हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 75
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. Raghvendra Prajapati
188
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in this field for about 1 year now, and though it may sound short, in that time I got to see and manage a pretty wide mix of cases that taught me lessons no textbook can cover fully. My focus in practice is using authentic Ayurvedic principles and procedures but always with a practical approach that fits the patient infront of me. Day to day I handle conditions like digestive issues, skin problems, joint pain, lifestyle disorders like diabetes or thyroid imbalance, and sometimes stress related complaints that show up in both body and mind.
During this year I worked in OPD setups where patient flow is high, which gave me exposure to quick yet careful diagnosis, planning simple but effective protocols with herbs, diet, panchakarma when needed. In some cases just correcting lifestyle and counseling made more difference than medicines, and that reinforced for me how much Ayurveda is about balance not just drugs.
I also spent time learning from senior physicians, assisting in Panchakarma therapies like Virechana, Basti, and Abhyanga. Doing that hands-on really gave me confidence that these aren’t abstract concepts—they are powerful when matched to the right patient and dosha condition.
One year may not sound like long, but for me it felt intense, every patient shaping how I approach the next. Sometimes I still doubt if I am doing enough, but seeing patients return with relief, improved sleep, less pain, or just saying they feel better in daily life—that feels like the real achievement. My aim going forward is to deepen this clinical base, refine my diagnostic skill, and keep building trust by making Ayurveda accessible, logical, and safe for people who turn to me for healing.
Dr. Sourabh Parashar
201
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a Nadi Vaidya, and for me pulse diagnosis is not just a method but the center of how I understand patient’s health. When I place fingers on the nadi, I am listening to body’s inner rhythm, the subtle imbalances that cannot always be seen in reports or tests. Over time I learned how much depth this ancient practice holds, how it can reveal digestive disturbances, stress overload, early metabolic issues, and even the tendencies toward chronic disease before symptoms get worse. It is not about magic, it is about sensitivity and training, connecting what the pulse tells with classical Ayurvedic principles.
In daily practice, I use Nadi Pariksha as the first step for every patient—whether they come for skin problem, joint stiffness, thyroid imbalance or piles. The pulse often shows me which dosha is disturbed, whether vata, pitta or kapha, and how deeply that imbalance has entered tissues. From there, treatment feels less like guesswork and more like precision. I design personalized plans—sometimes Panchakarma detox, sometimes gentle herbal support, sometimes diet and lifestyle corrections that look simple but are powerful when matched to the body’s state.
Working this way also help me build trust, because patients feel heard when I explain their condition not only in medical words but in what their pulse is showing right now. Many say it gives them confidence that Ayurveda is looking at the whole person not just the symptom list. For me, the satisfaction is watching how much faster healing begins when root cause is targeted correctly.
I also see Nadi Pariksha as a preventive tool. Many young people who feel “fine” come to me and through pulse I can point out early imbalance—like excess heat in pitta or blocked channels of kapha—and guide them before real disease manifest. That is where Ayurveda shines, and why I keep this tradition alive in every consultation. My goal is always clarity, safety, and helping patients regain balance through methods that are both ancient and still so practical in today’s lifestyle-driven disorders.
Dr. Shivani Agrawal
170
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in Ayurveda for about 3–4 years now as a consultant, before that I had 1 full year of internship where I was exposed to a mix of OPD, IPD and hands-on Panchakarma practice. Those first days as an intern really grounded me—learning to take case histories, listening to patients, observing how senior doctors plan treatment, all of that shaped my base. Later when I moved into independent consulting, I could actually put those learnings into real decisions, designing plans that blend herbs, diet, lifestyle changes and classical therapies for different disorders.
Over the years I got to see a wide range of cases—digestive disturbances, skin issues, hormonal problems, even lifestyle disorders like obesity and hypertension. Some patients came in only for counseling and diet planning, others needed structured therapies like Virechana or Basti. Each case taught me something new, like how two people with the same diagnosis can respond completely different depending on their prakriti or stress levels. That flexibility is something I try to carry in every consultation.
My main focus is always patient-centered care, not just prescribing tablets or decoctions but actually guiding people on how to sustain balance long term. I explain what’s happening in their body in simple language, why small changes in food or sleep matter, when Panchakarma is needed and when simple home remedies are enough. I feel Ayurveda works best when the patient is part of the process, not just a passive receiver.
Sometimes I wonder if 3–4 years sound too less compared to senior doctors with decades of practice, but honestly the intensity of seeing patients every day, troubleshooting, counseling, following up, it has been equal to a continuous learning curve. That mix of early internship plus consulting practice makes me confident in handling both straightforward and complex cases. At the end of the day, my goal is the same—to use authentic Ayurveda in a way that feels approachable, safe and effective for every patient who walks in.
Dr. Shivam Raj
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5
370
1 समीक्षाएँ
I am working with around 2 years of experince in gynecology & obstetrics, neurology and general medicine, and honestly those years taught me more than any textbook could. In gynae & obs I was deeply involved in patient monitoring, labour room management, supporting deliveries safely, making sure protocols were followed but also knowing when to adapt depending on patient’s need. It wasn’t just about procedures, it was about being present with mothers and families in very intense moments.
In neurology dept I got chance to see complex cases—stroke, seizure disorders, neuropathies, long-term neurodegenerative conditions. These patients taught me patience, that small clinical signs matter, and that quick decision making and calm observation have to go together. In general medicine, the variety was endless, from diabetes, hypertension, infections, metabolic conditions to multi-organ complications. That is where my base really got strong, because you learn to think broadly and not miss the small things.
Alongside, I trained properly in ICU procedures—ventilator settings, central and arterial lines, intubations, fluid management, monitoring critical vitals. ICU exposure gave me confidence to handle acute emergencies where seconds can change outcomes. Those moments are stressful, sometimes even overwhelming, but they sharpened my focus and discipline. I also realized medicine is not just about machines or drugs, it is also communication—explaining clearly to families, guiding them when fear is highest.
Now I find myself more inclined towards general medicine and neurology, because I like to see patient as whole person not just one system. Neurology especially fascinates me, how subtle clues can lead to a diagnosis if you pay enough attention. My approach is simple—combine thorough history, strong clinical exam and evidence-based protocols, while individualizing care.
Looking back, I see my experience as a mix of structure and judgment. Protocols gave me direction, patients gave me perspective. That combination of critical care training, neurological depth and general medicine breadth shapes how I practice today—safe, patient centered and focused on improving quality of life, not just controlling disease.
Dr. Parul Gupta
246
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am a qualified Ayurvedic physician with BAMS degree and right from start my focus was always on clinical practice and holistic patient care, not just theory. Over time my work naturally leaned more into lifestyle disorders, women’s health, digestive issues, skin and hair concerns, and preventive wellness. These are the cases that keep showing up again and again in opd, and each one force me to rethink, refine and make approach more clear and effective.
One of the big milestones for me was being part of the CCRAS sponsored SPARK Research Project. At first I thought it will just be academic research, but actually it turned into something deeper—it taught me how to observe patterns systematically, document carefully, analyse with discipline, and then bring those insights into real-world practice. That gave me stronger confidence in using Ayurveda in a way that can also stand in modern healthcare discussions, without losing authenticity.
In day to day practice, my method is quite straightforward: I spend time listening first, then identify root cause based on classical Ayurvedic tools like dosha imbalance, agni disturbances or samprapti pathways. Treatment then is planned step by step—it may be herbal formulations, Panchakarma detox procedures, or just diet and routine corrections that sound simple but often make the biggest difference. I believe lifestyle habits and food are half the medicine, but patients rarely get guidance in how to apply them.
In women’s health, whether PCOS, menstrual disorders, infertility or postnatal recovery, I try to combine empathy with clarity, so patient understand why something is happening, not just what pill or medicine to take. Same goes for digestive and skin conditions—treating only symptoms never feels right, I focus on sustainable balance.
To me Ayurveda is not only a treatment system but a way of restoring equilibrium in body and mind. Every prescription I write, I ask myself if it is safe, practical, and truly personalized for that patient’s prakriti and condition. My aim is not quick relief alone but long term healing. And maybe most important, I see education as part of treatment—when patients start to understand their own health, recovery becomes smoother and they carry that awareness lifelong.
Dr. Sweta Mer
198
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working with about 3 year experience in ayurvedic medicine and Panchkarma, and right now I am pursuing my masters in surgery (Shalyatantra). Day to day my practice revolve around managing cases like piles, fissure, fistula, GI disorders, skin conditions, also sports medicine and various Panchkarma therapies. For me these are not just routine cases, each patient show different presentation and I try to see what classical ayurveda says along with what practical clinical expereince taught me.
In anorectal problems like piles or fissure I use both kshar karma, herbal medications and panchkarma support, depending on the stage and severity. In fistula management too, I focus on safe procedures plus lifestyle guidance because recurrence is a big issue if root cause not corrected. Digestive disorders are another big area—gastritis, IBS type symptoms, chronic constipation, liver related complaints—I find they respond well when agni deepana and ama pachana are done with proper diet correction.
Skin disorders like eczema, psoriasis or even recurrent acne also form part of my opd work. Here I mix classical medicines, detox therapies and external applications, but I always explain to patient why internal imbalance has to be addressed, not only surface level. With sports medicine cases—joint sprain, muscle injuries—I apply marma chikitsa with supportive ayurvedic therapies which give good functional recovery. Panchkarma is kind of core tool for me, from Virechana to Basti, I plan it case by case, knowing when detox is needed and when it may weaken patient.
Doing masters in Shalyatantra now add another dimension, making me more confident in surgical perspective while still holding onto ayurveda principles. My approach is usually simple—first listen properly, find dosha dushya involvement, then decide whether it is only medicine, Panchkarma or surgical line. I keep aim clear: safe, practical and long term relief. And honestly what keep me going is seeing patient feel better, not just symptom gone but quality of life improved.
Dr. Neha
177
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am practicing since last 1.5 years, online and offline both—depends on what patient needs or feel comfortable with. During this time I handled wide types of cases, not just physical complaints but also where people felt stuck, lost, or tired of trying treatments that didn’t help them much. Some reach out with chronic skin issues, others with digestion troubles, pain that keeps returning, or hormonal imbalance they don’t really know how to explain. I try to listen first, like really listen. Most people already half-know what their body telling them, they just don’t have someone to decode it with clarity n’ direction.
Sometimes all they needed was to adjust small daily things—food pattern, sleep timing, or routine habits we normally ignore. Other times I suggest proper herbs, classical Ayurvedic medicines or therapies if required, but always with focus on long-term balance, not temporary patch-up. Whether it’s a 3 min doubt call or 30 min detail session, I put same level of attention. Even if we just talk once, I want it to be that one talk that changed something inside you.
One thing I keep hearing from patients is — “I feel lighter just after talking with you.” That matters. Healing isn’t just about dosage or disease name. It’s about making someone feel heard, supported, and guided in right path. You may come with fear, or frustration or even doubt if Ayurveda will work — but by the end of that first consult, you’ll feel sure you can overcome it. Not blindly positive, but confident with a plan.
I don’t claim quick-fixes. And sometimes even I get surprised at how slow or sudden recovery comes. But either way, I walk with the patient till they feel they’re ready to walk on their own. That’s all I aim for in each case — not just solving problem, but restoring trust in their own healing.
Dr. Krushna Chaitanya
218
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working with patients from around 5 yrs now—sometimes in clinics, sometimes online late at night with a cup of chai next to me and a bunch of case files open. Ayurveda isn’t just a system I studied, it sort of became how I see health and life both. Over these years, I’ve dealt with all kinds of cases but I’ve naturally leaned more towards things like PCOD, thyroid imbalance, gastric trouble, and UTI complaints. These are the ones people often ignore till it gets *too much*, and then they show up exhausted, confused, sometimes already tried a dozen things.
I’m not someone who gives the same churna or tablets to everyone. My style? Listen first. Like really listen. Half the time diagnosis starts there. Maybe that’s why I keep seeing followups, people come back or send someone from their family. Some cases take time—like PCOD can’t vanish in 2 weeks—but when you see improvement in moods, cycles, or skin, you know it’s working. There are also those gastric patients who come in saying “I’ve had gas from 10 yrs” and think nothing can change. But it does. Slowly but surely.
Offline practice taught me body language, how silence tells more than blood reports sometimes. Online practice taught me how to spot key patterns in words and build trust through screen, which is harder than it sounds. I don’t overpromise, I explain what might work and what may not.. but I do stay with the case, I don’t leave it halfway.
Even today, I still keep updating my notes and rechecking texts.. not out of doubt but because every patient feels different even if disease is same. There’s this unpredictabillity to real practice that textbooks never warned about, and I think that’s what keeps me hooked.
Dr. Chirag Kalathiya
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5
276
3 समीक्षाएँ
I am practising Ayurveda for more than 11 years now, mostly through Panchakarma and Shaman Chikitsa, and in that time I feel like I have seen the whole range—from routine lifestyle issues to really complicated chronic cases. Panchakarma still amazes me, how a properly planned detox or therapy can shift the patient’s state so deeply, it’s not just symptom relief, it’s kind of reboot for body and mind. Shaman chikitsa on the other hand teach me patience, because its about balancing slowly with herbs, diet, routine correction. Sometimes people think Ayurveda is only about slow results, but when you apply the right approach in the right stage of disease, results can be quick and sustainable.
Over the years I also made sure to keep learning modern medicine side by side. It helps when I face critical conditions, because understanding emergency protocols, vitals, and systemic evaluation allow me to integrate care safely. I don’t believe Ayurveda and modern science are opposites, to me they are languages describing the same body in different ways. In ICU kind of situations, knowledge of modern diagnostics and acute care become necessary, and my experience in such cases gave me confidence that even as an Ayurvedic physician I can hold my ground in critical care discussions.
I deal with digestive issues, respiratory disorders, skin problems, musculoskeletal pain, stress-related conditions, infertility, and chronic metabolic disorders quite often. Many times, patients come after trying multiple lines of treatment and want an approach that is safe but effective. I spend time listening, taking proper history, and checking prakriti, vikriti, agni before deciding. Panchakarma like Virechana or Basti have given excellent outcomes in long-standing issues. And for some patients, simple Shaman chikitsa and counseling is all they need.
After 11 years, what I value the most is not just clinical protocols but human connection. Explaining to the patient what’s happening, why this path is chosen, giving them confidence—that becomes as important as medicine. Ayurveda for me is not rigid, it adapts with patient needs. Whether it’s managing chronic diabetes, recovery after stroke, or just improving general wellness, my aim is same: bring balance back, give clarity, and support healing in a way that lasts.
I try to keep my work authentic, practical and safe—bridging classical Ayurvedic wisdom with the realities of modern clinical practice. And maybe the biggest reward for me is when a patient says they feel seen and heard, not just treated. That’s what keeps me going every day.
Dr. Akshay Negi
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5
897
81 समीक्षाएँ
I am currently pursuing my MD in Panchakarma, and by now I carry 3 yrs of steady clinical experience. Panchakarma for me is not just detox or some fancy retreat thing — it’s the core of how Ayurveda actually works to reset the system. During my journey I’ve handled patients with arthritis flares, chronic back pain, migraine, digestive troubles, hormonal imbalance, even skin and stress-related disorders... and in almost every case Panchakarma gave space for deeper healing than medicines alone.
Working hands-on with procedures like Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya, and Raktamokshana gave me a lot of practical insight. It's not just about performing the therapy, but understanding timing, patient strength, diet before and after, and how their mind-body reacts to cleansing. Some respond quick, others struggle with initial discomfort, and that’s where real patient support matters. I learnt to watch closely, adjust small details, and guide them through the whole process safely.
My approach is always patient-centric. I don’t believe in pushing the same package to everyone. I first assess prakriti, agni, mental state, lifestyle, then decide what works best. Sometimes full Panchakarma isn’t even needed — simple modifications, herbs, or limited therapy sessions can bring results. And when full shodhana is required, I plan it in detail with proper purvakarma & aftercare, cause that’s what makes outcomes sustainable.
The last few years made me more confident not just in procedures but in the philosophy behind them. Panchakarma isn’t a quick fix — it demands patience, discipline, trust. But when done right, it gives relief that lasts, and that’s why I keep refining how I practice it.
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