Prickly Pear

← Herb Library / Prickly Pear
Cactaceae

Prickly Pear

Opuntia ficus-indica
✓ Generally Safe Safe in Pregnancy
Native to: Mexico, Central America
Also known as: Indian Fig Cactus, Barbary Fig, Tuna Cactus, Nopal
Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

🌱 Parts Used

PadFruitFlower

💊 Therapeutic Uses

Type 2 diabetes (pad — reduces post-meal glucose, clinical evidence), hangover prevention (betalain extract — RCT reduces hangover severity), hypercholesterolemia, liver protection, IBD.


Herbal Actions

Antidiabetic (fiber and mucilage slow glucose absorption), anti-inflammatory, antioxidant, hangover relief (betalains), hepatoprotective, hypolipidemic

🔬 Active Constituents

Betaxanthins, betacyanins (betalains — distinctive pigments), flavonoids (quercetin, isorhamnetin, kaempferol), mucilage (polysaccharides), pectin, vitamin C, calcium, magnesium

⚗️ Preparation Methods

💊 CapsulePowder☕ Herbal TeaJuice

📐 Traditional Preparation Notes

Herbal TeaPad juice: 100–300ml fresh juice 2x daily. Dried pad: 2 tsp per 250ml, simmer 10 min.
TinctureStandardized extract: 500mg betalain standardized 2x daily for hangover. 2g pad daily for diabetes.
NotesFor hangover: take standardized betalain extract BEFORE drinking alcohol. For diabetes: 100–500g cooked pads daily or standardized extract. Pads must be de-spined. Traditionally eaten as vegetable (nopales) in Mexico.

⚠️ Safety Information

Safety Rating ✓ Generally Safe
Pregnancy Safe in Pregnancy
Drug Interactions Possible — consult doctor

Contraindications: Caution with antidiabetics (additive). Thorns cause deep tissue injury — handle carefully. Otherwise safe.

Side Effects: GI upset (high fiber). Diarrhea. Constipation (dose-dependent). Thorn splinters. Generally very safe.

← Back to Herb Library
Scroll to Top