Kuṣṭha-bheda-lakṣaṇa-nidāna and Śvitra (Kilāsa) Prognosis
त्रिपष्ट्यधिकशततमो ऽध्यायः धन्वन्तरिरुवाच / मिथ्याहारविहारेण विशेषेण विरोधिना / साधुनिन्दावधाद्युद्धहरणाद्यैश्च सेवितैः
tripaṣṭyadhikaśatatamo 'dhyāyaḥ dhanvantariruvāca / mithyāhāravihāreṇa viśeṣeṇa virodhinā / sādhunindāvadhādyuddhaharaṇādyaiśca sevitaiḥ
Kabanata 164. Wika ni Dhanvantari: Sa maling pagkain at di-wastong asal—lalo na sa mapanlaban at masamang-loob na pagsalungat—at sa paggawa ng mga gawaing gaya ng paninirang-puri sa mga banal, pagpatay, digmaan, pagnanakaw/pagnanakaw na may dahas at iba pa, ang tao’y napapaugnay sa mga sanhi ng mabibigat na karamdaman at pagdurusa.
Dhanvantari
Dosha: Mixed
Concept: Adharma in conduct (slandering the virtuous, violence, theft) and improper āhāra-vihāra becomes a causal nexus for suffering and disease.
Vedantic Theme: Karma as a subtle causal force shaping embodied experience (śarīra-duḥkha) through adharma and pramāda.
Application: Adopt sāttvika diet and disciplined lifestyle; avoid nindā, hiṃsā, theft, and needless enmity; cultivate respectful speech and non-hostility.
Primary Rasa: bibhatsa
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana (Brahma-khanda/Preta-khanda): recurring doctrine that pāpa leads to duḥkha and roga; Dhanvantari’s medical-dharma instruction sections on āhāra-vihāra
This verse links wrong food habits and unethical lifestyle (vihāra) with karmic outcomes, implying that physical suffering can arise from moral and behavioral causes.
It lists actions like slandering the virtuous, violence, war, and theft as behaviors that generate harmful karmic tendencies, which later manifest as affliction.
Adopt disciplined diet and conduct, avoid hostility and defamation, and refrain from harm and dishonest gain—treating ethics as preventive “medicine.”