Product Description
The Wheel-Breaker — Ayurveda's Answer to the Ring
Seed | Traditionally Harvested & Naturally Dried
Senna tora (syn. Cassia tora) | Fabaceae
चक्रमर्द • Chakramarda • Dadrughna • Prapunnada • Edagaja
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Attribute |
Details |
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Sanskrit Name |
चक्रमर्द (Chakramarda) • दद्रुघ्न (Dadrughna) • प्रपुन्नाड (Prapunnada) |
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Botanical Name |
Senna tora (syn. Cassia tora) |
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Plant Family |
Fabaceae (Leguminosae) |
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Part Used |
Seed │ Primarily for external preparation |
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Ayurvedic Category |
दद्रुघ्न (Dadrughna) • कुष्ठघ्न (Kushthaghna) • कण्डूघ्न (Kandughna) • कृमिघ्न (Krimighna) |
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Taste (Rasa) |
Katu (Pungent) |
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Quality (Guna) |
Laghu (Light) • Ruksha (Dry) |
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Potency (Virya) |
Ushna (Warm) |
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Post-Digestive Effect |
Katu (Pungent) |
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Dosha Action |
Kapha-Vata Shamaka │ Increases Pitta |
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Origin |
Traditionally Harvested Across Bharat |
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Shelf Life |
24 months from date of processing |
The Herb
Chakra — the wheel. Marda — to crush, to break.
The classical writers named this seed for what it destroys. Dadru — the ringworm lesion — spreads outward in an expanding ring, a wheel upon the skin. Chakramarda is the wheel-breaker. Its second name, Dadrughna, says the same thing without metaphor: the destroyer of dadru.
No dravya in the Ayurvedic pharmacopoeia carries a name more precisely fitted to its purpose.
Chakramarda grows as a monsoon weed across Bharat — roadsides, waste ground, the edges of fields. It asks nothing and appears everywhere. And in this common plant the classical physicians found the specific remedy for a condition that has troubled Bharat's humid seasons for as long as records exist.
Its rasa is pungent, its virya warm, its guna light and dry. It pacifies Kapha and Vata, and it increases Pitta. The classical literature attributes to it Kushthaghna (skin-wellness), Dadrughna (the wheel-breaker), Kandughna (relief of itching), Krimighna, Varnya, Vishaghna, and Vranaropana.
And its foremost classical use is external.
Chakramarda Taila — the seed oil — is applied to dadru kushtha. Chakramarda Lepa — the seed paste — is applied to the lesion. This is anubhuta yoga, the preparation of proven experience, recorded and used for centuries. The seed is ground, mixed, and put upon the skin.
ASLI AYURVEDA offers Chakramarda seed in its most authentic form — carefully harvested, naturally dried, preserved without additives or artificial enhancement.
This is not a wellness herb to be taken with tea.
It is a specific and targeted dravya, and the tradition applied it where the trouble was.
What the Ancient Texts Say
Classical Placements
Charaka Samhita — Shaka Varga, the group of leafy vegetables
Bhavaprakasha Nighantu — Haritakyadi Varga
Dhanvantari Nighantu — Karaviradi Varga
Kaiyadeva Nighantu — Oshadhi Varga
Raja Nighantu — Shatahvadi Varga
Sushruta Samhita
Sushruta records Chakramarda in Chikitsa Sthana 9.12–13.
The Names Are the Pharmacology
Chakramarda — the crusher of the wheel, the ring.
Dadrughna — the destroyer of dadru, ringworm.
Kharjughna — the destroyer of itching.
Pamaghati — the striker-down of pama, papular eruption.
Edagaja, Prapunnada, Meshakshi-kusuma — the sheep's-eye flower, for the shape of its leaflets.
A dravya whose synonyms are its indications. The classical writers did not require a separate section on therapeutic action.
Attributed Actions
Kushthaghna (skin-wellness), Dadrughna, Kandughna (relief of itching), Krimighna (anti-parasitic), Varnya (complexion-favouring), Vishaghna (anti-toxic), Vranaropana (wound-healing).
Classical indication: Kushtha, Dadru, Pama, Kandu, Visha.
A Note on Internal Use — Which We Will Not Minimise
The classical record on internal use is uncomfortable, and we will state it rather than omit it.
Bhojana Kutuhalam records Chakramarda as pungent and describes it as producing severe intoxication. The classical literature further records that the seed is considered unfavourable to Shukra — reproductive essence — and to the developing foetus. The seeds carry purgative action and the leaves contain cathartic constituents.
ASLI AYURVEDA offers Chakramarda seed for external preparation. We do not provide internal dosage instructions, and we do not encourage internal use without the direct supervision of a qualified Ayurvedic physician.
This is what the texts say. We do not edit the texts to make a product easier to sell.
Ayurvedic Classical Understanding
Across Ayurvedic literature and traditional practice, Chakramarda seed is associated with:
Dadrughna — the classical specific against the ringed lesion
Kushthaghna — traditional skin-wellness applications
Kandughna — relief of itching
Krimighna — traditional anti-parasitic action
Varnya — favourable to complexion
Vranaropana — wound-healing traditions
External application as taila and lepa
Kapha and Vata pacification
Its enduring place within Ayurveda reflects a tradition confident enough to name a remedy after the affliction it addressed.
Benefits
Ayurvedic Benefits
Traditionally revered as the classical Dadrughna dravya — named for the affliction it addresses
Classically attributed Kushthaghna — skin-wellness action
Traditionally attributed Kandughna — relief of itching
Recorded across five classical Nighantu placements
Traditionally attributed Varnya — favourable to complexion
The foundation of Chakramarda Taila and Chakramarda Lepa, preparations of proven experience
Traditionally associated with pacification of Kapha and Vata
External Wellness Benefits
Traditionally applied to support skin comfort and clarity
May support relief from itching when prepared as lepa
Traditionally associated with the appearance of the skin surface
Traditionally valued in monsoon-season skin routines
May support skin recovery, reflecting its classical Vranaropana attribution
Ritual Wellness Benefits
Traditionally prepared at home as taila and lepa across Bharat's households
Grows as a monsoon weed — a reminder that Ayurveda's remedies arrive with the season that requires them
Supports the Ayurvedic understanding that some dravyas belong upon the skin, not within the body
Historically valued in the humid months when skin trouble is common
How to Use Your Chakramarda
Chakramarda Lepa — The Classical Paste
Grind Chakramarda seed to a fine powder. Combine with a small quantity of water, or with buttermilk, or with lime juice according to traditional regional practice, until a smooth paste is formed.
Apply externally to the affected area of skin. Allow to remain, then wash with warm water.
Traditionally repeated daily during the period of need.
Chakramarda Taila — The Seed Oil
The classical anubhuta yoga — the preparation of proven experience. Chakramarda seed is processed into a medicated oil, applied externally to dadru kushtha.
Prepared by a qualified Ayurvedic pharmacy. We supply the seed; the preparation of medicated oil is properly the work of a rasashala.
Patch Test First — Always
Chakramarda's Ushna virya and pungent rasa are potent upon the skin. Before applying to any substantial area, apply a small quantity to the inner forearm and wait several hours.
This applies to every person, on every first use.
On Internal Use
ASLI AYURVEDA supplies Chakramarda seed for external preparation. The classical literature records the seed as purgative, as producing intoxication in quantity, and as unfavourable to Shukra and to the developing foetus.
We provide no internal dosage. Any internal use must be under the direct supervision of a qualified Ayurvedic physician who has examined you.
Seasonal Wisdom
Monsoon (Varsha Ritu): The season of the herb, and the season of the affliction. Chakramarda appears with the rains, and dadru appears with them too.
Post-Monsoon (Sharada Ritu): Traditionally continued as humidity persists.
Summer (Grishma Ritu): The Ushna virya aggravates Pitta, and heat aggravates the skin. Used with care.
Winter (Hemanta & Shishira): Traditionally less required.
Purity & Sourcing
ASLI AYURVEDA's Chakramarda is harvested across Bharat, where it grows as a monsoon plant in the open ground.
We supply seed only, separated from the pericarp as classical practice requires. Leaf, root, and shoot are used in some traditions but are distinct materials and are not offered under this name. Two species are accepted as source — Cassia tora and Cassia obtusifolia — and we identify our material against pharmacopoeial standard.
The seed is naturally dried and preserved without chemical fumigation, synthetic enhancement, or artificial colouring.
Processing takes place within our Z Gold Certified Greenroom Infrastructure — a spiritually aligned Ayurvedic wellness sanctum where Vedic chants resonate continuously, preserving the atmosphere and sanctity of classical herbal preparation.
No additives.
No preservatives.
No synthetic enhancement.
No compromise with authenticity.
What you receive is Chakramarda in the honest form Bharat's households have prepared for centuries — pungent, warming, and intended for the skin.
This is the Power of Pure.




