Community Medicine and Education Journal
Vol. 7 No. 1 (2025): Community Medicine and Education Journal

Short-Term Clinical Effects of Standardized Syzygium polyanthum (Bay Leaf) Tea Infusion on Serum Uric Acid Modulation in Hyperuricemia: A Pilot Trial in Primary Care

Andi Asda Astiah (Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Batam, Batam, Indonesia)
Isramilda (Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Batam, Batam, Indonesia)
Deby Febriyanti (Student, Faculty of Medicine, Universitas Batam, Batam, Indonesia)



Article Info

Publish Date
06 Apr 2026

Abstract

Hyperuricemia management relies heavily on synthetic xanthine oxidase inhibitors, which possess adverse effect risks. This pilot trial evaluates the short-term clinical effects of a standardized Syzygium polyanthum (Indonesian bay leaf) tea infusion on serum uric acid levels in a primary care setting, standardizing conventional preparation methods. A quasi-experimental, pre- and post-test controlled pilot trial was conducted at a community health center on Sumatra Island, Indonesia. Twenty-four adults with hyperuricemia were purposively assigned (alternating days of presentation) to an intervention group (n=12) or a control group (n=12). The intervention comprised 2.0 grams of standardized S. polyanthum tea infused at 80 degrees Celsius for 1 to 3 minutes, consumed twice daily for seven days. Both groups underwent monitored dietary purine restriction. Serum uric acid was evaluated via capillary analysis. The intervention cohort exhibited a statistically significant reduction in median serum uric acid from 8.1 mg/dL (Interquartile Range [IQR]: 7.4–8.9) to 6.9 mg/dL (IQR: 6.2–7.5) (p=0.034). The control group showed no significant alteration (median 8.0 mg/dL to 7.9 mg/dL; p=0.299). Intervention compliance was 95.4%, with no adverse gastrointestinal events reported. In conclusion, standardized S. polyanthum tea infusion significantly reduces serum uric acid over seven days, presenting a culturally syntonic and safe complementary intervention for primary healthcare frameworks, though extended treatment may be required to reach optimal clinical targets below 6.0 mg/dL.

Copyrights © 2025






Journal Info

Abbrev

CMEJ

Publisher

Subject

Humanities Education Health Professions Languange, Linguistic, Communication & Media Public Health

Description

CMEJ covers all subjects regarding community medicine and education. The covered research areas as follows community medicine, public health, epidemiology and biostatistics, health policy and administration, public health nutrition, environmental health, occupational health and safety, health ...