Love Your Liver

Love Your Liver

An Ayurvedic Guide to Fostering Liver Health

As a culture, we seem to be increasingly liver-conscious—ever more aware of the importance of a healthy liver. This attention is well deserved. Without question, the liver is one of our most vital organs—perhaps second only to the lungs and the heart.

We can live with just one kidney or a single lung, and we can do without the spleen entirely. But we cannot survive without a functioning liver.

Endlessly filtering and detoxifying the blood, the liver plays a significant role in digestion and metabolism. It also synthesizes protein, produces critical enzymes and hormones, breaks down and recycles tired blood cells, and regulates glycogen storage.

In this article:

As our primary organ of detoxification, the liver has the essential job of protecting the deeper tissues from impurities in the blood that might otherwise cause harm. However, overexposure to toxins (such as alcohol, prescription or recreational drugs, environmental pollutants, and the like) can adversely impact the liver itself.

Thankfully, the liver possesses a remarkable ability to heal and rejuvenate itself. This is something that sets the liver apart from other organs and tissues.

But if we want the liver to repair itself efficiently, we must offer it periodic rest. This resource will provide some practical guidance on encouraging the overall health of the liver—both in our daily lives and in more focused periods of cleansing and detoxification.

Whether you are currently struggling with low liver energy or want to act preemptively, this article is for you. After all, loving your liver today has the potential to profoundly impact your overall health, well-being, and longevity for years to come.

Key Liver Functions

Estimates as to the total number of separate functions performed by the liver are in the range of 500.1 We've already touched on some of the liver's best-known roles, but let's take a moment to understand its broader range of functions—most of which occur quite elegantly in concert with other organs and systems outside of the liver:

Detoxification

When we eat, the digestive tract breaks our food down into small, absorbable bits of energy, which are then allowed to enter the bloodstream—rasa dhatu (the plasma). This nourishing “food juice” then travels to the liver to be further refined and filtered.

The liver removes and eliminates unwanted toxins so that they do not enter into broader circulation. The liver is also responsible for metabolizing chemical toxins, prescription and recreational drugs, and alcohol.

Bile Formation and Secretion

The Sanskrit word pitta means “bile.”2 A product of the liver, bile is an alkaline fluid that helps emulsify fats for proper digestion. It is temporarily stored in the gallbladder, which hangs at the base of the liver.

As food is digested, the gallbladder empties stored bile into the small intestine. As a result, the health of the liver and gallbladder are closely intertwined.

Digestion and Metabolism

The liver plays a critical role in digesting and metabolizing ingested nutrients. It breaks down complex substances like carbohydrates, lipids, and proteins into biologically valuable molecules like glucose, cholesterol, phospholipids, and lipoproteins.3

The liver also regulates and stores glycogen—our primary source of available biological energy.

Protein Metabolism and Synthesis

The liver is one of the primary places in the body where proteins are metabolized, synthesized, and later degraded. Most of our bodily tissues are made up of proteins, but they are particularly essential for nourishing the muscle tissue.

In fact, Ayurveda connects low or weak liver energy to physical weakness in the muscle tissues, or mamsa dhatu.4

Other Important Liver Functions

The liver is also involved in hormone creation and metabolism, the metabolism and storage of fat, the regulation of bodily pH levels, the generation of red blood cells, and the regulation of blood volume and blood pressure.5

Ayurveda and the Liver

As its functions would indicate, the liver is intimately connected to a number of other organs, tissues, and systems throughout the body. Ayurveda provides us with an ancient yet incredibly relevant perspective on these relationships, which can help us better understand how to offer meaningful support to the liver.

Ayurveda describes the liver as a fiery, hot organ. Qualitatively speaking, this fact alone signals a close relationship between the liver, agni (the fire principle), pitta dosha, and the energy of transformation.

According to Ayurveda, the following substances, channels, and energies converge within, or are influenced by, the liver:

Agni

Agni is the sacred metabolic fire within. It has a diverse range of functions, but everywhere in the body, agni serves as a vehicle of transformation.

Ayurveda describes at least 40 specific physiological manifestations of agni, five of them—the bhuta agnis—housed exclusively in the liver. Functionally, the bhuta agnis are responsible for transforming our food into biologically useful substances.

The digestive process breaks down our food into its most basic form—the five elements (earth, water, fire, air, and ether), and the bhuta agnis (one for each element) convert these elements into a form that the body can use. Only this more refined substance is actually made available to the tissues through circulation.

Pitta Dosha and its Subtypes

Pitta is primarily composed of the fire and water elements. It is the source of all heat in the body. Not surprisingly, the liver and the gallbladder are both considered important sites of pitta.

Furthermore, the bile ducts empty into the small intestine, which is the primary seat (home) of pitta. Functionally, this flow from the liver and gallbladder into the small intestine expresses an intricate relationship between several different pitta organs and the flow of pitta itself.

A brief exploration of pitta's five subtypes sheds further light on the connection between pitta, the liver, and the gallbladder.

Pachaka Pitta

Pachaka pitta is located in the small intestine and the stomach. Its primary function is the digestion, absorption, and assimilation of foods.

It works in close coordination with—is even considered part of—jathara agni (the central digestive fire), which regulates agni throughout the body.

Embodying the energy of fire, heat, and transformation, pachaka pitta is intricately connected to the digestive function of the liver.

Ranjaka Pitta

Ranjaka pitta is located chiefly in the liver and the spleen, but to some degree in the stomach as well. Of all the subtypes of pitta, ranjaka pitta is most closely related to the liver.

The Sanskrit word ranjaka means “to give color.” Ranjaka pitta gives color to the blood and to all tissues throughout the body (it even influences skin, hair, and eye color).

Ranjaka pitta also produces bile and liver enzymes and governs the transformation of rasa dhatu (plasma) into rakta dhatu (red blood cells).

Alochaka Pitta

Alochaka pitta is located in the eyes and is necessary for visual perception. It makes possible the perception of both light and color. Alochaka pitta also oversees the luster, color, and translucence of the eyes themselves.

Interestingly, there is a very significant relationship between alochaka pitta in the eyes and ranjaka pitta in the liver, meaning that there is a direct connection between the eyes and the liver.

Disorders in the liver may cause the sclera of the eye to turn yellow. Similarly, toxicity in the liver can cause visual disturbances or hypersensitivity to light.6

Bhrajaka Pitta

Bhrajaka pitta is located in the skin. Its primary functions include the maintenance of skin color, texture, temperature, and moisture. This means that our complexion and the luster of our skin are primarily functions of bhrajaka pitta.

This subtype also facilitates the digestion and processing of any substances applied to (or absorbed through) the skin.

As with the eyes, there is a relationship between the skin and the liver, so any number of skin conditions can be traced back to disorders in the liver.

Sadhaka Pitta

Sadhaka pitta is located in the brain and in the heart. It is responsible for conscious thinking and emotions. Disturbances in ranjaka pitta (found in the liver) can very much affect our state of mind.

There is also a powerful connection between specific emotions and the liver (which we will explore shortly), reflecting the link between the liver and sadhaka pitta.

Rakta Dhatu

Here in the West, we are accustomed to thinking about the blood as a single entity, but Ayurveda separates the blood into two distinct tissues. This is not because these two tissues are physically separate, but because they have very different functions in the body and striking qualitative differences as well.

Rasa dhatu (the plasma) is a cooling, nourishing substance associated with feminine and lunar energies. It delivers nutrition to cells throughout the body, and is considered cool, slow, and soothing—like kapha. 

Rakta dhatu (made up of red blood cells) is the oxygen-carrying portion of the blood, which is associated with masculine and solar energies, and with pitta dosha. It is considered hot, sharp, and penetrating.

Qualitatively, rakta dhatu, pitta dosha, and the liver are quite similar, and there is a strong functional relationship between all three.

In fact, the liver is the mula (root) of rakta vaha srotas (the channel system associated with this oxygen-carrying portion of the blood) and, in the early stages of embryonic development, the liver is almost solely responsible for the creation of red blood cells—until that role gradually shifts to the bone marrow.7

It is also significant that one of the byproducts of rakta dhatu is bile (poshaka pitta), which is essential to the lipid metabolism carried out by the liver.8

Emotions Seated in the Liver

Just as the liver is critical to the digestion of food and nutrition, it plays a vital role in the digestion of emotions, particularly those closely aligned with the liver.

The liver is considered the seat of anger, hate, and resentment. It is also tied to feelings of envy, irritability, frustration, impatience, and excessive ambition.

Not surprisingly, all of these fiery emotions are imbalanced expressions of pitta dosha. But the liver is associated with the healthier expressions of pitta as well: willpower, courage, confidence, contentment, satisfaction, enthusiasm, cooperation, acceptance, and surrender.

You can learn a lot about the health of your liver by the flavor of emotions you encounter on a regular basis.

It is also telling to notice how well you can respond to, and move through, the more challenging range of these emotions.

Do they quickly and completely overpower you? Are you able to fully release them after some time? Or are you someone who can harbor anger and resentment for years on end?

If the liver is impaired, it can be harder to process and release these emotions. Similarly, pent-up anger and resentment can undoubtedly damage the liver.

Like Increases Like

As we have seen, the liver has close ties to agni and to almost every aspect of pitta dosha. As a result, the liver is very susceptible to excess heat, and aggravated pitta is frequently either the cause—or the effect—of any given liver imbalance.

This is not to say that vata and kapha are never involved in liver imbalances. They certainly can be. But because the liver is such a hot, fiery organ, even vata and kapha types of liver imbalances tend to aggravate pitta, causing it to stagnate and accumulate in the abdomen.

Even pitta disorders elsewhere in the digestive tract (like peptic ulcers or hyperacidity) are typically rooted in impaired liver and gallbladder functioning.9 Pitta imbalances are classically hot and inflammatory in nature.

So keeping an eye out for these types of imbalances, and addressing them early on, naturally helps protect the health of the liver and gallbladder.

 

Banyan friend, Jennifer

General Support for the Liver

Even though the liver serves as our primary organ of detoxification and would seem to be susceptible to accumulating toxicity over time, it has a remarkable built-in capacity for rejuvenation.

In fact, the liver is the only human organ that can naturally regenerate lost tissue. As little as 25 percent of a liver (e.g., in a liver transplant) can regrow into a full-sized, healthy, functioning liver.10

Promoting liver health is mainly about giving the organ a periodic break—slowing the barrage of taxing inputs and allowing the liver to rest and reset. This approach is very similar to the philosophy behind a more general cleanse, which can be a terrific means of supporting liver health.

The good news is that the liver knows how to heal itself—we just have to offer it the proper support. 

So whether you are operating proactively, working to balance an existing liver imbalance, or wanting to rectify choices that may have over-taxed your liver in the past, the following strategies are intended to support the natural functioning of the liver.

Cleansing

Done correctly, a cleanse strengthens agni throughout the system and helps eliminate the very toxicity that might otherwise inhibit our overall health. 

Cleansing initiates a powerful process of renewal and healing at many levels. It is a potent therapy for the liver because it affords the entire body a period of profound rest and detoxification. 

An Ayurvedic cleanse employs diet and lifestyle therapies to draw toxins (and excess vata, pitta, and kapha) out of the tissues and into the digestive tract so that they can be eliminated. While this is sometimes an uncomfortable process, the end result of a cleanse should be a renewed level of vitality and an improved sense of balance.

Even within the Ayurvedic tradition, there are many different ways to go about cleansing. The overall structure, length, intensity, and depth can and should be adapted according to each individual's constitution and current state of balance (take our dosha quiz if you don't know yours). 

Other key factors include one's level of strength, age, and various environmental and seasonal influences.

While there are several appropriate times of year to cleanse and detox the liver, spring is perhaps the most potent.

We often eat heavier, richer, more nourishing foods during the fall and winter months. These foods are more taxing for the liver, whereas the lighter fare we tend to crave come spring is naturally cooling and cleansing for the liver.

Spring is also a perfect season to clear any accumulating heat before the onset of the summer season. Then, throughout the summer—because the summer heat can be particularly hard on the liver—it is important to watch for increased heat in the system and to clear it whenever necessary.

Our Cleansing Department offers a smorgasbord of cleansing options so that you can choose the approach that best aligns with your personal needs, lifestyle, and available time.

The following cleanses are among the options you will find discussed there:

Whatever cleanse is right for you, working with an Ayurvedic practitioner during a cleanse can provide an invaluable level of personalized support, amplifying the benefits of the process.

 

A Note on Liver Flushes

Liver “flushes” have become quite popular in recent years. These practices generally rely on malic acid from apple juice or apple cider vinegar to soften liver stones and gallstones so that they can be eliminated when the liver and gallbladder are forcibly purged. 

This practice is not Ayurvedic, per se, and is certainly beyond the scope of this article. 

In general, Ayurveda favors gentle cleansing techniques, and its more aggressive cleansing therapies are performed only after taking great care to prepare the body properly. Therefore, Ayurveda would typically employ purgative herbs to accomplish a similar outcome over a longer stretch of time.

Supportive Fluids

Overly viscous blood is harder to filter and detoxify, so staying hydrated is critical to liver health. Some fluids are particularly supportive of the liver.

Lemon Water

Drinking warm lemon water first thing in the morning kindles and protects agni and helps clear the digestive tract of ama (toxins) that may have accumulated overnight.

Despite its citric and ascorbic acid content, once metabolized, lemon water is also very alkalizing and can therefore serve to balance accumulated pitta and to purify and cleanse the blood.

Further, lemon water is a robust source of antioxidants, is considered a liver stimulant, and helps encourage liver detox while supporting bile output.

Morning Lemon Water
Ingredients:Morning Lemon Water
  • ½ fresh lemon (including the peel)
  • 2 cups filtered cold water
  • 2 cups hot water (recently boiled, or similar temperature)

Upon waking, combine the water, squeeze the fresh juice into the water, and drop in the rind. Let sit for a few minutes and drink 2–4 cups on an empty stomach (you can continue to sip on what's leftover throughout the day). Allow about 20 minutes before eating.


Note: this ratio of hot to cold water is a good guideline for the temperature, but it can be adjusted to meet your individual temperature preference.

“Blue” Water

Certain wavelengths of light, and therefore specific colors, can have a profoundly soothing effect on our systems.

One way to settle pitta systemically, and particularly in the liver, is to ingest water that has been infused with cooling blue light.

Begin by filling a clear glass jar or bottle with purified water. Cover the jar with some blue cellophane (usually available at art supply stores). Place the container in the sun for a couple of hours so that the water receives an infusion of blue light.

Drink 1– 3 cups of this water per day.11 This practice can have a remarkably cooling effect on both the blood and the liver.

Supportive Diet

Because the liver is so directly involved in the digestive process and because one of its primary jobs is to filter and eliminate any toxins that we ingest, our diets inevitably have a profound effect on the health of the liver.

The following practices will help protect and rejuvenate the liver.

Pitta-Balancing Diet for the Liver

Because pitta is so closely tied to the liver, a pitta-balancing diet is generally going to support liver health and cleansing—particularly during the hotter months of the year.

In general, the best pitta-balancing foods are mild, even cooling (as opposed to spicy), nourishing, and somewhat dry.

  • Emphasize the sweet, bitter, and astringent tastes, while minimizing the salty, sour, and pungent (spicy) tastes.
  • The bitter taste is especially supportive of the liver because it is cooling and cleansing in nature.
  • If your digestive patterns tend toward excess pitta, you will likely also find raw vegetables and green vegetable juices particularly strengthening for the liver.12
  • Avoiding any additional toxicity from recreational or prescription drugs, alcohol, or tobacco will also be supportive.
  • In order to truly rest the liver, it is best to minimize your intake of refined sugars, oils, and fats—which are the primary foods that the liver is directly responsible for metabolizing.
  • Ghee is the easiest fat for the liver to digest and it also helps to restore enzymatic function.13 During a liver detox, favor ghee over other oils and fats, but still, use it sparingly.
  • In addition, select cooling, pitta-balancing spices and garnishes such as ground coriander, fresh cilantro, fennel, cumin, turmeric, mint, and lemon or lime juice in your meals. 

Foods that Strengthen the Liver

If you want to take your efforts one step further, there are a number of foods that more specifically strengthen and support the liver. These include bitter greens like kale, beet greens, collard greens, dandelion greens, nettles, and comfrey leaf.

Green vegetables that have a lot of chlorophyll in them are also generally helpful, as are beets, carrots, and apples.

Organic sesame oil, olive oil, and avocado oil can help rejuvenate the liver but are most effective when introduced after liver function has been restored and oils and fats are being digested well.14

 

Banyan friend Kathleen harvests collard greens

Lifestyle for the Liver

Because of the close relationship between pitta and the liver, general pitta-balancing measures support the liver by clearing excess heat from the physical and emotional fields. This is particularly true during pitta season (late spring and summer). 

Keep in mind that high or imbalanced pitta can compel many to disregard the needs of their bodies in favor of accomplishing their goals. If you recognize this pattern as one of your own, the antidote to this type of behavior is to listen to, and deeply honor, your body's needs on a day-to-day basis.

The following lifestyle strategies will help keep pitta cool and calm throughout the system, thereby supporting the liver.

A Sense of Routine

Pitta thrives with a sense of daily routine, so sticking to a more predictable schedule can help keep your mind and body both cool and grounded.

In particular, try sticking to consistent mealtimes, rising with—or even before—the sun, and retiring relatively early (ideally by 10 p.m.).

Staying Cool

Pitta is fairly intolerant of prolonged sun exposure, so it is best to avoid being in the sun during the heat of the day and to favor being outdoors in the morning and evening rather than mid-day.

When you are outdoors, shield your body from undue sun exposure by wearing lightweight, loose-fitting clothes that cover as much skin as possible. The head and the eyes are particularly sensitive to light and heat, so be sure to wear a sun hat and sunglasses.

During the hottest months, you can also reduce the water temperature in your shower or bath and cool the energetic body by applying some cooling essential oils (like khus or jasmine) to the crown of the head, and to the six other chakra points.15 

Dressing in, and exposing yourself to, an abundance of cooling colors (greens, blues, purples, and whites) will also help balance pitta systemically.

Pitta-Balancing Exercise

Exercise increases heat and when done incorrectly, it can easily provoke both pitta and the liver.

Pitta is very active in the atmosphere at mid-day, from about 10 a.m. to 2 p.m., which also tends to be the hottest time of day. Mid-day is therefore not an optimal time of day to exercise.

Exercise in the early morning or evening, from about 6–10 a.m. or p.m. is far more supportive. To guard against accumulating heat, it is also important to engage in a pitta-balancing exercise regimen that is moderate rather than overly vigorous.

Activities such as walking, hiking, swimming, cycling, and yoga—all done with relaxed effort—are best for keeping pitta balanced.

Tending to the Mind-Body Connection

Ayurveda views the mind, body, and spirit as integrated parts of an inseparable whole. Therefore, physical support for the liver is far more meaningful when we are simultaneously tending to the full spectrum of influences that can affect liver health—including our emotions and our overall state of mind.

Below are some specific strategies that offer a more subtle level of support to the liver.

 

Banyan ambassador Alicia Diaz relaxing in shady grass

Emotional Hygiene

A candid look at the full range of emotional influences in your mind-body ecology can be hugely supportive of liver health. As we have seen, the liver is a hot, fiery organ that shares an affinity with a number of volatile emotions (e.g., anger, envy, irritability)—which our culture tends to judge rather harshly.

As a result, many of us have been conditioned to think that these emotions are somehow unacceptable and have become quite skillful at suppressing them. This can lead to emotional stagnation and the accumulation of emotional ama (toxicity), which is never healthy.

The toxic residues of unresolved anger, resentment, and frustration can harm any number of tissues, but are particularly likely to impact the liver. Overactive or underdeveloped capacities for willpower, courage, confidence, enthusiasm, contentment, and surrender can also affect the liver.

Finding ways to keep all of these emotional energies in balance and flowing is critical to liver health.

It is important to feel and acknowledge all of your emotions in order to ensure their complete release. One of the best ways to do this is to become a passive observer and to allow yourself to witness whatever emotions are arising in each moment.

You may also want to consider addressing any stagnant energies from your past that might need attention and resolution. In particular, the practice of actively surrendering the personal will (located in the solar plexus) to the higher, creative or spiritual will (located in the heart center) can help keep the solar plexus energetically clear.16

A sacred fire ceremony with a ghee lamp or an agni hotra kit can also be quite powerful; simply offer your unresolved emotions to the fire and ask that they be transmuted and placed in service of the highest good.

Meditation, Pranayama, and Yoga

A regular practice to cool and quiet the mind can be instrumental in promoting health throughout the mind-body organism and can be especially supportive of an emotional hot-seat like the liver. Even a 10-to-15-minute daily practice can be transformative. 

Empty Bowl Meditation is a simple and beautiful practice suitable to most anyone.

Nadi Shodhana Pranayama (Alternate Nostril Breathing) is incredibly calming, grounding, soothing to the mind, the nervous system, and effectively balances vata, pitta, and kapha.

If lingering heat is at the root of your particular imbalances, Sheetali Pranayama (Cooling Breath) is extremely cooling and is wonderfully supportive of the liver.

If movement is more appealing for you, pitta-balancing yoga focuses on a moderate pace, an attitude of surrender, and emphasizes grounding, twisting, forward folds, and freedom of movement in the postures. 

Moon Salutations offer a simple, introductory pitta-balancing flow.

Ayurvedic Self-Massage

The practice of abhyanga (self-massage with oil) is deeply detoxifying to both superficial and deep tissues. It settles the nervous system, calms and nourishes the skin, promotes healthy circulation, helps lubricate and rejuvenate all of the tissues, and supports cleansing and detoxification throughout the system, thereby supporting the liver.

On a more subtle level, this practice strengthens the emotional, energetic, and spiritual aspects of our consciousness; it creates an insulating and protective barrier around the body, helping shield us from any disruptive energies that we may encounter throughout the day.

Abhyanga also supports the liver by very effectively reducing stress and helping clear emotional disturbances.

Moon Bathing

Whenever there is overactive heat or excess pitta in the body, moon bathing is extremely cooling and soothing. Simply make a point of being outdoors and exposed to moonlight after the sun has set.

This practice is particularly powerful on a full moon, when the sunset and moonrise are the most closely aligned.

Herbal Support

Many herbs in the Ayurvedic pharmacopeia are very effective at balancing pitta, clearing accumulated heat, cleansing the blood, encouraging the flow of bile, and detoxifying the liver.

Not surprisingly, most of these herbs are primarily bitter in taste. Ghee and aloe vera gel are often used as anupans (carrier substances) to deliver liver-cleansing herbs.17 

The following herbs and formulas are worth considering for liver support:

Liver Formula

Liver Formula tablets help detoxify and rejuvenate the liver by delivering a powerful combination of cleansing, bitter, pitta-balancing herbs. This formula is very supportive of overall liver health and can also be helpful if your lifestyle habits may have taxed your liver over the years.

Blood Cleanse

For a reset in the bloodstream itself, try Blood Cleanse tablets—a formula combining several potent Ayurvedic blood-purifying herbs. This formula has a natural inclination toward the lymph, the blood, and the liver, and can help eliminate excess heat and natural toxins from these organs and tissues.

Bhumyamalaki

Bhumyamalaki is the classic Ayurvedic herb for liver support. Not only does it have a particular affinity for the liver, but it is dry, light, bitter, cooling, soothing, and cleansing.

As a result, it balances pitta and kapha, and cools excess heat in the digestive tract. Its action helps cleanse, detoxify, and strengthen both the liver and the gallbladder.

Kutki

Kutki has a deeply cleansing action on both the liver and the gallbladder, supporting healthy liver function and the proper flow of bile, and it is very supportive of the spleen. It supports proper immune function systemically and is balancing to pitta and kapha.

Because it has been severely over-harvested, Banyan no longer carries kutki.

Milk Thistle

Milk thistle has a long history of traditional use and is especially renowned for its potential to support liver health and overall well-being. It is recognized as an adaptogenic herb and has a nourishing, grounding effect.

You don't need to search far for a delicious source of milk thistle—our Bitter & Bold and Masala Chai drink mixes both include this herb as a main ingredient, making it easy to support your liver health while you enjoy a satisfying daily beverage ritual.

Turmeric

Turmeric has a strong affinity for the blood, the skin, the digestive system, and the liver. It has a deeply clarifying and detoxifying effect on the entire system, offering particular support to these organs and tissues. 

Turmeric powder can be cooked into food or taken in the convenient form of Turmeric tablets.

Guduchi

Guduchi is renowned for boosting the immune system while purifying the blood, kidneys, and liver. It is also highly effective at cooling, calming, and soothing overactive pitta.

Triphala

Triphala is revered for its unique ability to gently cleanse, detoxify, and tone the digestive tract, while replenishing, nourishing, and rejuvenating the tissues. It encourages balanced agni throughout the system, helps eliminate ama, supports ojas, and therefore lends strength to the entire system.

To cleanse the digestive tract, these herbs are typically taken about half an hour before bed. Take one to two Triphala tablets with warm water.

Or if you prefer, triphala can be prepared as a tea. Simply add ½ teaspoon Triphala powder to a cup of freshly boiled water, steep for about 10 minutes, cool, and drink. Triphala liquid extract is also available.

Amalaki

During the summer season, especially in cases of high pitta or excess heat, it often makes sense to switch from triphala to amalaki—one of the three ingredients in triphala—because it is particularly pitta-balancing and helps eliminate excess heat from the digestive tract. Amalaki is available as a tablet and in powder form.

Chyavanprash

Chyavanprash is a traditional Ayurvedic herbal jam made in a base of amalaki fruit. This balancing formula kindles agni, helps buffer the body against stress, bolsters the immune system, and is extremely pitta-balancing. 

It can help foster clarity and health in the blood, the liver, and the digestive tract. Take 1–2 teaspoons daily or use as directed by your health practitioner.

Aloe Vera Gel

Aloe vera gel is profoundly cooling and has a particular affinity for balancing excess pitta—both internally and externally. Aloe vera gel has long been revered for its capacity to rejuvenate and support natural healing in the digestive tract, particularly when there is excess heat or pitta provocation. 

For the liver, take about 2 tablespoons of gel before meals two or three times per day, or as directed by your healthcare practitioner. Aloe vera gel is also a good carrier for herbs aimed at supporting the liver and the digestive tract.

Herbs for the Mind

The following herbs are particularly supportive of the mind and emotional spheres, so if calming the mind and the emotional field is a primary focus for you in promoting liver health, these herbs are worth considering.

Gotu Kola

Gotu kola, also known as brahmi, is tridoshic, incredibly sattvic in nature, and is renowned for its ability to support both the nervous system and the mind. 

This herb very effectively cools pitta throughout the system. It also has a strong affinity for the skin and the digestive tract, which are both closely tied to liver health. 

Gotu kola is also available in tablet form.

Bhringaraj

Bhringaraj is one of the best herbs for the head and is particularly adept at balancing and rejuvenating pitta dosha. 

It very effectively calms the mind, bolsters memory, benefits the lungs, and supports healthy eyes and ears. It is also an excellent liver cleanser.

Additional Resources

Keep in mind that liver imbalances do not develop in a vacuum. They occur only within the larger context of who we are—body, mind, and spirit. If you feel inspired to study the bigger picture, we have a number of other resources and articles that may further inform your journey towards optimal health. 

The following resources are particularly relevant to the topic of liver health:

The Importance of Healthy Digestion introduces the concept of agni and offers an in-depth exploration of the importance of tending to yours.

Our Guide to Healthy Elimination is relevant due to the natural connection between the liver and overall digestive health, which of course, is reflected in the quality of our elimination.

Building a Healthy Immune System can inform a natural approach to bolstering overall immune health.

An Ayurvedic Guide to Stress Management explores fantastic tools for reducing stress and for changing our relationship with stressful situations. If stress is a predominant force in your life, this resource might very well support your healing process.

Our Cleansing Department offers a diverse array of cleansing techniques and detailed instructions on how to do a home cleanse at a time that is right for you.

Our Summer Season Guide suggests a number of strategies for staying cool—both mind and body—and balancing pitta during the hotter months.

Your Unique Flavor of Liver Support

Remember, one of the primary tenets of Ayurveda is that we should treat individuals—not their symptoms. Promoting liver health is no different. 

While the above suggestions are aimed at supporting the overall health and functioning of the liver, each of us has a different constellation of factors to consider—our constitution and our current state of balance, our age, our environment, our khavaigunyas (personal weaknesses), and the season, to mention a few. 

This is where working with a qualified Ayurvedic practitioner can be invaluable. Rather than sifting through a long list of possible remedies, you can focus on those that would most deeply serve your system in particular. 

Even if you are navigating an Ayurvedic lifestyle on your own, it is critical to understand that who you are is a far more important consideration than the particular ailments you may be trying to correct. 

This is your adventure. Chances are that the therapeutic strategies that most resonate with you will have a particularly potent impact on your state of balance. So listen to your body, your heart, and your intuition. Trust your gut. Follow your inspiration. Keep it simple. Go slow. 

And most importantly, enjoy the process. We sincerely hope that we can continue to support you on your path to vibrant health.

About the Author

Melody Mischke, AP

Melody Mischke is a certified Transformational Coach, Ayurvedic Practitioner, Yoga Teacher, Writer, and Intuitive. She began studying meditation in India at 18, and has...

Read More
Recommended

References

1 “Liver,” Wikipedia, last modified May 3, 2015, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver.

2 David Frawley, Ayurvedic Healing: A Comprehensive Guide (Delhi: Motilal Banarsidass Publishers, 1997), 141.

3 Jessie Szalay, “Liver: Function, Failure, and Disease,” LiveScience, February 19, 2015, http://www.livescience.com/44859-liver.html.

4 Vasant Lad, Textbook of Ayurveda Volume 1: Fundamental Principles of Ayurveda (Albuquerque: The Ayurvedic Press, 2002), 96.

5 Ibid., 94-6.

6 Ibid., 59.

7 “Liver,” Wikipedia, last modified May 3, 2015, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver.

8 Lad, Textbook 1: Fundamental Principles, 116.

9 Frawley, Ayurvedic Healing, 141.

10 “Liver,” Wikipedia, last modified May 3, 2015, http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liver.

11 Vasant Lad, The Complete Book of Ayurvedic Home Remedies (New York: Three Rivers Press, 1998), 114.

12 Frawley, Ayurvedic Healing, 142.

13 Ibid.

14 Ibid., 144.

15 Vasant Lad, Textbook of Ayurveda Volume 3: General Principles of Management and Treatment (Albuquerque: The Ayurvedic Press, 2012), 116-118.

16 Frawley, Ayurvedic Healing, 141.

17 Ibid., 142.

Related Products