Krimi-nidāna: Types of External and Internal Parasites and Their Symptoms
वङ्भेदशूलविष्टम्भकार्श्यपारुष्यपाण्डुताः / रोमहर्षाग्निसदनं गुदकण्डूंर्विमार्गगाः
vaṅbhedaśūlaviṣṭambhakārśyapāruṣyapāṇḍutāḥ / romaharṣāgnisadanaṃ gudakaṇḍūṃrvimārgagāḥ
Dazu gehören: spaltender Schmerz in den Gliedern, Kolik und Verstopfung (Obstruktion), Abmagerung, Rauheit von Körper oder Haut, Blässe, Gänsehaut (Haarsträuben), brennendes Empfinden, Jucken in der Analgegend sowie abnorme Bewegungen oder Funktionen, die vom rechten Lauf abweichen.
Dhanvantari (as the medical instructor within the Purāṇic discourse)
Concept: Embodied pain and dysfunction are concrete ‘phala’ that compel correction and humility.
Vedantic Theme: Duhkha-darśana leading to vairagya; body’s instability underscores the search for the stable Self.
Application: Respond to symptoms with timely care, restraint, and purification of habits; use suffering to deepen discernment and compassion.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Type: internal-body
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.165.11-13 (etiology and types of krimi)
This verse lists hallmark signs of Vāta aggravation—pain, obstruction, dryness, and irregular movement—helping identify imbalance and guiding corrective regimen.
By emphasizing obstruction, misdirected function (vimārga-gāḥ), and dryness/emaciation, it frames disease as disturbed movement and depleted tissues—classic Vāta pathology.
Use the symptom-cluster (pain + constipation/obstruction + dryness + burning/itching) as a prompt to seek Ayurvedic evaluation and adopt grounding, lubricating routines rather than drying, irregular habits.