To the editor,
Yoga is a form of mind–body medicine that integrates an individual’s physical, mental, and spiritual components to improve aspects of health, especially illness related to stress.1,2 “Kundalini,” meaning “coiled-up” in Sanskrit, is a type of Hindu Yoga practice. 3 It is also related to the practice of all kinds of Hindu tantra, Tibetan Buddhism, Chinese Qigong (Chi Kung), and some Eastern martial arts. 3
According to the yoga tradition, kundalini is like an energy, a serpent, or a goddess that lies dormant at the base of the spine of all human beings. 3 Sivananda says that the awakening of kundalini manifests itself through various physical and psychological signs and symptoms such as feeling the currents of prana (vital energy) rising to the sahasrara chakra (thousand-petalled: the individual’s center of spirit, enlightenment, wisdom, universal consciousness, and connection to higher guidance), feeling vibrations of prana in different parts inside the body, feeling electric-like currents flow up and down the nerves, experiencing bliss, having divine visions, and getting inspiration and insight. When kundalini is at one chakra, intense heat is felt there, and when it leaves that center for the next chakra, the former chakra becomes very cold and appears lifeless. 3
This belief might also clinically present as psychosis, but limited literature is available in the form of case reports. Here we present a case that was difficult to diagnose.
Case Report
A 19-year-old, single, college-going female of urban background presented to the emergency department of a tertiary mental health institute with symptoms of mutism, poor oral intake, and stiffness of body with abnormal sustained postures for long-duration, for a week. This was unlike her usual yoga practices, which would be for a brief period and in a controlled manner. She was admitted and medical stabilization was done. With a provisional impression of catatonia under evaluation, she was given the Lorazepam challenge test, on which some response was seen. Hence, treatment was further continued with 6 mg intravenous Lorazepam in divided doses for three days, on which improvement was seen in the catatonic symptoms.
On subsequent evaluation, it was found that the patient had been practicing Hath Yoga and kundalini asan for the past three months on her own. As she was enchanted by knowing about the effect of yoga practices mentioned in books and the internet, she would practice yoga—pranayama and meditation on her own, unguided and any time during the day. In the past two months, she started experiencing a form of energy at the base of the spine that was gradually heading towards the head, activating her chakras muladhara, swadhistana, manipura, anahta vishuddha, ajna, and sahasrara. She would experience some unregistrable vibration, similar to the kundalini experiences as believed and written in the Hindu shashtras. She ascribed the vibration to some eternal force and considered herself to be its passive recipient. She also felt that people around her are talking about her, though others repeatedly refuted that, and was hearing clear voices, in an awake state, telling her to follow orders in her day-to-day activities. Her sleep pattern was disturbed; she would frequently get up at night and would often be found doing pranayama and meditation.
Over a month, she also expressed to have experienced eternal enlightenment and would feel that all materialistic things, including a person’s basic needs of hunger and thirst, are immaterial to them. Initially, her family members also believed these experiences to be an outcome of her yoga practices but were later concerned with a gradual change in her previous self and social and biological function. This change in the patient was not seen as deviance but as an impact of yoga practice until she stopped eating, speaking, and interacting with others and was found frozen in sustained postures, requiring medical attention.
The patient’s physical examination was suggestive of pallor. On mental status examination at the time of presentation, catatonic symptoms were present, with a Bush Francis Catatonia Rating Scale (BFCRS) 4 score of 13. She also had blunt affect, delusion of reference, somatic passivity, auditory (command) hallucination, impaired judgment, and absent insight. The patient was diagnosed to have schizophrenia, catatonic subtype, and was started with Tab. Risperidone along with Lorazepam that was gradually tapered over a week. At the time of discharge, the dose of Risperidone was 8 mg per day, Lorazepam was stopped, and BFCRS score was zero. The patient subsequently maintained well with regular follow-up.
Discussion
Schizophrenia or psychotic disorders are generally characterized by fundamental and characteristic distortions of thinking and perception and affect that is inappropriate or blunted. Since the index case fulfilled the criteria as per ICD-10 and had an illness duration of more than a month, a diagnosis of Schizophrenia was made. 5 Although sensations of heat are common in kundalini awakening, they are rare in psychosis.6,7 Awakening of kundalini should be a gradual process and supervised; failure to do so under proper guidance leads to negative effects including psychosis. 8
With the advancement of genetic studies, endophenotypic markers like P300 have shown a correlation in yoga and schizophrenia treatment. Sarang SP et al 9 also concluded in a clinical study about the relation of P300 and its utility in the early picking of changes or at-risk populations.9,10 These biological alterations (P300) by Yogic techniques may be used to warn people against such reactions 10 and can be helpful to screen at-risk population.
Therefore it may be inferred that unsupervised practice of yoga increases the risk of psychosis. Thus, this clinical case was considered a case of kundalini psychosis syndrome.
Conclusion
According to Rama, 11 kundalini is thought to contain latent energy and memories that could be personal and transpersonal. The modern way of understanding this latent power is in terms of the unconscious mind. Sivananda in 1994, wrote about the spiritual basis: Saraswati 3 says that some people who have awakened kundalini get in contact with their unconscious body and see inauspicious ferocious elements such as ghosts, monsters, etc., or get other perceptual phenomenal experiences. Since Kundalini psychosis showed a good response to antipsychotic treatment in our case, early detection and treatment could improve the socio-biological functioning and quality of life.
Footnotes
Patient Consent: Written consent of patient and her father was taken.
Declaration of Conflicting Interests: The authors declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Funding: The authors received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
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