Dr. Golla Rama Ranjitha
Experience: | 5 years |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly focused on treating skin disorders, hair issues, and arthritis — three areas that honestly overlap more than ppl think. I deal with stuff like eczema, psoriasis, acne, and pigmentation problems, using proper Ayurvedic line of treatment, not shortcuts or quick-fix pastes. Most skin conditions aren’t just skin deep — there's often poor gut health, excess pitta, or stress messing with the system, and I try to catch that before jumping into any meds.
Hair care is another big part of my work — especially cases of hair fall, dandruff, early greying, or itchy scalp stuff that just won’t go away. Many ppl already tried oils or shampoos before they land up with me. I usually go back to basics — understand their dosha, diet, sleep, and see where things are going off. Treatment can include herbal lepas, internal rasayanas, and sometimes a full reset with Vamana or Nasya when it’s really chronic.
I also handle arthritis cases regularly — knee joints mostly, sometimes frozen shoulder or low back. Pain, swelling, stiffness, all that. Here Panchakarma works well, esp with diet control & basic lifestyle shifts. But again, not everyone needs full Panchakarma... small changes can bring solid results if done right!! |
Achievements: | I am really grateful I got the Rising Star Award — wasn’t expecting it honestly, but it felt good to be seen for the work I’ve been putting in. It was given for clinical consistency, patient follow-ups, and trying to stick close to authentic Ayurvedic methods even when cases get a bit too layered or slow to respond. I guess it just reflecs how much I care about real results — not just ticking off protocols, but actually helping ppl feel better, long term. Small win, big motivator. |
I am someone who’s handled both the medical side and the messy day-to-day running of an Ayurveda center — I was the Center Head and Consulting Physician at Travancore Ayurveda Hospital, and honestly that role taught me more than just clinical stuff. Yes, I did regular OPD consultations, but also had to make sure everything worked right — from therapies being done on time to patient feedback, even inventory when things got tight. Kind of kept me grounded, made me look at healthcare as a system, not just prescriptions. Most of the cases I managed there were chronic — arthritis flares, kidney stones coming back again n again, skin issues that didn't respond to topical meds, hair fall that had more to do with pitta-vata than just shampoos, and even some tough eye complaints. I wasn’t trying to “cure” everything fast, just tried to listen, dig deeper, figure out where the imbalance was coming from. Not every treatment went smooth, of course. Some ppl stopped midway, others doubted Ayurveda at first — but many came back when they felt even slight relief, which I guess says something. I usually work through classical Ayurvedic frameworks — looking at dosha, dhatu level, srotas, etc — but I also do practical planning. No point giving a 10-step regimen when the patient can’t follow half of it, right? I try to personalize treatment — herbs, diet tweaks, simple routines, sometimes Panchakarma if needed. And yeah, I really try to explain things in normal words... like why digestion has anything to do with rashes or joint swelling, or how lifestyle pushes vitiation of doshas. Whether it's painful joints, recurring UTIs or stones, eczema patches that won't leave, or patchy hair loss that hits confidence — I’ve seen how Ayurveda can actually help, not just mask it. Still learning, still fixing things on the go, but I try to stay close to what the shastras teach, while also adapting to real life situations people are stuck in.