Cinchona Bark

← Herb Library / Cinchona Bark
Rubiaceae

Cinchona Bark

Cinchona officinalis
⚠ Use with Caution Avoid in Pregnancy
Native to: Andes, South America (Peru, Bolivia, Ecuador)
Also known as: Peruvian Bark, Fever Tree, Jesuit's Bark, Quinine Bark
Wikimedia Commons / CC BY-SA

🌱 Parts Used

Bark

💊 Therapeutic Uses

Malaria (historical — quinine first effective antimalarial), babesiosis, leg cramps (quinine), cardiac arrhythmias (quinidine). SOURCE of quinine used in tonic water. Largely replaced by synthetic drugs.


Herbal Actions

Antimalarial (quinine), antipyretic, bitter tonic, antiarrhythmic (quinidine), analgesic

🔬 Active Constituents

Quinoline alkaloids (quinine, quinidine, cinchonine, cinchonidine), tannins, bitter glycosides (chinovabitter)

⚗️ Preparation Methods

🏺 Tincture🍵 Decoction

📐 Traditional Preparation Notes

Herbal Tea0.5 tsp bark per 250ml, steep 10 min, 3x daily — bitter tonic use
Tincture2–4 ml (1:5, 40% ethanol), 3x daily for bitter tonic
NotesWhole bark as bitter tonic safe. Quinine for malaria: medical supervision required (narrow therapeutic index). Tonic water contains trace quinine (83mg/L) — generally safe. Quinidine (antiarrhythmic): prescription only.

⚠️ Safety Information

Safety Rating ⚠ Use with Caution
Pregnancy Avoid in Pregnancy
Drug Interactions ⚠ Known interactions

Contraindications: Avoid in pregnancy (uterotonic, abortifacient at high doses). Avoid with anticoagulants, cardiac medications. G6PD deficiency — hemolysis risk. Quinine narrow therapeutic index.

Side Effects: Cinchonism (tinnitus, headache, nausea — dose-dependent). Cardiac arrhythmias. Hemolysis (G6PD deficiency). Hypoglycemia. Allergic reactions.

← Back to Herb Library
Scroll to Top