Prof. Dr. Shahrukh Ahmed
MBBS, FCPS (Internal Medicine), MD (Neurology)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Gulshan, Dhaka
A Neurologist is a doctor who diagnoses and treats disorders of the brain, spinal cord, nerves and muscles. In Bangladesh, patients most commonly see a neurologist for recurring headaches and migraine, stroke (brain attack) and its after-effects, epilepsy and seizures, facial palsy, dizziness or vertigo, numbness and weakness in the limbs, back and neck pain with nerve involvement, tremors and Parkinson's disease, and memory problems. A typical consultation begins with a detailed history followed by a neurological examination that checks your power, reflexes, sensation, coordination, eye movements and gait. The neurologist may order an MRI or CT scan, EEG, nerve conduction study (NCS/EMG) or blood tests to confirm the diagnosis, then start medication, physiotherapy or referral as needed. You should see a neurologist if you have a sudden weakness or slurred speech (a stroke emergency), repeated fits, persistent or worsening headaches, fainting spells, unexplained numbness or tingling, tremors, or trouble with balance and memory. Early assessment matters because conditions like stroke and epilepsy are far more treatable when caught early.
MBBS, FCPS (Internal Medicine), MD (Neurology)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Gulshan, Dhaka
MBBS, DTM&H (UK), MD (USA) Board Certified in Neurology (USA)
Neurologist
Gulshan, Dhaka
MBBS, Diploma in Clinical Neurology (UK), MSc Neuroscience (UK)
Neurologist
Dhanmondi, Dhaka
MBBB(Dhaka), M.Sc, MPH, MD(Neurology), Fellowship In Epileptolgy(India), Traind In Japan & South Korea
Neurologist
Dhanmondi, Dhaka
MBBS, MCPS, FCPS, FRCP
Neuromedicine Specialist
Dhaka
MBBS, MCPS (Medicine), MD (Neurology)
Neurologist
Rajshahi
MBBS (DMC), FCPS (BD), FRCP (Glasg), FACP (USA), DCN (London)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Mirpur, Dhaka
MBBS (Dhaka), FCPS (Medicine), MD (Neurology)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Dhanmondi, Dhaka
MBBS, FCPS (Medicine) Fellow Neurology, WHO (Thailand), Trained in Neurosonology (Singapore)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Dhanmondi, Dhaka
MBBS, MD (Neuromedicine)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Rajshahi
MBBS, MD (Neurology)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Dhanmondi, Dhaka
MBBS, FCPS (Medicine), MD (Neurology)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Dhaka
MBBS, BCS (Health), MD (Neurology)
Neurologist
Ramna, Dhaka
MBBS (DMC), MD (Medicine), FCPS (Medicine), FRCP (Glasg)
Neurologist
Dhaka
MBBS, MD (Neuromedicine)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Rajshahi
MBBS, BCS, FCPS, MD
Neurologist
Barisal
MBBS, BCS (Health), MD (Neurology)
Neurologist
Barisal
MBBS (Dhaka), DCN (London)
Neurologist
Dhaka
MBBS, MD
Neurologist
Dhanmondi, Dhaka
MBBS, MD (Neurology)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Rajshahi
MBBS, MD (Neurology)
Neurologist
Rajshahi
MBBS, MD (Neurology)
Neurologist
Mirpur, Dhaka
MBBS, BCS (Health), MD (Neurology)
Neurologist
Dhanmondi, Dhaka
MBBS, FCPS (Medicine), MD (Neuro Medicine)
Neuromedicine Specialist
Chittagong
In your area, a neurologist's consultation fee usually ranges from about 800 to 2,000 BDT for a private chamber visit. Senior consultants and professors at large hospitals may charge 1,500 to 2,500 BDT, while government and medical-college outpatient departments are far cheaper. Follow-up visits are normally discounted (around 500 to 1,000 BDT) if you return within a set period, but tests like MRI, EEG or nerve conduction studies are billed separately.
You can book by calling the doctor's chamber or hospital, or online through a doctor directory or the chamber's serial system. Carry any previous prescriptions, MRI/CT films, EEG or blood reports, and a list of your current medicines. At the visit the neurologist takes a detailed history, examines your power, reflexes, sensation, balance and eye movements, and may order scans or nerve tests before starting treatment. Bring a family member if you have memory, speech or mobility problems.
There is no single "best" neurologist for everyone, since the right doctor depends on your specific problem, such as stroke, epilepsy, headache or movement disorder. Look for an MBBS doctor with a higher neurology qualification (FCPS, MD Neurology or equivalent), good experience with your condition, and convenient chamber timings. On this page you can compare neurologists in your area by qualification, years of experience, hospital affiliation and consultation fee, and read what other patients say before choosing.
Yes. Many neurologists in your area now offer video or phone consultations, which work well for follow-ups, reviewing MRI/EEG reports, adjusting epilepsy or migraine medication, and getting a second opinion. However, the first visit for a new problem is usually better in person, because the neurologist needs to physically test your reflexes, power and balance. Stroke-like symptoms (sudden weakness, slurred speech, severe sudden headache) are always an emergency and need immediate hospital care, not a telemedicine call.