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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)।


आयुर्वेदिक डॉक्टर

827
परामर्श:
Dr. Sneha Shaji
374
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.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Mali Shruti Yuvraj
417
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working as an Ayurvedic consultant for 2+ yrs now—most of my practice revolves around chronic issues like diabetes mellitus, gut disorders, arthritis, joint pain, acid reflux, bloating and stuff that doesn’t just “go away” with a pill. These cases take patience. And honestly, what I’ve learned is you can’t just give herbs & expect things to shift unless you’re looking at *why* it happened in the first place. I use a mix of classical formulations (based on prakriti, agni, dosha, lifestyle), some basic yog practices, plus diet tweaks that actually fit the person's routine... no generic one-size-fit-all charts. With diabetes, especially, it’s usually not just sugar—it’s sleep, digestion, emotions, stress—so the care has to be layered. Like—one patient had high FBS and acidity both, turned out their eating pattern was totally upside down, and they’d been skipping lunch for months due to work load. Tiny things like this become the turning point. I usually suggest mild Panchakarma where needed (not for every case tho), and gut reset plans before jumping to meds. Constipation, indigestion, acid-peptic imbalance—they often come hand in hand with doshic imbalance and wrong food combos. It’s all connected. What I try is to give ppl tools to not need me forever—like if they get how food, breath and routine is tied into their condition, they’re less likely to slip back. My whole thing is: healing should feel like you’re coming back into your own body. Not like you’re fighting it every day. That’s kinda what keeps me going in this line of work.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Tanu Saini
461
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently doing my MS in Stri Roga & Prasuti Tantra at Sri Sai Ayurvedic Medical College and yeah, it's pushing me in all the right ways. Women’s health is not just complex—it changes so much depending on life stage, habits, stress, everything. That’s what really made me want to study this field more seriously. I’m learning to manage menstrual issues like PCOD, irregular cycles, also infertility, prenatal care, postpartum balance... it's a lot, but it’s worth it. Ayurveda has this beautiful way of connecting things—how digestion affects hormones, how mind affects reproductive health. I’m seeing that clearer now. I’ve been diving into therapies like Panchakarma, Uttarbasti, and Rasayana chikitsa, combining them with lifestyle tweaks and diet corrections. It’s not one-pill-solves-all here. You listen, track, adapt. Some days I think I'm getting there, other days, it feels like there's stil way more to grasp. One area I keep returning to is how stress and ama (toxins) disturb menstrual health and fertility. Once you catch the root, healing becomes more than just symptom control. Even in pregnancy care, I’m learning how important gut health is for both mom & baby. We use herbs, oils, routines—it’s all gentle but powerful. My goal honestly? To get better at treating women in a way that feels real. Not robotic, not just textbook. I wanna build treatments that respect each woman’s unique rhythm, not force her into a protocol. I don’t want to overpromise either. Ayurveda takes time. But if someone’s open to that—real change is possible. I’m still learning. But I'm committed to becoming the kind of doctor women can come to when they want care that listens, that heals from inside out.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Bhupinder Bhushan Dembla
495
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am practicing Ayurveda for more than 30 years now, mostly with people who're dealing with skin issues or gastric-type problems—like long-standing acne, eczema, chronic gastritis, hyperacidity, food allergies, & other things that just keep flaring up. Many of them come after trying different stuff, sometimes allopathic, sometimes home remedies... but no stable relief. I try to keep things simple. Just follow the basics of Ayurveda—understand why that imbalance is happening and fix it from there. One patient might need diet cleanup, another might need specific herbs, someone else might actually just need to stop skipping meals or sleeping late. It's always case by case. I don’t use big packages or “one fits all” methods. Never liked that approach, it doesn’t work in long term. I mostly rely on classical Ayurvedic medicines, adjust the ahara & vihara where needed, and give enough time to track progress. When someone really follows through... results show. Even ppl who’d almost given up on skin or stomach issues get back a better rhythm. Honestly, I’ve seen how often things are connected—digestion messing up the skin or poor eating triggering mood & immunity both. These small internal things matter way more than ppl realise. And I still believe Ayurveda works best when it’s done without overcomplicating. No fancy detox unless needed, no unnecessary panic. Just the right nudge in the right direction. That’s what I keep doing, day after day, trying to make ppl feel better without pushing them into harsh treatments or side effects. It takes patience, for sure, but it’s worth it.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Prasad Pentakota
5
19,324
760 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. P. Prasad, and I’ve been in this field for 20+ years now, working kinda across the board—General Medicine, Neurology, Dermatology, Cardiology—you name it. Didn’t start out thinking I’d end up spanning that wide, but over time, each area sort of pulled me in deeper. And honestly, I like that mix. It lets me look at a patient not just through one lens but a whole system-wide view... makes more sense when treating something that won’t fit neatly in one category. I’ve handled everything from day-to-day stuff like hypertension, diabetes, or skin infections to more serious neuro and cardiac problems. Some cases are quick—diagnose, treat, done. Others take time, repeated check-ins, figuring out what’s really going on beneath those usual symptoms. And that’s where the detail matters. I’m pretty big on thorough diagnosis and patient education—because half the problem is ppl just not knowing what’s happening inside their own body. What’s changed for me over years isn’t just knowledge, it’s how much I lean on listening. If you miss what someone didn’t say, you might also miss their actual illness. And idk, after seeing it play out so many times, I do believe combining updated medical practice with basic empathy really shifts outcomes. Doesn’t have to be complicated... it just has to be consistent. I keep up with research too—new drugs, diagnostics, cross-specialty updates etc., not because it’s trendy, but cuz it’s necessary. Patients come in better read now than ever. You can’t afford to fall behind. The end goal’s the same tho—help them heal right, not just fast. Ethical practice, evidence-based, and sometimes just being there to explain what’s going on. That’s what I stick to.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Shikha
388
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.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Brijaish Chawla
331
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a qualified Ayurvedic doctor—completed my BAMS and currently diving deeper into the world of Ayurveda through an MD degree. Like, honestly, I got into this not just to “practice medicine” but to understand the person in front of me. Their doshas, their daily life, even small habits—they all speak to the real cause of illness. And that’s the part I care about most: getting to that root, not just patching symptoms for a while and calling it done. I’ve been pretty into learning through both books and people, which means I’ve got good exposure dealing with lifestyle-related issues—like stress-related digestion probs, joint stiffness, metabolic disorders, even some neuro conditions that tend to be stubborn. These are where I find Ayurveda really shines—when you use yukti properly and just, well, listen to the body. What I do is mix a bit of it all—herbs, personalized ahar, dincharya tweaks, panchakarma when needed—and no, not blindly, but in a way that actually fits the patient’s prakriti and stage of disease. I believe Ayurveda isn't just about tradition, it’s a living science that can adapt, grow, adjust to modern life without losing its roots. And that’s something I try to reflect in how I treat every case. Honestly, for me, healing is more of a conversation than a one-time solution. I like when patients ask questions, when they feel part of the treatment, not just on the receiving end of some long prescription.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Kalpesh Wani
503
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. Kalpesh Wani and for the last 15 years I’ve been living and working in Pune with one thing always at the core – keeping Ayurveda and Panchakarma real, authentic, and honest. Not just following some modern shortcut or diluted version, but actually using the same classical principles that have guided healers for centuries. My clinic is my space for that – a fully equipped Panchakarma center where we do proper detox, rejuvenation, all the classical therapies the way they’re meant to be, but also making sure patients feel safe, comfortable and cared for during the process. Over the years I worked as an Ayurveda consultant in different hospitals, and that exposure to acute and chronic cases in such varied settings taught me a lot… like how to adapt without losing the essence of Ayurveda, how to talk with patients who might be more used to allopathy, how to fit genuine Ayurvedic care into an integrative healthcare setup without compromising. Those days shaped a lot of how I work now. When someone comes to me, the first step is always understanding the real cause – not just the symptom. I put time into proper diagnosis, planning a treatment that actually fits their body, their lifestyle, even their mindset. Sometimes it’s Panchakarma, sometimes herbal meds, sometimes simple but important changes in diet or routine. And yes, patient education is a big thing for me, because if they don’t understand why we’re doing something, they might not follow it. I believe Ayurveda isn’t just about treating disease – it’s about prevention, building strength, restoring balance, and yes, making life better overall. That’s what I keep in mind every single day, whether I’m doing a Basti therapy, explaining a treatment plan, or just listening to a patient’s story.. because those stories matter as much as the medicines.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Dip Deshmukh
444
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in Ayurveda with my main focus on reproductive health and infertility, because honestly that’s where I feel my skills can make the most difference. I spent a year as an Ayurvedic Medical Officer at Anand Multi-speciality Hospital in Aurangabad, and that year taught me a lot — not just about handling acute or chronic cases, but also about fitting into an integrative healthcare setup where Ayurveda and modern medicine can actually work side by side. Some days were routine, others… complicated. That’s where I really sharpened my diagnostic skills, making decisions quickly but with care, especially when working with multi-disciplinary teams. Right now, I am doing my MS in Obstetrics and Gynaecology in Hyderabad. The idea is to deepen my understanding of women’s health, but also to make my Ayurvedic practice stronger and more complete in the gynecology and obstetrics space. Infertility—male and female—is an area I work on a lot. I manage cases like PCOD, uterine fibroids, ovulatory issues, and even male problems like low sperm count, with treatments that don’t just mask symptoms. I focus on the root cause, whether it’s hormonal imbalance, structural issues, or lifestyle patterns messing with health. I tend to integrate classical Ayurvedic therapies, diet changes, herbal medicines, and lifestyle counseling into a single plan, plus I customize it for every person… because really no two cases are same. My goal is always to help restore natural fertility, improve hormonal balance, and support overall reproductive wellness in a way that feels sustainable—not quick fixes that fade away. Balancing traditional wisdom with my ongoing academic training keeps me learning and adapting every day. And I think that’s what helps me guide my patients toward safer, effective and long-term health results that actually fit their life, not just their medical file.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Swapnilkumar Bawiskar
344
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in Ayurveda for over 13 years now, and my practice has always been grounded in the classical way… no shortcuts. I focus on both Shaman (palliative) and Shodhan (purification) therapies, depending on what the patient’s condition really needs. Over the years I have worked with many musculoskeletal, neurological and chronic pain cases using Agnikarma (heat cauterization) and Viddhakarma (therapeutic needling) – both give amazing results when done right, but timing, technique and patient selection matter more than most people realise. I also bring Yoga into my treatments, since I’m a certified Yoga Therapist from MUHS, Nashik. That means I can blend very specific yoga practices with the Ayurvedic medicines and Panchakarma. Sometimes the shift comes not just from the herbal formulations or the detox, but from how the patient moves, breathes and manages their own routine. I like building those personalised Yoga plans alongside therapy – they make the treatment deeper and more sustainable. For me, symptom relief is never enough. I want to find and correct the root cause, whether it’s a dosha imbalance, poor digestion, lifestyle errors, or long-standing stress patterns. Each plan is tailored – from Shodhan Panchakarma to small diet changes – because no two patients are ever the same. And yes, I try to keep my clinic space welcoming… a place where people actually feel supported to heal, not just handed a prescription and sent off. My aim is always the same: guide them towards recovery that actually lasts, using the full depth of Ayurveda and Yoga together.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें


नवीनतम समीक्षाएँ

Gabriel
41 मिनटों पहले
Thanks a ton for this detailed answer! Really helped me figure out the next steps for my injury. Feeling less worried now. 😊
Thanks a ton for this detailed answer! Really helped me figure out the next steps for my injury. Feeling less worried now. 😊

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