Jvara-Nidāna-Lakṣaṇa: Causes, Doṣic Types, Āma/Nirāma Stages, and Prognosis of Fever
वैकृतो ऽन्यः स दुः साध्यः प्रायश्च प्राकृतो ऽनिलात् / वर्षासु मारुतो दुष्टः पित्तश्लेष्मान्वितं ज्वरम्
vaikṛto 'nyaḥ sa duḥ sādhyaḥ prāyaśca prākṛto 'nilāt / varṣāsu māruto duṣṭaḥ pittaśleṣmānvitaṃ jvaram
ଅନ୍ୟ ଏକ ‘ବୈକୃତ’ ଜ୍ୱର ଅଛି; ସେ ପ୍ରାୟଃ ଦୁଃସାଧ୍ୟ। ‘ପ୍ରାକୃତ’ ଜ୍ୱର ବାତ (ବାୟୁ) ଠାରୁ ଜନ୍ମେ। ବର୍ଷା ଋତୁରେ ବାୟୁ ଦୁଷ୍ଟ ହେଲେ ପିତ୍ତ ଓ ଶ୍ଳେଷ୍ମ (କଫ) ସହିତ ଜ୍ୱର ହୁଏ।
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Understanding doṣa causation and seasonal aggravation to guide treatment and conduct.
Vedantic Theme: Deha as instrument for dharma; prakṛti-vikṛti discernment as applied viveka.
Application: Observe rainy-season vāta aggravation; anticipate pitta-kapha association in fever; seek timely regimen and therapy rather than neglect.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.147 (Ayurveda/roga-nidāna context): doṣa-ṛtu relations and jvara types
This verse distinguishes difficult-to-treat, deranged fevers (vaikṛta) from more ordinary fevers (prākṛta), framing illness through doṣa-based causation—especially vāta’s role—so one can understand prognosis and seasonal risk.
It states that during the rains, vāyu (vāta/māruta) tends to become vitiated, and that aggravated vāta can generate fever accompanied by pitta and kapha (śleṣman).
Treat the rainy season as a higher-risk period for vāta disturbance: prioritize routine, warm/light diet, and timely care if fever presents with mixed pitta-kapha features, recognizing that some presentations may be harder to resolve.