Dr. Neerja Thakur
Experience: | 1 year |
Education: | Parul Institute of Ayurved |
Academic degree: | Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with people who have long term liver trouble or chronic gut issues that just won’t clear out with usual meds. I deal a lot with fatty liver, sluggish metabolism, hepatitis types and those weird bloating/heaviness things in the abdomen—mostly connected with poor Agni or liver overload. I try to reset that by supporting digestion and slowly detoxing using herbs and proper ahar tweaks. It’s not quick but if done right, you see real shift.
Also, joints. I treat patients with osteoarthritis, Sandhivata, sometimes even old age rheumatoid pains... and usually start with snigdha therapies, medicated tailas, Vatahara choornas, some Panchkarma when it fits. You can’t rush joint work either, it needs pacifying and patience—plus consistency.
Many come in with constipation, loose motions or this vague gastritis they can’t explain well but it’s chronic. In such cases, I always try figuring the root dosha first, sometimes it’s pitta heat, sometimes ama buildup from mandagni. Once that’s clear, I align treatment accordingly—nothing random.
Main goal’s simple: long term ease, not just symptom control. |
Achievements: | I am working as an Assistant Professor and over these past few yrs, I’ve shared many research papers and real-time case work at national seminars, few of which got appreciated (which felt nice honestly). Two of my academic articles are published formally—yes, peer reviewed. I also wrote a book recently, it’s up online now, not super flashy but meaningful to me. These things, they kinda show how much I value keeping Ayurved alive in both classroom and clinic, not just one side of it. |
I am an Ayurvedic vaidya who kinda leans hard into classical shastra—can’t lie, there's just something deeply grounding about sticking to the roots. With almost 5 yrs of clinical practice now, I try to keep things simple but real… personal care, honest meds, and results that actually last. Not bandaid fixes. I mean, isn't that what Ayurveda's always been about? I did my Master’s in Indian Alchemy—Rasa Shastra—and trust me, learning to work with Rasaushadhies changed everything. Those herbo-mineral combos aren’t just powerful—they need respect. You gotta understand the patient’s prakriti, dosha level, what stage the rog (disease) is at, and then decide: this much of this, that much of that. I make my own meds when it’s needed. It’s a slow process. But I wouldn’t rush that part. Precision really matters. Most of my day goes into treating stuff like arthritis, aam-related joint pain, cervical and lumbar spondylitis, plus digestion things—gas, acidity, constipation, sluggish metabolism... that whole category. I’ve also been working with chronic skin troubles—acne, eczema, those red-itchy things that come and go—ugh, they really test patience, right? But they do respond if you go deep, clean the blood (rakta shuddhi), fix the gut, and calm pitta. I rely heavily on Nadi Pariksha, and yeah, take case history proper. No assumptions. Dosha, vikriti, ahar-vihar—all gets noted. Sometimes patients think it's too many questions but hey, the more I know, the better I treat. And it’s not just about giving medicine. I talk a lot about Pathya, Ritucharya—how food, sleep, even daily timing changes things. Ayurveda’s not a treatment system to me—it’s like a lived rhythm. If you're dealing with long-standing stuff that doesn’t go with pills or creams, maybe try a route that's quiet but deep. If that sounds like your thing, I’m here.