This is a traditional herbal tincture combining **Black Walnut Husk**, **Wormwood Leaf**, **Sweet Annie**, and **Clove Flower Bud** — a classic combination used in folk herbalism for digestive cleansing. The total blend delivers 2,000 mg per serving, but individual ingredient amounts aren't disclosed, so there's no way to evaluate whether any single herb reaches a meaningful dose.

The challenge here is evidence. None of these four botanicals have well-designed RCTs supporting their traditional cleansing claims in humans. **Sweet Annie** (Artemisia annua) contains artemisinin, which has robust pharmaceutical research for malaria — but that's for a purified compound at controlled doses, not a multi-herb extract blend. The liquid format in vegetable glycerin does offer flexible dosing, and at the suggested 3x daily use you'd reach 6,000–12,000 mg total.

The proprietary blend is the main limitation. Without knowing how much of each herb you're actually getting, you're relying entirely on tradition rather than dose-verified efficacy.

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BioStacks

Nature's Answer

Black Walnut & Wormwood 2,000 mg

Liquid · 15 servings · $0.90/serving

N/A

Score Breakdown

Proprietary Blend

Individual doses not listed on the label. We can't assess efficacy without knowing the dose of each ingredient.

Ingredients (1)

Proprietary Extract Blend

Dose not disclosed

Label Nutrition Facts

Nutrition

Calories and macros.

  • Calories10 Calorie(s)
  • Total Carbohydrates2 Gram(s)

Active Ingredients

From the label · % Daily Value

DV%

Proprietary Extract Blend2000 mg

Clove Flower Bud Extract
Black Walnut Husk Extract
Sweet Annie Aerial Parts Extract
Wormwood Leaf Extract

Other Ingredients

Fillers, coatings, and additives

2Safe

GlycerinHumectant

Safe

Purified WaterSolvent

Safe

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Sources & Scoring

Nutrient data (RDA, UL, and safety thresholds) sourced from: NIH Office of Dietary Supplements and National Academies Dietary Reference Intakes (DRI).

This is not medical advice. Consult a healthcare provider before making changes to your supplement routine.

The score analyzes what's on the label: ingredient doses vs. clinical ranges, chemical forms, evidence levels, and known interactions. It does not verify label accuracy or test for contaminants — for that, look for third-party certifications like USP or NSF.