Medea Botanicals
Senna

Senna

Senna alexandrina(?)

Other names: Senna

EuropeanGeorgian

Photo credit: Lalithamba from India

This plant carries serious safety risks. All information is for educational reference only.

Safety information

Toxicity: Abdominal pain/spasm, diarrhea, allergic skin reactions. Long-term: reversible pseudomelanosis coli, electrolyte/water imbalance, proteinuria/hematuria, urine discoloration. | Stimulant laxative (sennosides/anthraquinones) — cramping, dehydration, electrolyte loss; chronic use harms the colon. Flag. | Use with care — strong purgative; cramping if not combined with a carminative. | Overuse/misuse causes potassium loss; chronic use causes dependency and impaired peristalsis (intestinal smooth-muscle damage).

Contraindications: Intestinal obstruction/stenosis, atony, appendicitis, IBD (Crohn's, ulcerative colitis), unexplained abdominal pain, severe dehydration. Not in pregnancy, breastfeeding, or children <12. Max one week's use. | Pregnancy, bowel obstruction/IBD, children, chronic use. | Not for children under 12 or in colitis; do not use continuously beyond ~10 days (risk of bowel weakening/dependence); pregnancy on professional advice only. | Contraindicated in chronic constipation, intestinal obstruction, inflammatory bowel disease (appendicitis, colitis, IBS, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's), abdominal pain of unknown origin, anal prolapse, hemorrhoids; ideally avoid in pregnancy/lactation and children under 12; max ~10 days.

Interactions: Potassium loss can potentiate cardiac glycosides (digoxin), interact with antiarrhythmics, QT-prolonging drugs, thiazide diuretics, corticosteroids, licorice root (additive hypokalemia). | Potassium-depleting drugs, digoxin. | None specifically noted. | May reduce absorption of oral drugs (decreased bowel transit time); potassium loss increases cardiac-glycoside toxicity; aggravates diuretic-induced potassium loss.

Pregnancy & breastfeeding: Contraindicated in pregnancy and breastfeeding. | Pregnancy contraindicated. | Pregnancy on professional advice only. | Ideally avoid in pregnancy/lactation.

Evidence level

Clinical

Supported by clinical trials in humans.

Preparations

This plant carries serious safety risks. All information is for educational reference only.

infusion · fruit pod and leaf

Part used: fruit pod and leaf

Traditional use: Traditionally used as a stimulant laxative for temporary (short-term) constipation.

How to prepare (traditional): Cold-style infusion: steep dried pods or leaves in warm water for 6-12 hours; use about 3-6 Alexandrian senna pods (or 4-12 Tinnevelly pods) per cup of water. Drink in the morning and at night.

Dosage note (descriptive only): Morning and night. Do not use for more than 10 days. BHP: 0.5-2 ml fluid extract twice daily.

Reference only — not a dosage instruction

Evidence:Traditional (systematized)

General preparation guide →

Associated conditions

Nutritional notes

Not relevant. | Not a food.

Healing traditions

EuropeanGeorgian
Sources (6)

  1. EMA/HMPC Sennae folium monograph & public summary
  2. EMA HMPC public statement on hydroxyanthracene derivatives (safety/genotoxicity)
  3. MK (commentary §სინამაქი)
  4. KH lexicon (Cassia acutifolia)
  5. Encyclopedia of Herbal Medicine (book, p.75) — Andrew Chevallier, English, 2016
  6. Hoffmann D., Medical Herbalism (2003) — materia medica, Senna alexandrina

All sources →

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