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Dr. Roshani Sinha
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Dr. Roshani Sinha

Dr. Roshani Sinha
Kharadi Pune
Doctor information
Experience:
Education:
Pt. Deen Dayal Upadhyay Memorial Health Sciences
Academic degree:
Doctor of Medicine in Ayurveda
Area of specialization:
I am mainly focused on Panchkarma, PCOD management, and chronic skin issues — though honestly, all three kind of overlap a lot. Like, I’ll see a girl with hormonal acne and turns out it's linked to pcos, gut stuff, even stress. I don’t just give lepas or churnas and send ppl off... I like to go into the root part. With Panchkarma, I prefer to tailor it. I don’t believe in just throwing virechan or basti at everyone. I check the prakriti, timing, their daily routine, how strong or weak their agni is. If it fits, we go ahead — otherwise we prep them slowly. Skin-wise I see lot of recurring eczema, pigmentation patches, acne that flares with food n stress. I use both internal & external protocols — like herbal rasayans, oil applications, diet rewiring. For PCOD, it’s always individual. Periods, weight, mood swings, facial hair — every case has it's own pattern. I try to see that pattern & then decide. That’s how ayurveda works anyway.
Achievements:
I am done with my MD in Ayurveda — 3 intense years that pulled me deeper into the actual depth of our texts n clinical logic. It wasn’t just exams or theory... I worked hands-on, did regular OPD postings, wrote my thesis, saw how ayurveda actually unfolds in real-life pace. I focussed more on diagnosis based study, but also learned how to tweak classics for today's cases. Not easy but totally worth it.

I am an Ayurveda doctor specialised in Roga Nidana evum Vikriti Vigyana — basically, the study of diagnosis and pathology in Ayurveda. For me, this part’s always felt like the real backbone of clinical practice. You can’t treat what you can’t understand properly, right? That’s kinda where I try to go deep — figuring out the why behind the dosha vitiation, how the samprapti is unfolding, and which points are actually reversible. I work a lot with lifestyle disorders — PCOS, obesity, insulin resistance types, people stuck in that loop of fatigue, bloating, missed periods and mood swings. It’s rarely just one system affected, so my approach is to look at the full picture — diet, agni, sleep, mental load, and more than anything habit. Sometimes it’s frustrating for them, I get that, coz the changes I suggest are subtle, not dramatic. But when they stick, it works. Women’s health is another space I keep circling back to — menstrual irregularities, post-pill hormonal weirdness, even early signs of perimenopause. Not always about herbs, sometimes it's just correcting timing of food or teaching how to read their own symptoms. I’m also really into preventive cardiology from an Ayurvedic lens. Heart health is misunderstood – ppl wait for a diagnosis before they act. I try to catch those early cues – cholesterol rise, disturbed sleep, stress load, mild hypertension – and balance that with rasayana support, ahar-vihar tweaks and proper daily routine alignment. Beyond clinic, I write. A lot, actually. I’ve been working on research pieces that try to bridge classical Ayurvedic ideas with today's health patterns. Like how prakriti maps onto modern metabolic profiles, or how doshic expressions show up in urban disorders. Not always easy to get it all published, but it helps me stay clear in my own thinking. All in all, I just wanna keep learning, keep refining my lens. And yeah – try to meet each patient where they are, not where the textbook says they should be.