When the Body’s Autopilot Falters, We Help It Find Balance Again.
Smart, non-invasive therapies that stabilise the autonomic nervous system and help you reclaim steadiness, clarity, and daily functioning.
Understanding a Nervous System That Won’t Stay Steady
Dysautonomia occurs when the autonomic nervous system, responsible for heart rate, blood pressure, digestion, and temperature, misfires. This creates symptoms that feel random but follow a deeper neurological pattern: dizziness, fatigue, rapid heartbeat, brain fog, anxiety-like sensations, and difficulty standing. By identifying the underlying autonomic dysfunction and retraining the system, stability can be restored, and daily life can feel predictable again.
Your Body Isn’t Overreacting. It’s Overcorrecting.
Dysautonomia is a communication issue, not a character flaw. When we map how your autonomic system responds to stress, posture, and triggers, we can rebuild balance from the inside out.
Dysautonomia, Simply Explained
The signs often feel unrelated, but share one root: autonomic imbalance.
Symptoms of Anxiety
Anxiety shows up in ways we often dismiss. Learning the signs can help us respond before it spirals.
- Cardiac: Rapid heartbeat, palpitations, episodes of feeling faint, and blood pressure swings when sitting, standing, or exerting.
- Neurological: Brain fog, lightheadedness, blurred vision, difficulty concentrating, or sudden fatigue.
- Gastrointestinal: Bloating, nausea, erratic digestion, and poor appetite during flare-ups.
- Thermoregulatory & Other: Excessive sweating or feeling unusually cold, exercise intolerance, and sleep disturbances or unrefreshing sleep.
Assessments
We identify how your autonomic system behaves under different conditions.
Autonomic Profiling: Tests posture-based changes in heart rate and blood pressure (like active stand or tilt assessments)
- qEEG Brain Mapping: Reveals neural overactivity or dysregulation associated with autonomic instability.
- Heart Rate Variability (HRV) Analysis: Measures resilience of the autonomic nervous system.
- Neurological Review: Screens for underlying nerve, brain, or metabolic contributors.
- Holistic Evaluation: Assesses lifestyle, habits, sleep, stress, gut health, and physical conditioning.
Treatment
Personalised treatment addressing both symptoms and root imbalance.
- Neuromodulation: rTMS / tDCS to stabilise regions regulating autonomic tone.
- Nerve Stimulation Therapies: taVNS (vagus nerve stimulation) to regulate heart rate, digestion, and stress.
- Autonomic Training: Neurofeedback and paced breathing to build system stability.
- Physical Rehabilitation: Gradual conditioning for circulation, strength, and orthostatic tolerance.
- Mind-Body Practices: Yoga therapy, meditation, and breathwork to calm sympathetic overdrive.
- Lifestyle Reset: Sleep rhythm optimisation, hydration and nutrition strategies, and trigger pattern tracking.
Outcomes
With consistent regulation therapies, patients experience steadier heart rate, fewer dizzy spells, improved focus, better endurance, reduced anxiety-like symptoms, and increased confidence in navigating daily activities. Our approach targets the system, not just the symptoms, to create long-term stability.
The Buddhi Clinic Advantage
A deeper understanding of autonomic imbalance, matched by whole-person solutions.
Our specialists decode autonomic dysfunction through advanced diagnostics, track patterned responses, and design a unique blend of neuromodulation, physical therapy, psychological care, and holistic healing. This integrated approach restores balance where the system keeps slipping.
Answers for a Body That Won’t Stay Regulated
Explore expert insights, practical guidance, and clear answers to your most pressing questions about anxiety and its care.
What exactly is Dysautonomia?
It’s a dysfunction of the autonomic nervous system, affecting processes like heart rate, blood pressure, digestion, and body temperature.
Why do my symptoms feel unpredictable?
Autonomic dysregulation causes sudden shifts in body signals, often triggered by posture, stress, dehydration, heat, or physical activity.
Is Dysautonomia the same as POTS?
POTS is one type of Dysautonomia. There are others, such as orthostatic intolerance, neurocardiogenic syncope, and autonomic neuropathies.
Can Dysautonomia be treated?
Yes. While some forms are chronic, symptoms can be significantly improved with neuromodulation, physical conditioning, autonomic training, and lifestyle recalibration.
Why do I feel anxious with Dysautonomia?
These sensations come from physiological changes, like palpitations or dizziness, not psychological anxiety. We treat both the physical and emotional impact.
How long does recovery take?
It varies by severity, but many people see improvement within weeks, with lasting progress over months through structured regulation.
Do I need medication?
Some cases benefit from medication, but many improve through non-pharmacological strategies that strengthen autonomic resilience.