Dr. Gurpreet Singh
Experience: | 3 years |
Education: | Shivalik Institute of Ayurved and Research |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly focused on root-cause based Ayurvedic care, that’s kinda been my compass from the beginning. I don’t really like to just patch up symptoms, esp. in long-term issues. My practice revolves around few core areas—Women’s Health, gut & digestive disorders, lifestyle/metabolic troubles like PCOS, diabetes, obesity, and then musculoskeletal pain—things like joint stiffness, back pain, vata-related wear-n-tear.
Women’s health is a huge part of my work. From irregular periods to PCOD, menopausal symptoms or just chronic fatigue that no one takes seriously—I dig into the hormonal + digestive link and try to balance the system step by step. With gut issues, it’s almost always more than just digestion—emotions, diet mistakes, ama buildup... the whole package needs untangling.
Same with lifestyle disorders—some ppl come with just ‘weight gain’, but under it there’s thyroid shifts, bad sleep, stress overload. I use a mix of herbal meds, Rasayana therapy, custom diet changes & sometimes Panchakarma if the body needs that deeper push. Joint pain cases I take slow, esp. if there's degeneration involved, like in osteoarthritis or lumbar spondylosis.
I don’t follow a one-size fits thing...I look at Prakriti, current imbalance, diet pattern, work stress even small triggers. That’s where most of the clarity comes from, tbh. And I explain stuff in a way patients actually get—nothing too Sanskrit-heavy unless they ask! |
Achievements: | I am usually knee-deep in cases that need extra patience n deeper insight—like the ones where symptoms just keep circling back unless u really work on root stuff. One thing I'm kinda proud of is managing some tricky long-term conditions—like PCOD, psoriasis, arthritis flares, stubborn digestion issues—by sticking to classical Ayurvedic plans. Not always easy, I’ll admit... but yeah, when done right, those protocols do bring strong, lasting changes. Some took weeks, others longer. but each one taught me to trust the process, not rush it. |
I am a dedicated Ayurvedic physican who's been walking the line between classical Ayurveda and modern clinical logic—trying to make both meet where real people actually live. I work a lot with chronic cases, things that usually don't just go away with one round of meds or some basic therapy. Stuff like long-standing gut issues, hormonal shifts, women’s cycle imbalances, metabolic conditions, and yeah, all those lifestyle-linked probs that keep showing up again n again. My base is strongly rooted in Ayurvedic texts—Charak, Ashtang, all that—but I don’t just quote it blindly. What I try to do is apply it to today’s health struggles using an evidence-supported mindset. It’s not about ancient vs. modern for me... it's about integration. My approach usually starts with proper Prakriti assessment, clinical observation, and simple conversation that gives real insights into someone’s body-state n habits. People often ignore that—just talking well? It actually reveals the whole picture sometimes. I tend to work closely with women dealing with menstrual issues, PCOS, acne, or unexplained fatigue, where digestion, stress, and lifestyle all blend into a complex mess. I also focus on skin conditions—like eczema, psoriasis, even chronic urticaria—that flare unpredictably. Gut disorders like IBS or acid peptic issues? they're kind of my thing too, especially when modern meds didn’t help much. And yes, I always come back to diet, because without fixing ahar, honestly, we can’t expect things to shift. My treatment plans combine classical formulations, internal herbal meds, Rasayana when needed, plus tailored changes in routine n food. Sometimes I’ll bring in Panchakarma if it fits, but only when the patient's ready and the condition warrants it. I'm not into giving heavy detox just because it sounds cool. All of this—whatever I do—is guided by one thing: giving care that’s personal, rooted, and not rushed. Every patient deserves time and clarity. And if they're healing slow? That’s still healing.