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Dr. Ragul R.R.
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Dr. Ragul R.R.

Dr. Ragul R.R.
Krishna Ayurvedic clinic, Anaikatti.
Doctor information
Experience:
3 years
Education:
Ayurveda College & Hospital, Coimbatore
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
I am mostly working on pain-related stuff, like real pain—not just minor stiffness or sprains but that nagging kind that sticks for months or even years. I see a lot of cases like cervical spondylosis, lumbar disc issues, sciatica that kind of hits into daily life—can’t sit straight, can’t walk long, things like that. I also deal with spine conditions where movement becomes super limited, plus some tricky respiratory disorders like bronchial asthma or chronic COPD that ppl think they just have to live with forever. What I try to do is not just mask symptoms. I mean, if someone’s wheezing or their back’s stuck, of course you want immediate relief—but the goal is bigger. I look into what actually triggered it—wrong posture? diet? kapha overload? old vata imbalance left untreated? Once that makes sense, I build a plan that mixes herbs, proper Panchakarma (mainly Basti, Nasya—sometimes both), and lifestyle stuff that’s doable for them. I’m also working with non-healing wounds & ulcers too. Some of those chronic ones need more than just bandaging or creams. You gotta clean them from inside out—and that’s where Ayurveda shows results, slowly but steadily. Each person’s prakriti and stage of roga matters a lot. I don’t do copy-paste plans. If one guy responds well to dashamoola, the other might need rasnasaptaka instead—depends. My goal is, like, not just “no pain” but helping ppl feel useful again—getting them walking again, or breathing without that fear that another attack’s coming any moment.
Achievements:
I am honestly not too big on fancy titles or numbers—like yeah, those matter—but to me the real wins are the patients who come back smiling, saying their pain’s gone or sleep’s better or digestion feels normal after weeks or years of struggle. That’s where the real achievement lies I think. Every time someone trusts me enough to follow the Ayurvedic path and then actually feels better—that's what keeps me goin.

I am practicing Ayurveda with 3 years of real clinical exposure, not just theory but hands-on stuff, right from busy OPDs to IPD setups where you really get to see how patients respond over days—not hours. Working with both short-term and chronic conditions has actually helped me see patterns that don’t always show up in a textbook. Whether it’s a skin allergy, joint swelling, stubborn digestion issues, or stress-related symptoms that shift every week—I'm constantly adjusting, learning, re-thinking protocols when needed. I try to stay close to the core of Ayurveda—by that I mean, applying Shodhana and Shamana wisely, not randomly. Detox is powerful, sure, but if someone’s not ready for Vamana or Basti, I won't push it. I usually begin by understanding the person first—their Prakriti, their daily rhythm, food habits, sleep pattern, and emotional load too (yeah, that part matters more than people think). Then we go from there. I mix classical formulations with updated guidance—diet plans that are simple, sustainable. No extreme stuff unless it’s needed. At the IPD level, I’ve handled structured Panchakarma protocols, sometimes multi-day sequences. That gave me a sense of how deep detox works—not just symptom relief but proper cellular reset kind of effect. And when I work with other health experts (nutritionists, yoga trainers, modern docs), I try to keep my Ayurvedic inputs clear, evidence-informed and practical. Like, I won’t just say “Take this lehyam,” without explaining why it’s needed or what to expect from it. Honestly, I still read a lot, attend case discussions, review Charak or Ashtanga verses just to make sure I’m not drifting too far from the roots. At the same time, I adapt when modern patient needs demand flexibility. Most people don’t have time for elaborate rituals, so I give them what they can follow. And yeah—explaining things in a simple way? Super important. If a patient doesn’t get what we’re doing, the healing just doesn’t sink in right.