Ask Ayurveda

/
/
Dr. S.L. Soni
FREE! Ask an Ayurvedic Doctor — 24/7
Connect with Ayurvedic doctors 24/7. Ask anything, get expert help today.

Dr. S.L. Soni

Dr. S.L. Soni
Shri Krishna Clinic and Day Care Center
Doctor information
Experience:
16 years
Education:
Maharashtra University of Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am working mostly with minor surgical cases where I get to combine sharp focus with Ayurveda’s deeper healing angle—it’s kind of the sweet spot for me honestly. Most of the time, patients come in thinking surgery means long recovery, too many meds, and all that... but I like showing how even things like abscess drainage or mole removals don’t have to be that intimidating or dragged out. Especially when you follow up with proper Ayurvedic aftercare, the body tends to heal cleaner, quicker. Less fuss. I deal with things like wart excisions, localized swellings, and I’m pretty involved in Ksharasutra treatment too—which is a real gamechanger when it comes to anorectal conditions like piles or fistula. It’s not instant magic but when done properly, it works without the kind of relapse you often see in conventional approaches. What I really try to do is keep that balance between surgical precision and whole-body recovery. Clean procedure, safe technique—yes, but also follow it up with tailored herbs, wound care based on prakruti, and diet that actually supports tissue healing. Some folks forget recovery ain’t just external. Honestly every patient’s different. Some don’t wanna hear too much detail, others ask like 15 questions before saying yes—but that’s fine. I walk them through it, show results, and once they feel they're healing naturally (without overload of chems or pain meds), that’s where the trust builds. I think it works because I stay hands-on with both the sharp stuff and the subtle recovery work. It’s kinda surgical Ayurveda in motion.
Achievements:
I am mostly into minor surgicals—removal of lipomas, cysts, fibroadenomas, corns n even stubborn moles. Honestly some of them look simple but they need real care... like real sharp focus during the cut and even more patience after it’s done. I’ve done quite a few now, and each time the whole process—clean excision, minimal scarring, healing with Ayurvedic support—feels like a full-circle thing. That’s where I feel the most grounded in what I do, really.

I am someone who's been living and breathing Ayurveda for over 15 years now. Honestly, I didn’t get into this just for the treatments or protocols—what pulled me in was how deeply it connects with each person, like it actually sees the person, not just the disease. Throughout these years, I’ve worked with people dealing with all kinds of chronic and lifestyle disorders—joint stiffness that won’t go away, digestive issues that keep coming back, skin flareups, breathing problems, things like that. Sometimes they're simple, other times it gets real complicated, and you gotta dig deeper, like really figure out what's underneath all those symptoms. My work leans heavily on the classical side of Ayurveda—herbal combinations, Panchakarma detox, proper Dinacharya routines, but also practical stuff. I mean, we live in different times right? People are stressed, eating weird stuff, not sleeping right. So I try blending in real life advice—diet that fits their routine, lifestyle shifts that are doable, not just textbook theory. What I care most about is treating the actual root, not just patching over the issue. That means spending time, listening proper, watching how the body reacts, and then slowly adjusting till things begin to settle. I’ve had patients come in thinking this is their 'last try' after all else failed—and when they finally feel relief, long-term not just temporary—that’s honestly the most rewarding part for me. I’m also quite focused on preventive care. Like if we can help someone avoid getting sick in the first place, or catch imbalances early on, that’s a win. I try explaining to people what’s going on with their body, not just giving pills. Teaching them how their doshas work, what food triggers what, how emotions mess with digestion, etc. That awareness makes a big diffrence! Ayurveda isn’t fast. But it works when you stay with it. That’s what I tell patients—this is more like building health than fighting illness. You rebuild from inside, slow but strong. That’s what I try to do with everyone who walks in—help them get back to that balance where they feel well again. Whole again.