About Yograj Guggulu
Yograj Guggulu is the primary classical guggulu for vata-dominant musculoskeletal conditions — arthritis, sciatica, cervical and lumbar spondylosis, frozen shoulder, and general myalgia. Documented in Sharangdhar Samhita, it contains shuddha guggulu plus 29 supporting herbs including triphala, trikatu, yavani, ajmoda, chavya, chitraka, and multiple warming carminatives.
Where kaishore guggulu targets pitta-inflammatory conditions (gout, hyperuricemia), yograj targets vata presentations: cold joints, cracking, stiffness worse in morning, pain that moves, and nervous-system involvement (tingling, numbness, sciatica radiation). It is considered slightly warming and anabolic, suitable for long-term chronic-vata use.
Its reputation in Ayurvedic rheumatology is substantial — a typical protocol runs 2–3 months at 2 tablets twice daily, often combined with localized abhyanga (oil massage) using mahanarayan taila or vishagarbha taila.
Classical Reference
Sharangdhar Samhita — Madhyama Khanda, Vati-Adhyaya
Dosha Effect
Ingredients (16)
| Ingredient | Role | Proportion |
|---|---|---|
| Shuddha Guggulu | chief - anti-inflammatory | 29 parts |
| Pippali | trikatu, yogavahi | 1 part |
| Pippali-mool | vata-pacifier | 1 part |
| Chavya | deepana | 1 part |
| Chitraka | agni-enhancer | 1 part |
| Shunthi | anti-inflammatory | 1 part |
| Maricha | deepana | 1 part |
| Ajmoda | antispasmodic | 1 part |
| Jeeraka | digestive | 1 part |
| Krishna Jeeraka | digestive | 1 part |
| Yavani (Ajwain) | antispasmodic | 1 part |
| Haritaki | triphala | 1 part |
| Amla | triphala | 1 part |
| Bibhitaki | triphala | 1 part |
| Vidanga | krimighna | 1 part |
| ...plus 14 additional ingredients | synergistic vata-pacifiers | 1 part each |
Preparation Method
Guggulu is purified (shodhana) in triphala decoction. Herbs individually powdered and blended. Triturated with purified guggulu and ghee to form tablets of 250–500 mg.
Traditional Uses
Chronic arthritis
Classical indication for sandhivata (osteoarthritis) and amavata (rheumatoid-type — early stages).
Sciatica
Traditional indication for gridhrasi — the classical Ayurvedic sciatica picture.
Cervical/lumbar spondylosis
Used for vata-aggravated spinal degeneration with stiffness and radiating pain.
Frozen shoulder
Apabahuka — traditionally responsive to yograj guggulu + local oil therapy.
Neurological vata
Nerve tingling, numbness, mild paralysis support.
Dosage Guidelines
| Form | Amount | Timing |
|---|---|---|
| Adults | 2 tablets (500 mg–1 g) | Twice daily after meals with warm water |
| Severe cases | 3 tablets | Three times daily — under supervision |
Anupana (Recommended Carriers)
- Warm water — Standard use
- Dashmool kashaya — Severe vata presentation
- Warm milk — Chronic nervous vata
Contraindications & Interactions
Avoid or use with caution in:
- Pregnancy
- Hyperthyroidism
- Peptic ulcer
- Severe pitta conditions with burning/redness in joints
- Bleeding disorders
Drug interactions:
- Thyroid medication
- Anticoagulants (guggulu)
- Beta-blockers, calcium-channel blockers
- NSAIDs (monitor stomach tolerance)
Frequently Asked Questions
Yograj vs kaishore vs simhanad?
Yograj = vata arthritis (cold, stiff joints). Kaishore = pitta arthritis/gout (hot, red, swollen). Simhanad = advanced rheumatoid arthritis with amavata picture.
Can I take it with my allopathic arthritis medication?
Generally compatible with analgesics and NSAIDs. Discuss with rheumatologist if on DMARDs, biologics or methotrexate.
How long until results?
Noticeable stiffness/pain improvement typically at 3–4 weeks. Full anti-inflammatory effect at 2–3 months. Continue under supervision for chronic cases.
Does it help sciatica?
Traditional indication for gridhrasi (sciatica). Best combined with mahanarayan taila massage and yoga (gentle hip openers).