Dr. Pushpendra Arora
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Medical Bord of Alternative System of Medicine |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am someone who naturally drifted toward chronic cases—especially where pain keeps showing up again n again. My main work right now’s around joint-related disorders like osteoarthritis, rheumatoid issues, cervical spondylosis or just that stubborn back pain that won't leave. I get a lot of cases where mobility’s already limited or stiffness has spread beyond just the joints, and honestly that’s where Ayurveda shines if we give it the right pace.
Skin troubles and piles are also areas I deal with often—many of those get ignored until they turn severe or embarrassing, but they usually respond well to a mix of internal herbs n some cleaning of gut. I usually build each plan slow, depending on how the person's digestion (agni) is doing. Sometimes I go for deep detox (like virechan or basti), other times it’s just herbs n strict food timing that do the job.
I try to not give same line of treatment to anyone, 'cause really it rarely works that way. Pain might look similar on the outside, but doshas behind it can be totally different case to case. My goal’s not just short term fix—it’s more like steady relief without pushing the body too much too fast. |
Achievements: | I am currently diving deeper into panchakarma studies—it’s a diploma program I’m doing to refine my detox protocols and just get more precise with it. Before that, I did an advanced diploma in cupping therapy too, which weirdly changed how I see stubborn pain cases... cupping really helped open new angles for treatment. Somewhere along the way, Shri Dhanvantari Herbal gave me a certificate of appreciation—meant a lot, honestly, just felt seen for staying true to Ayurvedic care. |
I am someone who kind of grew into Ayurveda through two very different but connected roles—first as a hands-on pharmacist running an Ayurvedic pharmacy for years, and now as a practicing physician. That pharmacy phase wasn’t just about managing stock or dispensing formulas... it gave me a full-time seat with the herbs. Like, real-time learning on how each classical preparation behaves, what goes into making something truly potent, and honestly? what shortcuts to avoid. That part still stays with me—I'm still picky about quality and preparation when I prescribe. Since past 3 years I’m mostly focused on clinical practice—more patient-facing. And here’s where that background really helps. I use Nadi Pariksha and prakriti reading in most consults, but also keep checking how the medicine will actually perform based on their gut state, season, even their mental load sometimes. My approach is kinda layered—start with gut, fix agni, then move deeper. I don’t jump straight into long lists of herbs unless I’m clear on what the body can handle or absorb. Panchakarma I suggest when it’s really needed—esp for chronic buildup or deep-seated dosha imbalance. But a lot of people just need dietary realignment, daily routine tweaks and that consistent herbal support. I try keeping things doable, not overtheoretical. Whether it’s metabolic sluggishness or skin inflammation or hormonal noise—I go with long-haul plans, not band-aid stuff. Working both in pharmacy and clinic gave me this habit of questioning how and why something works—not just following texts blindly. That’s probly why many of my patients stick around, even when their case looked simple on the surface. Ayurveda works slow but strong, and I do my best to respect that.