Jvara-Nidāna-Lakṣaṇa: Causes, Doṣic Types, Āma/Nirāma Stages, and Prognosis of Fever
दिवाकरार्पितबले व्यायामाच्च विशोषिते / शरीरे नियतं वाताज्ज्वरः स्यात्पौर्वरात्रिकः
divākarārpitabale vyāyāmācca viśoṣite / śarīre niyataṃ vātājjvaraḥ syātpaurvarātrikaḥ
Quando a força do corpo foi consumida sob o sol e ele se ressecou pelo esforço, então, por uma agravação assentada de vāta, surge uma febre—manifestando-se na primeira parte da noite.
Lord Vishnu
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Etiology (nidana): sun-depleted strength and exertion-induced dryness predispose to settled vāta aggravation causing early-night fever (pūrvārātrika).
Vedantic Theme: Moderation and awareness of bodily limits; prakriti’s laws operate regardless of intention—knowledge enables skillful living.
Application: Avoid overexertion and dehydration/overexposure to sun; restore fluids, rest, and vāta-pacifying routines when early-night fever patterns appear.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.147.80 (rātrija jvara); Garuda Purana 1.147 (vata/kapha/pitta-based fever taxonomy)
This verse links vāta aggravation to fever, showing that the text also preserves practical Ayurvedic causation—especially how dryness and overexertion provoke vāta disorders.
It does not address the soul’s journey directly; instead, it teaches bodily causation of fever, implying that right living and bodily balance support dharma and clarity of mind.
Avoid overexertion in strong sun, prevent dehydration, and manage vāta-increasing habits (dryness, fatigue, irregular routine) to reduce vāta-type fever tendencies.