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Dr. Monzurul Alom Ansary
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Dr. Monzurul Alom Ansary

Dr. Monzurul Alom Ansary
Private clinic and Hayat Hospital Guwahati
Doctor information
Experience:
4 years
Education:
Govt. Ayurvedic College, Guwahati
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mainly into Ayurvedic management for chronic issues n lifestyle messes that ppl kinda deal with for yrs without real relief. Most ppl come with gut probs—like IBS, gas, acidity, constipation, or more complex stuff like fissure or piles. I dig into diet history a lot there. I use herbal meds that match their prakriti but Panchakarma often helps reset things esp when stuff gets stubborn or keeps flaring. Repro & sexual health also matters big time—specially when hormones go off or stress makes things worse. Same goes with neuro things... like headaches, tingling, sleep probs, sometimes linked with digestion or vata imbalance. I look for that root imbalance, not just treat isolated issues. Dermatology’s another field I handle—eczema, acne, even dull skin & pigmentation. Skin always shows what’s going on inside. Kidney support, hormonal misalignments or anxiety-type symptoms—they all kinda overlap when u look closely. I keep the approach personal. Like not just one oil or formula for everyone—treatment’s gotta fit their nature, their routine, their story actually. That’s how I go about it.
Achievements:
I am working with patients for a little over 2 yrs now—Ayurveda at the center of it all—and honestly it’s taught me more than textbooks ever did. Every person comes with their own layers, and figuring that out’s kinda what drives me. I rely a lot on classical diagnostics, but also just noticing small stuff… tone, sleep issues, old patterns. My treatment’s mostly personalized, never one-size. That deep listening n tailoring care? It's helped a lot in building real trust & solid results, I think.

I am someone who sorta walks between two worlds—Ayurveda and Allopathy—and honestly I don’t see them as opposite sides. For me, they’re just different lenses to look at the same human story. Whether someone walks in with a fever or a chronic skin issue that’s been bugging them for years, I try to not rush in with a prescription. First, I listen. I really sit with their words, the way they describe symptoms, even stuff they almost leave out—it tells you a lot if you’re really paying attention. Ayurvedically, I’ll map out the doshic pattern or see where lifestyle’s gone outta sync. But I’m not hesitant to run bloods or refer an x-ray if something needs ruling out. Some days I might start with Triphala and adjust their ahar-vihar. Other times, a short antibiotic course is what’s safest n most practical. That balance is always shifting, patient to patient. I’m big on patient education. Like, if you’re treating PCOD or acid reflux or migraines again and again and not telling them why it's showing up... then they just keep coming back without real healing. I explain stuff—even if it takes longer—and try to keep it human, not too textbooky. Preventive care is another space I care a lot about. Not just “don’t eat fried food,” but helping people actually understand their bodies, cycles, digestion rhythms, even emotional triggers. That’s when people start healing not just from disease, but from this long-term pattern of imbalance we kinda normalize. Whether it's something as basic as a cold or something deeper like fatigue that’s not explained by any test... I try to meet them where they are, not where a protocol says they should be. For me, the goal is long-term wellness. Doesn’t matter if that starts with a decoction or a diagnosis code—as long as we’re working toward real balance. That’s kinda the core of how I practice. It’s not rigid. It’s alive.