Pāṇḍu-Śotha Nidāna: Doṣa-wise Signs, Complications, and Prognosis
श्वासकासातिसारार्शोजठरप्रदरज्वराः / विष्टम्भालस्यकच्छर्दिहिक्कापाण्डुविसर्पकम्
śvāsakāsātisārārśojaṭharapradarajvarāḥ / viṣṭambhālasyakacchardihikkāpāṇḍuvisarpakam
منها ما يُحدث تورّمًا في الأجزاء العليا، ومنها ما يكون في الأسفل في ناحية المثانة، وما استقرّ في الوسط أحدثه في المنطقة الوسطى. فإذا سرى في جميع الأطراف سُمّي «تورّم الجسد كله»، وإذا انتشر في كل موضع سُمّي «الشامل»، وقد يتحرّك إلى الخارج وإلى الداخل بحسب الموضع الذي يأوي إليه.
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Mixed
Concept: Śotha is associated with multiple systemic disorders (respiratory, GI, fever, anemia-like states, skin spread), implying interconnected pathology across srotas (channels).
Vedantic Theme: Interdependence within prakṛti’s guṇas and bodily systems; discernment (viveka) through correct classification reduces suffering.
Application: Recognize swelling as potentially systemic; assess co-morbid symptoms (dyspnea, cough, diarrhea, piles, fever, vomiting, hiccup, pallor, spreading eruptions) and seek comprehensive treatment.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.162 (śotha-prakaraṇa: associated vyādhis and systemic spread)
It gives a traditional framework to recognize patterns—upper, lower (basti region), middle, or generalized—so the condition is understood by its seat and spread.
By highlighting how suffering ‘pervades’ according to its āśraya (seat), it mirrors the puranic idea that experiences in embodied life follow specific causes and conditions, which rituals and dharma aim to purify.
Track where symptoms begin and how they spread, seek timely care, and adopt stabilizing routines (sleep, diet, moderation) traditionally recommended for vāta imbalance.