Page:Sushruta Samhita Vol 1.djvu/221

Chap.XIV.] blood of the Ena or common deer, or of a sheep, hare, or buffalo. A diet composed of boiled rice, soaked in or saturated with clarified butter, should be prescribed, and the complications should be subdued according to the nature of the deranged bodily humours respectively involved therein.

Authoritative verses on the subject:—Excessive blood-letting is followed by impaired appetite and an agitated condition of the vital Vayu owing to the loss of the fundamental principles of the body, and, accordingly, to recoup the health of the the patient a course of diet should be prescribed which is light and not excessively heat-making, and which contains a fair amount of emollient and blood-making matter, and is marked by little or no acid taste.

The four measures indicated for the stoppage of bleeding are known; as the Sandhanam (process by contracting the affected part), the Skandanam (thickening or congealing the local blood), the Pachanam (process of setting up suppuration in the wound) and the Dahanam (process of cauterisation).

Drugs of astringent tastes are possessed of the property of bringing about an adhesion (contraction) of the wound. Cooling measures such as, applications of ice etc, tend to thicken the local blood; alkalis and alkaline preparations produce suppuration in such a