COLOCYNTHIS.
The dried, peeled pulp of the fruit of Citrullus
Colocynthis (Linné,) Schrader. (Nat. Ord. Cucurbitaceae.)
Mediterranean basin of Europe, Asia, and Africa. Dose, 1 to 5
grains.
Common Names: Colocynth, Bitter Apple, Bitter Cucumber, Colocynth
Pulp.
Principal Constituent.—The bitter active
glucoside colocynthin (C56H34O23)
Preparation.—Specific Medicine Colocynth. Dose, 1/30 to 5
drops.
Specific Indications.—Pain of a cutting,
twisting, boring, or tearing character, and if of the bowels, a desire
to go to stool; visceral neuralgia, with cutting pain; dysentery, with
tormina, and small passages of mucus, or diarrhoea with mucoid passages
. and intense cutting pain; colicky pains anywhere in the abdomen
(minute doses); distressing accumulations of gas; constipation with dry
scybala and griping pain in the lower bowel (larger doses).
Action.—Colocynth is a decided local irritant.
In small doses it is a stomachic bitter, exciting an increased flow of
gastric juice. In even moderate doses it is a violent hydragogue
cathartic, producing copious watery evacuations, and sometimes violent
emesis, tormina, and bloody stools. It may cause death from
gastro-enteritis. The powder or the tincture applied to a raw surface or
to the abdomen will purge as if given by the mouth. Colocynth, in small
doses, increases the renal function.
Therapy.—Colocynth is a powerful hydragogue
cathartic, but is seldom employed as such in Eclectic practice. Except
in minute doses it should not be given alone, at least never to the
extent of causing purging. It is commonly administered with other
cathartics in pill form, the compound extract of colocynth being
preferred, and its violence controlled by hyoscyamus or belladonna. When
so employed it is usually in melancholia and hypochondriasis with
sluggish hepatic and intestinal action, with large fecal accumulations;
and sometimes to produce local pelvic effects and thereby stimulate
menstruation in atonic amenorrhoea. It has been largely employed in
ascites from all causes, but while actively cathartic, it is less
desirable than some other hydragogue cathartics. It should never be so
used in the aged and where there is great debility or gastro-intestinal
inflammation. It is very rarely employed in Eclectic therapy for
dropsical effusions.
Specifically, colocynth is a remedy for visceral pain
of a sharp, colicky character-cutting, darting, cramping, or tearing
pain. The fractional dose only should be used. In sharp "belly ache"
attending stomach and bowel disorders, colocynth is splendidly effective
when the patient feels cold, weak and faint, and the pain is so great as
to cause him to flex his body upon his thighs. Even when neuralgic or
rheumatoid, such a condition is promptly relieved by colocynth.
In atonic dyspepsia, with bitter taste, bitter yellow
eructations, bloating after eating, with sharp, griping or cutting pain
in the umbilical region minute doses give excellent results. When
gaseous accumulations cause disturbances of breathing, or cardiac
palpitation, with loud belching and expulsion of flatus, and nausea and
vomiting are present, colocynth should be given with prospects of prompt
relief. Rx. Specific Medicine Colocynth (1 x dilution), 1-10 drops;
Water, 4 fluidounces. Mix. Sig.: One teaspoonful every 3 or 4 hours.
Where there is a lack of normal secretion 5 drops of tincture of
capsicum may be added to the mixture.
With similar symptoms minute doses act well in
cholera infantum; in chronic diarrhoea with slimy stools and tympanites;
in diarrhoea from overeating or improper food; and in dysentery with
great tormina, tenesmus and cutting pain, with ineffectual efforts at
stool it is one of the most certain of agents to relieve. In intestinal
and hepatic torpor, with bloating and dry scybalous stools it should be
given in somewhat larger doses (1/4 to 1 drop of Specific Medicine
Colocynth). When persistent headache depends upon the stomach and bowel
perversions named above it is often corrected by colocynth. In that form
of lumbago and sometimes pressure sciatica, due to gaseous accumulations
in the bowels, colocynth, capsicum, and bryonia should be considered.
The dose should not be large enough to purge.
Colocynth is useful in neuralgia of the viscera in
the parts supplied by the splanchnic nerves, as neuralgic colic. Other
nerve endings seem to respond to it, for it relieves ovarian neuralgia,
orchialgia, and sometimes neuralgia of the fifth nerve, when the
characteristic cutting pain prevails. It should be given also when
colicky pain precedes or accompanies amenorrhoea. |