The yogic observation of Ida and Pingala correlates with the nasal cycle, where one nostril dominates every 90–120 minutes. Left nostril dominance correlates with right-hemisphere brain activity (creative, parasympathetic); right nostril dominance correlates with left-hemisphere (logical, sympathetic). Nadi Shodhana (alternate nostril breathing) actively balances this cycle.
A 2023 meta-analysis in the Journal of Clinical Medicine reviewed 42 RCTs on slow pranayama. Findings: significant reduction in systolic BP (−8.2 mmHg), heart rate (−6.4 bpm), and salivary cortisol. Bhramari (humming bee breath) was most effective for hypertension due to nitric oxide release in the nasal sinuses. pranayama the breath of yoga
fMRI studies on Kumbhaka show increased functional connectivity between the insula (interoceptive awareness), prefrontal cortex (executive control), and periaqueductal gray (pain/breath integration). For generalized anxiety disorder (GAD), 12 weeks of Nadi Shodhana (30 min/day) was non-inferior to SSRIs in a 2025 pilot trial, without side effects. The yogic observation of Ida and Pingala correlates
Patanjali’s Yoga Sutras (II.49–II.53) state that once pranayama is mastered, "the veil is removed from the inner light." The logic is sequential: Unsteady breath → unsteady mind → sensory distraction. By voluntarily controlling breath, one gains control over mental fluctuations ( citta vritti ). Pranayama serves as the bridge between the external (asana) and internal (pratyahara, dharana, dhyana). A 2023 meta-analysis in the Journal of Clinical