Pippali for Debility: Does It Work?
Does Pippali (Long Pepper, Piper longum) help with debility? Yes — and as one of only two pungent Rasayanas in all of Ayurveda, it occupies a unique therapeutic place. Pippali rebuilds strength specifically for cold, sluggish, Vata-Kapha pattern weakness, especially when chronic respiratory illness, weak digestion, or post-viral fatigue is part of the picture.
The classical paradox sits at the heart of Pippali's identity. It is pungent in taste (Katu Rasa) and hot in potency (Ushna Virya), so it kindles digestion and clears Kapha like any other heating spice. But its post-digestive effect (Vipaka) is sweet (Madhura), which is the tissue-building quality. Bhavaprakash Nighantu classifies Pippali as Vrishya (virilising), Rasayana (rejuvenative), Deepani (digestive stimulant), Medhya (intellect-promoting), and Shwasa-Kasa hara (relieves cough and asthma).
The classical method for using Pippali as a Rasayana is the famous Vardhamana Pippali, a graded-dose protocol where the daily dose increases by one fruit each day for ten days and then decreases by one each day back to zero. Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6, warns plainly: "Long pepper should not be used in excess, for long period, without following the regimen of rejuvenation therapy." Used inside the Vardhamana protocol it is a powerful rejuvenative; used carelessly, it irritates.
Pippali is the right Rasayana when debility comes with chronic cough, breathlessness, recurrent bronchitis, weak Agni, or cold-and-damp constitutional weakness.
How Pippali Helps with Debility
Pippali's mechanism for debility is unlike any other Rasayana. Instead of feeding tissue directly with sweet, cool, heavy nourishment, it strengthens the body by restoring Agni, clearing channels, and then nourishing through its sweet post-digestive effect. This is exactly the right approach for cold, damp, Vata-Kapha debility where ordinary tonics simply sit undigested.
Reigniting Agni — the prerequisite for Rasayana
The classical action Deepani (digestive stimulant) is central. Most chronic debility carries weak Agni and accumulated Ama (metabolic toxin). Sweet tonics like Bala or Shatavari given on top of weak Agni often make matters worse because the body cannot digest them. Pippali's pungent taste and hot potency burn through Ama and rebuild Agni, opening the door for true tissue rebuilding.
Sweet Vipaka — the hidden Rasayana
The action that makes Pippali a Rasayana rather than just a stimulant is its sweet post-digestive effect (Madhura Vipaka). After the pungent action does its clearing work, the sweet Vipaka quietly nourishes Mamsa, Shukra, and the respiratory channel (Pranavaha Srotas). Bhavaprakash credits Pippali with action on "all tissues except bone," covering the systems most affected by chronic debility.
Yogavahi — amplifying other Rasayanas
Pippali is the classical Yogavahi, a carrier herb that increases the bioavailability of co-administered medicines. Modern research has confirmed this: piperine inhibits drug-metabolising enzymes in the gut and liver, increasing tissue absorption of other compounds. This is why Pippali appears in Chyawanprash, Sitopaladi, and dozens of other Rasayana formulas. In debility protocols, a small dose of Pippali alongside Ashwagandha or Bala raises the effective strength of the main Rasayana.
How to Use Pippali for Debility
For debility, Pippali must be used in the classical Rasayana way — never as a casual daily spice. Astanga Hridaya explicitly cautions against extended use without following the proper regimen. The two safe and effective approaches are the Vardhamana Pippali graded-dose protocol and pairing Pippali with milk as a respiratory Rasayana.
Best forms for debility
- Vardhamana Pippali (graded-dose Rasayana): the classical method. Start with one Pippali fruit ground into milk on day one, two on day two, increasing by one daily up to a chosen peak (commonly ten), then decreasing by one daily back to zero. A complete 21-day Rasayana cycle.
- Pippali churna with warm milk: 250 to 500 mg of dried Pippali fruit powder simmered in warm milk. The simplest daily form for chronic cough-driven debility.
- As part of Sitopaladi Churna: the gentler classical formula for post-respiratory-illness debility, especially after fever, bronchitis, or COVID-pattern fatigue.
- As part of Trikatu: Pippali + ginger + black pepper. Used at low dose (250 mg) before meals when weak digestion is the bottleneck.
Dosage and the Vardhamana method
| Form | Dose | Anupana | Timing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Vardhamana Pippali | 1 fruit on day 1, +1 daily to peak, then -1 daily | Warm milk | Empty stomach, morning |
| Pippali churna (daily) | 250 to 500 mg | Warm milk with ghee | Morning and evening |
| Sitopaladi Churna | 1 to 3 g | Honey (room temperature) | Twice daily, after meals |
| Trikatu Churna | 250 to 500 mg | Warm water | Before meals |
Anupana for debility
Warm cow's milk is the classical Anupana for Vardhamana Pippali. Milk balances the heating effect of Pippali and carries the herb deeper into tissues. For post-respiratory-illness debility: Sitopaladi churna with honey. For weak digestion with debility: small-dose Trikatu before meals with warm water.
Critical safety notes
Avoid Pippali in Pitta-predominant debility (burning, irritability, post-fever Pitta), peptic ulcers, active acid reflux, and pregnancy. Do not exceed the Vardhamana peak or extend the dose beyond classical guidance — Astanga Hridaya is explicit on this point.
Duration
A complete Vardhamana cycle is 21 days. Daily low-dose use with milk can extend to six to eight weeks. Always pause between cycles.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Vardhamana Pippali and why is it the classical method?
Vardhamana Pippali is the graded-dose Rasayana protocol where Pippali is taken in increasing then decreasing daily doses, typically over 21 days. It is the form classically prescribed because Pippali's hot potency makes long-term flat dosing risky, while the pulsed Vardhamana approach delivers full Rasayana benefit without aggravating Pitta. Astanga Hridaya warns specifically against using Pippali long-term outside this regimen.
How long does Pippali take to work for debility?
Within the 21-day Vardhamana cycle, most people feel clearer digestion, easier breathing, and steadier energy by the second week. For chronic respiratory-driven debility, a single full Vardhamana cycle followed by a one-month rest then a second cycle is the classical pattern. Deep recovery from post-COVID, post-bronchitis, or chronic asthma debility may need three to four cycles over a year.
Pippali vs Ashwagandha for debility — which is better?
They suit different patterns. Ashwagandha is sweet, warming, and grounding — first choice for Vata debility with anxiety, poor sleep, and muscle weakness. Pippali is the right choice when chronic cough, breathlessness, weak digestion, or post-viral lung weakness is part of the debility. Many classical formulas combine them: Ashwagandha as the base Rasayana, Pippali as the Yogavahi that carries Ashwagandha deeper.
Pippali vs Bala for debility?
Bala is sweet, cold, and tissue-rebuilding — first choice for Pitta-Vata debility, post-fever recovery, and neuromuscular weakness. Pippali is pungent and warming — first choice for Vata-Kapha debility with respiratory weakness or weak Agni. They are complementary, not interchangeable.
Can I just take Pippali every day like turmeric?
No. Astanga Hridaya is unusually direct: long-term casual use of Pippali without a Rasayana protocol can damage rather than strengthen. The classical safe forms are the Vardhamana cycle, or low-dose use inside compound formulas like Sitopaladi or Chyawanprash. Treat Pippali as medicine, not as a daily kitchen spice for debility.
Recommended: Start Pippali for Debility
If you want to start using Pippali for debility today, here is the safest classical starting point — the Vardhamana method with milk.
Best form: Vardhamana Pippali with warm milk
Day 1: grind one dried Pippali fruit (or use 250 mg of churna) into a cup of warm milk, drink first thing in the morning. Day 2: two fruits. Day 3: three. Build up by one fruit per day to a peak of seven to ten (set the peak based on your tolerance and constitution), then taper back down by one fruit per day to zero. This is the complete classical Rasayana cycle and takes 14 to 21 days.
Kitchen version (gentler alternative)
If the Vardhamana protocol feels intimidating, the simpler path is Sitopaladi Churna: take half a teaspoon mixed with one teaspoon of honey, twice daily after meals. It contains Pippali alongside cardamom, cinnamon, bamboo manna, and rock sugar, giving you Pippali's Rasayana effect in a balanced, beginner-safe form.
Dosha fork
If your debility is Vata-Kapha type (cold extremities, sluggish digestion, chronic mucus, post-viral fatigue): Vardhamana Pippali in milk is ideal. If purely Vata-type (dryness, anxiety, scattered thinking): keep doses low and combine with ghee and milk. If Pitta-type (burning, irritability, post-fever): avoid Pippali alone — use a small dose inside Sitopaladi with extra licorice and rock sugar.
Find Pippali on Amazon ↗ Sitopaladi Churna ↗
Safety: Avoid Pippali in pregnancy, peptic ulcer, active acid reflux, and Pitta-driven debility. Do not exceed classical doses or extend beyond a Vardhamana cycle without a practitioner's guidance.
Safety & Precautions
Pippali is potent, and unlike the gentler tonics such as Amla or Ashwagandha, it should be used with awareness of dose and duration. Classical texts explicitly caution against taking Pippali at high doses for long periods, the Ashtanga Hridaya notes that Pippali is beneficial only when used as part of a proper Rasayana protocol; otherwise it can irritate tissue.
Pitta Aggravation
Pippali is heating (Ushna Virya) and increases Pitta. Its sweet post-digestive effect softens this somewhat, Pippali is noticeably milder on Pitta than black pepper, but the aggravation is still real. Signs of overuse include heartburn, loose stools, excessive thirst, skin rashes, and irritability. People with a Pitta constitution, or with active Pitta conditions like acid reflux, inflammatory skin disease, or summer heat sensitivity, should use Pippali sparingly and always with a cooling vehicle such as milk or ghee.
GERD and Acid Reflux
Anyone with active acid reflux, gastritis, or peptic ulcer disease should avoid Pippali churna taken plain. If use is necessary for respiratory or digestive reasons, restrict to low doses (0.5 g or less) taken in milk or with ghee, and stop if symptoms worsen.
Drug Interactions (Piperine)
Pippali contains piperine, the same compound that makes black pepper bioavailability-enhancing. Piperine inhibits several liver and gut enzymes (CYP3A4, CYP2D6, P-glycoprotein) and can therefore increase the blood levels of many medications. If you take prescription drugs, especially blood thinners, antiepileptics, immunosuppressants, antidepressants, or chemotherapy agents, consult your doctor before adding concentrated Pippali to your routine. Culinary-scale use in food is generally not a concern, but daily supplementation can be.
Duration and Dose Ceiling
Classical guidance recommends keeping daily plain Pippali doses under 5 grams and avoiding prolonged high-dose use outside a supervised Rasayana protocol. The Vardhamana Pippali method, graded increase followed by graded decrease, is the safer and more traditional way to use Pippali at therapeutic levels. Low-dose daily use (0.5-1 g) as part of formulas like Trikatu or Chyawanprash is considered safe for long periods.
Pregnancy and Nursing
Small culinary amounts of Pippali used in cooking are traditionally considered acceptable. Medicinal doses, concentrated extracts, and the Vardhamana protocol should be avoided during pregnancy because of the herb's heating, penetrating action and the historical use of pungent herbs as uterine stimulants. During nursing, small doses are sometimes used to support maternal digestion and lactation, but always under practitioner guidance.
Overdose Signs
Excessive Pippali shows up as burning sensations in the chest or stomach, loose stools, excessive sweating, or mouth ulcers. These resolve by stopping the herb and taking cooling foods such as milk, ghee, or coconut water. If symptoms persist beyond 48 hours, consult a practitioner.
Other Herbs for Weakness & Debility
See all herbs for weakness & debility on the Weakness & Debility page.
▶ Classical Text References (5 sources)
Pippali (long pepper) ले मला वीदश ु ीत आ ा गव ु ि न ना च प पल १६१ सा शु का वपर ता अतः ि न धा व ृ या रसे कटुः वाद ुपाका अ नल ले म वासकासापहा सरा १६२ न ताम युपयु जीत रसायन व धं वना Long pepper, in its green state aggravates kapha, is sweet in taste and cold in potency, not easily digestible and is unctous.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food
प चकोलकमेत च म रचेन वना म ृतम ् गु म ल होदरानाहशल ू नं द पनं परम ् The above, excluding marica, (pippali, pippalimula, cavya, citraka and nagara) is known as panchakolaka, It cures abdominal tumors, disease of the sleen, enlargement of the abdomen, distension and colic, and is best to improve hunger and digestion.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food
Pippali (long pepper) ले मला वीदश ु ीत आ ा गव ु ि न ना च प पल १६१ सा शु का वपर ता अतः ि न धा व ृ या रसे कटुः वाद ुपाका अ नल ले म वासकासापहा सरा १६२ न ताम युपयु जीत रसायन व धं वना Long pepper, in its green state aggravates kapha, is sweet in taste and cold in potency, not easily digestible and is unctous.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food
Long pepper should not be used in excess, for long period, without following the regimen of rejuvenation therapy.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food
163 त वदा कमेत च यं कटुकं जयेत ् १६४ थौ याि नसदन वासकास ल पदपीनसान ् Similar is ardraka (fresh ginger, green); Trikatu - Pepper, long pepper and ginger – together known as trikatu, useful in obesity,Asthma, dyspepsia, cough, filariasis and chronic nasal catarrh.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 6: Annaswaroopa Food
(Kukkuta) Chicken and Spotted deer should not be taken along with curds Uncooked meat along with bile radish along with black gram Sheep meat along with leaves of Kusumba herb Germinated grains along with Bisa Lakucha Phala along with black gram soup (masha supa) Banana along with butter milk is not recommended Curds along with Tala phala (Palm date) Pippali, Maricha and honey Kakamachi along with jaggery Black pepper along with fish or during digestion of fish - 33-36.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 7: Anna Raksha Vidhi
म य न तेलन नेहे सा धताः प पल कां ये दशाहमु षतं स प णं व यजेत ् करे Pippali (long pepper) processed with the oil in which fish is fried should be rejected.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 7: Anna Raksha Vidhi
म य न तेलन नेहे सा धताः प पल कां ये दशाहमु षतं स प णं व यजेत ् करे Pippali (long pepper) processed with the oil in which fish is fried should be rejected.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 7: Anna Raksha Vidhi
Katu Gana – group of pungents:कटुको ह गु म रचकृ मिजत प चकोलकम ् कुठे रा या ह रतकाः प तं मू म करम ् Hingu- Asa foetida Maricha – Black pepper, Krimijit – Vidanga, Panchakola – Chitraka, Pippalmoola, Pippali, Chitraka and ginger, leafy vegetables such as Kutheraka and others (mentioned in verse 103 of chapter 6 earlier), Pitta (bile of animals), Mutra (urines), Arushkara etc.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their
Tikta and Katu त तं कटु च भू य ठं अ ु यं वातकोपनम ् ऋते अम ृतापटोल यां शु ठ कृ णा रसोनतः Generally bitters and pungents are non-aphrodisiacs and aggravate (increase) Vata except for Amrita (Indian tinospora), Patoli, Shunthi (ginger), Krishna (long pepper) and Rasona – Garlic – Alium sativum.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 10: Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their
21-24 योषकटवीवरा श ु वड गा त वषाि थराः ह गुस ौवचलाजाजीयवानीधा य च काः नशी ब ृह यौ हपुषा पाठामूलं च के बुकात ् एषां चूण मधु घ ृतं तैलं च सदशांशकम ् स तु भः षोडशगुणैयु तं पीतं नहि त तत ् अ त थौ या दकान ् सवा ोगान यां च त वधान ् ोगकामलाि व वासकासगल हान ् बु मेधा म ृ तकरं स न या ने च द पनम ् Powder of Vyosha- (Trikatu – pepper, long pepper and ginger), Katvi, Vara (Triphala), Shigru (drum stick), Vidanga (False black pepper – Embelia ribes), Ativisha, Sthira (Desmodium gangeticum), Hingu – (A
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 14: Dvividha Upakramaneeya
Snehavyapat Cikitsa – treatment of bad effects :ु त ृ णो लेखन वेद ापाना नभे षजम ् त ा र टखलो ालयव यामाकको वम ् प पल यथा वं फला ौ प यागोमू गु गुलु तरोगं च नेह याप द साधनम ् Kshut, Trushna – Producing hunger, thirst, Ulleka, sveda – vomiting and perspiration, administering foods, drinks and medicines which are dry (cause dryness), use of Takrarista (fermented medicine from buttermilk), Khala – menu prepared from curds, Uddala, Yava (barley), Shyamaka, Kodrava, Pippali (long pepper), Triphala
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 16: Snehavidhi oleation therapy
फला प पल प यागु गु वा द वपा चतान ् नेहान ् यथा वमे तेषां योजयेद वका रणः In these conditions, fats boiled with Triphala, Pippali, Pathya, Guggulu, etc.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 16: Snehavidhi oleation therapy
Snehavyapat Cikitsa – treatment of bad effects :ु त ृ णो लेखन वेद ापाना नभे षजम ् त ा र टखलो ालयव यामाकको वम ् प पल यथा वं फला ौ प यागोमू गु गुलु तरोगं च नेह याप द साधनम ् Kshut, Trushna – Producing hunger, thirst, Ulleka, sveda – vomiting and perspiration, administering foods, drinks and medicines which are dry (cause dryness), use of Takrarista (fermented medicine from buttermilk), Khala – menu prepared from curds, Uddala, Yava (barley), Shyamaka, Kodrava, Pippali (long pepper), Triphala
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 16: Snehavidhi oleation therapy
(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
burning of the skin should be done either with a lighted wick, tooth of a cow, rock crystal, arrow head or others – such as Pippali, excreta of goat, iron- rod, piece of bangles.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 30: Kshar-AgniKarma Vidhi
Source: Astanga Hridaya, Ch. 6, Ch. 6, Ch. 6, Ch. 6, Ch. 6, Ch. 7, Ch. 7, Ch. 7, Ch. 10, Ch. 10, Ch. 14, Ch. 16, Ch. 16, Ch. 16, Ch. 18, Ch. 30
Pippali (long pepper) ले मला वीदश ु ीत आ ा गव ु ि न ना च प पल १६१ सा शु का वपर ता अतः ि न धा व ृ या रसे कटुः वाद ुपाका अ नल ले म वासकासापहा सरा १६२ न ताम युपयु जीत रसायन व धं वना Long pepper, in its green state aggravates kapha, is sweet in taste and cold in potency, not easily digestible and is unctous.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Annaswaroopa Food
प चकोलकमेत च म रचेन वना म ृतम ् गु म ल होदरानाहशल ू नं द पनं परम ् The above, excluding marica, (pippali, pippalimula, cavya, citraka and nagara) is known as panchakolaka, It cures abdominal tumors, disease of the sleen, enlargement of the abdomen, distension and colic, and is best to improve hunger and digestion.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Annaswaroopa Food
(Kukkuta) Chicken and Spotted deer should not be taken along with curds Uncooked meat along with bile radish along with black gram Sheep meat along with leaves of Kusumba herb Germinated grains along with Bisa Lakucha Phala along with black gram soup (masha supa) Banana along with butter milk is not recommended Curds along with Tala phala (Palm date) Pippali, Maricha and honey Kakamachi along with jaggery Black pepper along with fish or during digestion of fish - 33-36.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Anna Raksha Vidhi
म य न तेलन नेहे सा धताः प पल कां ये दशाहमु षतं स प णं व यजेत ् करे Pippali (long pepper) processed with the oil in which fish is fried should be rejected.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Anna Raksha Vidhi
Katu Gana – group of pungents:कटुको ह गु म रचकृ मिजत प चकोलकम ् कुठे रा या ह रतकाः प तं मू म करम ् Hingu- Asa foetida Maricha – Black pepper, Krimijit – Vidanga, Panchakola – Chitraka, Pippalmoola, Pippali, Chitraka and ginger, leafy vegetables such as Kutheraka and others (mentioned in verse 103 of chapter 6 earlier), Pitta (bile of animals), Mutra (urines), Arushkara etc.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their
Source: Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Annaswaroopa Food; Anna Raksha Vidhi; Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their
Lists 20+ medicinal plants including Apamarga, Pippali, Maricha, Vidanga for shirovirechana (nasal catharsis) indicated for headache, rhinitis, epilepsy, and anosmia.
— Charaka Samhita, Sutra Sthana — Fundamental Principles, Chapter 2: Dehusked Seeds of Apamarga & Panchakarma (Apamarga Tanduliya Adhyaya / अपामार्गतण्डुलीय अध्याय)
Twenty-eight types of medicated gruels (yavagu) described for various conditions: Pippali gruel for digestion (v.
— Charaka Samhita, Sutra Sthana — Fundamental Principles, Chapter 2: Dehusked Seeds of Apamarga & Panchakarma (Apamarga Tanduliya Adhyaya / अपामार्गतण्डुलीय अध्याय)
), pippali (Piper longum Linn), pippali moola (root of Piper longum Linn.
— Charaka Samhita, Sharira Sthana — Human Body & Embryology, Chapter 8: Guidelines for Lineage (Jatisutriya Sharira / जातिसूत्रीय शरीर)
), hasti pippali (Scindapsus officinalis Schott), mandukaparni (Centella asiatica urban.
— Charaka Samhita, Sharira Sthana — Human Body & Embryology, Chapter 8: Guidelines for Lineage (Jatisutriya Sharira / जातिसूत्रीय शरीर)
Powders of haritaki, rock salt, amalaka, jaggery, vacha, vidanga, haridra, pippali and dry ginger should be taken with hot water by adequately oleated and fomented individuals.
— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 1: Rejuvenation Therapy (Rasayana Chikitsa / रसायन चिकित्सा)
Source: Charaka Samhita, Sutra Sthana — Fundamental Principles, Chapter 2: Dehusked Seeds of Apamarga & Panchakarma (Apamarga Tanduliya Adhyaya / अपामार्गतण्डुलीय अध्याय); Sharira Sthana — Human Body & Embryology, Chapter 8: Guidelines for Lineage (Jatisutriya Sharira / जातिसूत्रीय शरीर); Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 1: Rejuvenation Therapy (Rasayana Chikitsa / रसायन चिकित्सा)
Utpata (eruption), Palishosha (ear lobe dryness), Vidari (fissure), Duhkhavardhana (pain-increasing), Paripota (ulceration), Lehi (adhesive), and Pippali (nodular).
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Purva Khanda, Chapter 7: Rogagananam (Enumeration of Diseases)
Its juice, combined with Pippali (long pepper — Piper longum) powder, alleviates Kasa (cough), Shvasa (dyspnea), and Kapha disorders.
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 1: Svarasadikalpana (Svarasa, Kalka, Kvatha, etc.)
Pippali (long pepper — Piper longum), Maricha (black pepper — Piper nigrum), Shunthi (dry ginger), Guduchi (Tinospora cordifolia), Abhaya (Haritaki — Terminalia chebula), Katuka (Picrorhiza kurroa), Bharangi (Clerodendrum serratum), and Kantakari (Solanum xanthocarpum) — this decoction alleviates Jvara (fever).
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 2: Kvathakalpana (Decoction Preparations)
Hingvashtaka Churna: Hingu (asafoetida — Ferula assa-foetida), Saindhava (rock salt), Shunthi (dry ginger — Zingiber officinale), Krishna Jiraka (black cumin — Nigella sativa), Pippali (long pepper — Piper longum), Yamani (Trachyspermum ammi), and Maricha (black pepper — Piper nigrum) — these eight ingredients constitute Hingvashtaka.
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 3: Churnakalpana (Powder Preparations)
Lavanbhaskar Churna: Sauvarchala (Sochal salt), Vida (Vida salt), Kacha salt, Samudra (sea salt), and Saindhava (rock salt), along with Dhanyaka (coriander — Coriandrum sativum), Pippali (long pepper), Shunthi (dry ginger), Talisa (Abies webbiana), and Nagakeshara (Mesua ferrea) —.
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 3: Churnakalpana (Powder Preparations)
Source: Sharangadhara Samhita, Purva Khanda, Chapter 7: Rogagananam (Enumeration of Diseases); Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 1: Svarasadikalpana (Svarasa, Kalka, Kvatha, etc.); Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 2: Kvathakalpana (Decoction Preparations); Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 3: Churnakalpana (Powder Preparations)
The cauterizing agents include: Pippali (Piper longum), Ajashakrit (goat dung), Shara (arrow-shaped rods), Shalaka (metal probes), Jambavaushthaira (iron instruments), Chaudra-gunda (honey-wax preparations), and Sneha (medicated oils/ghee) (4).
— Sushruta Samhita, Sutra Sthana, Chapter 12: Agni-karma Vidhi Adhyaya - Cauterization by Fire
Pippali and rods are for skin-level conditions;
— Sushruta Samhita, Sutra Sthana, Chapter 12: Agni-karma Vidhi Adhyaya - Cauterization by Fire
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)
Mahaushada (ginger), pippali (long pepper), musta (nut grass), saindhava (rock salt), and white maricha (pepper) — ground with matulunga (citron) juice — this eye anjana quickly destroys pishtaka (paste-like eye lesion).
— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 11: Kaphabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Kapha-type Conjunctivitis)
With shirisha (Albizia) seeds, maricha (pepper), pippali (long pepper), and saindhava (rock salt), anjana should be prepared for shukra (corneal opacity).
— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 12: Raktabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Blood-type Conjunctivitis)
Source: Sushruta Samhita, Sutra Sthana, Chapter 12: Agni-karma Vidhi Adhyaya - Cauterization by Fire; Uttara Tantra, Chapter 9: Vatabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Vata-type Conjunctivitis); Uttara Tantra, Chapter 11: Kaphabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Kapha-type Conjunctivitis); Uttara Tantra, Chapter 12: Raktabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Blood-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.