|
Botanical Name :
Solanum xanthocarpum
Sanskrit Name :
Kantakari, Nidigadhika
English Name :
Yellow Berried Nightshade
Family : Solanaceae
Description of
Solanum
xanthocarpum:
Found in Southeast Asia, Malaya and tropical Australia. Very
commonly found throughout India in plains from seashore to hills
up to 1000 m high..
It is a very prickly perennial herb somewhat with woody base.
Stem branched much and younger ones clothed with dense, stellate
and tomentose hairs. Prickles are compressed straight, glabrous
and shining, often 1-3 cm long. Leaves ovate or elliptic,
sinuate or subpinnatifid, obtuse or subacute, stellately hairy
on both sides, armed on the midrib and often on the nerves with
long yellow sharp prickles. Petiole is long, stellately hairy
and prickly. Flowers are in cymes or some times reduced as
solitary. Calyx tube is short, globose and lobes linear-lanceolate,
acute, densely hairy and prickly. Corolla purple, lobes deltoid,
acute, and hairy outside. Anther filament is long, glabrous and
anthers open by a pore. Ovary is ovoid and glabrous. Berry
yellow, green-blotched and sorrounded by enlarged calyx. Seeds
are glabrous. |
 |
|
Principal Constituents:
Steroidal alkaloid solasodine is the principal alkaloid.
Alcoholic extracts of the plant contain fatty and resinous
substances. Solasonine is present in fruits. The glycoalkaloid
content of fruits collected from plants growing in Jammu &
Kashmir is reported to be 3.5 per cent (total alkaloids: 1.1%).
The plant samples collected from Calcutta contained solasodine
of 0.0287%. The presence of diosgenin in the plant has been
reported. Seeds yield 19.3 % of a greenish yellow,
semi-drying oil with a characteristic odour. The unsaponifiable
matter of fruits contains two sterols, one of which is
carpesterol.
Pharmacology:
Pharmacological studies on this herb have shown that aqueous and
alcoholic extracts of the plant possess hypotensive effect,
which is partly inhibited by atropine. The more persistent
secondary fall in the blood pressure and broncho-constriction
are inhibited by the antihistamine drugs. Both glycoalkaloid and
fatty acid fractions of the extract cause liberation of
histamine from chopped lung-tissue. The beneficial effect of the
drug on bronchial asthma may be attributed to the depletion of
histamine from bronchial and lung-tissue. Solasodine
is teratogenic in rats and guinea-pigs.
Toxicology:
There is no adverse effect was reported on use of this herb as
drug.
Indications:
Stem, flowers and fruits are bitter and carminative. It is
employed in cough, asthma and pains in chest, being used in the
form of a decoction. They are prescribed for relief in burning
sensation in the feet accompanied by vesicular watery eruptions.
Leaves are applied locally to relieve pain. The juice of berries
is used in sore throat. Like roots, seeds are also administered
as an expectorant in asthma and cough. The plant is credited
with diuretic properties and is used to cure dropsy. Its juice
is mixed with whey and ginger and given in fevers. The juice of
the leaves, mixed with black pepper, is prescribed in
rheumatism. An Ayurvedic compound Arkadhi, with this herb is
useful in dengue fever, acute bronchitis and fevers accompanied
by chest-affections. The macerated plant in coconut oil is given
to cattle at the time of calf delivery. A decoction of roots or
crushed fruits with mine salt is given to cattle for stomachache
or constipation. It forms a constituent of herbal cough remedy
koflet (Himalaya) and is reported to promote expectoration.
Disclaimer:
The authenticity of the above
information are not verified and established by us. You are
requested to get it verified. The above given information are
collected from various sources may be used for academic purpose.
|