CHAPTER XXVI. CONVULSIVES. NEUROTICS PRODUCING CONVULSIONS. NUX VOMICA--BRUCIA--STRYCHNIA. The plants which yield the alkaloid Strychnia are, the Strychnos nux vomica, a native tree of Coromandel, Ceylon and Bengal: the Strychnos Ignatii, which abounds in the Philippine Islands, and furnishes the hard seed, about the size of a filbert, known as the bean of St. Ignatius; the Strychnos tieute, a large climbing shrub of Java; the Strychnos toxifera, of Guiana; and the Strychnos colubrina, or Snakewood, of the East Indies. The effects of these plants are exerted upon the spinal cord; as is manifest by the violent convulsions and the tetanic contractions of the muscles which they produce. They have no effect on the brain, consciousness remaining intact until death. A powerful juice, used by the Indians of Guiana as an arrow poison, and variously designated as curare, woorara, &c., is in all probability obtained from the Strychnos toxifera. The composition of the arrow poison varies in different tribes; in some it is a mysterious compound of many substances, Nux Vomica.—A powder, a tincture, and an extract, obtained from the seeds of the Strychnos nux vomica, or koochla tree, are used in medical practice. Thirty grains of the powder have proved fatal, and so have three grains of the alcoholic extract. Death may occur in from fifteen minutes to twelve hours. It is possible that nux vomica may accumulate in the system, as serious symptoms have arisen from the long-continued use of small doses. Thus a lady took nine grains of the powder daily, in divided doses, for sixteen days. As purging then set in with colic, the medicine was withdrawn. Five days after the withdrawal there was ringing in the ears, with drowsiness, impairment of speech, &c.; on the ninth day tetanic symptoms set in, with trismus; and on the twelfth day, after several tetanic convulsions, death took place from exhaustion. Brucia.—The seeds of the nux vomica not only yield strychnia but brucia, an alkaloid which has the same properties, and causes the same symptoms as strychnia, though it is much less powerful. Strychnia.—This alkaloid may very justly be termed a deadly poison. It is unfortunately the active ingredient of some preparations sold to the public for destroying vermin: a circumstance which has now led to the death of several individuals. “Battle’s Vermin Killer” is said by Dr. Letheby to consist of flour, Prussian blue, sugar, and strychnia in the proportion of twenty-three per cent. Since the use of strychnia by those notori The medicinal dose of strychnia is from the 1/30th to the 1/12th of a grain twice a day. Dr. Christison communicated a case to Dr. Taylor in which the 1/16th of a grain caused the death in four hours of a child between two and three years of age. One quarter of a grain has nearly proved fatal to adults. A woman twenty-two years of age died in the Jersey Hospital, from the accidental administration of half a grain. Death has occurred in twenty minutes from this poison. In eleven cases analyzed by Dr. Guy two hours and three-quarters were the limits respectively. Symptoms.—The time at which the symptoms commence varies according as the strychnia has been taken in solution or in a pill. In the first case a very bitter taste is experienced during swallowing, usually followed in a few minutes by a sense of suffocation and difficulty of breathing. Then there are twitchings of the muscles, jerking movements of the limbs, and a quivering of the whole frame. The limbs become rigid, the head is bent back, while the body is stiffened and arched, so that it rests on the head and heels (opisthotonos). The difficulty of breathing causes the face to become dusky, the eyeballs prominent, and the lips livid. The features assume a peculiar grin (risus sardonicus); there is much thirst, but perhaps inability to drink from spasm of the jaws; while the sufferer is quite conscious, is much alarmed, and is impressed with the idea that death is surely stealing upon him. As the attacks of spasms are commencing the patient cries out, and warns those about him of the approach of the seizure; he begs for help, and perhaps asks to be held, or rubbed, or turned over; and when the When the strychnia has been taken in a pill two hours have elapsed before any effects have been produced. A case is also reported (Glasgow Medical Journal, July, 1856) where a medical man took three grains of strychnia dissolved in spirits of wine and diluted sulphuric acid. He went to bed and slept for an hour and a half, and then awoke with a spasm. Under treatment he recovered. There is commonly a wide difference between tetanus arising from a wound or from disease and that provoked by strychnia. In the former case some exciting cause can be detected; the symptoms come on gradually, and only attain their full development at the end of several hours; the rigidity of the muscles is more or less permanent, there being no intervals of relaxation as there are in poisoning; and death has hardly been known to occur in less than twenty-four hours, while frequently it is deferred for two or three days. Post-mortem Appearances.—Although the body may be relaxed at the time of death it usually quickly stiffens—frequently in the course of ten or fifteen minutes. The rigor mortis is persistent for some time: in the case of Cook, poisoned by Palmer, the rigidity of the body and limbs was said not to have passed off after two months’ interment. Treatment.—Emetics are to be given at once, and repeated until very free vomiting is induced. If the tetanic spasms have not commenced, the stomach-pump ought to be used. Chloroform is to be given to relieve spasm and pain, but the patient should be disturbed as little as possible, as the least thing induces the tetanic attack. There is no very suitable antidote, but tannic acid, in the form of green or black tea, &c., might be given. Iodine forms a crystallizable compound with strychnia. Dr. Bennett, of Sydney, has recorded an instance in which he attributed recovery to the employment of tincture of iodine. Hence from thirty minims to a drachm of this tincture combined with the iodide of potassium may be exhibited. In its absence, three or four ounces of animal charcoal, diffused through water, ought to be given. To prevent the spasms by paralyzing the motor nerves, a solution of curare has been recommended by Dr. George Harley to be injected under the skin; or, if it could be obtained, the active principle of this substance, curarina, would perhaps be deserving of trial. The patient is to be kept warm and quiet. To separate strychnia from organic admixture the process modified from Stas, given in the beginning of this book, is the most useful. Tests.—Strychnia is a white crystalline solid, very insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol or chloroform or weak acids, and having an intensely bitter taste. 1. Pure strychnia is not changed in color when treated with iodic acid or with either of the strong mineral acids; but as this alkaloid generally contains brucia, nitric acid reddens it. 2. Dissolved in sulphuric acid no change ensues; but on adding a fragment of bichromate of potass to the solution a series of blue, violet, purple and red tints are produced. The same result is brought about by using ferricyanide of potassium, permanganate of potassium, the peroxide of lead, or the black oxide of manganese. 3. If the skin of a frog be dried, and a few drops of a solution containing strychnia applied to it, strong tetanic convulsions will ensue, and be reproduced every time the animal is touched or irritated. According to Dr. Marshall Hall this strychnoscopic test will detect the 1/5000th of a grain, or even less. 4. An exceedingly useful class of tests for many poisons has been introduced by Dr. Guy; we mean the crystalline appearances presented on subliming the substance and condensing it on a cool microscopic slide, or the crystalline form observed as modified by various reagents. Thus the strychnine sublimate, touched with a drop of carbazotic acid, forms groups of arborescent crystals, each branch forming part of a circle, when seen under the microscope. |