Dr. Rohini Arun Aramani
Experience: | 12 years |
Education: | Govt ayurveda medical College bangalore |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working around Panchakarma Chikitsa these days—it kinda became my main track over the years. I treat a bunch of chronic & lifestyle disorders that don’t really respond well to just quick fixes. Stuff like PCOD, thyroid troubles, gut issues, joint pain, even infertility cases—those need slow, layered work. I use classical panchakarma tools like Basti, Virechana etc depending on what’s stuck in the system. Migraine and frozen shoulder have shown solid response too, esp. when the therapy timing’s right. My plan always starts with seeing the *person*, not just the disease. Every protocol is tweaked—sometimes detox is priority, sometimes rebuilding ojas matters more. The goal’s not to suppress symptoms fast but to untangle the root imbalance & build stability from there. |
Achievements: | I am not usually someone who talks about ranks n stuff but—yeah, I did end up topping the university during my undergrad & somehow also secured 4th place in Anatomy at RGUHS, which I wasn’t even expecting tbh. Later cracked 8th rank in PG entrance. My work in Panchakarma got noticed too, which meant a lot... got the Jivaka award from Himalaya & Vaidyaratna by Jiva Ayurveda. Those moments kind of pushed me to keep going deeper into classical care, like keep it real, not textbook-only. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor with over 10 years of real clinical grind behind me—mostly around chronic issues and Panchakarma therapies that actually *work* when done right. I kinda built my whole practice around classical Ayurveda, not shortcuts or fusion stuff. Real chikitsa. Real results. I’ve worked at places like Dhanwantaralaya, Sairam College, and Jiva Ayurveda—each setup taught me something different. Some days were just back-to-back Virechana preps, others were complex metabolic cases where ppl had tried everything else before walking in. That’s when Ayurveda needs to show up fully. My focus is mainly on chronic health probs—joint stiffness, IBS-type gut issues, hormonal imbalances, sluggish metabolism, or even just ppl feeling stuck in cycles of fatigue or pain that don’t go away. Panchakarma—Vamana, Virechana, Basti, Nasya, Raktamokshana—isn’t just a therapy line for me; it’s like the base protocol when the system’s outta sync. But yah, I don’t do it blindly. It needs proper assessment… Prakriti, vikriti, past treatments, seasonal factors—sometimes ppl don’t realise the *timing* of therapy matters more than the therapy itself. I use classical medicines—some with tricky dosing, some super gentle—depending on the case. But the major chunk of success comes from getting the patient to *live* the correction—through food, sleep, dinacharya... not just gulping herbs. That lifestyle shift part is hard but crucial. I don’t believe in silencing symptoms. I go after the *cause*—which is messier, longer, but long-lasting. Still learning honestly. This science is deep. Some days it humbles me. But I stay grounded by seeing actual changes in ppl who commit to the process. Helping someone move from chronic suffering to balance—it’s not magic. It’s Ayurveda done with attention, timing and trust. And I stick by that.