Explore 5,320+ detailed herb profiles with safety data, evidence grades, and traditional uses.
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Our Herbal Support Finder matches you with herbs based on your wellness goals, health profile, medications, and allergies — with safety checks built in.
Every recommendation includes interaction and contraindication checks
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Baccharis trimera
Brazilian bitter herb for liver and digestive complaints. Used in gaucho folk medicine for hangover, indigestion, diabetes, and intestinal parasites. Contains clerodane diterpenes and flavonoids. Very bitter — often blended with other herbs.
Angelica sinensis
One of the most important herbs in Traditional Chinese Medicine, traditionally used to support blood health and menstrual balance.
Angelica sinensis (520mg)
Standard Dong Quai capsule — the convenient format for menstrual support. 520mg 3x daily. Best for blood deficiency patterns (TCM). Not a standalone menopause herb.
Angelica sinensis (extract)
Standardized extract of the "female ginseng." Used for menstrual regulation, blood nourishment, and menopausal support. Most studied form in clinical trials.
Angelica sinensis
The whole root of Dong Quai — "female ginseng" of TCM. Blood tonic and blood mover for menstrual health. Head, body, and tail have different actions.
Angelica sinensis (tea)
Traditional decoction form of Dong Quai — simmered 20-30 minutes. The classic way TCM practitioners prepare this blood tonic. Often combined with other herbs.
Eriobotrya japonica
TCM cough and lung herb — Pi Pa Ye. Used in the famous Nin Jiom Pei Pa Koa (honey loquat cough syrup — the most popular cough remedy in Asia). For dry coughs, nausea, and thirst. Leaf hairs must be removed before use.
Aristotelia chilensis
A Chilean berry with extremely high anthocyanin content — studied for blood sugar support, eye health, and anti-inflammatory properties.
Origanum vulgare (liquid oil)
Liquid oregano oil in olive oil carrier — 2-4 drops under tongue or in water. EXTREMELY potent. Short-term use only (7-14 days). Follow with probiotics.
Notopterygium incisum
TCM wind-damp herb for the UPPER body — partner of Du Huo (lower body). For neck/shoulder stiffness, occipital headache, and upper body joint pain from wind-cold-damp. Very warming and aromatic. Key herb in Jiu Wei Qiang Huo Tang.
Quassia amara
One of the most bitter substances in nature — used as digestive bitter, antimalarial, and insecticide. For loss of appetite, dyspepsia, and intestinal parasites. Contains quassin (appetite stimulant). Used in brewing as hops substitute.
Combretum indicum
Southeast Asian vine used in Filipino, Thai, and Ayurvedic medicine for intestinal roundworms — seeds are the primary anthelmintic. Flowers change color white-pink-red over 3 days. Contains quisqualic acid (AMPA receptor agonist). For parasites and fever.
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Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
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