Page 128 - Pharmacognosy 2 PG303
P. 128

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

                                               CANNABIS HERB

                                                (Indian hemp, Hashish)




































                     The dried flowering and fruiting tops of pistillate plants of Cannabis sativa Linne Family:
              Cannabinaceae.

                     It is an annual plant, Indigenous to central and west Asia but now largely cultivated in
              tropical  countries  (USA/  Mexico)  for  the  production  of  oleo-resin.  In  temperate  countries
              (Europe), it is mass cultivated for its strong fibers and oily seeds (hemp seed).

              Macroscopical Characters
                     The  plants  occur  in  irregular  flattened  or  cylindrical  dull  green  to  greenish-  brown
              agglutinated  masses,  harsh  resinous  or  loose  less  resinous  in  touch.  It  has  narcotic  and
              characteristic odor and very slight or no taste. The stem is cylindrical, longitudinally furrowed,
              hairy, pale green to light brown in color with ascending branches bearing numerous bracts, in the
              axil  of  which  small  cymose  inflorescences  arise.  The  leaves  are  generally  broken  simple,
              lanceolate, petiolate, alternate with entire margin. The lower leaves are palmately lobed and hacve
              serrate margin. The bracts are numerous, either simple and sessile or palmately compound of
              three leaflets and short petioles, each has small stipules. The lower bracts are larger, resemble the
              foliage leaves, palmately compound with 3- 5 leaflets, which are narrowely lanceolate with serrate
              margins and acute apices. The central leaflets are larger and about 3 cm L. In the axil of each bract
              are two boat shaped bracteoles with acute apices, each enclosing a single small pistillate flower.
              The  flower  has  a  minute  ovary  (2  mm  length)  enveloped  by  a  membranous  perianth  termed
              perigone, surmounted by two long brownish- red hairy stigmas, within the ovary is one ovule. The
              fruit is small indehiscent, 6 mm L. and 4 mm W., glossy, ovoid with several longitudinal veins
              due to the presence of the enlarged, persistent bracteoles enveloping the fruit. It has a single seed
              with a small oily endosperm and large incumbent embryo.




                                                            91
   123   124   125   126   127   128   129   130   131   132   133