Alkaloids Flashcards
1
Q
Yew
A
- Contains alkaloid taxine (cardiotoxic effect) and antimitotic agents called taxans.
- Taxine inhibits sodium and calcium channels on myocardium leading to decreased
contractility. - The whole plant is toxic except the red aril surrounding the seed.
- Signs of intoxication are: nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, mydriasis, decrease in blood
pressure, decrease in temperature, bradycardia and bradypnoe, heart collapse and
death. - Most sensitive are horses, which may die within a few minutes after ingestion.
- Treatment is only symptomatic.
2
Q
Horsetail
A
- Contains alkaloids palustrine and nicotine, and enzyme thiaminase.
- Alkaloids activate nicotinic receptors and lead to excitation, lack of thiamine leads to
neurological signs. - Poisonings mainly in cattle, usually after chronic intake.
- Signs of chronic intake: decrease of body weight, decrease of milk yield, diarrhoea,
paralysis of muscles. - Treatment: change of the diet and a supplement of vitamin B1 (thiamine)
3
Q
Hemlock
A
- Contains alkaloid coniine – inhibits nicotinic Ach receptors.
- Coniine irritates GIT, then causes paralysis of motoric centres.
- It is an up-going poisoning – first there is a paralysis of legs, then of a neck, head and
finally trunk and chest. Death comes due to the paralysis of respiration muscles and it
is in full consciousness. - Coniine is a volatile substance, so beware of smelling to it, can cause a mild poisoning
– headaches, vomiting – even while smelling to it. - Poisonings are typical in ruminants from hay.
- Treatment is only symptomatic and usually unsuccessful
4
Q
Monkshood
A
- Contains alkaloid aconitine, which is the most potent plant toxic substance in Europe – the lethal dose is 2 mg of aconitine for the an adult man.
- It is very dangerous as it is absorbed via all routes including intact skin.
- It blocks neuronal transmission especially in nervus vagus, inhibits Na channels on
synapses and in heart and causes death similar to that in coniine – a respiration
paralysis in the full consciousness, or heart failure. - Treatment is only symptomatic, but rarely successful.
5
Q
Ragwort
A
- Contains pyrrolizidine alkaloids – senecin, senecionin.
- Most common is spring poisoning after chronic or long-term exposure. In spring, the
alkaloids are bound in a plant to sugars and other chemicals, so they don’t change its taste. Young and inexperienced animals - especially horses - are the main victims. In late summer and autumn, pyrrolizidine alkaloids are released from their bonds and cause a very bitter taste of plants, so there aren’t poisonings in this period of year. - Pyrrolizidine alkaloids create adducts with DNA leading to hepatotoxicity and consequent hepatopathic encephalopathy.
- Signs: weakness, inappetence, jaundice, increased neuronal irritability, blindness, apathy, ataxia, liver failure.
- Prognosis is always poor, because signs are significant at the time when the damage of liver is too massive. Treatment is only symptomatic.
- In the CZ the poisoning of horses is called Žďár disease of horses.
6
Q
Deadly nightshade, Jimsonweed (thorn apple) and other Solanaceae (Atropa belladonna, Datura stramonium etc.)
A
- Contain alkaloids atropine
- Potatoes from Solanaceae contain solanine (lecture on food toxins) and tobacco plant
contains nicotine (stimulation of nicotinic Ach receptors). - Most poisonings by plants containing atropine.
- Some animals are resistant to atropine, they have an enzyme in blood which
deactivates it - singing birds, guinea pigs, rabbits. - Horses are very sensitive to this poisoning.
- Atropine is a parasympatolytic agent (xerostomia, inhibition of peristaltics, mydriasis,
hallucinations, seizures, hyperthermia). - Treatment of the poisoning is usually symptomatic, but the antidote is physostigmine.
7
Q
Boxwood
A
- Contains alkaloids cyclobuxine and buxamine.
- Lethal dose is similar to yew tree, so it is very poisonous.
- Cytotoxic, stimulate apoptosis + inhibit cholinesterases.
- Causes mainly vomiting, diarrhoea, colic, tremors, seizures, exhaustion, pain and
vocalisation, death. - Treatment is only symptomatic
8
Q
Sycamore maple tree
A
- Contains toxic aminoacid hypoglycin A.
- Most of the active substance is found in the seeds (autumn) and seedlings (spring).
- Hypoglycin A inhibits beta oxidation of fatty acids in muscles and leads to so called
Atypical myopathy (rhabdomyolysis). - Signs include apathy, colic pains in belly, sweating, reluctance to move, dark urine,
weakness, recumbency, kidney damage, death. Mortality rate is very high. - Treatment is only symptomatic but rarely successful.
9
Q
Frogflower and other Ranunculaceae
A
- Contain lactone called protoanemonin, which is found in all the Ranunculaceae family
- The alkaloid is highly toxic for water organisms, especially for fish and young frogs.
- It affects mainly kidneys, treatment is symptomatic.
- The poison is one of the few which is destroyed by drying – hay is not toxic.