Best Peripheral Neuropathy Treatment Doctors in India

Dr. Aditya Gupta

Dr. Mohit Bhatt


Dr. Chandran Gnanamuthu


Dr. Sudhir Kumar

Dr. Sushil Tandel

Dr Rakesh Kumar Jain

Dr. A.K. Roy



Dr. Vikram Kamath



Dr. Ramesh Patankar

Dr. Pawan Ojha

Dr. P R Krishnan

Dr. Laxmidhar Parhi


What Patients with Peripheral Neuropathy Worry About Most
Peripheral neuropathy (numbness, tingling, burning, or weakness in the feet and hands from damaged nerves) raises three big worries: will it spread upward, will balance keep getting worse, and will it lead to amputation. Patients with diabetes worry about foot ulcers. Patients with chemotherapy-induced neuropathy worry about whether it ever improves. The honest answer is that early diagnosis, tight control of the underlying cause, and symptom medication slow or stop progression in most cases.
How Peripheral Neuropathy Is Diagnosed
The neurologist examines reflexes, vibration sense, light touch, pinprick, and proprioception. Nerve conduction studies and electromyography identify the type (axonal versus demyelinating) and distribution. Blood tests cover glucose, glycated haemoglobin, vitamin B12, thyroid function, kidney and liver function, immunoglobulins, antinuclear antibodies, and (when indicated) HIV, hepatitis, paraproteins, and heavy metals. Skin biopsy is used for small-fibre neuropathy. Magnetic resonance imaging or nerve ultrasound is added for entrapment or inflammatory neuropathy.
Treatment Options for Peripheral Neuropathy in India
Treatment is in two parts: fixing the cause and treating the symptoms. Diabetic neuropathy needs tight glycaemic control with glycated haemoglobin below seven percent. Vitamin B12 deficiency is treated with intramuscular cyanocobalamin loading then maintenance. Chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy is treated with intravenous immunoglobulin, plasma exchange, or corticosteroids. Vasculitic neuropathy needs corticosteroids plus rituximab or cyclophosphamide. Symptom drugs include pregabalin, gabapentin, duloxetine, and amitriptyline. Centres at All India Institute of Medical Sciences, National Institute of Mental Health and Neurosciences, Fortis Memorial Research Institute, Medanta, Apollo, and BLK-Max run dedicated neuropathy clinics with intravenous immunoglobulin and plasma exchange facilities.
Recovery, Success Rates, and Follow-Up
Inflammatory neuropathies often respond well to immunotherapy, with around seventy percent of chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy patients regaining function on intravenous immunoglobulin. Diabetic and chemotherapy-induced neuropathies usually stop progressing rather than reverse. Vitamin B12 deficiency neuropathy improves over six to twelve months with replacement. Follow-up is every three months with nerve conduction studies repeated annually.
How to Choose the Right Peripheral Neuropathy Doctor
Choose a neurologist with a dedicated neuromuscular practice, in-house nerve conduction and electromyography, access to intravenous immunoglobulin, and a clear plan for foot care and fall prevention. Ask how many chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy patients are on immunoglobulin, what the access is for plasma exchange, and whether the clinic does skin biopsy. A vague workup plan or a doctor who skips nerve conduction is the wrong choice.
International Patient Support
Peripheral neuropathy care in India, including intravenous immunoglobulin courses, costs a fraction of equivalent treatment in the United Kingdom, United Arab Emirates, or East Africa. Cancer Rounds arranges the medical visa invitation letter, accommodation near the chosen neurology centre, multilingual support in eleven plus languages, and a single case manager throughout. Patients travel from Nigeria, Bangladesh, Kenya, Ethiopia, Iraq, Oman, and the United Arab Emirates Hospital pharmacies stock intravenous immunoglobulin, plasma exchange supplies, and disease-modifying medication that may be hard to source in the home country.
Frequently Asked Questions
What causes peripheral neuropathy?
Most common causes are diabetes, vitamin B12 deficiency, alcohol, chemotherapy, hereditary disorders, and inflammatory conditions like chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy. A structured workup identifies the cause in around eighty percent of cases.
Can peripheral neuropathy be cured?
Reversible causes (vitamin B12 deficiency, thyroid disease, inflammatory neuropathy) often improve with treatment. Long-standing diabetic or chemotherapy-induced neuropathy usually stops worsening rather than reverses. Early diagnosis matters.
How do I know if it is chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy?
Slowly progressive weakness in arms and legs over two months or more, reduced reflexes, and a demyelinating pattern on nerve conduction studies. Lumbar puncture often shows raised protein. Confirmation guides immunoglobulin therapy.
Is foot care important?
Yes, especially in diabetic neuropathy. Daily foot inspection, well-fitting shoes, no walking barefoot, and prompt treatment of cuts or blisters prevent ulcers and amputations. Annual podiatry review is standard.
Will chemotherapy neuropathy go away?
Around half of patients see partial improvement over twelve to twenty-four months after stopping chemotherapy. Around a third are left with persistent symptoms. Duloxetine is the best-studied drug for ongoing chemotherapy-induced neuropathy.
Does exercise help?
Yes. Balance training, strength exercises, and aerobic activity reduce falls, improve nerve function in some types, and help blood sugar control in diabetic neuropathy. Structured physiotherapy is part of the plan.









