About Sitopaladi Churna
Sitopaladi Churna is the most widely prescribed Ayurvedic respiratory formulation, effective across the full spectrum of respiratory complaints: dry cough, productive cough, sore throat, bronchitis, post-viral cough, and pediatric respiratory infections. Documented in Sharangdhar Samhita, it combines mishri (rock sugar) with vanshlochan (bamboo manna), pippali, ela (cardamom) and dalchini (cinnamon).
The unique sweet-pungent profile makes it palatable for children (it tastes like sweet spice mix) and is tridoshic — unlike trikatu, it does not aggravate pitta. It is the preferred choice for the "dry tickly cough" or "post-flu lingering cough" pattern where heating herbs would be counterproductive.
Commonly dispensed with honey as anupana for kapha-type productive cough, or with ghee for dry vata-type cough. Dosage is generous in pediatric practice (500mg twice daily for children over 3).
Classical Reference
Sharangdhar Samhita — Madhyama Khanda, Churna-kalpana
Dosha Effect
Ingredients (5)
| Ingredient | Role | Proportion |
|---|---|---|
| Mishri (Sugar Candy) | kasahara, pitta-pacifier | 16 parts |
| Vanshlochan (Bamboo Silica) | chief — respiratory, cooling | 8 parts |
| Pippali | bronchodilator, expectorant | 4 parts |
| Ela (Green Cardamom) | aromatic, mild expectorant | 2 parts |
| Dalchini (Cinnamon bark) | warming, circulatory | 1 part |
Preparation Method
Ingredients individually powdered (80 mesh). Mixed in the classical 16:8:4:2:1 proportion. Mishri content gives sweetness that dominates — store dry and airtight.
Traditional Uses
Cough relief
Classical kasahara (cough-suppressing) formulation; works across dry and productive cough.
Bronchitis support
Traditional indication for shvasa (asthma-like) and kasa (cough) conditions.
Post-viral cough
Lingering post-flu/post-COVID cough frequently responds within 7–14 days.
Pediatric respiratory
Safe, palatable — widely used in Ayurvedic pediatric practice for cough and throat discomfort.
Low-grade fever
Classical indication for jwara with respiratory involvement.
Dosage Guidelines
| Form | Amount | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Adults | 3 g (½ tsp) | 2–4× daily with honey or ghee |
| Children (3–12 yrs) | 500 mg–1.5 g | 2–3× daily with honey |
| Children (1–3 yrs) | 250–500 mg | 2× daily — Chikitsak supervision |
Anupana (Recommended Carriers)
- Honey — Kapha/productive cough — classical anupana
- Warm ghee — Dry vata-type cough, throat dryness
- Warm water — Fever with respiratory symptoms
Contraindications & Interactions
Avoid or use with caution in:
- Diabetes mellitus uncontrolled (high sugar content)
- Active fungal respiratory infections (sugar content)
Drug interactions:
- May enhance effect of bronchodilators (pippali)
Frequently Asked Questions
Sitopaladi vs cough syrup?
Conventional cough syrups target either suppression (dextromethorphan) or expectoration (guaifenesin). Sitopaladi does both gently while also addressing the underlying weak agni that leaves lingering cough.
How long until cough clears?
Acute coughs: 3–7 days. Chronic/post-viral: 2–4 weeks. If cough persists beyond 3 weeks, see a physician to rule out bacterial infection, asthma, or other cause.
Safe for babies?
Under 1 year — not recommended (honey contraindication). 1–3 years only under Chikitsak supervision at 250mg doses. 3+ years routinely used.
Can diabetics take it?
Standard sitopaladi has ~50% sugar. Sugar-free variants exist. Small occasional doses (1g × 2–3 days for acute cough) are usually tolerated; check your glucose log.