Updated 27 January 2024
Botanical characteristics
- Kingdom: Plantae
- Division: Magnoliophyta
- Class: Magnoliopsida
- Order: Dipsacales
- Family: Valerianaceae
- Part used: Root / Rhizome
- Country of origin: Nepal
Precautions for use
Caution! Spikenard essential oil is a rare oil that can only be used by adults and adolescents.
It is non-toxic but has estrogen-like properties.
Other precautions
Warning:
- People with epilepsy and asthma should seek medical advice before using Spikenard essential oil.
- Spikenard essential oil is not recommended for prolonged use.
Cutaneous use:
- Before applying essential oil to the skin, dilute it in vegetable oil (20% essential oil to 80% vegetable oil).
Diffusion:
- Dilute Spikenard essential oil between 5 and 10% in other essential oils for atmospheric diffusion.
- Pregnant women and babies over three months old can enjoy atmospheric diffusion without risk.
Allergenic components:
Spikenard essential oil contains several biochemical allergenic components:
- Eugenol (≤ 0.5%)
- Limonene (≤ 1%)
- Linalool (≤ 1%)
Note: It is best to test the essential oil before use (two drops on the crease of the elbow for at least 24 hours to check for a reaction).
Authorised users
Adults and adolescents
Children under 6 years
Pregnant and breastfeeding women
Pregnant women younger than 3 months
Infants under 3 years old
How to use
Inhalation
Cutaneous
Oral
Diffusion
Risks of use
Oestrogen-like
Properties
- Central nervous system depressant
- Respiratory and cardiac
- Circulatory
- Anti-inflammatory
- Antibacterial
Indications
- Dull hair
- Hair loss
- Psoriasis
- Eczema
- Tachycardia
- Haemorrhoids
- Ovarian insufficiency
- Sleep disorders
- Insomnia
- Varicose veins
- Stress
- Anxiety
Directions for use/usual dosage
- Externally and locally, as an olfacto.
- Friction on the cardiac/solar/sacral plexus to calm breathing and heart rate.
- Massage synergy for venous disorders.
- As a hair growth synergy.
- As an unction to help sleep and let go.
Find out more
The plant is becoming rarer, it is now protected and its essential oil is becoming harder to find and more expensive. However, it is difficult to replace and its Chinese counterpart is not as interesting. Indian spikenard has a very strong odour, which can bother some people.