OLEUM RICINI.
Castor Oil.
The fixed oil obtained from the seeds of Ricinus communis, Linné
(Nat. Ord. Euphorbiaceae). An East Indian plant; cultivated.
Description.—A pale yellow or nearly colorless
viscid oil, having a faint odor, and a bland, somewhat acrid, and
nauseating taste. Dose, 2 to 8 fluidrachms.
Principal Constituents.—The glyceride of ricinoleic acid (ricinolein),
fixed oils, and the non-purgative ricinine.
Specific Indications.—Pain and irritation in the intestines from
irritating or undigested food; intestinal, subacute inflammation, with
colic, and watery or mucoid passages.
Action.—Applied externally castor oil is
non-irritating, protective, and somewhat emollient. When swallowed it
does not irritate the stomach, and the nausea induced is probably due to
the odor and the persistence of the unpleasant clinging contact of the
oil in the mouth. Upon entering the small intestines it is split by the
pancreatic juice into glycerin and ricinoleic acid, and the latter
induces the purgative action. Rubbed into the abdomen castor oil will
also cause purgation. After the first hardened feces are removed the
stools become liquid and are passed without pain or tenesmus. Castor oil
seeds are poisonous, twenty having killed a child.
Therapy.—External. Castor oil is
protective and slightly stimulating to denuded surfaces, and may be
dropped into the eye after burns have caused an ocular ulcer. Equal
parts of castor oil and balsam of Peru have been used successfully upon
old, sluggish ulcers, as of the shins, and in the treatment of
hypergranulation following pus infection after abdominal operations;
also in healing the ulcers from burns, wounds, and abscesses.
Internal. Castor oil is one of the mildest and
most satisfactory cathartics, and with the exception of sulphate of
magnesium is the most commonly employed purgative. It has no irritant
effect upon the stomach and operates usually in four or five hours. It
is probably the best laxative for children to cleanse the intestinal
tract of tainted or undigested food, poorly masticated nuts, and mucoid
accumulations. It is very effective in dysentery to prepare the way for
more specific medicines, especially when there is evident constipation
of the upper bowel. It may prove the best agent where hardened feces are
the cause of a mucoid diarrhea. The best preliminary treatment of entero-colitis
in children is a purge of castor oil, after which indicated remedies
have a much better opportunity to act. Owing to its thorough yet mild
and unirritating character it is the most suitable laxative for
constipation of children and for pregnant women before and after labor,
before and after abdominal and pelvic operations, and when inflamed
hemorrhoids are present. After its use in irritative diarrhoea no other
agent will be needed, for the provocative cause having been removed the
natural tendency of the oil is to cause constipation. Castor oil is not
a good remedy for chronic constipation, for it cannot be used for
prolonged periods without detriment to the patient, and probably an
aggravation of the costive condition. But for an occasional purge in
constipation preliminary to the use of cascara and other better
laxatives for continued use nothing is better than a free dose of castor
oil. In cases where there is a semipasty and tenacious light-colored
stool with burning at voiding and persisting for weeks, and there is
much semi-colicky uneasiness or soreness in the bowels and frequent
desire to defecate, castor oil is the best purge that can be used. A
single dose usually rectifies the trouble. Castor oil may be used even
in inflammatory and febrile conditions.
Castor oil may be employed to assist in the expulsion
of worms, giving it before and after vermifuges and taeniacides. It
should not, however, be given if aspidium (male fern) has been used, for
it increases the poisonous absorption of the latter.
The great drawback to castor oil is its nauseous
taste, which may be more or less disguised by peppermint and other
aromatics. Peppermint lozenges may be eaten immediately before and after
swallowing it; it has been advised in coffee, sweet cider, ale, milk,
and broth, but we do not favor the giving of nauseous medicines in
common beverages and foods, lest a disgust for the latter be engendered.
The following is the best method we know of for administering castor
oil: Squeeze into a suitable warmed glass a small quantity of orange
juice, and thoroughly rinse the inner surface of the glass with it.
Place the dose of oil upon the juice and cover with more juice. Then
having moistened the mouth completely with a portion of the orange juice
quickly swallow the mixture within the glass. If this is well carried
out the oil will not adhere to the mucosa nor will it be tasted. When a
strong purgative is needed, equal parts of aromatic syrup of rhubarb (or
neutralizing cordial or glyconda) and castor oil may be given in doses
of one to two fluidounces. |