Explore 5,320+ detailed herb profiles with safety data, evidence grades, and traditional uses.
Personalized Guidance
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
Factors in your age, sex, conditions, medications, and allergies
Linanthus nuttallii
Native American medicinal plant used as panacea. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Monolepis nuttalliana
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, dermatological aid, emetic, hunting medicine. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Polytaenia nuttallii
Native American medicinal plant used as antidiarrheal, gynecological aid. Documented among Meskwaki.
Helianthus nuttallii
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Navajo.
Nymphaea lotus
Egyptian and West African water lily used in traditional medicine for diarrhea, diabetes, and as mild sedative. Contains nuciferine and nymphayol. Ancient Egyptian ceremonial plant. Flower tea for relaxation and lucid dreaming in modern herbalism.
Phoradendron leucarpum
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, anticonvulsive, gynecological aid, hypotensive, love medicine, pulmonary aid. Documented among Cherokee, Creek, Houma.
Avena sativa (tea)
Dried oat straw long-infused (4+ hours) — a deeply nourishing nervous system tonic rich in calcium, magnesium, and silica. One of the safest daily tonics.
Panicum obtusum
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Isleta.
Ipomoea indica
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, dermatological aid, laxative, orthopedic aid, pediatric aid, strengthener. Documented among Hawaiian.
Holodiscus discolor
Native American medicinal plant used as misc. disease remedy, antidiarrheal, eye medicine, oral aid, orthopedic aid, tonic. Documented among Chehalis, Lummi, Makah.
Ochna serrulata
Southern African shrub used in Zulu and Swazi traditional medicine for stomach complaints, ulcers, and as emetic. Root preparations for infertility. Contains biflavonoids (lophirone) and tannins. Named for fruit resembling Mickey Mouse face.
Ocotea glaziovii
A medicinal plant (Ocotea glaziovii) from the Lauraceae family used in traditional medicine.
Jatropha multifida
West African and Caribbean wound-healing plant; leaf latex applied to fresh cuts; bark decoction for infections. Toxic internally.
Pinus koraiensis
Korean pine nut and needle preparation used for respiratory conditions, fatigue, and nutritional support. Pine nut oil is rich in pinolenic acid for appetite control.
Pterocarpus mildbraedii
Nigerian Igbo medicinal food for anemia, inflammation, and microbial infections; leaf is eaten in soups and also used therapeutically.
Usnea longissima
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Nitinaht.
Geum triflorum
Native American medicinal plant used as blood medicine, eye medicine, gastrointestinal aid, stimulant, veterinary aid. Documented among Blackfoot, Chippewa, Paiute.
Olea europaea subsp. africana
East African olive bark for malaria, sore throat, and eye infections; leaf tea for hypertension and diabetes.
Nerium oleander
Traditional medicinal plant used for aposteme, atheroma, carcinoma, cardiac, cardiotonic, corn, cyanogenetic, diuretic, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Curcuma domestica
Polynesian-introduced turmeric variety used in traditional Hawaiian medicine for ear infections, sinus congestion, and purification rituals. Applied as poultice for skin conditions. Different cultivar from common turmeric with distinct phytochemical profile.
Olea europaea (fruit extract)
Concentrated olive polyphenols (hydroxytyrosol) — the most potent natural antioxidant measured by ORAC. Provides olive oil benefits without the calories.
Olea europaea
The leaves of the olive tree contain oleuropein, studied for cardiovascular support, blood sugar balance, and immune function.
Olea europaea (500mg)
Standard olive leaf extract capsule — 500mg standardized to 18-20% oleuropein. For immune, cardiovascular, and blood sugar support. 1-2 capsules twice daily.
Olea europaea (extract)
Standardized extract of olive leaf containing oleuropein. Used for immune support, blood pressure, blood sugar, and cardiovascular health.
Olea europaea (18-25% oleuropein)
Standardized olive leaf — 18-25% oleuropein. Broad-spectrum antimicrobial for colds, flu, and chronic infections. Also lowers blood pressure and blood sugar. Herxheimer (die-off) reactions common when starting — start low. More potent than eating olives.
Olea europaea (leaf tea)
Simple olive leaf tea — milder than extract but still provides oleuropein. Pleasant mild bitter-green taste. Traditional Mediterranean remedy for immune and cardiovascular support.
Olea europaea (tincture)
Alcohol-extracted olive leaf — faster absorption than capsules. 30-60 drops 2-3x daily. For immune, cardiovascular, and antimicrobial support.
Olea europaea (oil)
Extra virgin olive oil — contains oleocanthal (anti-inflammatory) and hydroxytyrosol (antioxidant). The foundation of the Mediterranean diet. Medicinal food.
Fish oil + Cholecalciferol
Fish oil combined with vitamin D3 — the two most universally recommended supplements. D3 is fat-soluble so fish oil is the perfect carrier. Convenient 2-in-1.
EPA/DHA from fish
EPA and DHA omega-3 fatty acids from fish — among the most evidence-based supplements worldwide. Essential for brain, heart, joint, and eye health.
Schizochytrium sp. (algae DHA+EPA)
DHA+EPA from microalgae — the vegan omega-3 source. Where fish get their omega-3 (from eating algae). No ocean contaminants. 250-500mg DHA+EPA daily.
Galium uniflorum
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, diaphoretic, diuretic. Documented among Choctaw.
Lycopus uniflorus
A medicinal plant (Lycopus uniflorus) from the Lamiaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Helianthella uniflora
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, orthopedic aid, analgesic, antirheumatic (external). Documented among Paiute, Shoshoni.
Allium unifolium
Native American medicinal plant used as poison. Documented among Mendocino Indian.
Sicyos angulatus
Native American medicinal plant used as venereal aid, veterinary aid. Documented among Iroquois.
Juniperus monosperma
Native American medicinal plant used as anticonvulsive, cold remedy, cough medicine, gynecological aid, antirheumatic (external), gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Apache, White Mountain, Hopi, Isleta.
Lobelia kalmii
Native American medicinal plant used as emetic, dermatological aid, ear medicine, love medicine. Documented among Cree, Hudson Bay, Iroquois.
Camellia sinensis (partially oxidized)
Partially oxidized tea (between green and black). Contains unique polymerized polyphenols. Studied for weight management, blood sugar, and dental health. Moderate caffeine.
Dichanthelium laxiflorum
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, antirheumatic (external), cough medicine, pulmonary aid, throat aid. Documented among Seminole.
Picradeniopsis oppositifolia
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, gastrointestinal aid, herbal steam, panacea. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Agoseris aurantiaca
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, dermatological aid, disinfectant, emetic, orthopedic aid, panacea. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Diplacus aurantiacus
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Tubatulabal.
Rudbeckia fulgida
Native American medicinal plant used as anthelmintic, dermatological aid, ear medicine, gynecological aid, kidney aid, snake bite remedy. Documented among Cherokee.
Ribes pinetorum
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, emetic. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Hypericum gentianoides
Native American medicinal plant used as abortifacient, antidiarrheal, dermatological aid, febrifuge, gastrointestinal aid, hemostat. Documented among Cherokee.
Lonicera ciliosa
Native American medicinal plant used as contraceptive, dermatological aid, tuberculosis remedy, tonic, gynecological aid, cold remedy. Documented among Chehalis, Klallam, Lummi.
Polygala lutea
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, antirheumatic (external), blood medicine, heart medicine, other, respiratory aid. Documented among Choctaw, Seminole.
Page 54 of 86
Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
Your health profile is encrypted and never shared