Visarpa Nidāna-Lakṣaṇa
Causes, Types, and Prognosis of Rapidly Spreading Eruptive Disorders
असाध्याः कृतसर्वोत्थाः सर्वे चाक्रान्तमर्मणः / शीर्णस्नायुशिरामांसाः क्लिन्नाश्चशवगन्धयः
asādhyāḥ kṛtasarvotthāḥ sarve cākrāntamarmaṇaḥ / śīrṇasnāyuśirāmāṃsāḥ klinnāścaśavagandhayaḥ
സർവദോഷോത്ഭവ (സന്നിപാതജന്യ) എല്ലാം അസാധ്യം; മർമസ്ഥാനങ്ങൾ ബാധിച്ചവയും അങ്ങനെ തന്നെ. സ്നായു, ശിര, മാംസം ക്ഷയിച്ചിടങ്ങൾ നനഞ്ഞ് ശവഗന്ധം പുറപ്പെടുവിക്കും.
Lord Vishnu (teaching Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Concept: Limits of intervention: sarvadoṣa involvement and marma affliction mark asādhyatā; discern when disease has crossed a threshold.
Vedantic Theme: Acceptance of finitude of the body; vairāgya through recognition of decay and inevitability.
Application: Identify incurable markers—tridoṣic involvement, marma invasion, destruction of tendons/vessels/flesh, sodden tissue, cadaveric odor—shift goals to palliation, hygiene, and compassionate care.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.163.23: treatable categories contrasted with this verse’s asādhyatā criteria; Garuda Purana 1.163.21: corpse-odor and tissue sloughing as severity signs
It becomes incurable when all doṣas are involved (sannipāta), when marmas (vital points) are affected, and when there is clear tissue breakdown with foul, corpse-like odor.
It does not discuss post-death travel or Yama’s realm; it is a medical-prognostic teaching embedded in Vishnu’s discourse to Garuda.
Severe spreading lesions with tissue necrosis and foul odor indicate a medical emergency—this verse frames those signs as late-stage, high-risk, and often beyond simple remedies.