Close Menu
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • HTL International Drives Sustainable Living Through Thoughtful Design, Circular Innovation and Responsible Manufacturing
    • Mitsu Chem Plast Limited Scales Up – Announces ~2,550 MT/Year Capacity Addition at Khalapur
    • Cultural Envoy Sundeep Bhutoria Calls on West Bengal Governor; Presents Handwritten Copy of Tagore’s Gitanjali
    • From Hyderabad Classrooms to IIT Campuses — Resonance Students Make It Big in JEE Advanced 2026
    • Why Older-Car Owners Need a Different Renewal Strategy
    • Maximus International Closes FY26 with 18% Revenue Growth and Record Q4 Performance
    • Europe Wants Its Digital Independence Back: The New Technology Sovereignty Race Has Begun
    • NVIDIA Wants To Put The Brain Back Inside The Machine
    Republic News Today
    • Business
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
    • National
    • Technology
    • Education
    Republic News Today
    Home»Health»Hope in Surat: 74-Year-Old Liver Cancer Patient’s “Impossible” Recovery Under Herbal Treatment
    Health

    Hope in Surat: 74-Year-Old Liver Cancer Patient’s “Impossible” Recovery Under Herbal Treatment

    Arjun SinghBy Arjun SinghAugust 22, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp Email

    Surat (Gujarat) [India], August 22: On a hot April afternoon in Surat, the Patel family sat in a crowded hospital waiting room, clutching a CT scan report that felt heavier than paper. The words were sharp, merciless: advanced liver cancer, spread across both lobes, blocked veins, fluid buildup, bone changes. For 74-year-old Ravjibhai (name changed), the doctors spoke plainly: there was no cure left, only comfort care.

    “You could say it was the moment we stopped talking about tomorrow,” remembers his nephew, Dr. Siddharth Patel. “We were quietly preparing for the end.”

    Yet just three months later, on another afternoon in July, the same family stared at a different scan. The tumours had shrunk to one patch. Blood was flowing again. The swelling was gone. Even the alarming tumour marker that had shot up to 1,000 ng/mL had fallen to 10, back in the safe zone. For a man who had been fading fast, it was a turnaround no one in the room dared to predict.

    The difference between those two afternoons was a name: Dr. Ranjit Sinh Solanki, a Surat-based oncologist whose reputation runs on both herbal roots and scientific rigour. Known for treating thousands of cancer patients and publishing in international journals, Dr. Solanki is neither a mystic nor a miracle-seller. His work draws from Ayurveda, ethnobotany and pharmacology, blended into what he calls “integrative oncology.”

    “People assume herbs mean guesswork,” he says, sitting in his modest clinic. “But my regimens are science-driven. They target the molecular pathways of disease, while also protecting the body from toxic side effects. It’s not alternative, it’s integrative.”

    Ravjibhai’s case became proof of concept. Prescribed a personalised herbal regimen meant to reduce tumour load, restore liver function and boost immunity, he began showing slight changes in weeks. The fever broke. Jaundice eased. He ate a little more each day and walked a little further. His family noticed he was laughing again, something they hadn’t heard in months.

    The July scan sealed what they were already feeling at home. The many shadows in his liver had shrunk into one. His abdomen, once swollen with fluid, was flat again. His numbers, which had scared even seasoned oncologists, were suddenly within range.

    A senior radiologist who reviewed both reports told this correspondent, “Such a reversal in advanced liver cancer is extremely rare. Clinically, it borders on the unbelievable.”

    Of course, medicine is cautious by nature. Experts warn that one case does not equal a cure. Clinical trials and larger studies are necessary before anyone can claim victory over such a deadly disease. But in living rooms and small temples across Gujarat, people don’t speak in clinical terms. They call it a chamatkar, a wonder.

    Dr. Siddharth Patel, who referred his uncle to Dr. Solanki, remains both a believer and a doctor. “We saw him slipping away in April. By July, we saw him walking in the courtyard, asking for chai. Call it science, call it a miracle, it gave us back precious time.”

    Dr. Solanki himself avoids the word miracle. “This is research, not ritual,” he insists. But he does admit one thing: India’s herbal heritage may hold answers the world has underestimated. “Our plants, our knowledge systems, they are not relics. With proper validation, they can save lives. What matters is restoring dignity, giving patients life without fear of toxicity.”

    Today, Ravjibhai is stable. The disease has not disappeared entirely, but it is no longer dictating his everyday. He eats, he sleeps, he speaks with his grandchildren. For a man once written off, each day is now a gift.

    And in Surat, where faith and pragmatism often walk hand in hand, the story is already spreading. A man who was told there was no tomorrow now has many tomorrows. Science will debate the details, but for his family, it is simple: he is alive, and that is enough.

    Health
    Arjun Singh
    • Website

    Related Posts

    Dr. Rohit Yadav — Among Delhi NCR’s Most Recognised Corticobasal® Implantologists, with 14+ Years of Experience and 25,000+ Corticobasal® Implants Placed

    June 2, 2026

    Diagnoses, Tips and Care for Dengue amid Monsoon Surge

    June 1, 2026

    Ashwagandha Industry Calls for Science-Led Review to Protect Farmers, Ayurveda, and India’s Nutraceutical Growth

    May 22, 2026

    Comments are closed.

    Recent Posts
    • HTL International Drives Sustainable Living Through Thoughtful Design, Circular Innovation and Responsible Manufacturing
    • Mitsu Chem Plast Limited Scales Up – Announces ~2,550 MT/Year Capacity Addition at Khalapur
    • Cultural Envoy Sundeep Bhutoria Calls on West Bengal Governor; Presents Handwritten Copy of Tagore’s Gitanjali
    • From Hyderabad Classrooms to IIT Campuses — Resonance Students Make It Big in JEE Advanced 2026
    • Why Older-Car Owners Need a Different Renewal Strategy
    Search
    Recent Posts
    • HTL International Drives Sustainable Living Through Thoughtful Design, Circular Innovation and Responsible Manufacturing
    • Mitsu Chem Plast Limited Scales Up – Announces ~2,550 MT/Year Capacity Addition at Khalapur
    • Cultural Envoy Sundeep Bhutoria Calls on West Bengal Governor; Presents Handwritten Copy of Tagore’s Gitanjali
    • From Hyderabad Classrooms to IIT Campuses — Resonance Students Make It Big in JEE Advanced 2026
    • Why Older-Car Owners Need a Different Renewal Strategy
    • Maximus International Closes FY26 with 18% Revenue Growth and Record Q4 Performance

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.