Page 204 - Pharmacognosy 2 PG303
P. 204

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


























                  Colchicum Corm: A., flat surface of a corn gathered in June, after removal
                  of brown outer scale; B, transverse section of the same; C, longitudinal
                  section of the same;  D,  commercial  dried  slices of  the  corm;  Starch
                  grains at bottom of drawing; b, bud for next season's flowering stem; e,
                  brown outer envelope f, remains of the flowering stem of last season;
                  f.v.b., vascular bundle; a, scar where corm has broken away from the
                  parent corm; a,, region when much shrinkage occurs during drying.

                     The dried slices are from 2-5 mm. thick about 3 cm. wide, sub-renifom to
              oval in shape, the groove on one side being due to the shrinkage of the more
              aqueous parenchyma occurring in the centre of the straight edge. The surface of
              the edge of the slice is dark brown, the transverse surface shows a white, mealy
              ground tissue in which are numerous scattered vascular bundles, appearing as
              grayish points . Pieces from the apex and base of the corm are sub-conical and
              plano-convex,  respectively.  The  fracture  is  short  and  starchy,  the  drug  is  in
              odorous and has a bitter taste. The transverse surface assumes a yellow color
              when  treated  with  hydrochloric  acid  or  with  sulphuric  acid,  20%.  This  is  a
              reaction for colchicine.

              Microscopical Characters
                     The epidermis consists of rectangular to polygonal tabular cells, about 40-
              60-95  microns  in  width  or  length  with  brown,  indistinctly  pitted  moderately
              thick,  slightly  wavy  walls;  it  contains  occasional  stomata,  nearly  circular  in
              outline. The mass of the corm consists of a thin-walled, round-celled parenchyma
              filled with starch grains which are simple or more usually compound with 2 or 3
              or  sometimes  4-7  components  which  are  often  muller-shaped,,  the  hilum  is
              central and often a radiate split. The vascular bundles are slender, collateral and
              run  longitudinally  through  the  corm;  the  xylem  vessels  are  narrow,  spiral  or
              annular and about 30 microns in diameter. Colchicine is found in the epidermis
              and in a sheath, one cell thick, surrounding each vascular bundle.



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