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Dr. Ajay Parmar
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Dr. Ajay Parmar

Dr. Ajay Parmar
Kastabhanjan Dev Clinic
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Gujarat Ayurved University
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mainly working with skin conditions and ano-rectal issues like piles (arsha), fissures (parikartika) and related things that people often ignore till it’s too late. Honestly, skin stuff and rectal complaints both affect quality of life in ways most don’t even say out loud. That’s what pulled me into this area in the first place—I mean it’s more than just itching or pain, right? I try to look deeper into the root imbalance behind what’s showing up outside. Is it pitta gone wild? Or some stubborn ama buildup... or maybe bad food habits silently messin up agni for years. Depends. I build every plan from scratch—diet, herbs, procedures like kshar karma when needed. No one-size-fits-all here, never works that way. I’m pretty cautious about using the right herbal formulations—keeping them aligned with the prakriti and current symptoms, not just labels. What I tell my patients often? Healing takes time. Like for real. Especially chronic things like eczema or reccuring fissures. I try to explain the why behind every change I suggest, whether it’s giving up that late-night snack or using some tailam daily. Education matters—if they get why it’s needed, they actually follow through. Mostly I focus on sustainable change, not quick patch-ups. No suppressing. We work with the body, not against it.
Achievements:
I am a BAMS graduate—yeah, Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine & Surgery—which kinda became the real start of how I look at health, not just disease. It wasn’t easy lol, lots of late nights trying to make sense of old Sanskrit verses mixed with modern stuff. But honestly, it gave me a solid base in Ayurvedic diagnosis, chikitsa, and that deep-rooted philosophy that healing’s more than just pills. I still go back to my notes now n then, esp. when I get a puzzling case!!

I am still in the early stages of my Ayurvedic journey—just about 6 months in, but honestly these few months have been super eye-opening. I got the chance to handle a bunch of different patient cases under seniors who really knew their stuff. That daily exposure slowly sharpened my clinical judgement, especially in applying classical Ayurvedic concepts to real life conditions, not just textbooks. I try not to just give symptom-based relief, that feels incomplete to me... my aim’s always been to figure out what’s causing the imbalance in the first place, like why this person, this time? I usually rely on personalized treatment plans. Like, depending on the prakriti, agni, ama-level and all that. I also keep checking their lifestyle, food habits and stress patterns—makes a huge difference. Dinacharya and Ritucharya really help set a strong base. I’m kind of drawn to preventive care a lot, maybe 'cause it's empowering, idk... but I find that when people understand their body better, they heal better too. Another thing I care a lot about is making sure my patients feel heard and safe. Whether someone has acidity, PCOS, or is just not sleeping well, I want them to trust that I’m with them in that healing space—not just dishing out dosages and leaving. I try to keep communication open, even if that means repeating the basics again n again... Honestly, I don’t claim to know everything. Still learning a lot. I keep reading, attending lectures or case-discussions when I can. And yeah, every case still kinda challenges me, which I like. I feel like each new patient adds something to my own growth too. At this point in my practice, what matters most to me is offering care that’s honest, rooted in Ayurvedic principles, and actually helpful without being overwhelming. Whether it’s a skin rash or chronic fatigue, I look for the subtle cues and try to guide people back to balance—gently, patiently, sustainably.