (not just restrictions), and simple stress resets people can actually stick with, not just aspirational stuff.
My end goal? Not just “treat” eczema or acidity or hair fall, but help someone see *why* it showed up and how to not live in fear of its return. That’s where longterm healing starts. I don’t rush—it’s always case-by-case, slow sometimes, but layered, real, and body-specific.
Dr. Meenakshi
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5
5,217
3 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently working as an Associate Professor and Ayurvedic Consultant at a pretty well-known Ayurvedic college here in Karnataka. This mix of teaching and clinical practice kinda keeps both sides of me alive—like, one foot always in the Shastra and the other in actual patient care. I guess that’s what I like about it... I get to teach budding Vaidyas from texts like Charaka n all, but also sit with real patients facing chronic issues that don’t come with textbook clarity.
In the classroom, I guide both UG and PG students—helping them actually *get* the link between Ayurvedic theory and practical work. Sometimes we’re deep into shloka discussions, other days we’re talking about how to handle a tricky IBS case or PCOD patient during rounds. I’m also pretty involved in research and department stuff—like case presentations, lit reviews, workshops, that sorta thing. It keeps the learning loop going, for me too tbh.
On the clinical side, I usually deal with chronic lifestyle disorders, MSK problems, digestive stuff like Grahani and Amlapitta, female health issues, even some skin cases—each one needing its own pace, its own kind of attention. My consults start with a full read of a person’s Prakriti and Vikriti—without that, no use jumping to meds or therapy. I like building long-term plans with people—not just give herbs and send them off. Detox (Panchakarma), Rasayana, Dinacharya tweaks, food habits—it’s all part of it.
I do believe education and prevention matter more than ppl think. Like—if someone actually *understands* their imbalance, they’re likelier to stick with care instead of looking for shortcuts. I also team up with fellow docs n students for collabs, paper reviews, sometimes just to debate the classics vs clinical questions. That exchange helps, makes me feel like I'm contributing back to Ayurveda, not just practicing it.
Dr. Vijay Attri
334
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who’s had the chance to work in some pretty intense medical settings, and honestly that’s shaped a lot of how I practice today. I spent 2 years as a Senior Research Fellow in the Dept of Rheumatology at AIIMS Delhi—yea, one of those places where your clinical brain gets pushed hard. Most of my time there was deep in the world of autoimmune stuff—rheumatoid arthritis, lupus, spondyloarthritis, connective tissue disease—it was research but also very hands-on with patients.
It wasn’t just theory or paper writing. I was involved in patient rounds, joint clinics, research reviews, academic discussions (some a bit too long tbh) but it all added up. I got to see how complex cases are handled from multiple lenses—immunology, imaging, pharma, lifestyle—and it sharpened my ability to pick subtle signs early. Working with senior rheumatologists there made me realize how crucial long-term planning and patient counseling really is. Meds matter, sure, but explaining what’s happening in someone’s body—that part’s not optional.
After AIIMS, I worked as a Resident Medical Officer at Tulip Hospital for about a year. It was totally different vibe—faster pace, more acute cases, more “you need to decide now” moments. That’s where I learned to trust my instinct more, manage emergency meds, talk to families who are scared and need clarity, and yeah—balance chaos with calm, somehow.
I’m very into patient-centric care—not in the fluffy sense—but really making sure people understand their diagnosis, what each medicine’s doing, and how they can participate in their recovery. Whether it’s someone coming in with swollen joints or weird fevers that don’t go away or even vague body pains that’ve been dragging for months—I don’t rush. I ask, I recheck, I explain.
Medicine's not static for me—I keep updating myself with new rheumatology guidelines, emerging trials, whatever’s credible and practical. I believe chronic disease care needs consistency, not just cleverness. And if I can help someone manage a difficult diagnosis without them feeling totally lost in it—that’s the kind of work I wanna keep doing.
Dr. Sachin Sharma
64
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am in the field of ayurveda practice from last 2 yrs, and in this short period I realised how much difference even small right guidance can make in patients life. Many ppl come with simple issues like acidity, skin rash, joint stiffness, but when you listen closely it often connect with lifestyle stress or food patterns. My work is not just about giving medicines, its about explaining why the problem start and how we can avoid it repeating again. Sometimes that part is harder than writing a prescription, but also more rewarding.
I focus on holistic care where diet, sleep, routine habits and ayurvedic principles blend together. I also use knowledge of pharmacology in a practical way to make sure the treatments are safe, dosage is correct, and patient feel confident abt what they are taking. This approach makes compliance better, especially for chronic issues where ppl tend to give up easily. I hv seen children responding well to simple lifestyle advice along with herbal formulations, and adults finding energy again after long fatigue when the treatment is planned with proper balance.
2 yrs might sound short to some, but each case teaches something unique. Every patient story pushes me to stay updated, to revisit classical texts, and to apply them in context of modern challenges like diabetes, fatty liver or anxiety driven complaints. I try to keep my practice open n friendly, letting patients talk freely without rushing. At times I also feel doubt whether I am doing enough, but the steady improvement in their well-being assures me I am on right path.
Right now I want to grow deeper in musculoskeletal disorders and preventive pediatrics, since those areas keep coming again and again in daily practice. My aim is not just to treat disease but to build awareness, so people see health as something they maintain everyday, not only when crisis hit. That simple shift in thinking can make medicine more effective, and I am learning how to guide better in that direction day by day.
Dr. Sony Dhar
372
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who found my path in this science not just by study but by living it daily. Ayurveda to me isn’t only about herbs or therapies, it’s about reading the body and mind together and trying to see what imbalance is really happening underneath. When I sit with a patient I don’t just listen for symptoms, I listen for patterns—how they eat, when they sleep, what stresses them, even small habits that may look ordinary but slowly disturb doshas.
My work mainly revolves around lifestyle disorders, chronic digestive troubles, skin diseases, stress-related complaints, and also preventive care. I use Panchakarma, herbal formulations, diet guidance, and personalized lifestyle corrections. But I don’t force therapies; if a person isn’t ready for long detox I plan small steps first. In obesity or diabetes cases even timing of meals makes bigger difference than people expect. With skin disorders like eczema or acne, I focus on gut correction first—cuz skin is often just the mirror of inside fire.
I also guide patients in dinacharya and ritucharya, daily and seasonal regimens that help them stay balanced long-term. Many times patients don’t realise how powerful simple things like regular sleep cycles, seasonal food, or meditation can be. I explain in plain words, no jargon, so they can actually use it. My interest in pharmacology and dravyaguna helps me select herbs that suit prakriti-vikriti, not just general prescriptions.
Through the years I saw people come back with relief not just in body but in how they feel mentally lighter, calmer. That’s when I know the treatment touched more than symptoms. Some cases are slow, some fast, but I keep patient trust at the center. I create space where they feel heard and respected—healing begins right there.
Ayurveda for me is not frozen in books. I keep learning from classical texts, new research, and every patient who walks in. My goal is always safe, sustainable, natural healing—guiding people to not only recover but also understand their health enough to stay balanced for years ahead.
Dr. Manasi Gandhi
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5
6,173
9 समीक्षाएँ
I am practicing Ayurveda on my own for around 20 years now and honestly, it’s hard to sum up what that feels like in just a line or two. Over these years, I’ve seen health problems change with time — lifestyle disorders becoming more common, stress showing up in ways people don’t even notice until it’s too late, and seasonal illnesses behaving a bit differently than before. My work is all about looking at the root of the problem, not just the part that’s hurting right now. Sometimes that means working with herbal formulations, sometimes with Panchakarma therapies, sometimes just changing how someone eats or sleeps. I’ve treated a mix of acute issues like fever, colds, stomach upsets, and chronic ones like arthritis, diabetes, skin diseases, and digestive troubles. Women’s health has also been a steady part of my practice, whether it’s menstrual irregularities, PCOD, or post-natal care. And I make time for children’s wellness too, especially through immunity-building practices like Suvarnaprashan. I guess what keeps me going is knowing that Ayurveda gives me so many tools to work with — it’s never just one formula for everyone. I like spending time understanding a person’s lifestyle, diet, and emotional state because without that, the treatment feels incomplete. Over two decades, I’ve learned that small, consistent changes can be more powerful than any single “big” remedy, and that’s something I always try to pass on to my patients!!
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