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Dr. Ashutosh Sikarwar
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Dr. Ashutosh Sikarwar

Dr. Ashutosh Sikarwar
Current Working as a Online Consultant.
Doctor information
Experience:
1 year
Education:
Government Autonomous Ayurvedic College Gwalior
Academic degree:
Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery
Area of specialization:
ChatGPT said: I am mainly into treating gastric disorders, ano-rectal issues, and joint-related probs, kind of where things go off-track but don't always look serious at first. GI stuff is something I deal with daily—like IBS, hyperacidity, gastritis, GERD, sprue, indigestion or even just that chronic constipation that no one talks about but totally messes with life. Hemorrhoids, fissures, anorexia—not the weight kind but appetite loss—and sluggish bowels too, all that falls under my radar. My focus is to fix digestion in a way that’s not just symptom-based, but actually restores agni balance... u knw like long-term stable digestion. Lot of my plans include herbs, deepan-pachan combos, regulated meal times and sometimes basti if the imbalance is deeper. And when it comes to vata-vyadhi types, like cervical spondylosis or frozen shoulder or that nagging low back pain from sitting weird all day—I work with a structured protocol that’s rooted in Ayurvedic principles but keeps patient lifestyle in mind too. Tennis elbow, lumbar stiffness, sciatica all come under this. Mostly these need internal meds + external therapies, like snehan or lepa, sometimes both. I also take joint pain seriously. Arthritis isn’t just age thing—I've seen younger ppl showing early signs cause of food, stress, posture. My approach mixes anti-inflammatory herbs with detox if ama is involved, also strengthening treatments like Rasayan or proper yoga modifications. Nothing rigid. Just practical care that makes sense for that patient in front of me. And yeah, not everything gets solved fast but with consistent effort ppl really do feel lighter, more mobile, even calmer.
Achievements:
I am not sure if internship counts as an achievement for everyone but honestly it really shaped how i look at real clinical work. I got my hands dirty—well not literally—but yeah, tons of exposure diagnosing patients, planning treatments, and figuring stuff out while coordinating with diff departments. Like working with surgeons, doing ward rounds, or just adjusting meds with help from seniors. Kinda realized then that treating a patient isn’t only about knowing disease. You need that whole picture thing. Sometimes cases were messy, not textbook neat. That’s where I really started trusting evidence-based steps, not just going by guess or habit. Seeing patients actually respond to well-planned therapies made me double down on staying clear and methodical in my approach. I mean, nothing groundbreaking maybe, but for me it marked the start of being more than just a student. I saw what worked and what didn’t, and that made a huge diff in how I built my clinical judgement.

I am an Ayurvedic practitioner who kinda got shaped by two hospitals in Gwalior—one was the Govt Autonomous Ayurvedic Hospital, and other Madhavrao District Hospital. At the govt setup, I had my hands full, literally, working on Ayurvedic meds & trying to actually understand their action rather than just prescribing blindly, u knw? That phase really helped me learn how to align treatments with the prakriti of each patient—sometimes it's vata-heavy, sometimes pitta’s gone wild. I was always tailoring combinations, like Panchakarma plus some internal meds plus food changes that matched their dosha. Madhavrao was diferent. It’s where I worked side-by-side with MDs, radiologists, and other clinicians and learned how modern diagnostics can actually enhance the Ayurvedic process—not replace it, just like sharpen it, u knw. There I saw some seriously complex cases—people w/ multiple issues, confused diagnoses—and it was actually rewarding when we cud sort through all that clutter with a holistic plan. Sometimes I wonder if our job is more like detective work than anything else—because every case is sorta layered. One person comes for skin issue, but deeper it's gut imbalance or mental overload. In my plans, detoxification & rasayana (rejuvenation) are like twin pillars—one cleanses, the other rebuilds. I always try to not just treat the "symptom" but get at the pattern—what they eat, how they sleep (or don’t), stress levels, metabolic quirks, seasonal habits. Like it's all connected. And honestly I think food as per prakriti is like 50% of the healing journey, but ppl ignore it the most. Anyway, my whole vibe is authentic Ayurveda but like grounded in reality. I’m not doing rituals for the sake of tradition—I do what works. And yeah sometimes it takes time, sometimes ppl are impatient... but if they trust the process, balance comes back. That’s why I’m still doing this, cause when someone walks in exhausted and walks out with clarity, u knw you did something that counts.