🍶

Dashmularishta

Daśamūlāriṣṭa · ARISHTA

Fermented tonic of the ten classical roots — traditionally used in post-partum care, respiratory conditions, and general debility.

9
Ingredients
5
Traditional Uses
4
FAQs
Bhaishajya Ratnavali
Classical Source

About Dashmularishta

Dashmularishta is the most versatile classical arishta, built on the dashmool (ten roots) — a combination of five greater roots (bilva, agnimantha, shyonaka, patala, gambhari) and five lesser roots (shalaparni, prishnaparni, brihati, kantakari, gokshura). It is the foremost vata-pacifying formulation in the arishta category, documented in Bhaishajya Ratnavali.

Its widest traditional use is post-partum (sutika) recovery — supporting uterine involution, milk production, and recovery from childbirth fatigue. It is also prescribed for chronic respiratory conditions (asthma, bronchitis), cardiac weakness, debility after illness, and male/female reproductive complaints. The fermentation enhances bioavailability and self-preserves the preparation at ~5–10% ABV.

As a Schedule E(1) medicine in India, it requires prescription handling. Typical dose: 15–30ml with equal water, twice daily after meals.

Classical Reference

Bhaishajya Ratnavali — Sutika Chikitsa and Vata-vyadhi chapters

Dosha Effect

Vata
Pitta
Kapha

Ingredients (9)

IngredientRoleProportion
Dashmool (Ten Roots) chief - vata-pacifying 2.4 kg decoction
Ashwagandha rasayana 48 g
Manjistha rakta-shodhaka 48 g
Haritaki anulomana 48 g
Lodhra stambhana 48 g
Dhataki pushpa fermentation starter 768 g
Jaggery fermentation substrate 14 kg
Honey anupana / preservative 4 kg
...plus 20 additional herbs synergistic 48 g each

Preparation Method

Dashmool decoction reduced to ¼. Cooled, combined with jaggery, honey, powdered herbs and dhataki pushpa in earthen pot. Fermented 30–60 days until arishta-siddhi lakshana appears. Filtered and matured.

Traditional Uses

Post-partum recovery

Classical sutika-paricharya — supports uterine recovery, milk production, fatigue.

Respiratory support

Traditional indication for chronic kasa (cough), shvasa (asthma-like).

General debility

Post-illness convalescence, chronic fatigue.

Cardiac tonic

Classical indication for hrid-daurbalya (cardiac weakness).

Vata disorders

All vata-vyadhi presentations with debility.

Dosage Guidelines

FormAmountTiming
Adults15–30 mlTwice daily after meals, diluted with equal water
Post-partum15–20 mlTwice daily for 30–45 days

Anupana (Recommended Carriers)

  • Equal quantity water — Standard dilution

Contraindications & Interactions

Avoid or use with caution in:

  • Pregnancy (alcohol content + uterine stimulants)
  • Children
  • History of alcohol use disorder
  • Severe liver disease
  • Uncontrolled diabetes (sugar)

Drug interactions:

  • CNS depressants (additive with alcohol)
  • Disulfiram, metronidazole
  • Anticoagulants

Schedule E(1) — 5–10% ABV. Not for unsupervised long-term use.

Frequently Asked Questions

Dashmularishta for post-delivery care — how long?

Classical protocols prescribe 30–45 days starting from day 3 post-delivery. Discuss duration with your Chikitsak and obstetrician, especially if breastfeeding.

Is it safe while breastfeeding?

The alcohol content is a consideration. Typical dose delivers ~0.75–1.5 ml pure alcohol — comparable to what some cultures consider acceptable in cooking wine. Some Chikitsaks prefer dashmool kashaya (non-fermented) for breastfeeding mothers. Discuss with your practitioner.

Can men take dashmularishta?

Yes — it is traditionally indicated for general debility, respiratory conditions and male fatigue. It is not exclusively for women.

Dashmularishta vs ashwagandharishta?

Dashmularishta is broader (dashmool base, more versatile). Ashwagandharishta is more specifically nervine/anxiety-focused.

Related Formulations

🍷 Ashwagandharishta🧠 Saraswatarishta🍇 Draksharishta