Licorice for Allergies: Does It Work?
Does Licorice (Yashtimadhu, Glycyrrhiza glabra) help with allergies? Yes, and it is one of the most reliable single herbs in the Ayurvedic toolkit for both respiratory and skin allergic disorders. The Bhavaprakash Nighantu lists Yashtimadhu among the most frequently used drugs in Ayurveda and names it the prime Kanthya (throat-soothing) herb. For an allergic person whose mucous membranes are inflamed, raw, and over-reactive, this membrane-soothing action is exactly what is needed.
Allergies in Ayurveda are framed as Asatmya-Pratyanika reactions where excess Pitta, ama, and blood-tissue inflammation drive the picture. Licorice fits this picture with unusual precision. Its classical properties (sweet and bitter rasa, cold potency (Sheeta Virya), and the dosha effect VP- K+) reduce Vata and Pitta while only mildly increasing Kapha, making it the right pick for hot, dry, inflamed allergic mucosa, eczema with redness, hives, allergic laryngitis, and allergic rhinitis with a raw throat.
The Bhavaprakash Nighantu lists Yashtimadhu's actions as Shothahara (anti-inflammatory), Pitta Shamaka (cools Pitta), Varnya (improves complexion), Vrana Ropana (heals wounds), and Kanthya (soothes the throat). Modern research adds context: glycyrrhizin, the major active in licorice root, has documented cortisol-sparing and anti-inflammatory effects, with measurable mast-cell stabilizing and antihistamine activity. This is why licorice has remained a first-line allergy herb across multiple traditional systems.
How Licorice Helps with Allergies
The Ayurvedic mechanism by which Licorice addresses allergies works through three layered actions: cooling and soothing inflamed membranes, stabilizing reactive Pitta, and gently nourishing depleted tissues.
Soothes and heals inflamed mucous membranes
Licorice is the premier Kanthya herb in Ayurveda, soothing the throat and respiratory mucosa. Bhavaprakash Nighantu classifies Yashtimadhu as Vrana Ropana (wound-healing) and a mucous-membrane tonic. For allergic rhinitis, allergic laryngitis, post-nasal drip with sore throat, and the dry, raw, hyper-reactive mucosa that characterizes chronic allergic flares, Licorice provides a demulcent coating that calms the surface while it heals the underlying tissue.
Cools Pitta-driven inflammation
Allergic skin flares (urticaria, eczema, contact dermatitis) carry a heavy Pitta load: red, hot, itchy, sometimes weeping. Licorice's cold potency (Sheeta Virya) and sweet-bitter taste profile make it a direct Pitta-pacifier. The Bhavaprakash Nighantu lists it explicitly as Pitta Shamaka and Shothahara (anti-inflammatory), placing it alongside the classical cooling herbs.
Acts as a natural cortisol-sparing anti-inflammatory
Modern research adds a striking mechanism: glycyrrhizin, the chief active in licorice root, inhibits the enzyme that breaks down cortisol in the body. The net effect is that the body's own anti-inflammatory cortisol stays active longer, giving licorice a measurable steroid-sparing action without exogenous steroid side effects at culinary-to-moderate doses. Combined with documented mast-cell stabilizing activity, this is a credible biochemical mechanism behind centuries of classical use for allergic and inflammatory disorders. Bonus action: as a sweet, unctuous, nourishing herb, Licorice gently rebuilds depleted Rasa and Rakta tissues that chronic allergies tend to wear down.
How to Use Licorice for Allergies
For allergies, Licorice is best used as a 4 to 8 week course during the flare season, alongside a longer-term Rasayana such as Amla. The form depends on whether your allergies are skin-pattern, respiratory-pattern, or mixed.
| Form | Dose | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Yashtimadhu powder (Churna) | 1 to 3 g twice daily with warm water or honey | Respiratory allergies, allergic rhinitis, allergic laryngitis |
| Yashtimadhu decoction (Kwatha) | 10 to 20 ml twice daily before meals | Skin allergies, eczema, chronic urticaria |
| Licorice + Ginger (1:1) | 1 g of each, twice daily | Mixed Kapha-Pitta allergic pattern with congestion plus inflammation |
| Topical paste | Mixed with ghee, applied twice daily | Itchy skin patches, allergic dermatitis, hives |
Timing and vehicle (Anupana)
For respiratory allergies and sore-throat patterns, take Licorice powder with warm water and a teaspoon of honey, twice daily on an empty stomach. For skin allergies and Pitta-pattern flares, take it with cool water and a teaspoon of ghee. The Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 21 also lists Yashtimadhu among useful drugs for medicated smoking blends used in respiratory disorders.
How long until effect
Throat soothing and reduced post-nasal drip often show within 5 to 7 days. Skin allergy improvement (less itching, calmer redness) typically takes 2 to 3 weeks. Underlying mucosal healing and reduced flare-frequency usually takes 4 to 8 weeks.
Cautions
Licorice can raise blood pressure and cause potassium loss at high or long-term doses. Limit continuous use to 6 to 8 weeks, then take a 2 to 4 week break. Avoid if you have hypertension, heart-failure, kidney disease, or are taking diuretics or digoxin. Use deglycyrrhizinated licorice (DGL) for longer continuous use without these risks.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does Licorice take to work for allergies?
Throat soothing and reduced post-nasal drip often show within 5 to 7 days. Skin-allergy improvement (less itching, calmer redness, fewer flares) typically takes 2 to 3 weeks. Underlying mucosal healing and reduction in baseline allergic reactivity usually takes 4 to 8 weeks of consistent use.
Can I take Licorice if I have high blood pressure?
Caution. Licorice can raise blood pressure and cause potassium loss at higher doses or with long-term use, due to glycyrrhizin's effect on cortisol metabolism. If you have hypertension, heart failure, kidney disease, or take diuretics or digoxin, avoid standard licorice. Deglycyrrhizinated licorice (DGL) removes the blood-pressure-affecting compound while keeping the mucous-membrane-soothing action.
What is the best form of Licorice for allergies?
For respiratory allergies (allergic rhinitis, post-nasal drip, allergic laryngitis), powder with warm water and honey is most direct. For skin allergies (eczema, hives, urticaria), a cooled decoction with ghee, or topical paste applied to flares, works best. For long-term safe use beyond 6 weeks, DGL is preferable.
Licorice vs Amla for allergies?
They work on different timescales and pair well. Amla is the deep Rasayana that slowly rebuilds immune tolerance over 8 to 12 weeks. Licorice is the faster anti-inflammatory and mucous-membrane soother that handles the acute month. Many traditional protocols pair them: Licorice for the first 6 weeks, Amla as the ongoing background.
Can I take Licorice with antihistamines or steroids?
Licorice is generally compatible with conventional antihistamines and may complement them. Combining with oral or long-term steroid medications requires caution because licorice itself has steroid-sparing activity and can amplify cortisol levels. Consult your physician before combining with prescription corticosteroids.
Recommended: Start Licorice for Allergies
If you want to start using Licorice for allergies today, here is the simplest starting point:
The most useful daily form is Yashtimadhu powder (churna), 1 to 3 g twice daily. It is the classical Ayurvedic preparation, fast-acting on inflamed mucosa, and inexpensive. For people who want to take it for longer than 6 weeks without blood-pressure concerns, deglycyrrhizinated licorice (DGL) capsules or chewable tablets are the safer alternative.
Kitchen version
Stir half a teaspoon of Licorice powder into 1 cup of warm water with 1 teaspoon of honey. Drink twice daily on an empty stomach, 4 to 8 weeks, then take a 2 to 4 week break. For a sore throat or allergic laryngitis flare, add a pinch of Ginger powder and sip slowly.
Dosha fork
If your allergies are hot, red, itchy, Pitta-skin-type: take Licorice with cool water and a teaspoon of ghee. If your allergies are dry, raw, irritated-throat, Vata-respiratory-type: take Licorice with warm water and honey. If congestion is heavy (Kapha-leaning), pair half the Licorice dose with half a teaspoon of dry Ginger.
Find Licorice on Amazon ↗ DGL Licorice ↗
Avoid standard licorice if you have hypertension, heart failure, kidney disease, or take diuretics or digoxin. Use DGL for longer continuous use.
Safety & Precautions
Licorice is one of the most-used herbs on earth, but it is also one of the very few Ayurvedic herbs with a well-documented, dose-dependent side-effect profile. The active compound glycyrrhizin is the reason for both its power and its cautions. The good news: nearly all of the risk is avoidable by understanding dose and form.
The Hypertension Warning (Read This First)
Glycyrrhizin inhibits the enzyme 11-beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase, which allows cortisol to act on mineralocorticoid receptors. The practical result is pseudoaldosteronism, the body behaves as if aldosterone is elevated. This means:
- Sodium and water retention, blood pressure rises
- Potassium loss through urine, risk of hypokalaemia
- In extreme cases: muscle weakness, arrhythmia, and oedema
Classical Ayurveda describes this directly: Licorice "increases water around the heart" and is contraindicated in hridroga (heart disease) and swelling. Modern cardiology agrees. Do not take therapeutic doses of whole-root Licorice if you have high blood pressure, congestive heart failure, kidney disease, low potassium, or a history of stroke. For any of these, DGL is the safe alternative.
Dose Matters Enormously
The difference between "daily tonic" and "adverse event" is dose and duration:
- Culinary/trace amounts (a piece of root in tea, a lozenge), safe for virtually everyone
- 1-3 g/day of powder, short-term (up to 4-6 weeks), safe for most healthy adults
- Above 3 g/day, or daily for months, real risk of BP elevation and potassium loss, even in previously healthy people
- DGL, no glycyrrhizin, effectively no BP risk at any typical dose
Drug Interactions
Licorice can meaningfully interact with several common medications. If you are on any of the following, consult your doctor before using therapeutic doses:
- Diuretics (especially thiazides and loop diuretics), compounds potassium loss dangerously
- Digoxin, low potassium increases digoxin toxicity risk
- Corticosteroids, Licorice extends their half-life and effect
- Warfarin, may alter bleeding risk
- Blood pressure medication, Licorice directly opposes the drug's action
- Oral contraceptives and hormone therapy, phyto-oestrogenic effect may potentiate
- Insulin and oral hypoglycaemics, Licorice can affect blood sugar in either direction
Pregnancy and Nursing
Classical Ayurveda states plainly: do not use in pregnancy. Modern observational data aligns, high Licorice intake during pregnancy is associated with preterm labour and second-trimester bleeding risk. Small culinary amounts and DGL are likely fine, but therapeutic whole-root use should be avoided. During breastfeeding, small amounts appear safe, but avoid prolonged high-dose use.
Other Cautions
- High Kapha individuals, Licorice's sweet, heavy, moist qualities can aggravate Kapha and worsen oedema, congestion, or sluggishness. Combine with ginger or black pepper to offset.
- Low potassium diet, Licorice increases potassium excretion. Pair with potassium-rich foods (banana, spinach, coconut water).
- Calcium absorption, chronic high-dose use may interfere with calcium absorption; classical texts flag caution in osteoporosis.
- Hypoglycaemia, Licorice can lower blood sugar; take with food if prone.
Signs You Are Taking Too Much
Watery weight gain, puffy face, ankle swelling, muscle weakness or cramps, headaches, and unexplained BP elevation. If any of these appear, stop immediately, effects usually resolve within 1-2 weeks once the herb is discontinued.
Other Herbs for Allergies
See all herbs for allergies on the Allergies page.
▶ Classical Text References (5 sources)
Meat juice (Mamsarasa) which is not very thick, Rasala (curds churned and mixed with pepper powder and sugar), Raga (syrup which is sweet, sour and salty) and Khandava (syrup which has all the tastes, prepared with many substances), Panaka panchasara, (syrup prepared with raisins (draksha), madhuka, dates (karjura), kasmarya, and parushaka fruits all in equal quantities, cooled and added with powder of cinnamon leaves, cinnamon and cardamom etc) and kept inside a fresh mud pot, along with leav
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 3: Ritucharya adhyaya Seasonal
117-118 मोचखजूरपनसना रकेलप षकम ् आ ाततालका मयराजादनमधूकजम ् सौवीरबदरा कोलफ गु ले मातको वम ् वातामा भशुका ोडमक ु ू लक नकोचकम ् उ माणं यालं च बं ृहणं गु शीतलम ् दाह त यहरं र त प त सादनम ् वाद ुपाकरसं ि न धं व टि भ कफशु कृत ् Mocha (plantain), kharjura (dates) panasa (jack fruits) narikela (cocoanut ) parusaka amrataka , tala, kasmarya, rajadana, madhuka, badara, ankola, phalgu, slesmataka, vatama, abhisuka, aksoda, mukulaka, nikocaka, urumanam, and priyala make the body stout, not easily di
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food
Similarly so, are Madhuka – Licorice – Glycyrrhiza glabra) and Mrdvika (grapes) Madhuka and dry grapes – both have similar qualities.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 9: Dravyadi Vigyaniya
Similarly so, are Madhuka – Licorice – Glycyrrhiza glabra) and Mrdvika (grapes) Madhuka and dry grapes – both have similar qualities.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 9: Dravyadi Vigyaniya
But dry grape has mild purgative action, but Madhuka does not.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 9: Dravyadi Vigyaniya
, Rishabhaka, Madhuka – Licorice – Glycyrrhiza glabra, Madhuka – Madhuka longifolia, Bimbi – Coccinia grandis / indica, Vidari – Pueraria tuberosa, the two Sravani – Mundi and Sravani, Ksheerasukla, Tugaksiri, the two Ksheerini, Gambhari, the two Saha, milk, sugarcane, Gokshura, Ksaudra, Draksa etc.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their
, Rishabhaka, Madhuka – Licorice – Glycyrrhiza glabra, Madhuka – Madhuka longifolia, Bimbi – Coccinia grandis / indica, Vidari – Pueraria tuberosa, the two Sravani – Mundi and Sravani, Ksheerasukla, Tugaksiri, the two Ksheerini, Gambhari, the two Saha, milk, sugarcane, Gokshura, Ksaudra, Draksa etc.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their
It usually contains Madanaphala (Randia spinosa), Licorice etc.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 18: Vamana Virechana Vidhi
Similar is the case of Anuvasana – fat enema and Matra basti – fat enema with very little oil 34-36 Anu taila जीव तीजलदे वदा जलद व से यगोपी हमं दाव व मधुक लवागु वर पु ा व ब वो पलम ् धाव यौ सरु भं ि थरे कृ महरं प ं ु ट रे णक ु ां कि ज कं कमला वलां शतगुणे द ये अ भ स वाथयेत ् ३७ तैला सं दशगण ु ं प रशो य तेन तैलं पचेत ् स ललेन दशैव वारान ् पाके पे चदशमे सममाजद ु धं न यं महागुणमुश यणुतैलमेतत ् ३८ Jivanti, Jala, Devadaru, Jalada, Twak, Sevya, Gopi (sariva), Hima, Darvi twak, Madhuka, Plava, A
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 20: Nasya Vidhi Nasal
13-15 For Shamana- Madyama, medium kind of smoke शमने श लक ला ा प ृ वीका कमलो पलम ् य ोधोद ु बरा व थ ल रो वचः सताः यि टमधु सुवण वक् प कं र तयि टका ग धा चाकु ठतगराः useful drugs are - shallaki, Laksha,Prithvika, Kamala, Utpala, Barks of Nyagrodha, Udumbara, Asvattha, Plaksa and Rodhra; Sita, Yasthimadhu (licorice), Suvarnatwak, Padmaka, Raktayastika Kustha, tagara and other scents – perfumeries.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 21: Dhumpana Medicated Smoking
Herbal smoking blends – Dhuma dravyani – For Mridu- mild kind of smoke, म ृदौ त या यगु गु गुलु मु त थौणेयशैलेयनलदोशीरवालकम ् वय गकौ तीमधुक ब वम जैलवालुकम ् ीवे टकं सजरसो यामकं मदनं लवम ् श लक कुं कुमं माषा यवाः कु द ु काि तलाः नेहः फलानां साराणां मेदो म जा वसा घ ृतम ् useful drugs are-Aguru, Guggulu, Musta, sthauneya, Shaileya, Nalada, Usheera, Valaka, Varanga, Kounti, Madhuka, Bilvamajja, elavaluka, Shrivestaka, Sarjarasa, Dhyamaka, Madana, Plava, Shallaki, Kumkuma, Masha, Yava, Kunduruk
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 21: Dhumpana Medicated Smoking
For Greeshma (summer) – कुमुदो पलक हारद ुवामधुकच दनम ् Kumuda, Utpala, Kalhara, Durva, Madhuka and Chandana (Sandalwood).
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 22: Gandushadi Vidhi Gargles
the ulcer should be covered with cotton swab soaked in a mixture of honey, melted ghee, Anjana – Srotonjana, ash of Ksyauma (flax), Phalini, fruit of Shallaki, Rodhra and Madhuka; then bandaging and other measures done as described previously.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 29: Shastrakarma Vidhi
If the site of the burn does not get torn from an ulcer because of being deep rooted, then a paste of seed of Dhanyamala-(sour gruel), Yashti (licorice) and tila (sesame) should be applied; तलक क: समधुको घ ृता ता णरोपण: । Paste of tila (sesame), and Madhuka mixed with ghee heals the ulcer.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 30: Kshar-AgniKarma Vidhi
If the site of the burn does not get torn from an ulcer because of being deep rooted, then a paste of seed of Dhanyamala-(sour gruel), Yashti (licorice) and tila (sesame) should be applied; तलक क: समधुको घ ृता ता णरोपण: । Paste of tila (sesame), and Madhuka mixed with ghee heals the ulcer.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 30: Kshar-AgniKarma Vidhi
Source: Astanga Hridaya, Ch. 3, Ch. 6, Ch. 9, Ch. 9, Ch. 9, Ch. 10, Ch. 10, Ch. 18, Ch. 20, Ch. 21, Ch. 21, Ch. 22, Ch. 29, Ch. 30, Ch. 30
Similarly so, are Madhuka – Licorice – Glycyrrhiza glabra) and Mrdvika (grapes) Madhuka and dry grapes – both have similar qualities.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Dravyadi Vigyaniya
, Rishabhaka, Madhuka – Licorice – Glycyrrhiza glabra, Madhuka – Madhuka longifolia, Bimbi – Coccinia grandis / indica, Vidari – Pueraria tuberosa, the two Sravani – Mundi and Sravani, Ksheerasukla, Tugaksiri, the two Ksheerini, Gambhari, the two Saha, milk, sugarcane, Gokshura, Ksaudra, Draksa etc.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their
It usually contains Madanaphala (Randia spinosa), Licorice etc.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Vamana Virechana Vidhi
Sita, Yasthimadhu (licorice), Suvarnatwak, Padmaka, Raktayastika Kustha, tagara and other scents – perfumeries.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Dhumpana Medicated Smoking
If the site of the burn does not get torn from an ulcer because of being deep rooted, then a paste of seed of Dhanyamala-(sour gruel), Yashti (licorice) and tila (sesame) should be applied;
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Kshar-AgniKarma Vidhi
Source: Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Dravyadi Vigyaniya; Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their; Vamana Virechana Vidhi; Dhumpana Medicated Smoking; Kshar-AgniKarma Vidhi
[249] Sauviranjana, tuttha, tapya-dhatu (maksika), manahshila, chaksushya (variety of kulattha), madhuka (Licorice – Glycyrrhiza glabra), loha bhasma(iron), precious stones, pushpanjana, saindhava, tusk of boar, kataka – strychnos potatorum may be used in the form of either powder or varti as collyrium which is excellent remedies for timira (cataract) and such other eye-diseases.
— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 26: Three Vital Organs Treatment (Trimarmiya Chikitsa / त्रिमर्मीयचिकित्सा)
[278 ½- 279½] Recipe for restoration of hair: Application of the paste of tila – sesame (Sesamum indicum), amalaki – Phyllanthus emblica, kinjalka, madhuka– Licorice – Glycyrrhiza glabra and honey over the head restores the color of hair, and promotes hair growth.
— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 26: Three Vital Organs Treatment (Trimarmiya Chikitsa / त्रिमर्मीयचिकित्सा)
Source: Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 26: Three Vital Organs Treatment (Trimarmiya Chikitsa / त्रिमर्मीयचिकित्सा)
Also: Murva (Marsdenia tenacissima), Madhurasa/Yashtimadhu (Glycyrrhiza glabra — licorice), Danti (Baliospermum montanum), Pushkara Moola (Inula racemosa), Bala (Sida cordifolia), Atibala (Abutilon indicum), Kapikacchu (Mucuna pruriens), and Trikantaka/Gokshura (Tribulus terrestris).
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 10: Asavarishta-Sandhanakalpana (Fermented Preparations)
The famous Dashanga Lepa (ten-ingredient paste) is made from: Shirisha (Albizia lebbeck), Madhuyashti (Glycyrrhiza glabra, licorice), Tagara (Valeriana wallichii), Rakta Chandana (red sandalwood, Pterocarpus santalinus), Ela (Elettaria cardamomum, cardamom), Mansi (Nardostachys jatamansi, spikenard), Nisha Yugma (Curcuma longa and Berberis aristata), Kushtha (Saussurea lappa), and Balaka (Pavonia odorata).
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Uttara Khanda, Chapter 11: Lepa Vidhi (Topical Paste Application)
By applying a paste of Yashti (licorice, Glycyrrhiza glabra), Indivara (blue lotus, Nymphaea stellata), Mridvika (raisins, Vitis vinifera), sesame oil, and ghee, Indralupta (alopecia areata) is cured and the hair becomes dense and strong.
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Uttara Khanda, Chapter 11: Lepa Vidhi (Topical Paste Application)
This nourishing paste combines the anti-inflammatory licorice with cooling blue lotus and nutritive raisins in an oil-ghee base.
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Uttara Khanda, Chapter 11: Lepa Vidhi (Topical Paste Application)
A paste of Rasna (Pluchea lanceolata), Nilotpala (blue lotus, Nymphaea stellata), Daru (Cedrus deodara), Chandana (sandalwood, Santalum album), Madhuka (licorice, Glycyrrhiza glabra), and Bala (Sida cordifolia), mixed with ghee and decoction -- this destroys Vata-type Visarpa (erysipelas/herpes).
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Uttara Khanda, Chapter 11: Lepa Vidhi (Topical Paste Application)
Source: Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 10: Asavarishta-Sandhanakalpana (Fermented Preparations); Uttara Khanda, Chapter 11: Lepa Vidhi (Topical Paste Application)
The intense pain caused by the fall of the surgical instrument on the body is pacified by irrigation with warm ghee mixed with Yashtimadhu (Glycyrrhiza glabra / licorice) (42).
— Sushruta Samhita, Sutra Sthana, Chapter 5: Agropaharaniya Adhyaya - Surgical Instruments and Procedures
Key principles: (1) Only close clean wounds, (2) Post-op lifestyle restrictions, (3) Seasonal adjustment of wound care frequency, (4) Emergency exceptions to protocol, (5) Warm ghee with licorice for post-surgical pain — licorice has proven anti-inflammatory properties.
— Sushruta Samhita, Sutra Sthana, Chapter 5: Agropaharaniya Adhyaya - Surgical Instruments and Procedures
Milk boiled with saindhava (rock salt), udicya, yashtimadhu (licorice), and pippali (long pepper), reduced to half — is beneficial for irrigation (seka) and also for ashchyotana (eye drops).
— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 9: Vatabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Vata-type Conjunctivitis)
Madhuka (licorice), rajani (turmeric), pathya (haritaki), and devadaru (cedar) should be ground.
— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 9: Vatabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Vata-type Conjunctivitis)
Draksha (grapes), audra, chandana (sandalwood), yashtimadhu (licorice), yoshit-tira, and rajyanka — ground to a paste with ghee, these are recommended for tarpana (eye nourishment), seka (irrigation), and nasya (nasal therapy).
— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 10: Pittabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Pitta-type Conjunctivitis)
Source: Sushruta Samhita, Sutra Sthana, Chapter 5: Agropaharaniya Adhyaya - Surgical Instruments and Procedures; Uttara Tantra, Chapter 9: Vatabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Vata-type Conjunctivitis); Uttara Tantra, Chapter 10: Pittabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Pitta-type Conjunctivitis)
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.