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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: INV-JED |
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JABORANDI , a nam given in a generic manner in Brazil and South America generally to a number of different plants, all of which possess more or less marked sialogogue and sudorific properties. In the year 1875 a drug was introduced under the above name to the notice of medical men in France by Dr Coutinho of 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 shrub about 10 ft. high, growing in 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 apex often slightly indented, from 3 to 4 in. long and 1 to r? in. broad in the middle. When held up to the 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 size and texture bear some resemblance to those of the cherry-laurel (Prunus laurocerasus), but are less polished on the upper surface. The flowers
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 part of the plant usually imported, although occasionally the stems and roots are attached to them. The active principle for which the name pilocarpine
Holmes, was ultimately adopted, was discovered almost simultaneously by Hardy
formula
Certain other alkaloids are 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
formula
Jaborandia, 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 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 spinal cord, pilocarpine exerts its greatest power on the secretions. It has no 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 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 direct stimulation of them by electricity adds nothing to the rate of salivary flow. The action is antagonized by atropine, which paralyses the nerve terminals. About 1-0th of a grain of atropineantagonizes half a grain of pilocarpine. The circulation is depressed by the drug, the pulse
The chief
Bright 's disease. It is also used to aid the growth of the hairin which it is sometimes successful; in cases of inordinate thirst, when one-tenth of a grain with a little bismuth held in the mouth may be of much value; in cases of lead and mercury poisoning, where it aids the elimination of the poison in the secretions; as a galactagogue; and in cases of atropine poisoning (though here it is of doubtful value).End of Article: JABORANDI If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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