Herb × Condition

Amla for Constipation

Sanskrit: Amalaki (meaning: the nurse) | Emblica officinalis

How Amla helps with Constipation according to Ayurveda. Classical references, dosage, preparation methods, and what modern research says.

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Amla for Constipation: Does It Work?

Does Amla (Amalaki) help with constipation? Yes, but with a specific role. Amla is not the first-line laxative in Ayurveda, that distinction belongs to Haritaki. Amla works at a slightly different level: it cools and lubricates an irritated colon, supports steady downward flow, and is the gentle, daily-safe herb you can lean on for the long arc rather than for an urgent purge.

Classical Ayurveda lists Amla among the herbs indicated for constipation, noting its mild laxative action alongside its broader role of cleansing the intestines and regulating digestion. The reasoning is built into its property profile. Amla carries five of the six tastes (Pancharasa), including sour (Amla rasa) which gently moves the inactive downward current of Vata, and astringent (Kashaya rasa) and bitter (Tikta rasa) which help clear residue from the gut wall. Its sweet post-digestive effect (Madhura Vipaka) means it nourishes the colonic mucosa rather than depleting it, which is why texts class it as a daily-safe Rasayana for the digestive system.

In practice, Amla is most useful for constipation that runs hot or dry: the kind that comes with hyperacidity, burning at the rectum, irritability, or a chronically inflamed gut lining. It is the Pitta-pacifying third of Triphala, the most widely used Ayurvedic bowel regulator in the world, and most people who use Amla for constipation use it in that form. As a single herb, Amla works best as a daily background tonic that keeps the colon moist, the digestive fire (Agni) calm, and elimination steady. The Charaka Samhita ranks Amla as the foremost Rasayana among all fruits, and the Astanga Hridaya places it among Pathya foods, those safe for daily, lifelong use.

How Amla Helps with Constipation

To understand why Amla helps with constipation, it helps to look at what is actually going wrong. Most constipation is a Vata disorder seated in the large intestine, the home of Apana Vayu, the downward-moving current that drives every elimination. When Apana Vayu is dry, blocked, or moving the wrong direction, transit stalls. A subset of constipation is instead Pitta-driven, where heat dries the intestinal membranes and inflammation makes evacuation incomplete. Amla addresses both, but in different ways.

Sour Taste That Moves Apana Vayu Without Heating

Sour taste (Amla rasa) is described in classical pharmacology as kindling digestive activity, moistening tissues, and making "the inactive Vata move downward." That last property is the mechanism by which sour foods relieve constipation. The catch is that most sour foods aggravate Pitta in the process. Amla is the documented exception. The Astanga Hridaya specifically notes that while sour taste generally aggravates Pitta, Amla and Pomegranate do not, because Amla's overall potency is cold (Sheeta Virya). This is what makes Amla unique: it gives you the downward-moving, peristalsis-stimulating effect of sour taste without the heat penalty.

Cool, Demulcent, Lightly Cleansing

Beyond Apana Vayu, Amla addresses two other layers of the problem. Its cold potency (Sheeta Virya) directly counters the heat that drives Pitta-pattern constipation, the kind with burning, incomplete evacuation, and an inflamed gut lining. Its sweet post-digestive effect (Madhura Vipaka) nourishes the colonic mucosa and the deeper tissues (Dhatus), which is why long-term use rebuilds rather than depletes gut tone, the opposite of what stimulant laxatives do. Classical texts describe Amla as cleansing the intestines and regulating digestion, and its astringent and bitter tastes (Kashaya, Tikta) help dislodge incompletely digested residue (Ama) stuck to the colon wall.

Why Amla Sits Inside Triphala for Bowel Health

The classical answer to why Amla is a bowel herb is that it does not work alone. In Triphala, Amla provides the cooling, antioxidant, mucosa-protective layer; Haritaki supplies the strong descending action on Apana Vayu; Vibhitaki handles Kapha congestion. Together they cover all three dosha patterns, which is why Triphala is the universal Ayurvedic bowel regulator. As a single herb, Amla shines specifically where the constipation is hot, dry, or inflammatory, and where you want long-term colonic nourishment rather than purgation.

How to Use Amla for Constipation

For constipation specifically, the goal with Amla is steady daily lubrication of the colon, gentle cooling of any hot or inflamed gut pattern, and support for the downward movement of Apana Vayu. That changes which form you should reach for and when you should take it.

Best Form for Constipation

Amla powder (Churna) is the most practical daily form. Fresh fruit is more potent if you can get it, but powder is easier to dose, store, and combine with the right vehicle (Anupana) for constipation. Amla juice (Swarasa) is the form to choose when there is significant heat, burning, or hyperacidity layered onto the constipation, since the juice carries the cooling effect most directly. Skip the dried Amla candies and Murabba for this purpose: they are sweetened and lose much of the bowel-regulating sour kick.

If you want a complete bowel formula rather than a supportive tonic, take Amla as part of Triphala. That is the form most people end up using, because Amla alone is gentler than what stubborn constipation usually needs.

Dosage, Timing, and Vehicle

FormDoseWhenAnupana (vehicle)
Amla powder3 to 6 g per dayBefore bed for next-morning effect; or first thing on risingWarm water; add 1 tsp ghee for Vata-type dryness; cool water with rock sugar for Pitta-type heat
Amla juice (Swarasa)10 to 20 mlMorning, empty stomachDiluted in warm or cool water; honey if no Pitta heat
Fresh fruit1 to 2 fruits dailyMorning, empty stomachPlain, or with a pinch of rock salt
Triphala (Amla as one third)3 to 6 g30 minutes before bedWarm water

The timing matters. Taken before bed, Amla works overnight while the body is in its natural cleansing phase, so the effect shows up as an easier morning bowel movement. Taken on rising, it stimulates the gastrocolic reflex along with warm water and often triggers elimination within 20 to 30 minutes.

Anupana, Tailored to the Pattern

  • Dry, Vata-type constipation (hard pellet stools, gas, irregularity): Amla powder in warm water with 1 teaspoon of ghee. Ghee adds the lubrication that Amla on its own does not provide.
  • Hot, Pitta-type constipation (burning, incomplete evacuation, irritability): Amla powder or juice in cool water with a pinch of rock sugar. Avoid honey here.
  • Sluggish, Kapha-type constipation (heaviness, slow transit, low urgency): Amla is less the lead herb here, but if you use it, take the powder with warm water and a pinch of dry ginger to add heat.

Duration

Amla is one of the few Ayurvedic herbs explicitly recommended by classical texts for daily, lifelong use. Expect to feel the cooling, soothing effect on the gut within 3 to 7 days of consistent use, and noticeable improvements in bowel regularity over 2 to 4 weeks. If after 2 weeks of consistent Amla there is no change, the constipation likely needs a stronger primary herb (Haritaki, Triphala, or castor oil) and Amla shifts to a supportive role.

One Practical Tip

Amla powder is intensely sour and can be hard to take straight. The easiest way to make it a daily habit: stir 1 teaspoon into a small cup of warm water with a teaspoon of ghee at bedtime. Most people grow into the taste within a couple of weeks and start to find it pleasant.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does Amla take to work for constipation?

Taken before bed, Amla typically produces a noticeably easier bowel movement the following morning, especially if you are already moderately regular. For chronically sluggish or dry-pattern constipation, expect a more gradual effect: cooling and lubrication of the gut over 3 to 7 days, and steadier, more complete elimination over 2 to 4 weeks. Amla is a regulator, not a purgative. If you need a same-night strong effect, you want Haritaki or castor oil; Amla rebuilds the system over time.

What is the best form of Amla for constipation?

Amla powder (Churna) taken before bed in warm water is the most practical and effective single-herb form. It is easy to dose, easy to combine with ghee for Vata-type dryness or with rock sugar for Pitta-type heat, and it works overnight. Amla juice is preferable when there is significant burning, hyperacidity, or inflammation layered onto the constipation. Fresh fruit is the most potent form if you have access to it. For most people with stubborn constipation, however, Amla works better inside Triphala than alone.

Amla vs Triphala for constipation, which should I use?

If your goal is reliable, daily bowel regularity, choose Triphala. Amla is one third of Triphala, the cooling, mucosa-nourishing third, but on its own it lacks the strong descending action of Haritaki and the Kapha-clearing action of Bibhitaki that make Triphala work across all three dosha patterns. Choose plain Amla over Triphala if your constipation is mild, primarily hot or dry-and-inflammatory in pattern, and your main need is long-term gut nourishment alongside cooling. Choose Amla as part of Triphala if you want a complete bowel formula. Many people end up using both: Triphala at bedtime for regularity, plain Amla in the morning as a Rasayana.

Can I take Amla every day long-term?

Yes. Amla is one of the rare herbs that classical texts explicitly endorse for daily, lifelong use. The Astanga Hridaya lists it among Pathya foods, those safe for habitual long-term consumption alongside rice, ghee, and green gram. Unlike stimulant laxatives, Amla does not cause dependency or progressively deplete colon tone. Used as a daily Rasayana, it tends to gradually improve baseline bowel function rather than requiring escalating doses. The two practical caveats: people on blood-thinning medication should discuss it with their doctor because of Amla's high Vitamin C content, and anyone with active diarrhea or dysentery should pause it.

Safety & Precautions

Amla is one of the safest herbs in Ayurveda. It has been eaten as food across South Asia for thousands of years, and no significant toxicity has been reported at standard doses. Vagbhata classifies it among Pathya, substances safe for daily, long-term use. That said, there are a few situations to be aware of:

When to Use Caution

  • Active cold or cough: Plain Amla juice can temporarily increase mucus due to its sour taste and cold potency. During a cold, take it as Chyawanprash (which includes warming spices) or as powder with honey instead.
  • High Kapha conditions: Amla's sweet post-digestive effect (Madhura Vipaka) can mildly increase Kapha in people who already have excess. Combine it with ginger or black pepper to counteract this.
  • Diabetes medication: Amla may lower blood sugar. If you're on glucose-lowering drugs, monitor your levels and consult your doctor before adding concentrated Amla supplements.
  • Iron-containing supplements: Amla's high Vitamin C enhances iron absorption significantly. This is usually beneficial, but be aware of it if you're managing iron overload conditions.

Pregnancy and Nursing

Amla in food quantities (fresh fruit, Chyawanprash) is considered safe during pregnancy and is traditionally given to support both mother and baby. For concentrated extracts or high-dose supplements, consult your Ayurvedic practitioner or doctor.

Overdose

Excessive Amla intake (well beyond normal food quantities) may cause loose stools or mild diarrhoea due to its laxative properties, and could aggravate acidity in very Pitta-sensitive individuals despite its overall cooling nature. These effects resolve by simply reducing the dose.

Other Herbs for Constipation

See all herbs for constipation on the Constipation page.

Classical Text References (5 sources)

5 Six tastes रसाः वा व ललवण त तोषणकषायकाःष यमा ता ते च यथापूव बलावहाः Svadu – Madhura – sweet, Amla – Sour, Lavana – Salt, Tikta – Bitter, Ushna – Katu – Pungent, Kashaya – Astringent are the six types of Rasa.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 1: Ayushkameeya Adhyaya

 Amla Vipaka (Sour) – Sour taste undergoes this Vipaka  Katu Vipaka – rest of the tastes – Bitter, astringent and pungent tastes undergo this Vipaka.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 1: Ayushkameeya Adhyaya

Sour, Salt and sweet (Amla, Lavana and Madhura) tastes are dominant respectively during the three seasons of this period.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 3: Ritucharya adhyaya Seasonal

49 ½ त तं वाद ु कषायं च ु धतो अ नं भजे लघु शा लमु ग सताधा ीपटोलमधुजा गलम ् When hungry, the person should take foods which are of bitter, sweet and astringent tastes, and easily digestible such as Rice, green gram, sugar, Amla, Patola, honey and meat of animals of desert-like lands.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 3: Ritucharya adhyaya Seasonal

(Provided cow is perfectly healthy without any infection) Dadhi (curds benefits/soured milk/coagulated milk) अ लपाकरसं ा ह गु णं द ध वातिजत ् २९ मेदः शु बल ले म प तर ताि नशोफकृत ् रो च णु श तम चौ शीतके वषम वरे ३० पीनसे मू कृ े च, ं तु हणीगदे नैवा याि न श नैवो णं वस तो ण शर सु न ३१ नामु गसूपं ना ौ ं त नाघ ृत सतोपलम ् न चानामलकं ना प न यं णो म थम यथा ३२ वरास ृि प तवीसपकु ठपा डु म दम ् Curd has Amla rasa – sour taste Amla paka – undergoes sour taste conversion after digestion Grahi - abs

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 5: Drava Vigyaniya Drinkables

Rochishnu – increases taste Curd Useful in aruchau – useful in anorexia Vishamajwara – chronic, recurrent fever Peenasa – rhinitis Mutrakruchra – dysuria Grahani – malabsorption syndrome Rules for curds consumption: Curd should not be eaten at nights, not made hot, Curd should not be taken along with green gram soup It should not be taken along with honey, ghee, sugar and Amla.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 5: Drava Vigyaniya Drinkables

29-32 Takra –(Fat-less buttermilk):त ं लघु कषाया लं द पनं कफवातिजत ् ३३ शोफोदराश हणीदोषमू ल हगु मघ त ृ याप गरपा हा चः वामयान ् जयेत ् ३४ Takra (butter milk) - churned curds Laghu – easy to digest Kashaya, amla – sour, astringent, Deepana – improves digestion strength Kaphavatjit – balances Kapha and Vata Useful in Shopha – inflammatory conditions Udara – ascites Arsha – hemorrhoids Grahani – malabsorption syndrome Mutradosha, Mutragraha – urine infection, dysuria Aruchi – anorexia Pleeha

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 5: Drava Vigyaniya Drinkables

158 Triphala benefits: इयं रसायनवरा फला अ यामयापहा । रोपणी व गद लेदमेदोमे हकफा िजत ् ॥१५९॥ Thus, the Triphala (haritaki, amalaki and vibhitaki), together is a best rejuvenator of the body, cures diseases of the eyes, heals wounds and cures skin diseases, excess moisture of the tissues, obesity, diabetes, aggravation of kapha and Asra (blood) 159.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food

त वदामलकं शीतम लं प तकफापहम ् Similarly so is amalaka in all other properties it is cold I potency, and mitigates pitta and kapha.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food

कटु पाके हमं के यम मीष च त गुणम ् Aksha (vibhitaka) is pungent at the end of digestion, cold in potency, good for hairs and possesses properties similar (to haritaki and amalaka) but slightly less (in degree).

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food

Pathya – food that can be consumed habitually (on daily basis, for a long time) – शीलये छा लगोधूमयवषि टकजा गलम ् सु नष णकजीव तीबालमूलवा तुकम ् प यामलकम ृ वीकापटोल मु गशकराः घत ृ द योदक ीर ौ दा डमसै धवम ् Shali (rice), Godhuma (wheat), Yava – Barley – Hordeum vulgare, Shashtika (rice maturing in sixty days), Jangala (meat of animals of desert like lands), sunisannaka, Jivanti – Leptadenia reticulata, Balamulaka (young radish), Pathya (Haritaki) Amalaka (Amla – Indian gooseberry), Mridwika – dr

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 8: Food habits &

Pathya – food that can be consumed habitually (on daily basis, for a long time) – शीलये छा लगोधूमयवषि टकजा गलम ् सु नष णकजीव तीबालमूलवा तुकम ् प यामलकम ृ वीकापटोल मु गशकराः घत ृ द योदक ीर ौ दा डमसै धवम ् Shali (rice), Godhuma (wheat), Yava – Barley – Hordeum vulgare, Shashtika (rice maturing in sixty days), Jangala (meat of animals of desert like lands), sunisannaka, Jivanti – Leptadenia reticulata, Balamulaka (young radish), Pathya (Haritaki) Amalaka (Amla – Indian gooseberry), Mridwika – dr

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 8: Food habits &

Warm water is ideal after-drink for foods which are starchy, Mastu – Supernatent liquid of curds (whey), Takra (diluted buttermilk) Amla kanjika (fermented gruel); dishes prepared from vegetables and Mudga (green gram) and other legumes : Sura (beer) is the ideal after drink for lean person.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 8: Food habits &

Sour remains as sour itself – Amla – Amla Vipaka (taste conversion after digestion) Tikta (bitter), Ushna (pungent) and Kasaya (astringent) tastes will generally be Katu Vipaka (pungent).

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 9: Dravyadi Vigyaniya

Amla ायो अ लं प तजननं दा डमामलकाहते Generally substances of sour taste aggravate Pitta, except Dadima – Pomegranate – Punica granatum and Amalaka (Indian gooseberry).

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their

Amla Gana – group of sour substances: अ लो धा ीफला ल कामातुलु गा लवेतसम ् दा डमं रजतं त ं चु ं पालेवतं द ध आ मा ातकं भ यं क प थं करमदकम ् Dhatriphala – Amla, Amlika – tamarind, Matulunga, Amlavetasa – Garcinia pedunculata Roxb.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their

Madhura (sweet) – Prithvi + Ap (earth + water) Amla (sour) – Tejas + Ap (fire + water) Lavana (salt) – Ap + Tejas (water + fire) Tikta (bitter) – Akasa + Vayu (ether + air) Katu (pungent) – Tejas + Vayu (Fire and air) Kashaya (astringent) – Prithvi + Vayu (earth + air) - 1.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their

Amla (sour) अ लः ालयते मुखम ् हषणो रोमद तानां अ ुव नकोचनः Amla (sour) makes the mouth watery, causes horripilation, tingling of the teeth and leads to closing of the eyes and brows.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their

7-9 Sour and Salt tastes – अ लोअि नद तकृत ् ि न धो उ ण वीय हम पशः यः पाचनरोचनः ीणनः लेदनो लघुः करो त कफ प ता ंमूढवातानुलोमनः Amla (sour) stimulates the Agni – (digestive activity), is unctuous, good for the heart, digestive, appetizer, hot in potency, cold on touch (coolant on external applications, relieves burning sensation), Sour taste satiates, causes moistening, it is easy for digestion, causes aggravation of Kapha, Pitta and Asra (blood) and makes the inactive Vata move downwards.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their

Similarly, Pitta undergoes chaya in rainy season, because of production of Amla viplaka (sour taste at the end of digestion) of water and foods.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 12: Doshabhediya Dosha Types,

49-50 Symptoms of Pitta increase – प त य दाहरागो मपा कताः वेदः लेदः स ृ तः कोथः सदनं मू छनं मदः कटुका लौ रसौ वणः पा डुर णविजतः Daha – burning sensation Raga – reddish discoloration Ushmapakita – heat, increase in temperature, formation of pus, ulcers Sveda – sweating Kleda – inflammation with wetness, moistness Sruti – inflammation with pus / oozing / secretions, exudation Kotha – putrefaction- decomposition Sadana – debility Murchana – fainting Mada – toxicity Katuka Amla Rasa - bitter and

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 12: Doshabhediya Dosha Types,

Svadu Amla Lavana Ushna Bhojya – foods which are of sweet, sour and salt taste; Abhyanga – Oil massage Mardana – simple massage Veshtana – wrapping / covering the body/ organ with cloth Trasana – Threatening, frightening Seka – pouring of herbal decoctions / oils on the affected part Paishtika Goudika Madya – wine prepared from corn flour and jaggery- molasses Snigdha Ushna Basti – enema therapy with fat-oil, enema with drugs of hot potency Sukhasheelata – comforting the patient Deepana Pachana

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 13: Doshopakramaniyam

20 Treatment for over nourishing त मेदो नल ले मनाशनं सव म यते कुला थजूण यामाकयवमु गमधूदकम ् म त ुद डाहता र ट च ताशोधनजागरम ् मधुना फलां ल या गुडूचीमभयां घनम ् रसा जन य महतः प चमल ू य ग ु गल ु ोः शलाजतु] योग च साि नम थरसो हतः वड गं नागरं ारः काललोहरजो मधु यवामलक चूण च योगो अ त थौ यदोशिजत ् Treatments which reduce Medas- fat, Anila- Vata and Kapha are desirable; Use of Kulattha – horse gram – Dolichos Biflorus, Jurna, Shyamaka, Yava – Barley – Hordeum Vulgare, Mudga – green gram – Averr

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 14: Dvividha Upakramaneeya

22b ह नवे गः कणाधा ी स ाथः लवणोदकैः वमे पुनः पुनः If bouts are insufficient, they should be induced again and again by drinking water boiled with Kana, Dhatri, Siddhartha and salt.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 18: Vamana Virechana Vidhi

(Snigdha Amla Lavana) 21b-22a प त य दशनं या छे दो वा ले मणो भवेत ् २२ Vomiting should be allowed till the appearance- coming out of Pitta or complete expelling of Kapha.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 18: Vamana Virechana Vidhi

(long pepper, Amla, White mustard and black salt) त वेगानाम वतनम ् विृ तः स वब धा वा केवल यौषध य वा अयोग तेन न ठ वक डूकोठ वरादयः Less bouts – Ayoga - Non – commencement of bouts, bouts coming on with hindrance or elimination of the medicine only- are the features of Ayoga- inadequate bouts; from it arise, excess of expectoration, itching, appearance of skin rashes, fever etc.

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 18: Vamana Virechana Vidhi

Diet after surgery – भोजनं च यथासा यं यवगोधूमषि टकाः मसरू मु गतव ु र जीव तीसु नष णकाः बालमूलकवताकत डुल यकावा तुकम ् कारवे लककक टपटोलकटुकाफलम ् सै धवं दा डमं धा ी घ ृतं त त हमं जलम ् जीणशा योदनं ि न धम पमु णोदको तरम ् भु जानो जा गलैमासैः शी ं णमपोह त The food of the patient should be that which is accustomed such as barley, wheat, rice of sixty day ripening (shashtika shali), Masura – lentil, Mudga (green-gram), Tuvari – (tur dal), Jivanti, Sunisannaka, tender Mulaka (Radish), Vartaka, Tan

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 29: Shastrakarma Vidhi

Diet after surgery – भोजनं च यथासा यं यवगोधूमषि टकाः मसरू मु गतव ु र जीव तीसु नष णकाः बालमूलकवताकत डुल यकावा तुकम ् कारवे लककक टपटोलकटुकाफलम ् सै धवं दा डमं धा ी घ ृतं त त हमं जलम ् जीणशा योदनं ि न धम पमु णोदको तरम ् भु जानो जा गलैमासैः शी ं णमपोह त The food of the patient should be that which is accustomed such as barley, wheat, rice of sixty day ripening (shashtika shali), Masura – lentil, Mudga (green-gram), Tuvari – (tur dal), Jivanti, Sunisannaka, tender Mulaka (Radish), Vartaka, Tan

— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 29: Shastrakarma Vidhi

Source: Astanga Hridaya, Ch. 1, Ch. 1, Ch. 3, Ch. 3, Ch. 5, Ch. 5, Ch. 5, Ch. 6, Ch. 6, Ch. 6, Ch. 8, Ch. 8, Ch. 8, Ch. 9, Ch. 10, Ch. 10, Ch. 10, Ch. 10, Ch. 10, Ch. 12, Ch. 12, Ch. 13, Ch. 14, Ch. 18, Ch. 18, Ch. 18, Ch. 29, Ch. 29

158 Triphala benefits: इयं रसायनवरा फला अ यामयापहा । रोपणी व गद लेदमेदोमे हकफा िजत ् ॥१५९॥ Thus, the Triphala (haritaki, amalaki and vibhitaki), together is a best rejuvenator of the body, cures diseases of the eyes, heals wounds and cures skin diseases, excess moisture of the tissues, obesity, diabetes, aggravation of kapha and Asra (blood) 159.

— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Annaswaroopa Food

5 Six tastes रसाः वा व ललवण त तोषणकषायकाःष यमा ता ते च यथापूव बलावहाः Svadu – Madhura – sweet, Amla – Sour, Lavana – Salt, Tikta – Bitter, Ushna – Katu – Pungent, Kashaya – Astringent are the six types of Rasa.

— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Ayushkameeya Adhyaya

 Amla Vipaka (Sour) – Sour taste undergoes this Vipaka  Katu Vipaka – rest of the tastes – Bitter, astringent and pungent tastes undergo this Vipaka.

— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Ayushkameeya Adhyaya

Sour, Salt and sweet (Amla, Lavana and Madhura) tastes are dominant respectively during the three seasons of this period.

— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Ritucharya adhyaya Seasonal

49 ½ त तं वाद ु कषायं च ु धतो अ नं भजे लघु शा लमु ग सताधा ीपटोलमधुजा गलम ् When hungry, the person should take foods which are of bitter, sweet and astringent tastes, and easily digestible such as Rice, green gram, sugar, Amla, Patola, honey and meat of animals of desert-like lands.

— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Ritucharya adhyaya Seasonal

Source: Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Annaswaroopa Food; Ayushkameeya Adhyaya; Ritucharya adhyaya Seasonal

Amalaki possesses the same properties;

— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 1: Rejuvenation Therapy (Rasayana Chikitsa / रसायन चिकित्सा)

Benefits described for the Amalaki Ghee preparation from Pranakamiya Rasayana Pada.

— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 1: Rejuvenation Therapy (Rasayana Chikitsa / रसायन चिकित्सा)

In this Abhaya-Amalaki quarter, six accomplished rasayana formulations promoting life have been described.

— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 1: Rejuvenation Therapy (Rasayana Chikitsa / रसायन चिकित्सा)

Freshly collected and dried amalaki (ten palas), draksha (ten palas), atmagupta (ten palas), punarnava (ten palas), shatavari (ten palas), vidari (ten palas), samanga (ten palas), pippali (ten palas), nagara (eight palas), madhuyashti (one palas), saurvachala (one pala) and maricha (two palas) – all these drugs should be made to powders.

— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 11: Chest Injury and Emaciation Treatment (Kshatakshina Chikitsa / क्षतक्षीणचिकित्सा)

Take 100 pala each of kashmarya, amalaki, black pepper, haritaki, vibhitaki, pippali and grapes, add to it 100 pala of old jaggery and two drona of water, then put the mixture in a vessel lined with honey for 7 days in summer or for 14 days in winter for fermentation.

— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 12: Edema Treatment (Shvayathu Chikitsa / श्वयथुचिकित्सा)

Source: Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 1: Rejuvenation Therapy (Rasayana Chikitsa / रसायन चिकित्सा); Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 11: Chest Injury and Emaciation Treatment (Kshatakshina Chikitsa / क्षतक्षीणचिकित्सा); Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 12: Edema Treatment (Shvayathu Chikitsa / श्वयथुचिकित्सा)

Prabhava (special potency) is illustrated thus: Amalaki (Emblica officinalis/Dhatri), though similar in Rasa and other properties to Lakucha (Artocarpus lakoocha), destroys all three Doshas.

— Sharangadhara Samhita, Purva Khanda, Chapter 2: Bhaishajyakhyanaka (Medicine Administration Timing)

Milk, Masha (Vigna mungo/black gram), the kernel of Bhallataka (Semecarpus anacardium), and Amalaki (Emblica officinalis) — these are described as both generating and promoting the flow of semen.

— Sharangadhara Samhita, Purva Khanda, Chapter 4: Dipana-Pachana Adikathanam (Digestive Actions etc.)

The juice of Amalaki (Emblica officinalis) combined with Haridra (turmeric — Curcuma longa) powder is beneficial [in Prameha and skin disorders].

— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 1: Svarasadikalpana (Svarasa, Kalka, Kvatha, etc.)

The juice extracted from the tender leaves of Jambu (Syzygium cumini), Amra (mango — Mangifera indica), and Amalaki (Emblica officinalis), mixed with honey, ghee, and sugar, alleviates severe Raktatisara (bloody diarrhea).

— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 1: Svarasadikalpana (Svarasa, Kalka, Kvatha, etc.)

Avipattikar Churna: Shunthi (dry ginger — Zingiber officinale), Maricha (black pepper — Piper nigrum), Pippali (long pepper — Piper longum), Amalaki (Emblica officinalis), Vibhitaki (Terminalia bellirica), Haritaki (Terminalia chebula), Mustaka (Cyperus rotundus), Vidanga (Embelia ribes), and Sharkara (sugar) —.

— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 3: Churnakalpana (Powder Preparations)

Source: Sharangadhara Samhita, Purva Khanda, Chapter 2: Bhaishajyakhyanaka (Medicine Administration Timing); Purva Khanda, Chapter 4: Dipana-Pachana Adikathanam (Digestive Actions etc.); Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 1: Svarasadikalpana (Svarasa, Kalka, Kvatha, etc.); Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 3: Churnakalpana (Powder Preparations)

Musta (nut grass), phena (coral calcium), sea utpala (lotus), krimi (worm-wood), ela (cardamom), amalaki seeds, talisha, shaila (rock), gairika (red ochre), ushira (vetiver), and shankha (conch) — these ground with breast milk make the anjana.

— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 10: Pittabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Pitta-type Conjunctivitis)

Decoction of Guduchi, Nimba (neem), and Dhatri (Amalaki) with Katuka.

— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 39: Jvarapratishedha

A medicated ghee (Ghrita) cooked with Pippali, Ativisha, Draksha, Sariva, Bilva, Chandana, Katuka, Indrayava, Ushira, Simhi, Amalaki, Ghana, Trayamana, Asthira, Dhatri, Vishva-bheshaja, and Chitraka -- when consumed, conquers irregular digestion, chronic fever, headache, abdominal tumors, splenic disease, anemia, fear, cough with burning, and flank pain.

— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 39: Jvarapratishedha

A decoction of jambu (Syzygium cumini), amra (mango), amalaki, and other astringent leaves should be prepared for washing, and also for irrigation.

— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 19: Chapter 19

or from madhuka (licorice), amalaki with sweet juices, or from black iron oxide burnt with ghee, milk, and honey.

— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 19: Chapter 19

Source: Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 10: Pittabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Pitta-type Conjunctivitis); Uttara Tantra, Chapter 39: Jvarapratishedha; Uttara Tantra, Chapter 19: Chapter 19

Medical Disclaimer: The information on this page is for educational purposes only and is not intended as medical advice. Ayurvedic treatments should be pursued under the guidance of a qualified practitioner (BAMS/MD Ayurveda). Always consult your healthcare provider before starting any new treatment. Content is sourced from classical Ayurvedic texts and may not reflect the latest medical research.