Page 186 - Pharmacognosy 2 PG303
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Pharmacognosy-2 (PG303)                              Level 2                Clinical Pharmacy-Pharm D

                                               RADIX IPOMOEA

              Orizaba Jalap Root. Mexican Scammony,

                     Orizaba jalap root is obtained from Ipomoea orizabensis (Pellet.) Ledanois,
              family Convolvulaceae, a plant growing near Orizaba in the Mexican Andes, about
              sixty-five miles south-west of Vera Cruz. It produces a large, woody root which is
              cut into pieces of varying size and shape and dried. The drug, which has long been
              known as light, woody, stalk, or male jalap, is imported in considerable quantities,
              under the name of Mexican Scammony.

              Macroscopical Characters
                     The  tubercles  of  Mexican  Scammony  or  Ipomoea  are  large  and
              fusiform, about 15-20 cm. long and 4-10 cm. thick, and compared with jalap,
              they are light in density. Entire tubercles, sometimes slashed longitudinally
              to facilitate drying, are occasionally imported, but usually they are cut into
              transverse slices about 0.5-2 cm. thick or sometimes as much as 4 cm. and
              more  or less wedge shaped. Externally the  tubercles are  grayish-black and
              very  coarsely  wrinkled.  The  transverse  surface  of  the  slices  is  rough  and
              fibrous from the projection of numerous woody strands arranged in concentric
              circles,  of  which  five  or  six  are  often  present,  in  the  tissue  phloem  and
              parenchyma  between  the  woody  rings  there  are  numerous  scattered  resin-
              cells. The slices are tough and the fracture is short, irregular and resinous; the
              odor is slight and the taste faintly acrid. Ipomea fluoresces in ultra-violet light
              with a deep bluish-violet color (cf. Jalap).

              Microscopical Characters
                     The numerous rings of vascular bundles arise by the limited activity of
              successive cambia. At the centre of the root is a small woody core consisting
              of  the  primary  xylem  surrounded  by  the  secondary  xylem  formed  by  the
              original  cambium,  which  ceases  to  function  after  a  limited  period,  •a  new
              accessory cambium now arises in the pericycle and  forms a ring of tertiary
              bundles surrounding the first secondary tissues and separated from one another
              and from the central group by parenchyma. After a short time this cambium
              also ceases to function and accessory cambia are formed successively in the
              pericycle, producing additional rings of bundles as the tubercle increases in
              size.

                     Abundant  starch  grains are  present in the  parenchyma, most of  them
              being two- to six- compound, individual grains being mostly muller-shaped
              and up to 35 microns in diameter.

                     Numerous  cluster  crystals  of  calcium  oxalate,  15-45  microns  in




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