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Herb Library

Herb Library

Explore 5,320+ detailed herb profiles with safety data, evidence grades, and traditional uses.

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Evidence-Based

Griffonia

Griffonia

Griffonia simplicifolia

B — Good EvidenceFabaceae

West African climbing plant whose seeds are the natural source of 5-HTP (5-hydroxytryptophan), a serotonin precursor used for mood and sleep support.

Grindelia

Grindelia

Grindelia squarrosa

T — Traditional UseAsteraceae

A traditional Western herb used for respiratory support, particularly for bronchial spasm and poison ivy/oak relief.

Groundcover Milkvetch

Groundcover Milkvetch

Astragalus humistratus

T — Traditional UseFabaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, dermatological aid, panacea. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.

Ground Ivy

Ground Ivy

Glechoma hederacea

T — Traditional UseLamiaceae

A European herb used for respiratory congestion, sinus support, tinnitus, and as a spring tonic. Also used in traditional brewing.

Groundplum Milkvetch

Groundplum Milkvetch

Astragalus crassicarpus

T — Traditional UseFabaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as anticonvulsive, hemostat, stimulant, tonic, veterinary aid. Documented among Chippewa, Lakota.

Ground Toot

Ground Toot

Coriaria thymifolia

T — Traditional UseCoriariaceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for canicide, poison, raticide.

Grouse Whortleberry

Grouse Whortleberry

Vaccinium scoparium

T — Traditional UseEricaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as antiemetic, dietary aid, pediatric aid. Documented among Cheyenne.

Gru-Gru Nut

Gru-Gru Nut

Acrocomia totai

T — Traditional UseArecaceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for antifertility.

Guaba

Guaba

Inga edulis

T — Traditional UseFabaceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for ache(head), nervine.

Guaco

Guaco

Mikania glomerata

C — Limited EvidenceAsteraceae

Brazilian respiratory herb — in the Brazilian Pharmacopoeia. For asthma, bronchitis, and coughs. Contains coumarin (bronchodilator). Also traditional snakebite remedy. "Guaco Syrup" is sold in every Brazilian pharmacy as an OTC cough medicine.

Guadalupe Jaborandi

Guadalupe Jaborandi

Pilocarpus racemosus

T — Traditional UseRutaceae

A medicinal plant (Pilocarpus racemosus) from the Rutaceae family used in traditional medicine.

Guadeloupe Cucumber

Guadeloupe Cucumber

Melothria pendula

T — Traditional UseCucurbitaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as snake bite remedy. Documented among Houma.

Guaiac

Guaiac

Guaiacum officinale

T — Traditional UseZygophyllaceae

Caribbean hardwood resin — historical remedy for syphilis (16th century). Anti-inflammatory for gout, rheumatism, and arthritis. One of the densest woods (sinks in water). Endangered species — use cultivated sources.

Guanique

Guanique

Chamissoa altissima

T — Traditional UseAmaranthaceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for blennorrhagia, depurative, dysentery, dyspepsia, venereal.

Guarana

Guarana

Paullinia cupana

C — Limited EvidenceSapindaceae

A Brazilian seed containing 2-4x more caffeine than coffee beans. Used for energy, cognitive support, and athletic performance. Slow-release caffeine.

Guarana Capsule

Guarana Capsule

Paullinia cupana (500mg)

C — Limited EvidenceSapindaceae

Standard guarana capsule — slow-release caffeine (2-4x coffee beans). For energy, focus, and athletic performance. 500mg provides ~100mg caffeine.

Guarda orvalho

Guarda orvalho

Erythroxylum citrifolium

T — Traditional UseErythroxylaceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for wound.

Guatemala Cereus

Guatemala Cereus

Hylocereus guatemalensis

T — Traditional UseCactaceae

A medicinal plant (Hylocereus guatemalensis) from the Cactaceae family used in traditional medicine.

Guava Leaf

Guava Leaf

Psidium guajava

C — Limited EvidenceMyrtaceae

Guava leaves — used in tropical folk medicine for diarrhea, blood sugar support, and digestive health. Rich in flavonoids and tannins.

Gubir

Gubir

Terminalia grandiflora

T — Traditional UseCombretaceae

Aboriginal Australian tree from the Northern Territory used for skin sores, diarrhea, and general pain. The bark is soaked in water and the liquid used as a medicinal wash.

Gudmar Leaf

Gudmar Leaf

Gymnema sylvestre (leaf)

A — Strong EvidenceApocynaceae

Ayurvedic diabetes leaf — "Meshashringi" (sugar destroyer). Chew fresh leaf and sugar becomes tasteless for 1-2 hours. For Type 2 diabetes, sugar cravings, and metabolic syndrome. May support beta cell regeneration. Traditional Ayurvedic practice: chew before meals.

Guduchi

Guduchi

Tinospora cordifolia

C — Limited EvidenceMenispermaceae

A key Ayurvedic immunomodulating herb, called "Amrita" (nectar of immortality), used for immune balance and liver support.

Guduchi Extract

Guduchi Extract

Tinospora cordifolia (standardized)

B — Good EvidenceMenispermaceae

Standardized Guduchi/Giloy extract — typically to 2.5% bitter principles. Ayurvedic immunomodulator for allergies, autoimmune conditions, and fever. Recently controversial in India due to liver toxicity reports (possibly from adulteration or Tinospora crispa contamination).

Guduchi Satva

Guduchi Satva

Tinospora sinensis

T — Traditional UseMenispermaceae

Related to Indian Guduchi, used in both Ayurvedic and Chinese medicine for rheumatic pain, inflammation, and fever. The stem starch (satva) is especially valued.

Guggul

Guggul

Commiphora wightii

B — Good EvidenceBurseraceae

An Ayurvedic resin traditionally used for joint health, cholesterol support, and thyroid function.

Guinea grass

Guinea grass

Panicum maximum

T — Traditional UsePoaceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for cyanogenetic, diuretic, poison, preventitive.

Guinea Hen Weed

Guinea Hen Weed

Petiveria alliacea

T — Traditional UsePhytolaccaceae

Has antimicrobial, anticancer, antitumor, antiviral, antioxidant, diuretic, and anti-HIV properties. Used to reverse cancer, reduce muscle spasms and fever, relax nerves, relieve pain, lower blood-sugar levels, and treat bacterial, fungal, and viral infections.

Gul-e-Babuna

Gul-e-Babuna

Matricaria chamomilla

B — Good EvidenceAsteraceae

Central Asian Unani calming herb for anxiety, digestive spasm, and skin inflammation. One of the most widely used herbs globally for relaxation and digestive comfort.

Gulf Cockspur Grass

Gulf Cockspur Grass

Echinochloa crus-pavonis

T — Traditional UsePoaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, emetic. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.

Gulf Sebastiana

Gulf Sebastiana

Sebastiania fruticosa

T — Traditional UseEuphorbiaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as laxative. Documented among Alabama.

Gum

Gum

Eucalyptus grandis

T — Traditional UseMyrtaceae

A medicinal plant (Eucalyptus grandis) from the Myrtaceae family used in traditional medicine.

Gumbolimbo

Gumbolimbo

Bursera simaruba

T — Traditional UseBurseraceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for ache(back), ache(stomach), antiseptic, aphrodisiac, bite(snake), calculus, cancer(stomach), cystitis, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.

Gumby Gumby

Gumby Gumby

Pittosporum angustifolium

T — Traditional UsePittosporaceae

Aboriginal medicine plant gaining attention for skin conditions, immune support, and general wellness. Traditionally used for aches, pains, and skin disorders.

Gum Ghatti

Gum Ghatti

Anogeissus latifolia

T — Traditional UseCombretaceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for cancer, carbuncle, cholera, cold, cough, diarrhea, dysuria, face, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.

Gummy Gooseberry

Gummy Gooseberry

Ribes lobbii

T — Traditional UseGrossulariaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as antidiarrheal, dermatological aid, oral aid, psychological aid, other. Documented among Kwakiutl, Saanich, Salish, Coast.

Gum Plant

Gum Plant

Grindelia sp.

T — Traditional UseAsteraceae

Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, veterinary aid, blood medicine, cold remedy, gastrointestinal aid, laxative. Documented among Jemez, Mendocino Indian.

Gum Tragacanth

Gum Tragacanth

Astragalus gummifer

T — Traditional UseFabaceae

Traditional medicinal plant used for emollient.

Gumweed

Gumweed

Grindelia squarrosa

T — Traditional UseAsteraceae

A Western American herb used for asthma, bronchitis, and poison oak/ivy relief. The sticky resin is antispasmodic and expectorant.

Gunnison's Mariposa Lily

Gunnison's Mariposa Lily

Calochortus gunnisonii

T — Traditional UseNartheciaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as veterinary aid, antirheumatic (internal), ceremonial medicine, dermatological aid, gynecological aid, panacea. Documented among Cheyenne, Keres, Western, Navajo, Ramah.

Gut Repair Formula

Gut Repair Formula

L-Glutamine + Marshmallow + Slippery Elm + Aloe

C — Limited EvidenceN/A (formula)

Gut barrier repair formula — L-Glutamine for enterocyte fuel, Marshmallow/Slippery Elm for mucilage coating, Aloe for tissue repair. The "4R" gut protocol staple.

Gymnema

Gymnema

Gymnema sylvestre

B — Good EvidenceApocynaceae

An Ayurvedic herb known as the "sugar destroyer" — it temporarily blocks sweet taste receptors and is studied for blood sugar support.

Gymnema Capsule

Gymnema Capsule

Gymnema sylvestre (400mg)

B — Good EvidenceApocynaceae

Standard Gymnema capsule — 400mg standardized to 25% gymnemic acids. Blocks sweet taste for 1-2 hours. Take before meals for blood sugar and craving support.

Gymnema Extract

Gymnema Extract

Gymnema sylvestre (extract)

B — Good EvidenceApocynaceae

Standardized extract (25-75% gymnemic acids). Blocks sweet taste receptors for 1-2 hours. The most studied form for blood sugar support.

Gyokuro

Gyokuro

Camellia sinensis (shade-grown leaf)

B — Good EvidenceTheaceae

The highest grade of Japanese green tea — shade-grown for 20+ days. Extremely high in L-theanine for relaxation and umami flavor.

Gypsyflower

Gypsyflower

Cynoglossum officinale

T — Traditional UseBoraginaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as antihemorrhagic, cancer treatment, dermatological aid, kidney aid, tuberculosis remedy, venereal aid. Documented among Iroquois.

Gyrinops Walla

Gyrinops Walla

Gyrinops walla

T — Traditional UseThymelaeaceae

Sri Lankan endemic agarwood relative used in traditional Sinhalese medicine for neurological conditions, digestive complaints, and as aromatic. Resinous heartwood highly valued. Contains sesquiterpenes. Endangered due to illegal harvesting for fragrance trade.

Hagenia

Hagenia

Hagenia abyssinica

C — Limited EvidenceRosaceae

Ethiopian traditional anthelmintic; dried female flower clusters used to expel tapeworms; once widely traded.

Hairy Angelica

Hairy Angelica

Angelica venenosa

T — Traditional UseApiaceae

Native American medicinal plant used as orthopedic aid, poison. Documented among Iroquois.

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