Nidāna of Vātarakta and Āvaraṇa of Vāyu; Doṣa-wise Lakṣaṇas and Triphalā-Yoga Remedies
कफे स्तैमित्यगुरुता सुप्तिस्निग्धत्वशीतता / कण्डूर्मन्दा च रुग्द्बन्द्वं सर्वलिङ्गञ्च संकरात्
kaphe staimityagurutā suptisnigdhatvaśītatā / kaṇḍūrmandā ca rugdbandvaṃ sarvaliṅgañca saṃkarāt
Kapag nanaig ang kapha, lumilitaw ang paninigas at kabigatan, antok, pagkamamantika at pagkalalamig. May banayad na pangangati, at ang mga kirot ay lumalabas na magkapares at halo-halo—tunay nga, dahil sa paghahalo ng mga doṣa, maaaring magsama-sama ang lahat ng palatandaan.
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda)
Dosha: Kapha
Concept: Kapha-lakṣaṇa and the principle of saṅkara (doṣa-mixture) producing composite symptom pictures.
Vedantic Theme: Causality through saṃyoga (combination) and pariṇāma (transformation): effects vary with mixtures, urging careful discrimination.
Application: Do not overfit a single-doṣa diagnosis when symptoms are mixed; assess heaviness/cold/oiliness as kapha markers while considering combined pathology.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.167.13-15 (single-doṣa symptom sets); Garuda Purana 1.167.17 (single vs dual vs tri-doṣa prognosis)
This verse lists diagnostic signs of Kapha dominance—heaviness, coldness, drowsiness and itching—showing that the Purana also preserves practical Ayurvedic nidāna (symptom-knowledge).
It notes that when doṣas mix, symptoms can overlap, so ‘all signs’ may appear together rather than in a single clear doṣa pattern.
Use it as a traditional checklist for Kapha aggravation and remember that mixed symptoms may indicate combined imbalances rather than a single cause.