Dr. Supriya K Pattanashetti
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University Of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am someone who works mostly with chronic skin and gut stuff, but also get a lot of cases related to hormones, hair, and wounds that just don’t heal the way they should. I treat acne, pigmentation patches, scalp infections, hair fall, all those things ppl try covering up with products but never really fix from inside. For me, Ayurveda gives space to look at where it all started — not just “what cream to apply.”
I also manage a fair amount of digestive issues — like acidity that flares up randomly, constipation that drags on for weeks, or gastritis that just doesn’t calm down even after meds. I try to connect symptoms with agni and lifestyle — what they’re eating, how often, sleep, and even stress. That’s usually where the fire goes off balance anyway.
Gynecological cases come too — irregular periods, PCOD, mid-cycle spotting... I handle those with internal herbs, cycle tracking, and a bunch of small but consistent changes in daily routine. Piles, diabetic cases, non-healing ulcers — I get those too. Healing isn’t always fast, but when the path is right, results do come. |
Achievements: | I am kinda proud to say I secured 3rd rank in Panchakarma during my postgrad at Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences. It wasn’t easy — long hours, tricky papers, and lots of case-based thinking. But that phase really pushed me to understand the depth of Ayurvedic detox and how much impact proper therapy planning can make. That rank, small as it sounds, still keeps me grounded and reminds me why I chose this line — to heal through real, well-thought-out Panchakarma work.. not guesswork! |
I am someone who really got into the day-to-day rhythm of Ayurveda during my time as a duty doctor at Vasudha Ayurcare and Panchakarma Centre in Ilkal. Spent a full year there, and honestly, that one year taught me more than any theory class ever could. I was right in the middle of patient care — diagnosing, planning, and sometimes even personally doing the therapies. Not just writing charts and stepping away. That place gave me a chance to live Ayurveda, not just study it. Most of the people who came in had long-standing issues — lifestyle disorders like diabetes, hormonal shifts, chronic back pain, frozen shoulder, headaches that didn’t have a clear diagnosis, etc. You start to see how deeply habits, emotions, and digestion are tangled up in their symptoms. That’s when I began shifting my focus more toward root-cause thinking, rather than just “treating the thing.” I got to work hands-on with classical Panchakarma treatments — Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya — depending on what the case needed. I also did follow-ups, observed changes week after week, and made adjustments along the way. That kind of continuous care makes you think harder about why something’s working (or not). We had a good senior team guiding us too, which helped me get a grip on the deeper diagnostic approach — not just what symptoms are showing, but what’s really disturbed at the dosha-dhatu level. I still hold on to that approach — clinical but intuitive. I try to listen, observe carefully, and then offer care that fits the patient’s Prakriti, lifestyle and their current capacity to follow the plan. Ayurveda isn't one-size-fits-all — and I don’t believe in giving the same churnam or oil to everyone just cause the disease name matches.