Treatment of Nāḍī-vraṇa, Bhagandara, Upadaṃśa, Fractures, Kuṣṭha/Śvitra, Āmlapitta, ENT–Eye Disorders, and Bleeding Conditions
भावितं मलपूक्वाथैः सोमराजीफलं बहु / कर्षं भक्षेदलवणो ह्यक्षफल्गुशृतं पिबेत्
bhāvitaṃ malapūkvāthaiḥ somarājīphalaṃ bahu / karṣaṃ bhakṣedalavaṇo hyakṣaphalguśṛtaṃ pibet
El fruto de somarājī, impregnado repetidas veces con la decocción de malapūka, debe tomarse en buena cantidad; cómase un karṣa sin sal y luego bébase una decocción cocida con harītakī (akṣa) y phalgu.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Saṃyama (restraint) and saṃskāra (processing) amplify therapeutic effect; regimen is a form of disciplined living.
Vedantic Theme: Purification through repeated refinement; disciplined senses (rasa-niyama) support well-being and steadiness of mind.
Application: Follow exact dose (one karṣa), avoid salt during intake, and use the follow-up decoction; keep routine and dietary simplicity during therapy.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
Type: apothecary/kitchen-pharmacy
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.171 (bhāvanā/rasāyana procedures; kuṣṭha-related formulations)
This verse positions somarājī as a principal internal remedy, emphasizing pharmaceutical processing (bhāvita) and a measured dose (one karṣa) with dietary restriction (no salt).
The verse is medical rather than eschatological; it frames health as something maintained through regulated conduct and correct regimen, aligning bodily discipline with dharmic living.
The key takeaway is the regimen principle—processing, correct dose, and dietary rules—while actual use of herbs should be supervised by qualified practitioners.