Role of Yoga Prana Vidya Healing in High-Risk Pregnancy: A successful Case of 37 years old Female
Role of Yoga Prana Vidya Healing in High-Risk Pregnancy: A successful Case of 37 years old Female
Publication: International journal of medical sciences and academic research
Article link: https://www.scientificpublications.in/index.php/ijmsar/article/view/149
Authors:
Mohandas Baliga
Certified YPV Healer & Senior YPV Trainer, Mangalore, Karnataka, India
Venkata Satyanarayana Nanduri
Consultant, Research and Publications, YPV Ashram, Sri Ramana Trust, Thally 635118, Tamil Nadu, India
Abstract :
Introduction: High-risk pregnancies complicated by chronic hypertension, hypothyroidism, recurrent pregnancy loss, and failed assisted reproductive techniques often result in poor outcomes. Complementary therapies such as Yoga Prana Vidya (YPV) have shown promise in reducing stress and supporting maternal well-being.
Case Presentation: A 37 years old married woman, with a history of chronic hypertension, hypothyroidism, right kidney surgery, and recurrent miscarriages, conceived spontaneously after failed IVF attempts. At 19 weeks, fetal ultrasound revealed mild bilateral renal pelvic dilatation, necessitating close monitoring. She sought YPV healing at 5 months gestation.
YPV intervention: Over four months (May–September 2025), she received 120 YPV healing sessions (YPV Psychotherapy L3, YPV L2, HDP L1, stress energy removal, blessings). She practiced daily YPV sadhana including breathing, forgiveness meditation, and exercises from YPV Sadhna App. Clinical monitoring showed stabilization of blood pressure (maintained at ~140/100 mmHg), improved thyroid function, and resolution of fetal renal dilatation by repeat scans.
Results: At 29 weeks, maternal BP and thyroid remained controlled. She delivered a healthy male infant via C-section at 37 weeks without complications. Postpartum, her BP normalized (120/80 mmHg) and TSH reduced to 3.2. The patient reported reduced stress, improved well-being, and expressed gratitude for YPV healing.
Conclusion: This case highlights the potential role of YPV healing as an adjunct in managing high-risk pregnancies, supporting maternal-fetal outcomes, and reducing stress. Further controlled studies are recommended.





















