The most powerful healing system in classical Ayurveda — five ancient purification procedures that eliminate deep-rooted toxins, restore Dosha balance, and rejuvenate the body at a cellular level. Not a spa treatment. Classical medicine.
Panchakarma (Sanskrit: पञ्चकर्म) literally means "five actions." It is the most powerful therapeutic protocol in classical Ayurveda — a systematic series of purification procedures that eliminate accumulated toxins (Ama) from every tissue and channel of the body.
Unlike symptomatic treatment, Panchakarma addresses the root cause of disease by purifying the body at a cellular level. It is not a luxury spa programme — it is intense classical medicine that requires careful medical assessment, proper preparation, and disciplined follow-up.
At Prakash Nethralaya, Panchakarma is prescribed only when clinically indicated — after a full assessment of Prakriti, Vikruti, and the patient's capacity to undergo the procedures. We follow classical protocols without shortcuts.
Panchakarma is not just the main procedure — it is a structured three-phase process. Skipping any phase reduces effectiveness and can cause harm. At Prakash Nethralaya, we follow all three phases rigorously.
The essential preparation phase — done before any main Panchakarma procedure. Poorvakarma softens deep-seated Ama, opens channels (Srotas), and prepares the body to safely expel toxins.
The core Panchakarma procedure — one or more of the five classical purification actions, selected based on the patient's condition, Dosha imbalance, and preparation outcome.
The recovery and rejuvenation phase — equally important as the main procedure. The body is now purified and deeply receptive to nourishment. Skipping this phase wastes the Panchakarma's benefit.
Only one or two procedures are typically administered per course — selected by the Vaidya based on the patient's diagnosis, Dosha, and preparation outcome.
Vamana is the controlled administration of medicated emetic drugs to induce therapeutic vomiting — eliminating excess Kapha from the upper gastrointestinal tract, lungs, and respiratory system. The procedure is precise, medically controlled, and very different from ordinary vomiting. Preparation involves 3–5 days of Snehapana and Swedan before the procedure.
On the procedure day, the patient consumes specific Kapha-aggravating foods, then receives emetic medicines. The entire procedure is supervised by the doctor throughout. Vamana is considered complete when the body expels the correct number of Vegas (waves) — a measure the classical texts define precisely.
Virechana is medicated therapeutic purgation — the most commonly administered Panchakarma at Prakash Nethralaya, particularly for eye diseases. Medicated purgative drugs (typically Trivrit Lehyam or Eranda oil with Triphala) are administered after 3–7 days of Snehapana to eliminate excess Pitta and toxins from the liver, gallbladder, small intestine, and blood (Rakta Dhatu).
For eye conditions, Virechana is the primary Panchakarma — as the eye is a Pitta organ, and Alochaka Pitta (vision) is directly dependent on Pachaka Pitta (digestive fire) and Rakta Dhatu (blood). Purifying the blood through Virechana delivers direct benefit to retinal health and ocular circulation.
Basti is described in Charaka Samhita as "Ardhachikitsa" — the half treatment — meaning it alone addresses 50% of all Vata-related diseases. Medicated oils or herbal decoctions are administered rectally to cleanse and nourish the colon, which is the primary seat of Vata in Ayurveda. Two types are used: Anuvasana Basti (oil-based, nourishing) and Niruha Basti (decoction-based, cleansing).
For degenerative conditions like Retinitis Pigmentosa and optic nerve atrophy — where Vata degeneration of nerve tissue is the primary pathology — Basti is the most critical Panchakarma procedure. Krama Basti (a programmed sequence of 8–30 Bastis) is used for severe neurological and musculoskeletal conditions.
Nasya is the administration of medicated oils, ghee, or herbal powders through the nasal passage. The nose is the gateway to the head (Shirosrotas) in Ayurveda — medicated substances administered through it reach the brain, eyes, ears, sinuses, and cranial nerves through the Shalaka channels described in Sushruta Samhita.
Types include: Snehana Nasya (nourishing oils for Vata), Shodhana Nasya (cleansing preparations for Kapha and Pitta), and Navana Nasya (decoction-based, the most commonly used). For eye diseases — particularly optic nerve atrophy, RP, and Glaucoma — Nasya is combined with Virechana or Basti to create a comprehensive protocol targeting both the local and systemic causes.
Raktamokshana is the classical Ayurvedic bloodletting procedure — the purification of Rakta Dhatu (blood tissue). It is performed using two primary methods: Jalaukavacharana (leech therapy, most commonly used) and Siravyadha (venipuncture with a sharp instrument, less common). Raktamokshana is selectively indicated — only when Rakta Dhatu is the primary site of the disease and other procedures are insufficient.
Leech therapy (Jalaukavacharana) is the safer and more commonly used method. Leeches secrete anticoagulants and vasodilatory substances at the bite site — providing both mechanical blood removal and pharmacological benefit to local circulation. It is particularly effective for localised inflammatory skin conditions, varicose veins, and certain types of alopecia.
All programmes are customised per patient after consultation. The duration and procedures are decided by the treating Vaidya — not chosen by the patient. Pricing is discussed during consultation.
Your doctor will give you specific instructions during the consultation. These are general guidelines — follow your Vaidya's specific advice above all.
Panchakarma is not suitable for everyone. Always consult our Vaidyas before beginning. General contraindications include:
Most Panchakarma procedures (especially Vamana, Virechana, and deep Basti) are contraindicated during pregnancy. Some gentle Basti may be used under specific circumstances — only with doctor's assessment.
Panchakarma should not be initiated during active fever, infection, or acute illness. The body must be in a stable state to safely undergo purification procedures.
Extremely weak or malnourished individuals cannot safely undergo Panchakarma. Nourishment (Brimhana) must precede purification in such cases.
Very elderly patients (85+) may not tolerate full Panchakarma. Modified, gentler protocols are used — the treating doctor assesses individual capacity.
Severe uncontrolled hypertension, recent heart attack, or advanced cardiac failure require careful assessment before Panchakarma can be considered.
Full Panchakarma is generally not administered to very young children. Age-appropriate, modified protocols are used when treatment is needed.
This is not a complete list. Individual assessment by our Vaidya is always required. Please disclose all existing medical conditions and medications during your consultation.