Janu Basti is a targeted Ayurvedic therapy for the knee (janu). A reservoir ring made of black-gram dough is built around the knee joint and filled with comfortably warm medicated oil — commonly Ksheerabala, Mahanarayana or Dhanwantharam thailam — which is kept warm and retained over the joint for 30 to 40 minutes, then gently massaged in.
The sustained, deep warmth combined with prolonged skin contact of the medicated oil is classically described as lubricating the joint, calming vata, and easing pain and stiffness in degenerative knee conditions. At ACTYMED, Janu Basti is a core component of our non-surgical knee osteoarthritis programme, sequenced alongside exercise therapy, manual therapy and weight management — the combination modern guidelines actually endorse for knee OA, with Janu Basti providing the pain-relief window that lets patients exercise properly.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does Janu Basti feel like?
Deeply soothing, sustained warmth enveloping the knee — most patients with arthritic knees describe noticeable easing of stiffness by the end of a single session, and cumulative relief across a course.
How many sessions are needed?
Typically 7 consecutive days per course, repeated periodically for chronic degenerative knees. Your response is reviewed with simple function measures — stairs, walking distance, stiffness duration.
Is there research supporting it?
Clinical studies in Ayurvedic research journals (AYU, JAIM) report reduced pain and improved function with Janu Basti in knee osteoarthritis, particularly combined with internal Ayurvedic medication or exercise. Trials are small, so we position it precisely: a low-risk, classically grounded pain-relief therapy used to enable the guideline-endorsed core treatment — exercise.
Can it replace knee replacement surgery?
No therapy honestly promises that. What structured conservative care can often do — including Janu Basti within our programme — is meaningfully reduce pain and delay or avoid surgery for suitable knees. Advanced joints with severe structural change are counselled honestly about their options.
Who should avoid Janu Basti?
Those with acutely hot, swollen, inflamed knees (different treatment comes first), skin infection over the knee, reduced skin sensation (temperature is managed carefully), or acute injury in the first days.
Can both knees be treated together?
Yes — bilateral Janu Basti in one session is routine for bilateral osteoarthritis.
