Ask Ayurveda

FREE! Ask an Ayurvedic Doctor — 24/7
Connect with Ayurvedic doctors 24/7. Ask anything, get expert help today.

Our Team of Ayurvedic Experts — page 69

Convenient search allows you to find good specialists based on the following parameters: doctor’s rating, work experience, patient reviews, specialization, academic degree, and online presence.

On the page, you can get an individual consultation with a doctor. Many doctors provide online consultations in a consilium format (questions and answers from multiple doctors).


Ayurvedic doctors

785
Consultations:
Dr. Arpita Bhaskar
5
181
1 reviews
I am an Ayurvedia practioner who’s kinda always drawn to healing things the natural way... herbs, lifestyle shifts, that deeper root-cause thing—ya that’s where I feel connected. I’ve done my graduation in BAMS from Government Ayurveda College, Jabalpur, MP. Those years were tough and full of grind but it gave me this solid, like really solid, foundation in classical Ayurvedic sciences. And yeah, not just bookish... real world side of it too. Now my focus honestly is to keep learning while helping real people—who come in with digestion problems or hormonal mess or mental stress or even chronic fatigue they can’t explain. Every case is diff, even if symptoms look same outside. That part makes me stop and look closer—what is vitiated? What system is overworking or under? My mind instantly shifts into that mode, trying to trace the imbalance and realign it without suppressin anything. Right now I’m still early in the field, but every patient, every prakriti I see adds a layer to how I understand dis-ease. I don’t rush, mostly just try to listen first... ppl are usually surprised when you sit n listen without cutting them off mid sentence. I don’t claim to fix everything but I do keep that long-term goal in mind—healing that lasts beyond just medicine course. My interest stays rooted in ahar, vihar, and herbal chikitsa. Working with traditional herbs in customized way, not some one-size-fits-all type. I feel Ayurveda demands patience, and yeah, I’m okay with that. Cuz body speaks when we slow down. And that’s what I try to bring in my work—space to slow down, observe, correct gently. Of course I mess up sometimes or miss smth small.. but I reflect and adjust. It’s all part of the practice. I wanna grow steady, keep that fire for real healing alive. This path’s not loud, but it’s deep. And I’m here for it.
Read reviews
Dr. Harshita Hyati
5
30,143
4 reviews
I am someone who kinda learned the ropes through real hands-on stuff more than just classroom theory. During my internship at Govt. District Hospital, Gadag, I rotated thru departments like casualty, gen. medicine, surgery, and OB-GYN — and that was intense but honestly super helpful. I got to see patients with both acute flare-ups n long-term problems, and learned to act quick, think faster. The exposure was wide but also deep, like I actually *did* things under solid guidance, not just observe. Later, I worked as a duty doc at AYUSH Hospital in Gadag Betgeri. There I really started applying the Ayurvedic side of things in actual OPD and IPD practice. Merging textbook theory with patient behaviour, feedback, pulse reading—ya all that real-time stuff that you don’t catch just in books. I also finished a 366-day internship at DGM Ayurvedic Medical College & Hospital. And I remember being involved in diagnosis, evals, making treatment plans (under supervision ofc), and it really forced me to connect Ayurvedic principles with each person’s condition, not just follow blanket protocols. What stuck with me is how important it is to balance textbook knowledge with situational judgment. Working across multiple settings made me sharper at reading subtle symptoms, managing cases across different systems, and adapting fast. I’ve become more confident in handling both simple n complex presentations, especially in multi-disciplinary environments. I still carry forward that same curiosity n discipline into my current Ayurvedic practice—trying to stay rooted in classical wisdom but also being fully aware of practical modern healthcare needs.
Read reviews
Dr. S.N Yadav
9,535
0 reviews
I am working mainly on pain cases, lot of them come with knee joint issues, sciatica or lumbar back pain and sometimes the problems look simple but they disturb whole daily life.. people cant sit properly or sleep or even walk freely. I deal with conditions like spondylitis, frozen shoulder, tennis elbow, golfer elbow, heel pain etc and each one is different but somehow connected to how body movement goes out of balance. My focus is not only on just reducing pain with quick relief measures but to also see the root pattern, whether posture, life style or old injury is behind it. Sometimes I feel treatment take longer than expected, but still patient need to see progress step by step. In my practice I use Ayurvedic principles and combine them with simple practical advice that patients can really follow. For ex.. in knee pain its not only oil massage or medicines, but also changes in diet, daily walking pattern, or even stress levels that matter. With sciatica or lumbar spine pain, people often dont realise how much sitting habit or wrong chair choice makes it worse. Helping them see that and slowly modify is part of healing too. I like to explain things in plain way, not heavy medical jargons, so patients feel comfortable and know what is happening in their body. Sometimes I see frustration in them, like frozen shoulder makes even combing hair tough, and they feel stuck. When they understand treatment is step wise, they cooperate more. Ayurveda give us many tools like herbal formulations, panchakarma, external therapies, and I adapt them as per condition and patient’s strength. Heel pain for example may respond better with local therapies while spondylitis need deeper detox and strengthening. I keep learning through each case, every pain story is little unique. Maybe I don’t claim miracle cure but I do believe in steady improvement and sustainable relief. My goal is always that patient not only walk out with less pain but also know how to prevent it again, that’s where real care lie.
Read reviews
Dr. Praveen Kumar
423
0 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic practitioner who kinda learned the craft the long, everyday way—through patient after patient, sitting in clinics, working under experienced hands, getting my hands dirty with real-life cases and not just textbook patterns. For 8 months I served as a Junior Consultant at a well-known Ayurvedic hospital, where I got to actually manage cases—not just watch from a distance, but do things, try things (under supervision of course). That’s where a lot of my early confidence came from. Then for 2 years, I closely worked with a senior Ayurveda physician in private practice—and honestly that was a different kind of learning altogether. You pick up the art of diagnosis by observing—not just Nadi and Agni but the way someone talks about their symptoms, what they’re *not* saying, how their skin looks, eyes move, etc. Those details stay with you. That phase taught me how to *see* the patient, not just treat the disease. Most of the cases I handled were chronic or recurring—things like acidity, IBS, asthma, PCOS, knee pain, even weird fatigue cases where all reports show "normal" but the person just doesn’t *feel* normal. I used classical Ayurvedic meds, Panchakarma where needed, and yeah a lot of lifestyle counseling too. Because honestly, without changing food habits, routines, stress patterns... most conditions just keep looping back. My focus is always on figuring out the root imbalance—not just what’s bothering someone today but what’s *feeding* the issue over time. I try to make patients understand Ayurveda not in some heavy theory way, but like—“ok, this is how your body reacts when you skip meals or oversleep or push through burnout.” That’s where they start changing things on their own, and that’s when recovery actually sticks. I don’t chase fancy outcomes. I just wanna help people feel better in a way that *lasts*. That’s the kind of care I aim for—simple, grounded, and totally personalized.
Read reviews
Dr. Sarfaraj Mujawar
5
133
1 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic consultant with experience working in different setups, each teaching me something new about patient care. I worked for 1 year at Sanjeevini Hospital in Gokak, where I handled OPD consultations, follow-ups, and guided patients through both acute and chronic conditions. It was a busy environment, but it sharpened my ability to make quick yet accurate decisions while keeping treatments rooted in classical Ayurveda. After that, I spent 6 months at Vinayak Hospital in Gottigere, Bengaluru – there the case variety was huge, from lifestyle disorders and joint pain to skin and digestive issues. It helped me adapt treatments to very different patient needs, often combining Panchakarma, diet changes, and herbal medicines into practical plans. Now I’m running my own clinic in Hubballi, Karnataka. Here, I have more freedom to design fully personalized treatment plans and spend extra time understanding a patient’s prakruti, lifestyle, and health history before deciding on the line of management. My approach blends Ayurvedic diagnosis, safe herbal formulations, and where needed, detox or rejuvenation therapies. I focus a lot on patient education too – cause a treatment works best when the person understands why they’re following it. Whether it’s helping someone recover from a stubborn digestive issue, manage chronic joint pain, or improve overall wellness, my goal is always to address the root cause, not just the symptoms. Running my own practice also means building trust with patients and seeing their progress over time, which is the most rewarding part of the work for me.
Read reviews
Dr. Nisha Parveen
1,623
0 reviews
I am Dr. Nisha Parveen, an Ayurveda practitioner who’s honestly just really into helping people feel balanced again. Not in a vague way—I mean actual, noticeable, inside-out balance. I work with patients of all ages but it’s never a one-size-fits-all kinda deal. Whether someone’s struggling with digestion that just won’t settle, skin flares, joint stiffness that drags on, or stress that’s quietly breaking them down… I always try to pause first and ask, what’s really going on underneath? I follow classical Ayurvedic texts (can’t really skip that if you're serious about the science), but I'm not stuck in the past either. Health today is messy—odd sleep habits, processed food, emotional burnout—and I like making treatment plans that actually *fit* into all that. Herbs, Panchakarma, diet corrections, subtle routine nudges—they all play a part. Sometimes it's just changing a tiny morning thing that makes the most difference... and I learn that again with each patient. One of the most fulfilling areas for me has been working with women—especially around hormonal shifts, pregnancy care, even fatigue that gets dismissed way too often. I focus a lot on identifying the root cause—prakriti, agni, ama, seasonal triggers, you name it—and once we see that clearly, the healing just gets smoother. Garbhasanskar is a big part of my work too. Guiding mothers through that journey, using Ayurvedic tools to nurture not just the body but mind and heart—that’s something that feels really close to my core. I don’t promise overnight results. What I *do* promise is that I’ll actually listen, think carefully, and stay with the process. Health isn’t a quick fix and I kinda think people know that deep down. I just try to hold space for it—to offer care that’s steady, rooted in real Ayurvedic logic, but also aware of modern-day chaos. That’s really what my practice is about.
Read reviews
Dr. Apeksha Sahare
913
0 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic Consultant mostly working with women who're struggling with PCOD, irregular periods, infertility and honestly... all the frustrating hormonal stuff no one really talks about enough. Over the years, I’ve kinda made it my thing to help them figure out what’s really going on underneath — not just masking the symptoms but digging into whether it’s stress, sluggish digestion, or just the body being outta sync hormonally. My approach is all about personalized Ayurvedic care, and I don’t mean a one-size-fits-all kit. I use classical Ayurvedic principles (yep, the stuff in the ancient texts) but I also try to make sense of modern diagnostics too. You know, like understanding scan results or hormonal lab values so I can bridge both sides and guide better. Treatments usually involve herbal formulations, Panchakarma (when needed), and daily habit tweaks. Some call it lifestyle modification but I try to keep it real and do-able. Most of the patients I see come in either totally exhausted from trying synthetic hormone therapies or completely confused about their cycle patterns. And I get it. I've worked with women who've missed periods for months, dealt with painful ovulation, or couldn’t conceive despite “everything looking normal” in reports. With steady care, herbs, body detox, and better eating rhythms — many of them got their cycle back on track. Some even conceived naturally, no IVF, no hormonal overload. I also see a lot of skin issues — not just acne but things like psoriasis, urticaria, recurring fungal patches, eczema. In most cases, it’s not just about slapping on a cream. I look at internal detox, blood purification, gut balancing, and the right external herbal application. When the inside clears up, the outside often does too. Sometimes slow, but the relief lasts longer. My goal? Hmm.. I think it’s to make Ayurveda feel approachable, practical, and not like some mystic ritual. Healing should feel grounded. If you’re dealing with chronic skin problems or can’t figure out what your cycle wants from you anymore, maybe we can talk it through and build something that actually works. Not promising miracles, but I do believe in the body’s ability to reset — with the right kind of nudge.
Read reviews
Dr. Soorya Gopakumar
255
0 reviews
I am working mostly in the space of Stree Roga—Ayurveda's branch for women’s health. Not just treating problems but really figuring out why things go off-balance. Whether it’s PCOS or delayed periods or those weird mid-cycle cramps that ppl often ignore... I try to go deep into the root cause. Most of the women I see are either struggling with something hormonal, or something emotional that reflects through hormones—it’s all connected. My job is to untangle that. I treat PCOS (Artava Kshaya), painful or irregular periods, infertility (Vandhyatva), Shweta pradara (that’s white discharge) and even support women during menopause when symptoms get confusing and... just messy. I use a combo of things—classical herbal meds, Panchakarma when needed, some detox or snehana if toxins are stuck... and I really stress on lifestyle. Because you can’t just do Virechana and go back to 3am scrolling and fried snacks 🙃 One thing I do that not many docs spend enough time on is prevention. Like, why wait until you're infertile or your cycles totally vanish to seek help? I teach women how to align daily routines (Dinacharya), seasonal shifts (Ritucharya), mental practices, and all that. It sounds small, but these things keep cycles smooth, digestion light, and mood more... stable? Also, I explain everything. I need my patients to understand what’s happening in their body. Not just follow instructions blindly—bc when they get it, they actually stay consistent. Some girls ask a lot of questions, some are quiet but anxious... doesn’t matter. I sit and go over what this dosha is doing or what exactly is blocking ovulation or how stress is tied to gut problems, etc. Clarity empowers. For me, the goal is not short term fixes or suppressing symptoms. I want real healing—reversal where possible, relief where not, and a solid baseline of well-being that lasts through years. Each woman I work with is different. No copy-paste protocols here. I plan treatments around prakriti, vikriti, samprapti—plus, honestly, a bit of instinct that comes with seeing many patterns repeat over time. Whether it’s a young girl with severe PMS or a 45 yr old navigating early menopause—I try to show up with empathy, patience, and a treatment that fits. And that makes all the diff.
Read reviews
Dr. Atheena Krishna.a.b
738
0 reviews
I am an Ayurvedic doctor mostly working with ppl dealing with lifestyle mess—stress, bloating, poor sleep, weird cycles, random fatigue... that kinda stuff. I focus on making healing a bit more grounded and doable, not just idealistic textbook talk. Like, I won’t throw 20 herbs at someone on day one. I go by what their prakriti shows, what their digestion’s doing, how they’re eating, waking, even worrying. Ayurveda gives clues if you just listen right—agni, dosha shifts, all of it. I see a lot of young folks with gut stuff—constipation, acidity, or just no clarity about their digestion. I usually correct that through ahara-vihara adjustments and plain, effective herbs (nothing crazy rare). In dermatology and hair stuff, I get a mix—acne with pigment left behind, hairfall that’s “suddenly worse,” or that greasy+itchy dandruff phase. I go with a combo of internal meds, simple scalp routines, maybe nasya or lepa if needed, depending on how deep things are stuck. Also, women's health is a big part of my work—period delays, PMS, PCOD/PCOS, perimenopause symptoms... I’ve worked with plenty of cases where cycle’s erratic or ovulation needs regulation, or even couples facing fertility confusion. I don’t promise overnight fixes but yes—Ayurveda gives us tools for uterine cleansing, hormone balance, even mental reset (which honestly is huge in these cases). Honestly I just try to help ppl make sense of what their body’s trying to say—and offer something that’ll stick, not just suppress it for now. Healing has to make sense in their real-life routine or it just won’t work long term.
Read reviews
Dr. Kajal Sharma
131
0 reviews
I am someone who really got into women’s health right from the early days of my practice. I had one year of hands-on work at an obstetrics and gynecology hospital—where things were non-stop, fast-paced and honestly kinda overwhelming at times, but I learned a lot. Managing high-risk cases, routine ANC, post-natal care... all of that kinda gave me a real look at what patients go through, not just medically but emotionally too. Then after that phase, I moved into Ayurvedic Sewa Samhiti for another year. It was a very different pace but just as demanding in its own way. There I really started to connect deeper with patients, seeing how chronic issues responded to lifestyle corrections and herbs when done consistently. It was less about rush and more about balance. That year helped me appreciate prakriti-based treatment more than before. After that, I also spent about 6 months in an IVF centre. Fertility is delicate, and the cases there needed so much empathy along with protocol-based care. While I wasn’t directly handling all procedures, I did get involved with counseling, prepping, and supporting the treatments—plus learning how Ayurvedic support like uttarbasti or rasayan therapy could help in conjunction. Honestly, that combo approach stuck with me. Now when I see patients, I try to not just look at what disease they have but also how they live and feel. That's where diagnosis actually begins, no? I like to listen carefully—sometimes people don’t say things directly, but you notice it in their energy, their words, or even what they avoid telling you. I don’t rush treatment, and I don’t believe in one-size-fits-all either. What worked for someone might not work at all for the next. That's why I focus lot on understanding their history, diet, sleep, mental state—all of it counts. For me, every patient’s journey is slightly different and honestly, that’s what keeps this field meaningful. Not just curing, but understanding. Sometimes feels like I learn as much from patients as they do from me. I just try to keep that curiosity going.
Read reviews


Latest reviews

John
9 hours ago
Thank you so much! Your detailed advice is exactly what I needed. Feeling much more confident moving forward with your plan. 🙌
Thank you so much! Your detailed advice is exactly what I needed. Feeling much more confident moving forward with your plan. 🙌

FAQ