CINCHONA

sĭngkōˈnə or chinchonachĭngkōˈnə, name for species of the genus Cinchona, evergreen trees of the madder family native to the Andean highlands from Bolivia to Colombia and also to some mountainous regions of Panama and Costa Rica. The trees are now cultivated elsewhere for "Peruvian bark," the source of quinine. Quinine is still the drug of last resort in the treatment of malaria, but its commercial importance was greatly reduced after the development of synthetic analogs in the 1950s. Several species yield quinine and several other antimalarial alkaloids. The bark of the uprooted tree is beaten loose, peeled by hand, and dried quickly to prevent the loss of alkaloids. Final extraction is conducted in factories.

The trees were named in honor of the countess of Chinchón who, legend says, was cured of a fever in 1638 by a preparation of the bark. Supposedly, at her instigation the bark was collected for malaria sufferers and later exported to Spain. Native peoples, however, had long used it for medicinal purposes and this use was observed by Jesuit missionaries, who brought the bark to Europe. Cinchona is sometimes called Jesuits' bark because of the part the group played in its dispersal. So successful were the Dutch and English in transplanting cinchona to Java and India that until World War II these countries, especially Java, grew practically the entire commercial supply.

Cinchona is classified in the division Magnoliophyta, class division Magnoliopsida, order Rubiales, family Rubiaceae.

See M. L. Duran-Reynals, The Fever Bark Tree (1946); P. E. Thompson and L. M. Werbel, Antimalarial Agents (1972); F. Rocco, The Miraculous Fever-Tree (2003).

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

-10419-

Search the Library
Books
Journals
Magazines
Newspapers
Encyclopedia
Advanced Search
About Questia
Questia is the world's largest online academic library offering full-text books, journals, and articles on thousands of topics.

Join Now...
Questia Books and Articles on: Cinchona
We found: 551 results
By media type:
 

Books:

 

446  

 

Journal articles:

 

25  

 

Magazine articles:

 

38  

 

Newspaper articles:

 

23  

 

Encyclopedia articles:

 

19  

 

books on: Cinchona  - 446 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...nineteenth century. As early as 1858 a second cinchona plantation was established at Tjibeurem. JUNGHUHN wrote the first manual about cinchona cultivation. It appeared in 1859 under...title Provisional Guide to Experimental Cinchona Cultivation " Voorloopige handleiding...
...with the tea-export restrictions. CINCHONA RESTRICTION In spite of the various measures taken by the Association of Cinchona Producers in Netherlands India...consequences of an over-production of cinchona have become more and more evident...
...the only method of maintaining a sound cinchona industry able to meet the increasing...In 1913 he brought about the first cinchona agreement between the newly established Association of Cinchona Producers and the quinine manufacturers...
...that a Bolivian species of the plant, Cinchona Calisaya , held the highest concentrations...producing a virtual Bolivian monopoly of the cinchona market that would last until 1850. During...1840s and early 1850s, Bolivian sales of cinchona boomed, comprising some 10 percent of...
...feared that the worlds cinchona supplies would soon...interest to obtain living cinchonas and reproduce them in...or theft, of the cinchona. The French and the...1860s over a million cinchona trees grew in Java...the Dutch to transfer cinchonas. Six saplings were...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Cinchona  - 25 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-25 >>  
 
...Swietenia Febrifuga and the Cinchona Substitutes by Pratik...distribution of the true Cinchonas has been pretty well...botanical species of Cinchona, from which the commercial...practitioners "eroded" cinchonas status as a "specific...manifest diseases allowed cinchona to become a central...
...USE AND DISTRIBUTION OF CINCHONA Prior to his travels beginning...knew nothing of the Andean cinchona or quinquina tree, whose...the European discovery of cinchonas antimalarial properties is...of the Spanish discovery of cinchona in "The Plateau of Caxamarca...
...had a virtual monopoly of production of cinchona bark from which quinine was made. Military...malaria were still uncommon. Much of the cinchona bark previously was shipped to the Netherlands...of chemicals necessary for processing cinchona bark. Some people in the quinine distribution...
...potentially lethal: Quinine is the chief alkaloid of cinchona, the bark of the Cinchona tree indigenous to certain regions of South America . . . The first written record of the use of cinchona occurs in a religious book written in 1633 and...
...in London. The commodities of tea and cinchona (the bark of which was used to make...coffee, sugar, tobacco, tea and cinchona (Kreutzberg: 5153, Table 5; Huitema...Starting in the 1850s with a collection of cinchona seedlings brought from the existing source...
More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-25 >>

 

magazine articles on: Cinchona  - 38 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-38 >>  
 
...his collection of cinchonas from the Pacific...content of all -- Cinchona calisaya -- grew...living from stripping cinchona bark in the forest...Vilque, wrapping the cinchonas in his poncho at...Although more than 200 cinchonas reached Southampton...species, known as Cinchona succirubra, was...
...barks, by which name cinchona bark was often called...humoral imbalances. The cinchonas bitterness, they were...a large shipment of cinchona bark was sent to a Spanish...Quinologia, praised cinchonas medicinal uses...than have recourse to cinchona bark, which together...
...although most commercial opium is now converted into codeine by methylation. Cinchona tree (Cinchona officinalis) Quinine is a drug which is made from the bark of the cinchona tree. A number of various other chemicals can also be synthesised from...
...is now southern Ecuador, to see its cinchona trees. The team had heard how indigenous...smallpox. His visit and observations on cinchona would make Loja the world center for...today, towns in the region rely on the cinchona trade. In April 1738, La Condamine...
...based in war-torn eastern Congo, grows Cinchona trees from which the ancient anti-malarial...exploits of daring explorers who smuggled Cinchona seeds out of 19th-century Peru in the...known 17th-century story from which the Cinchona tree takes its name is exposed as apocryphal...
More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-38 >>

 

newspaper articles on: Cinchona  - 23 results

       More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-23 >>  
 
...Gomez, Mrs. Rizabelita A. Sistena-Reyes, Congresswoman Cinchona Cruz-Gonzales, Pastor Lucilla T. Turalba, Mrs. Fidela...Adoracion J. Villanueva, Ms. Guia G. Gomez, Congresswoman Cinchona Cruz-Gonzales and her husband Mr. Manny Gonzales and Attorney...
...as a drug and was originally extracted from the bark of the cinchona tree. Conquistadors discovered this when they invaded Peru...whilst the native Incas didnt, thanks to the bark of the cinchona tree. It took two French scientists until 1820 to extract...
...borne disease. At that time, the only treatment for malaria was quinine, which was extracted from cinchona trees. The Japanese captured the cinchona plantations, providing quinine for their own troops, and gloated that malaria-fever-stricken...
...the region.According to the DENR, scientists have discovered a source of anti-malaria drug from the bark of the ldquo;Cinchona tree rdquo; which can be found in the area.It was further gathered that Mount Dulang-dulang, the highest point in the...
...Flower Show make a beeline to the gardens. Fever-Trees Tree Garden has a fantastic made partly from reclaimed wood from Cinchona (aka fever trees) -dark bark produces used in its tonics. Tree Tonic Water (pounds 1.65, 500ml, Waitrose) for the...
More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-23 >>

 

encyclopedia articles on: Cinchona  - 19 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-19 >>  
 
CINCHONA singko n or chinchona chingko n , name for species of the genus Cinchona, evergreen trees of the madder family native to...missionaries, who brought the bark to Europe. Cinchona is sometimes called Jesuits bark because of the...
...quina by the indigenous people of Peru, of several species of Cinchona and is used in the form of a salt, especially the sulfate. By the middle of the 17th cent. Jesuit missionaries had brought cinchona bark to Europe from South America, and quinine was isolated...
...universities. Economy Most of Indonesias sugarcane and kapok are grown in Java. Rubber, tea, coffee, tobacco, cacao, and cinchona are produced in highland plantations. Rice is the chief small-farm crop. Cattle are raised in the east. In the northeast...
...mi (30 60 km) wide, NE Tanzania. On its slopes, which rise to c.8,000 ft (2,440 m), coffee, sisal, tea, and cinchona are produced; rice is grown in the swampy foothills. The region was among the first in E Africa to be settled (1902) by...
...rhythm patterns. It is an alkaloid chemically similar to quinine and, like quinine, occurs naturally in some species of cinchona trees. Quinidine slows the rate of blood flow in heart chambers and lowers the excitability of the muscle. Quinidine is a...
More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-19 >>

 About Questia   ::   Privacy   ::   Contact