Online Encyclopedia

ALOE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 720 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

ALOE  , a genus of

See also:
plants belonging to the natural order
See also:
Liliaceae, with about 90
See also:
species growing in the dry parts of Africa, especially Cape Colony, and in the mountains of tropical Africa . Members of the closely allied genera Gasteria and Haworthia, with a similar mode of growth, are also cultivated and popularly known as aloes . The plants are apparently stemless, bearing a rosette of large, thick, fleshy leaves, or have a shorter or longer (sometimes branched) stem, along which, or towards the end of which and its branches, the generally fleshy leaves are borne . They are much cultivated as ornamental plants, especially in public buildings and gardens, for their stiff, rugged habit . The leaves are generally
See also:
lance-shaped with a sharp
See also:
apex and a spiny margin; but vary in colour from grey to bright green, and are sometimes striped or mottled . The rather small tubular yellow or red flowers are borne on
See also:
simple or branched leafless stems. and are generally densely clustered . The juice of the leaves of certain species yields aloes (see below) . In some cases, as in Aloe venenosa, the juice is poisonous . The plant called
See also:
American aloe,
See also:
Agave americana (q.v.), belongs to a different order, viz . Amaryllidaceae . Aloes is a medicinal substance used as a purgative and produced from various species of aloe, such as A. vera, vulgaris, socotrina, chinensis, and Perryi . Several kinds of aloes are distinguished in commerce—Barbadoes, Socotrine, hepatic,
See also:
Indian, and Cape aloes .

The first two are those commonly used foi medicinal purposes . Aloes is the expressed juice of the leaves of the plant . When the leaves are cut the juice flows out, and is collected and evaporated . After the juice has been obtained, the leaves are sometimes boiled, so as to yield an inferior

kind of aloes . From these plants active principles termed aloins are extracted by
See also:
water . According to W . A . Shenstone, two classes are to be recognized: (1) Nataloins, which yield picric and oxalic acids with nitric acid, and do not give a red coloration with nitric acid; and (2) Barbaloins, which yield aloetic acid, C7H2N20;, chrysammic acid, C,H2N206, picric and oxalic acids with nitric acid, being reddened by this reagent . This second
See also:
group may be divided into a-Barbaloins, obtained from Barbadoes aloes, and reddened in the cold, and /3-Barbaloins, obtained from Socotrine and
See also:
Zanzibar aloes, reddened by ordinary nitric acid only when warmed, or by fuming acid in the cold . Nataloin, 2C17H18O7•H2O, forms bright yellow scales, melting at 212°–222°; barbaloin, C17H1s07, forms yellow prismatic crystals . Aloes also contain a trace of volatile oil, to which its odour is due . The dose is 2 to 5 grains, that of aloin being a to 2 grains .

Aloes can be absorbed from a broken

See also:
surface and will then cause purging . When given internally it increases the actual amount as well as the
See also:
rate of flow of the bile . It hardly affects the small intestine, but markedly stimulates the
See also:
muscular coat of the large intestine, causing purging in about fifteen hours . There is hardly any increase in the intestinal secretion, the drug being emphatically not a hydragogue cathartic . There is no doubt that its habitual use may be a factor in the formation of haemorrhoids; as in the case of all drugs that act powerfully on the
See also:
lower
See also:
part of the intestine, without simultaneously lowering the venous pressure by causing increase of secretion from the bowel . Aloes also tends to increase the menstrual flow and therefore belongs to the group of emmenagogues . Aloin is preferable to aloes for therapeutic purposes, as it causes less, if any, pain . It is a valuable drug in many forms of constipation, as its continual use does not, as a
See also:
rule, lead to the necessity of enlarging the dose . Its combined
See also:
action on the bowel and the uterus is of especial value in chlorosis, of which amenorrhoea is an almost constant symptom . The drug is obviously contra-indicated in pregnancy and when haemorrhoids are already
See also:
present . Many well-known patent medicines consist essentially of aloes . The lign-aloes is quite different from the medicinal aloes .

The word is used in the

Bible (Numb.
See also:
xxiv . 6), but as the trees usually supposed to be meant by this word are not native in
See also:
Syria, it has been suggested that the LXX.
See also:
reading in which the word does not occur is to be preferred . Lign-aloe is a corruption of the
See also:
Lat. lignum-aloe, a wood, not a resin . Dioscorides refers to it as agallochon, a wood brought from
See also:
Arabia or India, which was odoriferous but with an astringent and bitter taste . This may be Aquilaria agallochum, a native of East India and
See also:
China, which supplies the so-called eagle-wood or aloes-wood, which contains much resin and oil .

End of Article: ALOE
[back]
ALNWICK
[next]
ALOUNG ALOMPRA

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.