Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Subscription Access
Open Access Open Access Open Access  Restricted Access Restricted Access Subscription Access

Phytochemistry and Pharmacology of Anamirta cocculus Willd


Affiliations
1 College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Govt. Medical College, Thiruvananthapuram – 695011, Kerala, India
2 College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Govt. Medical College, Kozhikode – 673008, Kerala, India
     

   Subscribe/Renew Journal


Anamirta cocculus is a woody climber of Menispermaceae family remains popular folk remedy in Asia and adjacent regions. It crude drug is officially listed in many Pharmacopoeias. The fruits, especially the seed contain picrotoxin, a very strong poison that was toxic to all vertebrates affecting the CNS, stimulating the respiratory and vagus centres in the medulla and acting on the heart and lungs with diminished pulse. The toxicity results in vomiting, purging, profuse sweating, dimness of vision, unconsciousness and clonic convulsions. Death occurs rapidly due to respiration failure, or slowly from gastro-intestinal symptoms, particularly the medulla oblongata and respiratory centre. In South-East Asia the fruit of Anamirta cocculus is used mainly as a fish poison and as an insecticide. The plant was large-stemmed and, stem and ischolar_mains contains quaternary alkaloids, such as beriberine, palmatine, magnoflorine, columbamine, oxypalmine, stepharine and the major tertiary alkaloid as 1- 8-oxotetrahydropalmatine. The alkaloids of Anamirta cocculus have antibacterial, antimicrobial, sympatholytical (acetylcholine), and antifertility activities and the isolated alkaloids were confirmed and characterized by UVspectrophotometry, Mass spectroscopy, H1-NMR and C13-NMR spectroscopy.

Keywords

Anamirta cocculus, Picrotoxin, Quaternary Alkaloids, Tertiary Alkaloids, Mass Spectroscopy.
Subscription Login to verify subscription
User
Notifications
Font Size


Abstract Views: 234

PDF Views: 1




  • Phytochemistry and Pharmacology of Anamirta cocculus Willd

Abstract Views: 234  |  PDF Views: 1

Authors

U. S. Jijith
College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Govt. Medical College, Thiruvananthapuram – 695011, Kerala, India
C. R. Sudhakaran Nair
College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Govt. Medical College, Thiruvananthapuram – 695011, Kerala, India
K. C. Ajithkumar
College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Govt. Medical College, Kozhikode – 673008, Kerala, India
K. Pramod
College of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Govt. Medical College, Kozhikode – 673008, Kerala, India

Abstract


Anamirta cocculus is a woody climber of Menispermaceae family remains popular folk remedy in Asia and adjacent regions. It crude drug is officially listed in many Pharmacopoeias. The fruits, especially the seed contain picrotoxin, a very strong poison that was toxic to all vertebrates affecting the CNS, stimulating the respiratory and vagus centres in the medulla and acting on the heart and lungs with diminished pulse. The toxicity results in vomiting, purging, profuse sweating, dimness of vision, unconsciousness and clonic convulsions. Death occurs rapidly due to respiration failure, or slowly from gastro-intestinal symptoms, particularly the medulla oblongata and respiratory centre. In South-East Asia the fruit of Anamirta cocculus is used mainly as a fish poison and as an insecticide. The plant was large-stemmed and, stem and ischolar_mains contains quaternary alkaloids, such as beriberine, palmatine, magnoflorine, columbamine, oxypalmine, stepharine and the major tertiary alkaloid as 1- 8-oxotetrahydropalmatine. The alkaloids of Anamirta cocculus have antibacterial, antimicrobial, sympatholytical (acetylcholine), and antifertility activities and the isolated alkaloids were confirmed and characterized by UVspectrophotometry, Mass spectroscopy, H1-NMR and C13-NMR spectroscopy.

Keywords


Anamirta cocculus, Picrotoxin, Quaternary Alkaloids, Tertiary Alkaloids, Mass Spectroscopy.