Original Tribestan and a generic product labelled “Tribulus terrestris” should not automatically be treated as interchangeable. The botanical name is only the starting point.
Practical comparison checklist
| Question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Who manufactures the product? | A clearly identified manufacturer improves traceability. |
| Which plant material is used? | Different parts of the plant and different sources can lead to different finished products. |
| Is it a powder or an extract? | A defined extract is not the same as an unspecified amount of ground herb. |
| How much is present per tablet or capsule? | Large percentages on a label are hard to interpret without an actual amount per unit. |
| Which compounds are standardized? | The historical Tribestan archive emphasizes the saponin profile and protodioscin. |
| Is there a leaflet and a clear package identity? | Finished-product documentation matters. |
What the historical comparative document can and cannot tell you
The historical source library includes an English-language comparative analytical investigation. It helps explain the historical positioning of Tribestan and why the older website focused on analytical profiles rather than the plant name alone.
It should not be used as a current market-wide verdict on products sold today. Formulations, suppliers and product specifications can change.