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Avipattikar Churna

Avipattikara Cūrṇa · CHURNA

Classical churna traditionally used for hyperacidity, acid reflux, heartburn and pitta-type digestive complaints.

13
Ingredients
4
Traditional Uses
4
FAQs
Bhaishajya Ratnavali
Classical Source

About Avipattikar Churna

Avipattikar Churna (literally "that which removes unremitting acidity") is a classical Ayurvedic formulation from Bhaishajya Ratnavali specifically indicated for amlapitta — the Ayurvedic term covering hyperacidity, GERD, peptic irritation and associated symptoms. It combines the classical trikatu and triphala bases with lavang, tvak, patra, mustak, vidanga, trivrit and sharkara in specific proportions.

Unlike modern antacids that neutralize existing acid, avipattikar works upstream by supporting normal agni (digestive fire) patterns and improving bile flow — classical texts describe it as pitta-sarak (pitta-clearing) through anulomana. This makes it particularly useful for the 2pm–4pm "pitta-spike" acid reflux pattern and evening heartburn after spicy meals.

It is widely used as first-line Ayurvedic support for chronic acidity, often taken with cool water or milk at bedtime. Modern research documents gastroprotective and prokinetic activity consistent with the traditional indications.

Classical Reference

Bhaishajya Ratnavali — Amlapitta Chikitsa Prakarana

Dosha Effect

Vata
Pitta
Kapha

Ingredients (13)

IngredientRoleProportion
Shunthi
Rhizome
trikatu - digestive 1 part
Maricha
Fruit
trikatu 1 part
Pippali
Fruit
trikatu, yogavahi 1 part
Haritaki triphala 1 part
Bibhitaki triphala 1 part
Amla triphala - pitta-pacifier 1 part
Mustak
Rhizome
digestive 1 part
Vidanga krimighna 1 part
Ela (Cardamom) aromatic, deepana 1 part
Tejpatra (Cinnamon leaf) aromatic 1 part
Lavang (Clove) carminative 1 part
Trivrit (Operculina turpethum) mild purgative - chief 44 parts
Sharkara (Sugar candy) pitta-pacifier, vehicle 66 parts

Preparation Method

All ingredients individually powdered to 80 mesh. Trivrit root is the chief ingredient at 44 parts; sharkara at 66 parts gives the characteristic sweet-cooling profile. Blended thoroughly and stored airtight.

Traditional Uses

Hyperacidity relief

Primary classical indication for amlapitta (acid reflux, heartburn, sour belching).

Chronic gastritis support

Traditionally prescribed for recurrent pitta-origin gastric irritation.

Constipation with acidity

Gentle anulomana action with trivrit addresses both simultaneously.

Bitter taste in mouth

Classical indication for mukha-dourgandhya (bad taste) of pitta origin.

Dosage Guidelines

FormAmountTiming
Adults3–6 g (½–1 tsp)Once or twice daily, bedtime or after meals
Acute flare6 gAt bedtime with cool milk

Anupana (Recommended Carriers)

  • Cool water — Standard pitta-pacifying use
  • Cold milk — Severe heartburn, nighttime reflux
  • Sugarcane juice — Acute pitta flare

Contraindications & Interactions

Avoid or use with caution in:

  • Diabetes (high sugar content — sharkara)
  • Severe diarrhea (trivrit is mildly purgative)
  • Pregnancy (trivrit content)
  • Dehydration

Drug interactions:

  • May reduce absorption of some medications — space by 2 hours

Frequently Asked Questions

Avipattikar vs antacid — which is better?

Antacids give faster 15-min relief for active heartburn. Avipattikar works upstream over 2–4 weeks to reduce the frequency and severity of episodes. Many use antacid acutely + avipattikar nightly for chronic acidity.

Safe for GERD?

Traditionally indicated for the GERD symptom cluster. If you're on a PPI (pantoprazole, omeprazole), you can add avipattikar but do not stop your PPI without your physician's advice.

Why the sugar?

Sharkara (unrefined sugar candy) is specifically pitta-pacifying in Ayurveda. The formula is deliberately sweet — without sugar, the pitta-cooling effect is weaker.

Can diabetics take it?

Not recommended in the classical form due to high sugar content. Sugar-free variants exist but check with your Chikitsak.

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