Frequently asked questions

Simple answers to the questions patients ask most often.

This page is intentionally written in plain language so new patients can quickly understand when to consult an internal medicine doctor and what kind of care to expect.

Dr. Kulwant Yadav portrait for FAQ page
Do I need an internal medicine doctor for diabetes or BP?

Yes. Internal medicine specialists are trained to manage chronic conditions like diabetes and hypertension, especially when treatment needs regular follow-up and complication prevention.

Can I consult for fever, weakness, cough, or everyday health problems?

Yes. The clinic evaluates both common day-to-day medical problems and long-term illnesses. Many patients visit for fever, fatigue, cough, acidity, poor sleep, and recurring infections.

Do you treat obesity, fatty liver, and lifestyle-related issues?

Yes. Medical support is available for obesity, fatty liver, metabolic syndrome, unhealthy routines, and related lifestyle diseases that increase heart and kidney risk over time.

Is ECG available as part of evaluation?

Yes. ECG may be advised when needed for palpitations, chest discomfort, BP assessment, or broader cardiovascular risk review.

Can sleep problems and stress-related symptoms be discussed in consultation?

Yes. Poor sleep, stress, anxiety-related physical symptoms, tiredness, and routine disruption can be evaluated as part of your overall health picture.

When should I seek urgent care instead of waiting for an appointment?

Seek urgent medical attention immediately for severe chest pain, sudden breathing difficulty, seizure, fainting, sudden weakness, confusion, or loss of consciousness.

Do you offer preventive health checkups?

Yes. Preventive screening helps detect silent problems such as high blood sugar, BP, cholesterol, liver issues, kidney disease, and long-term metabolic risk early.

Useful before your visit

What to bring if you have long-term medical conditions

  • Recent test reports if available
  • Current medicine list or prescriptions
  • BP or sugar records if you track them
  • Questions about symptoms, routine, diet, or side effects

Still unsure?

If symptoms are persistent, it is worth getting them checked.

Many issues like fatigue, poor sleep, acidity, weight gain, and repeated infection seem minor at first but may be linked to larger metabolic or lifestyle patterns.

Still have a question?

Reach out for consultation guidance or appointment support.

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