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Hydrangea Febrifugine

China Hydrangea macrophylla (Thunb.) Seringe Febrifugin, hydrangeic acid, hydrangenol, rutin.50 Antimalarial, antitussive, diuretic. [Pg.271]

Largely on the basis of the magnitude (7 Hz) of J13 (obtained by irradiation at the side chain methylene) in febrifugine acetate di-hydro-chloride [272] this derivative of the hydrangea alkaloid was assigned the trans configuration shown. (173)... [Pg.91]

Febrifugine has a history as a malaria remedy which dates back to the first recorded use of Ch ang Shan in China, 200 B.C. It is an alkaloid which is apparently fairly widely distributed in the roots and leaves of plants of the family Saxifragaceae, and has been isolated both from the leaves of the common hydrangea in the United States and from the roots of Dichroa febrifuga Lour. The alleged antimalarial activity of the latter crude plant material has been confirmed by a number of modem investigators (93, 96-99). As a consequence of the careful and independent studies of both American and Chinese workers (100-106), the active alkaloid has been... [Pg.156]

The total alkaloid content of the Chinese root is 0.1-0.15% (43, 46), but that of Indian root is only about one tenth as great (46). The leaves of D. febrifuga also contain febrifugine (43, 44, 46), but in much smaller amount than the roots nevertheless, the leaves (known as Shuu Chi, or in Yunnan as Chunine ) have a high antimalarial activity and probably contain some other active alkaloid (44). Febrifugine has also been isolated from hydrangea leaves (51). [Pg.112]


See other pages where Hydrangea Febrifugine is mentioned: [Pg.92]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.15]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.347]    [Pg.172]    [Pg.219]    [Pg.175]    [Pg.569]    [Pg.146]    [Pg.370]   


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