Abuta

Botanical

What is it

Abuta refers to South American climbing vines in the genera Abuta and Cissampelos, used in Amazonian traditional medicine for women's health, fevers, and digestive complaints.

Evidence for 1 use

AI-assisted evidence assessment — talk to your doctor before relying on any single supplement.

Traditional women's health and digestive use

Mixed Evidence

Used in Amazonian traditional medicine for menstrual symptoms, fevers, and digestion. Controlled human trials are not available.

How it works

Abuta plants contain bisbenzylisoquinoline alkaloids that have shown anti-inflammatory and muscle-relaxant activity in preclinical studies. Some related alkaloids have neuromuscular blocking properties similar to curare. Human evidence for supplement use is limited.

Dosage

No standardized supplement dose. Traditional preparations vary widely; supplement labels are inconsistent.

When and how to take it

No formal timing guidance.

1 commercial form

Compare the main delivery options and what they’re best suited for.

Dried bark or root

Traditional decoction or capsule format.

Variable alkaloid content

Safety

Limited published human safety data. Alkaloid content may carry pharmacological risks at higher doses; quality varies by source.

Who should be cautious

Avoid in pregnancy (traditional use for affecting uterine tone), breastfeeding, and in children. Caution with cardiovascular and neuromuscular conditions.

Interactions

Possible additive effects with sedatives, muscle relaxants, or blood pressure medications based on preclinical activity.

Frequently asked questions

What is abuta used for?

Amazonian traditional medicine has used it for menstrual symptoms and digestive complaints. Clinical evidence is limited.

Is it safe?

Limited safety data. Avoid during pregnancy and consult a clinician before use.

References

Abuta on WikidataWikidata link

Abuta on NIH DSLD (US supplement label database)NIH Dietary Supplement Label Database link

Research on Abuta (PubMed search)PubMed link

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Evidence-based·How we grade evidence

Disclaimer: These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This page is educational, not a substitute for personalized medical advice. Evidence grades are AI-assisted assessments — talk to your doctor before starting any new supplement, especially if you’re pregnant, breastfeeding, on medications, or managing a chronic condition.