Guest guest Posted November 28, 2007 Report Share Posted November 28, 2007 How To Get Started with Ayurvedic Pulse Diagnosis <http://fiteyes.com/blogs/dave/2007/11/27/how-to-get-started-with-ayurve\ dic-pulse-diagnosis> I just wrote a blog article about How To Get Started with Ayurvedic Pulse Diagnosis. I thought people in this group would find the article helpful. And I welcome any comments the experts in this group would like to make about that article. Regards, Dave http://fiteyes.com/blogs/dave/2007/11/27/how-to-get-started-with-ayurved\ ic-pulse-diagnosis Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 28, 2007 Report Share Posted November 28, 2007 Hi David, A couple thoughts on your blog posting: 1. I am skeptical of the current state of Ayurvedic pulse diagnosis. You cite a quote that pulse diagnosis is " the centrepiece of a classic Ayurveda examination " . If this were true, then why is it that in Kerala, which many call the center of Ayurveda in India, you will be hard pressed to find a physician that actually practices it. This is apart from the fact that pulse is clearly anumana, or " inferential " , according to Charakas delineation of " trividha pariksha " , or the " the sources of knowledge " . How should inference be considered the centerpiece of any evidence? Walking home late at night, a man is startled because he sees something on the road. Is it a snake or a stick? Only close observation can discern the difference. To my mind, the mark of a good practitioner is their thoroughness in obtaining knowledge from all sources and integrating these into a unified whole. Sometimes this means knowing what to pay attention to and what to ignore, especially when it comes to inference. 2. It seems that the system of pulse diagnosis that has dominated the scene is very much derived from Dr. Vasant Lad's work on the subject. What isn't well known however, is just how syncretic Dr. Lad's system is. I became familiar with it about 15 years ago, and even then it was easy to tell that much of his knowledge of pulse was derived from readings on Chinese pulse diagnosis, particularly when associating the pulse with specific organs. Before Dr. Lad's work, there was very little material available on the subject of pulse, which brings into question the exact origins of his system. There are only a few Ayurvedic sources on pulse, and most are comparatively late. You won't find any significant detail on the practice pulse diagnosis in Charaka, Sushruta or Vagbhata. It appears to first make its way into the late medieval texts including the Sharangadhara (14th cent CE) and Bhavaprakasha (15th cent CE), after India had extensive exposure to foreign cultures. Nonetheless, the description of the technique is fairly abbreviated. Other commonly cited texts on Ayurvedic pulse diagnosis include the Nadivijnanam and the treatise by Shankara Sen, both only discovered recently. While ShankarSen is quite recent, the Nadivijnanam is perhaps quite old since it states to have been written by Maharishi Kanada, the same author of the Vaisheshika sutra (c. 600 BCE). However, it was not uncommon during the medieval period in India for an author to sign his work in the name of an illustrious sage, to add weight to its significance. Be that as it may, none of these pulse systems, and especially that Nadivijnanam, can be said to lend any weight or support to the system that Dr. Lad developed. Rather, it would seem, esp. from the Nadivijnanam, that it is more important to understand the quality of the pulse, since almost all of his descriptions of the pulse relate to the movement of animals. 3. Based on the above, and also through consultation with many other practitioners, I have found it more helpful to interpret the pulse generally rather than to apply the elaborate and detailed methodology espoused by Dr. Lad. Look for the quality of the pulsation and worry less under which finger you feel the pulse. Is the pulse weak, thin and subtle? This is vata. Is the pulse fast, hard and wiry? This is pitta. Is the pulse slow, soft and wide? This is kapha. Fast pulse indicates heat, slow pulse indicates cold. There are some other simple aspects to take note of as well, such as the depth of the pulse, by which you can assess teh quality of ojas and agni. And by the way, Kapha is actually pronounced ka-pha, the " pha " sound denoting an aspirated " p " sound. North Indian speakers have been influenced by Farsi, and while some speaking sanskrit continue to use the " f " sound for " ph " , this is really just a bad grammatical habit. 4. As for how the doshas relate to each finger, I am far from convinced that we can say very simply that vata is the index finger, pitta the middle and kapha the ring finger. First off, what do we mean by this? Is it that the doshas can be understood simply by feeling the pulse under the fingers? I think this is simplistic. What about absence of pulsation under a particular finger? Does this not mean anything? Why should we just take note of one aspect and not both? The Chinese system actually adds much more subtlety to this system, by emphasizing the idea that a strong pulse indicates heightened metabolism whereas as weak pulse indicates decreased metabolism. In the Chinese text on pulse written by Li Shi Zhen (16th cent CE), the index, middle and ring fingers actually denote different regions of the body: the index (the upper jiao, including the chest and areas above), the middle (the middle jiao, including the digestive organs), and the ring finger (indicating the lower jiao, including the pelvic organs). Anyone reading this familiar with Ayurveda will immediately see a correlation between this scheme and how the doshas are said to maintain to different " seats " (sthanas) in the body: vata is located from the umbilicus downwards; pitta between the umbilicus and diaphragm; and kapha, from the diaphragm upwards. For me, this was a revelation. It linked up the rather more sophisticated and detailed TCM pulsology with Ayurvedic theory, and suddenly the Chinese notion of the Triple Burner (san jiao), which is something of an anomaly in TCM, links up with a fundamental notion of Ayurveda. As such, while I interpret the pulse very simply and weight it according to other signs and symptoms, I also feel under which fingers the pulses are weak and strong. Sometimes my findings can be rationalized according to Lad's system, other times not. For example, if I feel a weakness under a particular finger, I pay attention to see is that weakness can be correlated to a particular region of the body. Thus a weak pulse under the ring finger to me indicates some problem in the lower regions of the body, usually related to the adrenals, and thus corresponds to an increase in vata. In TCM pulsology we wold say 'kidney qi vacuity'. In contrast, a weak pulse under the index finger can indicate a weakness in the chest regions, and often times I will note some problem there. Likewise, a strong pulse under the index finger often suggests some kind of heightened metabolic activity, and is usually a good predictor of a kapha increase, such as a cold. In other words, a strong pulse under the index finger does not necessarily mean a vata increase! 5. Lastly, it is not true that " ...as a rule, there are no blood or other body-fluid samples taken, and there is no laboratory testing, as is typical of Western medicine " . In fact, feces and urine make up a very important component of the ashtavidya pariksha ('eight methods of diagnosis'), along with pulse, tongue, and other factors. Laboratory testing is obviously absent, and yet the Ayurvedic physicians had other methods. Even blood is sampled during rakta mokshana, to determine its nature and quality. Anyway, thanks for giving me the opportunity to address this issue more fully. best regards... Caldecott, Dip. Cl.H, RH(AHG) Ayurvedic practitioner, Medical Herbalist 203 - 1750 East 10th Ave Vancouver, BC V5N 5K4 CANADA web: http//:www.toddcaldecott.com email: todd tel: (1)778.896.8894 fax: (1)866.703.2792 ____________________________ How To Get Started with Ayurvedic Pulse Diagnosis <http://fiteyes.com/blogs/dave/2007/11/27/how-to-get-started-with- ayurve\ dic-pulse-diagnosis> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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