Nidāna of Vātarakta and Āvaraṇa of Vāyu; Doṣa-wise Lakṣaṇas and Triphalā-Yoga Remedies
धमन्यङ्गुलिसन्धीनां संकोचोङ्गग्रहो तिरुक् / शीतद्वेषानुपशयौ स्तम्भवेपथुसुप्तयः
dhamanyaṅgulisandhīnāṃ saṃkocoṅgagraho tiruk / śītadveṣānupaśayau stambhavepathusuptayaḥ
يحدث انقباضٌ في العروق ومفاصل الأصابع، وتيبّسٌ وقبضٌ في الأطراف مع ألمٍ نافذٍ كالوخز. وتظهر كراهيةٌ للبرد مع سكونٍ به، ومعها تصلّبٌ ورعشةٌ وخَدَرٌ.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Lakṣaṇa-jñāna (diagnostic recognition) of doṣic disturbance through bodily signs.
Vedantic Theme: Deha-anityatā (the body as mutable and conditioned), prompting viveka through clear seeing of embodied suffering.
Application: Use symptom-pattern recognition to seek timely treatment, adjust diet/behavior, and avoid aggravating factors (especially cold exposure when it worsens).
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.167.14-17 (progression of doṣa-wise and mixed symptomatology; prognosis)
This verse catalogues characteristic clinical signs used to identify a bodily imbalance (notably vata-type features like constriction, tremor, numbness), showing the Purana’s practical teaching on diagnosing conditions.
It does not directly describe the soul’s journey; instead, it teaches bodily symptomatology, which supports dharmic living by maintaining health for ritual duty and spiritual practice.
Use it as a traditional checklist of warning signs—persistent stiffness, tremor, numbness, and cold sensitivity indicate the need for timely care and lifestyle correction.