Nidāna of Mūtraghāta and Aśmarī: Doṣa-based Types, Signs, and Named Urinary Syndromes
प्रवृद्धवायुना मूत्रे वस्तिस्थे चैव दाहकृत् / मूत्रं वर्तयते पूर्वं सरक्तं रक्तमेव वा
pravṛddhavāyunā mūtre vastisthe caiva dāhakṛt / mūtraṃ vartayate pūrvaṃ saraktaṃ raktameva vā
جب بڑھی ہوئی وायु (باد) مثانے میں ٹھہرے ہوئے پیشاب پر اثر انداز ہوتی ہے تو جلن پیدا ہوتی ہے۔ ابتدا میں خون ملا پیشاب آتا ہے، یا کبھی صرف خون ہی خارج ہوتا ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (speaking to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Accurate discernment of symptoms (lakṣaṇa) and pathogenesis (samprāpti) to respond wisely to suffering.
Vedantic Theme: Viveka (discriminative knowledge) applied to embodied experience; observing guṇa/doṣa movements without denial.
Application: Treat burning urination and blood in urine as serious; reduce vāta aggravation and seek prompt therapeutic intervention.
Primary Rasa: bhayanaka
Secondary Rasa: karuna
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.158: bladder (vasti) disorders; progression from obstruction to burning/bleeding signs
This verse highlights aggravated vāyu as a direct cause of burning urination and blood in urine, framing disease as a doṣa-driven disturbance with observable clinical signs.
By describing specific bodily symptoms (burning and bloody urine), the text concretely illustrates embodied suffering—often discussed alongside moral and post-death consequences in the Preta Kanda.
Treat burning or blood in urine as a serious warning sign and seek qualified medical care; ethically, the verse encourages attentive care of the body and disciplined living to prevent doṣa aggravation.