हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 37
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. Sahil Gupta
75
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic Allergy Specialist by core, with degrees in B.A.M.S. & M.H.A., and right now I'm working as the CEO of IAFA Ayurveda®. been in this space for over 15 years now—sounds like a long time but honestly still feels like I’m learning something new every month.
My main focus is helping people deal with food allergies, nasal congestion, fungal infections (especially recurrent ones), and skin allergies that don’t really respond to creams or meds or whatever else they’ve already tried. I see a lot of chronic, stubborn cases. The ones that flare up randomly, or shift seasonally, or even react to the weirdest foods—milk, wheat, lentils, fruits... sometimes even plain rice! And half of these patients don’t even realise it’s an allergic response until it gets really out of hand.
At IAFA, we run both in-clinic and online consults. That’s been a big help for families outside India or folks in cities where there’s no access to proper ayurvedic care. Like, real allergy care, not just generic immunity tonics. I try to make it clear to patients that the immune system is not supposed to overreact—that’s what we’re calming down. And we do it through stepwise, root-cause based management... not shortcuts.
I don’t believe in just suppressing symptoms with herbs either. Ayurveda has its own way of identifying where the imbalance starts—whether it’s in diet, agni (digestive fire), or even unresolved gut issues. Fungal infections? I’ve seen those vanish only when the internal terrain is corrected—not just by applying stuff on top.
Honestly, the work can be intense. Every allergy case is different. But that’s also what makes this field kinda addictive... you're not just treating a condition, you're tracking how a person's entire system is reacting to life. That's what Ayurveda taught me. And that’s exactly what I use, everyday.
Dr. Madhvi Sharma
167
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am just about a year into my Ayurvedic journey, still feelin like I’m learning something new every single day. Even though it's early in my practice, that one year kinda feels like five — you know? Long days, full of patients, reading late night case studies, constantly checking if I missed something. My main focus right now is just staying super grounded in the classical principles, sticking to what the texts say while also figuring out how to apply it all in real life scenerios where things don't always look textbook-perfect.
I’m drawn toward treating common chronic stuff — like digestive problems, periods that go haywire, headaches that won’t quit, even early stages of lifestyle disorders like stress-linked issues or mild hypertension. Doesn’t mean I’ve seen everything, but I do take time with each case. I ask a lot (maybe too many?) questions, take notes, compare patterns, and try not to jump too fast into herbal prescriptions unless I know the prakriti and the root cause kinda line up.
I’ve also spent time observing panchakarma sessions closely — not leading them yet, but slowly getting more confident in suggesting the right therapies when needed. The way Ayurveda connects mental & physical health fascinates me honestly, and lately I’ve been reading more about manas rogas and how daily routine can mess up everything from skin to mood.
Still growing, still figuring out what kind of doctor I wanna become. But I’m careful. I don’t like guess work. Every patient’s body tells you something — it’s just about learning how to listen better. That’s where I’m at right now. Trying to listen, observe, and get better one step at a time.
Dr. Aishwarya Kashid
308
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a practicing Ayurveda doctor, been working in this field for about 4 yrs now. What really drives me is not just symptom relief—but that full-circle kind of healing where mind, body, habits all start syncing up. I usually work with people who have lifestyle disorders (like acidity, sleep issues, stress, PCOS etc) and also more stubborn stuff like chronic skin problems, joint pain, sluggish digestion—things that don’t just go away with a pill.
I always begin with understanding the patient’s *prakriti*—that unique doshic blueprint—because nothing in Ayurveda is one-size-fits-all, right? Then I build a treatment plan using classical Ayurvedic medicines (not those generic over-the-counter ones), sometimes Panchakarma if it's needed, but always paired with simple shifts in food and routine. I spend time explaining all that. Like, why we're doing what we're doing. Patients shouldn’t feel lost in jargon.
Even with less time in practice compared to senior docs, I’ve treated a pretty good number of cases and learned a lot. I keep going back to the texts—Charaka, Ashtanga, sometimes even lesser-known ones—because each time you read them after treating real people, something new clicks.
I try to stay grounded in what works, not what’s trending or fast or marketable. I care about sustainability in healing—where the person actually feels better *and* understands how to stay that way. And I’m still learning every day. Every patient teaches something.. even the ones who don’t come back. Maybe especially them.
Dr. S.K. Myvizhli
264
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who’s been practicing for almost 2 years now, and I’d say my core area is Panchakarma and managing long-term or lifestyle-related health issues. I really got into this because I saw how much of modern illness is just ignored until it gets worse—like people living with fatigue or joint pain forever, assuming it’s just part of aging. That didn’t sit right with me.
I work with classical Panchakarma therapies a lot—Vaman, Virechan, Basti, Nasya, and yeah even Raktamokshan when needed. I’ve done these across many cases but I don’t just follow a textbook. I look at who the person is, what doshas are messed up, and tailor everything from the therapy to their ahar-vihar. Like it’s not one-size-fits-all, right?
Lately I've been seeing many patients with Aamvata, Sandhivata, lower back stuff, or gut issues that just don’t go away with usual meds. My aim is not to just give herbal pain relief but to reverse the underlying pathology—using diet, shodhan, rasayana when appropriate, and helping the body detox n heal at its pace. I’m also into Ayurvedic nutrition a lot. I keep building custom diet regimens for ppl that they can actually follow in real life—not just “don’t eat spicy,” you know?
General OPD-wise, I handle stuff like skin allergies, hormonal stuff, acidity, constipation, sleep troubles, seasonal flus etc. I don’t rush consults—I ask a lot of questions, sometimes too many!—but it’s cause every detail gives me a clue about how that person’s system is coping or collapsing. I’ve found that even small tweaks in routine can make a huge shift if done right and consistent.
I also use Swasthavritta guidelines a lot. Basic daily dinacharya, ritucharya, and all that makes a diff. And if someone’s open to it, I recommend yoga tools for their case—specially in chronic fatigue, PCOS or anxiety-prone profiles.
Anyway, I try to keep it real, gentle and sustainable. My goal isn't to give some miracle result but to nudge ppl toward long-lasting balance. And if I can reduce their dependnce on chem-based meds or help them avoid unnecessary procedures, that’s a win in my book.
Dr. Saurabh Pandhare
950
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working as an Ayurvedic practitioner for the past 2 years and during this time I tried to keep my focus on delivering care that feels authentic and practical at the same time. For me Ayurveda is not just about prescribing herbs or doing Panchakarma, it is about seeing the whole picture of the patient—what is their prakriti, how their dosha shifting, what lifestyle patterns contributing to the condition. Many times I find small things, like irregular eating habits or disturbed sleep, making bigger impact than people think, and guiding them on those areas is as important as giving medicines.
In my practice I manage a variety of health issues, some common like indigestion, acidity, skin rashes, and some chronic like arthritis, hormonal imbalance, or long-term digestive weakness. I prefer to design treatment plans that are not copy paste but tuned to the individual. Herbal medicines play a big role, but I also rely a lot on simple diet correction, yoga postures, breathing practices, and when needed Panchakarma procedures like virechana or basti. Each of these therapies work best only when matched to the person’s need, so I take time to explain why I’m recommending it, rather than just writing a prescription.
One thing I’ve learned is patients respond better when they actually understand what’s happening inside their body. So I spend time in patient education, sometimes even drawing out simple charts or breaking down dosha imbalance in a way they can relate to. It makes them feel part of their healing, not just someone waiting for results.
Working with patients so far has taught me the value of compassionate listening. Many times when someone comes with chronic pain or stress, the act of being heard itself becomes part of the healing process. That’s why I try to maintain strong doctor-patient relationships, giving enough time and space for them to share.
My aim stays same always—restore balance and help people live healthier, not only free from illness but with better quality of life. I want Ayurveda to be not just a treatment system for them, but a way of sustainable wellness.
Dr. Aayush Tomar
666
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a general physician with just over a year in clinical practice — still learning every single day tbh, but in that time, I’ve seen how powerful basic, attentive care can be. Most people come in with things that look small — a cough that won’t stop, some pain in the back, feeling low or not sleeping right — but those symptoms can mean so much more when you actually stop and listen to the full story. That’s kind of how I try to approach it. My base is general medicine, and I handle a mix of both acute and long-standing conditions. Fevers, infections, gastritis, blood pressure ups and downs, fatigue, hormonal stuff, weird aches that don’t show up in reports — I look at all of it with patience, not just a prescription pad.
Alongside that, I also spent 6 months working under a senior psychiatrist — not a lot maybe, but honestly? Eye-opening. Helped me understand how much of our physical health is tangled up with mental patterns we ignore. During that phase, I started seeing anxiety, depression, mood imbalances — not just as “mental” stuff but part of a whole system breakdown. That blend of mental + physical focus really shapes my consults now. Like someone walks in with chest tightness and I’m asking about both ECGs *and* sleep, stress, screen time, relationship stuff — because yeah, that matters too.
When I sit with a patient, I try not to rush. I explain what I can (sometimes clumsily lol), keep it real, and work out something that actually fits into their daily life — not some textbook plan. Evidence-based, yes, but also... human. I care a lot about building that honest space where people don’t feel stupid for asking questions or admitting they’re struggling. Whether it’s general issues or stress-related complaints, I take both seriously.
Right now I’m open to working with anyone who needs help managing their health, whether it's general wellness or more emotional burnout-type stuff. Let’s talk, understand what’s going on, and figure out a doable path. That’s my whole thing — keep it simple, grounded, and helpful.
Dr. Mallesh
370
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. Mallesh, an Ayurvedic physician mainly working with ENT disorders—ear, nose, throat—and also oral cavity problems that often get overlooked until they start interfering with daily life. I deal with sinusitis, allergic rhinitis, recurring throat infections, tinnitus, earaches, nasal blockages, oral ulcers… and a few rare cases that don’t fit neatly into any single list. Many of my patients come after trying conventional treatments without lasting relief, which honestly makes me more determined to dig deeper into the cause.
My approach starts with a detailed examination, using Ayurvedic diagnostic methods along with a careful listening of the patient’s own story (sometimes the smallest detail changes the entire plan). Once I know what’s driving the issue—often a dosha imbalance combined with lifestyle triggers—I create an individualised treatment plan. That might involve herbal formulations, medicated oils, Nasya (nasal administration), Gandusha (oil holding & rinsing), or other targeted therapies, plus diet & lifestyle adjustments that are actually doable in their daily routine.
I try not to just chase away the symptoms but build the body’s own resistance, so the same problem doesn’t keep returning. ENT issues can be stubborn, especially when linked to weak immunity or chronic inflammation, but Ayurveda gives us tools that are gentle yet powerful enough to work long-term.
Over the years I’ve seen acute flare-ups calm down without invasive procedures, and chronic cases finally stabilise after years of recurring trouble. That’s the part I enjoy most—watching someone breathe clear after months of nasal blockages or finally sleep without ear ringing driving them mad.
Patient comfort matters to me as much as the treatment itself. I keep consultations open and unhurried, making sure they understand what’s happening and why we’re doing each step. “Be healthy, be happy” isn’t just a line—it’s the feeling I want them to carry when they walk out the door, knowing they’re on a path toward real, sustainable recovery.
Dr. Akash Dubey
897
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently doing my MD in Rog Nidan at Tilak Ayurved Mahavidyalaya, Pune — and honestly this phase feels like a complete shift in how I look at diseases. Rog Nidan is about digging deep into diagnosis, not just what the symptom “looks like.” I spend a lot of my time working on Nidan Panchak — Hetu, Purvarupa, Rupa, Upashaya, Samprapti — and trying to see how these classical tools line up with what we call modern clinical observations. It’s not always straightforward, sometimes the pieces don’t fit neatly, but that’s where the real thinking starts.
My main interest is understanding the root cause — why the body is reacting the way it does, how doshas are moving, which dushya is weak, which srotas are blocked, and where the samprapti is heading. Because if the diagnosis is even slightly off, the treatment will never hold. That’s why I value this training so much, it makes you slow down and see the case before jumping to manage it.
During my MD I’ve been exposed to all kinds of cases — respiratory, metabolic, skin disorders, chronic GI problems — and the learning is different each time. I sit with seniors, discuss, listen, and also try to add my own observations. We do seminars, case presentations, departmental discussions, and those sessions push me to refine my logic, to defend why I read a case in a certain way. Sometimes I’m wrong, but that’s what sharpens the skill.
What draws me most is the role of early detection and preventive care. Ayurveda has so much to say about before the disease fully sets in, and I think that’s what people need today. Teaching patients about their prakriti, helping them understand the imbalance, showing them how lifestyle connects with their health… those small conversations go a long way.
As I move ahead, my goal is to keep building this bridge — where Rog Nidan isn’t just theory in Sanskrit, but a living diagnostic tool that stands strong even in today’s healthcare setup. Evidence-informed, patient-centered, but deeply rooted in classical wisdom. That’s the physician I want to become.
Dr. Vineet Tiwari
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5
13,116
15 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurveda, meditation and yoga consultant who somehow found myself spending more than 12 years working with people who were tired, stressed, anxious or just stuck in their own health cycles. I didn’t start out thinking I would mix all three together, but over time it just became natural—Ayurveda gave the framework, yoga gave the movement, and meditation gave the space. When I look at a patient now, I don’t just see the symptom in front of me, I try to read their prakriti, the doshic imbalance, even the way lifestyle and stress has been shaping them quietly for years.
I work with many who deal with chronic stress, anxiety, digestive probs, hormonal shifts, fatigue, sleep troubles, the kind of issues that modern medicine often labels but doesn’t always solve fully. For me it is about tailoring the plan—sometimes its detox and diet, other times it’s more about asana therapy and guided breathing. I notice even small shifts like when someone starts sleeping deeper after months of insomnia, that’s a big win for them and for me too.
My sessions are usually layered—mindful breathing, awareness practice, Ayurvedic diet corrections, yoga postures adapted to what the body can actually do. Not textbook perfection, but practical healing. Whether it is supporting someone after an illness or helping with long fatigue, I want them to feel connected back with their own rhythm instead of chasing some ideal outside.
I also do workshops and group sessions, because honestly some people heal faster when they’re not alone in the journey. Teaching therapeutic yoga classes or guided meditation in small groups has shown me how shared energy changes the way ppl recover. Prevention, resilience, balancing energy—all these words sound big, but in practice they mean helping someone wake up lighter or go to bed calmer.
Health for me is not just absence of disease. It’s harmony, between body mind and consciousness. I keep that in mind every time I sit with someone, trying to support them beyond the symptom picture. I still feel like a student of Ayurveda daily, but also a guide for those who need tools to take charge of their health in simple yet powerful ways.
Dr. Nagalingayya Swami
276
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in Ayurved practice for over five years now, and honestly it still feels like each patient teaches me something new. My focus has mostly been on holistic care—not just symptom control, but going deep into what’s causing the issue and trying to correct that. Whether it’s a lifestyle disease that’s grown over years or some seasonal flare-up that came out of nowhere, I try to figure out a plan that’s both rooted in classical texts and still makes sense for today’s lifestyle... coz that part keeps changing constantly.
I usually begin with a detailed assessment—things like Prakriti analysis, dosha balance (or more often, imbalance lol), daily habits, appetite, stress triggers, sleep patterns, the works. Sometimes even one small detail tells you a lot if you're looking properly. From there I customize herbal meds, food changes, Panchakarma when needed, n even simple daily routine tips. Doesn’t always need a big treatment, sometimes it’s just about small shifts that work together.
Lot of the cases I’ve handled are related to digestion issues, stress, hormonal shifts, or joint pains that don’t go away despite meds... those are tricky but I feel that’s where Ayurved shines if you stay patient n honest with it. Many patients also come in with fatigue or mood swings that allopathic tests don’t explain much—those cases really require sitting down and listening. I try to give space to patients to talk, not just diagnose fast and move on.
My goal? I guess it’s to make Ayurved feel real for people. Not just something ancient but something that fits today too. I like to give them tools they can carry with them—understanding their bodytype, knowing what food suits them, when to cleanse or rest... even small stuff like waking up at a fixed time can shift the body’s energy.
Anyway yeah, I do my best to keep it authentic to the roots but still usable for now. Just helping people live in tune with their body, not fight against it all the time. That’s the aim really.
FAQ
आयुर्वेदिक डॉक्टर से प्रश्न कैसे पूछें?
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