Prameha-Nidāna-Lakṣaṇa-Bheda: Etiology, Signs, Varieties, and Complications of Meha
शीतप्रियत्वं गलतालुशोषो माधुर्य मास्ये करपाददाहः / भविष्यतो मेहगणस्य रूपं मूत्रे ऽपि धावन्ति पिपीलिकाश्च
śītapriyatvaṃ galatāluśoṣo mādhurya māsye karapādadāhaḥ / bhaviṣyato mehagaṇasya rūpaṃ mūtre 'pi dhāvanti pipīlikāśca
குளிரானவற்றில் விருப்பம், தொண்டு-அண்ணப்பலகை உலர்தல், வாயில் இனிமை, கை-கால்களில் எரிச்சல்—இவை வரவிருக்கும் மேஹ நோய்களின் அறிகுறிகள்; மூத்திரத்தை நோக்கி எறும்புகளும் ஓடுகின்றன என்று காணப்படும்.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue instruction to Garuda)
Concept: Repeated instruction: vigilance and early correction prevent escalation; disciplined living is protective.
Vedantic Theme: Pragmatic care of the body supports pursuit of higher aims; repeated reminders cultivate smṛti (mindful recollection) and restraint.
Application: Use the symptom cluster as a checklist; if present, adjust diet and habits and consult a practitioner before full manifestation.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.159.35 (same symptom cluster); Garuda Purana 1.159.38 (thirst, sweet/sticky urine; doṣa causation)
This verse treats Prameha as a recognizable disorder with specific early signs, showing that the Garuda Purana also preserves practical diagnostic knowledge alongside dharma and afterlife teachings.
It lists a cluster of symptoms—dry throat/palate, sweet taste in the mouth, burning in extremities, and ants drawn to urine—presented as markers of an impending meha-gaṇa (group of urinary diseases).
Treat these as warning signs to seek timely medical evaluation, adopt disciplined diet and lifestyle, and avoid negligence—using early detection as a form of responsible dharma toward one’s body.