Page 205 - Pharmacognosy 2 PG303 (1)
P. 205

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


              Constituents
                     Dried colchicum corm contains up to about 0.6 % of the toxic alkaloid
              colchicine. The drug also contains abundance of starch. It yields from 2.2-2.4%
              of ash.

              Uses
                     Colchicum is chiefly used to relieve the pain and inflammation and shorten
              the duration of acute gout and certain gouty affections, but is liable to cause
              intestinal  pain  accompanied  by  vomiting  and  purging.  Colchicine  induces
              polyploidy in seedlings treated with a weak solution about 0.4 %.
























              Indian colchicum: Colchici Indici Cormus.

                   Indian colchicum is the corm of Colchicum luteum Baker, Family Liliaceae,
              deprived of its membranous coats and dried.

              Macroscopical Characters
                     The corms are brownish and translucent or pale-buff and semi-translucent or,
              more rarely, opaque, and cream colored or brownish-gray, usually ovate in outline
              and plano-convex with a slight contraction of the convex surface at the level of the
              oval scar marking the area where the corm was attached to that of the previous
              season and the margin of which exhibits scars left by the removal of the fibrous
              roots,  the  outer  surface  of  the  corm  is  marked  by  indefinite  and  irregular
              longitudinal  striations. Some  corms  are broadly  ovoid,  30-45  mm.  long  15-25
              mm.  wide  and  7-15  mm.  thick,  with  a  longitudinal  groove  2-9  mm.  wide,
              sometimes very shallow, and extending the entire length of the flat surface; the oval
              scar is about 3 by 5 mm., dark in color and occurs at the base or at a position
              one-tenth to one-half of the length of the corm from the base. Other corms are
              elongated and finger-like, being about 35-40 mm. long, 8-10 mm. broad and 5-8
              mm. thick, with the scar at a point two-thirds to three-quarters of the length



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