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Dr. Surbhi Sharma Bhavsar
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Dr. Surbhi Sharma Bhavsar

Dr. Surbhi Sharma Bhavsar
Sehore Madhya Pradesh personal practice
Doctor information
Experience:
4 years
Education:
Shubhdeep Ayurved Medical College
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly working in the space of lifestyle & metabolic disorders—heart disease, high BP, diabetes, thyroid troubles, even PCOD/PCOS—they're kinda all tangled up if you look close. My main goal’s to untangle that mess slowly. I use Ayurvedic plans, real ones, like dosha-based herbal meds, full Panchakarma protocols, not the spa-kind!, and diets that aren’t just boiled veggies or random ghee fasting. Everything I do depends on the person’s prakriti & what stage their imbalance’s at. Some ppl come with chronic joint stuff, like knee pain that never really leaves or weird patterns of recurrent fever—those are tricky but yeah, Ayurveda handles them well if we track the root causes... not just the symptoms. I don’t like rushing treatment tbh. Healing happens in phases and I try to explain that in a way that feels doable to the patient, else they bounce. I always keep an eye on long-term prevention. Reversing early signs of disease takes less time than ppl think—but only if they stick. Every plan I do’s layered & open to change, coz bodies change too.
Achievements:
I am not usually into standing on stage types, but yeah—presented two case papers at the National Ayurved Cardiologist Symposium. Both were from my real cardiac patients, one on early ischemic signs & one mixed with high BP+stress loop.. kinda complex. Shared what actually worked using Ayurvedic protocols—got some good questions too, made me rethink parts. Stuff like this keeps me sharp, reminds me that practical evidence & learning never really stops no matter how routine things look day to day.

I am someone who kinda stumbled into preventive cardiology at first—honestly didn’t expect to enjoy working in that space *that* much, but during those 3 years at Madhavbaug Cardiac Clinic, things shifted. I worked there full-time as a Preventive Cardiologist, and it wasn’t just treating numbers on a BP chart or ECG readouts. Most ppl who walked in had hypertension, ischemic heart conditions, or early-stage heart failure. But behind all of that, there was always more—bad sleep, zero movement, high stress, wrong food cycles… lifestyle traps basically. What we did at the clinic was try to catch things before they spiral. I’d use classical Ayurvedic formulations & therapies—like proper panchakarma plans, not just token detoxes—plus diet protocols crafted for each cardiac profile. I also got into disease-specific yoga routines... mostly focused on circulation, breath retraining, and vagal tone stuff. And yeah, used modern diagnostic tools throughout—labs, ECGs, treadmill tests when needed. That combo really worked. It helped ppl feel like they're doing something active for their heart, not just reacting to fear or meds. Over time I got better at spotting patterns early—seeing how metabolic chaos connects to long-term damage. Whether it was pre-diabetes showing up in lipid panels or someone with chronic acidity + high stress turning up with erratic BP, you just start seeing the threads. Those cases taught me how big a role education plays too—like if a person doesn’t *get* what’s happening inside their body, they won’t stick to changes. Now in my own practice, I still go back to that same model: listen close, start slow, focus on root-cause & let Ayurveda do the rebuilding part. The big learning from Madhavbaug? That chronic cardiac issues don't always need high-intensity treatment. Sometimes they just need the right kind of steady pressure—on food, on thoughts, on habits—to ease the load on the heart and let recovery start.