Page 309 - Pharmacognosy 2 PG303
P. 309

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

              4-  HCl test:  Boil 1 g of Gum Tragacanth with 20 ml of water, until a mucilage is
                 obtained, then add 5 ml of HCl and again boil the mixture for 5 mins.; no red or
                 pink colour is produced (Indian Gum or Karaya Gum).
              5-  Lead acetate test:  Boil 0.5 g of gum Tragacanth with 20 ml of water, until a
                 mucilage is obtained, add 10 ml of lead acetate T.S.; a flocculent precipitate is
                 formed,  filter,  and  to  the  filtrate  add  10  ml  of  lead  sub-acetate  solution;  no
                 precipitate is formed, or at most a slight turbidity is produced (c.f. Gum Arabic).
              6-  Iodine test:  Mix a small quantity of powdered gum tragacanth with few drops
                 of water, followed by few drops of N/50 iodine; the particles are coloured yellow
                 and may show minute scattered blue points. Examine microscopically; only few
                 groups of small, rounded starch granules are visible.

              Constituents
                     Gum  Tragacanth  contains  60-70  %  of  bassorin,  a  complex  of
              polymethoxylated acids, which swells in water but does not dissolve and which gives
              tragacanth mucilage its peculiar density, serving to distinguish it from acacia which
              contains little or no bassorin.  Tragacanth also contains tragacanthin, which is a
              soluble constituent consists of 3 molecules of glucuronic acid and 1 molecule of
              arabinose.

              Uses
                     Tragacanth is employed pharmaceutically as a suspending agent for insoluble
              powders in mixtures, as an emulsifying agent for oils and resins, and as an adhesive
              in pill mass.  It is employed in cosmetics (hand lotions), as a demulcent and an
              emollient, and in cloth printing, confectionary, etc.




                                                 DRIED EXTRACTS

                     This group includes drugs which are prepared by evaporating the aqueous
              decoction of parts of certain plants or animals, e.g., Agar-Agar, Gelatin and Gambir,
              which are official in the Egyptian Pharmacopoeia.

                                                        Agar - Agar

                                             Syn.:  Agar; Japanese Isinglass














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