Dr. Sweta Mer
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | BAMS |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mainly working across different areas where ayurveda really show its strength—sports medicine, GI disorders, diabetic foot ulcer care, wound management, fracture handling, agnikarma and anorectal conditions like piles, fissure and fistula. In sports cases I focus on marma therapy, external applications, healing support that not only reduce pain but also restore movement faster. For GI problems like acidity, IBS, constipation or liver related disorders, I rely on agni deepana, ama pachana and panchkarma whenever required, with diet corrections that make long term shift.
Diabetic foot ulcers and chronic wound care is another area I put lot of effort, because healing here need patience plus consistent monitoring. I use ayurvedic dressings, herbal formulations and agnikarma in selected cases, which often help reduce infection and speed up recovery. With fracture care I combine classical immobilization, bone healing herbs and supportive therapy to regain function safely.
In anorectal disorders piles, fissure, fistula—I see many cases in opd—and each one require slightly different approach. Sometimes kshar karma works best, sometimes internal medicines and lifestyle correction give results, and sometimes both need to go hand in hand. For me agnikarma is also important tool, especially in painful or non-healing conditions.
What connect all these areas is that my approach is not just symptom relief but safe, clear and practical healing pathway. I try to give patient confidence that ayurveda can handle even chronic or complicated cases when planned with precision. |
Achievements: | I am glad when people ask me what I count as achievement, the first thing that come in my mind is patients well being. For me nothing stand higher than seeing someone walk out healthier than they came in, whether its relief from pain, better sleep, or regaining daily routine. Each case is different but when patient say they feel more confident or stable in life, that feel like true reward. I see that as proof that consistent ayurvedic care, right counselling, and small habit changes can really shift health for good. |
I am working with about 3 year experience in ayurvedic medicine and Panchkarma, and right now I am pursuing my masters in surgery (Shalyatantra). Day to day my practice revolve around managing cases like piles, fissure, fistula, GI disorders, skin conditions, also sports medicine and various Panchkarma therapies. For me these are not just routine cases, each patient show different presentation and I try to see what classical ayurveda says along with what practical clinical expereince taught me. In anorectal problems like piles or fissure I use both kshar karma, herbal medications and panchkarma support, depending on the stage and severity. In fistula management too, I focus on safe procedures plus lifestyle guidance because recurrence is a big issue if root cause not corrected. Digestive disorders are another big area—gastritis, IBS type symptoms, chronic constipation, liver related complaints—I find they respond well when agni deepana and ama pachana are done with proper diet correction. Skin disorders like eczema, psoriasis or even recurrent acne also form part of my opd work. Here I mix classical medicines, detox therapies and external applications, but I always explain to patient why internal imbalance has to be addressed, not only surface level. With sports medicine cases—joint sprain, muscle injuries—I apply marma chikitsa with supportive ayurvedic therapies which give good functional recovery. Panchkarma is kind of core tool for me, from Virechana to Basti, I plan it case by case, knowing when detox is needed and when it may weaken patient. Doing masters in Shalyatantra now add another dimension, making me more confident in surgical perspective while still holding onto ayurveda principles. My approach is usually simple—first listen properly, find dosha dushya involvement, then decide whether it is only medicine, Panchkarma or surgical line. I keep aim clear: safe, practical and long term relief. And honestly what keep me going is seeing patient feel better, not just symptom gone but quality of life improved.