Experimental evaluation of antipyretic and analgesic activities of Amalakyadi Gana: An Ayurvedic formulation
Journal name: AYU (Journal of Research in Ayurveda)
Original article title: Experimental evaluation of antipyretic and analgesic activities of Amalakyadi Gana: An Ayurvedic formulation
AYU is an internationally recognized quarterly journal dedicated to advancing research in Ayurveda. The journal covers a wide range of topics, including clinical and pharmacological research in Ayurveda's eight branches, herbal remedies, phytochemistry, and ethnomedicine.
Original source:
This page is merely a summary which is automatically generated hence you should visit the source to read the original article which includes the author, publication date, notes and references.
Manoj J. Timbadiya
K. Nishteswar
Rabinarayan Acharya
Mukesh B. Nariya
AYU (Journal of Research in Ayurveda):
(An International Quarterly Journal of Research in Ayurveda)
Full text available for: Experimental evaluation of antipyretic and analgesic activities of Amalakyadi Gana: An Ayurvedic formulation
Year: 2015 | Doi: 10.4103/0974-8520.175554
Copyright (license): CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
Download the PDF file of the original publication
Summary of article contents:
Introduction: In Ayurvedic classics, the symptom fever is considered as a separate disease called Jwara. Acharya Sushruta has mentioned Amalakyadi Gana for treatment of all types of Jwara, which contains four drugs namely Amalaki (Emblica officinalis Gaertn.), Haritaki (Terminalia chebula Retz.), Pippali (Piper longum L.), and Chitraka (Plumbago zeylenica L.).
Other Science Concepts:
Discover the significance of concepts within the article: �Experimental evaluation of antipyretic and analgesic activities of Amalakyadi Gana: An Ayurvedic formulation�. Further sources in the context of Science might help you critically compare this page with similair documents:
Jwara, Decoction, Statistically Significant, Clinical Practice, Acharya Sushruta, Analgesic activity, Institutional Animal Ethical committee, Yeast induced pyrexia, PGE2, Formalin induced paw licking, Tail-flick method, Amalakyadi Gana, Antipyretic activity, Alcoholic extract, Non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), Prostaglandin synthesis, Clinical testing, Ayurvedic classic, Wistar albino rat, Ancient claim.