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Experiencing Loud Noises in My Ears
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Ear, Nose, and Throat Disorders
Question #48108
25 days ago
316

Experiencing Loud Noises in My Ears - #48108

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Mere kano se relative and enemy ke loud noise [awazs] aati ha .kehi var ye awazs itny jayda hoti ha ki mera kud pe control pana muskil ho jata ha. 7_8 vaar mera accident in awazs se ho gaya ha.ye awazs Sema Pagano ke tar kerne laghta hu.please Mujee medicine describe kare , Mujeeb Archana sa doctor battery C

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Doctors' responses

YEH AAPKA MASLA BOHOT SERIOUS LAGTA HAI KYUNKI AAPKO KANO MEIN RELATIVE YA ENEMY KI LOUD AWAZS SUNAI DETI HAIN AUR ISSE AAPKO CONTROL KHONE KI PROBLEM HO JATI HAI AUR AAPKA ACCIDENT BHI HO CHUKA HAI

AYURVEDIC NAZAR SE YE CONDITION NERVOUS SYSTEM AUR BRAIN KE STRESS AUR VATA IMBALANCE SE JUDI HUI HO SAKTI HAI ISME AUDITORY NERVES HYPERSENSITIVE HO JATE HAIN AUR MIND MEIN ANXIETY BHI BADH JATI HAI

IS CONDITION MEIN PEHLA STEP HAMESHA SAFETY AUR MEDICAL CHECKUP HAI AAPKO NEUROLOGIST SE JALDI MILNA CHAHIYE TAKI KANO KI HEARING TEST AUDITORY NERVE CHECK HO SAKI

AYURVEDICALLY NERVOUS SYSTEM KO CALM KARNE AUR VATA BALANCE KARNE KE LIYE INTERNAL MEDICINES HELPFUL HAIN

ASHWAGANDHA POWDER 3 GRAMS DAILY WITH WARM MILK AFTER DINNER STRESS REDUCTION AUR NERVOUS SYSTEM STRENGTH KE LIYE BRAHMI POWDER 1 GRAM DAILY WITH WARM MILK YA WATER CALMS MIND IMPROVES FOCUS AND REDUCES HYPERSENSITIVITY JATAMANSI POWDER 500 MG DAILY WITH WARM WATER OR MILK NIGHT TIME HELPS IN MENTAL CALMNESS SLEEP AUR NERVE HEALTH

EXTERNAL MEASURES KANO MEIN STRONG LOUD NOISE SE DUR RAHEN SLEEP PROPER AUR DISTRACTION FREE ENVIRONMENT MEIN SOYE MEDITATION AUR PRANAYAM DAILY PRACTICE KAREN AVOID TEA COFFEE ALCOHOL JUNK FOOD JISSE NERVOUS SYSTEM OVERSTIMULATED HO

CONSISTENCY BOHOT IMPORTANT HAI YE MEDICINES AUR LIFESTYLE PRACTICES KO DAILY KARNA HOGA SAATH HI PROFESSIONAL THERAPY JAISA COGNITIVE BEHAVIORAL THERAPY YA SOUND THERAPY DOCTOR SUGGEST KARE TO USE FOLLOW KARNA CHAHIYE

YE CONDITION GRADUAL CONTROL MEIN AATI HAI PATIENCE AUR CONSISTENT CARE SE AAPKA MIND AUR NERVES CALM HO SAKTE HAIN

AGAR AWAZS ITNI JYADA HO RAHI HAIN KI CONTROL KHONA HO RAHI HAI TO IMMEDIATE NEUROLOGIST KO CONSULT KAREN TAKI SAFETY RISK NA HO

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1.Ashwagandha churna 1 tsp twice daily with warm milk after meals 2.Brahmi vati 1 tab twice daily with water after meals 3.Manasmithra vatkam 1 tab at bedtime with milk 4.Kalayanak ghrita 1 tsp with warm milk empty stoamch in the morning 5.Saraswatarishta 20 ml with 20 ml water twice daily after meals 6.Bilva taila- 2 drops of warm oil in each ear at bedtime

🧘‍♀️ Sahayak Yog aur Dincharya - Pranayama: Anulom Vilom, Bhramari, Chandra Bhedan — din mein 2 baar 10–15 minute - Dhyan / Mantra Japa: “Om Namah Shivaya” ya “Ram Ram” ka uchcharan - Sattvik Aahar: Doodh, ghee, moong dal, lauki, tori, anjeer, khajoor - Parhez: Tikha, khatta, junk food, caffeine, raat ka jagna, tanav - Snaan: Neem-patta daal kar garm paani se snan, mastak par thanda paa

Warm Regards DR. ANJALI SEHRAWAT

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Jo aap bata rahe ho ki kano se relatives ya enemies ki loud voices sunai deti hain aur kabhi kabhi awaz itni zyada ho jaati hai ki khud par control rakhna mushkil ho jata hai yeh koi normal stress ya imagination nahi hai Aur kyunki aapne clearly bataya hai ki in awazon ki wajah se 7 8 baar accident bhi ho chuka hai yeh ek serious medical condition ko indicate karta hai

Ayurveda mein hum maante hain ki jab mind aur nervous system bahut zyada disturbed ho jaata hai to sensory perception galat tarah se kaam karne lagta hai Lekin jab awaz bilkul clear ho repetitive ho aur aapki safety ko risk mein daal rahi ho to sirf ayurvedic medicines par depend karna safe nahi hota

Ek ayurvedic doctor hone ke naate meri responsibility hai ki main aapki safety ko sabse pehle rakhoon Is condition mein psychiatrist ya neuro physician ka consultation bahut zaroori hota hai Iska matlab yeh bilkul nahi hai ki aap weak ho ya aapko koi stigma hai Yeh bhi ek medical problem hai jaise BP ya diabetes

Modern medicines aksar is stage par zaroori hoti hain kyunki woh brain ke chemical imbalance ko control karti hain aur voices ko shant karti hain Jab condition stable ho jaati hai tab Ayurveda ka role bahut strong hota hai mind ko nourish karne ke liye sleep improve karne ke liye aur future relapse ko prevent karne ke liye

Ayurveda supportive medicines jaise brahmi jatamansi shankhpushpi wagairah baad ke phase mein use ki jaati hain aur woh bhi psychiatrist ke treatment ke saath coordination mein Emergency phase mein sirf ayurveda par depend karna aapke liye unsafe ho sakta hai

Jab tak aap proper consultation nahi karte please driving ya akela travel avoid karein Trusted family member ke saath rahein aur sleep routine ko regular rakhne ki koshish karein

Main yeh clear kehna chahti hoon Aap galat nahi ho Aap akeli nahi ho Aur iska treatment available hai

Please bina delay ke psychiatric consultation lein Uske baad main aapko ayurvedic supportive care ke liye proper guidance zaroor dungi

Aap chahein to consultation ke baad mujhe update kar sakte ho Main aapke saath hoon aur aapki madad ke liye yahin hoon

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Consulting the AYURVEDIC shalakya ENT SPECIALIST

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24 days ago
5

Hlo,

Mujeeb ji, main aapki baat samajh sakta hoon. Aap jo bata rahe hain—kano se rishtedaar ya dushman ki loud awazein sunai dena, awaz itni tez ho jana ke khud par control mushkil ho jaye, aur 7–8 baar accident ho chuka ho—ye serious medical problem ho sakti hai.

Aise symptoms in problems me ho sakte hain: Auditory hallucinations (awazein jo asal me nahi hoti) Severe anxiety / panic disorder Psychiatric condition (jaise psychosis) Neurological ya ear (ENT) problem Misophonia ya tinnitus (lekin aapke case me zyada severe lag raha hai)

👨‍⚕️ Aapko kya karna chahiye (Step by Step) - Turant psychiatrist ko dikhaiye - Agar available ho to government hospital / district hospital - ENT doctor ko bhi dikhaiye (kano ka test zaroori) - Doctor ko clearly bataiye: - Awazein kaun si aati hain - Kab se aa rahi hain - Accident ka history - Neend, gussa, dar, depression

🚨 Jab tak doctor na mile - Driving / risky kaam avoid karein - Loud jagah se door rahein - Akela rehne ki jagah family ke saath rahein - Agar awaz aaye to deep breathing (gehri saans) try karein

Tq

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Hello Thanks for opening up about this. I want to be really clear and careful with my response, because what you’re describing is serious—and you need the right kind of help.

YOUR CONCERN

- You hear loud noises and voices in your ears. - You think these voices are coming from people you know, or maybe even enemies. - Sometimes, the voices get so overwhelming that you lose control. - You’ve had 7 or 8 accidents because of this. - It feels like this mental disturbance keeps getting worse.

This isn’t just a simple ear issue or just tinnitus. These symptoms point to a mental health condition involving auditory hallucinations. None of this is your fault, and it doesn’t mean you’re weak. But you can’t fix this with home remedies or just Ayurveda.

Here’s what might be going on, from a medical perspective: - Psychosis - Severe anxiety disorder with hallucinations - Schizophrenia spectrum disorder - Mood disorder with psychotic features

Honestly, hearing voices that make you lose control and lead to accidents is a medical emergency. You need to act fast.

What should you do right now?

1. See a psychiatrist—urgently. This is the most important thing you can do. A psychiatrist can figure out exactly what’s happening, start the right treatment to reduce the voices, help prevent more accidents, and get you back in control. If you can, bring a trusted family member with you.

2. Don’t wait or try to handle this alone. Please don’t rely only on spiritual or alternative remedies, and don’t drive or use machines while the voices are active. This is about your safety and the safety of others.

About medication:

For now start with 1 Brahmi ghrita 1 tsp morning empty stomach followed by warm water 2. SG tab 2-0-2 after food

And please remember: - You’re not possessed. - No one is attacking you. - This is a medical problem, and it can be treated. - Many people get better with the right care.

Warm Regards Dr Snehal Vidhate

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24 days ago
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Hi this is Dr soukhya…as considering your problem… better you go with KARNA PURANA procedure which helps to get rid of this issue…

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24 days ago
5

This is a serious psychiatric condition (likely schizophrenia or severe psychotic disorder), not treatable only with Ayurvedic medicines. Immediate psychiatric help is essential.

Consult a psychiatrist TODAY or go to nearest mental hospital/emergency. You need proper evaluation & antipsychotic medication (safe & effective). Do NOT drive or go near danger until treated – safety first.

Ayurvedic Support (only after psychiatrist starts main treatment) 1 Brahmi Vati (Gold) – 1 tablet twice daily (controls hallucinations) 2 Jatamansi Churna – 3 gm night with warm milk (deep calming & sleep). 3 Saraswatarishta – 15 ml + 30 ml water twice daily (brain tonic, reduces noise perception). 4 Ashwagandha Lehyam – 5–10 gm night (reduces anxiety & stress).

Daily Warm Brahmi Taila head massage 5 min nightly. 10 min Anulom-Vilom pranayama (calms mind). Important Ayurveda is supportive only , psychiatric treatment is primary & life-saving. Your accidents show high risk , please seek help immediately.

Regards Dr Gursimran Jeet Singh MD Panchakarma

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Hello ,

You are experiencing sounds in the ears and head that others cannot hear, along with fear, loss of control, confusion, and accidents. This is not imagination or weakness. It is a medical condition affecting the ear, nerves, and mind together. In Ayurveda, this condition is mainly described under: -Karna Nāda / Karna Kṣweda (abnormal sound perception) -Manovaha Srotas Vikṛti (disturbance of mind channels) -Vāta Pradhāna Manas Roga (Vata-dominant mental disorder)

Why This Happens (Ayurvedic Explanation) Role of Vata Dosha • Vata controls nerves, hearing, movement, and thoughts • When Vata becomes dry, fast, and uncontrolled, it produces: • False sounds • Sudden fear • Loss of stability • Poor judgment → accidents

Role of Mind (Rajas & Tamas) • Rajas → agitation, suspicion, fear • Tamas → confusion, loss of clarity • Together they cause: • Feeling that others are causing harm • Misinterpretation of reality • Emotional imbalance

Why Control Is Lost • Vata moves upward to brain & ear • Mind becomes overstimulated • Body reacts suddenly → accidents This is why only painkillers or ear drops do not work.

Treatment Goals Short-Term Goals • Reduce loud noise perception • Calm fear and agitation • Improve sleep • Prevent accident

Long-Term Goals • Strengthen nervous system • Improve mental clarity • Restore confidence • Prevent relapse

Internal Medicines

1. Brahmi Ghrita= 10 ml twice daily with warm milk for 3months =Nourishes brain cells, Reduces imaginary sounds, Improves clarity and control

2. Kalyanaka Ghrita= 5 ml morning empty stomach 3 months =Best classical medicine for fear, confusion, abnormal perception

3. Saraswatarishta.= 20 ml with equal water after meals twice daily =Strengthens memory, Reduces anxiety, Supports speech & thought control

4. Manasmitra Vatakam =1 tablet at night for 2 months =Deeply calms mind, Improves sleep ,Controls impulsive behavior

5. Ashwagandha Churna =5 g with warm milk at night =Strengthens nerves, Reduces stress, Prevents relapse

External Therapies (Very Important) Shiro Abhyanga • Oil: Ksheerabala Taila / Bala Taila • Frequency: Daily or alternate days • Effect: • Calms nervous system • Improves sleep • Reduces fear

Shirodhara • Duration: 30–45 minutes • Course: 7–14 days • Most powerful therapy for mind disorders • Stabilizes thoughts • Reduces false perceptions

Nasya • Medicine: Brahmi Ghrita • Dose: 4 drops per nostril in morning • Direct effect on brain & ear • Clears • Yoga & Pranayama Recommended Yoga • Shavasana • Vajrasana • Balasana

• Pranayama • Anulom Vilom (slow) • Bhramari (very effective for ear sounds) • Deep belly breathing Avoid forceful pranayama (Kapalbhati, Bhastrika)

Diet Eat More • Warm food • Milk, ghee • Rice, wheat • Moong dal • Almonds (soaked)

Avoid • Tea, coffee • Alcohol • Cold food • Junk food • Fasting

Home Remedies • Warm milk + pinch nutmeg at night • Foot massage with sesame oil • Quiet environment before sleep • No mobile use at night

Investigations Required (Very Important) To rule out serious causes 1. ENT Examination 2. Audiometry 3. MRI / CT Brain (if advised) 4. Psychiatric Evaluation 5. Blood Tests • B12 • Thyroid • CBC

Duration of Treatment • Initial improvement: 3–4 weeks • Stable control: 3 months • Complete rehabilitation: 6–12 months

This condition: • Is NOT weakness • Is NOT imagination • Is NOT punishment It IS treatable Needs patience Needs family support Needs combined medical supervision

Ayurveda says: “Manas roga cannot be cured by medicine alone; reassurance, discipline, and care are equally important.”

Do follow

Hope this might be helpful

Thank you

Dr. Maitri Acharya

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Put bilva drops in both ear twice daily. Do exercises like pushing air towards ears by closing air filled mouth and nose. As is done after plane landing. Start with Cap. Ashwashila 1-0-1 after food with water. Do Nasya with Brahmi grith 2 drops in both nostril twice daily. Ekangvir ras 1-0-1 after food with water. Follow up after 1 week

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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
1851 reviews
Dr. Shalini Sreedharan
I am an Ayurvedic physician graduated from Vaidyaratnam Ayurveda College, Kerala, and sometimes I still feel that the years I spent learning there left a kind of rhythm in my mind—the way Kerala clinical traditions flow into every thought I have during a consult. I carry that depth of ayurvedic medicine into my practice, mixing it with a slightly modern lens whenever needed, though I admit my thoughts jump around a bit and I end up rewriting a sentence or two while explaining something. My main work sits at the intersection of musculoskeletal health and cosmetic aspects in Ayurveda. It sounds like two different worlds, but clinically they overlap a lot. A joint imbalance shows on the posture, a skin dullness links back to agni, and sometimes a patient tells me one tiny complaint that makes me rethink the whole plan. I pay attention to those small clues even when my notes look a bit scrambled or a comma goes missng somewhere. Panchakarma plays a big role in my approach—deep-acting therapies that work slowly but shift things from the inside. I like understanding why a particular procedure suits one person and not the next, and I sometimes pause midway through planning thinking *wait, that detail matters more than I thought*, then adjust the regimen with more care. Personalized wellness routines also matter a lot to me… diet tweaks, daily habits, simple corrections that people often underestimate. When it comes to cosmetic wellness—radiance, glow, natural rejuvenation—I focus on restoring balance rather than masking the issue. Ayurveda treats beauty as an outcome of internal harmony, and that idea guides most of my choices, even if my words come out a little tangled when trying to explain it fast. My intention is always to help you reach a place where your body feels stronger, lighter, more aligned, and yes, where your natural beauty shows without forcing it. I know healing takes patience, sometimes more than we expect, but I walk through it with you… step by step, with clarity, honesty, and a few typos here and there that sneak in when I’m typing too quick.
5
3 reviews
Dr. Sara Garg
I am someone who believes Ayurveda isn’t just some old system — it’s alive, and actually still works when you use it the way it's meant to be used. My practice mostly revolves around proper Ayurvedic diagnosis (rogi & roga pariksha types), Panchakarma therapies, and ya also a lot of work with herbal medicine — not just prescribing but sometimes preparing stuff myself when needed. I really like that hands-on part actually, like knowing where the herbs came from and how they're processed... changes everything. One of the things I pay a lot of attention to is how a person's lifestyle is playing into their condition. Food, sleep, bowel habits, even small emotional patterns that people don't even realize are affecting their digestion or immunity — I look at all of it before jumping to treatment. Dietary therapy isn’t just telling people to eat less fried food lol. It’s more about timing, combinations, seasonal influence, and what suits their prakriti. That kind of detail takes time, and sometimes patients don’t get why it matters at first.. but slowly it clicks. Panchakarma — I do it when I feel it's needed. Doesn’t suit everyone all the time, but in the right case, it really clears the stuck layers. But again, it's not magic — people need to prep properly and follow instructions. That's where strong communication matters. I make it a point to explain everything without dumping too much Sanskrit unless they’re curious. I also try to keep things simple, like I don’t want patients feeling intimidated or overwhelmed with 10 things at once. We go step by step — sometimes slow, sometimes quick depending on the case. There’s no “one protocol fits all” in Ayurveda and frankly I get bored doing same thing again and again. Whether it’s a fever that won’t go or long-term fatigue or gut mess — I usually go deep into what's behind it. Surface-level fixes don’t last. I rather take the time than rush into wrong herbs. It’s more work, ya, but makes a diff in long run.
5
553 reviews
Dr. Gursimran Jeet Singh
I am Dr. Gursimran Jeet Singh, born and raised in Punjab where culture and traditions almost naturally guided me toward Ayurveda. From very early days I felt more drawn to natural ways of healing, and this curiosity finally led me to pursue Bachelor of Ayurvedic Medicine and Surgery (BAMS) at Shri Dhanwantry Ayurvedic College, Chandigarh—an institution known for shaping strong Ayurvedic physicians. During those years I learned not only the classical texts and treatment methods, but also how to look at health through a very practical, human lense. For the past five years I worked in clinical practice, where patients come with wide range of concerns—from chronic digestion troubles to autoimmune illness—and I try to integrate both Ayurveda and modern medical knowledge to give them the most complete care I can. Sometimes western diagnostics help me to understand the stage of disease, while Ayurveda helps me design treatment that address root cause. This bridging approach is not always easy, but I believe it’s necessary for today’s health challanges. Currently I am also pursuing higher studies in Panchakarma therapy. Panchakarma is an area I feel very strongly about—it is not just detox, it is a whole system of cleansing, rejuvenation, rebalancing, and I want to deepen my expertise here. In practice, I combine Panchakarma with lifestyle guidance, diet planning, herbal remedies, yoga and mindfulness practices depending on what a patient actually needs at that moment. No two cases are same, and Ayurveda reminds me daily that healing must be personal. My approach is always focused on root-cause management rather than temporary relief. Diet, herbs, therapeutic oils, meditation routines, and simple daily habits—they all work together when chosen rightly. Sometimes results come slow, sometimes faster, but I try to keep care sustainable and compassionate. Helping someone regain energy, sleep better, or reduce pain, that is the real achievement in my journey. And I continue learning, because Ayurveda is deep, it doesn’t finish with one degree or one training, it grow with every patient and every experiance.My specialties lie in treating a range of chronic and lifestyle-related conditions using Ayurveda’s time-tested principles, tailored to each individual’s unique constitution (Prakriti). I have significant expertise in managing digestive disorders, such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS), acid reflux, constipation, diabetes, obesity and inflammatory bowel diseases. I also specialize in addressing stress-related and mental health conditions, including anxiety, depression, insomnia, and burnout, which are increasingly common in today’s fast-paced world. By integrating therapies like Shirodhara (oil pouring on the forehead) to calm the nervous system, Abhyanga (herbal oil massages) to balance Vata dosha, and adaptogenic herbs like Ashwagandha and Brahmi, I help patients achieve mental clarity and emotional resilience. In the field of musculoskeletal and joint health, I excel in treating conditions like arthritis (rheumatoid and osteoarthritis), back pain, sciatica, and sports injuries. Using therapies such as Kati Basti (localized oil retention on the lower back) and potent anti-inflammatory herbs like Guggulu and Shallaki, I focus on reducing inflammation, improving joint mobility, and strengthening tissues. My treatments have helped many patients, particularly those seeking non-invasive alternatives, regain mobility and reduce pain through a blend of internal medications and external therapies. Skin disorders are another key area of my practice, where I address conditions like eczema, psoriasis, acne, and pigmentation issues holistically. By focusing on blood purification and balancing Pitta dosha and detoxifying Panchakarma techniques like Raktamokshana (bloodletting). My approach targets dietary and lifestyle triggers, offering sustainable results for clients who previously relied on temporary solutions like topical steroids. My dual expertise in Ayurveda and modern medicine allows me to create integrative treatment plans that are both effective and safe. I am deeply committed to patient education, empowering individuals to embrace Ayurvedic principles for sustainable health. Through this online platform, I am excited to offer virtual consultations, making the profound benefits of Ayurveda accessible to all. Whether you seek relief from a specific condition or aim to enhance overall vitality, I look forward to guiding you on your journey to balance and well-being with compassion and expertise.
5
369 reviews
Dr. Ravi Chandra Rushi
I am working right now as a Consultant Ayurvedic Ano-Rectal Surgeon at Bhrigu Maharishi Ayurvedic Hospital in Nalgonda—and yeah, that name’s quite something, but what really keeps me here is the kind of cases we get. My main focus is managing ano-rectal disorders like piles (Arsha), fistula-in-ano (Bhagandara), fissure-in-ano (Parikartika), pilonidal sinus, and rectal polyps. These are often more complex than they look at first, and they get misdiagnosed or overtreated in a lotta places. That’s where our classical tools come in—Ksharasutra therapy, Agnikarma, and a few other para-surgical techniques we follow from the Samhitas...they’ve been lifesavers honestly. My work here pushes me to keep refining surgical precision while also sticking to the Ayurvedic core. I do rely on modern diagnostics when needed, but I won’t replace the value of a well-done Nadi Pariksha or assessing dosha-vikruti in depth. Most of my patients come with pain, fear, and usually after a couple of rounds of either incomplete surgeries or just being fed painkillers n antibiotics. And I totally get that frustration. That’s why I combine surgery with a whole support plan—Ayurvedic meds, diet changes, lifestyle tweaks that actually match their prakriti. Not generic stuff off a handout. Over time, I’ve seen that when people follow the whole protocol, not just the procedure part, the recurrence drops a lot. I’m quite particular about follow-up and wound care too, ‘cause we’re dealing with delicate areas here and ignoring post-op can ruin outcomes. Oh and yeah—I care a lot about educating folks too. I talk to patients in OPD, sometimes give community talks, just to tell people they do have safer options than cutting everything out under GA! I still study Shalya Tantra like it’s a living document. I try to stay updated with whatever credible advancements are happening in Ayurvedic surgery, but I filter what’s fluff and what’s actually useful. At the end of the day, my aim is to offer respectful, outcome-based care that lets patients walk out without shame or fear. That’s really what keeps me grounded in this field.
5
1717 reviews
Dr. Prasad Pentakota
I am Dr. P. Prasad, and I’ve been in this field for 20+ years now, working kinda across the board—General Medicine, Neurology, Dermatology, Cardiology—you name it. Didn’t start out thinking I’d end up spanning that wide, but over time, each area sort of pulled me in deeper. And honestly, I like that mix. It lets me look at a patient not just through one lens but a whole system-wide view... makes more sense when treating something that won’t fit neatly in one category. I’ve handled everything from day-to-day stuff like hypertension, diabetes, or skin infections to more serious neuro and cardiac problems. Some cases are quick—diagnose, treat, done. Others take time, repeated check-ins, figuring out what’s really going on beneath those usual symptoms. And that’s where the detail matters. I’m pretty big on thorough diagnosis and patient education—because half the problem is ppl just not knowing what’s happening inside their own body. What’s changed for me over years isn’t just knowledge, it’s how much I lean on listening. If you miss what someone didn’t say, you might also miss their actual illness. And idk, after seeing it play out so many times, I do believe combining updated medical practice with basic empathy really shifts outcomes. Doesn’t have to be complicated... it just has to be consistent. I keep up with research too—new drugs, diagnostics, cross-specialty updates etc., not because it’s trendy, but cuz it’s necessary. Patients come in better read now than ever. You can’t afford to fall behind. The end goal’s the same tho—help them heal right, not just fast. Ethical practice, evidence-based, and sometimes just being there to explain what’s going on. That’s what I stick to.
5
1141 reviews
Dr. M.Sushma
I am Dr. Sushma M and yeah, I’ve been in Ayurveda for over 20 yrs now—honestly still learning from it every day. I mostly work with preventive care, diet logic, and prakriti-based guidance. I mean, why wait for full-blown disease when your body’s been whispering for years, right? I’m kinda obsessed with that early correction part—spotting vata-pitta-kapha imbalances before they spiral into something deeper. Most ppl don’t realize how much power food timing, digestion rhythm, & basic routine actually have… until they shift it. Alongside all that classical Ayurveda, I also use energy medicine & color therapy—those subtle layers matter too, esp when someone’s dealing with long-term fatigue or emotional heaviness. These things help reconnect not just the body, but the inner self too. Some ppl are skeptical at first—but when you treat *beyond* the doshas, they feel it. And I don’t force anything… I just kinda match what fits their nature. I usually take time understanding a person’s prakriti—not just from pulse or skin or tongue—but how they react to stress, sleep patterns, their relationship with food. That whole package tells the story. I don’t do textbook treatment lines—I build a plan that adjusts *with* the person, not on top of them. Over the years, watching patients slowly return to their baseline harmony—that's what keeps me in it. I’ve seen folks come in feeling lost in symptoms no one explained… and then walk out weeks later understanding their body better than they ever did. That, to me, is healing. Not chasing symptoms, but restoring rhythm. I believe true care doesn’t look rushed, or mechanical. It listens, observes, tweaks gently. That's the kind of Ayurveda I try to practice—not loud, but deeply rooted.
5
1002 reviews
Dr. Ankit Rathore
I am someone who really got to feel the weight of actual practice during my one year internship at the civil hospital. It wasn’t just routine—it was a daily crash course in reality, where textbook cases didn’t always match what walked through the door. I spent long hours rotating through departments—OPD, emergency, minor OT, even labor rooms—and yeah, each one taught me something I couldn’t’ve learned sitting in lectures. There were days I saw over 40–50 patients in OPD, most with multilayered complaints—gastritis mixed with anxiety, or skin rashes that flared worse in stressy situations. I had to listen sharp, note quick, and still not miss anything. Like, once I forgot to double-check a sugar reading and the case shifted entirely, and that messed with me a bit. You learn from these things tho. I did. Civil hospital life means working with all types of ppl—those with chronic issues like joint pain, those rushing in with acute fevers, and sometimes those who just need someone to explain their condition calmly. I handled case sheets, helped in rounds, observed surgeries (some minor, some I couldn’t stop thinking about later tbh), managed herbal prescriptions under supervision, and did a lotta counseling, which is underrated honestly. One thing that stood out to me was how often symptoms were being treated but not the pattern behind them. Like repeat migraines? Usually it was more about sleep or stress than just pain. That shifted how I approached things. Made me dig deeper, not just ask "what hurts" but also "since when and what else changed?" The internship taught me to act quick but also pause when needed, speak confidently but also shut up and learn when I didn’t know something—trust me, those moments happened too. It gave me the ground reality of how Ayurvedic support can sit side-by-side with hospital protocols. Not everything went smooth—forgot a file once, mixed two doses (minor issue but still), and yeah, sometimes I was too cautious when I shoud've acted faster. But that year shaped me... more than anything else. And I carry all that messiness and learning into my practice now, everyday.
0 reviews
Dr. Maitri Bhavesh Kumar Acharya
I am Dr. Maitri, currently in my 2nd year of MD in Dravyaguna, and yeah, I run my own Ayurvedic clinic in Ranoli where I’ve been seeing patients for 2 years now. Honestly, what pulled me into this path deeper is how powerful herbs really are—when used right. Not just randomly mixing churnas but actually understanding their rasa, virya, vipaka etc. That’s kinda my zone, where textbook knowledge meets day-to-day case handling. My practice revolves around helping people with PCOD, acne, dandruff, back pain, stiffness in knees or joints that never seem to go away. And I don’t jump to giving a long list of medicines straight away—first I spend time figuring out their prakriti, their habits, food cycle, what triggers what… basically all the small stuff that gets missed. Then comes the plan—herbs (single or compound), some diet reshuffling, and always some lifestyle nudges. Sometimes they’re tiny, like sleep timing. Sometimes big like proper seasonal detox. Being into Dravyaguna helps me get into the depth of herbs more confidently. I don’t just look at the symptom—I think okay what guna will counter this? Should the drug be snigdha, ushna, tikta? Is there a reverse vipaka that’ll hurt the agni? I ask these questions before writing any combo. That’s made a huge diff in outcomes. Like I had this case of chronic urticaria that would flare up every week, and just tweaking the herbs based on sheetala vs ushna nature... helped calm the system in 3 weeks flat. Not magic, just logic. I also work with women who are struggling with hormonal swings, mood, delayed periods or even unexplained breakouts. When hormones go haywire, the skin shows, digestion slows, and mind gets foggy too. I keep my approach full-circle—cleansing, balancing, rejuvenating. No quick fixes, I tell them early on. What I’m hoping to do more of now is make Ayurveda feel practical. Not overwhelming. Just simple tools—ahara, vihara, aushadha—used consistently, with some trust in the body’s own healing. I’m still learning, still refining, but honestly, seeing people feel in control of their health again—that’s what keeps me rooted to this.
5
728 reviews

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