Glossary: Ayurvedic & Botanical Terms
Last reviewed: 28 May 2026
Quick Answer: What does this glossary cover?
This glossary defines the Ayurvedic and botanical terms used across the Diabec website, including Ayurveda, Gurmar, Rasayana, charantin, swertiamarin, saponin, glycoside, preclinical, WHO-GMP, traditional use, food supplement, and on-hold claim. Diabec is a UK food supplement made by NIBARTECH LTD; it is not a medicine and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.
Plain-language definitions of the Ayurvedic and botanical terms used across the Diabec website. Each term links back to the ingredient or compliance topic where it appears in fuller context.
- Ayurveda
- A traditional system of medicine originating in the Indian subcontinent over 3,000 years ago, recognised by the WHO as a traditional health system. In the UK, EU, US, Australia and Singapore, Ayurvedic terms are used descriptively; no Ayurvedic ingredient on this site is registered as a medicine.
- Gurmar
- Hindi for “sugar destroyer”. Common name for Gymnema sylvestre, used in Ayurveda for over 2,000 years.
- Rasayana
- Ayurvedic category for rejuvenative or restorative botanicals, traditionally used for long-term wellbeing.
- Karela
- Hindi for Bitter Melon (Momordica charantia), a fruit traditionally eaten across India, Okinawa, the Caribbean and Southeast Asia.
- Mamejava
- Gujarati for Enicostemma littorale (also Chhota Chirayata), a bitter botanical native to western India used in Bhil and Garasia tribal medicine.
- Methi
- Hindi for Fenugreek (Trigonella foenum-graecum), a seed listed in Egyptian medical papyri from around 1500 BCE.
- Jamun / Java Plum
- Common names for Syzygium cumini, a fruit tree native to the Indian subcontinent.
- Nimba
- Sanskrit for Neem (Azadirachta indica), a tree native to the Indian subcontinent known as the “village pharmacy”.
- Charantin
- A bioactive steroidal saponin isolated from Bitter Melon, studied in preclinical glucose-metabolism research.
- Swertiamarin
- A secoiridoid glycoside isolated from Enicostemma, the main compound studied by researchers at M.S. University of Baroda.
- Gymnemic acid
- A family of triterpenoid saponins from Gymnema sylvestre, responsible for the temporary sweet-taste-suppression effect of fresh leaves.
- 4-hydroxyisoleucine
- A non-protein amino acid found in Fenugreek seeds, studied for effects on insulin secretion in preclinical models.
- Polypeptide-p
- An insulin-like protein isolated from Bitter Melon (Momordica charantia), reported in early 20th-century pharmacology literature.
- Azadirachtin
- A limonoid compound from Neem, widely studied across pharmacology and agriculture.
- Saponin
- A naturally occurring glycoside with surfactant (soap-like) properties, found in many medicinal plants. Charantin and Gymnemic acid are saponins.
- Glycoside
- A molecule consisting of a sugar bound to another functional group. Many plant bioactives, including swertiamarin and the saponins, are glycosides.
- Botanical
- A plant-derived ingredient. The European Food Safety Authority maintains a separate compendium of plants and plant-derived substances used in food supplements.
- Preclinical
- Laboratory, cell-culture or animal research conducted before human clinical trials. Preclinical findings do not confirm benefit in humans.
- GMP / WHO-GMP
- Good Manufacturing Practice, a quality-assurance framework for medicines and supplements. WHO-GMP is the World Health Organization version recognised across multiple jurisdictions. Diabec is manufactured in a WHO-GMP certified facility in India.
- Traditional use
- Under EU/UK regulation, “traditional use” references describe historical patterns of use over generations. They are not authorised health claims and do not imply EFSA, MHRA or FDA approval.
- Food supplement
- Defined in the UK by the Food Supplements (England) Regulations 2003 (and equivalent SIs in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland), and in the EU by Regulation 2002/46/EC: a concentrated source of nutrients or other substances intended to supplement the normal diet. Diabec is sold as a food supplement, not a medicine.
- On-hold claim
- A botanical health claim that is pending evaluation by the European Food Safety Authority (EFSA) under EU Regulation 1924/2006. In the UK these claims are administered separately through the GB Register of Nutrition and Health Claims (DHSC), based on the retained version of Regulation 1924/2006. On-hold claims may currently be used in line with the relevant register but have not been authorised.
- Regulators referenced on this site
- EFSA, European Food Safety Authority (EU). MHRA, Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (UK). FDA, Food and Drug Administration (US). TGA, Therapeutic Goods Administration (Australia). HSA, Health Sciences Authority (Singapore). Health Canada (Canada).