How Pulamanthole Mooss Ayurveda’s Living Legacy Found Its Place in Academic History
At a time when Alzheimer’s disease and age-related cognitive decline are emerging as major public health challenges in India, families are increasingly searching for long-term, holistic care beyond symptom management. In this evolving landscape, classical Ayurvedic institutions rooted in centuries-old medical wisdom are quietly reclaiming relevance through tradition and disciplined clinical practice.
One such institution is Ashtavaidyan Pulamanthole Mooss Ayurveda Hospital, a name deeply embedded in Kerala’s Ashtavaidya heritage. Known today for its structured Ayurvedic support for neurological and cognitive disorders, the hospital represents a rare continuity of classical healing that has survived generations of social and medical change.
Despite Ayurveda’s growing global footprint, the cultural memory of the scholars and lineages that preserved its classical texts has often faded. Among them is Vagbhata, the revered Ayurvedic authority whose works Ashtanga Hridaya and Ashtanga Sangraha continue to form the foundation of Ayurvedic education and clinical practice across the world.
It is this forgotten connection between classical knowledge and living practice that Sukitha M., a native of Pulamanthole, set out to document through her doctoral research.
A Doctoral Thesis That Became Cultural Preservation
Recently awarded a PhD by the University of Calicut, Sukitha completed an extensive academic study titled “Contribution of Pulamantol Ashtavaidya Family to Ayurveda.” More than an academic milestone, her research stands as one of the few structured efforts to document the Pulamanthole Mooss Ashtavaidya lineage, transforming a largely oral and practice-based tradition into recorded history.
Guided by Dr. Thanu V. G., Assistant Professor of Sanskrit at SNGS College, Pattambi, the study traces the evolution of the Ashtavaidya system, which was once practiced by eighteen families and later consolidated into eight major lineages. Among these, the Pulamanthole Mooss family emerges as a key contributor to the continuity of classical Kerala Ayurveda through uninterrupted physician-led practice.
From Manuscripts to Medicine
What distinguishes this doctoral work is its depth. Beyond lineage history, the research documents rare handwritten Ayurvedic manuscripts preserved by the Pulamanthole Mooss family, many of which reference classical traditions associated with Vagbhata.
Classical texts such as Pathya, Kairali, Chikitsamanjari, and Sadachara Vrithivarthanam are examined not only as literary works but also as clinical and ethical frameworks guiding treatment, diet, conduct, and spiritual discipline. The research also records healing traditions such as Sarvaroga Shamana and the family’s long-standing association with the Sree Rudra Dhanwanthari Temple, highlighting the integrated nature of medicine, spirituality, and ethics in classical Ayurveda.
Living Tradition and Modern Relevance
These principles continue in practice at Ashtavaidyan Pulamanthole Mooss Ayurveda Hospital, operating under Pulamanthole Mooss Ayurveda Hospital and PMIC Brain Disorders Clinic. Rooted in a medical tradition spanning over a century, the hospital has gained recognition for its structured and personalised Ayurvedic protocols supporting patients with Alzheimer’s disease, memory loss, dementia-related symptoms, and post-stroke cognitive challenges.
Rather than isolated treatments, care is delivered through long-term physician-supervised protocols focusing on neurological balance, digestion, mental clarity, and overall vitality. The hospital has reported a growing number of successive cases where families observe improved quality of life, emotional stability, and functional independence.
While the institution avoids presenting Ayurveda as a curative replacement for modern medicine, its approach highlights the value of continuity of care, individualised attention, and integration of lifestyle with clinical support.
Why This Research Matters Now
Members associated with the Pulamanthole Mooss Ayurveda Thanal Foundation describe Sukitha’s doctoral research as cultural documentation with contemporary relevance. At a time when Ayurveda is often commercialised, the study raises an important question for the wider community about how sustainable the system can be if its historical custodians and contexts are forgotten.
By placing the Pulamanthole Mooss legacy into the academic record, the research ensures that future scholars and practitioners can trace Ayurveda not only through textbooks but through lived medical lineages.
Remembering the Roots to Sustain the Future
Sukitha’s research serves as a reminder that Ayurveda’s strength lies in memory, discipline, and continuity. As cognitive health challenges rise and holistic healthcare gains attention, institutions like Ashtavaidyan Pulamanthole Mooss Ayurveda Hospital stand at a meaningful intersection of history and relevance.
By transforming living tradition into documented history, this doctoral work reinforces a simple truth. The future of Ayurveda depends as much on remembering its roots as on expanding its reach.
