Arctostaphylos uva-ursi (of the family Ericaceae) is a plant by the common name of uva-ursi with other common names including bearberry, bear's grape, and kinnikinnick (referring to a mixture used in smoking from the Algonquin language[1]). It has been traditionally used in Canada where it is prominently found in the wild, with some usage dating back to ancient Rome, and was usually used for the treatment of kidney stones and other renal disorders when the leaves were brewed into a tea.[1] It is related to the species Arctostaphylos pungens grown in southwestern US and Mexico.[2] 'Uva ursi' itself can be translated to bear grape, named after the apparent consumption of this berry by bears in the regions it is grown.[1]
It has been reported that consumption of the plant at traditionally-used doses may color the urine green[1][3] which intensifies upon exposure to the air due to oxidation of hydroquinone.[4] Its contemporary use is primarily due to its long-standing usage in traditional medicine for the treatment of issues related to painful urination and urinary tract infections (UTIs).[3] It seems to be traditionally used primarily for female usage and not for men, youth, or pregnant women.[3]
Uva ursi, or 'bear's grape' in English, is a fruit-bearing plant which appears to have traditional usage in both North America and Europe for the treatment of urinary conditions in women. It seems to also have the odd side-effect of turning urine a greenish hue, and its medicinal usage in traditional medicine is limited to this one specific use.
The plant Arctostaphylos uva-ursi (leaves unless otherwise specified) contains:
- Arbutin (hydroquinone-1-O-β-D-glucoside; synonymous with arbutoside), one source citing 100-210mg in three grams of leaves (after steeping in 150mL water[2]) but others varying between 5-15% dry weight of the leaves.[3][4][5][6][7] While relatively unique among plants in its genus (Arctostaphylos ), one study has found comparable levels of arbutin in uva ursi as in Origanum majorana (marjoram)[8]
- Methylarbutin (up to 4% dry leaf weight[4])
- Coralagin[9]
- Piceoside[10]
- Gallic acid[4] (between 634-980µg/mL in freshly prepared water extracts[11]) also in the form of galloyl arbutin.[4] Gallotannins in general (tannin compounds formed from gallic acid) are claimed to comprise up to 20% of the leaf by dry weight[12]
- Myrcitrin, a glycoside of myricetin, higher in bulk leaves (4,984-7,786µg/mL) than in encapsulated (517-1,360µg/mL) water extracts according to one study[11]
- Isoquercitrin, a glycoside of quercetin, in trace amounts in water extracts of leaves (32.8µg/mL) or undetectable[11]
- Ursolic acid[4]
- Uvaol[4]
- Magnesium[13]
- Manganese[13]
- Copper[13]
The recommended dose, according to 1998 Commission E (Germany), appears to be a tea of 150mL brewed from 3g of the leaf taken four times a day; as each tea brewed this way is though to confer 100-210mg arbutin the total daily dose varies between 400-840mg.[2]
Other compounds in the leaves include the essential oil component which is predominately linalool (7.3% of the total essential oil) and α-terpineol (7.8%) and predominately composed of terpenoid structures (46.8% total essential oil) and fatty acid-derived compounds (10.7%);[14] there is, overall, 243 unique molecules detectable in the essential oil.[14]
Uva ursi contains a variety of phenolic compounds like most plants, but due to the high arbutin content and relatively low content of most other compounds tested for (with exception to the tannins) it could be seen as essentially a herbal vessel for arbutin.