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PRINCIPLES OF TOXICOLOGY - Biology East Borneo

PRINCIPLES OF TOXICOLOGY - Biology East Borneo

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420 PROPERTIES AND EFFECTS <strong>OF</strong> NATURAL TOXINS AND VENOMSFigure 17.4 The common foxglove, Digitalis purpurea. The leaves of this beautiful flowering perennial containseveral cardiac glycosides that are used in the medical treatment of congestive heart failure. Unfortunately, foxgloveleaves are easily confused with the leaves of the common comfrey, whose leaves are commonly used to prepareherbal teas, and there have been several medical reports of foxglove poisoning due to this error in plant identification.tered orally at recommeded doses, usually as a tea or a tablet. However, individuals who chronicallyconsume excessive amounts of ginseng may experience deleterious side effects including insomnia,skin eruptions, diarrhea, and hypertension.Fortunately for us, most saponins are not readily absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract asglycosides. Instead, intestinal glycosidase enzymes cleave away the sugar groups attached to the3-B–OH group on the sterol skeleton, and this practically abolishes their toxicity. The non-polaraglycones are readily absorbed and probably are pharmacologically active components. Thesaponins are a large, chemically diverse group. Despite a vast effort by chemists to decipher theircomplex structures, very little is yet known about their pharmacological mechanisms of action.They probably exert a variety of actions through multiple cell receptors. In spite of their popularity

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