Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 380
Trim: 6 x 9⅛
978-1-4422-0709-7 • Paperback • September 2010 • $45.00 • (£35.00)
Frank John Ninivaggi, M.D. is an Associate Attending Physician at Yale-New Haven Hospital, an Assistant Clinical Professor of Child Psychiatry at Yale University School of Medicine, Yale Child Study Center, and a member of the Yale-New Haven Community Medical Group. He is the Medical Director of the Devereux Glenholme School in Washington, Connecticut. He is Board certified in Psychiatry and Neurology, and in 2004 was certified as a Fellow of the American Psychiatric Association. He is a consultant and in private practice in New Haven, Connecticut.
1 Preface
2 Introduction
3 1 BACKGROUND, HISTORY, AND DEVELOPMENT
4 2 THEORETICAL FOUNDATIONS AND AN OVERVIEW
5 3 ANATOMY
6 4 PHYSIOLOGY AND DIGESTION
7 5 PRAKRUTI AND VIKRUTI
8 6 HEALTH AND THE DISEASE PROCESS. I
9 7 HEALTH AND THE DISEASE PROCESS. II
10 8 NUTRITION AND DIET IN AYURVEDA
11 9 LIFESTYLE AND BEHAVIORAL REGIMENS IN AYURVEDA AND IN YOGA
12 10 AYURVEDIC THERAPIES, PANCHAKARMA, AND MATERIA MEDICA
13 11 THE CULTIVATION OF CONSCIOUSNESS
14 12 THE BIOPSYCHOSPIRITUAL PERSPECTIVE IN CONTEMPORARY CLINICAL PSYCHIATRY
15 EPILOGUE
16 APPENDIX 1 AYURVEDIC ORAL AND WRITTEN TRADITION TIMELINE
17 APPENDIX 2 DISEASES CAUSED BY THE DOSHAS
18 APPENDIX 3 CLINICAL CASE EXAMPLES
Using a completely Ayurvedic perspective, this book takes the reader from the beginning and moves step-by-step through the historic origins of the universe, including all sentient matter within it, to the interrelationships these have to each other. It is clear that Ayurveda is a tradition that has evolved from antiquity and has endured through oral as well as literal translations. The text demands that Western readers peel off the sheaths of their way of thinking about the origins of matter and life....This book provides a comprehensive history of the development of Ayurveda, including its relationship to Buddhism, with occasional references to traditional Chinese medicine. The reader is quickly drawn into the conceptualization of the world from the Ayurvedic perspective.
— JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association
Frank Ninivaggi's updated second edition of Ayurveda strikes me as an ambassadorial success. The volume introduces concepts of ancient Indian medicine in a tone readily grasped by the Western reader and easily incorporated into a traditional medical framework. As a practicing psychiatrist, I was especially pleased to learn of the riches that this ancient body of knowledge has to offer us on wellbeing: the books renewed entreaty to live well and meaningfully is welcome and timely indeed.
— Andres Martin, M.D., MPH, Yale Child Study Center
Dr. Ninivaggi has done us a great favor in providing this clear and scholarly presentation of Ayurveda. His text includes a welcome effort to make correlations among Ayurveda, neuroscience, and Western physiology. We in the West have much to learn from these ancient observations and procedures.
— Robert Evans, M.D., clinical professor, Child Study Center and Psychiatry Yale University School of Medicine
Dr. Frank Ninivaggi, MD is one of very few physicians who has knowledge and deep understanding of Ayurveda. I am particularly enthused by his ability to simplify complex concepts. Readers will see this ability throughout the book. Because of increasing emphasis on 'healthy lifestyle', physicians all over the world are looking for an alternate approach. Ayurveda provides a very good alternative because of his unique approach to establishing harmony between the body and mind. This undoubtedly is an important book that will make an essential reading not only for the physicians and health care workers but also for those who are interested in promoting a healthy life style.
— Rajendra Badgaiyan, M.D., assistant professor, Harvard Medical School Associate Neuroscientist, Massachusettes General Hospital Harvard University
On the road to a one-world medicine, this book is the most concise and comprehensive text on Ayurveda on the market. You must read it if you want an in-depth understanding of the functional concepts of Ayurveda. The definition of the technical terms from each chapter is summarized in helpful glossary at the end of the book, which serves as a practical help for students of Ayurveda.
— Dr. Henry J. Greten, Heidelberg School of Chinese Medicine and the German Society for Traditional Chinese Medicine
Written by a North American psychiatrist, this is a first-rate introduction to a set of traditional medical theories and practices from India that are represented as an organized system of healing principles and clinical interventions. In India, Ayurveda has enjoyed a postcolonial resurgence, and elsewhere it finds a place today among alternative and complementary forms of medicine. Healing as a process of restoring balance through exercise and physical manipulation, prescribed diet, and carefully selected herbal remedies is a key feature of Ayurveda. Ninivaggi gives these components full attention, but is particularly interested in Ayurveda's philosophical background as relevant to his own practice through an emphasis on cultivation of consciousness that inspires a biopsychospiritual perspective for clinical psychiatry, drawn from the ancient East and the modern West. Maharishi Mahesh Yogi and his former student Deepak Chopra earlier popularized Ayurveda in the West; Ninivaggi's book reflects the more nuanced consideration that Ayurveda is receiving now....Highly recommended. Lower-level undergraduates and above; general readers.
— Choice Reviews