Nidāna of Mūtraghāta and Aśmarī: Doṣa-based Types, Signs, and Named Urinary Syndromes
ऽध्यायः धन्वन्तरिरुवाच / अथातो मूत्रघातस्य निदानं शृणु सुश्रुत / बस्तिबस्तिशिरोमेढ्रकटीवृषणपायु च
'dhyāyaḥ dhanvantariruvāca / athāto mūtraghātasya nidānaṃ śṛṇu suśruta / bastibastiśiromeḍhrakaṭīvṛṣaṇapāyu ca
قال دهنفنتري: والآن، يا سوشروتا، اسمع نِدانَةَ مُوترَغْهاتَة، أي أسباب احتباس البول. وهو مما يتعلّق بالبَسْتي (المثانة)، وعنق/رأس المثانة، والذَّكَر، والخاصرة، والخصيتين، والشرج.
Dhanvantari
Concept: Nidāna (causation) must be heard and understood before treatment; precise knowledge of affected loci guides right action.
Vedantic Theme: Viveka (discernment) applied to embodied experience—knowing causes and conditions reduces suffering.
Application: Begin with etiological assessment for urinary obstruction; map symptoms to anatomical regions (bladder/neck/penis/loin/testes/anus) before intervention.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.158.2-4 (anatomy/flow and pathology of mūtraghāta)
This verse introduces a medical (Āyurvedic) teaching section where Dhanvantari explains the etiology of urinary obstruction, framing it as a disorder affecting multiple pelvic organs.
It does not discuss the afterlife narrative here; instead, it shifts to a practical, embodied teaching—health and disease causation—within the Purana’s broader instruction.
Use it as a cue to treat urinary retention as a systemic pelvic condition and seek qualified medical care early, rather than ignoring symptoms.