Dr. Aditya Trigunayat Sharma
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Madan Mohan Malviya Government Ayurvedic College And Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into anorectal work right now—stuff like piles, fissure, fistula, you knw the usual things ppl keep delaying until it gets worse. Ksharsutra therapy is my main line for those... it's one of those Ayurvedic parasurgical tools that actually deliver solid results if timed & applied right. But that’s not all—I also work closely with infertility cases. Ayurvedic infertility management is like this slow, layered process and I try to keep it as real & practical as possible for each couple.
Apart from that, digestive issues are always kinda in the background too—chronic acidity, sluggish gut, IBS-like patterns, even liver-bile stuff. I usually go with a 3-part method: herbs, food (obv), and dosha-specific lifestyle resets. Not everyone needs deep panchakarma right away—sometimes even a small virechan or sneha-basti done correctly can start the shift.
I use classical Ayurvedic frameworks but don’t ignore what’s happening in real life—people have stress, irregular food, poor sleep. That changes everything!! I keep adjusting things till it fits *them* not just the textbook. |
Achievements: | I am not really chasing awards but ya, I did recieve the Bhishak Parveen Award in 2024 at Gujarat—kind of a big moment for me tbh. It was more than just a title... felt like a nod to the years I’ve poured into practicing Ayurveda with full sincerity. That moment sorta pushed me to go even deeper into traditional methods and keep offering real, sustainable care—especially for folks who’ve tried evrything else but still not better. |
I am an Ayurvedic physician mainly working in anorectal and GI stuff—things like piles, fissures, fistulas, sluggish liver, constipation n similar disorders that ppl usually struggle with quietly way too long. I spent 2 full years at Sumna Anorectal Hospital in Tirupati, Andhra Pradesh, where I kinda deep-dived into classical approaches + parasurgical stuff like Ksharsutra, which honestly works way better than ppl expect (if used right). Later I did this one-year CRAV training under Rashtriya Ayurveda Vidyapeeth (yeah the AYUSH ministry backed one) in Delhi... not just theory but proper hands-on refinement. Helped me sort my line of thinking—like when to go full shodhana, when not to push it. Right now I run my own setup—the Advance Ayurveda Anorectal and Piles Clinic & Panchakarma Centre. Not some fancy chain thing. Just me, trying to give proper attention to each person. Most of my treatments revolve around tailored protocols—sometimes Ksharsutra, sometimes just diet+herbs, or localized lepa, basti, virechana if the gut's totally stuck. I don’t like pushing patients thru pre-fixed "packages” just to tick boxes. Every case is different. Like one fissure patient needs deep healing, not cutting... another with fistula may need staged work—not just banding n hoping for the best. I try to match treatment to prakruti, dosha avastha, and honestly—how much the patient can manage in real life rn. If someone’s stressed n not eating or sleeping on time, even the best meds won’t hold. Also not ignoring diagnostics either. I still ask for scans or bloods when I feel something doesn’t line up. Ayurveda isn't anti-science. For me, the whole point is integration—real healing that stays, not just symptom patchwork. Anyway, still learning every day. Still observing how the same treatment hits diff ppl diff ways. That’s what keeps me going.