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Yoga as therapy

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Therapeutic yoga workshop, Jakarta, 2016

Yoga as therapy is the use of yoga as exercise, consisting mainly of postures called asanas, as a gentle form of exercise and relaxation applied specifically with the intention of improving health. This form of yoga is widely practised in classes, and may involve meditation, imagery, breath work (pranayama) and music.[1]

At least three types of health claim have been made for yoga: magical claims for medieval haṭha yoga, including the power of healing; unsupported claims of benefits to organ systems from the practice of asanas; and more or less well supported claims of specific medical and psychological benefits from studies of differing sizes using a wide variety of methodologies.

Systematic reviews have found beneficial effects of yoga on low back pain[2] and depression,[3] but despite much investigation little or no evidence for benefit for specific medical conditions. Study of trauma-sensitive yoga has been hampered by weak methodology.[4]

Context[edit | edit source]

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Different schools teach yoga with emphasis on aerobic exercise (such as Bikram Yoga), precision in the asanas (like Iyengar Yoga), or spirituality (like Sivananda Yoga).[5] Unbranded "hatha yoga" (not to be confused with medieval haṭha yoga) may teach any combination of these.

Yoga classes used as therapy usually consist of asanas (postures used for stretching), pranayama (breathing exercises), and relaxation in savasana (lying down).[6] The physical asanas of modern yoga are related to medieval haṭha yoga tradition, but they were not widely practiced in India before the early 20th century.[7]

The number of schools and styles of yoga in the Western world has grown rapidly from the late 20th century. By 2012, there were at least 19 widespread styles from Ashtanga Vinyasa Yoga to Viniyoga. These emphasise different aspects including aerobic exercise, precision in the asanas, and spirituality in the haṭha yoga tradition.[5][8] These aspects can be illustrated by schools with distinctive styles. Thus, Bikram Yoga has an aerobic exercise style with rooms heated to 105 °F (41 °C)

and a fixed sequence of 2 breathing exercises and 26 asanas performed in every session. Iyengar Yoga emphasises correct alignment in the postures, working slowly, if necessary with props, and ending with relaxation. Sivananda Yoga focuses more on spiritual practice, with 12 basic poses, chanting in Sanskrit, pranayama breathing exercises, meditation, and relaxation in each class, and importance is placed on vegetarian diet.[5][8]

Types of claim[edit | edit source]

At least three different types of claim of therapeutic benefit have been made for yoga from medieval times onwards, not counting the more general claims of good health made throughout this period: magical powers, biomedical claims for marketing purposes, and specific medical claims. Neither of the first two are supported by reliable evidence. The medical claims are supported by evidence of varying quality, from case studies to controlled trials and ultimately systematic review of multiple trials.[9] [10]

Magical powers[edit | edit source]

Medieval authors asserted that Haṭha yoga brought physical (as well as spiritual) benefits, and provided magical powers including of healing. The Hatha Yoga Pradipika (HYP) states that asanas in general, described as the first auxiliary of haṭha yoga, give "steadiness, good health, and lightness of limb." (HYP 1.17)[9] Specific asanas, it claims, bring additional benefits; for example, Matsyendrasana awakens Kundalini and helps to prevent semen from being shed involuntarily; (HYP 1.27) Paschimottanasana "stokes up the digestive fire, slims the belly and gives good health"; (HYP 1.29) Shavasana "takes away fatigue and relaxes the mind"; (HYP 1.32) while Padmasana "destroys all diseases" (HYP 1.47).[11] These claims lie within a tradition across all forms of yoga that practitioners can gain supernatural powers.[12] Hemachandra's Yogashastra (1.8–9) lists the magical powers, which include healing and the destruction of poisons.[13]


Biomedical claims for marketing purposes[edit | edit source]

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Styles of yoga differ in their approach to the asanas. Iyengar Yoga emphasises correctness, seen here as a practitioner uses a yoga brick to attain correct alignment in Utthitha Trikonasana.[8]

Twentieth century advocates of some schools of yoga, such as B. K. S. Iyengar, have for various reasons made claims for the effects of yoga on specific organs, without adducing any evidence. The yoga scholar Suzanne Newcombe argues that this was one of several visions of yoga as in some sense therapeutic, ranging from medical to a more popular offer of health and well-being.[14] The yoga scholar Andrea Jain describes these claims of Iyengar's in terms of "elaborating and fortifying his yoga brand"[15] and "mass-marketing",[15] calling Iyengar's 1966 book Light on Yoga "arguably the most significant event in the process of elaborating the brand".[15] The yoga teacher Bernie Gourley notes that the book neither describes contraindications systematically, nor provides evidence for the claimed benefits.[16] Jain suggests that "Its biomedical dialect was attractive to many."[15] For example, in the book, Iyengar claims that the asanas of the Eka Pada Sirsasana cycle[17]

...tone up the muscular, nervous and circulatory systems of the entire body. The spine receives a rich supply of blood, which increases the nervous energy in the chakras (the various nerve plexuses situated in the spine), the flywheels in the human body machine. These poses develop the chest and make the breathing fuller and the body firmer; they stop nervous trembling of the body and prevent the diseases which cause it; they also help to eliminate toxins by supplying pure blood to every part of the body and bringing the congested blood back to the heart and lungs for purification.[17]

The history of such claims was reviewed by William J. Broad in his 2012 book The Science of Yoga. Broad argues that while the health claims for yoga began as Hindu nationalist posturing, it turns out that there is ironically[10] "a wealth of real benefits".[10]

Remedial yoga[edit | edit source]

Newcombe notes that Iyengar was sickly as a child, and that yoga with his brother-in-law Krishnamacharya had improved his health; it had also helped his daughter Geeta, so his response to his students' health issues "was an intense and personal one."[18] In effect, Newcombe argues, Iyengar was treating "remedial yoga" as analogous to Henrik Ling's medical gymnastics.[18] As early as 1940, Iyengar was using yoga as a therapy for common conditions such as sinus problems, backache, and fatigue.[19] Iyengar was willing to push people through pain "to [show] them new possibilities."[20] In the 1960s, he trained a few people such as Diana Clifton and Silva Mehta to deliver this remedial yoga; particular asanas were used for different conditions, and non-remedial Iyengar Yoga teachers were taught to tell students that ordinary classes were not suitable for "serious health issues".[21] Mehta taught a remedial yoga class in the Iyengar Yoga Institute in Maida Vale from its opening in 1984;[22] she contributed "Remedial Programs" for conditions such as arthritis, backache, knee cartilage problems, pregnancy, sciatica, scoliosis and varicose veins in the Mehtas' 1990 book Yoga the Iyengar Way.[23] However, Iyengar was deferential to Western medicine and its assessments, so in Newcombe's view Iyengar Yoga is "positioned as complementary to standard medical treatment rather than as an alternative".[24]

Newcombe argues that in Britain, yoga "largely avoided overt conflict with the medical profession by simultaneously professionalising with educational qualifications and deferring to medical expertise."[25] After Richard Hittleman's Yoga for Health series on ITV from 1971 to 1974,[26] the series producer Howard Kent founded a charity, the Yoga for Health Foundation, to "Research into the therapeutic benefits to be obtained by the practice of yoga";[27] residential courses began in 1978 at Ickwell Bury in Bedfordshire.[28] The Foundation stated that yoga was not a therapy or cure but had "therapeutic benefits", whether physical, mental, or emotional, and it worked especially with "the physically handicapped".[29] Newcombe notes that a third organisation, the Yoga Biomedical Trust, was founded in Cambridge in 1983 by a biologist, Robin Monro, to research complementary therapies. He found it hard to obtain research funding, and in the 1990s moved to London, focusing on training yoga teachers in yoga as therapy and providing yoga as individualised therapy, using pranayama, relaxation and asanas.[30]

Evidence-based medical claims[edit | edit source]

Researchers have studied the medical and psychological effects of yoga as exercise in a wide range of trials and observational studies, sometimes with careful controls, providing evidence of differing quality about yoga's possible benefits.[10] The various types of claim, and the evidence for them, are discussed below.

Research[edit | edit source]

Methodology[edit | edit source]


Much of the research on the therapeutic use of yoga has been in the form of preliminary studies or clinical trials of low methodological quality, including small sample sizes, inadequate control and blinding, lack of randomization, and high risk of bias.[31][32] Further research is needed to quantify the benefits and to clarify the mechanisms involved.[33]

For example, a 2010 literature review on the use of yoga for depression stated, "although the results from these trials are encouraging, they should be viewed as very preliminary because the trials, as a group, suffered from substantial methodological limitations."[32] A 2015 systematic review on the effect of yoga on mood and the brain recommended that future clinical trials should apply more methodological rigour.[3]

Mechanisms[edit | edit source]

A yoga class relaxing in Supta Baddha Konasana. There is evidence that yoga relieves stress by multiple mechanisms.[34]

The practice of asanas has been claimed to improve flexibility, strength, and balance; to alleviate stress and anxiety, and to reduce the symptoms of lower back pain, without necessarily demonstrating the precise mechanisms involved.[35] A review of five studies noted that three psychological (positive affect, mindfulness, self-compassion) and four biological mechanisms (posterior hypothalamus, interleukin-6, C-reactive protein and cortisol) that might act on stress had been examined empirically, whereas many other potential mechanisms remained to be studied; four of the mechanisms (positive affect, self-compassion, inhibition of the posterior hypothalamus and salivary cortisol) were found to mediate yoga's effect on stress.[34]

Low back pain[edit | edit source]

Back pain is one reason people take up yoga, and since at least the 1960s some practitioners have claimed that it relieved their symptoms.[36]

A 2013 systematic review on the use of yoga for low back pain found strong evidence for short- and long-term effects on pain, and moderate evidence for long-term benefit in back-specific disability, with no serious adverse events. Ten randomised controlled trials were analysed, of which eight had a low risk of bias. The outcomes measured included improvements in "pain, back-specific disability, generic disability, health-related quality of life, and global improvement".[2] The review stated that yoga can be recommended as an additional therapy to chronic low back pain patients.[2]

Mental disorders[edit | edit source]

Trauma-sensitive yoga has been developed in the USA in the hope of benefiting individuals suffering from psychological trauma.

A 2013 systematic review on the use of yoga for depression found moderate evidence of short-term benefit over "usual care" and limited evidence compared to relaxation and aerobic exercise. Only 3 of 12 randomised controlled trials had a low risk of bias. The diversity of the studies precluded analysis of long-term effects.[37] A 2015 systematic review on the effect of yoga on mood and the brain concluded that "yoga is associated with better regulation of the sympathetic nervous system and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal system, as well as a decrease in depressive and anxious symptoms in a range of populations."[3] A systematic review in 2017 found some evidence of benefit in major depressive disorder, examining outcomes primarily of improvements in remission rates and severity of depression (and secondarily of anxiety and adverse events), but considered that better randomised controlled trials were required.[38]

Trauma-sensitive yoga has been developed by David Emerson and others of the Trauma Center at the Justice Resource Institute in Brookline, Massachusetts. The center uses yoga alongside other treatments to support recovery from traumatic episodes and to enable healing from PTSD. Workers including Bessel van der Kolk and Richard Miller have studied how clients can "regain comfort in their bodies, counteract rumination, and improve self-regulation through yoga."[39][40] A 2018 systematic review of 12 studies, that had individually found positive effects compared to their control groups, was unable to find strong evidence of benefit from yoga for post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, or anxiety following traumatic experiences, and called for more rigorous study design.[4]

Cardiovascular health[edit | edit source]

A 2012 survey of yoga in Australia notes that there is "good evidence"[41] that yoga and its associated healthy lifestyle—often vegetarian, usually non-smoking, preferring organic food, drinking less or no alcohol–are beneficial for cardiovascular health, but that there was "little apparent uptake of yoga to address [existing] cardiovascular conditions and risk factors".[33] Yoga was cited by respondents as a cause of these lifestyle changes; the survey notes that the relative importance of the various factors had not been assessed.[33]

Other conditions[edit | edit source]

There is little reliable evidence that yoga is beneficial for specific medical conditions, and an increasing amount of evidence that it is not, as follows.

A systematic review in 2013 found weak evidence for the use of yoga for rheumatic diseases, examining outcomes of pain and disability, with no evidence of its safety.[42]

A 2015 systematic review found no evidence of benefit in treatment of epilepsy or menopause-related symptoms.[43][44]

According to the American Cancer Society, practice of yoga can improve strength and balance in cancer patients, is "unlikely to cause harm",[45] and does not "interfere with cancer treatment".[45] The society notes that yoga "cannot cure cancer"[46] but that yoga may help to improve the quality of life in cancer survivors, as shown in a randomised controlled trial of women who had had breast cancer. Measured outcomes included fatigue, depression, and sleep quality.[46][47]

A systematic review in 2015 found "promising" evidence that exercise helps people with dementia perform activities of daily living (ADLs), but no evidence that cognition, neuropsychiatric symptoms, or depression were benefited; yoga was not distinguished from other forms of exercise.[48]

A 2010 systematic review showed no effect of yoga on attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, measured by teacher rating on the ADHD overall scale.[31]

A systematic review in 2019 concluded that there was not enough evidence to be able to assess the effectiveness of yoga for treating women with urinary incontinence.[49]

Safety[edit | edit source]


Although relatively safe, yoga is not a risk-free form of exercise. Sensible precautions can usefully be taken – for example the avoidance of advanced moves by beginners, not combining practice with psychoactive drug use, and avoiding competitiveness.[50]

A small percentage of yoga practitioners each year suffer physical injuries analogous to sports injuries.[51] The practice of yoga has been cited as a cause of hyperextension or rotation of the neck, which may be a precipitating factor in cervical artery dissection.[52]

See also[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]

  1. 2.0 2.1 2.2
  2. 3.0 3.1 3.2
  3. 4.0 4.1
  4. 5.0 5.1 5.2 YJ Editors (13 November 2012). "What's Your Style? Explore the Types of Yoga". Yoga Journal. {{cite web}}: |last1= has generic name (help)
  5. Singleton 2010, p. 4.
  6. 8.0 8.1 8.2
  7. 9.0 9.1 Mallinson & Singleton 2017, p. 108.
  8. 10.0 10.1 10.2 10.3 Broad 2012, pp. 39 and whole book.
  9. Mallinson & Singleton 2017, pp. 108–111.
  10. Mallinson & Singleton 2017, pp. 359–361.
  11. Mallinson & Singleton 2017, pp. 385–387.
  12. Newcombe 2019, pp. 203-227, Chapter "Yoga as Therapy".
  13. 15.0 15.1 15.2 15.3 Jain 2015, pp. 82–83.
  14. Gourley, Bernie (1 June 2014). "Book Review: Light on Yoga by BKS Iyengar". The !n(tro)verted yogi. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
  15. 17.0 17.1 Iyengar 1979, p. 302, and whole book.
  16. 18.0 18.1 Newcombe 2019, p. 215.
  17. Goldberg 2016.
  18. Newcombe 2019, p. 216.
  19. Newcombe 2019, p. 217.
  20. Newcombe 2019, p. 221.
  21. Mehta, Mehta & Mehta 1990, pp. 185-187.
  22. Newcombe 2019, p. 219.
  23. Newcombe 2019, p. 206.
  24. Newcombe 2019, p. 189.
  25. Newcombe 2019, p. 209.
  26. Newcombe 2019, p. 211.
  27. Newcombe 2019, pp. 212-214.
  28. Newcombe 2019, pp. 222-225.
  29. 31.0 31.1
  30. 32.0 32.1
  31. 33.0 33.1 33.2
  32. 34.0 34.1
  33. Newcombe 2019, p. 203.
  34. Jackson, Kate. "Trauma-Sensitive Yoga". Social Work Today.
  35. For example, the survey by Penman and Stevens cites:
  36. 45.0 45.1 "The Truth About Alternative Medical Treatments". American Cancer Society. 30 January 2019. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  37. 46.0 46.1 "Say Yes to Yoga". American Cancer Society. 23 August 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2019.

Sources[edit | edit source]

External links[edit | edit source]



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