Page 203 - Pharmacognosy 2 PG303 (1)
P. 203

Pharmacognosy-2 (PG303)                              Level 2                Clinical Pharmacy-Pharm D

              Cultivation and collection
                     The drug is collected chiefly from wild plants, which are often removed
              when a field is ploughed. The corms are often collected in June or July, at which
              time they  are  in  the  best  condition, the  leaves having withered  away  and  the
              flower not yet having appeared.

                     Seed may be sown as soon as it is ripe, in September, in a moist shaded
              spot and covered thinly with soil; they germinate during the winter and early spring.
              When one year old the corms may be planted in the field about 60 cm. apart, and at
              the end of the third year they may becollected in July. Flowering usually takes place
              in  August  or  early  September  of  the  fourth  or  fifth  year.  Plants  may  also  be
              propagated by planting young wild corms, which should be buried at a depth of
              about 20 cm. They produce a rosette of large lanceolate leaves, about 15-25 cm.
              long, in the spring; these die down in July, and in August or September the crocus-
              like lilac or pale purple flowers appear, hence the names Autumn Crocus and Naked
              Ladies given to the plant. The ovary is 10 cm. or more below the ground level and
              the fruit forms below the ground, in the spring the stalk elongates and the fruit is
              carried up with the rosette of new leaves.

                     The corms are lifted, the fibrous roots are removed from the base and the
              outer membranous scales are peeled off. They may be used fresh for making a
              juice or extract or they may be dried and stored for use as required. If they are
              dried the corms are cut transversely into slices about 0.5 cm. thick and are dried
              at a gentle heat not exceeding 65° C The membranous remains of the outer scales
              are removed from the finished product by winnowing.


              Macroscopical Characters
                     The fresh conm is bluntly conical and flattened on one side. It is 3.5-4 cm
              high, 2.5-3 cm, wide and about 2 cm. thick. Near the base of the flat surface is a
              shallow depression containing a bud from which the aerial stem of the following
              season and ultimately a new corm will be formed. At the summit of the corm is
              the remains of last season's flowering stem and, running from apex to base of its
              surface, vascular bundles may be seen as faint lines. Scars of the fibrous roots
              are  present  at  the  base.  Internally  the  corm  is  firm,  white,  and  fleshy,  it  has
              disagreeable odor, and exudes, when cut, a bitter juice that is white and milky
              from the presence in it of numerous starch grains.
















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