हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 45
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
827
परामर्श:
Dr. Mahak
379
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a practicing gynecologist who’s pretty much in it for the long haul when it comes to supporting women through... well, everything—from their first cycle to post-menopause phases. My work’s grounded in clinical diagnosis, but what really matters to me is that every patient feels seen and actually heard, whether she's coming in for PCOS symptoms, fibroids, or just doesn’t know why her periods’ve gone all over the place again.
I work a lot with menstrual disorders, hormonal imbalances, fertility issues, even the tricky ones like endometriosis or PID that tend to get brushed off or missed. Honestly, half the battle is getting a woman to feel safe enough to explain what's going on with her body, without feeling judged or rushed. And once I understand the story—symptoms, cycle pattern, stress, maybe even food habits—I try to give a full picture back. Not just “here take this,” but like, this is what’s happening and why.
In fertility consults, I work with both partners when needed—guiding through assessments, discussing options... and yes, dealing with the emotional rollercoaster that can come with it. I believe clarity helps. Not false hope, not cold facts. Just the right info, right time. Antenatal and postnatal care are also a big part of my work—each trimester needs different kind of watchfulness. Sometimes it’s about supplements, other times sleep, sometimes it’s just calming fears.
And yeah, prevention matters a lot. I insist on regular Pap smears, HPV testing, breast exams, and open convos about menopause way before it starts knocking. Education, for me, is the core of care. A woman who's informed is gonna make better choices for herself, every time. I just try to make sure she’s not doing that alone.
My clinic’s not just about fixing illness—it’s a space where women can talk, feel okay asking “silly” questions, and walk out feeling more in control than when they came in. That’s kinda the whole point.
Dr. Feni Kanjibhai Mavani
372
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am practicing only Shuddha Ayurveda—no shortcuts, no fusions, no mixing things up with modern stuff just to make it faster. From the beginning I decided I’d stick to what the classical texts say. That means when someone walks into my clinic, I’m looking at their prakriti, vikriti, samprapti—everything that actually matters to figure out why the issue is even happening. I don’t like the idea of chasing symptoms. Doesn’t work. Never lasts.
Right now I’m still early in the journey tbh, but even in these initial years I’ve treated quite a few cases—things like Amlapitta, Grahani, IBS-like gut issues, migraines, anxiety, insomnia... you name it. Most of them had already tried other stuff and came to Ayurveda more like a last hope. And yeah, it’s slow sometimes—but it works when you follow it right. Shodhana helps a lot more than ppl expect. Especially when followed up properly with Rasayana, correct Ahar, simple lifestyle fixes, and herbal meds that actually suit their dosha.
I usually include Ritucharya, Dinacharya and even Sadvritta if needed—not just because it’s classical, but 'cause that’s how real prevention works. Not just medicines, but the daily little things we ignore until it builds up. That’s how we land in chronic illness in the first place.
I read a lot—mostly Charaka Samhita, Ashtanga Hridaya... try to go back to them whenever something gets confusing or when I need grounding. There’s always something new to reflect on, no matter how many times you go through the same shloka. I don’t claim I know everything—I’m learning everyday. But I do know I won’t compromise on what Ayurveda actually is.
Some ppl want quick cures, some want a pill. I can’t give that. But if someone’s ready to understand their own body, change a few things and trust the process—then yeah, we work together. And that’s where real healing starts.
Dr. Keerthi K Kulkarni
352
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who kind of lives at the intersection of classical Ayurveda + modern wellness science. I did my BAMS and right now studying Psychology (Master’s) and also finishing up a diploma in Nutrition & Health Education—feels like it all clicks together honestly. My work mostly centers around skin, food, and the whole “how are you actually living?” side of things. I see a lot of ppl with stress-based stuff, weight struggles, hormonal dips, or skin flareups that don’t go away with creams. I try to break it down gently—from dosha stuff to emotional triggers. And ya, we start small: maybe food first, or sleep, or just breathing. Then herbs or detox, only if needed.
Skin care is big part of my practice, but not the glossy kind—more like helping someone understand why their acne keeps coming, or why pigmentation isn’t going even though they tried everything. I go deep into Ahara (diet), Vihara (routine), Aushadha (herbs), and Manasa (mind). My goal’s not to mask stuff—it’s to fix what’s actually underneath it. I love seeing someone feel at ease in their skin again. That’s something.
Nutrition isn’t separate either—it’s the base layer really. I help ppl reconnect with meals that actually nourish based on who they are, what their day looks like, even the weather sometimes!! Not calorie-counting but real balance. Sometimes food itself becomes the turning point in healing, and that never gets old to watch.
Now with psychology in the picture, my work’s shifting deeper into mental-emotional spaces too—chronic anxiety, self-image issues, low motivation. I’m learning how the mind clings to patterns even when the body wants to heal. That’s where Ayurveda really shines—treating the person not just the diagnosis.
I try to make each consult a space where ppl feel safe to slow down, breathe, ask things they were too shy to ask before. The idea isn’t instant change—it’s building rhythm, choice by choice. Healing, for me, is more than symptom-fixing—it’s teaching someone how to stay better. That’s what I keep showing up for, even when it’s not simple. And maybe that’s the whole point anyway.
Dr. Ark Keertti Vidyarthi
409
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in Ayurveda since over 12 yrs now, and in all this time I’ve kinda realized one thing—every health issue has a story. Sometimes ppl walk in with gut problems, joint pain, weird rashes, weight gain or hormonal chaos like thyroid, PCOD or even those “undiagnosed fatigue” cases, and honestly it’s rarely just one thing. That’s why I stopped looking at isolated symptoms long ago. I focus on full-body patterns—Dosha, Dhatu, Agni, Srotas, the whole terrain.
I mostly deal with orthopedic conditions, digestive disorders, metabolic imbalances, and stubborn skin stuff like eczema or psoriasis, and yes, things like diabetes, BP, thyroid dysfunction, or just slow stubborn weight that won’t move. My main tools? Good old Panchakarma (properly planned, not trendy), classical herbal meds that actually match the prakriti + vikriti, and daily/seasonal regimens that ppl can actually follow. Like, no one’s doing 4-hour rituals every day... I keep things doable.
I use Nadi Pariksha a lot, it kinda opens the whole map of the person’s internal state. Along with Prakriti analysis, it lets me match treatments that aren’t just textbook but actually land well for that person. I like bringing modern diagnostics into it too—blood reports, scans, just to get a fuller picture. Not for treatment-dictation, but to understand what’s happening under the hood.
Working across different cities, patient types and setups over the years helped me get better at reading ppl—some need deep detox, others just need someone to explain what’s going wrong in their routine. I talk a lot about why the same food or sleep pattern hits two ppl differently, depending on agni, ama, or vitiated dhatus. And I always try to work towards long-term healing—not “symptom gone” relief, but actual system repair.
Patient eduction is a big part of what I do—making ppl feel informed, supported, and part of the process. I don’t do the one-way advice thing... I’d rather the patient feels heard and involved. Ayurveda doesn’t work unless it fits your life and makes sense in your rhythm. That’s what I try to deliver—clean, grounded, intelligent care that restores balance from the inside out.
Dr. Aswathy K Joy
362
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who really got to live Ayurveda during my time at Anjali Ayurveda Wellness Centre in Aluva, Kerala. That place had this kinda stillness to it—peaceful but focused—which honestly let me slow down and go deeper into actual classical practice, not just surface-level stuff. I worked there as a Consultant Ayurvedic Physician, mostly seeing lifestyle and chronic things—gut issues that never go away, stiffness in joints, skin that keeps flaring up without reason, and people stuck in constant stress loops. Felt like the usual suspects, but we didn’t just jump into treatments fast.
Every case—I mean every one—started from scratch: understanding prakriti, figuring out vikriti, listening to the nadi properly (not guessing), and tracing the whole roga-marga and samprapti... until we knew the direction of treatment. Once we had that clarity, only then we'd go for Panchakarma if it actually made sense. I used to do full protocols there—Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya, and even Raktamokshana in few cases—but always with real intent. No “just do detox” mindset. We'd balance shodhana with shamana, and some cases needed rasayana too—body needed rebuilding, not just elimination.
Something that stuck with me there was how many ppl needed guidance, not just meds. They didn’t know why their lifestyle was the problem. I spent time explaining dinacharya, ritucharya... simple ahara tips that they could actually do. Not fancy or unrealistic. And manasika swasthya? No one even heard of that half the time. But once we started addressing it—how they feel, think, behave in disease—it changed the whole approach.
Honestly, working in Kerala gave me a kind of clarity. Seeing classical Ayurveda being practiced exactly how the texts say, yet still totally relevant in today's context—it shifted my way of thinking. You don’t really need to modernize Ayurveda, right? Just deliver it in a way that makes sense to people. With patience. With heart. That’s the part I carry now. Helping ppl understand their disease, feel in control again... not just hand over a list of meds. Yeah it takes time, and it’s not always perfect, but that’s where real healing starts.
Dr. Richa Barad
506
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently working as Chief Ayurveda Consultant at DiRi Ayurveda in Ahmedabad... and honestly, every day feels different but rooted in the same thing—listening properly, and treating deeply. I’ve spent a little over 3 years now practicing Ayurveda clinically (not just reading the texts but actually seeing how it unfolds in real people’s lives). Most of my focus goes into chronic things—lifestyle disorders, gut issues, skin conditions that don’t respond to surface-level stuff, even musculoskeletal pains that get worse with modern routines. And yeah, Stree Roga cases too—I do see quite a few.
I rely heavily on understanding the person’s Prakriti and Vikriti, but also try to read the subtle signs. Like when a patient says they’re “just tired” but the tongue coat or bowel rhythm tells a diff story. That’s where I start. At DiRi, I handle full Panchakarma protocols—Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya, and Rakta mokshan—I don’t follow one-size-for-all things, the plan’s always individual. Timing, strength, even the oil—we tweak all of it.
What helps a lot is not rushing through consutations. I try to create a space where ppl actually feel heard. That’s the only way to get to the root-cause tbh. Most cases also need internal meds, daily dinacharya nudges, diet (which half of them ignore in the beginning), and a bit of hand-holding through seasonal transitions.
Lately I’ve been encouraging more patients to try preventive detox, like smaller panchakarma rounds pre-season or Ritucharya realignments. It helps to avoid flareups rather than only treating them after they pop up. I also feel like the goal isn’t just to "fix" things—it’s to make ppl feel balanced in their own bodies again. And when you see that shift happen—maybe it’s the digestion improving or the skin finally calming down—it kinda reinforces that Ayurveda isn’t slow... it’s just deep.
Dr. Soorya Gopakumar
405
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working mostly in the space of Stree Roga—Ayurveda's branch for women’s health. Not just treating problems but really figuring out why things go off-balance. Whether it’s PCOS or delayed periods or those weird mid-cycle cramps that ppl often ignore... I try to go deep into the root cause. Most of the women I see are either struggling with something hormonal, or something emotional that reflects through hormones—it’s all connected. My job is to untangle that.
I treat PCOS (Artava Kshaya), painful or irregular periods, infertility (Vandhyatva), Shweta pradara (that’s white discharge) and even support women during menopause when symptoms get confusing and... just messy. I use a combo of things—classical herbal meds, Panchakarma when needed, some detox or snehana if toxins are stuck... and I really stress on lifestyle. Because you can’t just do Virechana and go back to 3am scrolling and fried snacks 🙃
One thing I do that not many docs spend enough time on is prevention. Like, why wait until you're infertile or your cycles totally vanish to seek help? I teach women how to align daily routines (Dinacharya), seasonal shifts (Ritucharya), mental practices, and all that. It sounds small, but these things keep cycles smooth, digestion light, and mood more... stable?
Also, I explain everything. I need my patients to understand what’s happening in their body. Not just follow instructions blindly—bc when they get it, they actually stay consistent. Some girls ask a lot of questions, some are quiet but anxious... doesn’t matter. I sit and go over what this dosha is doing or what exactly is blocking ovulation or how stress is tied to gut problems, etc. Clarity empowers.
For me, the goal is not short term fixes or suppressing symptoms. I want real healing—reversal where possible, relief where not, and a solid baseline of well-being that lasts through years. Each woman I work with is different. No copy-paste protocols here. I plan treatments around prakriti, vikriti, samprapti—plus, honestly, a bit of instinct that comes with seeing many patterns repeat over time.
Whether it’s a young girl with severe PMS or a 45 yr old navigating early menopause—I try to show up with empathy, patience, and a treatment that fits. And that makes all the diff.
Dr. Megha R
358
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic physician working mostly in the areas where people kinda lose hope early—like piles, fissures, fistula, chronic wounds, painful varicose veins, and lingering pain that just doesn’t go away. My core work is centered around proctology and parasurgical care. I use therapies like Ksharasutra for Bhagandara and Arsha, and Agnikarma when pain or tissue swelling refuses to back off. Honestly—lot of my patients come after trying too many things that didn’t work, which makes the trust part even more imp.
In ano-rectal cases, I try not to rush. I usually combine internal meds with lepa, sitz bath or herbal dhoopan, and time the procedures when they’re most effective for each stage. Not everyone needs surgery right? But when they do, I stick to Ayurveda’s shalyatantra logic, focus on minimal invasion and max comfort... recovery matters, especially when people are already drained dealing with it for years.
My wound healing protocols are mix of herbal washes, medicated lepas, dressings + diet that matches the tissue state (roga-avasta). I’ve seen good recovery in ulcers that didn’t heal for weeks. For varicose veins n vascular-type pain, I mix things—some days Basti, some days Raktamokshan or a localized Agnikarma helps way better than only internal meds. Pain management is a big deal. If pain isn’t handled right, even the best healing stops halfway.
Ayurveda doesn’t just give you herbs n oils. It teaches how to read a condition, and where to interrupt it. I try to find that point early—like before the problem goes deep. But also, I guide on long-term stuff too: food, posture, bowel habits, and little daily things that either support or break your recovery. Not all patients follow 100%—but when they do, the results feel worth all the effort.
Dr. Anusha R T
595
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor by training and heart—graduated from S.D.M Institute of Ayurveda and Hospital, which honestly laid a really solid base for everything I do now. Been working clinically for a little over 3 years now, mostly at Madhavbaug Clinic in RR Nagar, Bangalore. That’s where I’ve been putting a lot of focus into preventive cardiology and what you might call metabolic care—stuff like diabtetes, obesity, hypertension, thyroid dysfunctions, and cardiac conditions. Lot of people come in thinking they’re just stuck with meds for life... but we try to change that. Disease reversal isn’t just a phrase—it’s the actual goal.
At Madhavbaug, I work mostly with Ayurvedic protocols but we’re big on lifestyle correction too. Like getting down to the roots of the problem—whether it's poor gut health or unmanaged stress or just food habits that quietly make things worse. I also have a bit of a parallel side practice going, especially for people dealing with tougher chronic things—kidney disorders and cancer cases, not for curing per se but for long-term support and improving strength during other treatments. Ayurveda has tools that help if used properly.
Sometimes the work is simple, like someone with acidity or bloating or sleep that’s just off. Other times it’s complex, overlapping issues that need time, patience, and repeat checks. I try not to rush into formulas. Every patient’s condition and prakriti tells a different story. Even if two people have the “same” diagnosis, the plan won't look the same.
And yeah—Ayurveda doesn't mean giving 7 herbs and hoping for magic. We do lab monitoring, use structured diet protocols, and track clinical changes. It’s real work and I enjoy doing it, even on days when it feels slow. End of the day, if someone walks out feeling better than when they came in, that counts as progress.
Dr. Karishma singh
384
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently working as a General Practitioner at DH Hospital and also run my own clinic, juggling both hospital rounds and neighborhood cases—keeps me grounded honestly. I see all sorts of patients, across all age groups, and most of what I do involves treating things that show up everyday: fevers, coughs, diabetes, BP issues, seasonal stuff, gut trouble, breathing complaints—you name it.
At DH, things move fast—like sometimes you’re managing an acute infection in the morning and by evening you’re adjusting long-term meds for an elderly patient with multiple conditions. That pace kinda shaped the way I handle clinical decisions. On the other hand, my clinic’s more about giving time, hearing stories in full, picking up early signs of things before they go bad. I do a lot of followups, especially with people managing chronic diseases, and I try to help them feel less “clinical”—more cared for, you know?
My approach is pretty simple. I focus on early diagnosis, clear explanation of what’s going on, and working with patients—not just talking at them. I explain things in normal language (medical jargon helps no one), help them understand lifestyle connections, and guide them in small manageable steps. Whether it’s someone with a new sugar diagnosis or a parent dealing with a kid’s recurring cold, I try to give practical advice—not textbook lines.
I keep myself updated with the latest guidelines—guidelines change, people’s habits change, new symptoms show up, especially post-COVID times, everything is kinda more layered now. Being alert to those shifts matters.
In short, I try to be the first person people can reach when they’re not sure what to do next with their health—someone they can trust to listen, think straight, and act in their best interest. Whether it’s a one-time visit or a long-term thing, my goal’s the same: better health, less stress. Not perfect, but consistent.
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