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Dr. S.K. Myvizhli
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Dr. S.K. Myvizhli

Dr. S.K. Myvizhli
Assistant Medical Officer-Ayurveda Government of Tamil Nadu.
Doctor information
Experience:
2 years
Education:
Government Ayurveda Medical College and Hospital Nagercoil Tamil Nadu
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am kind of someone who kept going back to learn more... like, I didn’t stop after my degree. I went on to do over 10 advanced certifications—each one gave me something unique to work with in clinic. Now my focus stretches across Panchakarma therapies, Ayurvedic dermatology, cosmetology too (that ones surprisingly deep), eye disorders, kidney care, thyroid issues, women’s health n yeah also integrative yoga n wellness. It’s not always easy to connect all these fields, but somehow it started making sense when I began looking at patients not by their disease but by their prakriti first. When someone comes in with skin rashes or a hormonal crash or even stress-linked hairfall—I don't just give herbs n hope it works... I try to see what their core imbalance is, where the doshas are overacting, whether it's an agni thing or maybe something stuck in dhatus. Sometimes we go through deep shodhan, sometimes it's just slow repair with lifestyle work. I mix classical therapies with modern reasoning—just to make sure care is not only ayurvedically strong but also practical in daily life. This wide base I’ve trained in helps me see patterns faster now. And when ppl stick with the protocol, the shifts can feel subtle at first but really powerful in the long run. Every case teaches something new... still learning honestly.
Achievements:
I am someone who’s always kinda leaned into both learning n sharing—two of my articles got publised in Nalam, a govt health magazine, which felt like a big deal honestly. In college days, I topped in Ashtanga Hridayam n Kaumarabhritya, and yeah got 1st rank in my 3rd prof exam too. My MD thesis? Was deep into Sthoulya—studied Eranda Taila Nitya Virechana with & without Udvartana... super hands-on stuff based on classical Ayurved. Felt good to stay rooted in texts but still test in real practice.

I am an Ayurvedic doctor who’s been practicing for almost 2 years now, and I’d say my core area is Panchakarma and managing long-term or lifestyle-related health issues. I really got into this because I saw how much of modern illness is just ignored until it gets worse—like people living with fatigue or joint pain forever, assuming it’s just part of aging. That didn’t sit right with me. I work with classical Panchakarma therapies a lot—Vaman, Virechan, Basti, Nasya, and yeah even Raktamokshan when needed. I’ve done these across many cases but I don’t just follow a textbook. I look at who the person is, what doshas are messed up, and tailor everything from the therapy to their ahar-vihar. Like it’s not one-size-fits-all, right? Lately I've been seeing many patients with Aamvata, Sandhivata, lower back stuff, or gut issues that just don’t go away with usual meds. My aim is not to just give herbal pain relief but to reverse the underlying pathology—using diet, shodhan, rasayana when appropriate, and helping the body detox n heal at its pace. I’m also into Ayurvedic nutrition a lot. I keep building custom diet regimens for ppl that they can actually follow in real life—not just “don’t eat spicy,” you know? General OPD-wise, I handle stuff like skin allergies, hormonal stuff, acidity, constipation, sleep troubles, seasonal flus etc. I don’t rush consults—I ask a lot of questions, sometimes too many!—but it’s cause every detail gives me a clue about how that person’s system is coping or collapsing. I’ve found that even small tweaks in routine can make a huge shift if done right and consistent. I also use Swasthavritta guidelines a lot. Basic daily dinacharya, ritucharya, and all that makes a diff. And if someone’s open to it, I recommend yoga tools for their case—specially in chronic fatigue, PCOS or anxiety-prone profiles. Anyway, I try to keep it real, gentle and sustainable. My goal isn't to give some miracle result but to nudge ppl toward long-lasting balance. And if I can reduce their dependnce on chem-based meds or help them avoid unnecessary procedures, that’s a win in my book.