− | Charak describes a group of preparations containing alcohol under ''nidana'' (etiological factors) [Cha.Sa.[[Nidana Sthana]] 2/4] like sura, sauvira, shukta, badaramala. . Ayurvedic classics warn against excessive use of alcohols in ''pitta''-vitiated patients, due to their heating and drying effects. In addition, biomedical research in 1986, suggests that subclinical vitamin K deficiency occurs in alcoholics, contributing to hypo-coagulability. | + | Charak describes a group of preparations containing alcohol under [[nidana]] (etiological factors) [Cha.Sa.[[Nidana Sthana]] 2/4] like sura, sauvira, shukta, badaramala. Ayurvedic classics warn against excessive use of alcohols in [[pitta]]-vitiated patients, due to their heating and drying effects. In addition, biomedical research in 1986, suggests that subclinical vitamin K deficiency occurs in alcoholics, contributing to hypo-coagulability. |
− | In summary, it appears that all the foods listed, either due to inherent ''veerya'' (heat ''dosha'' transfer potential) or combinations that create difficulty to digest using the body’s own heat, will raise a level of heat in the body that aggravates ''pitta dosha'' and initiates the cascade of ''pittakopa'' that leads eventually, if un-intervened, to ''raktapitta''. | + | In summary, it appears that all the foods listed, either due to inherent potency ([[veerya]]) or combinations that create difficulty to digest using the body’s own heat, will raise a level of heat in the body that aggravates [[pitta dosha]] and initiates the cascade of [[pitta kopa]] that leads eventually, if un-intervened, to [[raktapitta]]. |