Dr. Nikhil Zalaki
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Ayurveda Mahavidyalaya and Hospital Hubli |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am working as a neurologist, and sometimes I still pause in between words trying to explain how complex the nervous system actually is, because it really holds every tiny part of how we move-think-feel. My focus is on diagnosing and managing conditions that affect the brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves, and I try to look at each case with a mix of clear logic and a bit of instinct that comes from day-to-day clinical work.
I deal with disorders like migraines, seizures, neuropathies, movement issues, and other neuro problems that sometimes show very subtle signs, and I pay extra attention to those small clues even if I recheck them twice. My approach usually combines detailed neurological evaluation, appropriate diagnostic tests, and a treatment plan that fits the patient’s routine rather than overwhelming them with too many instructions.
I aim to provide care that actually helps people understand their condition without making it sound too heavy, though I catch myself typing long sentences and then cutting them short. My goal is always steady recovery, symptom control, and guiding patients through long-term management with clarity and bit of patience!! |
Achievements: | I am practicing since around 2–3 years now, and sometimes I still think I should count the exact months but I just go with it. In this time I managed quite a few cases with steady progress, some slow some quick, and seeing those good results kind of keeps me grounded. I worked on different neurological conditions and each one taught me a small thing, even if I missed a detail first and corrected it later. These outcomes remind me that consistent care really matter, even when the process feel a bit messy!! |
I am working with a mix of Ayurveda and allopathy knowledge, and sometimes I switch between both in my mind before deciding what actually fits the patient better. My base is always Ayurveda, but I don’t ignore the practical benifits of allopathic understanding, especially when I want a clearer clinical picture. I try to keep the approach simple: listen to the patient first, then choose the line of treatment they feel comfortable with, even though I gently lean them toward Ayurvedic care because I see more steady results there. I am particularly involved in spine-care cases, and over time I treated many pts with different kinds of back issues—some mild, some too stubborn—and honestly I learned a lot just by watching how their body respond day after day. Sometimes I adjust a therapy plan halfway because something feels not fully right, or I pause and rethink the whole routine if the improvement is slow. But in most cases I did notice good results, especially with therapies like abhyanga, basti, or even simple posture corrections backed by Ayurvedic principles. I like creating a treatment path that doesn’t force the patient into one strict system; instead I choose what aligns with their interest and condition. Though personally, I prefer Ayurveda because it works deeper and calmer, and I’ve seen how it helps the spine regain some strength and ease. And maybe I type a sentence twice when I explain all this, but the goal stays the same—give the person a healing plan that genuinely help them move pain-free and more confident in their own body.