Ayurveda — the Sanskrit term translates as the knowledge (Veda) of life (Ayus) — is one of the world's oldest continuously practised medical systems, with textual traditions dating to the Charaka Samhita (approximately 300 BCE to 200 CE) and the Sushruta Samhita (approximately 600 BCE), and oral traditions that extend further back into the Vedic period. For much of the 20th century, Ayurveda was either dismissed by modern medicine as pre-scientific folk tradition or appropriated by wellness industries as a source of exotic products. A more careful examination of the primary texts reveals something considerably more interesting: a systematic, empirically derived medical science with a sophisticated understanding of human physiology, disease causation, pharmacology, surgical technique, and preventive medicine that — on specific, verifiable points — anticipated modern biomedical findings by centuries or millennia. This article examines seven specific domains where Ayurvedic understanding has been validated by modern research: the gut-brain connection (Agni and the enteric nervous system); the role of inflammation in chronic disease (Ama and inflammatory biomarkers); individualised medicine based on constitution (Prakriti and modern genomic approaches to personalised medicine); the antimicrobial and immunomodulatory properties of Ayurvedic herbs confirmed in peer-reviewed pharmacological research; the circadian rhythm principles of Dinacharya and their correspondence with modern chronobiology; the concept of Ojas and modern immunology; and the surgical achievements of Sushruta, whose rhinoplasty technique predated European reconstructive surgery by over two thousand years. The article concludes with an honest assessment of what Ayurveda requires in terms of rigorous clinical trial evidence to take its rightful place alongside modern integrative medicine.
Narayan Rout (Thu,) studied this question.
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