Ayurvedic medicine originated in the early evolution of India about 3,000-5,000 years ago.
These formulations are taken from the ancient Vedic text or Vedas (books of Ayurveda), the ancient religious and philosophical texts that are the oldest surviving literature in the world, which makes Ayurvedic medicine the oldest surviving healing system.
Type of Ayurvedic formulations
CLASSICAL AYURVEDIC MEDICINES
These medicines are present in traditional Ayurvedic text books such as Charaka Samhita, Sushruta Samhita etc. The manufacturing company follows the same formula and prepares medicines. For e.g bhasmas, asavas, arishtas, taila etc.
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES
These are also known as patent medicines or modern Ayurvedic medicines. Their formula, dosage form are decided by the manufacturing company and ingredients used in these preparation are not found in traditional Ayurvedic text books. Every company has its own formula and conducts clinical trial, research on the medicine about its efficacy. For e.g. capsules, syrups etc.
Herbal formulation
Herbal formulation shall mean a dosage form consisting of one or more herbs or processed herb(s) in specified quantities to provide specific nutritional, cosmetic benefits, and/or other benefits meant for use to diagnose treat, mitigate diseases of human beings or animals and/or to alter the structure or physiology of human beings or animals.
Herbal preparations are obtained by subjecting herbal substances to treatments such as extraction, distillation, expression, fractionation, purification, concentration or fermentation.
These include comminuted or powdered herbal substances, tinctures, extracts, essential oils, expressed juices and processed exudates.
Challenges in Herbal formulation
A key challenge is to objectively assess conflicting toxicological, epidemiological, and other data and the verification of herbal materials used.
Management within ranges of risk
Communication of uncertainty
Pharmacological, toxicological, and clinical documentation
Pharmacovigilance
Understanding why addition of harmful additives works evaluating “drug” interactions
Constraints with clinical trials and people available
Standardization
Safety, and efficacy assessment
Factors affecting safety and Quality
Quality of starting materials
Complexity of nomenclature of herbal ingredients
Chemical contamination by Heavy metals
Choice of chemical markers
Adulteration with synthetic chemical drugs
Constrains of herbal formulation
Indiscriminate harvesting and poor post-harvest treatment practices.
Lack of research on the development of high- yielding varieties, domestication etc.
Poor agriculture and propagation methods.
Inefficient processing techniques leading to low yields and poor quality products.
Poor quality control procedures.
Lack of current good manufacturing practices.
Lack of R & D on product and process development.
Difficulties in marketing.
Lack of trained personnel and equipment.
Lack of facilities to fabricate equipment locally.
Lack of access to latest technological and market information
Factors affecting herbal formulation
Drug adulteration
Faulty collection
Imperfect preparation
Incorrect storage
Gross substitution with plant material
Substitution with exhausted drugs
Ayurvedic formulations
Ayurvedic medicine originated in the early evolution of India about 3,000-5,000 years ago.
These formulations are taken from the ancient Vedic text or Vedas (books of Ayurveda), the ancient religious and philosophical texts that are the oldest surviving literature in the world, which makes Ayurvedic medicine the oldest surviving healing system.
Type of Ayurvedic formulations
CLASSICAL AYURVEDIC MEDICINES
These medicines are present in traditional Ayurvedic text books such as Charaka Samhita, Sushruta Samhita etc. The manufacturing company follows the same formula and prepares medicines. For e.g bhasmas, asavas, arishtas, taila etc.
PROPRIETARY MEDICINES
These are also known as patent medicines or modern Ayurvedic medicines. Their formula, dosage form are decided by the manufacturing company and ingredients used in these preparation are not found in traditional Ayurvedic text books. Every company has its own formula and conducts clinical trial, research on the medicine about its efficacy. For e.g. capsules, syrups etc.
Types and Forms of Ayuvedic formulations
Solid dosage forms:
Gutika & Chruna
Semi solid forms:
Avaleha & Ghrita
Liquid dosage forms:
Asava , Arista & Taila