| Thus, unmada covers a wide range of major mental disorders and is considered synonymous with madness and mental derangement, in which a person loses contact with reality and loses the ability to regulate his actions & conduct according to the norms of the society. When ''doshas'' move upwards in the body into the head, they could cause aberrations in the functioning of ''manas''(mind) while producing ''mada'' (delusional/ intoxicated state) in an individual. The mental status of psychotic patients is vividly described while explaining the clinical aspect of the disease. The description suggests that a patient of unmada develops derangement of all the activities of ''manas''(mind), ''buddhi''(intellect), ''ahamkara''(ego) and ''indriyas'' (sense organs). The patient develops thought disturbances in the form of abnormalities of ''chintana''(thinking), ''vichara''(discriminating) and ''uha''(analyzing), derangement of memory in the form of ''smriti nasa'' (memory loss.) and ''smriti bhramsha'' (memory impairment), behavioral, social and emotional disturbances in the form of abnormalities of ''achara, dharma'' and ''bhavas'' along with functional derangement of ''indriyas'' which is manifested clinically as disturbed speech and other variants such as incoherence (''abaddha vakyam''), thought blocking (''hridaya shunyata''), loosening of associations, neologism, echolalia etc. and various psychomotor disturbances. | | Thus, unmada covers a wide range of major mental disorders and is considered synonymous with madness and mental derangement, in which a person loses contact with reality and loses the ability to regulate his actions & conduct according to the norms of the society. When ''doshas'' move upwards in the body into the head, they could cause aberrations in the functioning of ''manas''(mind) while producing ''mada'' (delusional/ intoxicated state) in an individual. The mental status of psychotic patients is vividly described while explaining the clinical aspect of the disease. The description suggests that a patient of unmada develops derangement of all the activities of ''manas''(mind), ''buddhi''(intellect), ''ahamkara''(ego) and ''indriyas'' (sense organs). The patient develops thought disturbances in the form of abnormalities of ''chintana''(thinking), ''vichara''(discriminating) and ''uha''(analyzing), derangement of memory in the form of ''smriti nasa'' (memory loss.) and ''smriti bhramsha'' (memory impairment), behavioral, social and emotional disturbances in the form of abnormalities of ''achara, dharma'' and ''bhavas'' along with functional derangement of ''indriyas'' which is manifested clinically as disturbed speech and other variants such as incoherence (''abaddha vakyam''), thought blocking (''hridaya shunyata''), loosening of associations, neologism, echolalia etc. and various psychomotor disturbances. |
− | unmada is classified into two broad categories: ''nija''(endogenous), or those caused by internal imbalance of ''dosha'' i.e. ''vata'', ''pitta, kapha'' and ''sannipataja'', and ''agantu nimitta'', i.e., those caused by exogenous factors. Sushruta [Su.Sa.Uttara Tantra 62/4-5] and Vagbhatta - both are of the opinion that unmada is of six types, of which four are due to ''doshas'', the fifth is ''madyaja'' (like intoxications) and sixth is ''vishaja'' (poison-based or poison-like). Both have described the ''agantuja unmada'' separately as the condition of ''amanushopasarga'' (due to affliction of supra-human power) and ''bhuta badha'' (due to affliction of demons), under the heading ''amanusopasarga pratishedha'' (treatment of affliction of supra-human power) and ''bhuta badha pratisedha'' (treatment of affliction of demons) respectively. The body of knowledge within [[Ayurveda]] dedicated to psychiatry underscores the advancement in scientific knowledge on this subject that existed thousands of years ago.
| + | Unmada is classified into two broad categories: ''nija''(endogenous), or those caused by internal imbalance of ''dosha'' i.e. ''vata'', ''pitta, kapha'' and ''sannipataja'', and ''agantu nimitta'', i.e., those caused by exogenous factors. Sushruta <ref>Sushruta. Uttara Tantra, Cha.62 Unmadapratishedam Adhyaya verse 4-5. In: Jadavaji Trikamji Aacharya, Editors. Sushruta Samhita. 8th ed. Varanasi: Chaukhambha Orientalia;2005.</ref> and Vagbhatta - both are of the opinion that unmada is of six types, of which four are due to ''doshas'', the fifth is ''madyaja'' (like intoxications) and sixth is ''vishaja'' (poison-based or poison-like). Both have described the ''agantuja unmada'' separately as the condition of ''amanushopasarga'' (due to affliction of supra-human power) and ''bhuta badha'' (due to affliction of demons), under the heading ''amanusopasarga pratishedha'' (treatment of affliction of supra-human power) and ''bhuta badha pratisedha'' (treatment of affliction of demons) respectively. The body of knowledge within [[Ayurveda]] dedicated to psychiatry underscores the advancement in scientific knowledge on this subject that existed thousands of years ago. |