Dr. Swathimutthu Prasad B N
Experience: | 8 years |
Education: | SDM College of Ayurveda and Hospital, Hassan |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am an Ayurvedic gynecologist mostly working with women who’re trying to figure out why their cycles feel all over the place—like painful periods that just knock you out, PCOS symptoms that don’t respond to anything, or weird shifts during peri-menopause that no one really warns you about. I look at all that through a lens that’s rooted in Ayurveda but also super personalized. No cookie-cutter things. I use herbal blends (properly matched to their dosha), detox when needed (yeah, panchakarma but only when timing’s right), and honestly—just getting the daily stuff in sync again… like food, sleep, routine, basic rhythms we tend to lose.
I also do a lotta work with infertility, not just in women btw but men too. Low sperm count, irregular ovulation, unexplained delays—I try to go deeper than labels. Diet is big here, but mindset and emotional load? Also huge. I’ll often bring in yoga, breathing practices like pranayama, or even just help them cut one stress trigger that's messing everything else up. It’s not flashy, but it works if you stick with it.
Everything starts with understanding their prakriti-vikriti first, and from there I can build a treatment map that’s sustainable—not something that makes things worse long term. Ayurveda works in layers, and I try to stay honest about that. |
Achievements: | I am someone who ended up with a gold medal in both BAMS and MS in Prasuti Tantra & Stri Roga—kinda wild, right? one was awarded by the former Governor of Karnataka, the other from the ex-President of India which still feels unreal. I was also the first to win Himalaya Drug Company’s medal which really meant alot back then. My work’s showed up in The Hindu, Deccan Herald, even New Indian Express. I try to stay involved—suturing demos, public health talks, all of that keeps me grounded. |
I am Dr. Swathimutthu B N, and most of my work kinda circles around one core thing—helping women feel *really* seen, understood, and balanced in their reproductive health. Ayurveda gave me the tools to approach this not in pieces—like just PCOS or just menopause—but to actually look at the whole rhythm of a woman’s life, her cycle, her moods, her shifts, her inner fire (agni) and what throws it off. I mostly focus on hormone balance, fertility support, and just guiding folks through that maze of irregular periods, pain, PMS that drags on forever, or weird shifts post-childbirth that no one talks enough about. I work with both women and men dealing with infertility—that’s something close to me. Whether it’s weak ovulation, poor egg health, or issues with sperm quality, I try not to jump into treatment right away. First I sit with the case, listen to the pattern, figure out where the imbalance actually began. Then it’s usually some combo of panchakarma, herbs, dinacharya tweaks, food changes—sometimes even just helping people *slow down* a bit. It’s a lotta work to reset a body that’s been out of rhythm for years, but I’ve seen how steady, real Ayurveda can bring that back. Every case starts with assessing their Prakriti and Vikriti—because no, one-size-fits-all does *not* work. Some patients need grounding, others need cooling, some are just carrying emotional heat that’s throwing off everything. My treatments are always tailored: herbs for one person might make another worse. And I usually bring in yogasana, pranayama, stress tools when needed. It’s like weaving a plan that fits their pace & lifestyle—not just a protocol outta a textbook. Postpartum’s another area where I stay very hands-on. Women need more than just "rest"—they need warm healing, clarity, nourishment, and emotional space to settle into that new life. I’m often texting back n forth with my patients in those weeks, tweaking their food, adjusting decoctions, checking sleep, mood, bleeding... it’s personal. I don’t believe in quick fixes. I try to keep things honest, warm, and rooted in classical Ayurvedic wisdom—but with enough room to adapt to modern lives. My aim? Help each person feel like their body’s finally speaking *with* them again, not against them.