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Cinchona bark, antimalarial property

The oldest effective drug for the treatment of this disease is indisputably quinine. Although the antipyretic activity of cinchona bark was known to the Incas, it remained for the Jesuit missionaries to uncover its antimalarial properties in the early seventeenth century. The advance of organic chemistry led to the isolation and identification of the alkaloid, quinine, as the active compound at the turn of this century. The emerging clinical importance of this drug led up to the establishment of cinchona plantations in the Dutch East Indies. This very circum-... [Pg.337]

A number of naturally occurring pharmacologically active alkaloids possess quinoline and isoquinoline skeleton. For examples, papaverine from Papa-ver somniferum is an isoquinoline alkaloid and quinine from Cinchona barks is a quinoline alkaloid that has antimalarial properties. [Pg.165]

Quinidine, cinchonine, and cinchonidine also have antimalarial properties, but these alkaloids are not as effective as quinine. The cardiac effect makes quinidine unsuitable as an antimalarial. However, mixtures of total Cinchona alkaloids, even though low in quinine content, are acceptable antimalarial agents. This mixture, termed totaquine, has served as a substitute for quinine during shortages. Quinine-related alkaloids, especially quinidine, are also found in the bark of Remija pendunculata (Rubiaceae). [Pg.364]


See other pages where Cinchona bark, antimalarial property is mentioned: [Pg.40]    [Pg.1]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.750]    [Pg.270]   


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