Wednesday, 2 July 2014

SARPAGANDHI-amalppori

SARPAGANDHI-അമൽപ്പൊരി 

It is from the roots of sarpagandhi that the medicene used for blood pressure named serpacil is extracted. But in ayurveda sarpagandhi has long since been used as a nidrajanaka ooushadha or sleep inducing drug.Susrutha includes this drug under psychiatric medicene.

     Rauvolfia serpentina in Kudayathoor.jpg  
Scientific classification
Kingdom:Plantae
Division:Magnoliophyta
Class:Magnoliopsida
Order:Gentianales
Family:Apocynaceae
Genus:Rauvolfia
Species:R. serpentina
Binomial name
Rauvolfia serpentina
(L.Benth. ex Kurz[1]

FAMILY : APOCYNACEAE
SCI.NAME : RAUWOLFIA SERPENTINA BENTH EX KURZ

"[[[ 
Rauvolfia serpentina, or ' Indian snakeroot' or 'sarpagandha' is a species of flowering plant in the family Apocynaceae. It is native to theIndian Subcontinent and East Asia (from India to Indonesia).

 Medicinal uses

Rauvolfia serpentina contains a number of bioactive chemicals, including yohimbine, reserpine, ajmaline, deserpidine, rescinnamine,serpentinine.
The extract of the plant has also been used for millennia in India – Alexander the Great administered this plant to cure his general Ptolemy I Soter of a poisoned arrow. It was reported that Mahatma Gandhi took it as a tranquilizer during his lifetime. It has been used for millennia to treat insect stings and the bites of venomous reptiles. A compound which it contains called reserpine, was used in an attempt to treat high blood pressure and mental disorders including schizophrenia, and had a brief period of popularity for that purpose in the West from 1954 to 1957.
According to the American Cancer Society: "Available scientific evidence does not support claims that Indian snakeroot is effective in treating cancer, liver disease, or mental illness. It also has many dangerous side effects and is likely to increase the risk of cancer."
It is one of the 50 fundamental herbs used in traditional Chinese medicine, where it has the name shégēn mù  or yìndù shémù 
Etymology
The wood, commonly known as serpentwood, is mildly popular amongst woodcarving and woodturning hobbyists.  ]]] "


R.canescens L is the alternative drug used instead of the original one.

SANSKRIT : SARPAGANDHA, NAKULI, SARPAADANI, RAKTATRIKA, KUKKUTI
HINDI : CHOTACHAND
GUJARATHI : SARPAGANDHA
BENGALI : CHANDRA
TAMIL : SIVANMELPPODI
TELUGU : PATALAGANDHI

RASADI GUNAS
KASHAYA RASA
ROOKSHA GUNA
USNA VEERYA
KATU VIPAAKA

Habitat _ The sub-Himalayas tract
from Punjab to Nepal, Sikkim,
Bhutan, Assam, Western Ghats and
the Andamans.

Action _ Root—decoction is
employed to increase uterine
contractions and for expulsion
of foetus in difficult cases. The
total alkaloidal extract of the root
induces bradycardia, hypotension,
sedation. It finds application
in hypochondria, neuropsychiatric
disorders, psychosis and
schizophrenia.

Key application _ In mild, essential
hypertension (borderline
hypertension, especially with elevated
tension of the sympathetic
nervous system, for example,
sinus tachycardia, anxiety, tension
and psychomotor irritation,
when dietetic measures alone
are not sufficient. (German
Commission E.)
(Average daily dose: 600 mg drug
corresponding to 6 mg total alkaloid.)
Treatment is usually administered with
a diuretic to prevent fluid retention
which may develop if Rauvolfia root is
given alone. (WHO.) Contraindicated
in depression, bleeding disorders, gastric
and duodenal ulcers. (Sharon M.
Herr.) Also contraindicated in pregnancy,
since it has both teratogenic
and abortifacient potential. (Francis
Brinker.)
The root and root bark are rich in
alkaloids, the most important being
reserpine, others, around 30, which include
ajmaline, ajmalicine (raubasine),
ajmalicine, yohimbine, coryanthine,
iso-ajmaline, neo-ajmaline, papaverine,
raubasine, rauwolscine, rescinnamine,
reserpine, sarpagine, serpentine,
serpentinine, serpinine and deserpidine.
Reserpine is hypotensive and tranquilizer,
used for certain forms ofmental
disorders. Ajmalicine (raubasine)
and rescinnamine are also hypotensive
and tranquilizer. Deserpidine is
sedative, as well as hypotensive. Ajmaline
exhibits antiarrhythmic activity.
A
number of Rauvolfia species are
found in India: R. beddomei Hook. f.;
R. densiflora Benth ex Hook. f. (Himalayas,
Khasi and Aka Hills; Western
and Eastern Ghats); R. micrantha
Hook. f; known as Malabar Rauvolfia,
(Kerala, up to an altitude of 300 m)
The roots of R. beddomei contain
ajmalicine, sarpagine and serpentine,
but no reserpine. R. densiflora yielded
0.51%% of total alkaloids (reserpine
0.01%). R. micrantha gave ajmalicine,
raunamine, reserpiline, sarpagine,
neosarpagine, in addition to reserpine.
(In classical Ayurvedic texts, Nakuli
and Gandha-naakuli were included in
compound formulations for mental

diseases.)

( source : springers medical plants, wikipedia, internet )

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