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Dr. Anwin J Thayyil
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Dr. Anwin J Thayyil

Dr. Anwin J Thayyil
Tvasta ayurvedic hospital hyderabad
Doctor information
Experience:
10 years
Education:
Rajiv Gandhi University of Health and Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly working with chronic n lifestyle-linked stuff in Ayurveda, kind of where the deep patterns show up. I deal with musculoskeletal cases a lot—rheumatoid arthritis, osteoarthritis, gout, cervical n lumbar spondylosis, frozen shoulder too, which honestly needs more than just physical treatment. Respiratory things like asthma and allergy disorders also keep coming back, often tied with deeper imbalances. Then there’s hormonal things—thyroid, PCOS, diabetes, male infertility… I focus hard on those too, cuz they don’t respond well to surface-level care. I use classical Ayurvedic chikitsa, herbs, detox routines (only if truly needed), diet plans that aren’t one-size-fits-all, and yeah, lifestyle tweaks that are practical not rigid. Gut disorders, ano-rectal issues, skin stuff like eczema, fungal flareups, urticaria, even psoriasis—I try to make sense of how they’re connected rather than treating in bits. For me, it’s not about “curing” fast but really seeing what’s out of sync and then guiding that back to center. If it takes time, it takes time.
Achievements:
I am mostly working with chronic and long-standing cases, and over the years I’ve seen thousands of patients walk in with really tough conditions—joint pain, thyroid stuff, PCOS, skin issues, even fertility struggles. Managing those with Ayurvedic care takes patience, not just from me but from the patient too. But when it works—when we actually see progress—it really stays with you. I keep my focus on safe, personalised healing, and yeah, watching people actually feel better, that never gets old!!

I am working in Ayurveda for over 16 years now—bit of a long ride but honestly still learning every day. I'm currently an Associate Professor (yeah teaching keeps you sharp) and for the last 10 yrs I've been guiding students, trying to make those core Ayurvedic principles feel real, not just theory stuff out of textbooks. But I’m also in clinical practice, hands-on with patients facing lifestyle disorders—gut problems, thyroid issues, stress, obesity, you name it. Being both a teacher and physician gives me this kind of weirdly complete view… like, what we teach actually shows up in the clinic, and vice-versa. I use a blend of classical Ayurvedic treatments, herbal drugs, diet corrections, and life tweaks—depends on the person, really. Everyone’s body and story is different, right?? I'm really into making care “workable,” like something patients can stick with long term, not just flashy detoxes or shortcuts. I also do lots of counselling… sometimes patients come in just needing that mental anchor. And teaching for me ain't just about lectures—it kinda feeds my own clarity too. Every time a student asks something I hadn’t considered in a while, it clicks new again. That mix of academic exposure and patient interaction really shaped how I look at health—whole body, whole mind, not isolated pieces. My focus is keeping Ayurveda grounded but current. I'm not trying to modernize it in a gimmicky way, but yeah, making it fit into real people’s modern lives… I care about that. Whether it’s adapting diet plans that match someone’s crazy schedule or explaining herbal actions without Sanskrit overload—whatever makes the path clearer. There’s still a lot to unfold in this field. I’m here for it.