Nidāna of Mūtraghāta and Aśmarī: Doṣa-based Types, Signs, and Named Urinary Syndromes
मूत्राण्यावातजे कृच्छ्रपीत्ते पीतं सदाहरुक् / रक्तं वा कफजो बस्तिमेढ्रगौरवशोथवान्
mūtrāṇyāvātaje kṛcchrapītte pītaṃ sadāharuk / raktaṃ vā kaphajo bastimeḍhragauravaśothavān
Dans la dysurie due à vāta, l’urine est entravée ou irrégulière ; dans la dysurie de type pitta, l’urine est jaune et cause une brûlure constante ; dans la dysurie de type kapha, l’urine peut être blanchâtre ou mêlée de sang, avec lourdeur et enflure de la vessie et du membre viril.
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vainateya)
Dosha: Vata/Pitta/Kapha
Concept: Tridoṣa-based differential diagnosis of mūtrakṛcchra (dysuria) through urine color/quality and associated symptoms.
Vedantic Theme: Deha as prakṛti-vikāra; discernment (viveka) between Self and bodily conditions.
Application: Use symptom-patterns (vāta/pitta/kapha) to choose appropriate regimen and treatment rather than one-size-fits-all remedies.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.158 (Ayurveda section): mūtrakṛcchra/basti-roga and doṣa-lakṣaṇa progression; Garuda Purana 1.157–1.159 (contextual medical taxonomy of doṣas, malas, and urogenital disorders)
The verse links urinary symptoms to vāta, pitta, and kapha patterns, showing an early diagnostic approach based on urine color, burning, heaviness, and swelling.
It is a medical-knowledge passage rather than an afterlife narrative; it contributes to dharmic living by emphasizing care of the body as an instrument of duty.
Urine color changes, burning, blood, swelling, or heaviness are clinically significant—use them as prompts for prompt medical consultation.