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Dr. Abhiyanshu
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Dr. Abhiyanshu

Dr. Abhiyanshu
Clinic
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mainly focused on Nadi Pariksha—it’s kinda the starting point for almost every case I take. Pulse doesn’t just tell you what dosha’s aggravated, it shows you the *story* behind the symptoms. Once I get that clarity, treatment makes more sense. I also use Marma Therapy and Cupping Therapy a lot, esp. for joint stiffness, muscle pain, low energy... things ppl usually ignore till it gets worse. These therapies really help unblock stuff that meds alone can’t shift. I’ve managed cases like hairfall, dandruff, joint pain, mild eczema, hormonal dullness—all with tailored chikitsa. Not copy-paste routines. Each person gets a mix of herbal meds, marma where needed, and lifestyle tweaks that they can actually stick with. Fertility work is something I’m drawn to too. Whether it’s delayed cycles or unexplained infertility, I use Ayurvedic rasayana, reproductive care plans, and diet to gently build things back. My aim’s always to heal from the root, not just patch over problems.
Achievements:
I am still early in my journey, but during 6 months of active clinical work, I got to actually *practice* the Ayurved I studied—not just recite it. I diagnosed real patients, planned herbal meds, gave proper ahar-vihar advice, and saw results that reminded me why I chose this field. Sometimes it was small wins—like someone’s digestion finally settling. Other times, full symptom relief. Every case sharpened how I see disease... not as labels, but as patterns waiting to be balanced.

I am an Ayurvedic physician with around 6 months of hands-on clinical experience—not a long time on paper maybe, but in this short span I’ve already learned how much depth there is in real-world healing vs theory. I’ve worked under senior vaidyas who didn’t just teach me what to prescribe but *how to observe*—how a patient walks in, what their skin or nails show, how their nadi tells a story before they even speak. Most of my practice so far has centered around managing everyday-but-bothersome conditions—joint pain that won’t go away, hair fall ppl can't explain, acne flare-ups, basic gynaec things like delayed cycles, stress-linked PMS, etc. I always stick to proper Ayurvedic principles—like I don’t jump into meds unless I’m clear about the dosha involvement. Nadi Pariksha is a regular part of how I assess things, and depending on what I see, I’ll plan Shaman Chikitsa, simple marma support or maybe just some food/lifestyle shifts if that’s what’s actually needed. My style is not to overload ppl with long lists of churnas n lehyas. I believe even early on that good results come from *balance*—right dose, right ahar-vihar advice, maybe some gentle exercise that suits their energy. I’ve already seen how much better ppl respond when they feel heard and not just “fixed.” I’m still learning—every day, every pt. But I’m very clear that Ayurveda works best when it’s tailored properly. Even in these first few months, I’ve seen cases turn around—not magically, but steadily. That’s the part I trust most about this path. And yeah, I’m focused on getting sharper—with diagnostics, with therapy planning, and most importantly, in giving care that’s both real and reachable for whoever comes in.