Email :
enquiry@dehlvi.com
Toll free :
011-42141431
Search for Dealer locator or Dehlvi Approved clinics
Search for Ingredients :
Arabic Name : Banafsaj
Bengali Name : Banopa, Baga Banusa
Chinese Name : Zi hua di ding
English Name : Sweet Violet, Sweet-Scented Violet, Garden Violet, Heartease
French Name : Violette Douce
German Name : Duftveilchen, Heckenveilchen, Märzveilchen, Osterchen, Veilchen
Gujarati Name : Bahapa, Bahaphsa
Hindi Name : Banaphsha
Kashmiri Name : Banafsha
Latin name : Viola odorata Linn.
Marathi Name : Bugabanosa
Persian Name : Banafsha
Punjabi Name : Banafsha
Sanskrit Name : Neelapushpa
Urdu Name : Berge Banafsha (Leaf), Gul Banafsha (Flower)
Description
The flowers are valued as an alterative, antifungal, antiinflammatory, antiscorbutic, antiseptic, aperient, astringent, demulcent, diaphoretic, diuretic, emollient, expectorant, febrifuge and nutritive. They are useful in bilious and liver affections. They are used for catarrhal and pulmonary troubles and for calculus affections. Also used as a remedy for coughs, chest colds, catarrh, sore throat and hoarseness. It also has a strong reputation in the treatment of cancer and whooping cough. It contains salicylic acid, which is used to make aspirin. It is therefore effective in the treatment of headaches, migraine and insomnia. It cleanses toxins from the body.
The fresh leaves are a reputed drug for the treatment of cancer. The leaves have alterative, demulscent, diaphoretic and febrifuge properties. They are useful in fevers, common cold, catarrh, pleurisy, pneumonia and cough, They have been used with benefit to allay the pain in cancerous growths, especially in the throat. Though the British Pharmacopoeia does not uphold the treatment, it specifies how they are employed.
The underground stem or rhizomes (the so-called roots) are strongly emetic and purgative. They are useful in asthma, bronchitis, cold, catarrh and sinusitis.
Recommended Dosage: Leaves : 3 to 5 g powder; Flowers : 10 to 25 g powder.
Contraindication: Large amounts of leaves (many times the recommended dosage) may cause nausea and vomiting because of the irritant effects of saponins on the digestive system.