Nidāna of Mūtraghāta and Aśmarī: Doṣa-based Types, Signs, and Named Urinary Syndromes
आबध्य मूत्रं भ्रमति संस्तम्भोद्वेष्टगौरवम् / मूत्रमल्पाल्पमथवा विमुञ्चति सकृत्सकृत्
ābadhya mūtraṃ bhramati saṃstambhodveṣṭagauravam / mūtramalpālpamathavā vimuñcati sakṛtsakṛt
మూత్రం అడ్డుపడితే బాధితుడు వ్యాకులంగా తిరుగుతాడు; శరీరంలో గట్టితనం, ముడుచుకునే సంకోచం, భారంగా అనిపించడం కలుగుతుంది. అతడు మూత్రాన్ని కొద్దికొద్దిగా విడిచేను, లేక మళ్లీ మళ్లీ తరచుగా విడిచేను.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vainateya)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Symptom-clusters (lakṣaṇa) reveal the underlying obstruction; careful observation guides right response.
Vedantic Theme: Sākṣitva (witnessing): observe bodily states without identity-confusion; use knowledge to reduce suffering.
Application: If urine is scanty or frequent in drops with body heaviness and cramps, treat as obstruction; hydrate appropriately, avoid strain, and consult a physician promptly.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bibhatsa
Type: anatomical/systemic
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.158.25-29 (continuation of mūtra-vikāra symptomatology)
This verse illustrates how intense physical distress—here, urinary obstruction and painful, repeated urination—is presented as a form of suffering tied to karmic causes, warning the listener to live dharmically and avoid actions that lead to misery.
In the Vishnu–Garuda dialogue, such descriptions function as concrete examples of suffering experienced by embodied beings (and, in broader context, by the departed in transitional states), reinforcing that karma shapes one’s post-death and rebirth experiences.
Use it as an ethical reminder: avoid harmful conduct, cultivate self-discipline and compassion, and support traditional rites like śrāddha/pinda-dāna with sincerity—framed as acts meant to reduce suffering and uphold dharma.