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Seeking Guidance for My Son's Nonverbal Autism
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General Medicine
प्रश्न #39238
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Seeking Guidance for My Son's Nonverbal Autism - #39238

Client_897aa5

My son is 5 and is diagnosed with nonverbal autism. We have tried multitudes of things to help him and none have shown any progress. We have done things such as HBOT, diet change (all homemade foods, dairy and gluten free), speech/OT/PT, supplements and testing, stem cell therapy, mitochondrial support, craniosacral therapy, chiropractic, acupuncture… you’re probably getting the picture. Nothing we have done has moved the needle. His biggest concerns are him being nonverbal and his lack of imitation. He does not gesture(wave, clap or point), and does not use signs. Can you guide me in our first steps for helping him begin go make progress? Thank you.

How long has your son been diagnosed with nonverbal autism?:

- More than 2 years

What is your son's daily routine like?:

- Structured with set activities

Has your son shown any interest in specific activities or toys?:

- Some interest, but limited
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डॉक्टरों की प्रतिक्रियाएं

Hello I truly understand how emotionally and mentally challenging it can be when your child shows little progress despite your continuous love, effort, and commitment. But don’t worry we are here to help you out😊

✅ AYURVEDIC PLAN OF MANAGEMENT

✅INTERNAL MEDICATION

For Neurological Development & Speech Stimulation

1. Brahmi Ghrita – ¼ tsp with warm milk twice daily (improves brain function, comprehension, and focus).

2. Saraswata Churna – ¼ tsp with honey once daily (traditional formula for speech delay and cognitive growth).

3. Kalyanaka Ghrita – ½ tsp once daily with warm milk (acts as Medhya Rasayana – rejuvenates brain cells).

4. Swarna Bindu Prashana (if available in your region) – once a month on Pushya Nakshatra day – strengthens immunity, intellect, and communication.

5. Kalyana gulam - mix the gulam with lemon juice and apply on the tongue once daily ( for speech stimulation)

✅PANCHAKARMA (to be done under expert supervision)

These therapies help calm Vata, improve speech coordination, and enhance brain–body communication pathways

1. Abhyanga (Daily oil massage) – with lakshadi taila ; it reduces restlessness, improves muscle tone, and balances Vata.( Important )

2. Shiro Abhyanga (Head massage) – daily before sleep using Brahmi Taila – helps relaxation and focus.

3. Shirodhara – rhythmic pouring of medicated liquids over forehead to calm the nervous system.

4 Tailapozichila - medicated lepa application over the head

5. Karna Purana – instillation of warm medicated oil in ears helps auditory processing.

6 Nasya therapy - installation of medicated oil in nose

Out of these first I will suggest you to do Abhynga daily and shiroabhynga you can do 3-4 times a week

Rest Panchakarma therapy you can do for continue 7 days in nearby panchakarma center ( once in 3 months)

✅DIET MODIFICATION

✅ Include

Warm, freshly cooked homemade meals with ghee. Moong dal, rice, bottle gourd, pumpkin, beetroot, and carrots. Cow’s milk with turmeric, or milk with Brahmi Ghrita at night. Fresh fruits like pomegranate, banana, papaya, and apple. Homemade soups, kichdi, and dates for natural strength.

❌ Avoid

Cold, processed, packaged, and leftover foods. Refined sugar, bakery items, and heavy fried foods. Overuse of dairy replacements (almond/soy milk) which may increase dryness (Vata).

✅ Lifestyle & Behavioral Practices (Vihara)

1. Routine: Maintain a consistent schedule – same waking, eating, sleeping times daily to stabilize Vata.

2. Sound & Music Therapy Chanting soft mantras like Om, Ram while holding your child’s hand helps vibrational communication. Play soothing instrumental music or natural sounds (birds, flute, veena).

3. Tactile and Sensory Play: Use clay, sand, or warm oil touch play to stimulate sensory channels.

4. Speech stimulation techniques: Practice eye contact, slow imitation games (clap, wave, smile). Reward-based reinforcement after small responses helps positive conditioning.

✅RASAYANA (Rejuvenative Support for Long-Term

After 3–4 months of basic therapy, Rasayana tonics can help improve neurological nourishment:

1 Ashwagandhadi Lehyam – ¼ tsp daily for strength.

Important Note

Since your son already receives therapy and dietary support, Ayurveda can be integrated without stopping his current therapies. Focus first on gut correction and Vata balance for 2–3 months — once his digestion and sleep improve, mental progress follows naturally.

You have to be consistent for his treatment and medicines. With consistency you will see minute changes in his behaviour will be significantly improve his life before teenage.

Wishing your son a good health😊

Warm regards, Dr Snehal Vidhate

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Thank you for sharing your journey, so clearly it is clear how much love and perseverance you have invested in helping your son prince so many therapy have been tried and nothing else visible changed. It can feel defeating, but even in stillness a child’s brain is taking in for more than shows. Progress for nonverbal autistic children often begins not with words, but with a sense of safety and shared presence Right now, the most Healing thing you can offer is connection without demand beside him quietly during his favourite activities, hum softly and mirrors. Small parts of what is doing without expecting him to imitate you back. When he notices you joining his rhythm, you are gently awakening. the foundation of communication , joint attention, and trust. These come before speech or gestures and essential for them to emerge, naturally later

Reduce the pressure of structured teaching for a while, and bring more sensory regulating play into his days, swinging bouncing, walking together, splashing water or rhythmic trimming. Keep these interactions, short and joyful. The reputation of gentle rhythmic movement helps integrate his body and preparing his nervous system for invitation and speech Massage daily with warm sesame oil before part time, focusing on this fine and soul of the feet, the touch strength and the nervous system and calm restlessness, maintain soothing home atmosphere less noise softer, lighting, regular mealtime This predictable patterns create internal security, which is what open the door expression His food should stay simple, warm like cooked grains, vegetables, lunch and cold, heavy food. Warm soups with Muttal and Chumi are ideal for balancing his diet and mood a few drops of Brahmi gritha in the morning, may gently support neural activity and calm over stimulation when introduced carefully Instead of teaching guest, just like craving or clapping focus on creating moments, very naturally wants to blow bubbles and housing before you blow again, stopping your favourite swim Mary, and waiting for his look or singing a repetitive tune and living a gap for him to respond with a sound movement… each force invites him into communication at his own pace Try not to think of invitation or worse as lesson, but a science that sense of joy and trustee deepening celebrate, even the smallest a longer look return to audio voice, smile during play everyone of these days communication Consistency, softness, and rhythmic connection or slowly awaken his ability to express

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आपका व्यक्तिगत उपचार तैयार है
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आपका व्यक्तिगत उपचार तैयार है
हमने आपके डॉक्टर द्वारा सुझाई गई दवाएं जोड़ दी हैं।

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It’s better to consult your nearest Ayurved Hospital.

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Dr. Prasad Pentakota
I am Dr. P. Prasad, and I have accumulated over 20 years of experience working across multiple medical specialties, including General Medicine, Neurology, Dermatology, and Cardiology. Throughout my career, I have had the opportunity to diagnose and manage a wide range of health conditions, helping patients navigate both acute and chronic medical challenges. My exposure to these diverse fields has given me a comprehensive understanding of the human body and its interconnected systems. Whether it is managing general medical conditions, neurological disorders, skin diseases, or heart-related issues, I approach every case with careful attention to detail and evidence-based practices. I believe in providing accurate diagnosis, patient education, and treatment that is both effective and tailored to the individual’s specific needs. I place great emphasis on patient-centered care, where listening, understanding, and clear communication play a vital role. Over the years, I have seen how combining clinical knowledge with empathy can significantly improve treatment outcomes and patient satisfaction. With two decades of continuous learning and hands-on experience, I am committed to staying updated with the latest medical advancements and integrating them into my daily practice. My goal has always been to deliver high-quality, ethical, and compassionate medical care that addresses not just the illness but the overall well-being of my patients.
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Thank you for reaching out and trusting this platform with your son ceiling journey. I can sense how much dedication Patient and unconditional love you have already given you. You have exploited nearly every possible approach that is from diet and supplements to therapy and specialised therapy. You still find yourself for his work of progress that longing that constant effort is not in vain. Every therapy and every moment of Care has been shaping is in landscape, quietly in the way of say that even when change is not visible, the body and mind are still observing and be aligning internally. The goal now is to bring that quiet potential into gentle outward expression by reconnecting, his body, mind, and senses in the most natural and nurturing way.

When a child remains non-verbal behind the early developmental years and shows no imitation or gesture higher rate of use, this not has a lack of intelligence or capability disconnection in the pathways of communication between the manas and Indira and sharia … in simple terms, the bridge between awareness and expression is weak. The mind reduces impressions, but the body does not translate them into action. Hence, the absence of limitation, pointing or speech. Healing begins when we strengthen that bridge slowly and gently through rhythm, touch, sensory nourishment, emotional safety, and regulation of energy The first and most powerful therapy you can begin. A term is daily whole body massage with warm sesame oil or coconut oil? It is not just for the skin, but for awakening, century awareness or even you can use Ksheerabala taila also Massage from head to 2 with gentle circular motions on the joints and long strokes on the limits, they should last 15 to 20 minutes, followed by a warm bath The combination of warmth touch Sudha‘s eye active or fragmented nervous system and makes him feel grounded in his body over time his sensibility to touch, which shift from a defensive to the subjective, if fundamental change that open the way for imitation and expression

Hindi, same way samsparsha chikitsa -the therapy of conscious touch and sensory integration - should continue throughout the day in settle forms, children with autism often live in a world with sounds light and texture attack rather than organised their perception…their minds are alert, but their chances are in chaos so created calm, predictable and environment, dim natural lighting, gentle music, and mild sense of natural oils at minimal background noise Lettuce play materials, be simple, natural and tactile like wood blocks, Sand clay, cottons water, every time, C touches sports or shapes. These elements is sprain, refine its map of sensory input and begins aligning it with motor response. Even five minutes of calm and our water bag can activate deep neural integration that no external.Therapy can replace

During playtime, sit beside him, rather than across from him, avoid verbal instruction instead, quietly rhythm, if he spin a wheel spin yours alongside If he taps taps softly in tune, don’t ask him to look at you, let the connection bill invisible through rhythm When he pauses, pause with him This small worthless exchanges are fair. Communication truly begins. Beta, call this sattvic resonance Two share vibration of stillness and safety and learning becomes effortless… gradually, he will begin to notice your presence in his place and anticipate your next move that limitation in earliest form The next focus should be on Agni is digestive fire. You have already removed gluten and diary, which was wise but now it is time to strengthen the inner Tition rather than only restricting Foods In autism digestion and brain function are deeply linked When ama (undigested metabolic toxin) accumulates. In the gut, it travels through the stream and clocks like shuttle channels of communication in the brain The first sign of clearing ama is improved, focus and calmer behaviour To do this gently keep his meals freshly cooked warm and lightly spiced Give him food at the same time each day Moong dal Khichdi with a bit of ghee and cumin Lightly steamed vegetables with salt and soft red rice or millet can be given Avoid cold juices, refrigerator, snacks, processed food A teaspoon of ghee in each meal, lubricate the notes and an answer absorption of nutrients vital for brain function In the morning, you can start a stay with a zip of warm water. Mix with a few drops of ghee to awaken digestion Avoid forcing new test, gratulate in introduction is best over time. When dictation improves, you will notice better eye contact longer play, attention and more emotional, calm Ayurveda teaches thar mind always follows Agni-stable digestive fire means stable mind

For internal support, mild medhya dravyas can be introduced in Low doses Brahmi mandukaparni and vacha are classical herbs that strengthen neural communication and memory the best form is Brahmi gritha - give 1/4 th teaspoon in warm milk in the morning after breakfast-this preparation gently nutritious the brain tissue supports the myelin sheath and calms hyperexcitability without sedation The improvement it brings is gradual More awareness subtle responsiveness and better sleep patterns over time Try to maintain a rhythm through OT Ayurveda emphasises niyama-studying in routine at therapy in itself, fixed meal times. Set sleep hours. Regular wake up pattern and consistent outdoor exposure all regulate vata the principle of moment and nervous energy Stimulation through therapy are changing schedules can scatter focus A simple daily rhythm that alert alternates between movement and sensory plate, allows his brain to feel safe and predictable let him spend time in sunlight in the morning barefoot on grass or soil if possible. Exposure to sunlight at least 15 minutes daily early morning required. Speak and limitation will not come by asking him to perform them. They emerge when he begins to enjoy. Share experiences uses natural interest as if he loves water, blue bubbles and power. Let him look or move before You blew again if he sounds sing a song stop and wait These poses teach him that is response has meaning that communication changes the world. Every tiny gland sound or capture. He makes in those moments is the seed of language

Support yourself emotionally through this process as well. Ayurveda believes that mothers mental and emotional form part of child healing. If you’re calm, awful and centred is nervous system receives that NH has safety practice, grounding breath work for yourself, slow in relation and acceleration. Shruthi knows focusing on the art area, even for a few minutes each day, listen to soothing Mantras or gentle music in home, soul energy, be calm, rhythm, nurturing. Progress in these cases really come in dramatically it unfolds in invisible ships. One day human meet your kids, a little longer or smile when You humein familiar tune or imitate a moment without realising age of moment a break through the two words, but to awaken awareness and once awareness flows freely words follow on their own . Healing for a child like yours requires steadiness, simply city and deep sensitivity. Every oil massage every quiet moment of shape every war, male and every gentle fall medicine. The therapist you have tried have built foundation now I help integrate them into a state of harmony when body feel safe with Corona and his energy grounded the expression that has been silent for years. We begin to find its for this is not a taste of techniques, but journey of Reconnect, one that unfolds softly beautifully and always in its define timing Even you can start on Ashwagandhadi lehyam 1/4 th tsp with warm milk at night N try swarnaprashna at nearby ayurvedic centres

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Dr. Ravi Chandra Rushi
I am currently serving as a Consultant Ayurvedic Ano-Rectal Surgeon at Bhrigu Maharishi Ayurvedic Hospital, Nalgonda, where I specialize in the diagnosis, treatment, and long-term management of various ano-rectal disorders. My clinical focus lies in treating conditions such as piles (Arsha), fistula-in-ano (Bhagandara), fissure-in-ano (Parikartika), rectal polyps, and pilonidal sinus using time-tested Ayurvedic approaches like Ksharasutra, Agnikarma, and other para-surgical procedures outlined in classical texts. With a deep commitment to patient care, I emphasize a holistic treatment protocol that combines precise surgical techniques with Ayurvedic formulations, dietary guidance, and lifestyle modifications to reduce recurrence and promote natural healing. I strongly believe in integrating traditional Ayurvedic wisdom with patient-centric care, which allows for better outcomes and long-lasting relief. Working at Bhrigu Maharishi Ayurvedic Hospital has provided me with the opportunity to handle a wide range of surgical and post-operative cases. My approach is rooted in classical Shalya Tantra, enhanced by modern diagnostic insights. I stay updated with advancements in Ayurvedic surgery while adhering to evidence-based practices to ensure safety and efficacy. Beyond clinical practice, I am also committed to raising awareness about Ayurvedic proctology and promoting non-invasive treatments for conditions often mismanaged or overtreated by modern surgical approaches. I strive to make Ayurvedic surgical care accessible, effective, and aligned with the needs of today’s patients, while preserving the essence of our traditional healing system. Through continuous learning and compassionate practice, I aim to offer every patient a respectful, informed, and outcome-driven experience rooted in Ayurveda.
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Take rajawadi prash gold 1tsp with milk, vacha churna 1tsp , shankapushi 5ml od, Brahmi vati halftab

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हमने आपके डॉक्टर द्वारा सुझाई गई दवाएं जोड़ दी हैं।
आपका व्यक्तिगत उपचार तैयार है
हमने आपके डॉक्टर द्वारा सुझाई गई दवाएं जोड़ दी हैं।

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You need to visit nearby ayurvedic centre and consult ayurvedic physician for viddha karma treatment. This treatment will help, but still he is 5 years, will need time , if you compare with other kids, he will take longer time to get his verbal faculties. You will need patience and continue viddha karma treatment along with ayurvedic medicine. Start with Mentat Syrup 5 ml Twice daily after food with water Brahmi grith 1tsp twice daily before food with warm milk. Do Nasya with Brahmi grith 1 drop in both nostril once daily.

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आपका व्यक्तिगत उपचार तैयार है
हमने आपके डॉक्टर द्वारा सुझाई गई दवाएं जोड़ दी हैं।
आपका व्यक्तिगत उपचार तैयार है
हमने आपके डॉक्टर द्वारा सुझाई गई दवाएं जोड़ दी हैं।

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Dr. Sara Garg
I am someone who believes Ayurveda isn’t just some old system — it’s alive, and actually still works when you use it the way it's meant to be used. My practice mostly revolves around proper Ayurvedic diagnosis (rogi & roga pariksha types), Panchakarma therapies, and ya also a lot of work with herbal medicine — not just prescribing but sometimes preparing stuff myself when needed. I really like that hands-on part actually, like knowing where the herbs came from and how they're processed... changes everything. One of the things I pay a lot of attention to is how a person's lifestyle is playing into their condition. Food, sleep, bowel habits, even small emotional patterns that people don't even realize are affecting their digestion or immunity — I look at all of it before jumping to treatment. Dietary therapy isn’t just telling people to eat less fried food lol. It’s more about timing, combinations, seasonal influence, and what suits their prakriti. That kind of detail takes time, and sometimes patients don’t get why it matters at first.. but slowly it clicks. Panchakarma — I do it when I feel it's needed. Doesn’t suit everyone all the time, but in the right case, it really clears the stuck layers. But again, it's not magic — people need to prep properly and follow instructions. That's where strong communication matters. I make it a point to explain everything without dumping too much Sanskrit unless they’re curious. I also try to keep things simple, like I don’t want patients feeling intimidated or overwhelmed with 10 things at once. We go step by step — sometimes slow, sometimes quick depending on the case. There’s no “one protocol fits all” in Ayurveda and frankly I get bored doing same thing again and again. Whether it’s a fever that won’t go or long-term fatigue or gut mess — I usually go deep into what's behind it. Surface-level fixes don’t last. I rather take the time than rush into wrong herbs. It’s more work, ya, but makes a diff in long run.
1 घंटा पहले
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HI,

Start SWARNPRASHAN every month for proper development or built his immune system.

Speech therapy and behavioural therapy should be started, which will help you to see best results.

And strictly avoid sweet things from child.

CONSULT to nearby pediatrician for proper diagnosis and treatment.

THANKU

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ITS VERY CHALLENGING FOR MOTHER BCZ HIS LOVED ONE SUFFERS THAT KIND OF RARE PHENOMENON… DNT WORRY BE PATIENT AYURVEDA REALLY HELPS YOU ALOT:-

KUMARKALYAN RAS=2 GM RASRAJ RAS=1 gm RAJAT BHASMA=2GM MUKTA SHUKTI BHSMA 10GM PRAWAL PISTI=10GM ABRAK BHSMA=5GM ASHWAGANDHA CHURNA=25GM VRIHAT VAT CHINTAMANI RAS=1GM… MIX ALL 1/3RD TSP WITH HONEY EMPTY STOMACH TWICE DAILY

ARVIND ASAVA=3-3 TSP AFTER MEAL TWICE DAILY

BRAHMI GHRIT=1 TSP WITH MILK AT BED TIME

BHRAMA RASAYANA=1 TSP WITH MILK EARLY MORNING…

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आपका व्यक्तिगत उपचार तैयार है
हमने आपके डॉक्टर द्वारा सुझाई गई दवाएं जोड़ दी हैं।
आपका व्यक्तिगत उपचार तैयार है
हमने आपके डॉक्टर द्वारा सुझाई गई दवाएं जोड़ दी हैं।

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HELLO,

Your son’s brain is wired differently. It does not process social signals, imitation, and communication in the same automatic way neurotypical children do. In non-verbal autism at 5 yrs, talking is not the first goal.

Communication is the objective. Communication → imitation → gesture → symbol → then sometimes speech. Currently, his nervous system is Vata aggravated in the Ayurvedic perspective.

This shows up as: irregular, unpredictability, difficulty integrating sensory input, difficulty with sustained engagement. Core target is not “fix autism” (wrong framework). Core target is to increase: regulated learning windows. When he is regulated → he CAN learn. Whenever regulation collapses → nothing enters.

Treatment goals- regulation: nervous system calm, digestion predictable, sleep stable Alternative and augmentative communication, commonly referred to as AAC imitation training gesture acquisition social reciprocity increase The possibility of eventual vocalization cannot be forced but can grow when #1-4 increase Ayurveda supports goal 1. AAC + NDBI supports goals 2–4. When 1–4 get strong → 5 + 6 happen slowly.

Internal Ayurveda medicines-

1) Chyawanprash (½ teaspoon daily after food) = gentle rasayana, nourishes system, improves tissue building, supports immunity & vitality Extremely classical and safe for long-term pediatric use if reputable brand.

2) Children’s Medhya Syrup (combo formulation that generally contains Brahmi + Shankhpushpi + Yashtimadhu + other brain tonics) use manufacturer pediatric dose this supports attention, processing speed, cognitive stamina gradually start this 6-8 weeks continuous before evaluating change

3) Brahmi Ghrita only introduced later after 6-8 weeks=-2 weeks 1/4 tsp with warm milk at night Micro dosing only DO NOT STACK 7 things at one time. Ayurveda works better with clean stack.

First, start #1

+ #2. External Ayurveda Abhyanga-this becomes the most powerful part warm sesame oil deep pressure style strokes 10–20 minutes Daily, or at least 5 days a week

follow with warm bath Abhyanga + warm bath: increases regulation window. This is the time slot right after where his attempts at therapy should happen.

No aggressive panchakarma

No detox

No purgation

No "miracle flushes

Pediatrics requires softness.

Diet to be followed

Foods should be warm, soft, cooked no cold food No raw salad No iced drinks Ghee allowed daily small rice + mung + soft cooked vegetables are ideal base Mild spices help, such as cumin, coriander, fennel. avoid fast food, deep-fried, very spicy Avoid excessive snacking. water must be at room temperature or warm. Digestion must be predictable. Predictable digestion produces predictable nervous system.

lifestyle/ routine- Dinacharya essential points wake-up time every day same sleeping time structured day predictable sequence low chaos household High daily similarity environment Vata is so predictable.

Yoga + pranayama-5 yr child version no formal pranayama only playful, breathing-based regulation was blowing bubbles blowing feathers blowing cotton ball blowing pretend candles

Yoga forms: cat cow (with animal imitation) Supported tree pose Child’s pose

animal walks: bear walk, crab walk In fact, this is also imitation therapy. developmental therapy requirement It is important to introduce AAC. Not optional. AAC does NOT block speech. AAC increases the odds of speech later. NDBI (naturalistic developmental behavioral intervention) style play-5-15 minute blocks multiple times per day-is the highest success framework.

Ayurveda supports the nervous system, then NDBI + AAC actually works.

final advice (this is the parent anchor) Start Chyawanprash + Medhya Syrup-not more than these two. Daily abhyanga + warm bath Warm cooked diet AAC daily in natural play, not only therapy room NDBI micro sessions daily (5–10 min blocks) Keep schedule identical daily This is the combination that is sustainable. Consistent slow small wins add up - this is long horizon.

DO FOLLOW

HOPE THIS MIGHT BE HELPFUL

THANK YOU

DR. MAITRI ACHARYA

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ऑनलाइन डॉक्टर

Dr. Ayush Varma
I am an Ayurvedic physician with an MD from AIIMS—yeah, the 2008 batch. That time kinda shaped everything for me... learning at that level really forces you to think deeper, not just follow protocol. Now, with 15+ years in this field, I mostly work with chronic stuff—autoimmune issues, gut-related problems, metabolic syndrome... those complex cases where symptoms overlap n patients usually end up confused after years of going in circles. I don’t rush to treat symptoms—I try to dig into what’s actually causing the system to go off-track. I guess that’s where my training really helps, especially when blending classical Ayurveda with updated diagnostics. I did get certified in Panchakarma & Rasayana therapy, which I use quite a lot—especially in cases where tissue-level nourishment or deep detox is needed. Rasayana has this underrated role in post-illness recovery n immune stabilization, which most people miss. I’m pretty active in clinical research too—not a full-time academic or anything, but I’ve contributed to studies on how Ayurveda helps manage diabetes, immunity burnout, stress dysregulation, things like that. It’s been important for me to keep a foot in that evidence-based space—not just because of credibility but because it keeps me from becoming too rigid in practice. I also get invited to speak at wellness events n some integrative health conferences—sharing ideas around patient-centered treatment models or chronic care via Ayurvedic frameworks. I practice full-time at a wellness centre that’s serious about Ayurveda—not just the spa kind—but real, protocol-driven, yet personalised medicine. Most of my patients come to me after trying a lot of other options, which makes trust-building a huge part of what I do every single day.
4.95
20 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
985 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Prasad Pentakota
I am Dr. P. Prasad, and I’ve been in this field for 20+ years now, working kinda across the board—General Medicine, Neurology, Dermatology, Cardiology—you name it. Didn’t start out thinking I’d end up spanning that wide, but over time, each area sort of pulled me in deeper. And honestly, I like that mix. It lets me look at a patient not just through one lens but a whole system-wide view... makes more sense when treating something that won’t fit neatly in one category. I’ve handled everything from day-to-day stuff like hypertension, diabetes, or skin infections to more serious neuro and cardiac problems. Some cases are quick—diagnose, treat, done. Others take time, repeated check-ins, figuring out what’s really going on beneath those usual symptoms. And that’s where the detail matters. I’m pretty big on thorough diagnosis and patient education—because half the problem is ppl just not knowing what’s happening inside their own body. What’s changed for me over years isn’t just knowledge, it’s how much I lean on listening. If you miss what someone didn’t say, you might also miss their actual illness. And idk, after seeing it play out so many times, I do believe combining updated medical practice with basic empathy really shifts outcomes. Doesn’t have to be complicated... it just has to be consistent. I keep up with research too—new drugs, diagnostics, cross-specialty updates etc., not because it’s trendy, but cuz it’s necessary. Patients come in better read now than ever. You can’t afford to fall behind. The end goal’s the same tho—help them heal right, not just fast. Ethical practice, evidence-based, and sometimes just being there to explain what’s going on. That’s what I stick to.
5
632 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Anirudh Deshmukh
I am Dr Anurag Sharma, done with BAMS and also PGDHCM from IMS BHU, which honestly shaped a lot of how I approach things now in clinic. Working as a physician and also as an anorectal surgeon, I’ve got around 2 to 3 years of solid experience—tho like, every day still teaches me something new. I mainly focus on anorectal care (like piles, fissure, fistula stuff), plus I work with chronic pain cases too. Pain management is something I feel really invested in—seeing someone walk in barely managing and then leave with actual relief, that hits different. I’m not really the fancy talk type, but I try to keep my patients super informed, not just hand out meds n move on. Each case needs a bit of thinking—some need Ksharasutra or minor para surgical stuff, while others are just lifestyle tweaks and herbal meds. I like mixing the Ayurved principles with modern insights when I can, coz both sides got value really. It’s like—knowing when to go gentle and when to be precise. Right now I’m working hard on getting even better with surgical skills, but also want to help people get to me before surgery's the only option. Had few complicated cases where patience n consistency paid off—no shortcuts but yeah, worth it. The whole point for me is to actually listen first, like proper listen. People talk about symptoms but also say what they feel—and that helps in understanding more than any lab report sometimes. I just want to stay grounded in my work, and keep growing while doing what I can to make someone's pain bit less every day.
0 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Sara Garg
I am someone who believes Ayurveda isn’t just some old system — it’s alive, and actually still works when you use it the way it's meant to be used. My practice mostly revolves around proper Ayurvedic diagnosis (rogi & roga pariksha types), Panchakarma therapies, and ya also a lot of work with herbal medicine — not just prescribing but sometimes preparing stuff myself when needed. I really like that hands-on part actually, like knowing where the herbs came from and how they're processed... changes everything. One of the things I pay a lot of attention to is how a person's lifestyle is playing into their condition. Food, sleep, bowel habits, even small emotional patterns that people don't even realize are affecting their digestion or immunity — I look at all of it before jumping to treatment. Dietary therapy isn’t just telling people to eat less fried food lol. It’s more about timing, combinations, seasonal influence, and what suits their prakriti. That kind of detail takes time, and sometimes patients don’t get why it matters at first.. but slowly it clicks. Panchakarma — I do it when I feel it's needed. Doesn’t suit everyone all the time, but in the right case, it really clears the stuck layers. But again, it's not magic — people need to prep properly and follow instructions. That's where strong communication matters. I make it a point to explain everything without dumping too much Sanskrit unless they’re curious. I also try to keep things simple, like I don’t want patients feeling intimidated or overwhelmed with 10 things at once. We go step by step — sometimes slow, sometimes quick depending on the case. There’s no “one protocol fits all” in Ayurveda and frankly I get bored doing same thing again and again. Whether it’s a fever that won’t go or long-term fatigue or gut mess — I usually go deep into what's behind it. Surface-level fixes don’t last. I rather take the time than rush into wrong herbs. It’s more work, ya, but makes a diff in long run.
5
22 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Anupriya
I am an Ayurvedic doctor trained at one of the most reputed institutes (yeah, the kind that makes u sweat but also feel proud lol) where I completed my BAMS with 70%—not just numbers but real grind behind it. My focus during & after graduation has always been on treating the patient not just the disease, and honestly that philosophy keeps guiding me even now. I usually see anywhere around 50 to 60 patients a day, sometimes more if there's a health camp or local rush. It’s hectic, but I kinda thrive in that rhythm. What matters to me is not the number but going deep into each case—reading every complaint, understanding symptoms, prakriti, current state, season changes etc. and putting together a treatment that feels “right” for that person, not just for the condition. Like, I don’t do one-size-fits-all plans. I sit down, make case reports (yup, proper handwritten notes sometimes), observe small shifts, modify herbs, suggest diet tweaks, even plan rest patterns when needed. I find that holistic angle super powerful. And patients feel it too—some who come in dull n restless, over weeks show clarity, skin settles, energy kinda gets back... that makes the day worth it tbh. There’s no shortcut to trust, and i get that. Maybe that’s why patients keep referring their siblings or maa-papa too. Not bragging, but when people say things like “you actually listened” or “I felt heard”, it stays in the back of my mind even when I’m dog tired lol. My goal? Just to keep learning, treating honestly and evolving as per what each new case teaches me. Ayurveda isn’t static—it grows with u if u let it. I guess I’m just walking that path, one custom plan at a time.
5
310 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Ravi Chandra Rushi
I am working right now as a Consultant Ayurvedic Ano-Rectal Surgeon at Bhrigu Maharishi Ayurvedic Hospital in Nalgonda—and yeah, that name’s quite something, but what really keeps me here is the kind of cases we get. My main focus is managing ano-rectal disorders like piles (Arsha), fistula-in-ano (Bhagandara), fissure-in-ano (Parikartika), pilonidal sinus, and rectal polyps. These are often more complex than they look at first, and they get misdiagnosed or overtreated in a lotta places. That’s where our classical tools come in—Ksharasutra therapy, Agnikarma, and a few other para-surgical techniques we follow from the Samhitas...they’ve been lifesavers honestly. My work here pushes me to keep refining surgical precision while also sticking to the Ayurvedic core. I do rely on modern diagnostics when needed, but I won’t replace the value of a well-done Nadi Pariksha or assessing dosha-vikruti in depth. Most of my patients come with pain, fear, and usually after a couple of rounds of either incomplete surgeries or just being fed painkillers n antibiotics. And I totally get that frustration. That’s why I combine surgery with a whole support plan—Ayurvedic meds, diet changes, lifestyle tweaks that actually match their prakriti. Not generic stuff off a handout. Over time, I’ve seen that when people follow the whole protocol, not just the procedure part, the recurrence drops a lot. I’m quite particular about follow-up and wound care too, ‘cause we’re dealing with delicate areas here and ignoring post-op can ruin outcomes. Oh and yeah—I care a lot about educating folks too. I talk to patients in OPD, sometimes give community talks, just to tell people they do have safer options than cutting everything out under GA! I still study Shalya Tantra like it’s a living document. I try to stay updated with whatever credible advancements are happening in Ayurvedic surgery, but I filter what’s fluff and what’s actually useful. At the end of the day, my aim is to offer respectful, outcome-based care that lets patients walk out without shame or fear. That’s really what keeps me grounded in this field.
5
118 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Snehal Vidhate
I am Dr. Snehal Vidhate, born n brought up in Maharashtra—and honestly, for as long as I remember I’ve felt this pull towards Ayurveda. Not the fancy version ppl throw around, but the deep, real kind that actually helps ppl. I did my BAMS from YMT Ayurvedic Medical College in Kharghar. That’s where I got my basics strong—like really studied the shastras, understood prakriti, doshas, the whole deal. Not just crammed theory but started to see how it shows up in real lives. After finishing BAMS, I got into this one-year certificate course at Rashtriya Ayurveda Vidyapeeth, Delhi—honestly a turning point. I was super lucky to learn Kerala Ayurveda from my Guru, Prof. Dr. G.G. Gangadharan. He’s got this way of seeing things... simple but deep. That time with him taught me more than any textbook ever could. It kinda reshaped how I look at health, healing n how precise Ayurveda can be when you respect its roots. Right now I’m doing my MD in Panchakarma from SDM Ayurveda College, Bangalore. This place is like a hub for serious Ayurveda work. The Panchakarma training here? Super intense. We go deep into detoxification & rasayana therapy—not just theory again, but hands-on. I’m learning to blend classical techniques with today’s clinical demands.. like how to make Vamana or Basti actually doable in modern patient setups. My current practice is really about merging tradition with logic. Whether it’s chronic skin issues, gut problems, stress burnout or hormone stuff—my goal is to get to the root, not just hush the symptoms. I use Panchakarma when needed, but also a lot of ahara-vihara tweaks, medhya herbs, sometimes just slowing ppl down a bit helps. I really believe Ayurveda’s power is in its simplicity when done right. I don’t try to fix ppl—I work *with* them. And honestly, every patient teaches me something back.
5
198 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Hemanshu Mehta
I am Dr. Hemanshu—right now a 2nd year MD scholar in Shalya Tantra, which basically means I’m training deep into the surgical side of Ayurveda. Not just cutting and stitching, btw, but the whole spectrum of para-surgical tools like Agnikarma, Viddhakarma, and Kshara Karma... these aren’t just traditional, they’re super precise when done right. I’m not saying I know everything yet (still learning every day honestly), but I do have solid exposure in handling chronic pain issues, muscle-joint disorders, and anorectal conditions like piles, fissures, fistulas—especially where modern treatments fall short or the patient’s tired of going through loops. During clinical rounds, I’ve seen how even simple Kshara application or well-timed Agnikarma can ease stuff like tennis elbow or planter fasciatis, fast. But more than the technique, I feel the key is figuring what matches the patient’s constitution n lifestyle... like one-size-never-fits-all here. I try to go beyond the complaint—looking into their ahar, sleep, stress levels, digestion, and just how they feel in general. That part gets missed often. I honestly believe healing isn’t just a “procedure done” kind of thing. I try not to rush—spend time on pre-procedure prep, post-care advice, what diet might help the tissue rebuild faster, whether they’re mentally up for it too. And no, I don’t ignore pathology reports either—modern diagnostic tools help me stay grounded while applying ancient methods. It’s not this vs that, it’s both, when needed. My aim, tbh, is to become the kind of Ayurvedic surgeon who doesn't just do the work but understands why that karma or technique is needed at that point in time. Every case teaches me something new, and that curiosity keeps me moving.
5
187 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Maitri Bhavesh Kumar Acharya
I am Dr. Maitri, currently in my 2nd year of MD in Dravyaguna, and yeah, I run my own Ayurvedic clinic in Ranoli where I’ve been seeing patients for 2 years now. Honestly, what pulled me into this path deeper is how powerful herbs really are—when used right. Not just randomly mixing churnas but actually understanding their rasa, virya, vipaka etc. That’s kinda my zone, where textbook knowledge meets day-to-day case handling. My practice revolves around helping people with PCOD, acne, dandruff, back pain, stiffness in knees or joints that never seem to go away. And I don’t jump to giving a long list of medicines straight away—first I spend time figuring out their prakriti, their habits, food cycle, what triggers what… basically all the small stuff that gets missed. Then comes the plan—herbs (single or compound), some diet reshuffling, and always some lifestyle nudges. Sometimes they’re tiny, like sleep timing. Sometimes big like proper seasonal detox. Being into Dravyaguna helps me get into the depth of herbs more confidently. I don’t just look at the symptom—I think okay what guna will counter this? Should the drug be snigdha, ushna, tikta? Is there a reverse vipaka that’ll hurt the agni? I ask these questions before writing any combo. That’s made a huge diff in outcomes. Like I had this case of chronic urticaria that would flare up every week, and just tweaking the herbs based on sheetala vs ushna nature... helped calm the system in 3 weeks flat. Not magic, just logic. I also work with women who are struggling with hormonal swings, mood, delayed periods or even unexplained breakouts. When hormones go haywire, the skin shows, digestion slows, and mind gets foggy too. I keep my approach full-circle—cleansing, balancing, rejuvenating. No quick fixes, I tell them early on. What I’m hoping to do more of now is make Ayurveda feel practical. Not overwhelming. Just simple tools—ahara, vihara, aushadha—used consistently, with some trust in the body’s own healing. I’m still learning, still refining, but honestly, seeing people feel in control of their health again—that’s what keeps me rooted to this.
5
461 समीक्षाएँ
Dr. Atul Painuli
I am Vaidya Atul Painuli, currently working as an Ayurvedic Consultant at Patanjali Chikitsalaya, Delhi... been here a while now. My focus from the start—over 10+ yrs in this field—has been to stay true to what Ayurveda *actually* is, not just surface-level remedies or buzzwords. I’ve treated a wide mix of patients, from people battling chronic illnesses to those just looking to fix their lifestyle before it leads to disease (which is v underrated tbh). During these years, I kinda shaped my practice around the idea that one solution never fits all. Whether it’s diabetes, gut disorders, stress-related problems or hormone issues—everything goes back to the root, the *nidana*. I usually go with classic Ayurvedic meds, but I mix it up with Panchakarma, diet tweaks and daily routine correction, depending on the case. Most of the time, ppl don’t even realize how much their habits are feeding into the problem. It’s not just about herbs or massages... though those are important too. At Patanjali Chikitsalaya, I see patients from literally all walks of life—office-goers, elderly, even young kids sometimes. Everyone’s got something diff going on, which keeps me grounded. What I try to do is not just treat the symptoms but help ppl *see* what’s happening in their bodies and minds. Like Ayurveda says—if your digestion, sleep and emotions are off... then eventually health’s gonna wobble. I don’t promise quick results but I do stay with my patients through the process, adjusting things based on how they respond. That part makes a big difference I think. For me, Ayurveda isn’t a “last resort” kinda thing—it’s a system that can prevent 80% of the lifestyle diseases ppl suffer from today, if done right. My goal? Just to keep doing this in a way that feels real, grounded, and actually helps ppl—not overwhelm them with too much jargon or fear. Just practical, clean, honest healing.
5
75 समीक्षाएँ

नवीनतम समीक्षाएँ

Christian
6 घंटे पहले
Thank you for your advice! It was really nice to get a simple, clear answer. Appreciate the heads up on consultation options!
Thank you for your advice! It was really nice to get a simple, clear answer. Appreciate the heads up on consultation options!
Kennedy
6 घंटे पहले
Thanks so much for the advice! Your clear suggestions and the follow-up plan make me feel hopeful about managing my back pain. Appreciate it a lot!
Thanks so much for the advice! Your clear suggestions and the follow-up plan make me feel hopeful about managing my back pain. Appreciate it a lot!
Andrew
6 घंटे पहले
Thanks doc, your advice was super clear and really helped me. Putt me at ease about next steps. Grateful for ur guidance!
Thanks doc, your advice was super clear and really helped me. Putt me at ease about next steps. Grateful for ur guidance!
Jaxon
6 घंटे पहले
Thanks for the advice, doc! Felt confusing at first but your remedies make sense. Gonna try them out and see how it goes!
Thanks for the advice, doc! Felt confusing at first but your remedies make sense. Gonna try them out and see how it goes!