Dr. Sahdev Kumar
Experience: | 5 years |
Education: | Rajeev Gandhi University of Health Sciences |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on treating metabolic stuff n digestive disorders through Ayurvedic lens—things like diabetes, BP, cholesterol ups-n-downs, weight gain that just won’t move no matter what people try. A lot of my work also circles around liver issues like fatty liver, gut probs like IBS, hyperacidity, bloating, gas, and sometimes even breathlessness that comes from internal imbalance not just lung issue. I keep the approach rooted in basic principles—herbs, detox, daily tweaks. Sometimes Panchakarma makes sense, other times just consistent gut reset and dietary guidance does a lot.
And then there's piles—ya, I see that a lot. For that I mostly go with non-invasive therapies. Ksharsutra has been super helpful for some chronic cases too, when it fits. I’m not about rushing people into hard treatments unless really needed. My idea of care is—longterm, gentle when possible, but also effective, not wishy-washy. I look at lifestyle disease not as fixed labels but evolving things... you reverse habits, support agni, and then you really start healing. |
Achievements: | I am trained in ACLS and BLS and yeah that really changed the way I handle sudden emergencies—cardiac arrests, collapsed airways, shock cases, things that can go real bad real fast if not acted on quickly. That training gave me a sort of sharpness—like you learn how to manage airways, give CPR the right way, read rhythms without panicking, and respond under pressure. It’s not just skills on paper either, I use that stuff, especially when something unpredictable shows up in clinic or outside. |
I am coming from a space where both Ayurveda and allopathy kinda shaped how I look at disease & healing... I did a year of proper clinical work in modern medicine and after that spent 3 yrs in Ayurvedic practice—deep-diving into root-cause stuff like dosha imbalance, digestion, ojas, and how body reacts when things go off-track for too long. Honestly, that mix helped me a lot. Like, I don’t get stuck thinking it’s only one way or nothing—if someone walks in with diabetes or chronic eczema or infertility, I’m thinking: ok, what's the origin story here, what’s the prakriti, what’s the system trying to say? I mostly work with metabolic conditions (diabetes, thyroid, PCOS), long-standing skin issues, male-female fertility challenges, gut problems, liver & kidney support cases... and yeah, a lot of modern lifestyle messes—stress, poor sleep, overmedicated bodies. I like to use herbs, classical formulas, dietary restructuring, and Panchakarma if needed, but also—thanks to my allopathic background—I do understand lab values, clinical flags, imaging, and when to say “this needs a diff kind of care right now.” That’s important too. I really believe the sweet spot is somewhere between tradition and updated evidence-based stuff. Not throwing out what’s been working for centuries, just translating it better for today’s bodies. I guess that’s what drives me—to give patients something that feels both ancient and super real right now, not just theoretical advice that doesn’t fit their lifestyle or labs or history. That’s where I feel most useful honestly.