Dr. Yash Chauhan
Experience: | |
Education: | Sri Dharmasthala Manjunatheshwara Institute of Ayurveda and Hospital |
Academic degree: | Master of Surgery in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am into Ayurvedic surgical work mostly—lot of my cases revolve around pain care, ano-rectal problems & lifestyle-related things like obesity or stiffness due to long desk jobs (yea thats a thing now). I rely on Agnikarma a lot—like, for frozen shoulder, tennis elbow, or back pain it really works if done right with follow-up diet correction. I also do Ksharasutra procedures—mainly for piles, fistula, fissure patients who wanna avoid major cutting type surgery or had failed op before.
Chronic wounds, esp diabetic foot or stuff that just doesn't heal? I’ve seen Ayurvedic lepas plus proper vrana shodhan-chikitsa help. I don’t mix allopathy meds unless absolutelyyyy needed, but ya—I do believe in using newer dressing materials when needed alongside herbal ones.
For obesity and metabolic stuff, I don’t just throw guggul and hope for the best lol. I go deep into prakriti analysis, medohara combinations, panchakarma where needed, but also focus on changing their food habits longterm. Without that, nothing stays really.
Every case I see gets looked at from multiple angles—not just where it hurts but why it started and why it's still there. Because if that root is left untouched, it’s gonna come back again. |
Achievements: | I am done with my BAMS back in June 2020—scored 70%, which I felt okay about, not perfect but solid enough to push ahead. Then went for MS in Shalya Tantra ’cause I always leaned toward surgery side of Ayurveda... and finished that in April 2025 with 69% agg. That 3-year phase gave me real exposure—like not just book stuff, but how to actually handle surgical & parasurgical stuff using classical tools like Ksharasutra, vrana management, all that. Real grounding came from there. |
I am an Ayurvedic surgeon—still learning a lot tbh—but working full-on past 3 years in clinical practice with both OPD/IPD patients. My main focus is on things like ano-rectal issues (piles, fissure, fistula), chronic non-healing wounds, kidney stones, varicos veins, general surgeries... plus pain-related or muscle-skeletal problems too. Ksharasutra’s been a core tool in my setup—works amazing in fistula cases if used right, with proper post-care. Agnikarma is also something I trust, esp for pain or localized swelling. Most cases that come to me aren’t new—they’ve usually tried meds or surgery somewhere else. That means I gotta go deeper, check why healing got stuck or recurrences happening. I spend a lot of time just assessing—prakriti, agni, dosha pattern, patient habits, even small stuff like sleeping postures or food gaps can change outcomes. Not everything needs surgery—sometimes just mild parasurgical help & correction in dinacharya can shift pain or healing speed. For every case, I try to build a plan that's 100% patient-centered. Not in some theoretical way, but actually tuned to their body & daily life. Whether it’s herbal lepa for wounds or a Basti course for post-operative pain, I tweak as needed mid-process if I see the body reacting diff. No set template. Also I keep sharing basic info with patients on why things are happening to them... not just what to do. Education is part of the healing, I feel. Plus I'm always exploring ways to make Ayurveda and surgery talk to each other better—like bringing evidence-based tweaks to traditional treatments without diluting the core values. Feels like that’s where long-term solutions live. Not everything is neat or fast, but if it leads to deeper relief or prevents a reoccurence—even one—I feel that’s real progress.