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Kati Basti (Low Back Oil Pooling Therapy)

Duration: 30-40 minutes daily, typically 7-day course · Ayurvedic Orthopaedics, Ayurvedic Sports Medicine

Overview

Kati Basti applies the same principle as Janu Basti to the lumbar region (kati — low back): a dough reservoir is built over the lower spine and filled with comfortably warm medicated oil, retained and kept warm for 30 to 40 minutes, followed by gentle massage of the area.

Classically indicated for kati shoola (low back pain), sciatica-type radiating pain (gridhrasi) and degenerative spinal stiffness, it delivers prolonged deep warmth exactly where chronic low back pain lives. At ACTYMED, Kati Basti sits inside our Spine Clinic programme alongside exercise rehabilitation, manual therapy and posture retraining — providing the comfort that lets patients move and strengthen, which is what modern guidelines identify as the real long-term fix for chronic back pain.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does a session involve?

You lie face down; the warm oil pool is maintained over your lower back for 30–40 minutes, with temperature refreshed throughout, followed by a short massage and rest. Courses typically run 7 consecutive days.

Which back problems does it suit?

Chronic mechanical low back pain, degenerative disc-related stiffness, vata-type aching that worsens with cold and fatigue, and radiating buttock/leg discomfort once serious causes are excluded. Every patient is clinically assessed first — red flags are investigated, not oiled.

Is there evidence for it?

Studies in Ayurvedic research journals report reduced pain and disability scores with Kati Basti in chronic low back pain, generally within combined treatment plans. Independently, sustained superficial heat has Cochrane-level evidence for short-term back pain relief, and guidelines (NICE NG59) centre exercise — which our programme pairs it with.

Will it help sciatica?

It often eases the muscular guarding and vata-type ache accompanying sciatica. True nerve compression with progressive weakness or numbness needs medical evaluation first — we screen for exactly this.

Who should avoid Kati Basti?

People with skin infection over the area, reduced skin sensation, acute inflammatory flare, fever, unexplained red-flag back pain (weight loss, night pain — investigated first), and pregnancy.

Key Benefits

  • Sustained deep warmth precisely over the lumbar spine
  • Eases chronic low back pain and stiffness
  • Relaxes protective muscle guarding, enabling exercise rehab
  • Drug-free comfort for degenerative spinal conditions
  • Fits within a complete Spine Clinic programme

When This Treatment Is Used

  • Chronic mechanical low back pain
  • Degenerative disc-related stiffness
  • Vata-type back ache aggravated by cold and fatigue
  • Sciatica-type radiating discomfort after clinical screening
  • Post-strain stiffness after the acute phase

When It Is Avoided

  • Unexplained red-flag back pain — investigated before any therapy
  • Skin infection or wounds over the area
  • Markedly reduced skin sensation
  • Acute inflammatory conditions or fever
  • Pregnancy

Your clinician will always screen you before treatment — share your full medical history at your consultation.

Scientific Evidence

  • Clinical studies in Ayurvedic research journals (AYU and others) report reduced pain and disability with Kati Basti in chronic low back pain within multimodal plans
  • Superficial heat has Cochrane-level evidence for short-term low back pain relief (French et al. 2006)
  • NICE guideline NG59 centres exercise and self-management for back pain — the programme Kati Basti is embedded in at ACTYMED

Conditions This Treatment Helps With

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Doctors Who Perform This Treatment

Dr. Ajeesh T Alex

Dr. Ajeesh T Alex

Ayurvedic Orthopaedics & Sports Medicine

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Dr. Ashna C Paulose

Ayurvedic Aesthetics & Panchakarma IP In-Charge

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