Dr. Keerthi K Kulkarni
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | B.A.M.S, (Rajiv Gandhi University of Health Sciences).
Atreya ayurvedic medical college and research institute |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with ppl who're dealing with skin stuff that just keeps coming back—acne, dullness, pigmentation, or those random breakouts you can’t even explain. I use Ayurveda not just to fix the skin from outside but to figure what’s actually going on inside—gut, hormones, stress, food patterns, all of it. My main focus is skincare, nutrition & Panchakarma detox, but honestly it all connects anyway right?? I look at prakriti, agni, ama and try to build treatment around you, not some textbook protocol.
Sometimes it’s about tweaking diet a little, sometimes herbs do the job, or sometimes the body really needs deep detox and we go for Panchakarma—virechana, basti or even nasya depending on what's stuck where. I don’t push the intense stuff unless it's actually needed. My goal’s long-term balance not temporary clearups. And I’m kinda obsessed with keeping things practical... routines that fit into real life—not ones you forget after 3 days.
Healing’s slow sometimes, but it sticks. |
Achievements: | I am working as a Panchakarma doctor for over 2 yrs now, and also train others in it, which is kinda intense but rewarding. Most of my energy goes into helping ppl actually understand their health—like what’s causing all these lifestyle problems in the first place. I mix detox therapies with simple real-world guidance. No fluff, just deep-rooted stuff that works long term!! Watching patients shift out of cycles they thought were permanent—honestly, that’s what keeps me going everyday. |
I am an Ayurvedic doctor who kind of lives at the intersection of classical Ayurveda + modern wellness science. I did my BAMS and right now studying Psychology (Master’s) and also finishing up a diploma in Nutrition & Health Education—feels like it all clicks together honestly. My work mostly centers around skin, food, and the whole “how are you actually living?” side of things. I see a lot of ppl with stress-based stuff, weight struggles, hormonal dips, or skin flareups that don’t go away with creams. I try to break it down gently—from dosha stuff to emotional triggers. And ya, we start small: maybe food first, or sleep, or just breathing. Then herbs or detox, only if needed. Skin care is big part of my practice, but not the glossy kind—more like helping someone understand why their acne keeps coming, or why pigmentation isn’t going even though they tried everything. I go deep into Ahara (diet), Vihara (routine), Aushadha (herbs), and Manasa (mind). My goal’s not to mask stuff—it’s to fix what’s actually underneath it. I love seeing someone feel at ease in their skin again. That’s something. Nutrition isn’t separate either—it’s the base layer really. I help ppl reconnect with meals that actually nourish based on who they are, what their day looks like, even the weather sometimes!! Not calorie-counting but real balance. Sometimes food itself becomes the turning point in healing, and that never gets old to watch. Now with psychology in the picture, my work’s shifting deeper into mental-emotional spaces too—chronic anxiety, self-image issues, low motivation. I’m learning how the mind clings to patterns even when the body wants to heal. That’s where Ayurveda really shines—treating the person not just the diagnosis. I try to make each consult a space where ppl feel safe to slow down, breathe, ask things they were too shy to ask before. The idea isn’t instant change—it’s building rhythm, choice by choice. Healing, for me, is more than symptom-fixing—it’s teaching someone how to stay better. That’s what I keep showing up for, even when it’s not simple. And maybe that’s the whole point anyway.