Udara-roga Nidāna: Causes, Doṣa-Types, Spleen/Liver Enlargement, and Udakodara
पृथग्दोषैः समस्तौश्च प्लीहवङ्क्षक्षतोदकैः / तेनार्ताः शुष्कताल्वोष्ठाः सर्वपादकरोदराः
pṛthagdoṣaiḥ samastauśca plīhavaṅkṣakṣatodakaiḥ / tenārtāḥ śuṣkatālvoṣṭhāḥ sarvapādakarodarāḥ
দোষসমূহ পৃথকভাবে বা একত্রে, এবং প্লীহারোগ, কুঁচকির ব্যথা ও ক্ষয়/অতিস্রাব প্রভৃতি দ্বারা পীড়িত হয়ে তারা কাতর হয়। তালু ও ঠোঁট শুকিয়ে যায়, আর পা, হাত ও উদর সর্বত্র কষ্ট হয়।
Lord Vishnu (narrating to Garuda/Vainateya)
Concept: Disease can be dosha-specific or tridoshic; organ involvement (spleen/flanks) and fluid derangement manifest as dryness and generalized swelling—observe systemic signs, not isolated symptoms.
Vedantic Theme: Interdependence (paraspara-sambandha) of parts within the body; holistic seeing as right knowledge.
Application: When dryness of lips/palate and swelling of extremities accompany abdominal issues, treat as systemic pathology; evaluate fluid balance, organ enlargement, and multi-dosha involvement promptly.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.161.1-3 (mandagni → mala-sanchaya → vayu dushti → udararoga classification)
This verse lists specific physical deteriorations (dry palate/lips, systemic affliction and swelling-like symptoms) used as traditional indicators that life-force is failing, prompting timely dharmic preparations and rites.
It frames a cluster of debilitating symptoms as preta-like markers, implying the person’s vitality is collapsing toward the transitional condition discussed in the Garuda Purana’s after-death narrative.
Use it as a reminder for timely spiritual and family duties—settling obligations, remembering dharma, and arranging last rites—rather than delaying until the final crisis.