Online Encyclopedia

STROPHANTHUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 1042 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

STROPHANTHUS  , a genus of

See also:
plants of the 'natural order Apocynaceae, deriving its name from the long
See also:
twisted thread-like segments of the corolla, which in one
See also:
species attain a length of 12 or 14 inches . The genus comprises about 30 species, mainly tropical
See also:
African, extending into South Africa, with a few species in
See also:
Asia, from farther India to the Philippines and
See also:
China . Several of the African species furnish the natives with the
See also:
principal ingredient in their arrow poisons . The inee or onaye
See also:
poison of the Gaboon, the kombe of
See also:
equatorial North Africa, the arquah of the banks of the Niger and the wanika of
See also:
Zanzibar are all derived from members of this genus . The exact species used in each case cannot be said to be accurately known . There is no doubt, however, that S. hispidus and S. kombe are those most frequently employed . Both S. hispidus and S. kombe have hairy seeds with a slender thread-like appendage, terminating in a feathery tuft of long silken hairs, the seeds of the former being coated with short appressed brown hairs, and those of the latter with white hairs; but in the species used at Delagoa
See also:
Bay and called "umtsuli" the thread-like appendage of the seed is absent . The natives pound the seeds into an oily mass, which assumes a red colour, portions of this mass being smeared on the arrow immediately behind the barb . Under the name of strophanti semina, the dried ripe seeds of Strophanthus kombe, freed from awns, are official in the
See also:
British and many other pharmacopeias . The seeds must be mature . They are about in. long, in. broad, greenish fawn, covered with flattened silky hairs, and oval-acuminate in shape . They are almost odourless, but have an intensely bitter taste .

The

chief constituent is a white microcrystalline
See also:
glucoside, known as strophanthin, freely soluble in
See also:
water and
See also:
alcohol, but not in chloroform or ether, and melting at about 173° C . It constitutes about 5o% of the mature cotyledons of the seed, the proportion rising as maturity is reached . It is very similar to, but not identical with, onabain . It is split up by acids into strophanthidin and a methyl-ether of a
See also:
peculiar
See also:
sugar . The seeds also contain an active principle, inein, a
See also:
body known as kombic acid, fat, resin and
See also:
starch . The resin is contained in the husk, and occurs in the alcoholic tincture of strophanthus, its presence tending to cause
See also:
digestive disturbance and diarrhoea . When the seeds are treated with sulphuric acid and heat is applied, a
See also:
violet-coloration is produced . A section of the seed yields a green colour with cold sulphuric acid . The British Pharmacopeia contains two preparations of this important and valuable drug, a dry extract and a tincture . The former is hardly ever prescribed . The official tincture is much inferior to that originally recommended by
See also:
Sir Thomas Fraser, who introduced the drug into medical practice, in being much too weak, and in being prepared with alcohol instead of ether, which differs from alcohol in not dissolving the resin contained in the husks . It is therefore advisable to order the tincture of the British Pharmacopeia of 1885, or to prescribe the current tincture in double the official dose and combined with cardamoms, ginger or
See also:
capsicum, in order to counteract the irritant properties of the resin which it contains .

Strophanthin itself may be injected hypodermically in doses of sia to 2,1a

grain . Unfortunately the injections usually cause some temporary
See also:
local irritation . This method of exhibiting strophanthus is the only one of any avail when a result is wanted at once or even within several hours . Precisely the same observation applies to
See also:
digitalis, the other
See also:
great cardiac tonic .
See also:
Pharmacology.—The drug has no
See also:
external actions . Taken internally it tends, alter the repetition of large doses, to produce some gastric irritation . This is unquestionably less, however, than that produced by digitalis, and is probably due not at all to the active principle but entirely to the resin contained in the seed-husk . As ordinarily administered, the drug acts on the heart before influencing any other
See also:
organ or tissue . Often indeed no other
See also:
action can be observed . This is readily explained by the fact that the drug is carried by the coronary arteries to the cardiac muscle before it reaches any other
See also:
part of the systemic circulation . It is almost certain that strophanthus acts directly on no other cardiac structure than the muscle-fibre . No action can certainly be demonstrated either upon the terminals of the vagus nerves nor upon the
See also:
intra-cardiac
See also:
nervous ganglia .

The

See also:
muscular force is increased in a very marked degree . A secondary consequence of this is that the diastole is prolonged, and the
See also:
pulse thus rendered: less frequent . If the heart is beating irregularly the drug tends to make it more
See also:
regular . The action is similar to that of digitalis—and fifty years ago both these drugs would thus have been regarded, as indeed digitalis was, as cardiac sedatives . As the cardiac muscle receives its
See also:
blood supply only during diastole, it follows that strophanthus, while increasing the force of each beat, yet lengthens the period during which the muscle rests and is fed—thus being, in a paradoxical sense, a sedative as well as a stimulant . In fatal cases of strophanthus poisoning
See also:
death is brought about by the arrest of the heart in systole, i.e. in a state of tetanic spasm from over-stimulation . This of course is a striking exception to the natural
See also:
rule that death finds the heart in a state of relaxation and inability to contract . Strophanthus markedly raises the blood-pressure, but this action is proportional to and almost entirely due to the increased force of the heart; not, as in the case of digitalis, to constriction of the arterioles . Its action on the heart causes strophanthus to exert a powerful diuretic action, especially in cases of dropsy of cardiac origin . It is a less powerful diuretic than digitalis as a rule . The drug has no action on the nervous
See also:
system, but in toxic doses it powerfully affects the voluntary striped muscles . This action may be correlated with that exerted upon the cardiac muscle, which is striped, though not voluntary, and contrasted with its want of action upon the muscular fibre of the arteries, which is involuntary and non-striped .

The drug, like onabain, has a slight anaesthetic action when locally applied to the eyeball, and also causes contraction of the

pupil . Strophanthin is one of the most active and lethal of all known substances . One-hundredth of a grain will kill a mammal weighing four pounds, and one-third of a grain will kill a man of
See also:
average
See also:
weight . Serum containing one part of strophanthin in ten millions will arrest the
See also:
frog's heart in systole . Strophanthus is used therapeutically only as a cardiac stimulant . When given by the mouth it acts somewhat more rapidly than digitalis, being more soluble; but it is of course far less speedy in action than ether,
See also:
ammonia or such a pseudo-stimulant as
See also:
ethyl alcohol . In mitral disease of the heart especially strophanthus is an invaluable drug . It frequently succeeds when digitalis has failed; occasionally it fails where digitalis succeeds . It has the great
See also:
advantage over digitalis of being non-cumulative, and can be ad-ministered continually for many weeks or even months at a time . It is never to be given in acute Bright's disease, but is frequently of use in chronic Bright's disease, where digitalis, owing to its influence on the already over-contracted arterioles, is absolutely contra-indicated .

End of Article: STROPHANTHUS
[back]
atomic weight 87.62 STRONTIUM [Symbol Sr (0=16)]
[next]
STROPHE (Gr. o-rpod>)

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.