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
Pentaclethra macrophylla
West African tree whose fermented seeds (ugba) are an Igbo delicacy. Bark decoction for wound healing, gonorrhea, and convulsions. Seed oil for skin conditions. Contains paucine and pentaclethra saponins. Important in Nigerian ethnomedicine.
Paeonia lactiflora
TCM blood-nourishing herb — Bai Shao (white peony) nourishes blood and softens the liver. Chi Shao (red peony) cools blood and moves stasis. For menstrual pain, muscle cramps, and liver qi stagnation. Key ingredient in Si Wu Tang.
Mentha piperita
One of the most widely used and recognized herbs, valued for digestive comfort, headache support, and respiratory relief.
Mentha piperita (enteric 0.2ml)
Enteric-coated peppermint oil capsule — 0.2ml (approx 200mg) per capsule. For IBS: 1-2 caps 3x daily 30 min before meals. The enteric coating is essential.
Mentha piperita (essential oil)
One of the most versatile essential oils — topical for headaches (temples), aromatherapy for energy/focus, and enteric-coated capsules for IBS.
Mentha piperita (enteric-coated)
Enteric-coated peppermint oil capsule — releases in the intestines, not stomach. FDA-recognized for IBS. IBGard is the most studied brand. 180-225mg per cap.
Mentha x piperita (enteric-coated)
Enteric-coated peppermint oil capsules — the coating survives stomach acid and releases in the intestines. Clinical evidence matching antispasmodics for IBS (bloating, cramping, gas). 0.2-0.4mL per capsule 3x daily. Non-enteric causes heartburn.
Mentha piperita (tea)
The world's most popular herbal tea. Menthol provides cooling digestive relief. Clinical evidence for IBS when taken as enteric-coated capsules.
Linum perenne
Similar to common flax (linseed), the seeds provide essential fatty acids and are used as a bulking laxative for constipation. The aerial parts are used in infusions for colds and the oil for eczema and rheumatoid arthritis.
Ludwigia perennis
Traditional medicinal plant used for fever.
Arabis perennans
Native American medicinal plant used as anticonvulsive, psychological aid, analgesic. Documented among Navajo, Kayenta, Navajo, Ramah.
Vinca minor
Traditional medicinal plant used for astringent, bactericide, carminative, catarrh, collyrium, depurative, diarrhea, diuretic, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Thevetia peruviana
Traditional medicinal plant used for fever, malaria, piscicide.
Phellodendron amurense
TCM herb for clearing damp-heat — contains berberine. For UTIs, diarrhea, and skin infections. Part of the famous Er Miao San and Si Miao San formulas. Also studied for weight management (Relora contains Phellodendron + Magnolia).
Erigeron philadelphicus
Native American medicinal plant used as antidiarrheal, antihemorrhagic, abortifacient, analgesic, anticonvulsive, cold remedy. Documented among Blackfoot, Cherokee, Houma.
Colocasia esculenta
Philippine hilot poultice for boils, insect stings, and inflammation; cooked root is a staple food; raw plant contains calcium oxalate.
PS (phospholipid)
A phospholipid critical for brain cell membrane function. Used for cognitive support, memory, ADHD, and exercise recovery. FDA qualified health claim for dementia risk.
Delphinium brunonianum
Tibetan alpine herb for blood disorders and fever. Grows at extreme altitude (4000-5500m) and is collected during brief summer flowering season.
Phyllanthus muellerianus
West African climbing shrub used in Guinean, Ivorian, and Ghanaian traditional medicine for wound healing, dysentery, and sexually transmitted infections. Contains ellagitannins and gallic acid with strong antimicrobial activity.
Jatropha curcas
Traditional medicinal plant used for abortifacient, ache(stomach), ache(tooth), alopecia, anasarca, anodyne, antidote, antidote(comocladia), and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Lyonia mariana
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Cherokee.
Acacia leucophloea
A medicinal plant (Acacia leucophloea) from the Fabaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Pycnanthemum pilosum
A medicinal plant (Pycnanthemum pilosum) from the Lamiaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Pimenta racemosa
Caribbean tree whose leaves produce bay rum oil used in Caribbean folk medicine for muscle pain, scalp health, and as rubefacient. Traditional bay rum aftershave has medicinal origins. Contains eugenol, myrcene, and chavicol. EXTERNAL USE primarily.
Anagallis sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as venereal aid. Documented among Mahuna.
Prunus pensylvanica
Native American medicinal plant used as blood medicine, cough medicine, disinfectant, pulmonary aid, hemostat, pediatric aid. Documented among Algonquin, Quebec, Algonquin, Tete-de-Boule, Cherokee.
Juniperus pinchotii
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, ceremonial medicine, gynecological aid, other. Documented among Comanche.
Pinus sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as antidiarrheal, other, ceremonial medicine, dermatological aid. Documented among Alabama, Cherokee, Navajo.
Ananas comosus
Source of bromelain, a proteolytic enzyme with anti-inflammatory, anti-clotting, and digestive properties. Used to treat sports injuries, post-surgical swelling, sinusitis, and digestive insufficiency.
Pinus pinaster
A standardized pine bark extract (Pycnogenol) rich in proanthocyanidins, studied for cardiovascular and skin health.
Pinus pinaster
Patented antioxidant (Pycnogenol) — OPCs similar to grape seed but with unique compounds. For venous insufficiency, ADHD, asthma, diabetes, and skin aging. 400+ published studies on Pycnogenol brand. Expensive but well-researched.
Calamagrostis rubescens
Native American medicinal plant used as gynecological aid. Documented among Thompson.
Arceuthobium vaginatum
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Angadenia berteroi
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, other. Documented among Seminole.
Pinellia ternata
A key TCM herb for drying dampness and transforming phlegm. MUST be properly prepared (processed) — raw form is toxic. Used in many classic formulas.
Arctostaphylos nevadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as antidiarrheal, antidote. Documented among Karok.
Muhlenbergia dubia
Native American medicinal plant used as veterinary aid. Documented among Navajo.
Pinus strobus (tea)
Fresh pine needle tea — rich in vitamin C and shikimic acid. Traditional Native American winter remedy. Pleasant taste. Use only identified, non-toxic pine species.
Pinus massoniana
A TCM tonic containing phyto-androgens. Used for energy, hormonal support, and as a nutritive supplement. The tincture is used for androgen effects.
Monotropa hypopithys
Native American medicinal plant used as love medicine. Documented among Kwakiutl.
Tradescantia pinetorum
Native American medicinal plant used as veterinary aid. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Geranium caespitosum
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Keres, Western.
Hymenoxys richardsonii
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Zuni.
Heuchera rubescens
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, gastrointestinal aid, pediatric aid, eye medicine, venereal aid, antidiarrheal. Documented among Gosiute, Paiute, Shoshoni.
Cypripedium acaule
Native American medicinal plant used as gynecological aid, venereal aid, gastrointestinal aid, kidney aid, pediatric aid, urinary aid. Documented among Algonquin, Quebec, Algonquin, Tete-de-Boule, Cherokee.
Phyllodoce empetriformis
Native American medicinal plant used as tuberculosis remedy. Documented among Thompson.
Cassia grandis
Traditional medicinal plant used for cold, fever, laxative, mange, purgative.
Drosera capillaris
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Seminole.
Page 46 of 65
Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
Your health profile is encrypted and never shared