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Allergic Disorders
Question #21546
248 days ago
884

Atopic dermatitis - #21546

Preeti

I have atopic dermatitis since I was 18 years...it cause dryness in my upper o Body including thorat,blocked and dry nose ,face dryness and acne...dandruff in head..loking for permanent or long term solution to this

Age: 38
Chronic illnesses: Atopic dermatitis
PAID
Question is closed

Doctor-recommended remedies for this condition

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Doctors' responses

Avoid oily spicy food… Excess sun exposure and dust… Tab Purim 2tab twice daily before food Haridrakhand 15gm at empty stomach… Oint Epderm for external use

85 answered questions
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Accepted response

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Avoid sour, fermented and processed food. Increase intake of raw vegetables and fruits. Cutis oil for local application. Panchtikta ghrut guggul 3-0-3 Tab.Protekt 2-0-2

3192 answered questions
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Dr. Trupti
As a psychological counselor specializing in the well-being of women and children, I am committed to supporting my patients through a holistic and compassionate approach. My work focuses on addressing emotional, psychological, and physical health concerns by integrating counseling, nutrition guidance, and yoga into the therapeutic process. I strongly believe that mental health and physical well-being are closely connected, and sustainable healing is achieved through consistent, mindful lifestyle changes. I work closely with women and children facing a variety of psychological challenges such as stress, anxiety, emotional imbalances, and behavioral issues. Through individualized counseling sessions, I aim to create a safe, supportive, and non-judgmental space where my patients can express themselves openly and work toward emotional resilience. I combine evidence-based psychological techniques with practical strategies that include balanced nutrition and therapeutic yoga practices tailored to each patient’s unique needs and abilities. My approach is centered on empowering patients to take charge of their mental and physical health by making gradual yet impactful adjustments to their daily routines. By focusing on lifestyle modifications — such as mindful eating, stress management, body awareness, and improved emotional regulation — I help my patients build healthier habits that contribute to long-term well-being. Whether guiding a child through emotional difficulties, supporting a woman through life’s transitions, or promoting holistic health through diet and yoga, my goal is to make each patient’s journey meaningful and effective. I am passionate about promoting mental health, self-care, and sustainable wellness practices, ensuring that every individual I work with receives thoughtful and personalized care.
248 days ago

Hi

Allergens like dust,pollen,hair pets Stress Temperature Certain foods in some cases eggs, dairy, nuts etc Shampoo soap detergent avoid direct contact Avoid spicy sour salty oily junk food Milk with fruits ,juice ,milkshake ,fired ,fermented ,bakery food Add easy to digest ,cooked food ,rice ,boiled vegetables,moong dal Drink plenty of water Visit panchkrm centre for shodhna karm like raktmokshn Mahamanjishtadi kwath 15ml twice with water mahatiktak ghrut for local application

115 answered questions
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Avoid spicy food, fermented foods, maida, fried food, bekary food, potato, brinjal, green peas, turdal dal, more intake of tea or coffee,fish nonveg if your taking Take more water, leafy green Veggies, sprout more salad Do body massage with dineshavaliyadi taila Do head massage with durdurapatradi taila on alternate days and do head bath Take tab arogyavardini vati 1tid after food Tab rasamanikya 1 tid after food Aragwadadi kashya 15 ml bd If possible visit the nearby panchakarma centre and take one course of Virechana karma

432 answered questions
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Haridhdhrakhand churan 1tsp twice daily before food with milk Mahamanjistadi kadha 10ml twice daily after food with water Avipattikar tablet 1-0-1 Karanj oil for local application on affected area twice daily Take bath with neem leaves decoction in water.

3522 answered questions
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Neemghan vati- Kaishore guggulu- 1 tablet twice daily after food with water Mahamanjistha aristha- Khadira aristha- 2 teaspoon each with equal quantity of water twice daily after food Avoid spicy, sour processed food

3642 answered questions
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1.Guluchyadi ks tab 2-2-2 before food 2.Manjishtadi ks tab 2-0-2 after food 3.Vilwadi gulika 1-0-1after food 4.Manibadragulam¾tsp+ Avipathy churnam ½tsp at bedtime followed by warm water 5.Mahatikthakam lepam for ext.application (over dry areas)

You can do kashaya dharas with Kashaya vasthi(medicated enema) from a nearby Ayurvedic treatment center.

496 answered questions
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1)Ksheerabala taila 101 avarti 2 drops in each nostril every day morning after brushing 2)Cap. Mahatikthaka ghritha 2 capsules early morning empty stomach

Doing Snehapana at nearby panchakarma hospital give you permanent solution.
Avoid junk food. Add more Ghee and milk to the diet

20 answered questions
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Dr. Prasad Pentakota
I am Dr. P. Prasad, and I have accumulated over 20 years of experience working across multiple medical specialties, including General Medicine, Neurology, Dermatology, and Cardiology. Throughout my career, I have had the opportunity to diagnose and manage a wide range of health conditions, helping patients navigate both acute and chronic medical challenges. My exposure to these diverse fields has given me a comprehensive understanding of the human body and its interconnected systems. Whether it is managing general medical conditions, neurological disorders, skin diseases, or heart-related issues, I approach every case with careful attention to detail and evidence-based practices. I believe in providing accurate diagnosis, patient education, and treatment that is both effective and tailored to the individual’s specific needs. I place great emphasis on patient-centered care, where listening, understanding, and clear communication play a vital role. Over the years, I have seen how combining clinical knowledge with empathy can significantly improve treatment outcomes and patient satisfaction. With two decades of continuous learning and hands-on experience, I am committed to staying updated with the latest medical advancements and integrating them into my daily practice. My goal has always been to deliver high-quality, ethical, and compassionate medical care that addresses not just the illness but the overall well-being of my patients.
248 days ago
5

Panchkarma for detoxification Mahamanjistadi kasaya 20ml two times a day with warm water before meals Kadira arista 20ml two times a day with warm water after meals Neem ghan vati two times a day Hinguwastka churna half spoon with warm water before bed time

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Rx.DERMAGRIT TAB=2-2 TAB BEFORE MEAL TWICE DAILY

PANCHTIKTGHRIT GUGULU AROGYAWARDNI VATI DIVYA IMMUNOGHRIT TAB==1-1-1 TAB THRICE DAILY AFTER MEALS

FOR BODY APPLICATION… KAYAKALP OIL FOR NIGHT APPLICATION

FOR SCALP APPLICATION… COCONUT OIL=200ML… MIX WITH DIVYA GHANDAK RASYANANA=25GM… TANKAN BHSMA=5GM…MIX AND SHAKE WLL AND APPLY ON SCALP 1 HOUR BEFORE BATH …THIS PROCEDURE YOU DO 10 DAYS SCALP DANRUFF ARE TOTALLY GONE

AVOID… SWEETS AND SOUR BEVARAGES

TAKE BODY HYDRATED ATLEST 3 LITRES WATER PER DAY

738 answered questions
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Preeti ,It’s a Vata-Pitta dominant skin disorder. In Ayurveda, it is closely related to conditions like “Vicharchika” (eczema) and “Kshudra Kushtha” (minor skin diseases). You should consult a panchakarma specialist - mild virechan is good in your case, or take triphala powder 1tsp with luke warm water at night. 1.1 Gandhak Rasayan

2 Arogyavardhini Vati-2tab bd

Manjishithadi kwath-with 20ml water twice daily

External treatment Kumkumadi tailam- for Local application.

878 answered questions
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Hi Preeti first of all you have to give a complete detoxification to your body Take 2tsp avipathi choornam with hot water at night Eladi tailam +nalpamaradi tailam for external application Sidharthaka snana choorna for bathing or use triphala choorna boiled water for bathing Tab exitox2-0-2 after food Avoid spicy foods, creamy junk foods ,curd avoid mixing non veg foods with milk products,avoid urad dal

122 answered questions
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Dr. Harshita Hyati
I have gained comprehensive clinical experience through my internship and professional duties, which has laid a strong foundation for my medical practice. During my internship, I worked extensively across multiple departments, including casualty, general medicine, general surgery, and obstetrics & gynecology at the Government District Hospital, Gadag. This exposure allowed me to handle a variety of acute and chronic cases, sharpen my clinical assessment skills, and actively participate in patient management under the guidance of senior medical professionals. Following this, I served as a duty doctor at AYUSH Hospital, Gadag Betgeri, where I applied my Ayurvedic knowledge in a clinical setting and contributed to patient care in both outpatient and inpatient departments. I successfully completed 366 days of rigorous internship training at DGM Ayurvedic Medical College and Hospital, Gadag, where I was involved in patient evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment planning under supervision. My time there allowed me to integrate classical Ayurvedic principles with practical patient care while developing a keen understanding of hospital operations and multidisciplinary collaboration. These experiences have enhanced my ability to handle diverse medical conditions confidently while maintaining a patient-centered approach. I am dedicated to continuing my journey as an Ayurvedic practitioner with the same passion and commitment, focusing on delivering quality, evidence-based, and holistic healthcare.
248 days ago
5

Chandanasava 15 ml-0-15 ml with equal quantity of water after food Kunkumadi taila for external application face Hridhrakhanda 1tsp with honey morning

125 answered questions
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Dr. Meenakshi
I am currently working as an Associate Professor and Ayurvedic Consultant at a reputed Ayurvedic medical college in Karnataka. My dual role in academics and clinical practice allows me to stay deeply connected with both the foundational principles of Ayurveda and their real-world application in patient care. With years of experience in teaching and treating patients, I have developed a strong grounding in classical Ayurvedic texts as well as hands-on expertise in managing a wide spectrum of health conditions. In my academic role, I am involved in mentoring undergraduate and postgraduate students, guiding them through theoretical understanding, clinical training, and practical application of Ayurvedic medicine. I actively participate in departmental research, workshops, and case discussions, fostering a learning environment that emphasizes both scientific inquiry and traditional wisdom. As a consultant, I provide holistic Ayurvedic care for chronic lifestyle disorders, musculoskeletal problems, women’s health issues, gastrointestinal diseases, and skin disorders. My treatment plans are deeply personalized, based on a thorough assessment of Prakriti (body constitution) and Vikriti (imbalance), integrating herbal medicine, Panchakarma therapies, dietary advice, and preventive health strategies. I strongly believe in the importance of patient education and preventive care. Whether I am managing a complex condition or offering day-to-day wellness support, my aim is always to treat the root cause and promote long-term healing. I also collaborate with fellow practitioners and students to stay updated with advancements in Ayurvedic research and contribute meaningfully to the field. My commitment lies in offering authentic, evidence-based, and compassionate Ayurvedic care while nurturing the next generation of Ayurveda professionals with the same values.
247 days ago
5

Hello…

1) Mahamanjishtadi kashaya… 10 ml 2 times a day

2) Gandhaka rasayana… 2 tab 2 times a day

3) Madiphala rasayana… 10ml 2 times before food

4) moish lotion… External application fir dryness

Take this for 1 month… If Dint get changes then take Virechana procedure

187 answered questions
8% best answers

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Hello Preeti

• 20 Yrs Long History of ATOPIC DERMATITIS & SKIN ISSUES like Acne Dandruff Dryness needs PROPER PANCHAKARMA DETOXIFICATION THEN PROPER AYURVEDIC INTERNAL AND EXTERNAL MEDICINE

• Consider Ayurvedic Panchakarma Detoxification in Nearby Good Ayurvedic Medical Center specially Virechan and Raktamokshan

• AYURVEDIC TREATMENT

* Aloe Vera Juice 30 ml Early Morning on Empty Stomach with 1 Glass of Normal Water * Tab.Purodil 1 -0-1 After Food * Cap.Guggulu Tiktak 1-0-1 After Food * Tab.Histantin 1 -0-1 After Food * Mahamanjistadi Kashayam 15 ml -0-15 ml After Food * Elaadi Soap For Bath * Twaqure Cream For Local Application

DO’S - Prefer Alkaline Leafy Vegetables Fruits salads sprouts Fibers Plenty of Water Juices intake Maintain Personal Hygiene

DON’TS - Avoid Acidic Spicy Salty Sour Masala Fried Fast Juck Foods Bakery Non Veg Sedentary lifestyles Stress etc

REGARDS

Dr Arun Desai

God Bless You 😊🙏

481 answered questions
40% best answers

0 replies

Atopic dermatitis, or eczema, is a chronic condition that can indeed be challenging, but Ayurveda provides an insightful approach by examining the imbalances within the doshas, particularly Vata and Pitta. Given the symptoms you’ve described, we are looking at a combination of Vata (dryness and irregularity) and Pitta (inflammation and acne) imbalances.

Addressing these imbalances involves both internal and external treatments:

1. Dietary Adjustments: Focus on a Vata-Pitta pacifying diet. Incorporate sweet, sour, and salty tastes while minimizing pungent, bitter, and astringent ones. Consume warm, cooked foods that are easy to digest. Ground yourself with ghee, sesame oil, or coconut oil in cooking. Avoid processed foods, caffeine, alcohol, and excess spicy or fermented foods as they can aggravate Pitta.

2. Herbal Remedies: Triphala, a classical Ayurvedic formula, can help detoxify and balance all three doshas especially Pitta and Vata. You might take Triphala churna (powder) with warm water before bed. Turmeric, with its anti-inflammatory properties, can be beneficial — consider taking a capsule or mixed with warm milk. Neem is another herb that could help in reducing itching and inflammation.

3. Daily Routine: Boosting hydration is critical for Vata. Regular abhyanga (self-massage) with warm sesame or coconut oil can help nourish dry skin. Post-massage, a warm bath with oatmeal or milk can soothe the skin even more. Practicing nasal oiling (Nasya) with Anu Tailam may relieve blocked and dry nasal passages.

4. Lifestyle Modifications: Regular sleep routines and stress management techniques like yoga, pranayama, or meditation can bolster your immune response and mitigate flare-ups. Avoid sudden changes in temperature and opt for loose-fitting, natural fiber clothing.

5. Hydration: Drink plenty of warm water and herbal teas to keep your body hydrated; adding a squeeze of lemon can aid digestion.

For severe symptoms that significantly disrupt your life, it’s important to consult with a healthcare provider. Atopic dermatitis is a lifelong condition that can be managed effectively with consistent care and adjustments to lifestyle and diet. Remember, patience and persistence are key in Ayurveda.

1742 answered questions
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I am an Ayurveda practitioner who’s honestly kind of obsessed with understanding what really caused someone’s illness—not just what hurts, but why it started in the first place. I work through Prakruti-Vikruti pareeksha, tongue analysis, lifestyle patterns, digestion history—little things most ppl skip over, but Ayurveda doesn’t. I look at the whole system and how it’s interacting with the world around it. Not just, like, “you have acidity, take this churna.” My main focus is on balancing doshas—Vata, Pitta, Kapha—not in a copy-paste way, but in a very personalized, live-and-evolving format. Because sometimes someone looks like a Pitta imbalance but actually it's their aggravated Vata stirring it up... it’s layered. I use herbal medicine, ahar-vihar (diet + daily routine), lifestyle modifications and also just plain conversations with the patient to bring the mind and body back to a rhythm. When that happens—healing starts showing up, gradually but strongly. I work with chronic conditions, gut imbalances, seasonal allergies, emotional stress patterns, even people who just “don’t feel right” anymore but don’t have a name for it. Prevention is also a huge part of what I do—Ayurveda isn’t just for after you fall sick. Helping someone stay aligned, even when nothing feels urgent, is maybe the most powerful part of this science. My entire practice is rooted in classical Ayurvedic texts—Charaka, Sushruta, Ashtanga Hridayam—and I try to stay true to the system, but I also speak to people where they’re at. That means making the treatments doable in real life. No fancy lists of herbs no one can find. No shloka lectures unless someone wants them. Just real healing using real logic and intuition together. I care about precision in diagnosis. I don’t rush that part. I take time. Because one wrong assumption and you’re treating the shadow, not the source. And that’s what I try to avoid. My goal isn’t temporary relief—it’s to teach the body how to not need constant fixing. When someone walks away lighter, clearer, more in tune with their system—that’s the actual win.
5
209 reviews
Dr. Narendrakumar V Mishra
I am a Consulting Ayurvedic Physician practicing since 1990—feels strange saying “over three decades” sometimes, but yeah, that’s the journey. I’ve spent these years working closely with chronic conditions that don’t always have clear answers in quick fixes. My main work has been around skin disorders, hair fall, scalp issues, and long-standing lifestyle stuff like diabetes, arthritis, and stress that kinda lingers under everything else. When someone walks into my clinic, I don’t jump to treat the problem on the surface. I start by understanding their *prakriti* and *vikriti*—what they’re made of, and what’s currently out of sync. That lets me build treatment plans that actually *fit* their system—not just push a medicine and hope it works. I use a mix of classical formulations, panchakarma if needed, dietary corrections, and slow, practical lifestyle changes. No overnight miracle talk. Just steady support. Hair fall and skin issues often feel cosmetic from outside—but internally? It’s about digestion, stress, liver, hormones... I’ve seen patients try 10+ things before landing in front of me. And sometimes they just need someone to *listen* before throwing herbs at the problem. That’s something I never skip. With arthritis and diabetes too, I take the same root-cause path. I give Ayurvedic medicines, but also work with *dinacharya*, *ahar* rules, and ways to reduce the load modern life puts on the body. We discuss sleep, food timing, mental state, all of it. I’ve also worked a lot with people dealing with high stress—career burnout, anxiety patterns, overthinking—and my approach there includes Ayurvedic counseling, herbal mind support, breathing routines... depends what suits them. My foundation is built on classical *samhitas*, clinical observation, and actual time with patients—not theories alone. My goal has always been simple: to help people feel well—not just for a few weeks, but in a way that actually lasts. Healing that feels like *them*, not just protocol. That’s what I keep aiming for.
5
1486 reviews
Dr. Anjali Sehrawat
I am Dr. Anjali Sehrawat. Graduated BAMS from National College of Ayurveda & Hospital, Barwala (Hisar) in 2023—and right now I'm doing my residency, learning a lot everyday under senior clinicians who’ve been in the field way longer than me. It’s kind of intense but also really grounding. Like, it makes you pause before assuming anything about a patient. During my UG and clinical rotations, I got good hands-on exposure... not just in diagnosing through Ayurvedic nidan but also understanding where and when Allopathic tools (like lab reports or acute interventions) help fill the gap. I really believe that if you *actually* want to heal someone, you gotta see the whole picture—Ayurveda gives you that depth, but you also need to know when modern input is useful, right? I’m more interested in chronic & lifestyle disorders—stuff like metabolic imbalances, stress-linked issues, digestive problems that linger and slowly pull energy down. I don’t rush into giving churnas or kashayams just bcz the texts say so... I try to see what fits the patient’s prakriti, daily habits, emotional pattern etc. It’s not textbook-perfect every time, but that’s where the real skill grows I guess. I do a lot of thinking abt cause vs symptom—sometimes it's not the problem you see that actually needs solving first. What I care about most is making sure the treatment is safe, ethical, practical, and honest. No overpromising, no pushing meds that don’t fit. And I’m always reading or discussing sth—old Samhitas or recent journals, depends what the case demands. My goal really is to build a practice where people feel seen & understood, not just “managed.” That's where healing actually begins, right?
5
395 reviews

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