ბოტანიკა / Botanica
Manjistha

Manjistha

Rubia cordifolia

Ayurveda

Photo credit: Vinayaraj

Safety information

Safety information

Toxicity: Caution. Madder-type anthraquinones (notably lucidin) are genotoxic/mutagenic in laboratory assays; related R. tinctorum was withdrawn as a herbal product in the EU over genotoxicity. Warrants caution especially long-term/high-dose.

Contraindications: Pregnancy and lactation (avoid — genotoxicity concern, emmenagogue reputation); long-term high-dose use discouraged; stains urine/skin red.

Interactions: Possible additive with anticoagulants (traditional blood-moving use); hepatically metabolized constituents — caution with hepatotoxic drugs.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Avoid in pregnancy and lactation — genotoxicity concern, emmenagogue reputation.

Evidence level

Preclinical

Supported by laboratory or animal studies; not yet confirmed in humans.

Preparations

decoction · root

Part used: root

Evidence:Preclinical
medicated oil
Evidence:Preclinical
paste (lepa)

Traditional use: skin

Evidence:Preclinical
powder · root

Part used: root

Traditional use: skin disease, pigmentation, wound healing, blood/lymphatic tonic

Proposed mechanism: anthraquinones (purpurin, munjistin), mollugin, cyclic peptides — antioxidant, anti-inflammatory, antimicrobial, antiproliferative

Evidence:Preclinical

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Nutritional notes

Not a food; source of madder dye (alizarin/purpurin).

Healing traditions

Ayurveda
Sources (2)

  1. Olakkengil Shajan 2025, Int J Mol Sci (PMID 41465430)
  2. Kumar 2024, ACS Omega (PMID 38882167)

All sources →

Not medical advice. Consult a qualified healthcare professional before using any plant or preparation.