Guava Leaf

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Myrtaceae

Guava Leaf

Psidium guajava
✓ Generally Safe Caution in Pregnancy
Native to: Central America, Caribbean (cultivated tropically)
Also known as: Common Guava Leaf, Tropical Guava, Apple Guava
Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

🌱 Parts Used

LeafFruit

💊 Therapeutic Uses

Acute diarrhea and gastroenteritis (WHO recommendation for developing countries — clinical trials), type 2 diabetes (leaf — reduces blood sugar), oral infections (antimicrobial gargle), wound healing.


Herbal Actions

Antidiarrheal, antimicrobial, antifungal, antidiabetic, antispasmodic, antioxidant

🔬 Active Constituents

Quercetin, isoflavonoids (farrerol, guaijaverin), tannins (guavin B — antidiarrheal), essential oil (caryophyllene, nerolidiol), vitamin C (fruit — 228mg/100g), lycopene (pink fruit)

⚗️ Preparation Methods

☕ Herbal Tea💊 Capsule

📐 Traditional Preparation Notes

Herbal Tea3–5 dried leaves per 250ml, steep 15 min or simmer 10 min, 3x daily during diarrhea
TinctureStandardized extract: 400mg 3x daily for blood sugar. Tea for diarrhea.
NotesWHO lists guava leaf tea as effective for acute diarrhea in resource-limited settings. For blood sugar: 400mg extract before meals. Guavin B (tannin) directly inhibits intestinal secretion. Combine with oral rehydration salts for diarrhea.

⚠️ Safety Information

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

Contraindications: Caution with antidiabetics (blood sugar lowering). May delay drug absorption (tannins). Caution in pregnancy at therapeutic doses.

Side Effects: Constipation with excessive use (astringent tannins). Rarely GI upset. Very well tolerated generally.

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