Dr. Pangerawar Vishweshwar
Experience: | 7 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly focused on Neuro Ayurveda—helping ppl with neurological problems like migraine, stroke rehab, Parkinson’s, epilepsy, neuropathy, and other neuro-degenerative kinda stuff. Most of these start with some sort of vata imbalance, that’s what I try to correct first. I dig into the case to see where exactly that disruption began—not just the outward symptoms but the core issue behind it. Then I shape the treatment using classical ayurvedic meds, Panchakarma (when it fits), plus diet+routine shifts that actually match the person. It’s never like one-formula-for-all—some ppl need more internal support, some need detox, some need slow calming work on the system. I'm very tuned to how the nervous system responds over time, not just day one. Nerve regeneration is slow and often uneven... but there is a path if we stay on it.
My aim is to support both functional recovery and peace-of-mind while keeping their lifestyle sustainable, especially with chronic or long-term neuro stuff. Also, mind–body–spirit ain’t just a phrase—it’s literally how healing works when we do it right. |
Achievements: | I am working in neuro care since 2018, kinda 7+ years now, and during this time I’ve mostly stuck to integrative practice—mixing classical ayurveda with neuro rehab protocols that actually help ppl in real life. It’s not always perfect or linear, esp with chronic conditions, but I try to make space for long-term recovery not just symptom fix. Most of my work’s around complex stuff—stroke, parkinsons, migraine—and figuring out how to give relief without breaking the body further. |
I am practicing Ayurveda since 2018 after completing my graduation, and honestly it's been more of a lived journey than just a job. I started with a strong pull towards the classical roots of Ayurveda—not just textbook stuff but how it actually works in real people, in real life. Over time, that turned into a deeper thing... like how can I adapt ancient wisdom into today’s messy health realities without losing what actually makes Ayurveda work. I mostly work through root-cause diagnosis—like really digging into what’s going on underneath, not just what’s on the surface. I rely on tools like Nadi Pariksha, Prakriti mapping, dosha assessments—ya, all that. But it’s never just about charts. It’s how a person feels, how they react to things, how their body talks even when words don’t. From there I try to build a plan that’s theirs—not a one-size-fits-all—whether that means herbal meds, panchakarma (if needed), diet tweaks, or shifting daily habits that could be messing them up. I’ve worked with cases like skin conditions, gut issues, hormonal fluctuations, muscle pains, emotional burnout—stuff that sometimes don’t fit into one category. And tbh it’s not always quick or easy, but if we go layer by layer, things shift. And I don’t stop with the symptom going away—I try to make sure patients actually *get* what's happening inside them. That awareness kinda changes everything. Even now I keep updating myself—online seminars, tricky case discussions, those never really stop. It's not like I know everything, but I stay open. Always. If there's one thing I keep in practice, it's that trust grows through consistency. I check in, I explain what I can, I stay involved—not disappear after giving a prescription. And ya, sometimes ppl need more reassurance than medicine. I really just want Ayurveda to feel reachable, real, not wrapped in jargon. To help people feel in control of their health—not scared of it. That’s what I try to keep showing up for.