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Knee pain when climbing stairs and squats
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General Medicine
प्रश्न #25445
154 दिनों पहले
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Knee pain when climbing stairs and squats - #25445

Sunita

Knee pain from pst 4 years.ultra sound shows mild osteoporosis. It pains while doing squata.Crackles when climbing stairs. I was deficient in vitamin d3 and b12 , taking supplement for both from past 1 month. Want to improve on knee health and pain.

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डॉक्टरों की प्रतिक्रियाएं

Avoid sour and fermented food. Regular exercise. Cap.Artilon 2-0-2 Tab.Asthishrinkhla 2-0-2

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Hello Sunita, Thank you for sharing your concern. I understand how persistent knee pain, especially with mild osteoporosis, crackling sounds, and discomfort during squats and stairs, can affect your daily life.But dont worry we are here to out 😊

** AYURVEDIC PERSPECTIVE** ☑️In Ayurveda, your symptoms reflect an imbalance in Vata Dosha (responsible for joints and bones) and Asthi Dhatu Kshaya (weakened bone tissue). ☑️Vitamin D3 & B12 deficiencies weaken Agni (metabolism) and reduce bone nourishment.

This treatment will help you to?.. ✅ Reduce inflammation and cracking ✅ Nourish joints and bones ✅ Prevent further bone loss ✅ Improve flexibility and pain-free movement

INTERNAL MEDICATION

1 Lakshadi Guggulu 1-0-1 after foods (Strengthens bones, supports calcium absorption) 2 Trayodashang Guggulu 1-0-1 (Reduces stiffness, improves joint mobility) 3 Ashwagandha Tablet 1 tab at night Reduces Vata, supports bone & muscle strength 4 Dashmoolaristha 15 ml-0-15ml with warm water (Anti-inflammatory, relieves joint pain)

❗Minimum 3–4 months of continuous use is recommended❗

✅External Treatment (daily)

☑️Oil Massage (Abhyanga): Use Mahanarayan Taila Warm slightly before use Massage knee joints in circular motion for 10–15 mins Followed by hot water fomentation (with a towel or steamer)

This improves circulation, reduces stiffness, and lubricates joints.

✅if pain is severe go for panchakarma it will significantly boast your recovery and improve your joint health

👉Let me know if you are willing then i will provide detail panchakarma therapies to be done

✅Diet modification for Bone & Joint Health

✅ Include

Warm, cooked food with ghee Ragi (nachni), sesame seeds, coconut Amla, drumsticks, dates, figs Cow’s milk (if digestible) or almond milk Methi, garlic, ginger (mildly)

❌ Avoid:

Cold, dry, processed food Deep-fried, bakery, soda Curd at night Excess tea/coffee

With the right combination of medications , food, external oiling, and mindful movement, your knees can regain their strength and flexibility. Wishing you healing, strength and steady steps ahead,

Warm Regards Dr. Snehal Vidhate

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Sunita
ग्राहक
154 दिनों पहले

Thanks for the reply. I have also asked another question for improving my period flow and was advised Ashokarishta. Can I take dashmoolarishta and ashokarishta together or should I finish one course first and start this. Could you please have a look at that question as well If there is way to combine the medications with this.

Also should I continue taking vitamin d3 and b12 as well with these medication.

I am out of India but I can go for panchakarma when I visit India or if we have centre here, please let me know the treatments.

Hello Thank you for your reply.

Q. Can ashokaaristha and dashmoola aristha can be mixed or not? 👉first finish the ashokaaristha ( if your period flow is still a problem) 👉or if it is improved you can take dashmool aristha 15ml with water in morning And ashokaaristha 15ml at night after food

Q can you continue your vitamins supplemnt with this? 👉yes continue your vitamin supplements with this medication just give gap of 20-30 mins

Q. Panchakarma therapy you can do pancha karma whenever you come to India. You can do it at any good panchakrama center near by your home.

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Sunita
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154 दिनों पहले

I am also having sleep issues due to overthinking and stress, it takes around 2-3 hours for me to sleep after going to bed. Does ashwagandha helps in that or is there any other treatment I can follow.

Knee pain can often be linked to underlying factors, in your case mild osteoporosis and the vitamin deficiencies you’ve mentioned. Since you’ve started supplements for Vitamin D3 and B12, it’s a step in the right direction. Continuing these supplements while regularly monitoring your levels with your healthcare provider will be helpful.

Let’s think about some Ayurveda-based adjustments could offer relief and strengthen your knees. First, including foods that pacify Vata dosha may be beneficial, as this dosha can exacerbate joint pain when imbalanced. Warm, cooked foods like soups and stews should be part of your diet. Add spices like turmeric and ginger, known for their anti-inflammatory properties, which could reduce joint discomfort. A warm, golden milk - prepared with turmeric, a small pinch of black pepper and warm milk (or an alternative) can be taken at night to support joint health.

You may also consider Ayurvedic herbs like Ashwagandha and Guggulu, which traditionally are used for strengthening bones and reducing inflammation. However, before starting any new herb, consulting an Ayurvedic practitioner to see if it’s suitable for your specific constitution (prakriti) could be of advantage.

In terms of lifestyle, gentle yoga and stretching exercises are good to keep the joints flexible without overstraining your knees. However, avoiding deep squats or high-impact activities that stress the knees will be wise at this stage. Instead, engage in low-impact activities like swimming or cycling, which don’t place direct pressure on your knees.

Regularly applying warm sesame oil onto the knee joint can improve circulation and provide some relief. Warm compresses could also serve as a soothing method for alleviating stiffness.

Ultimately, monitoring and adapting your diet and lifestyle consistently will support long-term improvements, but it’s important to keep a healthcare provider or naturopath in the loop regarding your progress, especially since you’re managing osteoporosis.

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Daily Routine shall help

🌞 Morning Warm water + calcium-magnesium supplement and Knee massage + gentle stretches 🍽️ Breakfast Vitamin D3, B12 supplements Midday Warm sesame/ragi-based meal and Light walk Evening Knee strengthening (10 mins) Night Warm milk with turmeric + pinch of nutmeg.

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Hello sunita,

ACCORDING TO AYURVEDA, this condition occurs due to -vata aggravation-too much dryness and coldness in the body - low digestion power(agni) leading to toxin (ama) formation -weak joints and bones - asthi dhatu kshaya - lifestyle habits that dry out the body and increase wear and tear

INTERNAL MEDICATIONS

1) YOGARAJ GUGGULU= 2 tabs twice daily after food with lukewarm water = anti-inflammatory, vata balancing

2) MAHARASNADI KASHAYA= 15 ml with warm water twice daily before meals =joint pain and stiffness

3) SHALLAKI= 1 tab 500 g twice daily after meals with lukewarm water = natural painkiller slows cartilage loss

4) ASHWAGANDHA CHURNA= 1 tsp with warm milk at bedtime =strengthens bones, muscle relaxant

5) GUDUCHI CAPSULES = 2 cap daily in morning = immunomodulatory, detoxifier

6) PUNARNAVA MANDUR= 1 tab twice daily after meals = reduces swelling improves circulation

EXTERNAL TREATMENT

1) OIL MASSAGE= MAHANARAYAN TAILA -warm oil application with gentle massage daily -promotes circulation and reduces stiffness

2) STEAM THERAPY -after massage give steam for better absorption -reduces inflammation, opens channels

PACHAKARMA ADVISED -BASTI THERAPY= most effective vat treatment, lubricates joints internally -JANU BASTI= warm medicated oil is retained over nee joint

DIET -warm, cooked food only-never eat cold or raw food -Ghee- 1 tsp / day(natural joint lubricant) - soups- bone broth, vegetables or moong dal soup with ginger - green vegetables= steamed or lightly sauteed -grains= wheat, rice, barley, millets- warm and soft - Milk- warm cows milk with turmeric or ashwagandha -spices= turmeric, ginger, garlic, cumin, ajwain= helps digestion and inflammation -Fruits= ripe bananas, papaya, apples-stewed, figs

AVOID THESE STRICTLY -cold items= refrigerated food, cold water, ice cream -dry foods= popcorn, dry toast, chips, crackers -sour curd and yogurt= especially at night(it increases inflammation) -too much salt or sugar - nightshade vegetables in excess= like brinjal, tomato, potatoes -alcohol and smoking-they dry joints and worsen degenration -fermented food- pickles, vinegar

LIFESTYLE- DAILY HABITS -gentle walking or yoga every day- keep moving but avoid strain -use knee cap for support if walking is painful -take warm water sips throughout the day-helps vata and digestion -keep body warm-avoid exposure to cold air or water -practice slow deep breathing or meditation-reduces pain sensitivity -sleep early-helps tissue repair

AVOID -sitting in the same position for too long -high-impact exercises= like jumping, running, stairs - sleeping late at night -daytime naps= especially after heavy meals - sudden jerky movements -stress=it increases pain perception and vata imbalance

HOME REMEDIES -turmeric milk= 1 cup at bedtime -fenugreek seeds soaked overnight= eat in the morning -garlic in ghee= chew 1-2 cloves cooked in ghee = good for joints -castor oil= 1 tsp before bed once a week as mild detox

YOGA ASANA -tadasana -vrikshasana -setu bandhasana -supta padangusthasana -ananda balasana -marjariasana

SIMPLE STRENGTHENING EXERCISES -quad sets=10-15 reps -heel slides=10 reps each side - seated leg raises= 5-10 reps - ankle rotations -wall support squats

You can definitely experience relief from pain, better mobility

DO FOLLOW

HOPE THIS MIGHT BE HELPFUL

THANK YOU

DR. MAITRI ACHARYA

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179 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Anjali Sehrawat
I am Dr. Anjali Sehrawat. Graduated BAMS from National College of Ayurveda & Hospital, Barwala (Hisar) in 2023—and right now I'm doing my residency, learning a lot everyday under senior clinicians who’ve been in the field way longer than me. It’s kind of intense but also really grounding. Like, it makes you pause before assuming anything about a patient. During my UG and clinical rotations, I got good hands-on exposure... not just in diagnosing through Ayurvedic nidan but also understanding where and when Allopathic tools (like lab reports or acute interventions) help fill the gap. I really believe that if you *actually* want to heal someone, you gotta see the whole picture—Ayurveda gives you that depth, but you also need to know when modern input is useful, right? I’m more interested in chronic & lifestyle disorders—stuff like metabolic imbalances, stress-linked issues, digestive problems that linger and slowly pull energy down. I don’t rush into giving churnas or kashayams just bcz the texts say so... I try to see what fits the patient’s prakriti, daily habits, emotional pattern etc. It’s not textbook-perfect every time, but that’s where the real skill grows I guess. I do a lot of thinking abt cause vs symptom—sometimes it's not the problem you see that actually needs solving first. What I care about most is making sure the treatment is safe, ethical, practical, and honest. No overpromising, no pushing meds that don’t fit. And I’m always reading or discussing sth—old Samhitas or recent journals, depends what the case demands. My goal really is to build a practice where people feel seen & understood, not just “managed.” That's where healing actually begins, right?
5
362 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. M.Sushma
I am Dr. Sushma M and yeah, I’ve been in Ayurveda for over 20 yrs now—honestly still learning from it every day. I mostly work with preventive care, diet logic, and prakriti-based guidance. I mean, why wait for full-blown disease when your body’s been whispering for years, right? I’m kinda obsessed with that early correction part—spotting vata-pitta-kapha imbalances before they spiral into something deeper. Most ppl don’t realize how much power food timing, digestion rhythm, & basic routine actually have… until they shift it. Alongside all that classical Ayurveda, I also use energy medicine & color therapy—those subtle layers matter too, esp when someone’s dealing with long-term fatigue or emotional heaviness. These things help reconnect not just the body, but the inner self too. Some ppl are skeptical at first—but when you treat *beyond* the doshas, they feel it. And I don’t force anything… I just kinda match what fits their nature. I usually take time understanding a person’s prakriti—not just from pulse or skin or tongue—but how they react to stress, sleep patterns, their relationship with food. That whole package tells the story. I don’t do textbook treatment lines—I build a plan that adjusts *with* the person, not on top of them. Over the years, watching patients slowly return to their baseline harmony—that's what keeps me in it. I’ve seen folks come in feeling lost in symptoms no one explained… and then walk out weeks later understanding their body better than they ever did. That, to me, is healing. Not chasing symptoms, but restoring rhythm. I believe true care doesn’t look rushed, or mechanical. It listens, observes, tweaks gently. That's the kind of Ayurveda I try to practice—not loud, but deeply rooted.
5
643 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Narendrakumar V Mishra
I am a Consulting Ayurvedic Physician practicing since 1990—feels strange saying “over three decades” sometimes, but yeah, that’s the journey. I’ve spent these years working closely with chronic conditions that don’t always have clear answers in quick fixes. My main work has been around skin disorders, hair fall, scalp issues, and long-standing lifestyle stuff like diabetes, arthritis, and stress that kinda lingers under everything else. When someone walks into my clinic, I don’t jump to treat the problem on the surface. I start by understanding their *prakriti* and *vikriti*—what they’re made of, and what’s currently out of sync. That lets me build treatment plans that actually *fit* their system—not just push a medicine and hope it works. I use a mix of classical formulations, panchakarma if needed, dietary corrections, and slow, practical lifestyle changes. No overnight miracle talk. Just steady support. Hair fall and skin issues often feel cosmetic from outside—but internally? It’s about digestion, stress, liver, hormones... I’ve seen patients try 10+ things before landing in front of me. And sometimes they just need someone to *listen* before throwing herbs at the problem. That’s something I never skip. With arthritis and diabetes too, I take the same root-cause path. I give Ayurvedic medicines, but also work with *dinacharya*, *ahar* rules, and ways to reduce the load modern life puts on the body. We discuss sleep, food timing, mental state, all of it. I’ve also worked a lot with people dealing with high stress—career burnout, anxiety patterns, overthinking—and my approach there includes Ayurvedic counseling, herbal mind support, breathing routines... depends what suits them. My foundation is built on classical *samhitas*, clinical observation, and actual time with patients—not theories alone. My goal has always been simple: to help people feel well—not just for a few weeks, but in a way that actually lasts. Healing that feels like *them*, not just protocol. That’s what I keep aiming for.
5
1292 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Nisha Bisht
I am an Ayurvedic physician with over 10 years of real, everyday experience—both in the clinical side and in managing systems behind the scenes. My journey started at Jiva Ayurveda in Faridabad, where I spent around 3 years juggling in-clinic and telemedicine consultations. That time taught me how different patient care can look when it’s just you, the person’s voice, and classical texts. No fancy setups—just your grasp on nidan and your ability to *listen properly*. Then I moved into a Medical Officer role at Uttaranchal Ayurved College in Dehradun, where I stayed for 7 years. It was more than just outpatient care—I was also involved in academic work, teaching students while continuing to treat patients. That phase really pushed me to re-read things with new eyes. You explain something to students one day and then end up applying it differently the next day on a patient. The loop between theory and practice became sharper there. Right now, I’m working as Deputy Medical Superintendent at Shivalik Hospital (part of the Shivalik Ayurved Institute in Dehradun). It’s a dual role—consulting patients *and* making sure the hospital ops run smooth. I get to ensure that the Ayurvedic care we deliver is both clinically sound and logistically strong. From patient case planning to supporting clinical staff and overseeing treatment quality—I keep an eye on all of it. Across all these years, my focus hasn’t changed much—I still work to blend classical Ayurved with today’s healthcare structure in a way that feels practical, safe and real. I don’t believe in overloading patients or selling “quick detox” ideas. I work on balancing doshas, rebuilding agni, planning proper chikitsa based on the person’s condition and constitution. Whether it’s lifestyle disorders, seasonal issues, chronic cases, or plain unexplained fatigue—I try to reach the cause before anything else. I still believe that Ayurved works best when it’s applied with clarity and humility—not overcomplicated or oversold. That’s the approach I carry into every patient room and every team meeting. It’s a long road, but it’s one I’m fully walking.
5
289 समीक्षाएँ

नवीनतम समीक्षाएँ

Lincoln
17 घंटे पहले
This response was super helpful. The detailed steps and suggestions feel spot on and easy to follow. Really appreciate the practical advice. Thanks a ton!
This response was super helpful. The detailed steps and suggestions feel spot on and easy to follow. Really appreciate the practical advice. Thanks a ton!
Luke
23 घंटे पहले
Wow, thanks a lot for the detailed advice! It was super helpful to get such a clear and practical plan. Feeling better already 😊
Wow, thanks a lot for the detailed advice! It was super helpful to get such a clear and practical plan. Feeling better already 😊
Andrew
23 घंटे पहले
Thanks for the straightforward advice, doc! Appreciate the quick response and will definitely consider setting up a consult to get more personalized guidance. Feels good to have a direction to go in.
Thanks for the straightforward advice, doc! Appreciate the quick response and will definitely consider setting up a consult to get more personalized guidance. Feels good to have a direction to go in.
Christian
23 घंटे पहले
Thanks for cutting through the noise. Your advice made things clearer. Always helpful to get a second opinion like this!
Thanks for cutting through the noise. Your advice made things clearer. Always helpful to get a second opinion like this!