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हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 47

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. Vikrant Prashantrao Mohrir
506
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently working as an Anorectal Consultant where most of my time goes into treating conditions like piles (Arsha), anal fissures (Parikartika), fistula-in-ano (Bhagandara), and pilonidal sinus. These aren’t just surface problems—they come with pain, bleeding, embarrassment, recurrence, and a lot of frustration for the patient. I focus on Ayurvedic treatment that doesn’t just give temporary relief but goes deep into the cause. Using protocols like Ksharasutra therapy and Agnikarma, I work with both chronic and acute conditions, especially where people want to avoid conventional surgery or are tired of it failing again. My background is in Shalyatantra, so yes, I am trained in surgery—but I actually try to not use it unless absolutely needed. I’d rather go with a para-surgical plan that’s safe, low-risk and aligns better with the body’s own way of healing. I’m also very particular about diagnosis. Before I do anything, I take time to understand the doshic imbalance, digestive fire, local dushti (tissue-level pathology), and the patient's overall strength and stress load. My treatment doesn't stop with just the therapy. I include post-op healing support, pain management, wound care, diet correction, and lifestyle shifts. Some of the therapies I often include are Basti, Avagaha Sweda, and Lepa application—especially when there’s pain, burning, or swelling involved. I also guide patients in Ahara (diet), Vihara (daily activity) and Dinacharya (routines)—because honestly, if you don’t fix the routine, you’ll keep treating the same thing again and again. Every person I see gets a different plan, matched to their prakriti and condition. What I enjoy most about this field is the way Ayurveda allows me to treat deeply without causing trauma to the body. Chronic disorders do need patience, but I’ve seen Ksharasutra work where nothing else did. And I keep studying—reviewing classics, following research, learning from my seniors and from my own patients too. My aim? To make people feel in control again. No shame, no fear—just clarity, care, and a proper roadmap back to health.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Shahid
369
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic Consultant and Surgeon with a post-grad in Shalya Tantra, which basically means I work at the intersection of classical Ayurvedic wisdom and surgical precision—when needed. I’m fully trained to perform surgeries, yeah, but I honestly believe surgery should always be the last thing, not the first reflex. If we can help someone heal without a knife, then why not go that route first? In my practice I handle a mix of surgical and non-surgical conditions—fistula, piles, fissure, abscesses, pilonidal sinus, and chronic joint-muscle issues too. I’ve seen how much damage gets done when things are rushed to OT without even checking if Ayurved can fix it gently. I work a lot with Kshar Sutra therapy—it’s this brilliant, time-tested Ayurvedic method that helps manage ano-rectal problems without cutting everything open. Less pain, lower recurrence, and more respect for the body’s own healing pace. Diagnosis is a huge part of what I do. I rely a lot on direct observation, history taking, touch cues, dosha assessment, and yeah—sometimes blending in modern diagnostics to double-check what we’re seeing. I don’t push therapy unless I know why I’m giving it. Herbal meds, Panchakarma detox, wound care, diet corrections—they’re not given just for the sake of it. I build a full plan around the patient’s condition and prakriti. And when a case actually does need surgery—like when there’s a tough abscess or a non-responding fistula—I do it with care, and a lot of post-op support. Clean surgical technique, minimal trauma, and recovery that’s aided by internal Ayurvedic meds for faster tissue repair, less infection risk, and better overall energy post-recovery. I believe in giving each person honest, clear info about their condition. No fluff. Just facts, options, risks, recovery—told upfront. I don’t believe in scaring ppl into treatment. My aim is simple: use Ayurveda to heal when we can, use surgery only when we must... and always build trust before we build a treatment plan.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Hemlata
540
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am Dr. Hemlata, an Ayurvedic doctor with over 8 years working closely in women’s health—mainly gynecology and obstetrics, but from a completely natural & classical Ayurveda lens. I mostly work with women trying to find real, non-invasive solutions to infertility, hormonal imbalances, menstrual problems, and overall reproductive wellness. My focus isn't just on managing symptoms—it’s more about going to the root of the imbalance and building back the system gently but solidly. Over the yrs, I’ve helped many women who felt stuck with unexplained infertility or irregular cycles or hormone chaos that no one could quite fix. What I do is spend time listening first. Then I build a full treatment plan that blends personalized herbs, lifestyle correction, fertility nutrition, and therapies like Panchakarma or Rasayana where needed. I look at each case differently—no two patients walk in with the same prakriti or mental space, even if the diagnosis is "same". I work with conditions like PCOD/PCOS, painful periods, uterine fibroids, heavy or delayed bleeding, even stress-linked infertility. I don't just hand a list of medicines—I work on digestion, sleep, daily rhythm, mental strain, and also emotional load that builds over time, especially for women trying to conceive. Ayurveda has such a full spectrum, it lets me work layer by layer. I use therapies like Uttarbasti, Virechana or Yoni Pichu if they're indicated, but only after careful nadi, agni and doshic assessments. For some, it’s a simple routine tweak, for others, it’s a deeper detox followed by strengthening. Either way, I aim to keep it gentle, sustainable and most importantly—understandable to the woman who’s going thru it. My goal is to empower women to trust their body again, to stop feeling like they have no control over what’s happening. I’ve seen Ayurveda restore cycles, boost ovulation, ease long-standing PMS, and support conception naturally—even where hope was kinda fading. I believe in compassionate care, and I want every woman to feel seen and supported—not rushed through a treatment file. That’s what drives my practice every day.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Girish B.R.
635
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who’s worked closely on managing anorectal disorders through Ayurvedic care that’s both non-invasive and actually doable for the patient long term. Most of my focus is around things like fistula-in-ano, piles, fissures, pilonidal sinus and other lowkey ignored rectal issues that usually just get pushed toward surgery too quick. I use Kshar Sutra therapy a lot—it’s a para-surgical procedure, yes, but it’s minimally invasive & works wonders when done right. Patients see clear results with less recurrence, and honestly that’s what we aim for. My approach is kind of simple—I don’t jump to cutting or intense stuff. I start with cleaning the system out, correcting Agni, addressing lifestyle issues, and then layer treatment with internal meds and Kshara-based interventions. Most ppl don’t realize these conditions often start way before symptoms do... poor gut habits, untreated constipation, stress, whatever—there’s usually a backstory. I also treat chronic wounds. Like those stubborn, non-healing types that hang around forever and no one knows what to do with. Ayurved has solid answers for that if we’re patient. I combine wound-care with herbal lepas, detox plans, rasayana, and bandhan techniques depending on the depth and origin of the wound. Some come from infection, some from poor circulation or even dosha overload—it all needs decoding. What I care about most is that the patient understands what we’re treating and why. I don’t just give a name and a cream—I explain it, show them the timeline, the logic behind each chikitsa step. Most people actually want to know, they just never get told. For those trying to avoid unnecessary surgery or recurring meds with side effects, I offer alternatives grounded in evidence-based Ayurvedic logic. My goal’s always been to go to the root and get long-term results—not just short relief. I try to keep things honest, clean, and dosha-aligned. Every patient’s journey looks a bit different, and I build around that, not the textbook.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Liyakat Ahmed
498
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a Government Medical Officer, working in Ayurvedic healthcare since 2008—yeah, that's over 15 yrs now, and honestly, each year has only deepened my respect for this science. I’ve spent most of my clinical life in real on-ground setups—govt hospitals, rural dispensaries, PHCs—places where care actually needs to reach, not just where it’s convenient. My work’s always been rooted in classical Ayurveda, but guided by what people around me really go thru day to day. I’ve focused a lot on women’s health, especially reproductive care, menstrual issues, infertility guidance, and prenatal-postnatal support. I work with young girls figuring out hormonal chaos, pregnant women who want safe and natural support, and women navigating menopause without getting lost in symptoms. I don’t just give a few meds—I try to listen, really. Most times, it’s a mix of things—Panchakarma, Rasayana, food changes, counseling, even sleep habits. It all adds up. Maternal and child healthcare is something I’ve stayed deeply involved in. Whether it’s first-time moms, risky pregnancy cases, postnatal healing, or even helping build immunity in kids—I’ve used Ayurvedic protocols that adapt to life stages. Sometimes it’s herbs. Sometimes it’s just restoring rhythm. And yeah, every plan is dosha-based. Not just randomly picking things off a chart. Beyond OPD work, I’ve also been involved in community health programs. Screenings, awareness drives, outreach camps—those moments where Ayurveda and preventive health become part of daily life for the people. It’s where public health and Ayurveda overlap...and that blend is powerful if done right. I work with both acute & chronic issues, but always with one lens—what’s the root, and what’s sustainable. Whether it's a skin flare-up or lifestyle disease, treatment has to make sense to the person living with it. I stay updated, but my goal's still the same: clear diagnosis, ethical treatment, and helping people reconnect with their health in ways they can carry forward.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Shivaprasad Sharma
866
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an MD in Kayachikitsa from KLE University and have been board-certified in Ayurveda since 2016. Over these past 7+ years, I’ve kinda stayed in the middle of three things—clinical practice, teaching, and a bit of research work too. What keeps me going is honestly the process of bringing classical Ayurvedic wisdom into today’s health mess—with proper logic, not just repeating old lines. I don’t believe Ayurveda should stay stuck. It’s deep, yes, but it’s also meant to evolve... if we’re listening right. Most of my experience centers around managing chronic diseases & metabolic conditions—stuff like diabetes, BP, IBS, thyroid, autoimmune issues, fatigue syndromes, stress-looped imbalances... that category where ppl usually say “nothing really helps long-term”. I look for the root cause in each case, coz symptom-chasing only drags things out. Diagnosis for me isn’t just about test reports. I do full-body readings—Dosha mapping, digestion tracking, sleep patterns, mental rhythm, disease history, and the Prakriti-Vikriti overlay. That’s where my protocols start. In treatment I use herbal formulations, Rasayana, dietary restructures, Panchakarma therapies when needed—but never randomly. Every case gets layered planning. I always try keeping it doable. There’s no point giving a gold plan if the patient can’t apply it at home, right? During my academic side, I’ve contributed in research protocol designing, and been involved in patient education work, mainly to help ppl understand Ayurveda instead of just following instructions. That’s something I’m big on—patient awareness. I see health not just as cure, but as a process of getting people to feel in control of their body again.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Athulya Ramachandran
567
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working right now as a Duty Medical Officer at JSS Ayurveda Hospital—honestly it's a bit hectic sometimes, but the kind of learning that comes out of it is unmatched. Most days I’m managing OPD and IPD rounds, keeping track of cases that range from skin problems, arthritis, indigestion-type issues to more long-haul lifestyle conditions like diabetes or thyroid. It’s not always smooth, but each patient teaches something—sometimes subtle things that even books miss. One part of the job that kinda grew on me is patient assessment. I do thorough nadi pariksha, prakriti analysis and dosha evaluations, which helps get to the root quicker, not just the symptoms. My treatments mostly revolve around classical Ayurvedic meds and I also advise Panchakarma when needed—basti, virechana, you name it—depends on what fits best. Plus, I always try explaining to the patient why a certain diet or routine is advised. They deserve to know, not just follow blindly. I also chip in with admin stuff—making sure hygiene protocols are tight, records are neat, and there’s good coordination among our team. It's a challenge to balance clinical and paperwork side but I kinda like that pressure too... most of the time! Working alongside senior Vaidyas has helped polish my diagnostic clarity and made me trust the strength of Ayurveda even more. Integrating modern diagnostics with our traditional methods feels necessary to me. We're not just sticking to age-old texts, we’re applying them with present-day logic, and that's what makes it meaningful, right? One day I’d like to get deeper into Panchakarma research or maybe work with chronic care cases at a bigger level... still figuring. Till then I’m just focusing on doing justice to each case, each day. Whether it’s acute or chronic, I want the patient to feel seen, heard and supported—not rushed. That’s kinda the core for me. I keep reading, observing, making mistakes too—but learning with each one.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Saraswati Chinmalli
400
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently working as an Assistant Professor at RRAMC College, where honestly my day swings between teaching Ayurvedic fundamentals, mentoring students one-on-one, and getting into the grind of research that keeps Ayurveda alive in today's context. I don’t just teach from books—I kinda live it. Whether it's guiding a confused intern during rounds or debating classical references during lectures, I really try to make Ayurveda feel real and relevant, not dusty and frozen in time. Apart from academics, I’ve had my share of tough boots-on-ground moments too. During the COVID pandemic, I was on duty at a Covid Care Centre. That phase was rough—managing patients, oxygen levels, panic, everything. No script, just presence and fast decision-making. And when the Aapthamitra teleconsultations rolled out, I was also part of the team offering remote advice to ppl stuck at home, isolated, anxious. It wasn’t just medicine—it was comfort and clarity in chaos, if that makes sense. Before this role, I worked as a Medical Officer at PHC Magadi Road in Bengaluru. That place taught me a lot. You see everything there—from fever cases to pregnant mothers in labour to those regulars with chronic diabetes or knee pain who just walk in n chat about their BP. I learned what real primary care looks like—fast-paced but personal, limited resources but unlimited stories. I don’t believe Ayurveda is meant to sit only in pages. Whether I'm treating with classical herbal protocols or just talking to patients about their daily routines, it’s all about balance. I try to align treatments not just to the disease, but to the life around that disease. And yeah, I'm still learning. Reading. Listening. Updating myself through workshops, CME meets, and conversations with seniors who’ve walked this path longer. Ayurveda’s not static. It grows through each patient, each mistake, each curious student. That’s really what keeps me here.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Shweta A
686
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am someone who’s straddled both sides of medicine—Ayurveda and Allopathy—which honestly changed how I look at health n healing. For a year I worked directly with patients in both setups, watching how each system handles acute stuff like fevers or infections vs long-term things like diabetes or pain syndromes. Sometimes they overlap beautifully, and sometimes, yeah, you gotta pick what fits best. That kinda real-time exposure gave me a wider lens. I don’t just jump into herbs or tablets—I try to feel out the person first, what they really need. Right now I'm also doing my MPH in Maternal and Child Health (still in progress!), and that part? it's opening my eyes big time. There's just so much that goes into keeping moms and kids healthy—not just medicines or nutrition, but access, education, emotional support too. The public health side makes you think bigger, more community level... not just who’s in front of you in the clinic. It’s helped me care in a deeper way, honestly. I'm really drawn to this idea of integrative care, like not sticking to one fixed line of treatment. Ayurveda for dosha balance and immunity, Allopathy for acute needs, preventive stuff backed by real data... it all can work together, if you let it. I'm also into awareness work, like breaking down health things simply—helping people understand what’s going on in their body without scaring them or making them feel dumb. And yeah, I’ve seen that small steps matter. Whether it's constipation that’s been ignored for years, or a new mom feeling completely lost—there’s no one-size-fits-all. My aim is to keep growing in both these worlds n build a care model that’s smart, respectful, and actually doable in real life. If that means mixing traditions, fine. If it means standing back n listening more—maybe that’s even better.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Mohammad Faizan Siddiqui
5
755
1 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in the field of Ayurveda from last few years, around 3+ yrs now, and honestly the journey’s taught me more than books ever could. I got to work with quite a mix of setups—NirogStreet, MyUpchar, Gorgeouss Atara, Dr. Monga Medi Clinic, Aksa Ayurveda—each one totally diff but gave me solid ground-level clinical exp that kinda reshaped how I understand patient care. I didn't just follow protocols, I had to see what's working and why. At MyUpchar and NirogStreet, online consultations made me rethink the way we connect with people—harder in some ways, but weirdly more personal too at times. It pushed me to explain things better, listen more carefully, and figure out how to build trust even on screen. I used those convos to craft custom treatment plans, balancing Ayurvedic classics with modern lifestyle tweaks—especially for folks dealing with digestion issues, hormone chaos, PCOS, stress burnout, and hair-skin flareups. Dr. Monga and Aksa gave me more complex, offline cases, real-world scenarios where I couldn’t just say "take this churnam". It was more—analyzing Dosha states, checking Prakriti-vikriti patterns, managing metabolic stuff like pre-diabetes, obesity or PCOD that don't show textbook behavior. Had to rely on pulse-reading, gut sense (literally and otherwise), and yeah, a fair bit of patient education too, coz if people don’t get what’s happening inside them, results don't last. Mostly, I use herbs, Panchakarma detox (only when needed tho—not overusing it), food timing, routines, even breathwork sometimes, all tailored to their body types. I’m not into one-size-fits-all stuff. Each plan’s personal and flexible…like if someone works night shifts or can’t quit coffee or lives alone—I keep that in mind while suggesting treatments. For me, Ayurveda’s not about just fixing disease.. it's more like guiding ppl back to their baseline. Not perfect health maybe, but balance. And yeah, I'm still learning every day through these exp’s, refining my approach, trying to go deeper into root-cause level care instead of just symptom handling. That’s kinda what keeps me at it.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें


नवीनतम समीक्षाएँ

Gabriel
2 घंटे 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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