
clinical nutrition · 8 years experience
Drumstick pods (sahjan ki phali) are safe in pregnancy in moderate amounts, but moringa root and root bark must be avoided because they can trigger uterine contractions and miscarriage.
\Yes, you can eat drumstick (the moringa pod) safely in pregnancy. The pods, well-washed and well-cooked, are rich in vitamin C, calcium, and fibre. Drumstick leaves are safe in moderation but best limited in the first trimester. Moringa root, root bark, and large doses of seeds are not safe in pregnancy because they can stimulate the uterus (Kashyap et al, NCBI, 2022; FOGSI).
Key Takeaways
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Drumstick | The long, green seed pod of the Moringa oleifera tree, eaten as a vegetable. |
| Moringa | The tree and the broader name for any part of the plant (leaves, pods, seeds, root). |
| Sahjan / sahijan | Hindi name for drumstick or moringa. |
| Drumstick leaves | Small oval leaves of the moringa tree, used in saag and soups. |
| Moringa seeds | The dark seeds inside mature pods; eaten in small amounts in some regional cuisines. |
| Moringa root / root bark | The underground root and its outer bark; contraindicated in pregnancy. |
| Uterotonic | A substance that stimulates uterine contractions. |
| Abortifacient | A substance that can trigger pregnancy loss. |
| English | Hindi | Marathi | Bengali | Tamil | Telugu | Kannada | Malayalam | Urdu |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drumstick (pod) | सहजन / सहिजन | शेवग्याची शेंग | সজনে ডাঁটা | முருங்கைக்காய் | మునగకాయ | ನುಗ್ಗೆಕಾಯಿ | മുരിങ്ങക്കായ | سہجن |
| Moringa leaves | सहजन के पत्ते | शेवग्याची पाने | সজনে পাতা | முருங்கை இலை | మునగాకు | ನುಗ್ಗೆ ಸೊಪ್ಪು | മുരിങ്ങയില | سہجن کے پتے |
| Moringa tree | सहजन का पेड़ | शेवग्याचे झाड | সজনে গাছ | முருங்கை மரம் | మునగ చెట్టు | ನುಗ್ಗೆ ಮರ | മുരിങ്ങ മരം | سہجن کا درخت |
Drumstick pods are safe in pregnancy when well washed and well cooked; the root and root bark are not safe. This is the single most important distinction in moringa science. The pod (the vegetable you cook in sambar, dal, or curry) has been part of the Indian pregnancy diet for generations. Other parts of the plant carry different safety profiles.
| Part of the moringa plant | Safety in pregnancy | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Drumstick pods | Safe in moderation, well cooked | Standard cooking inactivates most concerns; rich in vitamin C and calcium |
| Drumstick leaves | Safe in cooked moderation, limit in the first trimester | Contain phytosterols and alpha-sitosterol that can theoretically affect estrogen receptors at high doses |
| Moringa seeds (culinary amount) | Caution; small amounts only | Limited human data in pregnancy |
| Moringa seed supplements (capsules, powders) | Avoid | Concentrated doses are not studied in pregnancy |
| Moringa root and root bark | Not safe; avoid entirely | Spirochin and moringinine alkaloids are uterotonic and have historically been used as abortifacients (Kashyap et al, 2022) |
| Moringa root tea or decoctions | Not safe; avoid entirely | Same reason as above |
About 100 to 150 g of well-cooked drumstick pods per day is safe for most pregnant women. That is roughly one full pod or two short pieces in a single meal. The Indian Council of Medical Research, National Institute of Nutrition, 2024 recommends 200 to 400 g of mixed vegetables daily in pregnancy, of which drumstick can form one portion.
| Form | Safe amount per day | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Drumstick pods, cooked | 100 to 150 g | Best in sambar, dal, sabzi, or stew |
| Drumstick leaves (cooked) | 1 to 2 tbsp, 2 to 3 times a week | Limit in the first trimester |
| Drumstick soup | 200 ml a day | A whole-food soup is fine; concentrated extracts are not |
| Drumstick sambar | A regular serving as part of a meal | Standard recipe is safe |
| Drumstick juice from leaves | Avoid concentrated juice in the first trimester | Especially if more than half a glass a day |
| Moringa supplements | Avoid in pregnancy | Concentrations exceed culinary intake |
Drumstick pods deliver about 37 kcal, 2.1 g protein, 3.2 g fibre, 120 mg vitamin C, and 30 mg calcium per 100 g. Values are drawn from the Indian Food Composition Tables, ICMR-NIN, 2020 and USDA FoodData Central.
| Nutrient (per 100 g) | Drumstick pods (raw) | Drumstick leaves (raw) | % of pregnancy daily need (pods) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Calories | 37 kcal | 64 kcal | ~1.5% |
| Protein | 2.1 g | 9.4 g | ~3% |
| Fibre | 3.2 g | 2.0 g | ~11% of 30 g need |
| Vitamin C | 120 mg | 51.7 mg | ~150% of 80 mg need |
| Vitamin A | 74 IU | 7,564 IU | ~1% (pods); rich in leaves |
| Calcium | 30 mg | 185 mg | ~3% of 1,200 mg need |
| Iron | 0.36 mg | 4.0 mg | ~1% (pods); ~14% (leaves) |
| Potassium | 461 mg | 337 mg | ~10% of 4,700 mg need |
| Folate | 44 mcg | 40 mcg | ~7% of 600 mcg need |
Note: drumstick is not a source of vitamin B12. Plant foods do not contain bioavailable B12. For B12, vegetarians need supplementation or fortified foods. Read anaemia during pregnancy for the broader iron and B12 plan.
Drumstick supports vitamin C status, calcium intake, digestion, and morning sickness relief during pregnancy. Each benefit has a clear mechanism.
| Benefit | What it does | Mechanism |
|---|---|---|
| Boosts vitamin C status | Strengthens immunity and helps iron absorption | 120 mg vitamin C per 100 g (more than oranges) |
| Supports bone health | Helps maternal and foetal bone development | Calcium and vitamin K in pods and leaves |
| Eases digestion | Reduces constipation common in late pregnancy | 3.2 g fibre per 100 g of pods |
| Helps morning sickness | Mildly settles nausea | Used widely in regional Indian first-trimester diets |
| Supports immunity | Reduces severity of common colds | Vitamin C and antioxidants |
| Mild blood-sugar effect (leaves) | Some studies suggest a hypoglycaemic effect of moringa leaves | Watch in gestational diabetes under doctor supervision |
| Helps with anaemia (leaves only) | Contributes to iron intake | 4.0 mg iron per 100 g of leaves |
A 2021 Indonesian RCT by Basri et al, J Public Health Res showed that moringa-leaf supplementation in pregnancy improved birth outcomes and reduced stunting in early childhood, but the study used culinary-level intake under monitored conditions, not high-dose supplements.
Yes, drumstick pods are safe across all three trimesters; the first trimester needs slightly more caution with leaves. A trimester-by-trimester view:
| Trimester | Weeks | Pods | Leaves | Cautions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| First | 1 to 12 | Safe, 100 g a day | Limit to twice a week | Avoid root, bark, and supplements entirely |
| Second | 13 to 27 | Safe, 100 to 150 g a day | Safe in normal cooking | Watch sugar control if on GDM diet |
| Third | 28 to 40 | Safe, 100 to 150 g a day | Safe in normal cooking | Helps with constipation and cramps |
For trimester-related discomfort, read nausea and vomiting during pregnancy and indigestion and heartburn during pregnancy.
Drumstick pods do not cause miscarriage in normal culinary amounts. Moringa root, root bark, and high-dose seed supplements can. This is the most important safety message of the article. The risk is part-specific and dose-specific.
For other foods to be careful about, read foods that cause miscarriage and miscarriage during early pregnancy.
Cook drumstick pods thoroughly until tender; raw pods are tough, woody, and not eaten in standard Indian cuisine. Practical preparations that are safe and traditional:
Avoid raw drumstick salads, raw moringa-leaf smoothies, and any "moringa cleanse" that promises rapid weight loss or detoxification.
The most common side effects from overeating are bloating, gas, mild diarrhoea, and rarely a transient drop in blood pressure or blood sugar. Pay attention to these:
| Side effect | Trigger | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Bloating or gas | Eating over 200 g a day | Reduce to 100 to 150 g; cook well |
| Mild diarrhoea | Sudden increase in fibre | Slow the addition over a week |
| Drop in blood sugar | Combining drumstick leaves with insulin or metformin for GDM | Monitor; speak to your doctor |
| Drop in blood pressure | Large servings of leaves on an empty stomach | Eat with a balanced meal |
| Allergic reaction (rare) | Personal sensitivity | Stop and consult your doctor |
| Uterine contractions | Only from root, bark, or supplements | Avoid these entirely |
Pick smooth, firm, dark-green pods that snap cleanly. Avoid pods with bumpy skin, dry tips, or strong bitterness. Storage tips:
Mylo recommends drumstick pods as a regular pregnancy-friendly vegetable, treats drumstick leaves as a moderate-use option (limited in the first trimester), and rules out moringa root, root bark, and concentrated supplements throughout pregnancy. The safety story of moringa is a parts story, not a "yes or no" story. Cook the pods well, keep leaves to a normal cooking amount, and skip every product that lists "moringa root", "moringa bark", or "moringa extract" without a clear ingredient source.
For related guides, read amla in pregnancy, arbi in pregnancy, foods that cause miscarriage, and foetal growth and development during pregnancy.
Is drumstick safe in the first trimester of pregnancy?
Yes, drumstick pods are safe in the first trimester in normal cooked amounts (100 g a day). Drumstick leaves are safe in moderation but better limited to 1 to 2 cooked tablespoons twice a week during the first trimester. Avoid all moringa root, root bark, root tea, and concentrated moringa supplements throughout pregnancy because they can stimulate uterine contractions (Kashyap et al, 2022).
Can drumstick cause miscarriage?
The drumstick pod, eaten as a normal cooked vegetable, does not cause miscarriage. The risk is from moringa root, root bark, and concentrated seed supplements, which contain alkaloids that can trigger uterine contractions. Stay with the cooked pod and cooked leaves in culinary amounts and avoid every "moringa" product whose ingredients you cannot verify.
Can I drink drumstick or moringa leaf juice during pregnancy?
Concentrated moringa leaf juice is not recommended in the first trimester, and only small amounts (less than half a glass a day) are appropriate later. Stay with cooked leaves in dal or saag instead. Any juice that lists root, bark, or "extract" should be avoided throughout pregnancy.
Is drumstick soup good for pregnancy?
Yes, drumstick soup made from the pod with garlic, ginger, and pepper is a comforting and pregnancy-friendly preparation. It supports vitamin C intake and is gentle on the stomach during morning sickness or a cold. Use about 100 g of pod per bowl and finish with fresh coriander or a small splash of lime.
Can I eat drumstick sambar during pregnancy?
Yes, drumstick sambar is safe and is a traditional South Indian pregnancy meal. The standard recipe uses cooked pods and dal in well-tolerated amounts. If you have gestational diabetes, watch the rice portion that accompanies the sambar rather than the sambar itself.
Is drumstick safe with gestational diabetes?
Yes, drumstick pods are low in calories and rich in fibre, which helps slow sugar absorption. Drumstick leaves have a mild hypoglycaemic effect in some studies, so combining them with diabetes medication should be done under your doctor's supervision to avoid a blood sugar drop (gestational diabetes guide).
Can I eat drumstick after embryo transfer or in early IVF pregnancy?
Drumstick pods in normal cooked amounts are generally considered safe after embryo transfer. Avoid moringa root, root bark, supplements, and large amounts of leaf juice, especially in the two-week wait and first trimester. Confirm any dietary doubts with your IVF specialist.
Pregnancy me sahjan kha sakte hain?
Haan, pregnancy me sahjan ki phali (drumstick) khana surakshit hai, agar achchhi tarah dhokar aur pakaakar khaayein. Roz 100 se 150 gram tak khaayein. Sahjan ke patte bhi pakakar limit me khaaye ja sakte hain (pehle trimester me kam). Lekin sahjan ki jad (root) aur jad ki chhaal (bark) pregnancy me bilkul nahi khaani chahiye, kyonki ye uterus me sankuchan kar sakti hain aur miscarriage ka khatra badha sakti hain (Kashyap et al, 2022).
Shevga in pregnancy safe ahe ka?
Hoy, gabhdarpanaat shevgachi sheng (drumstick pod) shijavlelya swarupat khane surakshit aahe. Divsala 100 te 150 gram thodi-thodi kara. Shevgachi paane mahinya-mhayane khallyas chalata, paan pahilya trimesterat kami theva. Shevgachi muli ani saal pregnancy madhe taalavyat, te garbhashayachya kambya vadhavtaat.
Munagaku pregnancy lo safe na?
Avunu, munagakaya (drumstick pods) ni baaga vudikincha pregnancy lo tinacchu, rozu 100 to 150 grams. Munagaku (leaves) ni paaramaarya parimitulalo tinacchu kani modati trimester lo takkuva ga tinandi. Kani moringa veru, veru bark, mariyu concentrated supplements ni pregnancy lo aaipodadu, edi uterus contractions ki dari teesthundi.
Muringayila garbhakalathu kazhikkamo?
Murungakkaya (drumstick) garbhakalathu nallavannam pakam cheythu kazhikkam, oru divasathil 100 muthal 150 gram vare. Muringayila moderate amount il safe aanu pakshe aadyathe trimester il kuravu cheyyuka. Moringa root, bark, supplements ennivayum garbhakalathu pooram ozhivakkanam.
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I am a certified Diabetes educator. I have also won an award for best Dietitian in Meerut from PrimeTime Media Research Pvt. Ltd.
Yeh kha skte hu kya 4 month pregnancy me
Drumstick is good for 2nd termistor of pregnancy?
Your body needs extra nutrition this trimester - these can help.





This content is for informational purposes only and should not replace professional medical advice. Consult with a physician or other health care professional if you have any concerns or questions about your health. If you rely on the information provided here, you do so solely at your own risk.

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