Dr. Suchin M
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Government Ayurveda Medical College, Mysore |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on treating chronic and lifestyle-linked issues that just keep coming back or dragging on—like diabetes, hypertension, hormonal stuff, kidney probs, liver sluggishness, and yeah, infertility in both men & women too. My way of dealing with these is pretty rooted in basic Ayurvedic ideas: find the actual cause, balance doshas, work with the body not against it. Nothing flashy, just consistent, thoughtful healing. Sometimes people expect quick fixes... but I really belive healing takes time and right effort.
When it comes to kidney and liver stuff—things like fatty liver, early-stage CKD, or even elevated creatinine—I use Panchakarma if needed, detox routines, tailored herbs, and most important... food. I mean, really focusing on food habits and what’s causing the organ stress. It’s not just about flushing toxins; it’s about giving those organs what they need to do their job properly again. Little changes actually go long way here.
In infertility cases, I look into hormonal patterns, ovulatory health, sperm quality—plus stress, digestion, ama buildup—all that. I’ve seen good results with nasya, basti, and sometimes simple rasayana plans + calming the mind a bit (because stress truly messes everything). No one treatment suits all—what matters is who the patient is, what they need, and where their balance is off.
Everything I do kind of ties back to that... I don’t believe in standard solutions. Just whatever works safely and naturally for that one individual in front of me. |
Achievements: | I am not really counting numbers all the time, but yeah, I’ve worked with 200+ patients now—mostly dealing with lifestyle stuff like sugar issues, BP, obesity... and quite a few kidney & liver cases too. Also had many infertility consults, both male & female sides. What I really try to do is dig into why things are off—not just what symptoms show up. I mix herbal meds with proper diet talk, some panchakarma when needed, and just keep it real. Every case has teached me something new, honestly. |
I am someone who’s honestly just really drawn to how deep Ayurveda goes—like really deep—not just treating what’s showing on the surface but getting into what’s actually causing it underneath. I really believe that even those complicated lifestyle diseases, stuff like diabetes or BP or obesity that people think they’ll just have to live with forever, can totally be managed with Ayurvedic principles. Not magically or overnight, but through proper diagnosis, diet tweaks, daily habits, and herbs that actually work if you use them right. That’s the part I focus on—making Ayurveda work practically, not just in theory. After finishing my BAMS, I’ve worked with chronic conditions for over a year now in clinical setups. Mostly patients dealing with long-term stuff that doesn’t go away with one pill—usually the kind of disorders rooted in stress, wrong food choices or too much sitting. I’ve seen that if you really listen first, like actually listen—hear their story, feel where they’re coming from—half the work’s already done. Then when you assess their Prakriti, figure out where the doshas are out of balance, and connect that with their history (plus any modern test reports they might bring), it gives you this full picture that’s so valuable. My treatment plans aren't one-size-fits-all. Sometimes it’s about bringing agni back into balance. Sometimes just clearing aam helps. Most people are shocked that things like bloating or even periods issues can shift just by aligning food and herbs with their constitution. And if the case is acute or there’s a red flag, I have no problem referring for emergency allopathic care. Integrative care makes sense—Ayurveda doesn’t have to be isolated from modern medicine. My aim? It's not just to fix a symptom. I want people to feel at ease in their own body again. To build habits they don’t need to break later. To know their own rhythm, not just follow some generic health trend. That’s what Ayurvedic healing means to me... not perfect, but real.