The Charaka Samhita is perhaps the most eminent text in Ayurveda, the ancient Indian medicinal practice. The sage Charaka is the author of this scriptural text, which provides a foundational understanding of the principles of medicine, diagnosis, treatment, and holistic healing. The entire document, being in Sanskrit, is chiefly devoted to the internal medicinal path or branch (Kayachikitsa). Disease prevention, the balance of humor in one's body (doshas), proper diet, lifestyle, herbal remedies, and organ-specific treatments are all emphasized here. The Charaka Samhita online is also about ethics, surgery, and medical education. Besides being available online in translated and original Sanskrit versions, it is widely read by Ayurveda practitioners and researchers. Those modern digital platforms provide searchable commentaries and interpretations; thus, this ancient medical treatise has become available to a worldwide audience.
Just making a point. It is best illustrated in Sushruta Samhita, the samhitasi writing that is attributed to the sage-physician who was later known as the Ayurvedic surgeon. The primary propaganda of the Charaka Samhita was probably to discourage people from exploring surgery. The Charaga Samhita can very well describe surgery, but surgical events are not given importance in this document. The reason for this purported omission in Charaka Samhita may be due to a lack of mention of stroke-associated urgency or urgent treatment requirements for arteritis-associated stroke. If a major emergency inspires a surgery or another invasively dangerous procedure, Charaka Samhita fails to mention such a well-known procedure in this life-saving surgery.