Pāṇḍu-Śotha Nidāna: Doṣa-wise Signs, Complications, and Prognosis
कृष्णेक्षणं कृष्णशिरानखविण्मूत्रनेत्रता / शोथो नासास्यवैरस्यं विट्शोषः पार्श्वमूर्छना
kṛṣṇekṣaṇaṃ kṛṣṇaśirānakhaviṇmūtranetratā / śotho nāsāsyavairasyaṃ viṭśoṣaḥ pārśvamūrchanā
当风(vāta)偏盛时,双眼发黑;头部、脉络、指甲、粪便、尿液,乃至目光都似被染成黑暗。随之出现肿胀;鼻与口生出令人不悦的怪味;大便干枯;两胁作痛并可昏厥。
Lord Vishnu (in dialogue with Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Doṣa-prādhānya (vāta predominance) is inferred from specific lakṣaṇas; accurate recognition precedes right treatment.
Vedantic Theme: Deha as anitya upādhi; discernment (viveka) about bodily states supports dharma and sādhanā.
Application: Use symptom-clusters (darkening, dryness, constipation, flank pain, mūrcchā) to identify vāta aggravation and respond with vāta-pacifying regimen under vaidya guidance.
Primary Rasa: karuna
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.162.11-14 (pitta/kapha and mixed-doṣa progression)
This verse lists observable vāta-dominant signs—darkening, dryness, swelling, flank pain, and fainting—used to recognize imbalance and decline in the body.
Indirectly: by describing bodily deterioration and loss of stability (dryness, fainting), it frames the body as perishable and encourages preparedness through dharma and right conduct.
Treat persistent dryness, fainting, and swelling as warning signs—seek care early, regulate diet/sleep, and maintain disciplined habits (sattvic routine) to reduce vāta aggravation.