Yoga for digestion is an evidence-based practice that improves gastrointestinal motility, reduces symptom severity, and enhances quality of life across various digestive disorders. A 2025 RCT of 68 diabetes patients found that a 20-minute series of asanas (Padahastasana, Pawanmuktasana, Bhujangasana, Vakrasana) significantly increased dominant frequency (P < 0.04), dominant power (P < 0.05), and normogastric waves (P < 0.02), indicating enhanced gastric motility, while the supine rest control group showed no improvement.
Research Findings
- Pediatric functional GI disorders (69 children, 8-18 years, 10-week yoga therapy): At 1-year follow-up, treatment response (≥50% reduction in weekly pain scores) was achieved in 58% of the yoga group versus 29% of the control group (P = 0.01). Pain intensity scores significantly reduced (P < 0.01), and school absence decreased (P = 0.03).
- IBS patients across multiple studies: Yoga improved IBS symptom severity, mood-related symptoms, and quality of life compared to controls. In adolescents with IBS, yoga produced significant reductions in gastrointestinal symptoms (p < 0.01) and lower levels of functional disability and anxiety.
- Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD): Yoga improved quality of life compared with controls and served as an effective adjunct to standard medical therapy, enhancing stress management and health-related quality of life in pediatric IBD patients.
- Gastrointestinal cancer: Yoga led to reductions in sleep disturbance and mood symptoms.
- Chronic pancreatitis: Yoga produced improvements in quality of life, stress, mood, alcohol dependence, and appetite.
How Yoga Improves Digestion
- Stimulates gastric motility through specific postures that modulate intra-abdominal pressure and enteric reflexes, with effects measurable within 20 minutes of practice
- Enhances parasympathetic nervous system activity (vagal tone), reducing stress-related GI dysfunction
- Downregulates the HPA axis and sympathetic nervous system, decreasing pro-inflammatory cytokines
- Reduces cortisol levels, which improves gut barrier function and reduces inflammation
- Modulates gut microbiota composition, enriching health-promoting microbes that improve GI and gut-barrier functions
Poses for Digestion
- Padahastasana (Hand to Foot Pose): Standing forward fold
- Pawanmuktasana (Wind Release Pose): Supine pose; hold 20-30 seconds
- Bhujangasana (Cobra Pose): Prone backbend
- Vakrasana (Twisted Pose): Seated spinal twist
For optimal digestive health, practice 2-3 sessions per week (30-60 minutes). A 20-minute sequence of specific asanas can produce immediate improvements in gastric motility. Yoga is generally safe across all ages, with no serious adverse events attributed to the intervention. A healthcare provider should be consulted before beginning any new exercise regimen, especially for individuals with acute GI conditions.





