Homeopathic consultations for allergy patterns in Naraina, Delhi
An unhurried look at dust, food-linked, skin, eye and seasonal patterns — with your current care, test reports and referral needs kept in view.
Dr. Yashasvi Verma · MD (Hom.) — B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra
Does this pattern feel familiar?
Dust-linked days
Cleaning, old files, fresh bedding or one particular room seem to restart the same eye-or-skin pattern.
Itchy, watering eyes
Your eyes itch or water after a particular exposure or during the same weeks each year.
Raised itchy patches that appear and fade
The marks move or settle, but the uncertainty about what started them stays.
Skin that reacts after contact
A product, fabric, metal, plant or work exposure seems to leave the same area itchy or irritated.
Food-linked episodes you are trying to decode
One food seems possible, but the pattern is not clear enough to guess or remove whole food groups on your own.
The same seasonal window
Spring or early autumn brings a repeatable pattern while other months are quieter.
Home, work, and outside feel different
The pattern changes between home, office, commute, and weekends away, and you want to record why.
How an allergy-pattern consultation works
Map the pattern.
The first visit connects timing, place, season, food, skin, eyes, medicines, sleep, stress, and past reactions instead of assuming one trigger from one symptom.
Separate clues from proof.
A test result or a difficult smog day is one clue. Dr. Verma reads it beside the clinical history and refers for specialist assessment when needed.
Plan alongside current care.
Antihistamines, topical medicines, and emergency instructions stay visible in the case; nothing is stopped on the page or changed without the prescribing clinician.
Review the same record.
Follow-ups return to the exposure diary, photographs, and day-to-day impact so decisions are based on a documented pattern rather than a vague memory.

Bring the pattern, not just the label
- 1
Bring the pattern with you.
Photos, dates, suspected exposures, foods, and the complete medicine list make a recurring problem easier to discuss than memory alone.
- 2
Tell the whole sequence.
Dr. Verma asks what happened first, how quickly it appeared, which body systems were involved, whether it has happened before, and what care is already in place.
- 3
Leave with clear next steps.
Dr. Verma explains the homeopathic plan, what to record before review, and when an allergist, dermatologist, ENT specialist, paediatrician, or hospital should be the next stop.

Your doctor
Dr. Yashasvi Verma
MD (Hom.) — B.R. Ambedkar University, Agra
With allergy concerns, the most important first step is not to guess the trigger. I ask for the sequence — where you were, what you ate or touched, how quickly the reaction appeared, and what medicines you already use. If the history points to specialist testing or urgent care, I say so clearly and plan my role around that.
More about Dr. VermaBooking for someone else?
For your child — bring a parent-observed timeline, photos, the complete medicine list, prior tests, and any school emergency plan. Do not remove foods from a child's diet on the basis of a broad panel alone.
For a parent — bring the medicines they actually take, not only remembered names, plus photos and prior reports. Note whether the pattern changes between home, work, commute, or seasons.
Questions about dust, food, skin and seasons
How do I know whether this is an allergy or irritation from pollution?
The pattern matters: what you were exposed to, how quickly it started, whether it repeats, and which body systems were involved. Pollution can irritate and can intensify an existing allergic pattern, but one bad-air day does not identify an allergen. Bring a dated diary and any photographs or reports.
Do I need allergy tests before the first consultation?
No test is a blanket prerequisite. Bring any results you already have. Further testing should be chosen from the history and interpreted by the appropriate clinician; a broad panel can show sensitisation that may not match a real-life reaction.
Should I stop foods that showed positive on an allergy panel?
Do not remove major food groups on a test result alone. A food allergy diagnosis depends on the clinical history and, when needed, targeted testing or a supervised food challenge. Children and older adults are especially vulnerable to the nutritional cost of unnecessary restriction.
Are recurring hives always caused by food?
No. Hives can have several causes, and chronic spontaneous hives are usually not driven by a specific food allergy. Photos, timing, duration, medicines, and repeatable exposures help the doctor decide whether allergy testing is relevant.
Can I continue my current medicines while consulting Dr. Verma?
Bring the full list of prescribed medicines, over-the-counter products, supplements, and homeopathic products. Continue prescribed care and any emergency plan unless the clinician who prescribed it changes it. Each treating clinician should know the complete list.
Why does the allergies page link to a separate allergic-rhinitis page?
This page covers the broad family — dust, food-linked questions, skin, eyes, and seasonal patterns. The allergic-rhinitis page goes deeper into nose-specific symptoms and questions, so the two pages stay useful without repeating the same recognition list.
Does the clinic offer online consultations for allergy concerns?
Yes. The clinic offers online consultations for allergy concerns.
Which age groups does the clinic accept for allergy consultations?
Patients aged 18 and over may consult independently. Anyone under 18 is seen with a parent or guardian present; the guardian gives the history and consents on the child's behalf.
Visit details
- Clinic hours
- Mon · Wed · Fri — 11 am – 2 pm
- Tue · Thu · Sat — 11 am – 2 pm & 6 pm – 9 pm
- Sun — Closed
Near Naraina Vihar Metro Station
Ready when you are
No preparation needed — just bring your story and any current prescriptions.
For sudden swelling of the lips, mouth, tongue or throat, difficulty swallowing or breathing, collapse, or a rapid reaction affecting more than one body system, use your prescribed emergency plan and seek emergency care immediately (112).







