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Bitter Melon

Lowering fasting and post-meal glucose

Evidence · Grade CSafety · Use with caution
Traditional useSafety cautionInteraction risk

A tropical fruit traditionally used across Asia for blood sugar management.

Bitter melon (Momordica charantia) is used as both food and medicine throughout Asia, Africa, and the Caribbean for diabetes and metabolic health.

Quick answer

What it is: Bitter melon (Momordica charantia) is used as both food and medicine throughout Asia, Africa, and the Caribbean for diabetes and metabolic health.

May support:Metabolic Syndrome, Prediabetes, Insulin Resistance, Obesity, High Cholesterol, Type 1 Diabetes, Type 2 Diabetes

Evidence:Evidence · Grade C

Safety:Safety · Use with caution

Evidence Summary

Evidence · Grade C

Evidence for bitter melon's use primarily comes from a combination of preclinical studies, some human clinical trials, and several meta-analyses of these trials. The existing evidence, while promising, particularly in areas of glucose management, is still considered provisional, leading to a 'C' grade.

Last reviewed · May 2026

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Why It Works

Contains charantin, vicine, and polypeptide-p — compounds with insulin-like activity.

How it works in more detail

Bitter melon (Momordica charantia) appears to influence glucose metabolism through several pathways. Preclinical and some human studies suggest it may enhance insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells, improve insulin sensitivity in peripheral tissues, and inhibit glucose absorption in the gut. Components such as charantin, vicine, and polypeptide-p are thought to mimic insulin-like effects or activate AMP-activated protein kinase (AMPK), a key regulator of cellular energy homeostasis. It may also modulate enzymes involved in gluconeogenesis, potentially reducing hepatic glucose production.

How to use

Always consult a qualified clinician.

Editorial guidance

Suggested dosage
50–100 mL juice daily, or 500–2000 mg extract daily
Research dosage range
Typically 500-2000 mg/day of dried fruit powder or extracts with varying concentrations.
Typical onset
Some effects on blood glucose may be observed relatively acutely with certain preparations, but more consistent benefits, particularly for long-term glucose management, typically reportedly require several weeks of consistent use.
Typical forms
capsule, extract, tea, juice, powder
Quality markers
A quality bitter melon product might specify the form of preparation (e.g., fruit extract, seed powder) and indicate standardization to key compounds like charantin, if available. Third-party testing for purity and absence of contaminants is also a marker of quality. Organic certification can ensure absence of pesticides.
Medication interactions
  • Antidiabetic drugs
  • Insulin
  • Blood thinners (anticoagulants)
  • Immunosuppressants
Avoid if
  • Pregnant
  • Breastfeeding
  • G6PD deficiency
  • Undergoing surgery (discontinue 2 weeks prior)
  • Hypoglycemia

Community tips

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Suggested dosage

50–100 mL juice daily, or 500–2000 mg extract daily

General guidance — discuss specifics with a clinician.

Active medicinal compounds

Charantin, vicine, polypeptide-p, momordicin, triterpenoids, glycosides, saponins, alkaloids, phenolic compounds.

Traditional use

Bitter melon has a long history of traditional use in various cultures, particularly in Asian, African, and Caribbean folk medicine. It has been employed in Ayurvedic medicine and Traditional Chinese Medicine (TCM) for conditions including diabetes, digestive issues, and as an anti-malarial agent.

Safety

Safety warnings

Can cause hypoglycemia, especially with diabetes medications. Avoid in pregnancy.

Avoid if

  • Pregnant
  • Breastfeeding
  • G6PD deficiency
  • Undergoing surgery (discontinue 2 weeks prior)
  • Hypoglycemia

Medication interactions

  • Antidiabetic drugs
  • Insulin
  • Blood thinners (anticoagulants)
  • Immunosuppressants

Reported side effects

  • Abdominal pain
  • Diarrhea
  • Hypoglycemia
  • Headache
  • Vomiting

General guidance — discuss specifics with a clinician.

Evidence ecosystem

Scientific literature, clinical guidance, government sources, ongoing research, traditional use, and lived experience — grouped by source type and quality.

No indexed evidence yet. We're still building out this remedy's evidence ecosystem.

Limitations: Current human clinical trials are often limited by small sample sizes, short study durations, and significant heterogeneity in study design, types of preparations (e.g., fruit juice, extract, powder), and dosages used. This variability makes it challenging to draw definitive conclusions and generalize findings.

This page is educational. Statements use phrases like "may support" and "has been studied for"because no remedy here is approved to cure, treat, or reverse any condition. Discussion happens on the ailment pages — community statistics here are derived from those reports. Always consult a qualified clinician.

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