Dr. Anirudh Deshmukh
Experience: | 14 years |
Education: | Government Ayurvedic College, Nagpur University (2011) |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am Dr Anirudh Deshmukh, working in Ayurveda practice for more than 10 yrs now—most of that time deep in Kayachikitsa work, which is like internal medicine stuff in our tradition. What I mainly deal with is people who come in with things like IBS or weird digestion issues that don’t really go away with regular meds, or hormonal things like PCOS that just keep looping.
Honestly sometimes it’s not just one issue, they walk in with stress, anxiety, or skin flares that’ve been hanging around for years. And it gets tangled, right? One thing leads to other. That’s where I try to use deeper Panchakarma therapies. Not the spa-style stuff but proper clinical detox when it’s really needed. But also not everyone needs the intense treatments—sometimes simple palliative rasayana herbs or gut reset is all they need, just no one told them before.
I work a lot with autoimmune conditions too, like random joint pains or skin eruptions that don't follow typical patterns. I’ve seen how metabolic issues like thyroid, insulin problems, even weight troubles—they often connect back to deeper agni imbalance and ama buildup. Getting those cleared is my focus. And yeah the mental aspect—stress sleep cycles, burnout—is very real and messes with healing, so I do spend time on that angle too.
Approach-wise, I’m not much for rushing. Every case has it's layers, like literally layers. You have to feel it out through the history, pulse, small cues. I don’t try to fit people in ready-made protocol, coz that never really works in long run. If something’s chronic, the plan’s gotta be real personal. That's just how I work. |
Achievements: | I am someone who still gets a bit nervous before big events but yeah I did present my clinical research on Panchakarma for IBS at the International Ayurveda Congress held in Kerala, 2022—that was kinda a turning point for me. It wasn’t easy putting the whole thing together, with data and actual patient follow ups, but worth it. Also published a bunch of articles, like 3 or 4, in journals...mainly around Rasayana therapy, metabolic stuff, chronic fatigue types. One of those got good peer feedback too but I kinda lost track. |
I am Dr Anurag Sharma, done with BAMS and also PGDHCM from IMS BHU, which honestly shaped a lot of how I approach things now in clinic. Working as a physician and also as an anorectal surgeon, I’ve got around 2 to 3 years of solid experience—tho like, every day still teaches me something new. I mainly focus on anorectal care (like piles, fissure, fistula stuff), plus I work with chronic pain cases too. Pain management is something I feel really invested in—seeing someone walk in barely managing and then leave with actual relief, that hits different. I’m not really the fancy talk type, but I try to keep my patients super informed, not just hand out meds n move on. Each case needs a bit of thinking—some need Ksharasutra or minor para surgical stuff, while others are just lifestyle tweaks and herbal meds. I like mixing the Ayurved principles with modern insights when I can, coz both sides got value really. It’s like—knowing when to go gentle and when to be precise. Right now I’m working hard on getting even better with surgical skills, but also want to help people get to me before surgery's the only option. Had few complicated cases where patience n consistency paid off—no shortcuts but yeah, worth it. The whole point for me is to actually listen first, like proper listen. People talk about symptoms but also say what they feel—and that helps in understanding more than any lab report sometimes. I just want to stay grounded in my work, and keep growing while doing what I can to make someone's pain bit less every day.