Dr. Liyakat Ahmed
Experience: | 17 years |
Education: | Madan Mohan Malviya Government Ayurved College |
Academic degree: | Master of Surgery in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am a post-grad in Prasuti Tantra evam Striroga and most of my clinical work circles around Ayurvedic obstetrics & gynecology—basically, women’s health in all its stages, with all its layers. I deal with things like irregular periods (Artava Vyapad), infertility (Vandhyatva), repeated miscarriages (Garbhasrava), leucorrhoea (Pradara), inflammation like cervicitis (Yonikanda), and even that fuzzy menopausal phase (Rajonivrutti stuff) where everything feels off but hard to explain.
Garbha Sanskar is something I deeply care about—it’s not just ritual, it’s preventive care from the very beginning. I also manage prenatal and postnatal care closely—tracking Agni, sleep, digestion, pain, mood swings—basically the whole body-mind space of the mother. I use therapies like Uttarbasti, Yoni Pichu, Vasti chikitsa, not randomly but when they actually fit the patient’s body type, stage, and history. Rasayana, food patterns, timing—all of it is part of the treatment, not extra.
Each case needs time... but it’s worth it. |
Achievements: | I am someone who’s worked quite closely on male infertility, and during my MD, I presented Best Paper on “Oligospermia – An Ayurvedic Approach” at Sushrutee CME in Pune. That topic sorta stayed with me, which led me to do my PG thesis comparing Gokshuradi Churna vs. Swayamguptadi Churna—trying to bring some clearer direction in Ayurvedic care for oligospermia cases. I also did hands-on training in Sthanik Chikitsa & basic laparoscopy, plus joined a focused CME in Kolhapur just to deepen my infertility protocols more practically. |
I am a Government Medical Officer, working in Ayurvedic healthcare since 2008—yeah, that's over 15 yrs now, and honestly, each year has only deepened my respect for this science. I’ve spent most of my clinical life in real on-ground setups—govt hospitals, rural dispensaries, PHCs—places where care actually needs to reach, not just where it’s convenient. My work’s always been rooted in classical Ayurveda, but guided by what people around me really go thru day to day. I’ve focused a lot on women’s health, especially reproductive care, menstrual issues, infertility guidance, and prenatal-postnatal support. I work with young girls figuring out hormonal chaos, pregnant women who want safe and natural support, and women navigating menopause without getting lost in symptoms. I don’t just give a few meds—I try to listen, really. Most times, it’s a mix of things—Panchakarma, Rasayana, food changes, counseling, even sleep habits. It all adds up. Maternal and child healthcare is something I’ve stayed deeply involved in. Whether it’s first-time moms, risky pregnancy cases, postnatal healing, or even helping build immunity in kids—I’ve used Ayurvedic protocols that adapt to life stages. Sometimes it’s herbs. Sometimes it’s just restoring rhythm. And yeah, every plan is dosha-based. Not just randomly picking things off a chart. Beyond OPD work, I’ve also been involved in community health programs. Screenings, awareness drives, outreach camps—those moments where Ayurveda and preventive health become part of daily life for the people. It’s where public health and Ayurveda overlap...and that blend is powerful if done right. I work with both acute & chronic issues, but always with one lens—what’s the root, and what’s sustainable. Whether it's a skin flare-up or lifestyle disease, treatment has to make sense to the person living with it. I stay updated, but my goal's still the same: clear diagnosis, ethical treatment, and helping people reconnect with their health in ways they can carry forward.