Dhanvantari’s Therapeutics: Jvara to Vraṇa
Fever, GI Disorders, Bleeding, Respiratory, Urinary, Swelling, and Wound Care
तैलमेरण्डजं पीत्वा बलासिद्धं पयो ऽन्वितम् / आध्मानशूलोपचितामन्त्रवृद्धिञ्जयेन्नरः
tailameraṇḍajaṃ pītvā balāsiddhaṃ payo 'nvitam / ādhmānaśūlopacitāmantravṛddhiñjayennaraḥ
เมื่อดื่มน้ำมันละหุ่ง (เอรัณฑะ) พร้อมน้ำนมที่ต้มสุกด้วยพืชบะลา บุรุษย่อมชนะอาการท้องอืด แน่นจุกเสียด และภาวะอันตรวฤทธิที่กำเริบ (คล้ายไส้เลื่อน)
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Balancing vāta through unctuous therapy and supportive preparations; strength (bala) as both herb and principle.
Vedantic Theme: Pain and disorder are transient modifications of prakṛti; disciplined means restore equilibrium while the Self remains untouched.
Application: Administer castor oil with milk processed with bala to address distension, colic, and antra-vṛddhi, with careful dosing and supervision.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: vira
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.170: vāta-vikāra/udara-ādhmāna and śūla remedies; use of eranda-taila as virecana/anulomana
This verse shows the Purana’s practical role: alongside dharma and afterlife teachings, it preserves applied healing guidance using classical herbs and preparations.
It does not directly discuss the soul’s journey; instead, it supports dharmic living by maintaining bodily health, which is treated as a foundation for duty and spiritual practice.
Use it as a textual reference for traditional formulations, but apply only with qualified Ayurvedic supervision, especially for castor oil and hernia-like conditions.