Dr. Aravind Kumar
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Rajiv Gandhi Ayurveda Medical college |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am an Ayurvedic doctor with a thing for understanding gut stuff—IBS, reflux, gas, like really why the stomach behaves that way?? I find that digestion kinda tells a bigger story about someone’s whole system. I focus a lot on gastrointestinal issues, and try to fix 'em using deep dietary changes, herbs, and routine resetting—not shortcuts or overpromising.. Skin conditions are the next layer I often deal with—eczema, psoriasis, acne—most of which link back to pitta imbalance or poor gut agni anyway, at least that’s what I see most often in my practice.
I'm also working closely with people dealing with diabetes, weight gain, sluggishness, and those metabolic “slow-burn” things that creep up on you. For these, I don’t rush into heavy regimens but try to design daily habits that slowly get the person back into sync. Each case I try to read by prakriti first, then match with the actual symptoms, and see how it unfolds... it doesn't work to push same advice on everyone. Oh and I’m exploring more with autoimmune stuff these days. Many cases respond well if inflammation is brought down naturally, without agitating the body with sharp cleanses too early.
My aim’s not to “treat everything” but to listen carefully, start small, and work steady. I guess what I try for is results that don’t collapse the moment treatment stops. That takes time, patience, and honest tracking. |
Achievements: | I am lucky I got a chance to present my paper on Mandagni—esp in relation to Grahani—at the national seminar by SDM Ayurveda College, Udupi in 2024. That whole experiance was kinda nerve-wracking but also super enriching. I mean, diving into the digestive root causes and having to explain my points in front of seniors, peers, everyone... it really made me think deeper about agni, its role in chronic gut disorders, and how to link it with real-world cases not just textbook stuff!! |
I am a junior Ayurveda doctor just stepping into the clinical side of things after finishing my formal education. honestly I’ve spent years immersed in the classics—reading, memorising, interpreting shlokas, understanding the logic of Tridoshas and all—but now I feel that real learning starts only when you sit in front of a patient. That’s what I want more of now... actual practice, live consultation, and figuring out how to really listen to what a body and mind is trying to say. Right now my main goal is to build my diagnostic skills—especially with tools like Prakriti analysis, Darshan, and Nadi pariksha—and understand how those translate into smart treatment choices. I’m really interested in prakriti-based consultation and herbal formulations, plus the whole detox concept of Panchakarma always fascinated me. It’s one thing to study virechana in a textbook and another thing to see someone actually go through it and feel better. That difference is what I want to explore deeper. I think of myself more like a student-clinician still growing, trying to bridge that weird gap between knowledge and practice. I don’t claim to know everything—far from it—but I do care a lot about doing this right. My approach is always going to be rooted in classical Ayurvedic theory but I’m also open to evolving that understanding as I go. Sometimes what we learn in books needs rethinking in real life scenarios, especially when patients present with overlapping or unclear symptoms. It's not black and white always. I want to become someone who’s capable of guiding patients in a sincere, patient-specific way... and do it ethically. Long term, I’d love to deepen my work into both preventive care and chronic condition management. I'm open to mentorship and team-based settings where I can keep refining how I think and how I treat. At the end of it, I just wanna offer something real—care that’s thoughtful, evidence-respectful, and deeply Ayurvedic.