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STRYCHNINE , CsiHssN202, an See also: alkaloid discovered in 1818 by Pelletier and Caventou in St See also: Ignatius's beans (Strychnos Ignatii) ; it also occurs in other See also: species of Strychnos, e.g
.
S
.
Nux vomica, S. colubrina, S
.
Tieute, and is generally accompanied by another alkaloid See also: brucine, C23H26N2O4.4H20, which was isolated by Pelletier and Caventou in 1819
.
Strychnine crystallizes from See also: alcohol in colourless prisms, which are practically insoluble in See also: water, and with difficulty soluble in the See also: common organic solvents
.
Its taste is exceptionally bitter
.
It has an alkaline reaction, and is a See also: tertiary monacid See also: base
.
It is optically active, the natural See also: form being laevorotatory
.
Brucine closely resembles strychnine, and is its dimethoxy derivative
.
The constitutions are unknown (see J
.
See also: Schmidt, Die Alkaloidchemie, 1904; 1909)-
.
See also: Medicine.—The B.P. dose of strychnine isa- to gr
.
In solution or in pill form . A preparation is syrupus fern phosphatis cum quinina et strychnine, containing ghl- gr. of strychnine in each fluid drachm . Strychninae hydrochloridum is also used; it is much more soluble than strychnine." From it is prepared liquor strychninae hydrochloridi, containing i gr. of hydrochloride inSee also: Ito minims
.
The See also: United States pharmacopoeia also contains strychninae nitras and strychninae sulphas
.
Strychnine is incompatible with liquor arsenicalis and potassium iodide
.
Physiological See also: Action.—Applied externally strychnine is a powerful antiseptic, but its poisonous nature prevents it from being used for this purpose
.
Brucine is a See also: local anaesthetic
.
Strychnine enters the See also: blood as such, being freely absorbed from mucous surfaces or when given hypodermically
.
Internally strychnine acts as a bitter, Increasing the secretion of gastric juice and the intestinal peristalsis, being a See also: direct stimulant to the See also: muscular coat; in this manner it has a purgative action
.
The specific effects of the See also: drug, however, are upon the central See also: nervous See also: system
.
It excites the motor areas of the See also: spinal cord and increases 'their reflex irritability
.
Small doses increase the sensibility of touch, sight and hearing; large doses cause twitching of the muscles and difficulty in swallowing; while in overdose violent See also: convulsions are produced
.
The cerebral See also: con-volutions remain unaffected, but the important centres of the medulla oblongata are stimulated
.
Not only is the See also: respiratory centre stimulated but the cardiac centre is acted upon both directly by the drug and indirectly for a See also: time by the enormous rise in blood pressure due to the contraction of the arterioles all over the See also: body
.
Ordinary doses have no effect upon the temperature but in over-dose the temperature rises during a convulsion
.
' Strychnine is eliminated by the kidneys as strychnine and strychnic acid
.
It is excreted very slowly and therefore accumulates in the system
.
Therapeutses.—Strychnine is chiefly used as a stimulant
.
It is
the treatment of See also: post-diphtheritic paralysis
.
In progressive See also: lead palsy, beri-beri, and the paralysis following acute alcoholism, fairly large doses are useful
.
In See also: pneumonia and other acute disease, where the patient is liable to sudden collapse, a hypodermic injection of strychnine will often save the patient's See also: life
.
In collapse following severe haemorrhage and in sudden and accidental arrest of the See also: heart or respiration during See also: chloroform narcosis an intramuscular injection of I9 gr. of the hydrochloride may stimulate the cardiac action
.
In acute opium poisoning strychnine is very valuable
.
It is a physiological antagonist of See also: chloral See also: hydrate, See also: morphine and physostigmine, and may be given in poisoning by these drugs
.
In dyspnoea due to See also: emphysema, See also: phthisis and asthma, strychnine is of service, given internally in doses of 1 to 3 minims of the liquor
.
The syrup of iron, See also: quinine and strychnine is used as a tonic
.
See also: Toxicology.—The symptoms of strychnine poisoning usually appear within twenty minutes of the ingestion of a poisonous dose, starting with an uneasy sensation, stiffness at the back of the neck, twitching of the muscles and a feeling of impending suffocation
.
The patient is then seized with violent convulsions of a tetanic character; the arms are stretched out, respiration impeded, the muscles are rigid, the body is thrown into opisthotonos, i.e. it rests See also: bow-form on the See also: head and the heels (occasionally the body is flexed forward ]emprosthotonos], the eyes remain wide open and fixed, and the mouth is See also: drawn aside (rises sardonicus)
.
After a minute the muscles relax, and the patient sinks back exhausted, consciousness being preserved throughout
.
Any noise, a draught of air or a touch may cause a convulsion
.
If the See also: case is about to terminate fatally the spasms rapidly succeed each other and See also: death usually occurs within two See also: hours, either from asphyxia produced by spasm of the respiratory muscles or more rarely from exhaustion
.
After death the position of the body may or may not be flexed; usually rigor mortis develops rapidly
.
In cases which recover the convulsions diminish in severity , leaving the patient exhausted
.
Complications are infrequent
.
The See also: average fatal dose for an adult is 11 grs., but death has resulted in twenty minutes from s grain
.
On the other See also: hand, recovery has taken place after g and to and even 20 grains have been swallowed, but in the latter case an emetic was at once administered
.
Idiosyncrasy plays a considerable See also: part in determining the effects, some See also: people being particularly susceptible; death has occurred in five minutes from the appearance of the first symptoms, but when a narcotic has been administered at the same time as the See also: poison the development is proportionately slow
.
Tetanus resembles strychnine poisoning, but the development of thesymptoms in tetanus is usually much slower, death rarely occurring within 24 hours
.
In strychnine poisoning trismus or lockjaw is generally secondary to spasm of the other muscles, while in tetanus it is usually the first symptom, no relaxation taking place between the spasms
.
The treatment of strychnine poisoning is to immediately evacuate the stomach with a stomach-See also: pump or emetic, chloroform being administered to allay the spasms
.
If the patient can swallow, See also: draughts of water containing tannic acid may be given
.
Nitrite of amyl inhalations are useful in the early stages when the respiratory muscles, are freely movable
.
Chloral and potassium bromide may be given as physiological antidotes
.
If death from asphyxia appears Imminent artificial respiration may be resorted to
.
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