Yogaratnakara: A Complete Treatise on Ayurveda in Two Volumes

Yogaratnakara: A Complete Treatise on Ayurveda in Two Volumes

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Book Specification

Item Code: IHL635
Author: Asha Kumari and P.V. Tewari
Publisher: Chaukhambha Bharati Academy, Varanasi
Language: (Sanskrit Text with English Translation)
Edition: 2010
ISBN: 9788190987172
Pages: 672
Cover: Hardcover
Other Details 10.0 inch X 7.5 inch
Weight 2.40 kg

Book Description

From the Jacket

Yogaratnakara the book of mid seventeenth century, written by yet unknown author, but extremely well known in the Ayurvedic world, is like a sun, throwing light on all aspects of ayurveda not seen in any other available book on ayurveda, however, since the book is compiled in the period when surgery was almost not being done by ayurvedist thus the references of subject matter related to salyavijnana (surgery) are scanty; knowledge of sarira (anotomy) being more important to surgeons also finds itself concised in few verse only. It is probably single available book which describes in detail ?astavidha pariksa? i.e. examination of pulse, urine and stool. The book is boon for those who desire to know ayurveda in depth and practice medicine only, but not dare to fathom the sea of voluminous books; as it describes in detail basic concepts of ayurveda, herbal herbomineral and metallic preparations alongwith their identification and properties of individual plant and metals or sumetals and also method of purification and killing of metals etc.; then method of preparation of recipes as well-as the dosages and after medications. After elaborating aeteopathogenesis, prodromal and clinical features, prognosis, and complications, etc. detailed preventive, promotive, rehabilitative and curative methods and also cleansing therapy (sodhana cikatsa) is given.

Present English translation done is simple language makes it accessible to those who are not well verse in hindi or samskrta. Thus the book is very useful for students, teachers and research workers all alike.

About the Author

Prof. (Km.) P.V. Tewari A.M.B.S., PhD. Adl. Med. Suptd. Mata Anandamayi Hospital (a charitable institution), Ex. H.O.D. Dept. of Prasuti Tantra, Director WHO collaborative centre, Dean of Ayurveda and Ayurvedic Pharmaceuticals I.M.S., B.H.U. elder sister of Dr. (Mrs.) Asha Kumari, daughter of freedom fighter Late Pt. Rama Sankara Tewari a recipient of Tamrapatra and Mrs. Rama Devi Tewari has produced large number of D. Ay. M./M.D. Ay. and Ph. Ds., published more than 205 research papers, edited/edited and translated/authored fourteen books. She has been associated with academic/administrative bodies of all important research and academic organizations of ayurveda of the country. He book Ayurvediya Prasuti Tantra and Striroga has received good recognition and awards.

Dr. (Mrs.) Asha Kumari M. A., Ph.D. exponent in Samskrta has acquired special experience of working on manuscripts during her work tenure with NISTADS (project on History of Science and Technology during Medieval Period). Besides editing and translating two mss of ayurveda i.e. Yogacandrika (translated in hindi and English) and Vrndamadhavaparanama Siddhayogah (translated in english) and has translated in hindi English one Prakrta Mahakavya (Setubandham) also. She has been writing articles, poems and stories in different journals and magazines on literary, social and cultural subjects. Her source of inspiration has always been ancient Samskrta literature.

Introduction

The creator of Loka i.e. the world created all the creatures and medicines medicinal plants) simultaneously, so that his best creation the human beings could have a healthy and long life with good creativity and procreativity. He also transferred the knowledge about these drugs to the coming generations through Asvini Kumaras. The first written record of this knowledge are the vedas specially me Atharvaveda. However during vedic period the medicine was magico religious. Available first literature written signally on Ayurveda are ?Caraka Samhita? and Susruta Samhita? which are well documented and systemetized. Progress of any system is always gradual, while the changes between Atharvaveda and Caraka and Susruta Samhitas appears to be drastic and the time gap between these two eras extends to thousands of years. The process and means of these changes are in oblivion.

Though ?Caraka Samhita? and ?Susruta Samhita? represent two different schools/systems of specialization i.e. the medical and surgical systems respectively yet those have dealt with all the eight specialized branches of Ayurveda. This very pattern of writing the books with minor modifications here and there persisted for centuries.

Madhavakara was the first author to deviate from this way of writing the Ayurvedic literature by bifurcating the existing system into two i.e. the diagnosis and treatment dealt in two separate treatises. Probably he might have done it to facilitate memorization and recapitulation by the learners of the subject, more so because the books is written totally in verses. ?Madavanidana? as the name itself insinuates deals with aetiopathogenesis and clinical features etc. aspects related to diagnosis of the diseases. Since the author has derived knowledge from the existing literature, it can also be considered as the first book mainly based on compilation with elaboration. Later he wrote a book on treatment. In the field of diagnosis his book stands supreme rather alone, however ?Vrnda Madhava? and ?Cakradatta? etc. later authors followed the pattern of second book and wrote treatises on only treatment.

Though for diagnosing the diseases and knowing the status of the patient trividha, pancavidha, sadvidha and dasavidha pariksas (ways of examination) were in practice yet the currently used method by the vaidyas i.e. nadipariksa (examination of pulse etc.) were absent. Later with the inclusion of nadipariksa during medieval period books were written on this subject also. The period when the astavidhapariksa came into practice is a bit confusing due to lack of available literature.

Later period of Ayurveda is mainly characterized with compilations that too on separate subjects like nighantus on drugs, books on rasa cikitsa, treatment, nadipariksa etc.

Among the available literature ?Yogaratnakara? is one treatise that deals with Ayurveda in its entirety but for sarira and salya that too in a very organized and different way. Probably owing to the fact that nobody who wants to learn Ayurveda, whether a student or a practitioner, has time enough to go through all the texts, moreover availability of all sorts of literature to any individual was then and is even now a problem. So the sagacious author of ?Yogaratnakara? compiled all the relevant aspects of the science necessary for a student or a practitioner of Ayurveda, in one book. Starting from the qualities and duties of a physician the book elaborates the four pillars necessary for the treatment i.e. the physician, the means of treatment, the attendant and the patient, indication of curability or otherwise according to the presentation of the messenger or other omens and then it comes to astavidha pariksa i.e. the eight measures of diagnosis as nadipariksa (pulse examination), mutra pariksa (urine examination), mala pariksa (stool test), sabda pariksa (diagnosis through voice of the patient), drk pariksa (diagnosis through touch), rupa pariksa (diagnosis through the look of the patient), drk pariksa (eye examination), asya pariksa (mouth examination) including jihva pariksa (tongue examination). After that the author describes the time periods i.e. the seasons, months and also parts of a day for respective aggravation of the dosas, signs of mature or immature stage of diseases; stages of development according to age; effect of dosas on the individual prakrti (nature on the whole); features of healthy body; weights and measures along with their synonyms according to magadha and kalinga schools; qualities of grains, vegetables, fruits and different types of meat, types and qualities of cooked cereal preparations; qualities of different types of drinks; qualities of some other edible preparations; features of life expectancy of the patients; regimen for day and night and also according to different seasons; qualities of different types of water (like cold, hot, boiled etc.); qualities of different types of milk, curd, butter, ghrta, oil, honey, sugar etc.; qualities of eight types of urine (procured from different sources); various groups of drugs; kasaya kalpana (methods of preparing paste, decoction, cold percolation etc.); qualities and methods of purification and killing of all the metals, substitute, gems and some drugs/herbs also; abhava varga i.e. substitute substances; the cleansing and theraputic methods; definition of some specific terms like drowsiness, yawning etc. and then enumeration of all the diseases is taken up in the treatise. Finally diagnosis and treatment of individual diseases is described in each of the seventy two chapters. The last four chapters classified as ?uttarakhanda deal with vajikarana (aphrodisiac recipes), rasayana (youth and longevity providing recipes), rasavaikrti (complications due to improper use of mercury) and roganusaranupana (appropriate after drinks).

CONTENTS

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1 Basic Concepts of Ayurveda 3-207
Mangalacarana 3
Physician and his duties 3
Importance of Agni 4
Limitation of treatment 4
Karmaja vyadhi (disease due to deeds of previous life) and principles of treatment 4
The four pillars of treatment and their qualities 6
The messenger 6
Auspicious omens 7
Examination of eight points of the patients 7
Determination of period for patient?s prognostication 20
Determination of place 22
Months when vata etc. dosas are aggravated 22
Seasons when dosas are aggravated 23
Functions of the three dosas 23
Pacificative measures for the three dosas 24
Stages of life 24
Description of prakrti (i.e. constitution) 26
Signs of healthy state 27
Definitions of measures 27
Magadha measures 27
The definition of kalinga measures 29
Properties of grains, fruits, bulbous roots, rhizomes and vegetables etc. 29
Properties of tamakhu i.e. tobacco 29
The properties of meat 42
Features of anupa i.e. marshy and aquatic creatures 43
Properties of jangala meat 43
Properties of the meat of marshy and aquatic animals 45
Qualities of cooked eatables and potables 48
Qualities of drinks 56
Qualities of Ragakhandava 58
Qualities of Rasala-skharini 58
Consideration about longevity 59
Description of proper daily routine 63
Dinacarya (daily routine of life) 63
Natural desires (effect of their suppression) 74
Importance of taking food 74
Effect of wind 85
Comfort providing routine 89
Ratricarya (proper activities during night) 92
Rtucarya (prescribed routine for different seasons) 100
Accumulation, aggravation and pacification of dosas in different seasons and their effect 100
Qualities of cold water 104
Qualities of medicated/nonmedicated hot water 104
Qualities of milk 106
Qualities of curd 112
Takra (buttermilk) and its qualities 114
Qualities of navaneet (butter) 116
Qualities of ghrta 117
Qualities of taila (oils) 118
Qualities of madhu (huney) 120
Qualities of iksu (sugarcane) 122
The eight types of urine 124
Groups of drugs 125
Kasayas 131
Preparation of silajatu 140
Common features, purification, killing and qualities of dhatus (metals), submetals and ohters 140
The metals 140
Upadhatus (submetals) 140
Wholesome and unwholesomes being used with mercury preparations 176
Tatna (gems) and others 178
The silajatu (bitumen) 181
Killing of visa 186
Upavisas (sub-poisons) 187
Satwapatana (metallic extraction) of abhraka (mica) 190
Preparation of ksara 191
The abavagarga (substitute drugs) 191
Virya (potency of action) and vipaka (final metabolism) of drugs 196
Cleansing therapies 196
Definitions of words (names or features of some ailments) and list of described diseases 205
The order of fever etc. diseases 206
2 Diagnosis and Treatment of Fever 208-289
Origine of fever 208
Pathogenesis 208
Prodromal features 208
General features of fever 209
Clinical features of fevers 209
Course of sandhika etc. all sannipataja fever 211
The prognosis 212
Specific features of these thirteen sannipatika fevers 212
Prognosis of sannipata 215
Features of malapaka or dhatupaka 216
Exogenous fevers 216
Visamajwara (intermittent fever) 217
Pathogenesis of intermittent fevers 218
Features of intermittent fever 218
Types and their locations 218
Status of dosas in these fevers 219
Complications of fever 220
Features of proper langhana in febrile case 221
Features of afebrile stage 221
Treatment 221
Treatment of fever in a proper order (principles of treatment in sequential order) 221
Importance of fasting 222
Period of paka (maturing) of fever 222
The period for starting decoctions etc. 223
Time for giving diet 223
Importance of pitta in fever 224
Period of drug administration to febrile case 224
Principles of treatment of recently inflicted fever 225
Dosages of drugs 228
Period of efficacy of various drugs 230
Period for administering these drugs 231
Remedy of fever with rigor 237
Principles of treatment in sannipataja fever 238
Treatment of fever situated in dhatus 238
Other general treatment/principles 238
Treatment of sannipataja fever 245
Treatment of exogenous fever 255
The intermittent fevers 256
Treatment of intermittent fevers 257
Other treatments of intermittent fevers 259
Application in the eyes and fumigation 263
The curnas for the treatment of fever 264
The ghrtas 270
The oils 271
The rasas (metallic preparations) 274
Features of fever lodged in the seven dhatus 283
Treatment of the fevers lodged in seven dhatus 283
Manthara (law grade) fever 284
Treatment 284
Treatment of the fever due to (use of) contaminated water 285
General principles of salutary and non-salutary regimen for the patients of fever 285
Pacana (factors) of recently inflicted fever 286
Beneficial/effective therapies for sannipata 286
Unwholesomes in case of recently inflicted fever 287
Wholesomes 287
3. Diagnosis and Treatment of Diarrhoea 290-316
Aetiopathogenesis of Atisara (diarrhoea) 290
Prodromal features 291
Clinical features 291
Features of amatisara 292
Features of ama 292
Features of pakvatisara 292
Bad prognostic features 292
Complications of diarrhoea 293
Pravahika (dysentery) 293
Features indicative of cure of diarrhoea 293
Aetiopathogenesis of fever with diarrhoea 294
Features of incurable/fatal diarrhoea 294
Treatment 294
Treatment of diarrhoea at the stage of its prodromal features 294
Treatment of amatisara 295
Treatment of pakvatisara (diarrhoea with digested food) 298
Treatment of blood mixed diarrhoea 301
Piccha basti 303
Treatment of anorectal prolapse 303
Treatment of diarrhoea with oedema 307
Treatment of dysentery 307
Purisaksaya (deficiency of faeces) 307
Treatment of fever with diarrhoea 308
Treatment of all the types of diarrhoea 309
Treatment of all the types of diarrhoea 311
The rasa (metallic preparations) 314
Wholesomes for diarrhoea patients 315
Unwholesomes for the diarrhoea patients 316
4 Diagnosis and Treatment of Grahani (disorders) 317-332
Aetiopathogenesis 317
Location of grahani membrane 317
Classification and general clinical features of grahani 317
Prodromal features 318
Ama grahani 319
Features of incurable grahani 319
Prognosis according to age 320
Treatment 320
General treatment of grahani diseases 322
The wholesomes 332
Unwholesomes 332
5 Diagnosis and Treatment of Piles 333-348
Diagnosis of piles 333
Etymology of arsa (piles) 333
Classifications 333
General features of piles 333
Prodromal features of piles 334
Clinical features 334
Involvement of vata etc. dosas in raktaja piles 336
Aggravation of all the three dosas (being the cause) 336
Prognosis 337
Piles (like lesion) on the other parts of the body 338
Clinical features of carmakila 338
Treatment 338
Type of treatment 338
The ghrtas 346
The pastes for local application 347
The rasas 348
Wholesome and unwholesome regimen 348
6 Diagnosis and Treatment of Depleted Digestive Fire 349-352
Types of digestive fire 349
Features of sama and visama etc. digestive fire 349
Treatment 349
Aetiology and clinical features of bhasmaka 350
Diagnosis aetiology 351
Treatment 351
7 Diagnosis and the Treatment of Indigestion 353-373
Definition of ama 353
Classification 353
Aetiology 353
Clinical features 354
Complications of indigestion 354
The visuci 355
Features of alasaka 355
Features of vilambika 356
Sequela of ama 356
Prognosis 356
Features of proper digestion of food 356
Treatment 256
Principles and general treatment 356
The powders 356
The pills 358
Electuaries 360
The decoctions 362
The ghrtas 363
The groups of substances to counter indigestion 364
The rasas 365
Treatment of visuci etc. 371
Non salutary diet in ajirna etc. 373
Salutary things 373
8 Diagnosis and Treatment of Parasites 374-379
Kinds of parasites 374
External parasites 374
Aetiology of parasites 374
Features of infestation of parasites 375
Complications 376
Treatment 376
The dococtions 376
The powders 377
Recipies for getting rid of the lice 378
Unwholesomes during the trouble of parasites 379
9 Diagnosis and Treatment of Anaemia 380-392
Types and Aetiopathogenesis of anaemia 380
The prodromal features of anaemia 380
Clinical features 380
Prognosis of anaemia 382
Aetiology of kamala (jaundice) 382
Clinical features of jaundice 382
Kumbhakamala (? Jaundice with ascites) 383
Incurable kamala 383
Incurable kumbhakamala 383
Halimaka (? chlorosis) 383
Features of panaki 383
Treatment 384
Decoctions 384
Iron preparations for anaemia 385
Treatment of jaundice and halimaka 387
Wholesomes and unwholesomes 392
10 Diagnosis and Treatment of Haemorrhagic Disorders (raktapitta) 393-408
Aetiopathogenesis 393
Prodromal features 393
Clinical features of raktapitta 393
Prognosis 394
Complications of haemorrhagic disorders 395
Character of blood and other features indicating incurability 395
Treatment 395
Decoctions, medicated milk etc. for treatment 397
External use of drugs 401
Ghrtas 402
Awaleha/Khanda 404
The rasas 407
11 Diagnosis and Treatment of Tuberculosis 409-450
Diagnosis of tuberculosis 409
Etymology of the names 409
Aetiological factors 409
Pathogenesis 409
Prodromal features 410
Clinical features 410
Prognosis of tuberculosis 411
Types of other sosas (consumption) 411
Life expectancy of yaksma-patient 413
Importance of sukra and mala of yaksma-patient 413
Treatment 413
Non-congenials 414
Salutary articles 414
Decoctions 415
Churnas 415
The ghrtas 416
The oils 426
Asava/Aristas 429
The rasa (metallic) preparations 431
Other treatment 445
Diagnosis of urahksata 445
Clinical features of urahksata 446
Prodromal features 446
Prognosis 446
Treatment of urahksata 447
Ghrtas 448
12 Diagnosis and Treatment of Cough 451-474
Aetiology 451
Pathogenesis 451
Their number (types) 451
The prodromal features 451
Clinical features of cough 451
Prognosis 452
Treatment 453
Specific treatment according to causative factors 454
Treatment of cough with dyspnoea 459
Recipes for all the types of cough 460
The rasas (metallic preparations) 468
Wholesomes and unwholesomes 473
13 Diagnosis and Treatment of Hiccough 475-481
Aetiology 475
Pathogenesis 475
Prodromal features 475
Its nomenclatures/types 475
Clinical features 476
Prognosis 476
Treatment 477
Wholesomes and unwholesomes 481
14. Diagnosis and Treatment of Dyspnoea 482-491
Aetiology 482
Pathogenesis 482
Classification 482
Prodromal features of dyspnoea 482
Clinical features 483
Bad prognosis of the chinnasvasa 484
Prognosis of ksudra etc. 485
Treatment 486
The decoctions 486
The electuaries 488
The wholesomes and unwholesomes 490
15. Diagnosis and Treatment of Svarabheda (hoarseness of voice) 492-496
Aetiopathogenesis 492
Clinical features 492
Prognosis 493
Treatment 493
16. Diagnosis and Treatment of Anorexia 497-505
Classification 497
Aetiology in general and clinical features of vataja anorexia 497
Clinical features 497
Treatment 498
The recipes for mouth wash 499
The pills 500

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