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CINCHONA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V06, Page 370 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CINCHONA  , the generic name of a number of trees which belong to the natural

order
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Rubiaceae . Botanically the genus includes trees of varying
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size, some reaching an altitude of 8o ft. and upwards, with
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evergreen leaves and deciduous stipules . The flowers are arranged in panicles, white or pinkish in colour, with a pleasant odour, the calyx being 5-toothed
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superior, and the corolla tubular, 5-lobed and fringed at the margin . The stamens- are 5, almost concealed by the tubular corolla, and the ovary terminates in a fleshy disk . The fruit is an ovoid or sub-cylindrical capsule, splitting from the
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base, and held together at the
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apex . The numerous seeds are flat and winged all round . About 40
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species have been distinguished, but of these not more than about a dozen have been economically utilized . The
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plants are natives of the western mountainous regions of South
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America, their
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geographical range extending from o° N. to 22° S.
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lat.; and they flourish generally at an
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elevation of from 500o to 8000 ft. above sea-level, although some have been noted growing as high up as I I,000 ft., and others have been found down to 2600 ft . The trees are valued solely on account of their bark, which long has been the source of the most valuable febrifuge or antipyretic
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medicine,
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quinine (q.v.), that has ever been discovered . The earliest well-authenticated instance of the medicinal use of cinchona bark is found in the
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year 1638, when the countess of Chinchon (hence the name), the wife of the governor of Peru, was cured of an attack of fever by its administration . The medicine was recommended in her case by the corregidor of Loxa, who was said himself to have practically experienced its supreme virtues eight years earlier . A knowledge of the bark was disseminated throughout
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Europe by members of the Jesuit brotherhood, whence it also became generally known as
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Jesuits' bark .

According to another account, this name arose from its value having been first discovered to a Jesuit missionary who, when prostrate with fever, was cured by the administration of the bark by a South

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American
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Indian . In each of the above instances the fever was no doubt
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malaria . The procuring of the bark in the dense forests of New Granada, Ecuador, Peru and
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Bolivia is a
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work of
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great toil and hardship to the Indian cascarilleros or cascadores engaged in the pursuit . The trees grow isolated or in small clumps, which have to be searched out by the experienced cascarillero, who laboriously cuts his way through the dense
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forest to the spot where he discovers a tree . Having freed the stem from adhering parasites and twining plants, he proceeds, by beating and cutting oblong pieces, to detach the stem bark as far as is within his reach . The tree is then felled, and the entire bark of stem and branches secured . The bark of the smaller branches, as it dries, curls up, forming " quills," the thicker masses from the stems constituting the " flat " bark of commerce . The drying, packing and transport of the bark are all operations of a laborious description conducted under most disadvantageous conditions . The enormous medicinal consumption of these barks, and the wasteful and reckless manner of procuring them in America long ago, caused serious and well-grounded apprehension that the native forests would quickly become exhausted . The attention of
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European communities was early directed to the necessity of securing steady and permanent supplies by introducing the more valuable species into localities likely to be favourable to their cultivation . The first actual attempt to
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rear plants was made in Algeria in 1849; but the effort was not successful . In 1854 the Dutch government seriously undertook the task of introducing the trees into the island of
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Java, and an expedition for that purpose was fitted out on an adequate scale .

Several hundreds of

young trees were obtained, of which a small
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pro-portion was successfully landed and planted in Java; and as the result of great attention the cultivation of cinchona plantations in that island became highly prosperous and promising . The desirability of introducing cinchonas into the East Indies was urged in a memorial addressed to the East India
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Company between 1838 and 1842 by
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Sir Robert Christison and backed by Dr Forbes Royle; but no active step was taken till 1852, when, again on the motion of Dr Royle, some efforts to obtain plants were made through consular agents . In the end the question was seriously taken up, and Sir Clements R . Markham was appointed to head an expedition to obtain young trees from South America and convey them to India . The transference of the plants was attended with considerable difficulty, but in 1861 under his superintendence a consignment of plants was planted in a favourable situation in the Nilgiri Hills . For several years subsequently additional supplies of plants of various species were obtained from different regions of South America, and some were also procured from the Dutch plantations in Java . Now the culture has spread over a wide
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area in
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southern India, in
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Ceylon, on the slopes of the Himalayas, and in
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British
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Burma, and has become widely spread through the tropics generally . The species grown are principally Cinchona officinalis, C . Calisaya, C. succirubra, C. pitayensis, and C . Pahudiana, some agreeing with certain soils and climates better than others, while the yield of alkaloids and the relative pro-portions of the different alkaloids differ in each species . The official " bark " of the British Pharmacopoeia is that of Cinchona succirubra or red bark . It is imported in the form of quills or recurved pieces, with a rough brown
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outer
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surface and a deep red inner surface, forming a reddish brown odourless powder, which has a bitter, astringent taste .

The British Pharmacopoeia directs that the bark, when used to make the various medicinal preparations, shall contain not less than 5 nor more than 6% of

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total alkaloids, of which at least one-
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half is to be constituted by quinine and cinchonidine . The preparations of this bark are four: a liquid extract, standardized to contain 5% of total alkaloids; an acid infusion; a tincture standardized to contain 1% of total alkaloids; and a compound tincture which must possess one-half the alkaloidal strength of the last . The only purpose for which these preparations of cinchona bark should be used is as tonics; and even when this is the desired
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action there are many reasons why the
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alkaloid should be preferred, even though the
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recent introduction of standardization removes one of the chief objections to their use . The
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pharmacology of red bark, dependent-as it is almost entirely upon the contained quinine, will not here be discussed (see QUININE) . But the composition of cinchona bark is a
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matter of importance and
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interest . The bark contains, in the first place, five alkaloids, of which all but quinine may here be dealt with . Quinidine, C2aH24N202, is isomeric with quinine, from which it differs in crystallizing in prisms instead of needles, in being dextro- and not laevo-rotatory, and in being insoluble in
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ammonia except in much excess . Cinchonine has the formula C19H22N20, quinine being methoxy cinchonine, i.e . C,9H21(OCH,)N20 . It occurs in inodorous, bitter, colourless prisms; unlike the two alkaloids already named, does not yield a green colour with chlorine
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water and ammonia; is dextro-rotatory; not fluorescent, and practically insoluble in ammonia and in ether . A
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fourth alkaloid, cinchonidine, is isomeric with cinchonine, which yields it when boiled with amyl alcoholic potash, but is laevo-rotatory, slightly soluble in ether, and faintly fluorescent . When red bark is extracted with dilute hydrochloric acid, the product filtered, and excess of sodium
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hydrate added thereto, quinine and ,quinidine are precipitated: on concentrating the
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mother liquor, cinchonine falls down, and on further concentration with addition of still more
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alkali, cinchonidine is thrown out .

Yellow bark, which is not official, yields 3 % of quinine, and

pale bark about to % of total alkaloids, of which hardly any is quinine, cinchonine and quinidine being its chief constituents . The various forms of bark also yield a very small quantity of an unimportant alkaloid, conquinannine . In addition to the above, red bark contains quinic acid, C7H1206, which is closely allied to benzoic acid and is excreted in the urine as hippuric acid . There also occurs chinovic acid, derived from a
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glucoside chinovin, which occurs as such in the bark . Besides a trace of volatile oil which gives the bark its characteristic odour, and cinchona red (the bark pigment). there occurs about 2% of eincho-tannic acid, closely allied to tannic acid and giving the bark its astringent
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property . Cinchona is never used, however, in order to obtain an astringent action . The importance of recognizing the complex and inconstant composition of cinchona bark lies, as in so many other instances, in this—that the physician who employs it can have only a very imperfect knowledge of the drug he is using . The latest work on the action of these alkaloids has shown that cinchonine has a tendency to produce-
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convulsions in certain patients, and that this action is a still more marked feature of cinchonidine and cinchonamine . Even small doses administered to epileptics increase the number of their attacks . They will probably be classified later among the convulsive poisons . The use of cinchona bark and its preparations, now that definite active principles can be readily obtained and precisely studied, is almost entirely to be deprecated . Quinidine is almost as powerful an antidote to malaria as quinine; cinchonidine has about two-thirds the power of quinine, and cinchonine less than one-half .

End of Article: CINCHONA
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