Browse by function
Anti-inflammatory ingredients
Japanese ingredients used for anti-inflammatory effects across cosmetics, foods, and supplements.
16 ingredients in this view.
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Angelica Acutiloba Root Extract
Tōki-kon ekisu
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Angelica Keiskei Extract
Ashitaba ekisu
Cosmetics · Oils & lipids
Aomori Hiba
Aomori hiba · INCI: Thujopsis Dolabrata Wood Oil
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Chrysanthemum Morifolium Flower Extract
Kiku-hana ekisu
Cosmetics · Quasi-drug actives
Dipotassium Glycyrrhizate
Guricchirurichin-san 2 K
Traditional · Kampo botanicals
Dokudami (Houttuynia Cordata)
Dokudami · INCI: Houttuynia Cordata Extract
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Eriobotrya Japonica Leaf Extract
Biwa-ha ekisu
Cosmetics · Quasi-drug actives
Hinokitiol
Hinokitiōru
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Lithospermum Erythrorhizon Root Extract
Shikon ekisu
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Oenanthe Javanica Extract
Seri ekisu
Supplements · General functional
Okinawa Ukon (Turmeric)
Okinawa ukon
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Paeonia Lactiflora Root Extract
Shakuyaku-kon ekisu
Cosmetics · Plant extracts
Perilla Frutescens Leaf Extract
Shiso-ha ekisu
Cosmetics · Quasi-drug actives
Stearyl Glycyrrhetinate
Guricchiruretin-san suteariru
Cosmetics · Quasi-drug actives
Tranexamic Acid
Toranekisamu-san
Traditional · Kampo botanicals
Yomogi (Japanese Mugwort)
Yomogi · INCI: Artemisia Princeps Leaf Extract
FAQ: Anti-inflammatory ingredients
Q. Why browse Japanese ingredients by ingredient function?
Browse Japanese ingredients by the functional benefit they deliver — brightening, antioxidant, gut health, sleep quality, etc. This page lists 16 ingredients tagged with the Anti-inflammatory ingredient function, helping formulators and brand planners shortlist candidates by use case rather than by category alone. Examples include Angelica Acutiloba Root Extract, Angelica Keiskei Extract, Aomori Hiba, and Chrysanthemum Morifolium Flower Extract.
Sources
- OEM JAPAN — glossary navigation taxonomy
Q. Are 'Anti-inflammatory' claims allowed in product marketing?
Function claims permitted on a finished product depend on the target market and regulatory pathway (cosmetic, quasi-drug, FFC, Tokuho, dietary supplement). The function tag here is an editorial summary of the ingredient's documented or traditional benefit, not an approved claim. Always verify claim wording against your target-market rules.
Sources
- MHLW — claim restrictions under PMD Act
- FTC — claim substantiation guidelines (US dietary supplements)