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Gelsemium is an Asian and North American genus of flowering plants belonging to family Gelsemiaceae. The genus contains three species of shrubs to straggling or twining climbers. Two species are native to North America, and one to China and Southeast Asia.<ref name=heidi>Template:Cite journal includes description, drawings, distribution map, etc.</ref>

Carl Linnaeus first classified G. sempervirens as Bignonia sempervirens in 1753; Antoine Laurent de Jussieu created a new genus for this species in 1789. Gelsemium is a Latinized form of the Italian word for jasmine, gelsomino. G. elegans has the common name "heartbreak grass".<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

PropertiesEdit

All three species of this genus are poisonous.

Active componentsEdit

The active components of gelsemium are the alkaloids, which are present in a concentration of about 0.5%. These consist primarily of gelsemine (a highly toxic compound related to strychnine), with lesser amounts of related compounds (gelsemicine, gelsedine, etc). Other compounds found in the plant include scopoletin (also called gelsemic acid), a small amount of volatile oil, fatty acid and tannins.<ref>Drugs, Gelsemium</ref>

Gelsemium has been shown to contain methoxyindoles.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Medicinal usesEdit

As late as 1906, a drug called Gelsemium, made from the rhizome and rootlets of Gelsemium sempervirens, was used in the treatment of facial and other neuralgias. It also proved valuable in some cases of malarial fever, and was occasionally used as a cardiac depressant and in spasmodic affections, but was inferior for this purpose to other remedies.<ref>Template:Cite NIE</ref>

SpeciesEdit

Species Common names Areal Characteristics Image
Gelsemium elegans Heartbreak grass Native to India, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, northern Myanmar, Taiwan, northern Thailand, Vietnam, and the Chinese provinces of Fujian, Guangdong, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hainan, Hunan, Jiangxi, Yunnan, and Zhejiang Twining climber, found in scrubby forests and thickets from 200–2000 meters elevation File:Gelsemium elegans 107560597.jpg
Gelsemium rankinii Rankin's jessamine, swamp jessamine, Rankin's trumpetflower Native to southeastern United States File:Swamp Jessamine (993733505).jpg
Gelsemium sempervirens Yellow jessamine, Carolina jessamine, evening trumpetflower Native to southeastern and south-central United States from Virginia to Texas and south through Mexico to Central America It is commonly grown as a garden flower worldwide File:Gelsemium sempervirens3.jpg

Alleged poisoning victimsEdit

Symptoms of poisoningEdit

The poison affects the vision and respiration.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Symptoms can appear almost immediately.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Arthur Conan Doyle's experimentEdit

Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the British physician and author of the Sherlock Holmes stories, once administered himself a small amount of gelsemium and kept increasing the amount every day until he could no longer stand the ill effects. In a letter written by him to the British Medical Journal published on 20 September 1879, he described that at lower doses he experienced "languor, giddiness, and a partial paralysis of the Ciliary muscle" (in the eye).<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> At higher doses he had persistent diarrhea, severe frontal headache, and great depression, and therefore stopped his self-experimentation at 200 minims.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

A rare case of Gelsemium addictionEdit

In his classic early 20th century work on psychotropic drugs Phantastica, German pharmacologist Louis Lewin recounts the seemingly unique case of a person who became addicted (in a manner far more often associated with opiates) to a Gelsemium preparation:

during a severe attack of rheumatism a man took a large quantity of an alcoholic tincture of Gelsemium sempervirens a plant which is liable to act on the brain and the medulla oblongata. Noticing an appreciable result he continued to take it, and finally became a slave to the drug. He gradually augmented the quantity, and reached 30 gr. of the tincture in one dose. Slowly he became pale, agitated, and discontented. He wasted away. Hallucination set in, and his state grew worse until disorders of the intelligence appeared. As he continued to increase the doses he fell into idiocy and died in a state of mental confusion.<ref>Lewin L. Phantastica. Die betäubenden und erregenden Genussmittel. Für Ärzte und Nichtärzte (trans. Phantastica: Narcotic and Stimulating Drugs. For Doctors and Non-doctors) Berlin: Verlag von Georg Stilke, 1924.</ref>

ReferencesEdit

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Further readingEdit

  • Template:Cite EB1911 This contains a detailed description of the then-common usage and dosage of the drug.

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