Dr. Sneh Deep Pargi
Experience: | 5 years |
Education: | Dr. Sarvepalli Radhakrishnan Rajasthan Ayurved University |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with lifestyle-led conditions—CAD, IHD, high BP, diabetes, PCOS/PCOD... the usual mess that creeps up slow but sticks deep if you don’t catch the pattern early. My approach in Ayurveda isn’t about patching up one symptom or chasing numbers—it’s more like reading the whole internal scene: agni, circulation, hormonal noise, blocked srotas, all that. Once I map the root layers—whether it's poor blood flow, insulin resistance or stuck Kapha—I build the plan out from there.
Sometimes it's diet over meds, sometimes it's nasya or mild virechana or maybe just slow correction with herbs and daily routines. I adjust based on how the body reacts, not just what looks good on paper. I also focus lot on stress link—because for many, that’s where things actually start slipping. And yeah, the goal’s always long-term reversal... not just “maintenance”. You’d be surprised how often sustainable change comes from small, right-time tweaks—not drastic detoxes or strict diets. |
Achievements: | I am usually working with patients stuck in long-term cycles of diabetes, BP, or PCOS—where nothing really shifts with just pills or temporary fixes. What I do is focus on the reversal side, not just control. Using Ayurveda, I kinda go deeper into why it started—digestion messed up? hormones off? Kapha or Meda buildup? Once that's clear, I map things like herbs, panchakarma, and changes in food/sleep. It takes time sure, but I’ve seen many shift out of meds or flares with this slow reset. |
I am someone who really ended up settling deep into the whole reversal space—chronic disorders, lifestyle chaos, all the long-haul stuff people usually carry around for years without much shift. Over the last 4+ years in clinical practice, I’ve worked a lot with type 2 diabetes, high BP, obesity cases, thyroid things (esp. subclinical or fluctuating TSH), PCOS, hormonal imbalances, and weird in-between patterns that don’t always fit textbook categories but clearly show metabolic distress. Most of my work revolves around getting to the *why* underneath—why is the sugar staying high despite meds, why is the weight stuck despite diets, why the cycle is irregular even when scans look "normal". Once we catch that core disruption, I use a combination of proper Ayurvedic detox (when required), internal herbal meds, food corrections, and small lifestyle shifts—nothing fancy but consistent stuff that’s aligned to that person’s nature and stage. I’ve seen many patients who came in frustrated, stuck in loops of test-repeat-dose-adjust and just kinda tired of being ‘managed’ rather than understood. Honestly, a lot of that changes when digestion gets strong again, sleep starts coming on time, or energy returns mid-morning without 2 coffees... those are the cues I track more than just lab values. My focus isn’t just removing meds fast—it’s about actually getting the body to *not need* them over time, which takes clear follow-ups, adjusting plans as things shift, and teaching people how to read their own signals. I don’t use one-size fits all panchakarma either—if detox makes sense, we do it right. If rebuilding is needed first, we wait. Gut healing, liver regulation, insulin sensitivity, cycle rhythm—all those have very specific Ayurvedic pathways that I like to apply carefully, not blindly. And yeah, some cases do surprise me with how fast they respond when the direction’s right. My work feels most real when a patient slowly starts feeling like *themselves* again... not just "treated". That’s what I aim for every time.