Dr. Satya Narain
Experience: | 14 years |
Education: | Parul University |
Academic degree: | Master of Surgery in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am into Ayurvedic surgical practice, mostly focused on ano-rectal stuff—fistula, piles, fissure, pilonidal sinus... all that. I’ve done quite a few hemorrhoidectomies, internal sphincterotomies, and I still rely on ksharasutra a lot, especially when things are deep-set or keep coming back. I also do hydrocele n hernia work with traditional support, trying to cut down chances of reccurance as much as possible.
Outside the OR, I’m also into Panchakarma big time. I use it for joint pain—arthritis, frozen shoulder, lumbar pain—where surgical help isn’t really the route. It’s more about consistent detox, taila, basti plans. I see a fair number of male patients too—sexual health stuff, low confidence around infertility or chronic fatigue patterns... that kind of thing.
Skin and metabolism disorders also end up in my clinic, sometimes not directly but linked to gut issues or dosha disturbance. Every plan I build starts from root-cause logic, not just removing symptoms. If I had to sum it up, I’d say I work at that middle space where surgery, classical Ayurveda, and long-haul healing kind of meet. |
Achievements: | I am doing ayurvedic surgeries for years now n have crossed 500+ ano-rectal cases on my own—kind of lost count after that, tbh. During my UG & PG, I ranked top in my batch, though honestly that part feels like long back now. I speak sometimes at national n a few global conferences too, not always sure what ppl take away but I try to keep it practical. Wrote some research stuff as well. These days I’m working as Assistant Professor in Shalya Tantra dept, juggling between OPDs, surgeries, and students!! |
I am an Ayurvedic surgeon by training—over 6 years now into this field—and most of my core work circles around ano-rectal issues like piles, fistula, fissure etc. I got really drawn to this area early in my clinical years bcz of how deeply misunderstood these conditions are, like people suffer quietly or try random stuff out of embarrassment. Using classical Ayurveda like ksharasutra, but tweaking it with a more modern, less painful, approach has really worked well for many of my patients—cleaner outcomes, shorter healing time. Not always smooth, but usually worth it. Before that, I worked for 5 years as RMO at a Panchakarma center that actually taught me more than any textbook tbh. Day in, day out, I was handling long-term chronic cases—autoimmune ones, joint stiffness, gut inflammation—that needed a slow, layered approach. Detox isn’t just oil and swedana; it’s timing, patience, reading the body signals right. I made a lot of mistakes in the early months, but that’s how you get better. These days I mostly focus on sexual wellness, infertility (esp male), and joint pain—things people hesitate to talk about. And that's okay. I'm used to long consults, messy timelines, lots of trial-and-error. No flashy promises. Just steady, logical treatment plans built around their prakriti, their history, the real root issue. A lot of what I do now is integrative—panchakarma, lepa, herbs, counseling, diet shifts—all woven together. What I still hold tight is the idea that Ayurveda isn’t old. It’s just detailed. Complex. Demands patience. But it works—when you listen close enough to the body and stop rushing it.