Dr. Apeksha Saxena
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Chhatrapati Shahu Ji Maharaj University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with ppl who have PCOS or PCOD, kidney stones, UTI-type symptoms, or nagging joint pains that kinda refuse to go away. Those 4 areas, I’d say, take up a big chunk of my practice. Not cuz they’re easy—but because Ayurveda actually has a *real* roadmap to deal with them without always jumping to strong meds or surgery.
With hormonal stuff like PCOD, I usually start by checking what’s off with their agni & cycle—like is their digestion sluggish? Are they sleeping too late? Once I get that part clear, we go step by step... herbs, food patterns, basic lifestyle stuff, sometimes Panchakarma if needed. I don't promise quick-fixes, but things do shift with time.
Renal calculi and UTI—I use a combo of mutravaha shodhana herbs, flushing-type treatments, and a bunch of fluid/salt balancing things. For joints, I watch ama levels mostly... and usually it’s a mix of internal medicines + oil therapies. Each case feels diff, even if it looks same on paper. I tweak the protocol based on how the person’s body’s behaving, not just diagnosis label. |
Achievements: | I am mostly seeing real progress in ppl with PCOD n kidney stones—that’s where I’ve put in a lot of hands-on work. not just prescribing herbs and all, but building full plans around *their* body type, their cycle issues, appetite, stress pattern, even sleep. A bunch of my PCOD patients who were struggling for months or yrs now have regular periods, reduced bloating, and just feel lighter (they tell me that a lot lol). Same with renal cases—once we clear the path, pain drops, stone movement starts, and relief actually stays. |
I am working as an Ayurvedic physician with a focus on practical, grounded care—I try to keep things as close to real-life healing as possible, not just theory. Most of the time, I deal with digestive issues, joint pains, hormonal shifts, lifestyle diseases—the kinds of problems that don’t just go away with one pill or one session. I look at the person’s prakriti first, what’s out of balance, where digestion’s breaking down or emotions are stuck, and then start building the treatment around that. Nothing cookie-cutter. My usual method blends classical Panchakarma therapies, simple diet fixes, some herbal meds, maybe routines that match the patient's nature—not always fancy, but it works. I'm not rigid with classical-only, though. If there's a modern wellness tool that fits the Ayurvedic logic, I don't mind adding it in. What matters is the *result*, right? I’ve done quite a bit of online consults too lately—guiding people remotely who didn’t know much about Ayurveda, and still managing to help them get their heads around what’s going wrong in their body. That’s honestly satisfying. Not everyone needs deep detox—sometimes just understanding their agni or daily habits does half the job. And yeah, I try to keep things clear, not preachy. I tend to go deep into patient stories. Not just the chart stuff—how they *feel* stuck or tired or anxious without knowing why. That part matters. Being able to connect and just listen without rushing, I guess that’s my nature. Ayurveda’s something I’m still growing with. I like to keep learning, not just from books but also from how real ppl respond to the treatments. It’s weird, but every case teaches me something new, makes me rethink my approach a bit. My goal’s simple: make Ayurveda easier to understand, and actually helpful for ppl who’re tired of masking symptoms and want long-term fix.