The Ayurvedic Health Care
In practice, Ayurvedic medicine includes two different concepts of health care. The first one represents the active home care shamana, which focuses on the harmonization of psychosomatic functions, purification of the body and strengthening the immune system. This particular therapy relieves the symptoms and removes the causes of diseases in their initial phase, by establishing balance of the three biologicallife forces (doshas), healthy functioning of the seven bodily tissues (dhatus), regular elimination of toxic waste (ama) and harmonic metabolism or digestive fire (agni).
The Ayurvedic Home Therapy
Ayurvedic shamana is the ideal home therapy for most regular working and employed people who are daily exposed to proportional strain and stress. It consists of seven purification methods which are applied according to the individual needs with help of herbal decoctions (kvatha) and elixirs (avaleha), grounded herbs (churna), tinctures and syrups (asava & aristha), tablets (guti-vati), oils (taila), balms (guggul) and ointments (lepa).
7 purification methods of shamana:
1. Stimulation of digestive fire (deepana)
2. Purification and detoxification (pachana)
3. Fasting (kshuda)
4. Regulation of fluids (trisha)
5. Physical activity, exercise and yoga (vyayama)
6. Heat and sunbath therapy (atapa)
7. Fresh air therapy and breathing exercises (marut)
Ayurvedic Panchakarma
The second concept of Ayurvedic health care is called sodhana. It represents a stricter purifying and detoxifying process known as Panchakarma, which is organised under the clinical supervision of a trained Ayurvedic doctor. The main difference between these two concepts lays in the method of treatment of the doshas’ imbalance. Shamana pacifies disturbed doshas back to their natural state of balance, whereas sodhana eliminates the aggravated doshas from the body.
Purification, sodhana, is a special therapy to eliminate disease-causing doshas in case of advanced, long-term and chronic conditions. It is connected mainly with the body’s thorough purification and general detoxification. Such deeper cleansing therapy eliminates aggravated doshas and accumulated toxins from bodily tissues (dhatus) and circulatory channels (srotamsi). Consequently, they remove the germs causing further development of various diseases. This purification method consists of five parts and is called Panchakarma, its five cleansing actions improving physical and mental health.