Agrimony Interactions Overview

Check For Interactions With Agrimony

Agrimony

Also known as
  • Agrimonia eupatoria
  • Agrimone
  • Agrimonia
  • Church Steeples
  • Churchsteeples
  • Cockeburr
  • Cocklebur
  • Common Agrimony
  • Fragrant Agrimony
  • Francormier
  • Herba Agrimoniae
  • Philanthropos
  • Soubeirette
  • Sticklewort
Agrimony Agrimony (Agrimonia eupatoria) is a perennial herb with yellow flowers and serrated leaves, found in Europe, Asia, and parts of Africa. Its dried above-ground parts and seeds are used in herbal preparations. These contain 4% to 10% condensed tannins like agrimoniin, ellagitannin, and gallotannin, as well as flavonoids, terpenoids, phenolic acids, and coumarins. Notably, luteolin-7-glucuronide is the major flavonoid. Agrimony provides vitamins C, thiamine, and K, along with other beneficial compounds. Agrimony has been traditionally used in herbal medicine to assist in treating bleeding, diabetes, sore throat, as well as cardiovascular, gallbladder, gastrointestinal, kidney, liver, and skin conditions.
There are 84 drugs known to interact with Agrimony

Commercial Products That Contain Agrimony

Below is a list of known supplements that contain Agrimony:

Please note that this may not be a complete list of all commercially available dietary supplements that contain Agrimony.

Drugs that interact with Agrimony

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Parts of this content are provided by the Therapeutic Research Center, LLC.

DISCLAIMER: Currently this does not check for drug-drug interactions. This is not an all-inclusive comprehensive list of potential interactions and is for informational purposes only. Not all interactions are known or well-reported in the scientific literature, and new interactions are continually being reported. Input is needed from a qualified healthcare provider including a pharmacist before starting any therapy. Application of clinical judgment is necessary.

© 2021 Therapeutic Research Center, LLC