Dhanvantari’s Therapeutics: Jvara to Vraṇa
Fever, GI Disorders, Bleeding, Respiratory, Urinary, Swelling, and Wound Care
शुण्ठीगोक्षुरकक्वाथः सामवातार्तिशूलनुत् / दशमूलामृतैरण्डरास्नानागरदारुभिः
śuṇṭhīgokṣurakakvāthaḥ sāmavātārtiśūlanut / daśamūlāmṛtairaṇḍarāsnānāgaradārubhiḥ
Отвар из сухого имбиря и гокшуры (gokṣura) облегчает боль и колики, возникающие из-за ваты (vāta). Его следует готовить вместе с дашамулой (daśamūla), гудучи/амритой (guḍūcī/amṛtā), касторовым растением (eraṇḍa), расной (rāsnā), сухим имбирём и дару (dāru, древесина деодара).
Lord Vishnu (in discourse to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Preservation of health through right remedies supports one’s capacity for dharma and sādhana.
Vedantic Theme: Śarīra as instrument (sādhana) for puruṣārthas; balance of guṇas/doṣas enabling sattva.
Application: Use a vāta-pacifying kvātha with śuṇṭhī, gokṣura, daśamūla, guḍūcī, eraṇḍa, rāsnā, nāgara, dāru under competent guidance; attend to vāta-aggravating diet/lifestyle.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.170 (Ayurveda/Chikitsā section, vāta-śūla remedies context)
This verse preserves practical Ayurvedic formulations within the Purana, showing that dharma literature also transmits health-supporting remedies for vāta-type pain and colic.
It does not address afterlife doctrine here; the focus is a therapeutic recipe, presented within Vishnu’s instructional discourse to Garuda.
It highlights a classical approach—using warming and vāta-pacifying herbs (like śuṇṭhī, daśamūla, castor)—but any use should be guided by a qualified Ayurvedic practitioner.