Dyspepsia (Indigestion)
Symptoms
Belching with a bad smell, watering of the mouth, distension of the
stomach, loss of appetite, aversion to food, offensive internal gas,
physical weakness, fretful temper, constipation or loose stool
containing food particles.
Causes
When we take food it is converted into a juicy mass with the help of
digestive fluids, then it is transformed into blood. Blood is the most
important substance in the body. Fruits, roots, leafy green vegetables
and other alkaline-type foods, after being digested, preserve the
vitality of the blood by increasing its alkaline portion, whereas fatty
and carbohydrate-type foods increase the acidity of the blood. If there
occurs a disproportionate increase in the acidity of the blood, then the
spleen, liver, heart, kidneys, etc., which are our blood-purifying
organs, come under too much pressure. As a result, these organs, being
over-worked in purifying the blood, become gradually so weak that they
ultimately fail to do their task properly.
Since the different kinds of juicy fruits can be sufficiently digested
in their own fluids, the liver bile does not have to make much effort to
digest them. But in order to digest starches and carbohydrates, the
saliva of the mouth must help at the preliminary stage. Chewing food
brings an adequate quantity of saliva into the mouth. No sooner does the
food mixed with saliva enter the stomach than the liver and the pancreas
are enabled to start secreting their bile and digestive fluids. So
unless food is chewed well, the liver can never function properly.
If the quantity of non-vegetarian food is large, then the internal
organs will ultimately become weak due to the increasing acidity of the
blood. Then when the food from the stomach, having already been
partially digested by fluid from the liver, enters the duodenal canal,
the weak pancreas will be incapable of secreting enough of its digestive
fluid. As a result, the partially digested food does not become
completely converted into rasa [chyle]. In consequence, the partially
digested food gradually decomposes inside the duodenum and thereby
partially blocks the intestine. This spoiled food creates a poisonous
gas in the body which the respiratory system fails to purify. It also
increases the acidic contents of the blood to an excessive degree. This
state of health is called “indigestion” or “dyspepsia”.
Although dyspepsia is not itself fatal, it can be the cause of several
fatal diseases. And in social life, dyspepsia aggravates peoples’
acrimonious tendencies and makes them extremely irritable. Stomach,
intestinal and rectal ulcers, constipation and serious dysentery may
arise from dyspepsia.
Treatment
Morning – Utkśepa Mudrá,
Mayúrásana,
Padahastásana,
Utkat́a (Shyana) Vajrásana,
Ágneyii
Mudrá andÁgneyii
Práńáyáma.
Evening – (With constipation) Agnisára
Mudrá, Diirgha Prańáma,
Yogásana or Yogamudrá, andBhújauṋgásana.
(With loose movement) Agnisára
Mudrá, Sarváuṋgásana,
Ágneyii Mudrá and Ágneyii
Práńáyáma.
Diet
Boiled old rice (grains a few years old), soup of green vegetables; in
case of loose motion, curd (yogurt); in case of constipation, curd made
from buffalo’s milk, mixed in water and taken with a little sugar.
Remember that curd water is particularly beneficial for dyspepsia
patients.
Dinánte ca pivet dugdhaḿ
Nishánte ca pivet payah,
Bhojanánte pivet takraḿ
Kiḿ vaedyasya prayojanam?
[Drink milk at the end of the day,
Drink water at dawn,
Drink curd-water after the noon meal,
Then what need for a doctor?]
Dos and don’ts
Dyspepsia originates from unbalanced food habits. Eating when one is not
hungry or only half hungry is harmful in this disease. So is eating rich
food for days together, using intoxicants, eating tasty food out of
greed alone, not taking rest after the meal before running off to the
office, or taking a bellyful of food (according to the scriptures, it is
desirable to fill the stomach halfway with food, one quarter with water,
and to keep one quarter empty for free movement of air); refraining from
doing physical labour and, over and above this, doing strenuous mental
work or indulging in sex, is also harmful in this disease.
It is better not to eat breakfast or any afternoon snack till the
disease is fully cured. However, if one feels hungry, one can have some
sweet or sour juicy fruit, particularly of sub-acid type, such as mango,
pineapple, jám,any
kind of citrus fruit (though citrus fruits belong to the acidic group,
their action on the body is alkaline), or, in case of constipation,
papaya. It is important to remember that acidic foods such as lemon and
curd (yoghurt) should be taken with a little water and salt.
All non-vegetarian types of food except for small fish, are harmful for
dyspepsia patients. Meat and eggs are poison. All intoxicants aggravate
constipation, hence they are not to be taken either.
With dyspepsia it is very essential to take a walk in the fresh air and
to do a little physical labour every day. Sleeping in the daytime and
staying awake at night are forbidden. It is better to take the evening
meal before 8 p.m., and a short walk thereafter is very helpful.
Pulses are alkaline food but rich, so they are not to be eaten in cases
of dyspepsia.
It is desirable to take food or to defecate when the main flow of breath
is through the right nostril. Even after food, it is desirable if the
flow of breath mainly through the right nostril continues for some time.
Because that is the time when the digestive glands start secreting a
sufficient quantity of fluids to help digestion.
Observing fast on ekádashii and
regulation of the diet at night on púrńimá and amávasyá [i.e.
taking just a little milk, fruit and dry things on those two nights] is
desirable.
Some remedies
1. Take 1/16 tola asafoetida [Ferula foetida Regel], fried in
ghee and mixed with an equal quantity of rock-salt, before meals.
2. Take shredded dry coconut or the flesh of mature coconut along with a
prepared betel [Piper betle Linn.] leaf or with aniseed.
3. Take jámir lime
sprinkled with salt.
4. Take 1/16 tola (not more than that) of ash of a
cowrie, wrapped in a
betel leaf, after the evening meal every day.(1)
5. For a few days take some myrobalan powder, mixed and ground with an
equal quantity of aniseed powder and double the quantity of Káshii sugar
[sugar refined by hand equipment and hence a reddish colour]. Do not
used myrobalan seeds which, if dropped in water, float rather than sink.
1958