Dr. Ashutosh Buye
Experience: | 4 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working around Panchakarma—real, classical procedures like Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya and Raktamokshana. These aren’t just detox tools btw, they go deep into system correction if done properly. I usually apply them in managing long-standing stuff like arthritis, back or neck pain, diabetes, BP issues etc.
I also deal with neurological things—post-stroke rehab, migraines, nervous system wear & tear, that sort. PCOD, infertility cases and hormonal imbalance show up a lot too, especially when there's cycle irregularity or mood patterns shifting weirdly. Women’s wellness overall is close to my heart.
A big part of my work is also in lifestyle issues—obesity, digestive mess-ups, insomnia, anxiety... Stress basically leaking into the body from all sides. I try to slow that down with individualized care, not random prescriptions.
Worked in several rural setups too. Health camps, low-resource areas, community healing—those gave me a whole different kind of learning tbh. |
Achievements: | I am a rank holder from RGUHS, Karnataka—something I didn’t expect honestly, but yeah, that happened. Later I trained in Kerala-style Panchakarma under some super experienced vaidyas, which totally changed how I approach therapies now.
Did my PGCP in Panchakarma from NIA Jaipur, backed by Ministry of AYUSH. I’ve worked with over 1,000 patients and also trained other vaidyas & therapists in classical protocols.
I do consults in English, Hindi, Kannada, Marathi n Telugu. My practice stays rooted in Ayurveda, but my hospital exp also helps. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with a bit of a soft spot for Panchakarma—maybe because that’s where I saw the biggest shifts in people’s health over time. I did my B.A.M.S. and then went for PGCP in Panchakarma from NIA Jaipur (Ministry of AYUSH). Got my basics from RGUHS Karnataka, where I was lucky enough to be a rank holder, though honestly it didn’t feel like luck at the time—just a lot of chai and late nights. I’ve worked in setups ranging from classical Ayurvedic hospitals to multi-speciality allopathy units. Places like Sushrutha Ayurveda Hospital (NABH-accredited), Prabha Ayurveda Foundation in Dhule, and the teaching hospital at NIA Jaipur. At one point, I was even working as an RMO in a modern hospital, which kind of added a different layer to how I see disease and recovery. Made me realise that integration isn’t just a buzzword—it's very real, and very useful if you know what you're doing. Right now, I’m based in Hyderabad, working at Sai Ayush Ayurveda Hospital. I do consultations, design Panchakarma therapies, and also guide people on prevention—not in a lecturey way, but more like figuring out what tiny shift could make a long-term difference for them. I’ve also been part of training vaidyas and therapists—especially in classical Panchakarma practices. That’s important to me, because the method matters. You can’t just “detox” people with random massages and call it Ayurved. Technique, timing, patient readiness—it all counts. Over the years, I've worked with more than 1,000 patients across diff conditions—from skin and digestive problems to stress, fatigue, hormonal imbalance etc. not everything is curable, sure. But a lot is manageable, if you know where to look. And I guess that’s kinda what drives me... helping someone feel just 30% better in a way that *lasts*. Everything starts there.