Dr. Kirti Bhati
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Madhya Pradesh Medical Science University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working on anorectal cases these days—piles, fissures, fistula types. Arsha, Parikartika, Bhagandara—whatever name ppl come with, I usually get to see the discomfort up close. I do a lot with non-surgical stuff, esp. Ksharasutra—it’s not magic but yeah, when done right, it really works. Some think they *need* surgery straight up, but half the time, we can manage things cleaner with parasurgical methods plus proper care.
At the same time, I’ve kept a special focus on vataj vyadhi too—sciatica, paralysis, joint wear-outs, the kind of disorders where Vata gets wild and ppl feel stuck in their own body. I use both Shodhan and Shaman chikitsa, depending on what suits—the idea's always to stabilize and slowly push the body toward balance, not just suppress things for a bit and wait for them to return. I look closely at ahar-vihar too, ‘cause most flare-ups trace back to lifestyle ignoring Vata dosha altogether.
Every case feels diff. Some ppl bounce back quick, others take time. But ya, I try not to rush or sugarcoat. Just explain the path, be there, and keep adjusting till we see real shift. |
Achievements: | I am a BAMS graduate with hands kinda full in treating piles, fissures, sciatica & few nerve-type issues mostly falling under vataj vyadhi. I do quite a bit of Panchakarma too—sometimes as main line, other times to support deeper stuff that needs cleansing or calming down. Not into one-size-fit-all thing, I look at symptoms, prakriti, food, even stress patterns. My work's mostly about getting doshas back to some balance and helping ppl feel better long term—not just patch up things quick. |
I am someone who's been working in clinical Ayurveda for a little over two years now—it’s not a super long time maybe, but honestly, it’s felt intense and steady. Every patient I’ve seen has kinda shaped how I think, like how prakriti isn’t always what it looks on paper, or how stress messes with agni in ways you can't treat by just giving a churnam and moving on. I’ve worked a lot with chronic stuff—gut issues mostly, but also anxiety patterns, weird skin flare-ups, all that in-between stuff people often carry around for *years*. I mostly stick to classical approaches—deep dive into dosha imbalances, samprapti, seasonal impacts etc.—but I try not to get rigid. Some ppl need structure, others get overwhelmed by rules, and I try to adjust without losing the core of Ayurveda. I’m big on dietary mapping too, not just “avoid viruddha ahara” types but like… helping them understand *why* certain food triggers them. Same with daily routine—sometimes just shifting one small thing (like dinner timing or screen breaks) makes a bigger dent than any capsule. When it fits, I go for Panchakarma—especially when I sense the body’s ready and not just when they ask for “detox.” I’ll wait if I have to, explain things if they’re unsure. I also write things down carefully after each consult—not just for followup but to spot patterns across weeks. And yeah, I do believe in patient education… not preachy stuff, but just sharing bits that stick. Like “don’t eat in a hurry” sounds basic, but many ppl forget what it feels like to eat slowly. This practice keeps pulling me deeper each month. I’ve learned to listen better, not just to complaints but like to the pauses, to what they *don’t* say sometimes. That part matters more than we admit. Anyway, I just try to stay rooted, stay honest, and bring this whole Ayurvedic way into real daily healing—not textbook perfect but something that makes sense for the person sitting in front of me.