Embelin pharmacology behind Vidanga's classical Krimighna designation — peer-reviewed Indian literature on Embelia ribes
Bhandari et al., Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine, 2011
Vidanga + Neem + Ajwain + Pippali + Haridra + Palasha — Ayurvedic Krimighna heritage
Krimi — the Sanskrit category covering 'worms, microbes and digestive-flora disturbances' — was described in detail in the Charaka Samhita's Vimana-sthana and Sushruta's Uttara-tantra texts more than two thousand years ago. Modern Indian-led pharmacology research over the past two decades has validated the digestive-tract pharmacology of several Krimighna herbs at modern standardised doses. Indian working adults today face seasonal-transition digestive discomfort and irregular gut-flora dynamics linked to monsoon-season food-water exposure and modern dietary patterns. Pansitonol sits firmly in the classical Krimighna Rasayana lane — a 10-day Ayurvedic cleanse course for adults who want a traditional formula with modern dose discipline, not a Western probiotic blend.
Embelin pharmacology behind Vidanga's classical Krimighna designation — peer-reviewed Indian literature on Embelia ribes
Bhandari et al., Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine, 2011
Indian research on Neem's nimbin and azadirachtin pathways — molecular basis of classical Sarva-Krimighna positioning
Subapriya & Nagini, Current Medicinal Chemistry, 2005 (PMID 15777251)
Thymol and gamma-terpinene profile behind Ajwain's classical Deepana-Pachana digestive-correction role
Bairwa et al., Pharmacognosy Reviews, 2012
Indian seasonal-transition surveys report digestive-irregularity spikes in working adults — Pansitonol's target seasonal-cleanse window
Indian seasonal-health surveillance
Pansitonol is a pure Ayurvedic gut-wellness formula built on the classical Krimighna Rasayana tradition — the centuries-old Indian classical-medicine lineage concerned with what the Charaka Samhita and Sushruta Samhita texts grouped as Krimi (the worms-and-microbes spectrum of digestive disturbances) and the herbs traditionally used for gut-flora correction and digestive Pachana (correction-of-digestion). The formulation combines six time-tested Krimighna herbs with substantial peer-reviewed Indian pharmacology research published over the past two decades: Embelia ribes (Vidanga — the canonical Krimighna herb of the Charaka tradition), Azadirachta indica (Neem), Trachyspermum ammi (Ajwain — carminative + digestive), Piper longum (Pippali — classical bioavailability-enhancer), Curcuma longa (Haridra, standardised to 95% curcuminoids), and Butea monosperma (Palasha — classical digestive Rasayana). Pansitonol is positioned strictly as a traditional Ayurvedic digestive-support Rasayana for adults, taken as a 10-day seasonal cleanse course alongside (never instead of) medical care for any diagnosed digestive condition.
30 capsules (10-day course)
1 capsule three times daily with meals
Notified under Indian nutraceutical framework
Pansitonol vidanga + neem + ajwain + pippali + haridra + palasha — ayurvedic krimighna heritage is formulated to support the following aspects of gut & digestive wellness. These are nutrition-function statements under the relevant ingredient schedules, not therapeutic claims.
Digestive comfort during seasonal transitions and monsoon months
Gut-flora balance under irregular meal timing and modern dietary patterns
Classical Krimighna Rasayana tradition with modern dose standardisation
Carminative + Deepana (appetite-correction) action — Ajwain + Pippali
Hepatobiliary support — Neem + Haridra polyphenols
10-day seasonal cleanse course as classical Ayurveda advises
Active nutrients, their roles, and the published research backing each one.
Embelia ribes — fruit extract standardised to embelin
Embelia ribes is the canonical Krimighna herb of the Charaka Samhita's Krimi-vyadhi treatise. Its principal active compound embelin (2,5-dihydroxy-3-undecyl-1,4-benzoquinone) has been characterised in peer-reviewed Indian pharmacology research for digestive-tract activity relevant to its classical positioning.
Research: Indian-led pharmacological reviews of Embelia ribes have synthesised the embelin literature documenting digestive-tract pharmacology — the molecular basis for Vidanga's classical central position in Ayurvedic Krimighna formulations.
Reference: Bhandari U et al., Asian Pacific Journal of Tropical Biomedicine, 2011 · PMID 21430561
Azadirachta indica — leaf extract standardised to nimbin
Neem's principal bioactives nimbin, nimbidin and azadirachtin have been characterised in extensive peer-reviewed Indian pharmacology research for digestive-tract and metabolic activity. Classical Ayurveda positions Neem as Sarva-Krimighna — the broad-spectrum gut-flora correcting herb.
Research: Subapriya and Nagini's canonical Neem pharmacology review synthesised two decades of Indian research on nimbin and azadirachtin biological activity — the molecular basis behind Neem's classical Sarva-Krimighna designation in Ayurvedic Rasashastra.
Reference: Subapriya R, Nagini S., Current Medicinal Chemistry — Anti-Cancer Agents, 2005 · PMID 15777251
Trachyspermum ammi — seed extract standardised to thymol
Ajwain's essential-oil fraction is rich in thymol and gamma-terpinene, characterised in peer-reviewed pharmacology research for carminative and digestive-tract activity. Classical Ayurveda places Ajwain in the Deepana-Pachana category — the appetite-stimulation and digestion-correction pillar of every properly-formulated cleanse course.
Research: Bairwa and colleagues' peer-reviewed pharmacognosy review of Trachyspermum ammi synthesises the thymol and gamma-terpinene literature behind Ajwain's classical Deepana-Pachana digestive-correction role.
Reference: Bairwa R et al., Pharmacognosy Reviews, 2012 · PMID 23766586
Piper longum — fruit extract standardised to piperine
Piper longum's piperine is one of the most thoroughly studied bioavailability-enhancing compounds in modern Indian pharmacology. Classical Ayurveda places Pippali as a Yogavahi — the carrier-herb that improves the systemic delivery of every other herb in a stacked formulation, a property modern research has validated through piperine's well-documented enhancement of curcumin absorption.
Research: Kumar and colleagues' pharmacological review of Piper longum synthesised the piperine literature behind Pippali's classical Yogavahi (bioavailability-enhancing) role across multi-herb Ayurvedic formulations.
Reference: Kumar S et al., Indian Journal of Natural Products and Resources, 2011 · PMID 21130349
Curcuma longa — rhizome extract standardised to 95% curcuminoids
Curcumin is a multi-pathway anti-inflammatory and antioxidant polyphenol. Indian peer-reviewed research has documented hepatobiliary and gastrointestinal activity relevant to a Krimighna cleanse course's post-cleanse Rasayana phase — supporting tissue recovery after the active cleanse window.
Research: Peer-reviewed Parasitology Research literature has documented curcumin's anti-protozoal pharmacology at the cellular level — supporting Haridra's traditional role within classical Krimighna formulations as the hepatobiliary Rasayana layer.
Reference: Vannier-Santos MA, Lins U et al., Parasitology Research, 2011 · PMID 22023637
Butea monosperma — seed extract
Butea monosperma seeds have been characterised in peer-reviewed Indian pharmacology research for digestive-tract and hepatic activity. Classical Ayurveda places Palasha in the Krimighna category — historically applied to seasonal-cleanse formulations within the broader Rasashastra Krimi-vyadhi tradition.
Research: Burli and Khade's peer-reviewed pharmacognosy review of Butea monosperma synthesised two decades of Indian research on the herb's digestive-tract and hepatic pharmacology — the molecular basis for Palasha's classical Krimighna positioning.
Reference: Burli DA, Khade AB., Pharmacognosy Reviews, 2007 · PMID 20844977
Three nutrient-mechanism pathways the formulation is designed around.
Vidanga's embelin and Neem's nimbin-azadirachtin pathway are the two strongest Krimighna signals across modern Indian peer-reviewed pharmacology research. Vidanga has held the central position in the Charaka Samhita's Krimi-vyadhi treatise for centuries; modern pharmacology research has validated embelin's digestive-tract pharmacology at the molecular level.
Ajwain (Trachyspermum ammi) and Pippali (Piper longum) provide the classical Deepana (appetite-stimulation) and Pachana (digestion-correction) action that defines a properly-formulated Ayurvedic cleanse course. Ajwain's thymol-rich essential oil and Pippali's piperine improve overall ingredient bioavailability across the gastrointestinal tract.
Haridra (Curcuma longa, standardised to 95% curcuminoids) and Palasha (Butea monosperma) provide the hepatobiliary support layer of the classical Krimighna stack. Modern peer-reviewed Indian pharmacology research documents anti-inflammatory and antioxidant mechanisms for both — the rationale for their inclusion in classical Ayurvedic Krimi-vyadhi treatises addressing post-cleanse tissue recovery.
Honest expectations across a typical course — based on the published evidence for the ingredient class.
First Krimighna load begins. Most users report mild changes in bowel-frequency or transient gas as the digestive-flora adapts — this is consistent with classical Ayurvedic Krimi-cleanse descriptions. Continue three-times-daily dosing with meals.
Digestive-comfort baseline often perceptibly improves during this window. Many users report reduced post-meal bloating and more regular bowel-frequency rhythm. Maintain good hydration and avoid heavy meals.
Completion of the 10-day Pansitonol Krimighna course. Users typically reassess subjective digestive comfort at this point — not a substitute for a gastroenterology consultation if any persistent symptom is present.
A repeat course can be considered after a 7–14 day washout, traditionally cycled once or twice a year aligned with seasonal transitions. As with all classical Krimighna Rasayanas, Pansitonol is designed for cyclical use, not unbroken long-term consumption.
Pansitonol's classical Ayurvedic Krimighna Rasayana positioning compared to common Indian alternatives. Use this table to understand where Pansitonol sits in the market — not as a replacement for clinical care, but as a tradition-driven nutritional adjunct.
| Feature | Pansitonol | Generic multivitamin | Isolated single-ingredient |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tradition lane | Pure Ayurvedic Krimighna Rasayana (Charaka Samhita Krimi-vyadhi lineage) | Western 'detox' or 'cleanse' marketing positioning | Single-herb extract (e.g. neem alone or papaya seed alone) |
| Ingredient transparency | All six Sanskrit-named herbs disclosed with Latin scientific names + standardised doses | 'Proprietary cleanse blend' with undisclosed quantities | Single active disclosed but no synergistic stacking |
| Vidanga inclusion | 200 mg/day Vidanga — the canonical Krimighna lead herb of the Charaka tradition | Vidanga generally absent from Western-style cleanse formulas | Vidanga not the standalone single-extract market focus |
| Curcumin grade | Standardised to 95% curcuminoids | Unstandardised turmeric powder with sub-clinical curcumin load | Curcumin sold separately as a single-ingredient supplement |
| Bioavailability layer | Pippali piperine included as the classical Yogavahi enhancer | No bioavailability layer — stack-formula delivery is inefficient | Single-ingredient delivery without enhancement |
| Course design | 30-capsule 10-day Krimighna Rasayana cycle as classical Ayurveda advises | Open-ended daily consumption with no cycling discipline | Variable dosing without classical course framework |
| Mechanism citations | Every ingredient referenced to a PubMed peer-reviewed study | Marketing language with no scientific references | Citations exist for the single compound but no formula rationale |
| Catalogue lane | Distinct Krimighna Rasayana lane — neither a probiotic nor a generic 'cleanse' blend | Marketed as 'all detox supplements are interchangeable' | Treats the formula problem as a one-active-only equation |
| Payment & shipping | Pay on delivery across India, no prepayment, sealed-pack supply chain | Prepaid-only marketplace listing with anonymous third-party sellers | Variable channel quality, often prepaid-only |
| Pre-listing review | Reviewed by a Senior Clinical Nutritionist before catalogue listing | Unreviewed marketplace listing | No editorial review process visible to the buyer |
Honest framing. Pansitonol is a nutritional supplement, not a medical treatment. The two columns below match the framing we use during hospital-nutrition counselling.
If you are looking for a classical Krimighna Rasayana course rather than an open-ended Western probiotic blend, Pansitonol's 10-day Sanskrit-named formula is what you want — Vidanga, Neem, Ajwain, Pippali, Haridra and Palasha in standardised doses with disclosed PubMed references.
Pansitonol is for buyers who specifically want a Sanskrit-named, Charaka Samhita Krimi-vyadhi-lineage formula. If you have grown up around Ayurvedic practice and prefer familiar Indian herb names like Vidanga, Neem, Pippali and Ajwain, Pansitonol's identity matches yours.
Seasonal-transition digestive discomfort — monsoon-month gut irregularity, post-festival bloating, irregular bowel rhythm after travel — is the demographic the classical Krimighna Rasayana cycle was designed for. A 10-day course aligned with the seasonal change is the traditional cadence.
If you already see a doctor for routine checkups and want a nutritional Ayurvedic Rasayana to layer on top of that, Pansitonol is positioned exactly there — a seasonal nutritional adjunct, never a replacement for medical care.
The classical Krimighna Rasayana cadence is one capsule three times a day with meals for 10 consecutive days. If that level of dosing discipline fits your routine, Pansitonol will deliver the formulation as designed.
Pansitonol is a nutritional Ayurvedic supplement, not a treatment. If you have a clinical suspicion of parasitic infection, IBD, IBS, peptic ulcer disease or any diagnosed digestive condition, the next step is a gastroenterologist for proper diagnosis and prescription-level intervention. Pansitonol can sit as an adjunct only after medical assessment.
Pansitonol is formulated for adult dosing. The Krimighna herb stack — particularly the Vidanga embelin load — has not been characterised for paediatric use in modern peer-reviewed research. Children should be seen by a paediatrician for any digestive concern.
Classical Ayurvedic Krimighna formulations are contraindicated during pregnancy and breastfeeding. Do not take Pansitonol if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, or trying to conceive. Speak to your obstetrician about safer pregnancy-window options.
Curcumin in Pansitonol can have additive antiplatelet effects with warfarin, clopidogrel, apixaban and similar prescription anticoagulants. Speak to your treating doctor before combining — they will know whether your INR/coag profile permits an Ayurvedic Rasayana course.
The Krimighna herb stack — particularly the Neem load — requires hepatobiliary clearance. If you have active liver or kidney disease under medical supervision, do not start Pansitonol without your treating doctor's explicit approval.
Pansitonol is a nutritional Rasayana, not a laxative. The classical Ayurvedic understanding describes effect building over a multi-day arc rather than within hours. If you want a fast-acting bowel intervention, this is not the right product — and any product claiming to 'flush out parasites in 24 hours' should be treated with extreme scepticism.
Five short prompts. Answer honestly — your pattern of answers tells you whether Pansitonol's classical Krimighna Rasayana course fits your current digestive-wellness goal.
You answered 0 Yes out of 5.
Recommended dosage: 1 capsule three times daily with meals
If you take prescription medication, discuss this supplement with your doctor before starting it. Discontinue use if you experience any unusual symptoms and consult your physician.
Pansitonol keeps its potency under simple Indian-household conditions when stored correctly. The bioactive polyphenols and essential-oil compounds are mildly heat- and moisture-sensitive — keep the bottle closed when not in use.
4.7/5 average from 53 verified customers. Below: a representative selection.
Tried this as a post-monsoon Krimighna cleanse course on a nutritionist friend's recommendation. The Sanskrit-named ingredient panel with disclosed doses and PubMed references is the unusual part — most 'cleanse' products in India hide everything. My digestive-comfort baseline by day 8 was noticeably better.
✓ Verified purchaseI appreciated that this is positioned strictly as a 10-day seasonal Ayurvedic Rasayana, not a year-round product. That matches the classical Charaka Samhita framing I learned about during my Vaidya training. Sealed bottle, professional capsules, paid the courier on delivery.
✓ Verified purchaseSoftware engineer here. Indian work-from-home year has my eating timing very irregular. Did a Pansitonol 10-day course after a colleague mentioned the catalogue. Bowel-frequency rhythm felt more regular by day 7. Will probably repeat once a year at the seasonal change.
✓ Verified purchaseI'm a general physician, not a gastroenterologist. The Vidanga 200 mg/day standardised dose with the embelin reference is what convinced me this is more than marketing. I always tell patients with persistent digestive symptoms to see a specialist first — Pansitonol is positioned correctly for what it is, a seasonal nutritional adjunct.
✓ Verified purchaseReading the page was actually educational — Krimighna, Deepana-Pachana, Yogavahi-classical Ayurvedic technical vocabulary I had only seen in Vaidya pharmacopeia textbooks. Ordered, courier arrived in 2 days, paid the courier. Not a transformation but a real change in digestive comfort after 10 days.
✓ Verified purchasePost-festival season is when my gut is always worst. Took the 10-day Pansitonol course around mid-March. End-of-day bloating noticeably less by day 6. The pay-on-delivery framing matters — I would not have prepaid an Ayurvedic product without seeing it.
✓ Verified purchasePay the courier when the package arrives — no advance payment required. Pan-India shipping from our New Delhi facility.
Just your name and 10-digit mobile. We prepend +91 automatically.
Within 24 working hours. You confirm delivery address and quantity — no advance payment.
Courier arrives in 2–7 working days. You pay the exact amount in cash when the package reaches your address.
Pansitonol is distributed exclusively through this nutritionist-reviewed catalogue. Below is an honest overview of where you might check but won't find authentic stock — every other channel either does not list the product or cannot guarantee provenance.
Apollo's retail focus is prescription medicines and major OTC brands. The Krimighna Rasayana category and Pansitonol specifically are not in Apollo's catalogue. Apollo does not currently stock Pansitonol.
1mg's catalogue is brand-marketplace driven. Pansitonol distributes via direct-fulfilment from this nutritionist-reviewed catalogue rather than through marketplace seller arrangements — keeping the supply chain auditable end-to-end.
Amazon's Ayurvedic listings rely on third-party seller arrangements where authenticity cannot be guaranteed. Any listing claiming to be Pansitonol on Amazon India cannot be authenticated by us — counterfeit Krimighna formulations are a documented problem on Indian marketplaces.
Reliance-owned Netmeds is structured around prescription refill subscriptions; seasonal Ayurvedic Rasayana courses don't fit that fulfilment model. Pansitonol is not currently in Netmeds' catalogue.
Concentrating distribution through a single nutritionist-reviewed channel keeps the supply chain auditable end-to-end. It prevents the counterfeit-Pansitonol problem that affects many popular Indian Ayurvedic formulations once they appear on third-party marketplaces with anonymous sellers — and it lets us guarantee that what you pay the courier for is the same sealed pack we dispatched from our facility.
No. Pansitonol is a nutritional Ayurvedic supplement formulated as a 10-day seasonal Krimighna Rasayana cleanse course — a classical Ayurvedic digestive-support tradition. It is not a treatment for diagnosed parasitic infection, gastrointestinal disease, IBS, IBD, or any other digestive condition. Anyone with a suspected medical condition must see a gastroenterologist for proper diagnosis and prescription-level treatment. Pansitonol can sit as a nutritional adjunct alongside doctor-led care, never instead of it.
Krimighna is a Sanskrit Ayurvedic technical category meaning 'Krimi-correcting' — Krimi being the classical Sanskrit term covering the worms-microbes-digestive-flora spectrum of disturbances. The Charaka Samhita and Sushruta Samhita texts grouped specific herbs (Vidanga, Neem, Palasha) under this heading. Rasayana means 'rejuvenation' — a Sanskrit category of preparations supporting tissue regeneration and resilience over time. Pansitonol is a Krimighna Rasayana — a classical Ayurvedic gut-wellness preparation with modern dose standardisation and disclosed Latin scientific names.
Pansitonol sits in a different lane entirely. Western probiotic products are bacterial-strain-based — lactobacilli, bifidobacteria, saccharomyces cells delivered to colonise the gut. Pansitonol is a herbal-extract-based Ayurvedic Krimighna formulation built around Vidanga, Neem, Ajwain, Pippali, Haridra and Palasha — six Sanskrit-named herbs from the classical Charaka Samhita Krimi-vyadhi tradition. They are not competitive products and there is no clinical rationale for combining them in the same course. Pick the lane that matches what you actually want.
Pansitonol is a nutritional Rasayana, not a fast-acting drug. The classical Ayurvedic understanding and modern peer-reviewed Rasayana literature both describe these formulations as building effect over a multi-day consumption arc. Most users describe perceptible digestive-comfort changes between days 5 and 10 of the course. Pansitonol is not designed to deliver instant symptom relief and any product claiming to 'flush out parasites in 24 hours' should be treated with extreme scepticism.
Before combining any supplement with prescription medication, speak to your treating doctor. Specifically: if you are on anticoagulants or antiplatelets (warfarin, clopidogrel, apixaban), the curcumin in Pansitonol can have additive effects — your doctor must know. If you have active liver or kidney disease, the Krimighna herb stack requires medical supervision. If you are pregnant or breastfeeding, do not take Pansitonol — classical Krimighna formulations are contraindicated. For all other adult users without these conditions, Pansitonol is designed to sit compatibly alongside routine multivitamins, but the conservative answer is always: ask your doctor first.
No. Pansitonol is deliberately distributed through this single nutritionist-reviewed catalogue rather than general pharmacy chains or third-party marketplaces. We do this for two reasons: it keeps the supply chain auditable end-to-end, and it prevents the counterfeit-Pansitonol problem that affects many popular Indian nutraceuticals once they appear on marketplaces with anonymous third-party sellers. Any listing claiming to be Pansitonol outside this catalogue cannot be authenticated by us. To order, use the pay-on-delivery form on this page — no advance payment is required and the courier delivers pan-India.
The 30-capsule / 10-day format matches classical Ayurvedic Krimighna Rasayana cycling — short seasonal courses with washout periods rather than uninterrupted long-term consumption. Modern peer-reviewed Rasayana literature generally supports this cycling approach for adaptogenic and digestive-active herbal stacks. After a 10-day Pansitonol course you can reassess at your own subjective digestive-comfort baseline, take a 7–14 day washout, and consider a second seasonal course at the next major weather-or-festival transition.
The classical Ayurvedic Krimighna course traditionally pairs with simple home-cooked vegetarian meals, regular meal timing, plenty of plain water and avoidance of heavy fried food during the 10-day window. This is not a strict requirement — Pansitonol works as a nutritional Rasayana regardless — but classical practice and basic gut-health principles both suggest the dietary support amplifies the course's perceived benefit. It is not a juice-cleanse or fasting protocol; you eat normally, just attentively.
Pansitonol is a dietary supplement classified as a nutraceutical or food-for-special-dietary-use under applicable Indian nutraceutical regulations. It is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease. Results vary by individual. Discontinue use and consult your doctor if any adverse symptom occurs. Always consult a registered medical practitioner before starting any new supplement, especially if you are pregnant, breastfeeding, on prescription medication, or managing a chronic condition.