हमारी आयुर्वेदिक विशेषज्ञों की टीम — पृष्ठ 88
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
880
परामर्श:
Dr. Kalaivanan Jayaraman
18
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working as a consultant cum Assistant Professor in the Dept of Kayachikitsa at Nandha Ayurveda College & Hospital in Erode, TN, and honestly sometimes I feel like I’m still figuring out new thing every day even after the routine gets bit hectic. I deal with a wide range of internal medicine cases, trying to connect classical Kayachikitsa concepts with what patients are actually going through in real time… and ya, I kinda like taking extra moments to rethink a diagnosis if something doesn’t sit right.
I am involved in OPD work, rounds, and handling chronic cases that usually need deeper samprapti analysis. Somewhere inbetween teaching and consulting I try to balance both sides, though somedays one pulls more than the other. I enjoy guiding students too, even if my sentences get mixed up or I jump from one idea to another while explaining shlokas or chikitsa-sutras. They still manage to follow me.. most of the time atleast.
I focus a lot on bringing practical understanding into classroom teaching, making students see how nadi, agni, roga-avastha and all those classical parameters actually show up in a real pt, not just on paper. Sometimes I end up repeating a point twice without noticing, or add a side thought inbetween, but that’s just how my mind runs when I’m in teaching mode.
In the hospital I try to keep a calm approach, sitting with pts a bit longer, hearing where their discomfort actually starts from. A few days the flow feels smooth, other days I get stuck on a case thinking if I missed a minor clue in the history. My aim is to treat them using proper ayurvedic principles—shamana, shodhana, panchakarma planning—whatever suits their condition and prakriti.
I like engaging with students in academic discussions, planning clinical postings, and encouraging them to get hands-on exp even if they hesitate first. Teaching keeps me grounded and consulting reminds me why I choose Kayachikitsa in first place. Somewhere both roles shape me, even with small imperfect moments here n there.
If I can help someone feel better, or help a student understand a tricky concept they were sturggling with, that honestly makes my day feel fuller.
Dr. Durgesh kumar
15
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working from almost three years now in a govt hospital OPD, and sometimes I still get that mix of rush and calm when I sit down with a new pt who walks in with skin issues or joint pain or some gastro trouble that has been bothering them for months. I keep thinking how each case kinda teaches me something again, even when I thought I alredy knew it well… but yeah, that’s how ayurveda keeps pulling me back to basics.
Most of my daily opd work goes around managing chronic skin disorders, stuff like eczema or acne that keeps flaring without warning, and I try to look deeper into agni or dosha imbalance before touching the treatment side. Same with joint disorders—knee stiffness, early OA signs, or the vata-aggravated pains that people ignore till it gets too much. I like taking a little extra time with them, even if the queue outside grows a bit, just to make sure I dont miss something small that matter later.
Gastro pts are another big part of my opd… a lot of acidity, gastritis, and that vague abdominal discomfort many ppl cant explain properly. Sometimes I listen twice because the way they describe it feels tangled, but it slowly makes sense when I track the routine they follow at home or work. I focus a lot on diet correction along with medicine, and honestly some days it works quicker than I expect.
Ayurveda gives me a way to not just push medicines but to understand the whole pattern behind a disease, and I try my best to bring that into every single consultation. I may not be perfect all the time, but I stay committed to giving a clean, honest assessment and guiding pts toward long-term healing rather than short fixes. And even when the day gets too crowded or my notes start looking messy, the idea that people trust me in their toughest moments kinda keeps me moving without complaining too much.
Dr. Iravathi Adepu
38
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in Ayurveda with a kind of steady focus on really seeing what each patient needs, and I usually start from the classical principles—trying to understand the dosha shifts, the nidana behind their troubles, and why the body reacting in that particular way. From there I put together indivdualised plans, mixing Panchakarma when needed, diet changes, herbal meds, lifestyle modifications… sometimes all together if the case feels layered or chronic.
I manage a wide mix of issues—like acute digestive flares, long-standing arthritis pains, different types of skin problems, and these growing lifestyle disorders that so many ppl struggle with. A lot of time goes into explaining things too, helping them follow small steps like Dinacharya or Ritucharya without feeling pressured. I kinda feel that education is half of the treatment in Ayurveda, honestly.
I also consult for clients from other countries, where the main work becomes guiding them towards practical Ayurvedic routines they can actually do where they live. And at times I design whole rejuvenation or lifestyle programs, trying to align diet, yoga, daily habits, stress-handling strategies… the whole picture, not just the medicine part. Some days it flows easily, some days I tweak the plans three times until they makes sense.
There’s also the follow-up part, which I try to take seriously because holistic healing isn’t instant. I keep track of how their sleep, digestion or mental ease is shifting, and if something not working, I change it without waiting too long. I like staying involved that way, supporting them through the process rather than handing a plan and stepping back. Maybe I overdo it a bit, but to me it feels right.
And somewhere in all this, I keep reminding myself that Ayurveda works best when treatment is personal and humane, even if the days get a little chaotic or the schedule runs longer than I excpect.
Dr. Amina Beevi A S
16
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working as an Ayurvedic doctor for about 2 years now, and sometimes I feel like every day teaches me something new about how patients open up when we really look beyond the symptoms. I mainly deal with consultations, Ayurveda cosmetology stuff, and a good amount of gynaecology work too. I try to do a proper Prakriti–Vikriti assesment for each person, even though on busy days I end up mixing notes or rechecking the same line twice, but that helps me get a clearer sense of their dosha imbalance and what’s actually going wrong inside the system.
I handle general OPD cases but I naturally lean more toward women’s health—things like irregular cycles, dysmenorrhoea, PCOS, leucorrhea and other hormonal up-downs that bother people quietly for months. And then there’s the skin & hair part, where I work with acne, pigmentation issues, hairfall, dandruff, even early ageing signs. I keep trying to link everything back to digestion, stress and lifestyle because many times that’s where the real trigger is hiding, even though patients want a quick cream or herb right away.
Sometimes I catch myself explaining diet ideas too fast and have to slow down, but mostly I focus on giving a treatment plan that includes herbs, routine correction, small yoga practices, and Panchakarma-based recomendations when they’re actually needed. I also spend time talking about dinacharya and ritucharya, and rasayana practices, because I belive long-term wellness comes only when people understand why the body reacts the way it does.
I do get a little carried away while educating patients, saying “just one more thing” before letting them go, but guiding them toward natural healing and preventive care feels important to me. And even when the flow of the day is messy or my writing looks untidy on the paper, I try to stay rooted in the classical Ayurvedic principles that keep reminding me that every person needs a different approach, not a copied formula.
Dr. Prarthana Hk
8
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in this field with a kind of steady focus, though sometimes I still feel I’m figuring things out as I go. I started with 1 year of clinical experience at Adhichunchagiri Ayurvedic Medical College & Research Center, where I got real hands-on exposure to daily patient consults, basic case workups and just understanding how an Ayurvedic setup actually runs. Some days were hectic, some felt too quiet, but all of it shaped the way I look at patient care now.
Right now I am working at Hamsaraga Hospital, and here my role feels a bit more grounded. I deal with all sorts of cases—chronic ones that need slow ongoing support and those quick, day-to-day issues where patients want immediate clarity. I try to stick to classical Ayurved principles, doing Prakriti–Vikriti checks, assessing their routine, diet, stress levels n all that, and then forming treatment plans that actually match their lifestyle instead of overwhelming them with too many things at once.
Sometimes I spend more time than planned just talking to a patient, trying to explain why a simple change in food timings or sleep habits makes such a huge difference, and other times I just jump straight into deciding herbs or panchakarma support if needed. It’s a mix of structured work and small instinctive decisions, and I kinda like that flow.
Working in two different environments gave me confidence in handling varied conditions and also taught me that healing is rarely linear. I keep trying to refine my approach, reading stuff, checking with seniors when needed, and making sure every patient feels heard rather than rushed. My aim is still simple—use Ayurveda in a way that feels practical, approachable and meaningful for each person who walks in.
Dr. S. Susitha Lekshmi
9
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am honestly trying to sum up my 10+ years in Ayurveda, and sometimes I feel like the words don’t fully catch what those years really meant. I worked across different setups, a mix of opd days, longer case followups and those moments where I had to rethink a treatment plan because the patient wasn’t responding the way I first expectd. Those things shaped me more than any textbook page honestly.
I focus a lot on understanding how a person’s routine n habits shape their health, and I use classical Ayurvedic principles to guide most decisions… though there are days when I go back and recheck the basics again to make sure I am doing it right. My work in these years has made me comfortable handling a wide range of cases, from common digestive trbls to joint issues and skin concerns, and sometimes the more slow-moving lifestyle disorders where patience becomes a kind of treatment too.
I try to keep my consultasions more like a conversation than a prescription-giving moment. I’ve seen how patients open up when they realise I’m looking for the root cause, not just the symptom. Diet correction, daily routine fixes, small mind-body adjustments—these things are simple but they shift a lot when done properly, and I’ve watched that happen dozens of times.
I also keep learning, even now, sometimes going through old notes or attending quick sessions to refresh things I might have overlooked. And somewhere in these years, I think I developed a steady kind of confidence—not loud, just practical—that comes from seeing what works again and again.
I’m still refining my approach, still figuring better ways to guide people, but my aim stayed same through all these years: offer care that feels real, personal, rooted in Ayurveda and still adaptable to the way people live today.
Dr. Neha Gupta
14
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in Ayurveda from a little over 2 years now, and sometimes I feel like each day pushes me deeper into understanding how metabolic disorders or skin issues or PCOD actually behave in differnt bodies. I rely a lot on evidence-based Ayurvedic practice, coz I like seeing a clear logic behind the diagnosis, even if I get stuck for a moment trying to figure out small details that dont fit right away.
I dealt with many gastrointestinal problems too—things like bloating, indigetion or long-standing gut issues—and I try to look at them through the root-cause lens, not just the surface level symptoms. My way is kind of simple but also not simple, you know… I focus on Nidana, dosha imbalance, daily routines, stress pattterns, all that, and from there I build a treatment plan that actually feels personal to the patient instead of a readymade chart.
Most people come to me wanting quick results but I keep reminding them gently that healing need time, and lifestyle modification matters more than they think. I follow a patient-first way of working… maybe I say it too often, but I really do sit with each person, asking small questions, checking prakriti-vikriti stuff, making sure they feel heard before I even suggest herbs or diet shifts.
Sometimes I get a bit carried away with explaining the why behind treatments, but I feel it helps them trust the process. And that trust, plus the right Ayurvedic plan, usually leads to steady improvement in metabolic disorders, skin diseases, PCOD patterns and GI concerns. I keep trying to balance classical wisdom with a modern view, even if the flow gets a bit messy in my head at times. But overall my goal stays the same—helping people reach long-term wellness, not just a short break from symptoms.
Dr. Yash Patel
12
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working from the day I passout, kind of jumped straight into starting my own small setup, FAMILY HEALTH CLINIC, and now its alrdy more than 3 yrs running. Sometimes I still can’t beleve how fast it all moved. In these years I handled so many different patients, and honestly even during my medico time I was seeing quite a big number, trying to learn how each case reacts to treatments in real life not just in books.
I try to keep the clinic space simple but focused on proper Ayurvedic assesment, talking to people slowly to understand what’s actually troubling them behind the main complaint. Some days the flow of patients is light, other days it gets a bit overwhelming, and I still mak mistakes here n there in figuring out timings or explanatons, but I do my best to give each person enough clarity about their condition and what lifestyle or ahara–vihara shifts may help them.
Even in these few yrs I got to see how root-cause based care actually change people’s day-to-day health, especially when they follow the plan regularly. And yeah, I’m still learning, doing small updates through reading or observing patterns, because Ayurveda is huge and each case teaches something new. My whole aim at the clinic is to keep it human, practical, and healing in a long-term way, not just a quick symptomatic fix—even if my thoughts get a bit scattered when I explain all this.
Dr. Jyoti
7
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am working in gynaecology since around 3.5 years now, and sometimes I still feel like I’m learning new things every single day, even when I thought I already understod a case well. My practice is rooted in Ayurveda, and I try to blend classical principles with what I see in real-time with each patient. I kinda focus a lot on understanding the root imbalance, because in gynaecology the issues are rarely just one thing… hormones, digestion, stress, lifestyle all get mixed up and I end up untangling them one by one.
Some days the work feels simple, like guiding a patient with mild cycle irregularity, and other times I’m sitting longer trying to decode why the pain or bleeding pattern changed suddenly. I rely a lot on prakriti–vikriti assessment, pulse reading (even if I recheck it twice sometimes), and detailed history taking before I even talk about medicines or yoga or diet shifts.
I treat cases like PCOS, irregular menstruation, dysmenorrhea, leucorrhoea, and hormonal swings using classical Ayurvedic formulations, routine correction, and small daily adjustments that patients can actually follow… not those impossible routines that look good on paper. And yes, I do spend time explaining why certain foods or habits make symptoms worse, maybe more than required, but I feel it helps them see the full picture.
There are moments when I question if I’m explaining too much or too little, but then patients come back saying they understand their body better now, and that somehow motivates me to keep this approach. I work with a mix of Ayurvedic therapies, diet planning, mild lifestyle coaching, and supportive counselling for the emotional side of gynaecological issues, which often gets ignored.
My aim is pretty straight—help women restore balance with minimal confusion, natural healing, and a plan that feels doable. And even when the process is not perfect or linear, I stay committed to guiding them steadily toward long-term wellbeing.
Dr. Pratheeksha
15
0 समीक्षाएँ
I am kinda thinking back while typing this, how my journey moved from one hopital to another and shaped the way I work now. I worked as a duty doctor in NRACHARYA hospital Koteshwara and later at New Medical Hospital in Kundapura, and each shift there showed me diff things about patient care, some days smooth and some totally chaotic.. but all useful. Before that I did my internship at KVG Ayurveda Medical College and Hospital, where I learned to handle day-to-day OPD work, small procedures, reporting, all that grind which at that time felt too much but now I see how much it helped me.
I also completd my PGCPK Panchakarma training at MAHE, and I still keep going back to those notes, maybe little messy notes, but they remind me how deeply Panchakarma needs to be understood rather than done like a ritual. That course pushed me to explore detox, shodhana logic, and the way dosha behave when you guide them properly.
Sometimes I get unsure mid-consultation, like am I missing one more point in history taking, but that doubt kinda helps me re-check and give better clarity to the pt. I try to mix my clinical experience from these hospitals with the classical ayurved basics we studied—pratyaksha, anumana, sabda—all in a practical way, not too bookish.
Working with diff teams also taught me how to speak with pts in a simple way rather than giving huge explenations. And somewhere through all this, I started trusting the slow process of learning, even when my sentence breaks off in wrong place or missing a comma… the work still moves forward.
This whole path, from KVG to MAHE to the two hospitals, shaped how I see healing: steady, patient, and always personalized, even if my typing looks a little rushed here.
FAQ
आयुर्वेदिक डॉक्टर से प्रश्न कैसे पूछें?
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