APOCYNUM CANNABINUM.
The root of Apocynum cannabinum, Linné (Nat.
Ord. Apocynaceae) gathered in autumn after the leaves and fruit have
matured. Grows throughout the United States. Dose, 1 to 20
grains.
Common Names: Bitter Root, Canadian Hemp, and improperly, Indian
Hemp.
Principal Constituents.—A resinous principle—apocynin,
and a yellow glucoside, apocynein; and apocynamarin, or
cynotoxin, or cymarin, all of which resemble digitalis
glucosides in action.
Preparations.—1. Specific Medicine Apocynum. Dose, 1/4 to
20 drops. Usual form of administration: Rx Specific Medicine
Apocynum, 10 drops to 1 fluidrachm; Water, four ounces; Mix. Sig. One
teaspoonful every 1 to 3 hours.
2. Decoctum Apocyni, Decoction of Apocynum (root 1 ounce to
Water, 16 ounces). Dose, 1 to 2 fluidrachms.
Specific Indications.—Watery infiltration of
cellular tissue—edema—with weak circulation and general debility; skin
blanched, full, smooth, and easily indented; puffiness under the eyes;
eyelids wrinkled, as if parts had been recently swollen; feet full and
edematous, pitting upon pressure; constipation, with edema; urine scanty
and circulation sluggish; boggy, watery uterus; full relaxed uterus with
watery discharge; profuse menorrhagia, too often and too long continued;
passive hemorrhages, small in amount and associated with pedal edema;
mitral and tricuspid regurgitation, with rapid and weak heart action,
low arterial tension, difficult breathing, cough, and tendency to
cyanosis.
Action.—Apocynum acts powerfully upon the
heart, slowing its action and raising arterial tension. The cardiac
muscle appears to be directly stimulated by it as are probably the
arterial coats. Contraction of the renal arteries also takes place, so
that while less blood passes at a time through the kidneys, the act of
filtration is more perfect and marked diuresis results. Though long
known that diuresis was one of its most prominent results, the knowledge
that this is due to the better cardiac pressure and arterial tonus,
rather than to the increased intrinsic secreting power of the renal
glomeruli, is the result of pharmacologic investigation in recent years,
particularly the work of Horatio C. Wood, Jr. The general effects upon
man of full doses of apocynum are nausea, and sometimes vomiting and
purging, succeeded by copious sweating. The pulse is then depressed, and
in some a disposition to drowsiness is observed until relieved by
vomiting. The powdered drug causes sneezing. The small doses employed in
Eclectic therapeutics seldom occasion any of the above-named symptoms
save that of severe watery purging, which may occur suddenly, when the
drug has been administered persistently for several weeks.
Therapy.—No remedy in the Eclectic materia
medica acts with greater certainty than does apocynum. In former times
it was employed in heroic doses chiefly for its hydragogue cathartic and
diuretic effects. Early in the last century it was employed by the
botanic practitioners for the relief of dropsy. Later the Eclectic
school developed its specific uses in dropsy and affections of the heart
and circulation. Like many similar drugs, the powder was employed as a
sternutatory in the days when it was believed that such effects as the
increasing of the nasal discharges was the best way to relieve headaches
and certain catarrhal affections. Again, it was recommended in
diaphoretic doses, for the relief of intermittent and remittent fevers,
and in pneumonic involvements, conditions in which it is now seldom or
never thought of. It is rarely employed nowadays as a cathartic, and
then only in dropsical conditions, as other hydragogues have been
similarly used. Such is the use of it advocated by the authors of the
regular school of medicine, by those who use it at all; and from such a
use arises the criticisms frequently indulged in condemnation of the
drug. Eclectics do not use it in this manner. Specific medication has
established that this action is not necessary, for when specifically
indicated it promptly removes effusions without resorting to cathartic
doses. Consequently it finds little use as a cathartic, except very
rarely as recommended by Goss, for the removal of ascarides.
To use apocynum intelligently and successfully, the
prescriber must recognize, first, that debility is the condition in
which it exerts its specific and beneficial effects—debility of the
heart and circulatory apparatus, of the kidneys, of the capillaries of
the skin particularly. In such a state it will prove a remedy; under
opposite conditions it is likely to prove an aggravation. The patient
with a strong, rope-like, hard, and quick pulse is not the patient for
apocynum. On the other hand, the feeble pulse, soft and of little force,
indicates its selection as the remedial agent. The atonic state which
readily permits of exudation from the blood vessels is the ideal
condition which we seek to remedy with apocynum. It is a vascular
stimulant. Such results one would not expect to obtain if there were
circulatory obstruction or active fever. The only apparent exception, in
which it is adapted to active conditions, is that reported by Webster of
its efficacy in active inflammation of the upper pharyngeal and
post-nasal tract, where, he declares, it rivals phytolacca in its
results. One can not expect apocynum to reconstruct worn-out tissues or
to restore damaged vascular valves. We must not hope to work miracles
with it where there are such structural lesions as incurable or
malignant organic diseases of the heart, liver, or kidneys. Yet in these
conditions, when debility and subcutaneous, watery exudation are strong
factors, it alone is a powerful remedy to relieve urgent symptoms and to
put into action that portion of sound tissue that remains. The most we
can hope for is an amelioration of the symptoms, and a notable decrease
of the watery accumulation may be looked for. Under these circumstances
we have removed enormous dropsical swellings with it, giving quick
relief from dyspnea and thereby allowing the patient to obtain rest in
the recumbent position. Still it did not cure, and in many such
instances death mercifully removes the victim before extensive
infiltration can again take place. Digitalis, cactus, strophanthus, and
convallaria often aid its action. It is a singular circumstance,
mentioned by Krausi, and which we have also observed, that apocynum
seldom has any effect upon patients who have been subjected to
paracentesis. In our opinion this is due to the advanced stage of the
disease, usually reached by the time it is necessary to tap; for tapping
is seldom regarded a curative measure, and is resorted to in the later
stages of ascites to give temporary relief. It is then too late for any
drug to gain a satisfactory foothold. Moreover, apocynum is less
effective in ascites than in edema or anasarca, for the latter is most
likely to depend upon circulatory failure, whereas the former may depend
most largely upon malignant or obstructing tumors.
The chief indication for apocynum is watery fullness
of tissues as if infiltrated and accompanied by debility. This may be
shown in the puffy eyelids, the swollen feet and ankles or other parts,
which pit upon pressure. The skin is usually blanched, sometimes
streaked with pinkish lines, full, smooth, and glistening. If the case
be chronic or subacute, the more active the drug appears. With these
conditions it may confidently be relied upon to cure curable cases or to
give relief in incurable maladies, whether they are revealed in simple
edema or anasarca, ascites, or dropsy of any of the serous cavities, or
dropsy following scarlatina or malarial poisoning. In both of the latter
conditions it is unusually effective. When such accumulations,
functional in origin and due chiefly to vascular weakness, accompany
atonic stomach and bowel disorders, as gastric and intestinal dyspepsia,
and in syphilis, it is a signally useful drug. In rheumatism, arthritis,
and sciatica, with edema, or even if but slight puffiness of the part be
present, it renders valuable aid to antirheumatics or other appropriate
remedies. Acute and chronic hydrocephalus, with spreading sutures,
protruding fontanelles, and puffy eyelids, have yielded to the curative
action of apocynum. It has been recommended in cerebro-spinal meningitis
during the stage of effusion. In watery leucorrhoea, passive menorrhagia,
irritable and congested uterus, prolapsus uteri, uterine subinvolution,
and in some cases of amenorrhoea, in all of which debility is marked and
the pelvic tissues are heavy, lax, and sodden, and there is slight
infiltration about the ankles, apocynum has cured when remedies
ordinarily directed in gynecological practice have failed to relieve.
For the renal congestion of the second stage of tubular nephritis Gere
found it to be the best remedy. Others assert its usefulness in the
nephritis of pregnancy with albumen in the urine. Our experience with
apocynum leads us to believe it less valuable in dropsies with albumen
waste than in those without it but dependent most largely upon
circulatory embarrassment.
Apocynum is of very great value in diseases of the
heart and circulation—a fact recognized and acted upon in Eclectic
therapy years ago. Its action in giving tone to the heart muscle and
vessels, and its use in cardiac disorders, was the subject of comment by
Scudder, Locke, Ellingwood, Freeman, Waterhouse, Webster, and others.
Angina pectoris, attended with edema, and praecordial oppression of
smokers, are relieved by it. Krausi calls attention to its utility in
mitral regurgitation, and speaks of it as the king of remedies in
tricuspid regurgitation, with rapid and feeble cardiac action, low
arterial tension, cough, dyspnea, pulsating jugulars, general cyanosis,
scanty and high-colored urine, and general dropsy. He also refers to it
as giving no special aid in aortic diseases.
The observation made by Krausi that apocynum
increases secretion and excretion by way of the kidneys, whereas
digitalis, after twenty-four hours, causes a retention of urea, is an
important one, and should not be lost sight of. This ought to make it a
valuable agent in uraemia and conditions depending upon faulty
elimination of that body. Within a few years the internal and the
hypodermatic use of apocynum directly upon the nerve is said to have
promptly relieved sciatic neuritis.
The observations of a single reporter on the use of
the first dilution of apocynum in not over one-drop doses every two
hours as a remedy for obesity, is worthy of consideration and seems
rational as the classic indications are noted. However, one must not be
too optimistic concerning the power of a medicine to reduce fat, nor
must anasarca be mistaken for obesity. In these cases the pulse lacks
strength, though it is rapid; the temperature is inclined to subnormal
in the morning and slightly above normal in the evening; the tongue has
a dirty-white coating; the appetite is poor, the abdomen full and doughy
to the touch; and there are gaseous eructations from the stomach and
expulsion of flatus from the bowels. Occasionally there are
night-sweats, and the ever-present indication for apocynum, edema of the
extremities, is constant. |