Jvara-Chikitsa: Doṣa-wise Fever Management, Medicated Waters, and Escalation Therapies
किराततिक्तैर्नारीगुडूचीशुण्ठिमुस्तकैः / पित्तज्वरहरः स्याच्च शृण्वन्यं योगमुत्तमम्
kirātatiktairnārīguḍūcīśuṇṭhimustakaiḥ / pittajvaraharaḥ syācca śṛṇvanyaṃ yogamuttamam
بـكيراتا-تيكتا (kirāta-tikta) العشبة المُرّة، ومع ناري (nārī) وغودوتشي (guḍūcī) والزنجبيل اليابس ومُستا، تصير هذه التركيبة مزيلةً لحُمّى البيتا (pitta). والآن استمع إلى علاجٍ ممتازٍ آخر.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda)
Dosha: Pitta
Concept: Excellence in remedy (uttama-yoga) comes from discerning combinations; learning proceeds stepwise—listen, apply, refine.
Vedantic Theme: Śāstra as compassionate guidance; knowledge applied to reduce duḥkha in saṃsāra’s embodied dimension.
Application: Use kirāta-tikta with nārī, guḍūcī, śuṇṭhī, and mustaka for pitta-fever; remain attentive for subsequent superior formulations.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.175.4 (pitta-jvara ghṛta); Garuda Purana 1.175.7 (another excellent remedy follows)
This verse preserves a practical Ayurvedic formulation, showing the Purana’s role not only in dharma and afterlife themes but also in household health knowledge—specifically targeting pitta-aggravated fever.
It does not address the soul’s journey here; this chapter segment focuses on Ayurvedic therapeutics (jvara-chikitsā) rather than preta/afterlife doctrine.
It highlights a classical pitta-fever approach—cooling/bitter herbs like guḍūcī with digestive supports like śuṇṭhi—best used today under guidance of a qualified Ayurvedic practitioner.