Dr. Akash Dubey
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | MP Medical Science University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working on cases related to skin, spine, diabetes and hair health — those are the areas where Ayurveda makes a clear difference if applied right. Skin conditions like eczema, psoriasis, acne, chronic rashes — I go beyond creams and focus on digestion, diet correction, internal herbs, detox. For spine issues like spinal stenosis or radiculopathy, therapy is usually Panchakarma-based with Basti, kati basti, abhyanga and rehab routines to ease nerve compression.
Diabetes care is another area where I spend time — managing sugar levels naturally with herbal support, diet timing, and lifestyle resets. Same with hair fall, which often links back to stress or pitta imbalance more than people realize. My treatment is never generic, it shifts with each person’s prakriti and needs.!! My goal isn’t just symptom relief but restoring balance so body can heal on its own and the results actually last. |
Achievements: | I am proud that I could handle tough cases like Avascular Necrosis (AVN) using Ayurvedic protocols, seeing patients walk again without depending only on invasive options. Along with that I’ve treated many skin disorders — psoriasis, chronic eczema, acne flare ups — some acute, some dragging for years. By combining Panchakarma, herbs, and daily-life changes, I’ve seen people get real long-term relief.!! For me the achievement isn’t just cure, it’s helping patients trust holistic healing again. |
I am currently doing my MD in Rog Nidan at Tilak Ayurved Mahavidyalaya, Pune — and honestly this phase feels like a complete shift in how I look at diseases. Rog Nidan is about digging deep into diagnosis, not just what the symptom “looks like.” I spend a lot of my time working on Nidan Panchak — Hetu, Purvarupa, Rupa, Upashaya, Samprapti — and trying to see how these classical tools line up with what we call modern clinical observations. It’s not always straightforward, sometimes the pieces don’t fit neatly, but that’s where the real thinking starts. My main interest is understanding the root cause — why the body is reacting the way it does, how doshas are moving, which dushya is weak, which srotas are blocked, and where the samprapti is heading. Because if the diagnosis is even slightly off, the treatment will never hold. That’s why I value this training so much, it makes you slow down and see the case before jumping to manage it. During my MD I’ve been exposed to all kinds of cases — respiratory, metabolic, skin disorders, chronic GI problems — and the learning is different each time. I sit with seniors, discuss, listen, and also try to add my own observations. We do seminars, case presentations, departmental discussions, and those sessions push me to refine my logic, to defend why I read a case in a certain way. Sometimes I’m wrong, but that’s what sharpens the skill. What draws me most is the role of early detection and preventive care. Ayurveda has so much to say about before the disease fully sets in, and I think that’s what people need today. Teaching patients about their prakriti, helping them understand the imbalance, showing them how lifestyle connects with their health… those small conversations go a long way. As I move ahead, my goal is to keep building this bridge — where Rog Nidan isn’t just theory in Sanskrit, but a living diagnostic tool that stands strong even in today’s healthcare setup. Evidence-informed, patient-centered, but deeply rooted in classical wisdom. That’s the physician I want to become.