Vidradhi–Gulma Nidāna
Causes and Signs of Abscess and Abdominal Mass
स्वतन्त्रः स्वाश्रये दुष्टः परतन्त्रः पराश्रये / ततः पिण्डकवच्छ्लेष्मा मलसंसृष्ट एव च
svatantraḥ svāśraye duṣṭaḥ paratantraḥ parāśraye / tataḥ piṇḍakavacchleṣmā malasaṃsṛṣṭa eva ca
وہ اگر خودمختار ہو تو اپنے ہی مقام میں بگڑتا ہے، اور اگر تابع ہو تو دوسرے کے مقام میں۔ تب بلغم پِنڈک کی مانند گاڑھا ہو جاتا ہے اور فضلے کے ساتھ بھی مل جاتا ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Distinguish svatantra (primary) doṣa derangement from paratantra (secondary/associated) derangement; mixed pathology arises when kapha and malas combine.
Vedantic Theme: Discrimination (viveka) and correct classification reduce confusion; complex effects often have multiple proximate causes.
Application: In diagnosis, identify whether vāta is primary or acting under another doṣa/obstruction; treat mixed conditions by addressing both kapha/mala accumulation and vāta dysregulation.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.160.36–39: vāta prakopa, obstruction, koṣṭha lodging; 1.160.40 continues gulma/āvaraṇa framework
Here gulma is described as a lump-like disorder lodging around the bladder, navel, heart region, and flanks, with specific symptoms when vāta is the cause.
By emphasizing how vāta-driven imbalance creates pain and fever, it underscores the Purana’s broader ethic: bodily discipline supports dharma and steadiness for spiritual practice.
If vāta-type symptoms appear (pain, gurgling, dryness, irregularity), prioritize grounding food, rest, warmth, and timely medical evaluation rather than ignoring early warning signs.