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
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.
Geum calthifolium
Native American medicinal plant used as cold remedy, dermatological aid, throat aid, tonic. Documented among Aleut.
Eleocharis geniculata
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, antidiarrheal, antirheumatic (external), emetic, febrifuge, urinary aid. Documented among Seminole.
Sanicula canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as abortifacient, gynecological aid, heart medicine. Documented among Chippewa, Houma.
Ribes oxyacanthoides
Native American medicinal plant used as gynecological aid. Documented among Cree, Woodlands.
Pedicularis canadensis
Native American medicinal plant used as analgesic, gastrointestinal aid, antidiarrheal, cough medicine, dermatological aid, veterinary aid. Documented among Catawba, Cherokee, Chippewa.
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.
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.
Oregano Oil + Caprylic Acid + Berberine
Antifungal combination — Oregano Oil (carvacrol), Caprylic Acid (coconut), Berberine. Multiple mechanisms to address yeast overgrowth. Short-term protocol.
Pouteria campechiana
A medicinal plant (Pouteria campechiana) from the Sapotaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Physalis peruviana
An Andean superfruit rich in withanolides (like ashwagandha) and vitamins. Used for blood sugar support, immune health, and as a nutritive food.
Gardenia jasminoides
A TCM herb for clearing heat, irritability, and jaundice. Contains crocin (same as saffron) and geniposide. Used in many TCM formulas.
Euphorbia lathyris
Traditional medicinal plant used for antiseptic, cancer, coffee, corn, diarrhea, diuretic, emetic, gangrene, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Capparis decidua
Rajasthani and Pakistani desert tree used in Ayurveda and folk medicine for diabetes, rheumatism, and toothache. Fruit pickled (ker) as food and medicine. Bark for asthma and cough. Contains isocodonocarpine alkaloids and spermidine.
Capparis spinosa (root bark)
Mediterranean and Middle Eastern caper plant root bark (distinct from the culinary bud) used in Unani and Ayurvedic medicine for liver conditions, gout, rheumatism, and spleen disorders. Contains stachydrine and rutin. Important in traditional Arab medicine.
Polygonum careyi
Native American medicinal plant used as cold remedy, febrifuge. Documented among Potawatomi.
Carlina acaulis
Alpine and Eastern European folk diuretic and digestive tonic; root used for fever, liver support, and skin wounds.
Modiola caroliniana
Native American medicinal plant used as misc. disease remedy, throat aid. Documented among Houma.
Pyrrhopappus carolinianus
Native American medicinal plant used as blood medicine. Documented among Cherokee.
Delphinium carolinianum
Native American medicinal plant used as poison. Documented among Lakota.
Ludwigia bonariensis
Native American medicinal plant used as blood medicine, dermatological aid, pediatric aid. Documented among Hawaiian.
Rosa carolina
Native American medicinal plant used as gastrointestinal aid. Documented among Menominee.
Limonium carolinianum
Native American medicinal plant used as tuberculosis remedy. Documented among Micmac.
Draba reptans
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid. Documented among Navajo, Ramah.
Xyris caroliniana
Native American medicinal plant used as antidiarrheal, pediatric aid. Documented among Cherokee.
Scrophularia marilandica
Native American medicinal plant used as gynecological aid. Documented among Iroquois.
Lomatium dissectum
Native American medicinal plant used as ceremonial medicine, dietary aid, stimulant, tonic, veterinary aid, analgesic. Documented among Blackfoot, Cheyenne, Gosiute.
Artemisia carruthii
Native American medicinal plant used as cough medicine, dermatological aid, diaphoretic, febrifuge, misc. disease remedy, panacea. Documented among Navajo, Ramah, Zuni.
Rhododendron albiflorum
Native American medicinal plant used as dermatological aid, gastrointestinal aid, cold remedy, throat aid. Documented among Okanagon, Skokomish, Thompson.
Rhamnus purshiana
A strong stimulant laxative bark. Must be aged 1+ year before use (fresh bark causes severe cramping). SHORT-TERM USE ONLY (max 1-2 weeks).
Croton eluteria
Traditional medicinal plant used for balsamic, digestive, fumigant, narcotic, tonic.
Sicana odorifera
Traditional medicinal plant used for amygdalitis.
Cinnamomum cassia
The "common" cinnamon — 95% of cinnamon sold in the US is Cassia, not true Ceylon cinnamon. Contains HIGH coumarin (liver risk at high doses). For blood sugar support, use Ceylon cinnamon instead.
Acacia farnesiana
Traditional medicinal plant used for ache(head), alterative, aphrodisiac, arthritis, astringent, bite(snake), cancer(stomach), carbuncle, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Cassytha filiformis
Pan-tropical parasitic vine used in Bahamian, Hawaiian, and West African folk medicine for kidney stones, hypertension, and diabetes. Contains aporphine alkaloids (cassythine, actinodaphnine). Called 'love vine' in Caribbean for aphrodisiac properties.
Theobroma angustifolium
A medicinal plant (Theobroma angustifolium) from the Sterculiaceae family used in traditional medicine.
Ricinus communis
Traditional medicinal plant used for abscess, ache(head), ache(stomach), ache(tooth), anodyne, antidote, anus, aperient, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Ricinus communis (oil)
Cold-pressed castor oil — used topically for skin/hair or in castor oil packs. Internally as a strong laxative (not recommended regularly). NEVER eat castor beans (ricin).
Ricinus communis (topical pack)
Castor oil-soaked flannel applied with heat to abdomen — traditional naturopathic remedy for liver support, constipation, inflammation, and menstrual cramps.
Leonotis nepetaefolia
Traditional medicinal plant used for abortifacient, amenorrhea, burn, cold, convulsion, depurative, emmenagogue, eyelid, and other conditions. Known from ethnobotanical records across multiple cultures.
Tragia nepetifolia
Native American medicinal plant used as snake bite remedy, panacea. Documented among Navajo, Kayenta, Navajo, Ramah.
Uncaria tomentosa
A South American vine used in traditional Peruvian medicine to support immune function and joint comfort.
Uncaria tomentosa (bark)
The inner bark of Cat's Claw vine — standardized for alkaloid content. Used for immune support, inflammation, and digestive health.
Uncaria tomentosa (500mg)
Standard 500mg capsule form — the most common commercial format. Contains both POA and TOA alkaloids. 1-3 capsules daily typical dose.
Uncaria tomentosa (extract)
Standardized Cat's Claw extract — some forms are "TOA-free" (pentacyclic alkaloid only) for immune protocols. More concentrated than raw bark.
Page 9 of 59
Graded evidence from clinical trials to traditional use
Your health profile is encrypted and never shared