Dr. Tanu Saini
Experience: | 8 years |
Education: | Vaidya Yagya Dutta Sharma Ayurvedic Medical College |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working in Ayurvedic gynecology right now & one of the things I keep going deeper into is PCOD/PCOS... cause honestly, there’s no straight line with these cases. Hormonal imbalances can show up all over the place—missed periods, acne, mood swings, fertility issues—and every woman’s story is just slightly different. That’s where Ayurveda really gives me tools to go beyond surface symptoms.
My approach kinda starts with identifying which doshas are messing up the system (usually Kapha-Pitta axis gets thrown off) and then I look into deeper things like agni imbalance or srotas blockage. I usually go for herbal combos that regulate hormones without suppressing them, and therapies like Panchakarma when things need a full reset. Uterine detox (esp. Uttarbasti) has shown me some real-time progress in stubborn cases. And yeah—diet’s huge, can’t ignore it even for a day.
I use charts, daily tracking, basic labs too sometimes. But mostly, it’s about listening... cycles tell a lot if you pay attention. I don’t claim to “cure” PCOS but yeah I’ve seen women slowly come out of that stuck space where nothing moved for months. If they stick to the plan, change happens. Not overnight but steady. I just try to give them that safe space, plus the right Ayurvedic support to let their body take over healing on its own. |
Achievements: | I am really glad I got to be part of the World Ayurvedic Congress in 2024 @Dehradun. It wasn’t just a formality thing—got a certificate yeah—but what actually mattered was being there, hearing real-time discussions from expereinced vaidyas, and just soaking up newer insights in Ayurvedic gynecology, some stuff you don’t always find in books. It kinda deepend my commitment to bring more updated yet classical approach into my own clinical practice. |
I am currently doing my MS in Stri Roga & Prasuti Tantra at Sri Sai Ayurvedic Medical College and yeah, it's pushing me in all the right ways. Women’s health is not just complex—it changes so much depending on life stage, habits, stress, everything. That’s what really made me want to study this field more seriously. I’m learning to manage menstrual issues like PCOD, irregular cycles, also infertility, prenatal care, postpartum balance... it's a lot, but it’s worth it. Ayurveda has this beautiful way of connecting things—how digestion affects hormones, how mind affects reproductive health. I’m seeing that clearer now. I’ve been diving into therapies like Panchakarma, Uttarbasti, and Rasayana chikitsa, combining them with lifestyle tweaks and diet corrections. It’s not one-pill-solves-all here. You listen, track, adapt. Some days I think I'm getting there, other days, it feels like there's stil way more to grasp. One area I keep returning to is how stress and ama (toxins) disturb menstrual health and fertility. Once you catch the root, healing becomes more than just symptom control. Even in pregnancy care, I’m learning how important gut health is for both mom & baby. We use herbs, oils, routines—it’s all gentle but powerful. My goal honestly? To get better at treating women in a way that feels real. Not robotic, not just textbook. I wanna build treatments that respect each woman’s unique rhythm, not force her into a protocol. I don’t want to overpromise either. Ayurveda takes time. But if someone’s open to that—real change is possible. I’m still learning. But I'm committed to becoming the kind of doctor women can come to when they want care that listens, that heals from inside out.