Dr. Diptesh gupta
Experience: | 5 years |
Education: | Jammu Institute of Ayurveda and Research |
Academic degree: | Diploma in Naturopathy and Yoga |
Area of specialization: | I am working mostly on ortho & ano-rectal issues right now, kinda split between bones/joints and those uncomfortable but way-too-common things like piles n fissures. In ortho, I deal with joint pain, injuries, early degeneration—stuff ppl usually ignore until it’s too stiff to move. I try not to just mask pain. I mix Ayurvedic stuff—like abhyanga, lepa, maybe even basti—alongside physio or basic meds if really needed. You can't just go one way all the time, right?
Then there's ano-rectal cases—Arsha, Parikartika, Bhagandara—most ppl come only when they can't sit properly. I get it. I use minimal intervention where possible. Ayurvedic ksharasutra or sitz baths, diet tuning, herbs—it actually helps more than people expect if they stick to it. Not every case needs cutting or hospital stays. I spend good time explaining diet here—too many come in constipated and stressed, and then go out repeating same cycle again.
Anyway, my thing is treating the root and getting ppl back to normal life, minus the drama. |
Achievements: | I am mostly seeing ppl with low back ache, neck stiffness, knee pain, frozen shoulder types of issues lately—sometimes all at once. Over time, I kinda got good at picking the root cause, like whether it’s poor posture, dosha imbalance, or just overstrain. I use Ayurvedic therapies plus a few supportive tricks when needed, not one-size-fits-all. Helping ppl walk easier or sleep pain-free again feels like a real win. Everytime mobility come back, that’s my small victory. |
I am mostly into ortho cases these days—joint pain, back pain, sports injuries, arthritis, all that stuff where the body just stops cooperating. I’ve been focusing in this field for a bit over a year now, and honestly, even in this short time, you start to see how layered musculoskeletal issues really are. It’s rarely just “a sprain” or “bad posture”—sometimes it’s vata aggravation, sometimes just lifestyle or emotional stress messing with posture and healing. I kinda naturally lean towards combining both Ayurvedic and Allopathic stuff. Like, I won’t shy away from painkillers if someone’s really struggling, but I’ll also pair that with abhyanga, local pichu, or a kashayam based on what the person actually *needs* not just the textbook. I do a lot of integrative treatment—herbal medicines, panchakarma-based pain support, some physio routines if needed (esp for postural correction) and def recommend diet shifts to reduce inflammation when I sense it. When someone comes in with chronic knee pain or a stiff spine, I won’t just ask where it hurts—I’ll dig a bit: Are they sitting too long? Are they sleeping right? What dosha pattern is off? What food is heating them up or drying out tissues too fast? That stuff matters if you're trying to give lasting relief, not just temporary patchups. My real aim is to help ppl get back mobility, function and ease—not just symptom relief. That’s why I keep explaining things during sessions too—why we’re doing this lepa or skipping that oil, or why I’m asking them to avoid curd at night even tho they love it lol. When they get it, they follow better. This ortho work may be just a year in, but the learnings are already huge. I'm still figuring out my own systems, refining protocols—but the core is always same: look deeper, think integrative, and help the patient feel like their pain actually makes sense to someone.