Dr. Aavesh Qureshi
Experience: | 2 years |
Education: | Madan Mohan Malviya Govt Ayurvedic College, Udaipur |
Academic degree: | Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery |
Area of specialization: | I am mostly working with cases linked to **liver n kidney disorders**, which I feel often get ignored till they’re too bad. I like to catch things early—like fatty liver, sluggish digestion, UTI issues or early signs of nephropathy n manage it through proper Ayurvedic meds, virechan, rasayan, diet shifts, etc. Then **rheumatoid arthritis** is a whole different game. Stiffness, pain, ama stuck in sandhi—those patterns keep showing up. I usually start with deep cleaning (detox, that is), then gradually build up ojas with herbs, oil basti, maybe leech too if it's vata-rakta kinda picture.
Also working in **Ayurvedic cosmetology**, which honestly isn’t just about fairness or acne—there’s so much hormonal stuff behind it. Hairfall, pigmentation, PCOD marks, stress wrinkles—I like digging into the doshic root. And yeah, **sexual wellness** is something I approach pretty quietly but seriously—be it premature ejaculation, low libido, painful periods or fertility prep. Ayurveda gives enough tools, just needs the right matching of herbs + lifestyle + mind reset. |
Achievements: | I am someone who kinda likes going deep into my subjects... maybe that’s why I topped my college in BAMS batch 2023, which honestly surprised me too. Later cracked AIAPGET with AIR 183 in 2025 — that phase taught me how much ayurveda still has to offer if u stay curious. I’ve picked up solid hands-on skills in diagnosis & opd consulting, and patient followup, esp chronic ones. I keep track of new meds & protocols... not just blindly but like, checking if they *actually* work or just hype. |
I am working in Ayurveda since a while now and honestly—every clinic, every patient sorta keeps changing how I look at healing. At **Pranav Ayurveda Clinic & Panchkarma Center** in Udaipur, I was there for around a year... mostly focusing on direct consultations. Like actually sitting with patients, listening (which is half the work tbh), digging into their lifestyle n dosha patterns, and figuring what kinda classical meds or pathya suits them without overcomplicating things. It was a small setup but I got to really *talk* to people, and that made a big diff in my approach. Then at **Aarogyam Ayurveda Hospital & Panchkarma Center**, I spent another year where the vibe was totally diff—more hospital-like, more structured. Here I was managing OPD, kinda busy shifts, and also personally handling **Panchkarma therapies**. I used to assist and sometimes even carry out basti, virechan, nasya... depending on the case and condition. Not all days were smooth, like some patients were skeptical or wanted instant results, but honestly it taught me patience and also how to explain what Ayurveda actually *means* in terms of timelines n healing. There’s always this push to mix modern reporting n Ayurveda and while I try to stay rooted in classical texts, I also check labs or imaging reports when needed, esp for chronic stuff. Still learning, still fumbling sometimes—but the whole process feels alive, yk? Real. I’m not here for quick fixes. I just wanna be part of a process where Ayurveda feels less like a "last resort" and more like the primary choice. That’s kinda where I stand rn.