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Evidence-Based Supplement Research
Evidence-Based Supplement Research
Surprising

Chamomile reduced mucositis severity across 11 trials — but the studies were too small and varied to say how much.

This meta-analysis suggests chamomile may help with mouth sores from cancer treatment, but because the 11 trials were small and the dose wasn't standardized, the evidence is still too weak to act on.

A meta-analysis of 11 randomized trials found that chamomile significantly reduced the severity of mucositis — painful mouth sores common in chemotherapy — and also lowered pain levels. However, the studies didn't specify the dose used, and the overall evidence is still early, so the results are promising but not yet reliable enough to recommend chamomile as a standard treatment.

Where this fits in the evidence

This is among the first studies we've indexed on Chamomile for Reduced Mucositis Severity — treat it as an early signal until more research accumulates.

This is a plain-language summary of a research finding, not medical advice. Pillser surfaces research signals to help you decide what's worth investigating — always consult a qualified professional before changing what you take.

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