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Dr. Abdul Wahab
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Dr. Abdul Wahab

Dr. Abdul Wahab
East End Nursing Home & Research Institute, Bamunimaidan, Guwahati
Doctor information
Experience:
Education:
Govt. Ayurvedic College, Jalukbari, Guwahati
Academic degree:
Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda
Area of specialization:
I am mainly working on Ayurvedic management for chronic and systemic health issues, which covers a wide range—from gut problems to joint pain that’s been dragging for years. My focus areas are gastrointestinal disorders like chronic gastritis or IBS, respiratory and lung-related troubles such as asthma or bronchitis, liver and kidney conditions, sexual health concerns, and pain or rheumatic diseases. I start with classical Ayurvedic diagnostics—looking at dosha imbalances, digestive strength, and lifestyle patterns—before deciding on any plan. Treatments usually mix herbal medicines, detox or Panchakarma when needed, food and routine changes, and guidance patients can actually follow without it becoming too overwhelming. Whether it’s a patient with liver dysfunction, renal weakness, chronic cough, or joint stiffness, the aim stays the same: fix the root cause, support the body’s own healing, and make sure the relief lasts—not just for a few weeks but for the long run.
Achievements:
I am glad to have published three research papers in well-recognised international journals, each adding evidence-based insights to Ayurvedic internal medicine. Writing them was not just academic work but also a way to organise years of clinical observation into something useful for the wider community. I also took part in two national seminars—great spaces for exchanging ideas and sharpening my own understanding. These experiences keep me grounded in learning and push me toward more research-driven practice.

I am an Ayurvedic doctor with an MD in Kayachikitsa—basically Ayurvedic Internal Medicine—and most of my work revolves around diagnosing and managing long-term, systemic conditions that need more than just quick symptom control. My training lets me go deep into the disease process from the Ayurvedic perspective, figuring out how the doshas, dhatus, and agni are involved, and then matching the treatment to each person’s constitution and lifestyle. It’s not about one prescription for all; it’s about tuning the therapy so it actually fits the patient’s life and health state. Over time, I’ve gotten very involved in autoimmune and metabolic disorders, digestive issues, skin diseases, and women’s health. That means I regularly work with cases like diabetes, osteoarthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, gastritis, acid reflux, PCOS, psoriasis, eczema… and many more that show up with layers of complications. My plans usually include internal herbal medicines, Panchakarma detox, rasayana support, food & lifestyle shifts—sometimes even small changes make huge difference. In both OPD and IPD setups, I often handle complex cases where you really have to spend time on the history, labs, and even the patient’s habits before deciding what will work. For me, empathy and accuracy go hand in hand—patients need to feel heard before they’ll follow a plan. One of the more memorable parts of my academic work was presenting a paper—*Triphala Kshalanam in Diabetic Wound Management*—at the AVP National Conference. It focused on showing how localized Ayurvedic therapies can actually speed up chronic wound healing, which was well received. I keep learning because Ayurveda is too big to think you’ve mastered it. My aim stays the same: make authentic Ayurvedic care easier for people to access, understand, and actually use in today’s life without losing its depth or scientific clarity.