Dr. Shantanu Kumar Mishra
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | B.A.M.S, (North Eastern Institute of Ayurveda and Homeopathy). |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on treating sexual health issues n infertility with Ayurveda, and tbh it’s something a lot of ppl feel awkward even talking about. But it doesn’t have to be. I try to make space where they can actually speak openly, coz half the problem is suppressed stress or fear. Whether it's low libido, early discharge, painful cycles, PCOD, or unexplained infertility—I try to dig into what’s really causing it.
Sometimes it’s hormones, sometimes weak dhatus (esp shukra), or poor diet, sometimes stress just burns out the system slowly. I use a combo of classical Ayurvedic therapies, herbal medicines, and food corrections—no shortcuts, no suppressing symptoms. Virechana, nasya, rasayana when needed... depends totally on how deep the imbalance has set in.
The idea isn’t to force anything but to revive reproductive strength and natural rhythm—without having to go into invasive stuff. Slow but steady. That’s how I work. |
Achievements: | I am holding a Master’s degree in Nutrition which kinda lets me bring that extra layer into my Ayurvedic practice, especially when I’m dealing with ppl with lifestyle disorders or long-term stuff like diabets or PCOD. Food isn't just food in Ayurveda right? it's therapy—like proper medicine if you get it right. This training help me make more accurate diet plans that work with the herbal treatments instead of just.. vague advice. it gives depth n makes a big diffrence in longterm healing. |
I am working in Ayurveda and Panchakarma therapy for around two years now, and honestly, I still feel like I’m learning new stuff every single day. My approach is pretty straightforward—listen first, figure out where the body and mind are getting thrown off track, and then build something that actually fits the person sitting in front of me. I mostly go by the classics... prakriti, doshas, lifestyle mess-ups, past illness patterns—those are what help me shape a plan that makes sense. I’ve handled all sorts of things—joint pain, stress headaches that never show up on tests, digestion that’s off even when reports say “normal”, PCOD stuff, skin allergies that keep coming back. Ayurveda doesn’t look at these things in pieces, which I appreciate. There’s a whole rhythm to the body, and once that’s disturbed, symptoms just kinda pile on in different ways. I try not to rush treatment—it's more about tuning that rhythm back. Panchakarma’s a big part of what I do. Like Abhyanga, Virechana, Basti, Nasya, Shirodhara—all those therapies that sound heavy but really they’re gentle if done right. I’ve seen huge shifts in people post detox, even if their main issue was anxiety or hormonal imbalance and not gut-related. We underestimate how much internal clutter we carry honestly. Education’s another big thing I push for. Ritucharya, Dinacharya, simple food habits—if people get those right, half of the work is already done. And no, I don’t mean changing everything overnight... sometimes just sleeping on time or eating without distraction makes the biggest differance. The way I see it, I’m not “fixing” patients—they’re doing the real work. I’m just walking with them, maybe holding the torch for a bit till they get their own back on. Healing’s slow, messy sometimes, but also really powerful if you let it be. I just want Ayurveda to feel like something you can live with, not be afraid of.