International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research

E-ISSN: 2582-2160     Impact Factor: 9.24

A Widely Indexed Open Access Peer Reviewed Multidisciplinary Bi-monthly Scholarly International Journal

Call for Paper Volume 8, Issue 3 (May-June 2026) Submit your research before last 3 days of June to publish your research paper in the issue of May-June.

Daivavyapashraya Chikitsa as an Adjuvant Therapy in the Management of Prameha: A Clinical Study Based on Brihattrayi and Virasimhavalokana

Author(s) Dr. Ajeet Tiwari, Prof. Dr. Asit Kumar Panja, Dr. Bhuwnesh Kumar Sharma, Dr. Ketan Sharma
Country India
Abstract Abstract
Background: Prameha is a Kapha-pradhana Vyadhi described in Ayurveda with Prabhuta and Avila Mutrata as cardinal features. It involves Kapha, Meda, Mamsa, Kleda, Mutra and Ojas as important pathological factors. In modern understanding, Prameha can be correlated with type 2 diabetes mellitus, a chronic metabolic disorder associated with hyperglycaemia, insulin resistance, obesity, sedentary lifestyle and psychological stress. Ayurveda describes three major therapeutic approaches: Daivavyapashraya, Yuktivyapashraya and Sattvavajaya Chikitsa. Among them, Daivavyapashraya Chikitsa is indicated in Karmaja, Adrishta-hetuja and psycho-spiritual aspects of disease [1-5].
Objective: To evaluate the clinical efficacy of Daivavyapashraya Chikitsa as an adjuvant to Madhumehari Churna in the management of Prameha.
Materials and Methods: An open-label, comparative, non-randomized clinical study was conducted on 60 patients of Prameha. Patients were divided into two groups of 30 each. Group A received Madhumehari Churna 6 g twice daily before meals with lukewarm water for 90 days. Group B received Madhumehari Churna in the same dose along with Daivavyapashraya Chikitsa, including Chandrayana Vrata, Gayatri Mantra Japa 1008 times daily, Panchakosha Sadhana, Pranayama, Mudra and Yajna. Assessment was done on subjective symptoms and objective parameters such as fasting blood sugar, post-prandial blood sugar and HbA1c [6-12].
Results: Both groups showed improvement, but Group B showed better results than Group A. Group A showed 43.92% subjective improvement, whereas Group B showed 59.34% improvement. Objective parameters such as FBS, PPBS and HbA1c also showed better reduction in Group B. Marked improvement was observed in 13.33% patients of Group B, while no patient in Group A showed marked improvement.
Conclusion: Daivavyapashraya Chikitsa, when combined with Madhumehari Churna, provides better clinical improvement in Prameha than Madhumehari Churna alone. The probable mode of action may be through Ahara-niyama, Upavasa, Mantra Japa, Yajna, stress reduction, mental discipline, lifestyle correction and improvement in Sattva Bala. The study supports the integrated role of Daivavyapashraya, Yuktivyapashraya and Sattvavajaya Chikitsa in the management of lifestyle disorders such as Prameha.
Keywords Keywords: Prameha; Daivavyapashraya Chikitsa; Madhumehari Churna; Chandrayana Vrata; Gayatri Mantra; Yajna; Diabetes Mellitus; Ayurveda.
Field Medical / Pharmacy
Published In Volume 8, Issue 3, May-June 2026
Published On 2026-06-02

Share this