Astringent
A traditional action term for substances described as tightening or drying tissues, often because of tannin-rich preparations.
This is an intended-action label from traditional literature, not a measured pharmacological result.
Recipes, methods and preparation notes.
Preparation notes connected to the same use term
A structured preparation method draft assembled from 1 research source. Quantities, timing, safety and storage must be checked against the linked source material before publication. Key facts include yield it valuable for resolving infections, clearing sinus congestion, and bringing co.
Open preparation note ↗Recipe · Traditional useGoldenrod Tea: An Herbal Blend for Urinary Tract InfectionsA structured herbal preparation draft assembled from 1 research source. Quantities, timing, safety and storage must be checked against the linked source material before publication.
Open preparation note ↗“Same plant” is not automatically “same use”. Each card states the connection type so the knowledge graph remains honest.
Prosopis cineraria
Where the association appears.
View 1 preserved source rows
Multiple rows can represent different places, references or repeated historical reports. They are preserved separately rather than treated as independent proof.
| Region | Reference label | Source row |
|---|---|---|
| India | Woi.8 | #6,009 |
Safety and self-care boundary
Use this page as a research index. Persistent, severe, unexplained or worsening symptoms need appropriate clinical assessment.
Plant identity, plant part, dose, preparation, route, interactions, pregnancy safety, toxicity and contraindications are not established by this association. Do not use it for self-diagnosis or self-medication.
USDA Dr. Duke ethnobotanical data
The plant–use association and source rows come from the USDA Dr. Duke database. Holistic Healing Tips adds taxonomy matching, readable vocabulary profiles, internal preparation links and visible interpretation boundaries.
Dataset version: 1992–2016 · Licence: CC0 · Record class: traditional use
Read the data methodology ↗