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
Quercus lobata
Native American medicinal plant used as burn dressing, dermatological aid, eye medicine, cough medicine, pediatric aid, antidiarrheal. Documented among Kawaiisu, Miwok, Yuki.
Rosa californica
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, pediatric aid, antirheumatic (internal), cold remedy, dermatological aid, febrifuge. Documented among Cahuilla, Costanoan, Diegueno.
Caloncoba echinata
West African tree whose seed oil (gorli oil) contains chaulmoogric acid — historically important for leprosy treatment. Used in Congolese and Cameroonian traditional medicine for skin diseases and Hansen's disease before modern antibiotics.
Calophyllum brasiliense
South American rainforest tree used in Brazilian and Costa Rican traditional medicine for wound healing, ulcers, and pain. Resin applied to wounds. Bark decoction for rheumatism. Contains calophyllolide and brasiliensic acid with anti-HIV research interest.
Calotropis procera (leaf)
Pan-tropical shrub leaf (distinct from more toxic latex) used in Sahelian and Indian traditional medicine as poultice for joint pain, swelling, and skin conditions. Contains calotropin cardenolides. Ayurvedic external use for filariasis and rheumatism.
Calpurnia aurea
East African shrub used in Ethiopian, Kenyan, and South African traditional medicine for intestinal worms, ectoparasites (lice, ticks), and skin diseases. Contains calpurmenine quinolizidine alkaloids. Important traditional veterinary medicine.
Geum calthifolium
Native American medicinal plant used as cold remedy, dermatological aid, throat aid, tonic. Documented among Aleut.
Camellia japonica
Traditional medicinal plant used for burn, cardiotonic, endocarditis, enterorrhagia, food, hematemesis, hemoptysis, oil, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Anthemis sp.
Native American medicinal plant used as kidney aid. Documented among Cree.
Haematoxylum campechianum
Traditional medicinal plant used for amenorrhea, anodyne, antiseptic, astringent, bactericide, bedsore, cancer, circulation, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Myrciaria dubia (standardized)
Standardized Camu Camu extract — typically 20% natural vitamin C. Whole-food vitamin C source with co-occurring bioflavonoids, carotenoids, and amino acids that enhance absorption vs synthetic ascorbic acid. Amazonian rainforest sustainable product.
Myrciaria dubia (powder)
Freeze-dried Amazonian berry powder — the highest vitamin C fruit on earth (2-3% by weight). 1 tsp provides 700-1000% daily vitamin C. Extremely tart.
Maianthemum canadense
Native American medicinal plant used as kidney aid, analgesic, gynecological aid, throat aid. Documented among Iroquois, Montagnais, Ojibwa.
Xanthium strumarium
Native American medicinal plant used as blood medicine, febrifuge, dermatological aid, gynecological aid, antirheumatic (internal), kidney aid. Documented among Apache, White Mountain, Houma, Keres, Western.
Solidago altissima
Native American medicinal plant used as burn dressing, dermatological aid. Documented among Chippewa.
Lactuca canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, ceremonial medicine, sedative, stimulant, veterinary aid, dermatological aid. Documented among Cherokee, Chippewa, Iroquois.
Eleocharis geniculata
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, antidiarrheal, antirheumatic (external), emetic, febrifuge, urinary aid. Documented among Seminole.
Elymus canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, kidney aid, other. Documented among Iroquois.
Taxus canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as antirheumatic (external), antirheumatic (internal), gynecological aid, poultice, abortifacient, herbal steam. Documented among Abnaki, Algonquin, Quebec, Algonquin, Tete-de-Boule.
Anemone canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, hemostat, anthelmintic, witchcraft medicine, eye medicine, ceremonial medicine. Documented among Chippewa, Iroquois, Meskwaki.
Sanicula canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as abortifacient, gynecological aid, heart medicine. Documented among Chippewa, Houma.
Pilea pumila
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, dietary aid, pediatric aid, respiratory aid. Documented among Cherokee, Iroquois.
Ribes oxyacanthoides
Native American medicinal plant used as gynecological aid. Documented among Cree, Woodlands.
Hieracium canadense
Native American medicinal plant used as hunting medicine. Documented among Ojibwa.
Ligusticum canadense
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Cherokee, Creek.
Pedicularis canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, gastrointestinal aid, antidiarrheal, cough medicine, dermatological aid, veterinary aid. Documented among Catawba, Cherokee, Chippewa.
Astragalus canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as antihemorrhagic, dermatological aid, pediatric aid, pulmonary aid, febrifuge, analgesic. Documented among Blackfoot, Dakota, Lakota.
Amelanchier canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as anthelmintic, pediatric aid, antidiarrheal, disinfectant, gynecological aid, blood medicine. Documented among Cherokee, Chippewa, Iroquois.
Cirsium arvense
Native American medicinal plant used as anthelmintic, pediatric aid, oral aid, pulmonary aid, tuberculosis remedy, gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Abnaki, Iroquois, Mohegan.
Elodea canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as emetic. Documented among Iroquois.
Viola canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic. Documented among Ojibwa, South.
Laportea canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as febrifuge, antidote, emetic, gynecological aid, psychological aid, tuberculosis remedy. Documented among Houma, Iroquois, Meskwaki.
Rumex hymenosepalus
Traditional medicinal plant used for alcoholism, arthritis, cancer(skin), carcinogenic, cold, diarrhea, poultice, sore(throat), and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Cananga odorata (leaf)
Indonesian and Filipino use of ylang-ylang LEAVES (distinct from the flower essential oil) for fever reduction, skin rashes, and itching. Leaf decoction in Javanese jamu for blood pressure. Contains liriodenine alkaloids. More accessible than expensive flower oil.
Canarium vulgare
Indonesian and Pacific Island tree whose resin (damar) is used in traditional medicine for wound healing and skin infections. Bark decoction for stomach complaints. Nut is important protein source in Melanesia. Resin burned as incense with medicinal smoke.
Salvia canariensis
A medicinal plant (Salvia canariensis) from the Lamiaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Ligusticum canbyi
Native American medicinal plant used as heart medicine, cold remedy, cough medicine, ear medicine, respiratory aid, anticonvulsive. Documented among Cree, Crow, Flathead.
Acalypha indica
Traditional medicinal plant used for constipation, croup, cyanogenetic, emetic, irritant, purgative, ringworm, tumor.
Oregano Oil + Caprylic Acid + Berberine
Antifungal combination — Oregano Oil (carvacrol), Caprylic Acid (coconut), Berberine. Multiple mechanisms to address yeast overgrowth. Short-term protocol.
Anemone cylindrica
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, burn dressing, eye medicine, psychological aid, stimulant, pulmonary aid. Documented among Meskwaki, Ojibwa.
Aleurites moluccana
Traditional medicinal plant used for ache(head), ache(stomach), aperient, aphrodisiac, asthma, debility, diarrhea, dysentery, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Pouteria campechiana
A medicinal plant (Pouteria campechiana) from the Sapotaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Prenanthes serpentaria
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic. Documented among Cherokee.
Vitis arizonica
Native American medicinal plant used as love medicine. Documented among Navajo.
Quercus chrysolepis
Native American medicinal plant used as poison. Documented among Mendocino Indian.
Aloe ferox
South African aloe species — the latex (yellow sap) is a powerful stimulant laxative. Much stronger than Aloe vera. Used for short-term constipation. The gel is soothing like A. vera.
Aloe ferox (extract)
Concentrated bitter aloe extract — a powerful stimulant laxative. Much stronger than aloe vera gel. SHORT-TERM USE ONLY (max 1-2 weeks).
Physalis peruviana
An Andean superfruit rich in withanolides (like ashwagandha) and vitamins. Used for blood sugar support, immune health, and as a nutritive food.
Page 15 of 86
Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
Your health profile is encrypted and never shared