Medicinal Plants: Heart and Circulatory System-Cardiotonic Flashcards
1
Q
Foxglove
HISTORY AS A MEDICINAL PLANT:
A
- European folk medicine
- Spread by word of mouth
- European herbals list foxglove as poisonous
- Treatment of “dropsy”-accumulation of bodily fluids in the body cavity and limbs, grotesque swelling
- Symptoms-damaged, weakened heart; blood returns to the heart at very low pressure, resulting in fluids leaking from capillaries into surrounding tissue; compromised kidney efficiency leading to weakened heart; painful swelling, increased stress on the heart, congestive heart failure
- William Withering
- Studied medicine at Edinburgh-surgery and anatomy
- Botanical Arrangement of all the Vegetables Naturally Growing in Great Britain-first complete English book on plants
- Famous medical botanist
- Found a decoction with extracts from a number of plant species but determined the active principle was from foxglove-administered standardized, controlled doses
- Developed a systematic regimen of experimental medical treatment (clinical trials)
2
Q
Foxglove
MODERN UTILIZATION:
A
- Cardiac glycosides-digoxin and digitoxin
- Treating incurable diseases of the heart and circulatory system
- Treat congestive heart failure caused by hypertension and arteriosclerosis and to restore normal heart rhythm
- Increases the contractibility of heart muscle, reducing but strengthening heartbeat, slowing wildly beating ventricles to normal levels, improving heart action
3
Q
Foxglove
SEMI-SYNTHETICS:
A
- Lanatoside C, acetyldigitoxin, and deslanoside
- Whole leaf extracts more effective than any single isolated cardiac glycoside
- Doses vary among patients
- Provide temporary relief and must be taken regularly
- Side effects-nausea, excessive salivation, headache, and fatigue