Dr. Priyanka Nehete
Experience: | 18 years |
Education: | A.S.S. Ayurved College, Nashik, Maharashtra |
Academic degree: | Master of Surgery in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working on cases related to digestion, bone joints and anorectal problems—like piles or fissure—infertility too. these areas need patience, real observation, and half the time it’s not just about the direct symptoms but what's behind them. I kinda always go back to the basics of Ayurved diagnosis—vata-pitta-kapha, agni, srotas. Feels like every new case is just a new mix of imbalance. I usually begin by fixing gut health first, bcoz honestly, it connects everything in body.
Bone and joint issues I see a lot in both younger & older patients—sports injuries, knee stiffness, back pain from work posture. I use panchkarma plans if needed or else proper marma+herbal protocols.
In infertility, I keep it very case-to-case. Sometimes it’s about hormonal imbalance, other times stress or diet. I try building trust n also make couples understand the Ayurvedic cycle perspective.
Also, ano-rectal problems are v common now bcoz of sedentary life—my focus is to manage them with less invasive therapies wherever possible. I like slow results that last than short fast ones that don’t. |
Achievements: | I am someone who kinda keeps going back to research even while managing patients daily. Had my clinical paper published (that process took time, trust me) and also got to present my work in few national & international seminars—those spaces are intense but you also learn a lot just by listening. I don’t always talk abt it much, but that mix of study+practice helps me see cases more sharply, like what’s textbook and what’s real.. |
I am working as an Ayurved consuktant and Panchkarma practitioner from last 12 years n honestly this path still teaches me every day. I started with a clear focus on joint pain and spine related issues bcoz I saw how badly they affect someone’s daily life—but later my work slowly expanded into infertility, digestion problems, and ano-rectal conditions like piles and fissures. These are not just medical labels to me. Each case feels like a story that’s waiting to be heard properly before deciding anything. In joint diseases, I prefer a root-cause based approach. If a patient has frozen shoulder or chronic knee pain, I go beyond just local therapy and look into digestion, sleep, even past injuries they might have forgot. Same goes for infertility—Ayurved gives us a big lens to see where the imbalance began. I've worked with couples who were stressed, confused or just tired from multiple failed options. We worked through diet, panchkarma detox, timing, and even small habits like sleep-wake cycles. Panchkarma is a huge part of how I practise. Not for everyone of course, but when right and planned properly, it gives the body a complete reset. I’ve seen chronic gut issues improve when we clear ama and restart agni with the right steps. Piles n fissure cases I treat usually with conservative Ayurvedic meds n kshar sutra if needed—but I still spend time talking lifestyle habits bcoz if they stay same, results don’t hold. Even now, each week I get cases that push me to rethink my protocols. But that’s exactly why I stay close to classical texts and try to adapt those concepts to today’s stress-diet-posture-heavy lifestyle. It’s slow work sometimes, but when someone tells me they can walk again without pain or finally got pregnant after years—it just clicks why I’m here doing what I do.