Online Encyclopedia

GELSEMIUM

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V11, Page 560 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GELSEMIUM  , a

drug consisting of the root of Gelsemium nitidum, a clinging
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shrub of the natural order Loganiaceae, having a milky juice, opposite, lanceolate shining leaves, and axillary clusters of from one to five large, funnel-shaped, very fragrant yellow flowers, whose perfume has been compared with that of the wallflower . The fruit is composed of two separable jointedpods, containing numerous flat-winged seeds . The stem often runs underground for a considerable distance, and indiscriminately with the root it is used in
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medicine . The plant is a native of the
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United States, growing on rich clay
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soil by the side of streams near the coast, from Virginia to the south of
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Florida . In the United States it is commonly known as the wild, yellow or Carolina jessamine, although in no way related to the true jessamines, which belong to the order Oleaceae . It was first described in 164o by John Parkinson, who grew it in his garden from seed sent by Tradescant from Virginia; at the
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present time it is but rarely seen, even in botanical gardens, in
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Great Britian . The drug contains a volatile oil and two potent alkaloids, gelseminine And gelsemine . Gelseminine is a yellowish, bitter substance, readily soluble in ether and
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alcohol . It is not employed therapeutically . Gelsemine has the formula CuH19NO2, and is a colourless, odourless, intensely bitter solid, which is insoluble in
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water, but readily forms a soluble hydrochloride . Gelsemium nitidum,
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half natural
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size; flower, nat. size . The dose of this salt is from 4th to Itoth of a grain .

The

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British Pharmacopoeia contains a tincture of gelsemium, the dose of which is from five to fifteen minims . The drug is essentially a nerve
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poison . It has no
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action, on the skin and no marked action on the alimentary or circulatory systems . Its action on the cerebrum is slight, consciousness being retained even after toxic doses, but there may be headache and giddiness . The drug rapidly causes failure of vision, diplopia, ptosis or falling of the upper eyelid, dilatation of the pupil, and a lowering of the
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intra-ocular tension . This last action is doubtful . The symptoms appear to be due to a paralysis of the motor cells that control the
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internal and
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external ocular muscles . The most marked action of the drug is upon the anterior cornua of grey
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matter in the
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spinal cord . It can be shown by a
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process of experimental exclusion that to an arrest of
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function of these cells is due the paralysis of all the voluntary muscles of the
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body that follows the administration of gelsemium or gelsemine . Just before
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death the sensory
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part of the spinal cord is also paralysed, general
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anaesthesia resulting . The drug kills by its action on the
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respiratory centre in the medulla oblongata . Shortly after the administration of even a moderate dose the respiration is slowed and is ultimately arrested, this being the 'cause of death .

In cases of poisoning the essential treatment is artificial respiration, which may be aided by the subcutaneous

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exhibition of
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strychnine . Though the drug is still widely used, the rational indications for its employment are singularly rare and uncertain . The conditions in which it is most frequently employed are
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convulsions,
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bronchitis, severe and purposeless coughing, myalgia or
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muscular pain, neuralgia and various vague forms of pain .

End of Article: GELSEMIUM
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