Dr. Veena Vijayan
Experience: | 12 years |
Education: | Amrita School of Ayurveda |
Academic degree: | Master of Surgery in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am someone who kinda floats between cosmetic care, neuro rehab, and anorectal cases—and weirdly, all of that fits together in my head. I work a lot with skin and hair using Ayurvedic cosmetology—dosha-based routines, herbal lep, detox where needed, and diet tweaks that don't feel like torture. People think glow comes from outside creams... nah. It’s all internal reset first.
Then there’s my focus on piles, fissure, fistula—those silent problems nobody wants to talk about but suffer daily with. I use proven Ayurvedic methods like Ksharasutra, Basti, and targeted meds. The idea is to heal, not just patch things till they come back again. This work is personal to me—it’s quiet but powerful, you see patients actually relaxing again once the pain goes.
And neuro—especially hemiplegia cases—is where I blend Marma therapy with herbs + rehab practices. Every patient’s body speaks differently. Marma helps unlock stuck points, build back circulation, awareness... even small muscle movements are big wins. It’s slow work, but deeply moving when progress starts showing. |
Achievements: | I am someone who really got into surgical Ayurveda from day one—ended up a rank holder during my MS in Shalyatantra, which yeah, was a proud moment but also kinda pressure too. I’ve done a bunch of CMEs, seminars, and clinical talks—sometimes attending, sometimes presenting. Those spaces really push you, you know? You share, listen, debate, refine stuff. It helped me grow beyond just textbooks—like learning how things actually work on the table, in real time, with real bodies and real limitations. |
ChatGPT said: I am an Ayurvedic doctor who kinda moves between three different zones—Marma chikitsa, skin + hair care, and anorectal issues like piles n fistula—sounds like a weird combo maybe, but somehow it all ties back to the same thing: blocked energy, bad digestion, stuck inflammation. I trained specifically in Marma therapy, and honestly it changed how I even see pain. Like, it’s not just about the joint or muscle—it’s the circuits underneath. I use Marma points to stimulate healing, ease pain, improve blood flow and sometimes even lift the mind out of a slump. It's subtle but powerful if done right. My Ayurvedic cosmetology work feels completely different but also not?? Most people come for skin glow or hair fall, but when we sit and talk, it’s always deeper. Gut issues, hormonal swings, poor sleep, ama build-up. I do detox, local herbal lepana, internal meds, but also give really grounded diet tweaks depending on dosha. My aim is—no quick cover-ups. Long-term glow with zero harsh chemcials or aggressive treatments. Then there’s the anorectal side—piles, fissures, fistula. Not glamorous at all, but super necessary work. So many suffer in silence or go through painful surgeries with relapses. I use classical Ayurvedic protocols, especially Ksharasutra and targeted internal meds to shrink growths, heal tears, restore bowel tone, and yeah, reduce recurrence. It’s practical medicine. Real-time results that can seriously change someone's quality of life. Each patient I meet gets a totally individual plan—based on Prakriti, Vikriti, and other Ayurvedic parameters. Whether it’s a person in pain or someone just feeling dull and off—I never just chase symptoms. We sit, assess, dig deeper. That’s where the actual healing starts. For me, it’s not about temporary calm—it’s about helping people feel more alive, more clear, more balanced in their own bodies again.