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हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 56

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

826
परामर्श:
Dr. Parveen Sultana
161
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am 13 years deep in this line of work, which honestly feels weird to type like that, but yeah—more than a decade trying to figure out why ppl aren’t healing the way they should and how to actually *help* without complicating things more than needed. I'm an Ayurvedic physician, mostly working through clinical OPD (and some govt side too), where I see a wide mix of cases—digestive stuff, joint flare-ups, skin conditions that don’t go away no matter what cream gets tried, even just plain tiredness ppl can’t explain. I don’t usually rush into treatment straight off. I try to listen, ask things others maybe didn’t think mattered (sleep timing, food patterns, past meds.. that kind of thing). One thing I've def learned over these yrs—no two ppl respond same, even with same diagnosis, like zero predictability sometimes. Makes you stay alert, stay curious. Ayurveda’s not about throwing ghee and herbs at a problem randomly. It’s about matching *rhythm* of the body, and that part takes real patience. I'm not into shortcuts. Like if someone wants a 2-day cure for a 4-year problem, I tell 'em this probably not the place for that. But if they stick with me, even just a bit longer than they're used to—usually we get somewhere meaningful. Might not be flashy, but it works. Also I keep rechecking my own approach, like did I miss something?? Should I’ve tweaked diet first instead of meds? I don’t mind backtracking when needed. Feels honest. Anyway, still learning every day. Still mess up phrasing sometimes or forget to explain why I skip a med. Patients remind me with their expressions lol. But I keep showing up, keep treating, keep paying attention—and honestly, that’s what makes me feel like I’m on the right track here.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Rashmi C
215
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who kinda leans hard into both tradition and practicality, maybe bcz that's what actually works for ppl in real life. I look at health not just like symptoms-on-a-chart but like… the whole person—what they're eating, how they sleep, even stuff like stress or mood swings or those tiny things that pile up over time and mess with your gut or skin or hormones. I try to see all that. I’ve spendt the last several years learning how to blend classical Ayurvedic knowledge with what's actually going on today. Digestive disorders like IBS, hyperacidity, bloating—they’re super common now, right? And they almost always come with stress or sleep trouble or poor routine. That’s where Ahara and Vihara really matter. I use that as a base and then bring in detox plans (Shodhana), Rasayana where needed, sometimes just calming Shamana herbs too, depending what the body needs. My goal isn’t to just hand out some herbal mix n move on. I dig into Prakriti and Vikriti properly, and try to educate patients too—why their body is reacting that way, what lifestyle stuff made it worse, how to fix it without depending on meds forever. I like it when patients get involved in their care—it’s more sustainable that way. Even the Panchakarma therapies I recommend aren’t just for show—they’re chosen for exact reasons. Sometimes I also team up with modern docs when it makes sense. I don’t see Ayurveda and allopathy as enemies or something weird like that. We both want ppl to heal right? I read cases a lot, keep updating myself, even if it means rethinking my approach now n then. To me Ayurveda isn't just ancient—it’s alive, like it keeps changing with how people change. That’s kinda what keeps me going in this field... trying to make it more useful & honest and still rooted in it's real spirit.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Arya Sara Baby
5
1,437
2 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic practitioner who kinda can’t imagine doing anything else honestly… I mean 3+ years of clinical work later, I still get that same feeling of wanting to dig deeper into each case, figuring out what’s going on beyond just the symptoms. My focus is mostly on Panchakarma, Raktamoksha and rehabilitation – that whole process of helping the body reset itself through detox, balance and, well, proper care. I stick close to the classical texts but I’m not afraid to adapt protocols to fit a person’s prakruti or the stage their illness is at. In practice that means I’ve handled stuff like chronic back pain, joint issues, nerve problems, fatigue that just won’t go away, and digestive-metabolic imbalances. Therapies like abhyanga, basti, pinda sweda, virechana, nasya… I’ve done them a lot, sometimes tweaking details to suit the patient. And yeah, ano-rectal care has also been part of my work – assisting in ksharasutra therapy and kshara karma for piles, fistula, fissures. Honestly the results can be amazing when you merge modern diagnostics with these old para-surgical methods. I also spend time explaining diet, routines, and ritucharya because if someone goes back to the same lifestyle patterns, the disease just comes back faster. For me Ayurveda isn’t “just treatment” – it’s living it, teaching it, and making it work for each person without losing the authenticity. I keep learning from senior vaidyas and peers, because every case shows you something new (and sometimes something unexpected). My aim’s simple – keep the treatment safe, real, and effective while actually making people feel they have control over their health again.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Manasa J M
1,096
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic practitioner who kinda just fell in love with the way this science works in real life.. not just in books. My one-year internship at DGM Ayurvedic Medical College was really the turning point—working alongside senior Vaidyas, watching them diagnose without a single lab report sometimes (and still being right), learning how to prep herbal formulations from scratch, doing Panchakarma therapies, and figuring out how to tweak a treatment plan when the patient’s prakriti or response shifted. After that I did six months of clinic work where the theory finally met the messy, unpredictable side of real people’s health. I handled cases like digestive issues that kept coming back, skin stuff like eczema or stubborn acne, back pain that flared in winters, and hormonal ups & downs that made life really tough for some. My approach kept leaning on Tridosha balance, fixing Agni when it was all over the place, and slowly building Ojas so recovery actually sticks. I’ve always thought Ayurveda is more than “treatment”... it’s a way of living that people either haven’t been shown properly or they just don’t know how to start. Part of my job—at least the way I see it—is to help ppl make small but real changes in diet, daily routine, seasonal habits, even sleep patterns, so they aren’t just better for now, but actually well for the long run. I use internal meds, diet plans, and lifestyle fixes that aren’t one-size-fits-all. I like when a patient leaves knowing exactly why they’re doing something, not just “because I said so”. There’s a different kind of trust there. I keep learning from each case, each person really, and I try to keep my work rooted in the old texts but open to practical reality. If you ask me, authentic Ayurveda can fit into today’s world—it just needs the right balance of tradition and adaptability. And that’s what I aim for every single day, even on the tough ones.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Vaisaly S
2,385
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor from Kerala, practicing for over 10 years now, and honestly—still learning, still figuring how deep this science really goes. Most of what I do is rooted in classical Kerala Ayurveda, the kind passed down not just in books but through actual lived experience, watching how people heal slow, steady, and fully. My work mostly revolves around chronic & lifestyle conditions—stuff like joint pain, diabetes, digestion issues, hormonal shifts, all that day-to-day struggle type stuff ppl carry around without even realising how much it’s pulling them down. I work a lot with Panchakarma therapies, but not just as a detox for the sake of it. It's about timing, choosing the right procedure, matching it to where the person *actually* is in their health. Not everyone needs virechana, you know? Sometimes it's a subtle dietary correction, or one small herbal combo done right. I tailor meds using traditional formulations, but also adapt—coz everyone’s prakriti and pathology isn't textbook neat. Women’s health is a big area for me. Menstrual irregularities, PCOD-type cases, perimenopause stuff—it’s not just about hormones, it’s about gut, sleep, and mental load too. I try to explain that Ayurveda looks at the whole pattern, not just blood work. Stress management too, lot of ppl come with anxiety-like symptoms that are masking digestive imbalances or vata overload. That’s where I guide them into realistic routine shifts, and slow internal work with herbs or rasayanas. Preventive health is underrated—most ppl only show up when something’s already out of hand. I do spend time educating, not in lectures, but more like hey, try *this* first before we go into therapy mode. It works when ppl feel heard, not judged. I’m big on making things doable. Ayurveda’s not magic, but it *can* be deeply healing when personalized. I just help ppl find their version of that—no noise, no rush.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Rampratap Vishwakarma
442
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am mostly focused on treating lifestyle disorders through Ayurveda, which honestly... is something I just naturally leaned into over time. Like with Diabetes—every single patient comes in with their own set of habits, stress, routines, and sometimes they don’t even know how deep the imbalance goes. I try not to rush. I work on root causes—especially in conditions like Thyroid dysfunction (hypo & hyper both), cardiac troubles and all those slow-developing metabolic things that throw the whole system off. At the same time, I work a lot with anorectal issues—piles, fistula and fissure mostly—using classical tools like Ksharasutra and Basti chikitsa. It’s not flashy but when someone avoids surgery, walks pain-free again… yeah, that’s what makes it worth. Arthritis is another area I’ve grown into, especially rheumatoid types and gout—pain and stiffness can really mess with daily life. Ayurvedic joint care, when done right, can actually bring back mobility without depending on painkillers everyday. Sexual wellness also part of what I see regularly—like premature ejaculation, low libido, erectile dysfunction or fertility issues in both men and women. I mostly use Rasayana therapy and targeted herbs + lifestyle clean-up, but it’s also a lot of listening and helping people open up—coz it’s not easy for them, right? I build all my protocols custom. Panchakarma when needed, herbs, diet tweaks, sleep fixes... and yeah, Dinacharya advice too, even if patients sometimes roll their eyes at it! I really believe patients should understand their bodies better—not just follow instructions. That's how we get long-term results, not just quick fixes. This approach, balancing classical Ayurveda and what modern diagnostics tell us, has helped me guide so many people toward a more balanced, disease-free life. It’s not perfect every time, but the work feels honest.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Himanshu Chaturvedi
5
177
1 समीक्षाएँ
I am a B.A.M.S doctor who always try to look at health in a holistic way, not just symptoms or medicines. For me Ayurveda is not only treatment but also a way of living, and when I meet patients I want them to feel that I am not just prescribing tablets but actually walking with them in their journey. Sometimes it takes time to explain what Ayurveda really mean in daily life, but I prefer that slow conversation over quick fixes. I work as an Ayurvedic physician and keep honesty in my practice as a kind of foundation, maybe even stubborn about it. I tell patients directly what Ayurveda can do for them, what may take longer, and where patience is required. Many times they come expecting immediate results, and I do feel the pressure, but still I stand by the principle of gradual healing, because body and mind both need alignment not just external medicines. My approach is rooted in classical Ayurvedic texts but I also look at modern lifestyle challenges like irregular sleep, junk food habits, or stress-related problems. When I design treatment plans, it’s never only about medicine — it’s diet, small lifestyle correction, and sometimes simple routine change like waking up early or breathing practice. Even a small shift make a big differnce if followed properly. I focus on preventive care as much as curative care. Patients with chronic issues like digestive disturbances, skin disorders, or metabolic conditions need consistent guidance. I don’t promise miracles, instead I build trust by working step by step. That honesty itself turns into strength of my practice, people appreciate when a doctor is straightforward about what to expect. Sometimes, I do feel challenged when patients are half-convinced, trying Ayurveda while also holding on to chemical meds or doubting results. It is not easy, but I take time to clear their doubts. For me, transparency and compassion are equal to treatment itself. In short, I see myself not only as a physician but a guide helping patients choose balance in their lives. My aim is not just to manage disease but to improve overall well being, and I remind myself daily to keep my work truthful to Ayurveda and to the people who trust me.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Ashish Rawat
69
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a medical practitioner with focused experince in managing anorectal conditions, gastrointestinal (GIT) disorders, and chronic pain-related issues — though honestly I still find myself learning new nuances every day. My daily work involve both diagnosis and long-term care of patients with common and complex anorectal diseases like fissures, hemorrhoids, fistula and similar conditions, and I try to approach each case with careful clinical judgement rather than rushing into interventions. Over the years I got quite deep into GIT health too, dealing with digestive disorders that affect quality of life — things like chronic gastritis, acid reflux, irritable bowel, etc. My goal is always to look beyond the surface symptom and figure out what’s actually disrupting the patient’s gut balance. I don’t claim to know everything, but my hands-on practice in this field has given me a pretty strong understanding of how lifestyle, diet and proper treatment plans can make a huge difference. Another key part of my practice is pain managment therapy, particularly through traditional viddha karma techniques. It’s a therapeutic approach that uses precise methods to relieve chronic pain and restore mobility, and I’ve seen patients respond remarkably well to it even when other treatments failed. Sometimes the results still suprise me — especially with long-standing pain cases where gradual relief brings back daily comfort. I try to keep my consultations open and straightforward (maybe too direct sometimes!), explaining options clearly and making sure patients feel part of the decision-making process. My belief is that real healing happens when medical treatment and patient understanding go hand in hand, not when one is imposed on the other. And even though my focus areas are quite specific, I’m always exploring new evidence and refining techniques — medicine never really “stops,” and neither should we.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Ritika
479
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who’s mostly working in the space of women’s health—gynecology, obstetrics, menstrual care... all of it. I kinda found myself drawn to this field early in my practice, probably because the problems women come with are rarely just physical. There’s always a rhythm behind the symptoms, and Ayurveda taught me to listen to that. Whether it’s PCOD, painful periods, delayed cycles, infertility struggles, or even menopause—each case has its own story. And no two women show the exact same set of signs, even if the diagnosis looks similar on paper. I use classical Ayurvedic methods—Rasayana herbs, Panchakarma detox (when it really fits), and a lot of lifestyle restructuring... not the textbook kind, more real-life stuff like adjusting food timing, spotting stress patterns, poor sleep or daily routines that throw things off balance. Hormonal issues are a big chunk of my work, and trust me, the relief doesn’t come from just “fixing the hormones.” It’s usually about correcting deeper imbalances—Agni, Srotas, mental fluctuations, whatever the root is. That’s where I usually start. I also work closely with women who are trying to conceive or coping with unexplained infertility. And honestly, many of them have tried everything by the time they reach Ayurveda. My job there is to simplify—to support their body instead of pushing it. Even in menopause cases, where many feel dismissed or just handed supplements, I try to offer a more grounded, individualized plan. I believe healing in this field requires slow tracking... like watching the cycle shift over months, not just chasing lab values. What keeps me going is seeing that slow change—a woman sleeping better, periods becoming painless, skin clearing, ovulation signs returning. That kind of shift means we’re heading in the right direction. My whole approach is based on listening first, then treating—not just jumping into therapy. Because trust, in this kind of care, makes all the difference.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें
Dr. Shweta Sindagi
456
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently working as an Ayurvedic Consultant at Miracle Drinks Pvt. Ltd.—been here around two years now, though honestly it doesn’t feel that long. Day to day, I’m mostly talking to patients, understanding what’s going wrong underneath the surface, and helping them figure out a way forward with Ayurveda. Some people come in with chronic stuff they’ve tried everything for... gut problems, sleep issues, fatigue that just hangs around. Others have more modern lifestyle things—BP, hormonal mess, weight that won’t budge. And yeah, sometimes it's just general confusion about health, where nothing looks “wrong” in tests, but they *feel* off. What I try to do is not jump to giving a long list of meds or strict diets. Instead, I sit with the patient’s prakriti, how they live, eat, think even—and then piece together a treatment that actually makes sense for them. I work with classical Ayurvedic principles, herbs, sometimes formulas from our own line, but it’s never just one-size-fits-all. What worked for someone else might totally flop for the next person. You have to look at the root cause—*always.* At Miracle Drinks, besides doing consultations, I also help shape some of the wellness protocols we suggest, and yeah—sometimes I’m involved in the herbal formulation side of things too, which is pretty interesting. It’s not like I’m making the medicines myself, but we do discuss how certain combinations might work better for certain conditions. Ayurveda for me isn’t just about treating illness—it’s this whole thing about balance. Prevention too. The more people can understand their own bodies, the less they’ll need to “fight” disease later. That’s something I try to bring into each consult. There’s no magic pill here. Just slow, clear, steady healing, if done right.
समीक्षाएँ पढ़ें


नवीनतम समीक्षाएँ

Thomas
3 घंटे पहले
Thanks a ton for the advice! Loved the simple steps and the med suggestions. Feeling hopeful about getting back to normal, fingers crossed.
Thanks a ton for the advice! Loved the simple steps and the med suggestions. Feeling hopeful about getting back to normal, fingers crossed.

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