षट्चत्वारो ऽनिलात्तेच मेदोमत्रकफावहाः / हारिद्रमेही कटुकं हरिद्रासन्निभं शकृत्
ṣaṭcatvāro 'nilātteca medomatrakaphāvahāḥ / hāridramehī kaṭukaṃ haridrāsannibhaṃ śakṛt
六種は乱れたヴァータ(vāta)より起こり、さらに四種は脂(medas)・尿・痰(kapha)を損なうものとされる。姜黄色のプラメーハに罹る者は、辛味ある便を、姜黄のごとく黄にして排する。
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Doṣa-specific phenotypes: vāta-derived types and mixed tissue/fluids involvement; haridrā-meha marked by turmeric-yellow features and pungent excreta.
Vedantic Theme: Guṇa/doṣa interplay shaping nāma-rūpa of the body; empirical signs as gateways to right action.
Application: Recognize vāta involvement and mixed pathology; note characteristic yellow/turmeric coloration and pungency as clinical clues for subtype differentiation.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.159.1 (prameha nidāna and counts); Garuda Purana 1.159.3-4 (color/consistency variants)
This verse uses hāridra-meha as a diagnostic marker—describing characteristic bodily signs (yellow, turmeric-like excretion) to classify a specific urinary/metabolic disorder.
Indirectly: by detailing bodily conditions and humoral imbalance, it frames the perishable body’s states—context often used in the Garuda Purana to motivate dharma and right conduct beyond the body.
Treat it as an observation about symptom-based assessment: persistent abnormal coloration and changes in excretion are warning signs—seek timely medical evaluation while maintaining disciplined diet and conduct.