Rosehip

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Rosaceae

Rosehip

Rosa canina
✓ Generally Safe Safe in Pregnancy
Native to: Europe, Western Asia, North Africa
Also known as: Dog Rose, Wild Rose, Brier Hip, Hip Tree
Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

🌱 Parts Used

Fruit

💊 Therapeutic Uses

Vitamin C deficiency, immune support, osteoarthritis (GOPO — clinical RCTs reduce pain and stiffness), kidney stone prevention (diuretic), cardiovascular protection, diarrhea (tannins).


Herbal Actions

Antioxidant, anti-inflammatory (GOPO), nutritive, mild diuretic, astringent, immunostimulant

🔬 Active Constituents

Vitamin C (400–2000mg/100g — one of richest plant sources), carotenoids (beta-carotene, lycopene), flavonoids (quercetin, rutin), GOPO (galactolipid — anti-inflammatory), tannins, pectin

⚗️ Preparation Methods

☕ Herbal Tea🏺 Tincture💊 Capsule

📐 Traditional Preparation Notes

Herbal Tea1–2 tsp dried hips per 250ml, simmer 10 min, 2–3x daily
TinctureStandardized powder: 5–10g daily for arthritis (clinical dose for GOPO studies)
NotesRemove seeds before use (irritant hairs). Simmer hips to release vitamin C. GOPO (LitoZin): 2500mg rosehip powder 2x daily — specific for osteoarthritis. Vitamin C destroyed by boiling — steep only for vitamin C.

⚠️ Safety Information

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

Contraindications: Caution with warfarin at high doses (vitamin K in seeds). Renal oxalate stone risk at very high vitamin C doses. Avoid seeds (hair irritation).

Side Effects: GI upset at high doses (vitamin C). Diarrhea. Seed hairs cause mechanical GI irritation if not removed. Otherwise very safe.

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