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COLCHICUM , the Meadow See also: Saffron, or Autumn See also: Crocus (Colchicum autumnale), a perennial plant of the natural See also: order
.
See also: Liliaceae, found See also: wild in See also: rich moist meadow-See also: land in See also: England and See also: Ireland, in See also: middle and See also: southern See also: Europe, and in the Swiss See also: Alps
.
It has pale-See also: purple See also: flowers, rarely more than three in number; the perianth is funnel-shaped, and produced below into a long slender See also: tube, in the upper See also: part of which the six stamens are inserted
.
The ovary is three-celled, and lies at the bottom of this tube
.
The leaves are three or four in number, flat, lanceolate, erect and sheathing; and there is no See also: stem
.
See also: Propagation is by the formation of new corms from the See also: parent corm, and by seeds
.
The latter are numerous, round, reddish-See also: brown, and of the
See also: size of black See also: mustard-seeds
.
The corm of the meadow-saffron attains its full size in See also: June or early in See also: July
.
A smaller corm is then formed from the old one, close to its See also: root; and this in See also: September and See also: October produces the crocus-like flowers
.
In the succeeding See also: January or See also: February it sends up its leaves, together with the ovary, which perfects its seeds during the summer
.
The See also: young corm, at first about the diameter of the flower-stalk, grows continuously, till in the following July it attains the size of a small apricot
.
The parent corm remains attached to the new one, and keeps its See also: form and size till See also: April in the third See also: year of its existence, after which it decays
.
In some cases a single corm produces several new See also: plants during its second spring by giving rise to immature corms
.
C. autumnale and its numerous varieties as well as other See also: species of the genus, are well known in cultivation, forming some of the most beautiful of autumn-flowering plants
.
They are very easy to cultivate and do not require lifting
.
The most suitable See also: soil is a See also: light, sandy loam enriched with well decomposed manure, in a rather moist situation
.
The corms should be planted not less than 3 in. deep
.
Propagation is effected by seed or increase of corms; the seed should be sown as soon as it is ripe in June or July
.
Colchicum was known to the Greeks under the name of KoXxuu6v, from Ko\Xis, or See also: Colchis, a country in which the plant See also: grew; and it is described by Dioscorides as a See also: poison
.
In the 17th century the corms were worn by some of the See also: German peasantry as a charm against the plague
.
The See also: drug was little used till 1763, when Baron Storck of Vienna introduced it for the treatment of dropsy
.
Its use in febrile diseases, at one See also: time extensive, is now obsolete
.
As a specific for See also: gout colchicum was early employed by the See also: Arabs; and the preparation known as eau medicinale, much resorted to in the 18th century for the cure of gout, owes its therapeutic virtues to colchicum; but general See also: attention was first directed by See also: Sir Everard Home to the use of the drug in gout
.
For medical purposes the corm should be collected. in the early summer and, after the See also: outer coat has been removed, should be sliced and dried at a temperature of 130° to 1500 F
.
The chief constituents of colchicum are two alkaloids, colchicine and veratrine . Colchicine is the active principle and may be given in full form in doses of to 3 g grain . It is a yellow, micro-crystalline powder, soluble inSee also: water, See also: alcohol and See also: chloroform, and forming readily decomposed salts with acids
.
It is the methyl ester of a neutral See also: body colchicein, which may be obtained in See also: white acicular crystals
.
The official dose of powdered colchicum is 2 to 5 grains, which may be given in a cachet
.
The
See also: British Pharmacopoeia contains
(r) an extract of the fresh corm, having doses of 1 to r grain, and (2) the Vinum Colchici, made by treating the dried corm with See also: sherry and given in doses of To to 30 minims
.
This latter is the preparation still most generally used, though the presence of veratrine both in the corm and the seeds renders the use of colchicine itself theoretically preferable
.
The dried ripe seeds of this plant are also used in See also: medicine
.
They are exceedingly hard and difficult to pulverize, odourless, bitter and readily confused with black mustard seeds
.
They contain a volatile oil which does not occur in the corm, and their proportion of colchicine is higher, for which reason the Tinctura Colchici Seminumdose 5 to 15 minims—is preferable to the See also: wine prepared from the corm
.
At See also: present this otherwise excellent preparation is not standardized, but the See also: suggestion has been made that it should be standardized to contain o• r % of colchicine
.
The salicylate of colchicine is See also: stable in water and maybe given in doses of about one-thirtieth of a grain
.
It is often known as Colchi-Sal . See also: Pharmacology.—Colchicum or colchicine, when applied to the skin, acts as a powerful irritant, causing See also: local See also: pain and congestion
.
When inhaled, the powder causes violent sneezing, similar to that produced by veratrine itself, which is, as already stated, a constituent of the corm
.
Taken internally, colchicum or colchicine markedly increases the amount of bile poured into the alimentary canal, being amongst the most powerful of known cholagogues
.
Though this See also: action doubtless contributes to its remarkable therapeutic power, it is very far from being an adequate explanation of the virtues of the drug in gout
.
In larger doses colchicum or colchicine acts as a most violent gastrointestinal irritant, causing terrible pain, colic,vomiting, diarrhoea, haemorrhage from the bowel, thirst and ultimately See also: death from collapse
.
This is accelerated by a marked depressant action upon the See also: heart, similar to that produced by veratrine and See also: aconite
.
Large doses also depress the See also: nervous See also: system, weakening the anterior horns of See also: grey See also: matter in the See also: spinal cord so as ultimately to cause See also: complete paralysis, and also causing a partial insensibility of the cutaneous nerves of touch and pain
.
The action of colchicum or colchicine upon the kidneys has been minutely studied, and it is asserted on the one See also: hand that the urinary solids are much diminished and, on the other hand, that they are markedly increased, the specific gravity of the secretion being much raised
.
These assertions, and the See also: total inadequacy of the pharmacology of colchicum, as above detailed, to explain its specific therapeutic See also: property, show that the secret of colchicum is as yet undiscovered
.
The See also: sole but extremely important use of this drug is as a specific for gout
.
It has an extraordinary power over the pain of acute gout; it lessens the severity and frequency of the attacks when given continuously between them, and it markedly controls such symptoms of gout as eczema, See also: bronchitis and See also: neuritis, whilst it is entirely inoperative against these conditions when they are not of gouty origin
.
Despite the general recognition of these facts, the pharmacology of colchicum has hitherto thrown no light on the pathology of gout, and the pathology of gout has thrown no light upon the manner in which colchicum exerts its unique influence upon this disease . Veratrine is useless in the treatment of gout . A further curious fact, doubtless of verySee also: great significance, but hitherto lacking interpretation, is that the administration of colchicum during an acute attack of gout may often hasten the oncoming of the next attack; and this property, See also: familiar to many gouty patients, may not be affected by the administration of small doses after the attack
.
Altogether colchicum is a See also: puzzle, and will remain so until the efficient poison of gout is isolated and defined
.
When that is done, colchicine may be found to exhibit a definite chemical interaction with this hitherto undiscovered substance
.
In colchicum poisoning, empty the stomach, give white of See also: egg, See also: olive or salad oil, and water
.
Use hot bottles and stimulants, especially trying to counteract the cardiac depression by atropine, caffeine, strophanthin, &c
.
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