Online Encyclopedia

JABORANDI

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 105 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JABORANDI  , a nam° given in a generic manner in

Brazil and South
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America generally to a number of different
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plants, all of which possess more or less marked sialogogue and sudorific properties . In the
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year 1875 a drug was introduced under the above name to the
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notice of medical men in France by Dr Coutinho of
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Pernambuco, its botanical source being then unknown . Pilocarpus pennatifolius, a member of the natural order Rutaceae, the plant from which it is obtained, is a slightly branched
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shrub about 10 ft. high, growing in
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Paraguay and the eastern provinces of Brazil . The leaves, which are placed alternately on the stem, are often 1-1 ft. long, and ccnsist of from two to five pairs of opposite leaflets, the terminal one having a longer pedicel than the others . The leaflets-are oval, lanceolate, entire and obtuse, with the
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apex often slightly indented, from 3 to 4 in. long and 1 to r? in. broad in the
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middle . When held up to the
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light they may be observed to have scattered all over them numerous pellucid dots or receptacles of secretion immersed in the substance of the leaf . The leaves in
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size and texture bear some resemblance to those of the
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cherry-
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laurel (Prunus laurocerasus), but are less polished on the upper
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surface . The flowers, which are produced in spring and early summer, are borne on a raceme, 6 or 8 in. long, and the fruit consists of five carpels, of which not more than two or three usually arrive at maturity . The leaves are the
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part of the plant usually imported, although occasionally the stems and roots are attached to them . The active principle for which the name
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pilocarpine, suggested by Holmes, was ultimately adopted, was discovered almost simultaneously by Hardy in France and Gerrard in England, but was first obtained in a pure state by Petit of Paris . It is a liquid
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alkaloid, slightly soluble in
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water, and very soluble in
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alcohol, ether and chloroform . It strongly rotates the
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plane of polarization to the right, and forms crystalline salts of which the nitrate is that chiefly used in.
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medicine .

The nitrate and phosphate are insoluble in ether, chloroform and benzol, while the hydro-chlorate and hydrobromate dissolve both in these menstrua and in water and alcohol; the sulphate and acetate being deliquescent are not employed medicinally . The

formula of the alkaloid is C11 H16N202 . Certain other alkaloids are
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present in the leaves . They have been named jaborine, jaboridine and pilocarpidine . The first of these is the most important and constant . It is possibly derived from pilocarpine, and has the formula C22H32N404 . Jaborine resembles atropine pharmacologically, and is there-fore antagonistic to pilocarpine . The various preparations of Jaborandi—a, leaf (reduced) ; b, leaflet (natural size) ; c, flower; d, fruit (natural size) . jaborandi leaves are therefore undesirable for therapeutic pur- poses, and only the nitrate of pilocarpine itself should be used . This is a white crystalline powder, soluble in the ratio of about ore part in ten of cold water . The dose is -y-2 grain by the mouth, and up to one-third of a grain hypodermically, in which fashion it is usually given . The
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action of this powerful alkaloid closely resembles that of physostigmine, but whereas the latter is specially active in influencing the heart, the eye and the
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spinal cord, pilocarpine exerts its greatest power on the secretions .

It has no

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external action . When taken by the mouth the drug is rapidly absorbed and stimulates the secretions of the entire alimentary tract, though not of the liver . The action on the salivary glands is the most marked and the best understood . The
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great flow of saliva is due to an action of the drug, after absorption, on the terminations of the chorda tympani, sympathetic and other nerves of salivary secretion . The gland cells themselves are unaffected . The nerves are so violently excited that
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direct stimulation of them by
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electricity adds nothing to the
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rate of salivary flow . The action is antagonized by atropine, which paralyses the nerve terminals . About 1-0th of a grain of atropine antagonizes
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half a grain of pilocarpine . The circulation is depressed by the drug, the
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pulse being slowed and the
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blood pressure falling . The cardiac action is due to stimulation of the vagus, but the dilatation of the blood-vessels does not appear to be due to a specific action upon them . The drug does not kill by its action on the heart . Its dangerous action is upon the bronchial secretion, which is greatly increased .

Pilocarpine is not only the most powerful sialogogue but also the most powerful diaphoretic known . One dose may cause the flow of nearly a

pint of sweat in an
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hour . The action is due, as in the case of the salivation, to stimulation of the terminals of the sudorific nerves . According to K . Binz there is also in both cases an action on the medullary centres for these secretions . Just as the saliva is a true secretion containing a high proportion of ptyalin and salts, and is not a mere transudation of water, so the perspiration is found to contain a high ratio of urea and chlorides . The great diaphoresis and the depression of the circulation usually cause a fall in temperature of about 20 F . The drug is excreted unchanged in the urine . It is a mild diuretic . When given internally or applied locally to the eye it powerfully stimulates the terminals of the oculomotor nerves in the
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iris and ciliary muscle, causing
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ext eme contraction of the pupil and spasm of accommodation . The tension of the eyeball is at first raised but afterwards lowered . The chief therapeutic use of the drug is as a diaphoretic in chronic Bright's disease .

It is also used to aid the growth of the hair—in which it is sometimes successful; in cases of inordinate thirst, when one-tenth of a grain with a little

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bismuth held in the mouth may be of much value; in cases of lead and mercury poisoning, where it
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aids the elimination of the
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poison in the secretions; as a galactagogue; and in cases of atropine poisoning (though here it is of doubtful value) .

End of Article: JABORANDI
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DANIEL ERNST JABLONSKI (166o-1741)
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