Dr. Kanishka Sharma
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | National College Of Ayurveda & Hospital |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly into Nadi Parikshan these days, like really tuned into it. This pulse reading isn’t just a technique for me, it kinda feels like a deeper convo with the body—without all the blood reports and scans. Through Nadi I usually catch the root-cause way before the symptoms turn into full-blown trouble... not always, but yeah most of the time it shows the imbalance, if you’re listening right. I also work a lot with patients dealing with joint pain & especially rheumatoid arthritis types—these cases need patience and layering, like you can't just throw herbs and hope for the best.
I go for a combo of internal formulations (mostly classical stuff, nothing flashy) + external therapies like lepam or abhyanga, and yeah diet tweaks make a huge difference too. Pain relief matters but I really wanna give people back their ease of movement—like being able to sit without fear, or sleep without achey stiffness.
Each case I get I try to build slow but solid treatment plans that fit their prakriti, not like a copy-paste thing. Detox when needed, support with herbs, then guide 'em into daily shifts that actually last. That's the path I trust. |
Achievements: | I am kinda proud of what those health camps taught me—working on ground level, with real people in tough spots...that hit diff. I volunteered at several camps run by private ayurveda setups n' each time was like a crash course in fast, practical care—no fancy tools, just skills. Also won few awards for public speaking which yeah surprised me lol but I guess I just talk like how patients think? Not big words, just clear, warm explananations that actually make sense to them. That's important to me. |
I am practicing Ayurveda with a mix of old-school faith & just everyday real-world work. My base is solidly classical—Nadi Parikshan, Prakriti reading, that kind of stuff—but I kinda lean into understanding the person too, not just the dosha map. Most of my hands-on learning came during those health camps I did with private ayurveda setups... didn’t realize then how much they’d shape my way of seeing patients now. You talk to 100+ strangers in a day, you feel the difference between textbook and truth. Pulse diagnosis really stuck with me, it just felt right, like a deeper conversation without saying much. I usually do a mix of Nadi + verbal ques to get a full picture before I start building a plan... and no two plans are same. I’m especially into treating joint pains—rheumatoid arthritis being one of those conditions where ppl come in desperate, tired, frustrated... and I do my best to ease that through both internal meds & local therapies. Sometimes all they need is someone to listen for 5 minutes without interrupting, fr. Mental wellness and sexual health... yeah, I’ve worked with those too, and I try to be really careful there. The trust factor matters a ton. I keep my space super confidential, zero judgment, just care. Also trained in Marma therapy and Viddha Karma—used both for stuck pain conditions or things that don’t respond to oral meds alone. Panchakarma is something I keep close, it’s not about overdoing it but using the right shodhana or shamana depending on what the body actually needs. I honestly believe long-term health isn’t about curing just symptoms. That’s why every patient of mine gets some piece of daily routine advice—nothing dramatic, just real changes. Some ppl don’t even need meds, just a small shift in sleep or food and they feel seen, understood. At the end of the day I wanna keep Ayurveda clean, human, & real. Something you don’t just read in books but feel in life.