Dr. Aanchal Gandotra
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | University of Jammu |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am someone who kinda found their zone in treating gynec and fertility issues—like PCOS, missed periods, early menopause, hormonal chaos, and those frustrating unexplained infertility cases. I work mostly through an integrative method—means I combine Ayurvedic classics (herbs, Panchakarma, all that) with modern diagnostic tools. Because honestly, both help in different ways. If hormones are off, or ovulation’s acting weird, or uterus lining’s not building up right—we try to find *why*, not just push for pills.
Sometimes it’s just gut and sleep that’s off, sometimes it’s deeper. Either way I take time to build a treatment path that’s unique to her body type, her cycle story, and her stress patterns. I give a lot of attention to preconception care, like even before someone tries, we work on detoxing, ojas building, and supporting Shukra dhatu with food and herbs. Menopause too, isn’t just hot flushes—there’s mind stuff, dryness, bone feel etc, all needing a full-body look. I try to hold space for that. |
Achievements: | I am mostly working with gynae + infertility now & over past 3 yrs I’ve handled all sorts—irregular periods, PCOS that don’t settle easily, hormone swings, even some tough unexplained infertility ones. Many responded well with natural cycles returning or even conceiving without needing major interventions. I use both Ayurveda + modern testing (like AMH, scans etc) to guide the flow. It’s not quick-fix work but the results—when they show—kinda make the whole wait feel worth it. |
I am an Ayurvedic practitioner with around 3+ years of pretty hands-on experience—mostly focused on gynecology and obstetrics. I work a lot with women going through issues like PCOS, missed or delayed periods, infertility cases that don’t seem to move, menopausal troubles, or just struggling with recovery post delivery. What I try to do is blend both systems—Ayurveda + modern medicine—without forcing either. If it helps, I use it. If it doesn’t, we don’t. Most of my treatments start with understanding the body from both angles—like doing Nadi Pariksha or checking Yoni dushti, but also running hormone panels or ultrasounds if needed. That’s how I build a better picture. For PCOS, it might be Shatavari + dietary reset. For painful cycles, sometimes we go with virechana and then follow it with specific meds. Some need Panchakarma, some don’t. I guess that’s what I mean when I say—no two bodies respond the same, even if diagnosis looks similar on paper. There are times when using a low-dose allopathic support along with Rasayana therapy gives better results. I don’t have any fixed bias—I just go case by case. Like for antenatal care, I often mix Garbhini Paricharya guidelines with basic supplement support depending on how the mother is feeling that week. For postpartum, I focus more on strengthening digestion, restoring Dhatus, and correcting Agni slowly rather than rushing. I also spend time on lifestyle and diet talks—it’s underrated but honestly that’s where half the healing starts. Daily food timing, bowel health, hydration, stress reset, sleep cycle—all of it matters. I give my patients very doable, home-adjusted plans they can actually stick to. Watching women regain normal cycles after years or getting that positive test after 3–4 failed cycles… those moments kinda fuel my commitment to this blend of science + tradition. I’m still learning every day, but I stay consistent with one thing—listening. That always tells me more than any scan or report.