Medicinal Plants: Urogenital and Gastrointestinal Systems-Gastrointestinal System Flashcards
1
Q
Senna
BOTANICAL INFORMATION:
A
- Small leguminous shrub
- Arabian peninsula, west Africa, Asia
- Cultivated in Sudan, China, India
2
Q
Senna
HISTORY AS A MEDICINAL PLANT:
A
- Effective purgative and laxative
- Mature pods were dried and powdered to produced the laxative
- Introduced to Europe by Arab traders
- Demand was greatly exceeded supply, so the powder was very expensive
3
Q
Senna
MODERN UTILIZATION:
A
- Replaced by less expensive synthetic drugs
- Phenolphthalein dominated the market but banned by the FDA as a suspected carcinogen
- Highly purified extracts of natural senna
- Sennoside A and B-enzymatically hydrolyzed by gut bacteria to form laxative-affecting anthroquinones
4
Q
Cascara
BOTANICAL INFORMATION:
A
- Deciduous tree
- Western North America-British Columbia to California to Montana
5
Q
Cascara
HISTORY AS A MEDICINAL PLANT:
A
- Inner bark used by indigenous groups as a strong laxative-purgative
- Peeled from trees felled (cut down) in the spring and early summer
6
Q
Cascara
MODERN UTILIZATION:
A
- Commercial companies used material harvested from wild trees but species was extripated
- Carcaroside A and B-enzymatically hydrolyzed by gut bacteria to form Emodin (purgative)
- Cascara (and Aloe vera) banned for use as laxatives-based on suggesting potential carcinogenic effects
7
Q
Ipecac
BOTANICAL INFORMATION:
A
- Low shrub
- Brazilian highlands and eastern Bolivia
8
Q
Ipecac
HISTORY AS A MEDICINAL PLANT:
A
- Indigenous people used bark of the thickened fibrous roots to treat intestinal infections (dysentery)
- First appeared in France
- Treating of dysentery was popularized by Helvetius
- Treated French royal family, heir to the throne
- Rights were sold to the French government
- “Dover’s powder”-mixture of ipecac, opium
- Treatment for fever, gout, and dysentery
- Emetic (induced vomiting) administered to children, induce perspirations, treating bronchitis, and digestive stimiulant
9
Q
Ipecac
MODERN UTILIZATION:
A
- Alkaloids-Emetine and cephaeline
- Root treated amoebic dysentery
- Emetic properties-vomiting and diarrhoea
- Cause inflammation of the peripheral nerves, irregular heartbeat, sudden lowering of blood pressure, death
- Safer and effective treatments-diloxanide (intestinal ameobiasis), metronidazole (hepatic ameobiasis), and dehydroemetine (semi-synthetic)
- Aversion therapy in treating chronic alcoholism