Page 196 - Pharmacognosy 2 PG303 (1)
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Pharmacognosy-2 (PG303)                              Level 2                Clinical Pharmacy-Pharm D

              Constituents
                     An intensely bitter amorphous alkaloid and a dark brown resin, both of which
              are  purgative;  alcohol,  bryonol,  and  various  fatty  acids.  The  autumnal  root
              contains, further, large quantities of starch.

              Uses
                     The root, when taken internally in full doses acts as a cathartic and diuretic,
              applied to the skin it is irritant, and may cause vesication. It has been recommended
              for  pleurisy,  whooping  cough,  and  bronchitis,  and  has  been  given  in  cases  of
              dropsy.

                     Bryonia alba Linn. a continental species, is distinguished by its monoecious
              flowers and black berries, the common bryony having dioecious flowers and scarlet
              berries. It produces a similar root containing probably the same constituents.

                     Black  Bryony  is  the  fresh  root  of  Tamus  communis  Linn.,  Family
              Dioscoreaceae,  a  common  climbing  plant  of  the  hedgerows  and  thickets  of
              England. The fresh root is used as an application for bruises; it is rather smaller
              than bryony root and is free from bitterness.



                                                RAUWOLFIA ROOT

              Chootachand; Sarpagandha; Indian Snakeroot.

                     Rauwolfia consists of the dried root and rhizome of Rauwolfia serpentina
              Benth., family Apocynaceae, a large shrub indigenous to India, Burma, Malaya,
              Siam (Thailand) and Java. The drug has been used for many centuries in Ayuredic
              medicine under the Sanskrit name of sarpagandha.


















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