Dr. Arun RC
Experience: | 10 years |
Education: | Alvas Ayurveda Medical College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am working mainly with musculoskeletal and related issues, and sometimes I still get surprised how many patterns I recognise after handling more than 5000+ patient cases over the last decade. I move a lot between joint pains, arthritis, back troubles, fractures that need careful monitoring, and even sports injuries where people expect fast fixes but I try to remind them that healing has its own pace.. even if my words get jumbled a bit while explaining.
I lean on non-invasive ayurvedic therapies because they match well with what I aim for—supporting the body’s natural repair mechanisms without rushing into aggressive steps. Varicose vein cases come up quite often too, and I kinda take extra time there, checking circulation things and small details I sometimes forget to mention until the end.
Gastro-intestinal disorders also stay a big part of my routine, from indigestion swings to IBS-like complaints where diet and lifestyle corrections play a major role, and I keep tweaking plans though a comma or two may go missing. Rhuematoid arthritis (I always misspell that one) needs a gentler, more layered approach, mixing herbs, panchakarma options and long-term monitoring.
I just try to keep things practical—listen properly, adapt treatments, and help someone walk out with a little less pain or confusion than they walked in with, even if my sentences run longer or wander off for a second before getting back on track. |
Achievements: | I am running my orthopaedic regenerative ayurveda and panchakarma centre called Ayur Srishti in Varapuzha, Kochi, and sometimes I still catch myself double-checking small things because managing a full setup gets a bit messy in my head. The centre growing well feels like a quiet achievment, even if I spell that wrong once or twice.
I work daily with complex joint issues, spine care routines, and long panchakarma protocols, and I kinda feel proud that people trust me enough to walk in with their long-standing pains. Setting up the centre took more effort than I expected—paperwork, patient flow, random hiccups where I forgot a comma or two on forms—but it helped me refine how regenerative therapies actually fit into real practice.
Running Ayur Srishti gave me space to design treatment plans more freely, mix therapies properly, and build a small team that learns together even when I ramble through explanations. It’s a simple achievemnt but meaningful, creating a place where patients find steady relief and where I can keep improving without pretending everything is perfectly polished. |
I am working mostly around regenerative orthopaedic ayurveda and panchakarma these days, and honestly sometimes I get a bit carried away explaining how joints can heal better when we give the body the right push, but I feel it’s important. I try to focus on the idea that degeneration doesn’t always mean the end of things; in many cases the tissues respond well to classical therapies, though I still double-check small details and sometimes forget a comma here or there. I spend a lot of time with patients who come with knee pain, spine stiffness or old injuries that didn’t settle properly, and I keep reminding myself to slow down and listen even when I’m excited about a treatment plan. Panchakarma plays a big part for me, whether it’s applying snehan, basti or just choosing the right rejuvenative herbs—simple steps but they work when matched well to the person’s dosha. There are days when I wonder if I should explain less or more, but I ultimately like giving people a sense of clarity about what’s going on inside their body, even if my wording get a bit mixed sometimes. Regenerative ayurveda feels like a bridge between what the body wants to repair and what we can guide with diet changes, mild exercise, and detox therapies. And I kinda hold on to that idea when meeting someone new who walked in with pain for months. My work isn't flashy, just steady, trying to support mobility, reduce inflammation, and help someone return to normal routines without rushing them. If any thought runs through my head during consults, it’s just “go slow, fix the root, don’t ignore small signs.” That’s how I try to shape each plan, with panchakarma and orthopaedic care moving together, even if my sentences run long or have tiny mispelt words hiding in them.