Aromatherapy via the Nabhi Route: Olfactory and Transdermal Pathways, Mechanistic Basis, and Formulation Considerations for Lavender and Chamomile Nabhi Oils

International Journal of Development Research

Volume: 
16
Article ID: 
30860
7 pages
Research Article

Aromatherapy via the Nabhi Route: Olfactory and Transdermal Pathways, Mechanistic Basis, and Formulation Considerations for Lavender and Chamomile Nabhi Oils

Chirag Warty and Dr. Manaswi Rajurkar

Abstract: 

Background: Navel-applied aromatic oils - a practice codified in Ayurveda as Nabhi Chikitsa - are used for sleep support and anxiolysis. Lavender (Lavandula angustifolia) and chamomile (Chamaemelum nobile; Matricaria chamomilla) represent two of the most clinically validated aromatic botanicals, with demonstrated efficacy via inhalation.[1-3,25] When placed into the umbilical cavity, these oils activate two parallel delivery pathways: an olfactory/limbic pathway, in which volatile terpene constituents evaporate from the warm, enclosed navel cavity and reach the olfactory epithelium; and a transdermal/systemic pathway, in which lipophilic aromatic compounds passively diffuse through the relatively thin umbilical stratum corneum into systemic circulation. Objective: This review examines the mechanistic basis of each delivery pathway, the physicochemical properties that determine compound-specific pathway selectivity, the anatomical and physiological features of the umbilical site that facilitate both pathways, and the formulation design principles that follow from this dual-pathway framework. Evidence Summary: The olfactory pathway provides rapid limbic activation within minutes via direct amygdalo-hypothalamic signalling, driving fast anxiolysis, parasympathetic shift, and sleep onset support.[5-12,18,21] The transdermal pathway delivers sustained systemic terpene exposure, including the chamomile sesquiterpenes alpha-bisabolol and chamazulene, which are exclusively transdermal by virtue of their near-zero vapour pressure and cannot be delivered by inhalation.[13-17,31-34] The navel's enclosed geometry, thin stratum corneum, and enhanced occlusion combine to make it a superior site for co-activating both pathways simultaneously.[34] Conclusions: Nabhi aromatherapy with lavender and chamomile constitutes a mechanistically rational dual-pathway delivery system. The olfactory and transdermal pathways are temporally complementary rather than merely parallel: olfactory priming drives rapid sleep onset while transdermal compound accumulation supports sustained sleep architecture consolidation. Understanding these mechanisms provides a rational foundation for evidence-based Nabhi oil formulation design.

DOI: 
https://doi.org/10.37118/ijdr.30860.05.2026
Download PDF: