Turmeric for Boils: Does It Work?
Does Turmeric help with boils? Yes. Turmeric (Haridra) is Ayurveda's golden anti-inflammatory and one of the small group of herbs prescribed both internally and as a topical paste when a boil appears. Bhavaprakash Nighantu calls it the best Varnya (complexion-enhancing) and Krimighna (anti-parasitic, anti-microbial) drug, which is exactly the dual action a boil needs.
A boil is Pidaka, an eruption driven by Pitta and Rakta dhatu vitiation. Turmeric's bitter and astringent rasa, its hot potency (Ushna Virya), and its strong Ama-scraping action work to break the inflammatory load in the blood. The dosha effect is K-VP+: Turmeric lowers Kapha and at therapeutic doses settles Pitta and Vata as well, which suits the mixed picture in a boil where local Kapha is trapping pus inside a hot, inflamed Pitta lesion. Its hot quality also gently ripens an indolent boil, helping it come to a head rather than sitting blocked under the skin.
Ayurvedic home practice has used Turmeric for boils for centuries: half a teaspoon of turmeric mixed with red Sandalwood powder in warm water makes the classical cooling-healing paste, and a Neem-Turmeric-Kutki combination is the standard internal formula when boils recur in someone with a family history of diabetes. Its modern reputation, anti-inflammatory, antibacterial, wound-healing, rests on the same actions Ayurveda has been describing for centuries.
How Turmeric Helps with Boils
Turmeric is unusual among Pitta-related skin herbs because its potency is hot, not cold. That apparent contradiction is exactly what makes it work for boils: a stuck, slow-suppurating boil needs both the Pitta overflow cleared from the blood and the local lesion driven to a head so it can drain. Turmeric does both.
Bitter-astringent, anti-inflammatory across the blood
The bitter (Tikta) and astringent (Kashaya) tastes scrape Ama and contract over-relaxed blood vessels, reducing the inflammatory swelling around a boil. Turmeric is classically described as acting on the circulatory and digestive systems, the same axis that delivers Pitta and Ama to the skin in Pidaka. Where Neem cools the blood, Turmeric pulls heat into transformation, kindling Agni to digest the metabolic residue rather than letting it stagnate.
Ripening and drawing the boil
The hot potency (Ushna Virya) gives Turmeric a localised pachana effect on the lesion itself. Applied externally with ginger powder, half a teaspoon of each, it brings a stubborn boil to a head, the classical action of Pakwa karana, ripening. Pairing it with red Sandalwood for a more inflamed, throbbing boil cools the surrounding heat while still resolving the lesion centre.
Wound healing and antibacterial action
Curcumin and related curcuminoids have well-documented anti-inflammatory and antibacterial activity, including against Staphylococcus aureus. This sits alongside Turmeric's classical reputation as Krimighna. The Varnya action, why turmeric paste is used after the boil drains, is also a real wound-healing effect: it supports collagen organisation and reduces post-inflammatory pigmentation. Internally, the K-VP+ effect helps the body keep clearing the underlying Rakta-Pitta vitiation that predisposes to recurrence.
How to Use Turmeric for Boils
Turmeric works on a boil from two directions: a topical paste that ripens and disinfects the lesion, and an internal preparation that addresses the Pitta-Rakta load and (when relevant) the metabolic predisposition. The classical home remedies for boils almost always combine turmeric with one other herb depending on intent.
Topical pastes for the lesion
Pick the partner herb based on what the boil is doing.
- Indolent, slow-to-head boil: half a teaspoon turmeric powder plus half a teaspoon ginger powder mixed with a few drops of warm water; apply directly to bring it to a head.
- Hot, red, throbbing boil: half a teaspoon turmeric plus half a teaspoon red Sandalwood powder in warm water as a cooling-healing paste.
- Active bacterial-looking boil: pair turmeric paste with Neem powder paste applied alternately.
Internal dosing
For internal use, 1 to 3 grams of turmeric powder daily with warm milk is the standard Ayurvedic range. The warm-milk anupana suits the bitter, hot herb because it cushions the digestive heat and carries curcumin better than water; the milk-and-turmeric combination is also the traditional Varnya preparation. For recurrent boils with diabetic risk, the classical compound is one part Neem, one part Turmeric, and half a part Kutki, half a teaspoon two or three times a day with warm water until the boil resolves and ideally for a few weeks beyond.
| Form | Dose | When | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| Turmeric and Ginger paste (topical) | ½ tsp each in warm water | Twice daily on lesion | Indolent boil that will not head |
| Turmeric and Sandalwood paste (topical) | ½ tsp each in warm water | Twice daily on lesion | Hot, throbbing, inflamed boil |
| Turmeric powder (internal) | 1 to 3 g | With warm milk, once or twice daily | General anti-inflammatory, blood support |
| Neem-Turmeric-Kutki compound | ½ tsp 2 to 3 times a day | With warm water | Recurrent boils, diabetic risk |
Duration expectations
Topical paste typically softens an active boil within two to three days. Internal turmeric for systemic predisposition should run for four to six weeks alongside dietary correction. Stop the topical once the boil has drained and the skin is closing, and continue internal turmeric (in food or in milk) as part of a maintenance pattern. Turmeric stains skin and clothes for a day or two; expect that with topical use.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does Turmeric take to work on a boil?
Topical turmeric paste, especially combined with ginger or sandalwood, softens an active boil within 48 to 72 hours and brings it to a head over three to five days. Internal turmeric for the systemic Pitta-Rakta picture is a longer game; expect four to six weeks of consistent use before the recurrence pattern shifts.
Can I just eat more turmeric in food instead of taking it medicinally?
Culinary turmeric helps as a maintenance dose, particularly when cooked in fat and paired with black pepper, but it is unlikely to provide enough curcumin to resolve an active boil. For a current lesion, use the topical paste, and take 1 to 3 g of pure turmeric powder in warm milk as the internal dose. Treat culinary turmeric as prevention, medicinal turmeric as treatment.
Turmeric vs Neem for boils, which is better?
They are complementary, not competing. Neem is cold and bitter, the lead Raktashodhaka and the strongest direct antibacterial in this group; Turmeric is hot, bitter-astringent, and the strongest ripening agent that drives a boil to a head. Classical home practice uses both: Neem internally and topically to clear the blood, Turmeric in the topical paste with sandalwood or ginger to resolve the local lesion. The Neem-Turmeric-Kutki internal compound is the standard combination when diabetic predisposition is suspected.
Will turmeric paste stain my skin permanently?
No. Turmeric leaves a yellow tint on the skin and on clothing, but it fades within one to three days as the skin sheds. Wear an old t-shirt while the paste is on, and avoid putting it on visible facial skin if you have an event the next day. The pigmenting effect is in fact part of its post-boil Varnya action, helping the area heal evenly once the lesion drains.
Recommended: Start Turmeric for Boils
If you want to start using Turmeric for boils today, here is the simplest starting point.
The best form is plain organic turmeric powder, the same product covers the topical paste and the internal warm-milk dose. Capsules work for travel and convenience but lose the topical option, which is the fastest-acting use for an active boil.
Kitchen version: for the topical, mix half a teaspoon turmeric and half a teaspoon ginger (for an indolent boil) or half a teaspoon turmeric and half a teaspoon red sandalwood (for a hot, throbbing boil) with a few drops of warm water; apply to the lesion twice daily. For internal use, stir 1 teaspoon turmeric into a cup of warm milk before bed, the classical golden milk.
Dosha fork: if your boil is acutely red, hot, and Pitta-dominant, use the Turmeric and Sandalwood pairing externally. If it is slow, indolent, with localised swelling and Kapha-like dampness, use the Turmeric and Ginger pairing to ripen and drain. For a recurrent pattern with diabetic risk, combine internal Turmeric with Neem and Kutki at half a teaspoon two or three times a day.
Find Turmeric on Amazon ↗ Red Sandalwood Powder ↗
Safety: Turmeric is hot in potency; very high internal doses can aggravate Pitta in heat-flushed individuals or those with active GI ulcers. Stop topical use if the skin shows allergic redness or itching unrelated to the boil. Seek medical care for facial boils near the nose, spreading redness, or fever, paste and milk are not substitutes for incision and drainage when those are needed.
Safety & Precautions
Turmeric used as a culinary spice is exceptionally safe, it has been eaten daily across South Asia for thousands of years with no significant toxicity reported. The cautions below apply mainly to concentrated extracts and high therapeutic doses (1,000+ mg of standardised curcumin), not to a teaspoon in your dal.
Blood-Thinning Medications
Turmeric mildly inhibits platelet aggregation and the COX enzymes, the same pathway that aspirin and many anticoagulants target. If you take warfarin, heparin, clopidogrel, aspirin, or any anticoagulant, do not start high-dose turmeric or curcumin extracts without your doctor monitoring your INR or clotting times. Food-level use (cooking, golden milk a few times a week) is generally fine, but supplements should be cleared with your prescriber.
Surgery
Stop high-dose turmeric extracts at least 2 weeks before any planned surgery or dental extraction. The blood-thinning effect can increase bleeding risk during and after surgery. Cooking-level turmeric is not a concern.
Gallstones and Bile Duct Obstruction
Turmeric stimulates bile flow (Pittasaraka). If you have known gallstones or a bile duct obstruction, this stimulation can trigger pain or, rarely, dislodge a stone. Use only under practitioner supervision in this situation.
Acute Hepatitis or Jaundice
While turmeric is excellent for chronic liver support, classical texts and modern hepatology agree it should be avoided during acute viral hepatitis or active jaundice. Resume only after liver enzymes have normalised.
Acid Reflux and Ulcers
Turmeric's heating potency (Ushna Virya) can aggravate peptic ulcers or severe acid reflux in high doses. People with very high Pitta sometimes experience heartburn from concentrated turmeric on an empty stomach, take it with food or as part of a buffered formula.
Pregnancy and Conception
Turmeric in food is safe and traditional during pregnancy. Therapeutic doses, extracts, and concentrated supplements should be avoided, turmeric is described as Bhedana (penetrating) and stimulates uterine and blood movement, which is why it's used to regulate menses but contraindicated for those trying to conceive or already pregnant. Stick to a pinch in cooking.
Iron Absorption
High-dose curcumin can mildly chelate iron. People with iron-deficiency anemia should take turmeric supplements at a different time of day from iron supplements or iron-rich meals.
Yellow Staining
Not a safety issue, but worth knowing: turmeric stains skin, fingernails, clothing, and grout intensely. Use gloves when applying paste, and don't worry, skin staining fades within 24-48 hours.
Other Herbs for Boils
See all herbs for boils on the Boils page.
▶ Classical Text References (5 sources)
For both these conditions the patient should be administered Vamana (emesis) and Virechana (purgation therapies), followed by Nasya (nasal medication), Anjana (collyriums) and drinking of decoction prepared from Haridra – Turmeric Rhizome – Curcuma Longa, and Daruharidra (Berberis aristata), Katabhi – Celastrus paniculata, Guda- jaggery, Sinduvarita, Nispava, Baspika, Sataparvika, roots of Tanduliyaka, Kukkutanda – hen’s egg and Avalguja – Psoralea corylifolia to relieve the effect of poison.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 7: Anna Raksha Vidhi
Honey along with seeds of Pushkara, Honey, along with wine of dates (Maireya) and sugar Milk drinks along with Mantha (solution of corn flour) Turmeric with mustard oil is incompatible.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 7: Anna Raksha Vidhi
For both these conditions the patient should be administered Vamana (emesis) and Virechana (purgation therapies), followed by Nasya (nasal medication), Anjana (collyriums) and drinking of decoction prepared from Haridra – Turmeric Rhizome – Curcuma Longa, and Daruharidra (Berberis aristata), Katabhi – Celastrus paniculata, Guda- jaggery, Sinduvarita, Nispava, Baspika, Sataparvika, roots of Tanduliyaka, Kukkutanda – hen’s egg and Avalguja – Psoralea corylifolia to relieve the effect of poison.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 7: Anna Raksha Vidhi
हार तमांसं हा र शूल क ोतपा चतम ् ह र ावि नना स यो यापादय त जी वतम ् Meat of Haridra (yellow bird) piered with wood of Haridra and cooked with the flame of Haridra is lethal.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 7: Anna Raksha Vidhi
भ मपांशुप र व तं तदे व च समा कम ् Meat of Haridra, cooked by smearing ash and sand, consumed along with honey kills the person quickly.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 7: Anna Raksha Vidhi
Tikta Gana – group of bitters :त तः पदोल ाय ती वालकोशीर च दनम ् भू न ब न ब कटुका तगरा गु व सकम ् न तमाला वरजनी मु त मूवाट पकम पाठापामागकां यायोगुडू चध वयासकम ् प चमल ू ं महा या यौ वशाल अ त वषावचा Patoli, Trayanti – Gentiana kurroa, Valaka, Usira – Vetiveria zizanioides, Chandana – Sandalwood, Bhunimba – The creat (whole plant) – Andrographis paniculata, Nimba – Neem – Azadirachta indica, Katuka – Picrorhiza kurroa, Tagara – Indian Valerian (root) – Valeriana wallichi, Aguru, Vatsaka – Hol
— 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
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
For Teekshna – strong, Purgative kind of smoke – ती णे यो त मती नशा दशमुलमानो वालं ला ा वेता फल यम ् ग ध या ण ती णा न गणो मु व वरे चनः useful drugs are Jyotismati, Nisha (turmeric), Dashamula, Ala, Laksa, Shweta, Triphala, Substances which have strong smell and drugs of Murdha Virechana Gana- vide chapter 15, -1318 Dhumavarti- preparation of smoke wickजले ि थतामहोरा मी षकां वादशा गुलाम ् प टैधुमऔषधैरेवम ् प चकृ वः व तर गु ठक थल ु ो लेपये त ् यवम या यधा भवेत ् छाया शु कां वगभ तां नेह
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 21: Dhumpana Medicated Smoking
For Teekshna – strong, Purgative kind of smoke – ती णे यो त मती नशा दशमुलमानो वालं ला ा वेता फल यम ् ग ध या ण ती णा न गणो मु व वरे चनः useful drugs are Jyotismati, Nisha (turmeric), Dashamula, Ala, Laksa, Shweta, Triphala, Substances which have strong smell and drugs of Murdha Virechana Gana- vide chapter 15, -1318 Dhumavarti- preparation of smoke wickजले ि थतामहोरा मी षकां वादशा गुलाम ् प टैधुमऔषधैरेवम ् प चकृ वः व तर गु ठक थल ु ो लेपये त ् यवम या यधा भवेत ् छाया शु कां वगभ तां नेह
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 21: Dhumpana Medicated Smoking
39 Jalaukavacharana- procedure of applying leeches:अथेतरा नशाक कयु ते अ ब स प र लुताः अवि तसोमे त े वा पन ु चा चा सता जले लागये ृतम ृ पब ती त यर तश नत क धा नपातनैः छादये मद ु ाससा ृ व The leech that are kept for short time in water containing paste of turmeric / grain washed water (Avantisoma)/ buttermilk should be made comfortable by putting back in pure water.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 26: Shastra Vidhi
45 अशु ौ ावयेत ् दंशान ् ह र ागुडमा कैः ॥४६॥ शतधौता य पचव ततो लेपा च शीतलाः। When in doubt of impurity, the site of the bite should be made to bleed by applying paste of Haridra (Turmeric), Guda (jaggery) and honey.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 26: Shastra Vidhi
45 अशु ौ ावयेत ् दंशान ् ह र ागुडमा कैः ॥४६॥ शतधौता य पचव ततो लेपा च शीतलाः। When in doubt of impurity, the site of the bite should be made to bleed by applying paste of Haridra (Turmeric), Guda (jaggery) and honey.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 26: Shastra Vidhi
35 अस यग े व त वे ल योष नशानतैः सागारधूमलवणतैलै द याि छरामुखम ् स य व ृ ते को णेन तैलेन लवणेन च When the blood is not flowing out in sufficient quantity, the cut end of the vein should be smeared with oil processed with Vella (Vidanga), Vyosha (Trikatu), Haridra, Nata, Agaradhuma or Lavana, when the blood is flowing out properly, the site should be smeared with warm oil and salt.
— Astanga Hridaya, Chapter 27: Siravyadha Vidhi
Source: Astanga Hridaya, Ch. 7, Ch. 7, Ch. 7, Ch. 7, Ch. 7, Ch. 10, Ch. 14, Ch. 14, Ch. 21, Ch. 21, Ch. 26, Ch. 26, Ch. 26, Ch. 27
For both these conditions the patient should be administered Vamana (emesis) and Virechana (purgation therapies), followed by Nasya (nasal medication), Anjana (collyriums) and drinking of decoction prepared from Haridra – Turmeric Rhizome – Curcuma Longa, and Daruharidra (Berberis aristata), Katabhi – Celastrus paniculata, Guda- jaggery, Sinduvarita, Nispava, Baspika, Sataparvika, roots of Tanduliyaka, Kukkutanda – hen’s egg and Avalguja – Psoralea corylifolia to relieve the effect of poison.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Anna Raksha Vidhi
Honey along with seeds of Pushkara, Honey, along with wine of dates (Maireya) and sugar Milk drinks along with Mantha (solution of corn flour) Turmeric with mustard oil is incompatible.
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Anna Raksha Vidhi
Tikta Gana – group of bitters :त तः पदोल ाय ती वालकोशीर च दनम ् भू न ब न ब कटुका तगरा गु व सकम ् न तमाला वरजनी मु त मूवाट पकम पाठापामागकां यायोगुडू चध वयासकम ् प चमल ू ं महा या यौ वशाल अ त वषावचा Patoli, Trayanti – Gentiana kurroa, Valaka, Usira – Vetiveria zizanioides, Chandana – Sandalwood, Bhunimba – The creat (whole plant) – Andrographis paniculata, Nimba – Neem – Azadirachta indica, Katuka – Picrorhiza kurroa, Tagara – Indian Valerian (root) – Valeriana wallichi, Aguru, Vatsaka – Hol
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, 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 Sutrasthan, Dvividha Upakramaneeya
For Teekshna – strong, Purgative kind of smoke – ती णे यो त मती नशा दशमुलमानो वालं ला ा वेता फल यम ् ग ध या ण ती णा न गणो मु व वरे चनः useful drugs are Jyotismati, Nisha (turmeric), Dashamula, Ala, Laksa, Shweta, Triphala, Substances which have strong smell and drugs of Murdha Virechana Gana- vide chapter 15, -1318 Dhumavarti- preparation of smoke wickजले ि थतामहोरा मी षकां वादशा गुलाम ् प टैधुमऔषधैरेवम ् प चकृ वः व तर गु ठक थल ु ो लेपये त ् यवम या यधा भवेत ् छाया शु कां वगभ तां नेह
— Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Dhumpana Medicated Smoking
Source: Astanga Hridaya Sutrasthan, Anna Raksha Vidhi; Rasabhediyam Tastes, Their; Dvividha Upakramaneeya; Dhumpana Medicated Smoking
The haridra (turmeric), roots of eranda (Ricinus communis Linn), laksha (Ficus Lacor Buch-Ham), manahshila (realgar, an Arsenic compound), jatamansi (Nardostachys jatamansone BC), are powdered properly and wick is prepared.
— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 17: Hiccup and Dyspnea Treatment (Hikka Shvasa Chikitsa / हिक्काश्वासचिकित्सा)
The physician may also give pomegranate or other sour fruits or the linctus mixed with astringent substances or he may give a potion containing turmeric and sugar.
— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 22: Thirst Disorders Treatment (Trishna Chikitsa / तृष्णाचिकित्सा)
Twenty types of prameha classified by dosha: 10 kapha (curable), 6 pitta (palliable), 4 vata (incurable) Kapha types: water-like, sugarcane-juice-like, dense, layered, white, seminal, cold, slow-flowing, saliva-like, sand-containing urines Pitta types: alkali-like, black, indigo, turmeric-colored, madder-colored, blood-containing urines Vata types: bone-marrow, vital-essence, muscle-fat, lymph-mixed urines Obese patients require depletion therapy first;
— Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Ch. 6
Source: Charaka Samhita, Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 17: Hiccup and Dyspnea Treatment (Hikka Shvasa Chikitsa / हिक्काश्वासचिकित्सा); Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Chapter 22: Thirst Disorders Treatment (Trishna Chikitsa / तृष्णाचिकित्सा); Chikitsa Sthana — Therapeutic Principles, Ch. 6
The six Pittaja Pramehas are: Manjishtha-meha (madder-colored urine), Haridra-meha (turmeric-colored urine), Nilameha (blue urine), Raktaka (blood-red urine), Krishnameha (black urine), and Charameha.
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Purva Khanda, Chapter 7: Rogagananam (Enumeration of Diseases)
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 of Kanya (Aloe vera — Aloe barbadensis) mixed with Nisha (turmeric) powder cures Pliha (splenic disorders) and Apachi (cervical lymphadenitis).
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 1: Svarasadikalpana (Svarasa, Kalka, Kvatha, etc.)
Triphala, Mustaka (Cyperus rotundus), Khadira (Acacia catechu), Nimba (Azadirachta indica), the two Haridras (turmeric and tree turmeric), Patola (Trichosanthes dioica), Guduchi (Tinospora cordifolia), Katuka (Picrorhiza kurroa), and Vidanga (Embelia ribes) — this decoction destroys Kushtha (skin diseases).
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 2: Kvathakalpana (Decoction Preparations)
Chandraprabha Vati [for Prameha/urinary disorders]: Chandraprabha (camphor), Vacha (Acorus calamus), Musta (Cyperus rotundus), Bhunimba (Andrographis paniculata), Amrita (Guduchi — Tinospora cordifolia), Daruka (Cedrus deodara), Haridra (turmeric — Curcuma longa), Ativisha (Aconitum heterophyllum), Darvi (Berberis aristata), Pippalimula (root of long pepper), and Chitraka (Plumbago zeylanica) —.
— Sharangadhara Samhita, Madhyama Khanda, Chapter 4: Gutikakalpana (Tablet/Pill 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 4: Gutikakalpana (Tablet/Pill Preparations)
The leech is applied after cleaning the skin with turmeric paste, and detached using salt, turmeric, or honey when satiated.
— Sushruta Samhita, Sutra Sthana, Chapter 13: Jalaukavacharaniya Adhyaya - Leech Therapy
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)
Or milk prepared with rajani (turmeric) and devadaru (cedar) with rock salt.
— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 9: Vatabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Vata-type Conjunctivitis)
Gundra, rice, shaivala (aquatic moss), shailabheda, daruharidra (tree turmeric), ela (cardamom), utpala (blue lotus), rodhra, abhra (mica), lotus petal, sugar, darbha (sacred grass), tala (palmyra), rodhra, vetasa (cane), and padmaka.
— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 10: Pittabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Pitta-type Conjunctivitis)
With honey, conch shell, Nepali-origin herb, daruharidra (tree turmeric), and saindhava.
— Sushruta Samhita, Uttara Tantra, Chapter 12: Raktabhishyanda Pratishedha Adhyaya (Chapter on Treatment of Blood-type Conjunctivitis)
Source: Sushruta Samhita, Sutra Sthana, Chapter 13: Jalaukavacharaniya Adhyaya - Leech Therapy; 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); 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.