QUININE

kwīˈnīnˌ, kwĭnēnˈ, white crystalline alkaloid with a bitter taste. Before the development of more effective synthetic drugs such as quinacrine, chloroquine, and primaquine, quinine was the specific agent in the treatment of malaria. Almost insoluble in water, it dissolves readily in alcohol and other organic solvents. It is derived from the bark, called quina 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 in 1820 by the French chemists J. B. Caventou and P. J. Pelletier; chemical synthesis was achieved in 1944 by R. B. Woodward and W. E. Doering, American chemists.

Certain strains of the malarial parasite Plasmodium falciparum have now developed a resistance to chloroquine, and quinine is again the preferred drug in some regions. Quinine also has been used medicinally to allay fever and pain, to induce uterine contractions during labor, and as a sclerosing, or hardening, agent in the treatment of varicose veins. It is added to soft drinks called tonics, which are often mixed with alcoholic beverages. Excessive dosage or continuous use of quinine may cause cinchonism, characterized by ringing in the ears, headache, dizziness, changes in blood pressure, and even death.

See 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.

-39419-

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: Quinine
We found: 3025 results
By media type:
 

Books:

 

2437  

 

Journal articles:

 

194  

 

Magazine articles:

 

176  

 

Newspaper articles:

 

189  

 

Encyclopedia articles:

 

29  

 

books on: Quinine  - 2437 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...Home Remedies, Smallpox Vaccine, and Quinine From Saugrains announcement in the newspaper...strong efforts to discredit his use of quinine for swamp fever. Marmadukes and Doniphans forces believed in quinine, as they had seen its benefit in their...
...Vannevar Bush, 2 September 1942 , Quinine. 7. Ibid.; Baxter 1946, p. 311...December 1942; Charles Morrow Wilson, "Quinine: Reborn in Our Hemisphere," Harpers , August 1943, pp. 275-80, Quinine. 10. Robert B. Woodward to EHL...
Quinine / My favorite drink is tonic water. Is it true that it still contains quinine? Yes, it contains a very small amount of quinine, which gives tonic water its slightly bitter taste. / The drink itself dates back to the time when the British...
...manufacturers to extract the utmost amount of quinine from the available bark. Much criticism...complexities of the whole cinchona-quinine enterprise. Their constant aim has been to keep the world supplied with quinine and to see that the planters get adequate...
...Gunion Peters, 1979 . Arguing that adding quinine in food not only changes the palatability...1979 , suggested that the rejection of quinine is based on toxic consequences rather...that while VMH knife-cut rats reject quinine-adulterated food, they do not reject...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Quinine  - 194 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...a filter paper wetted with an aversive quinine solution, whereas the darkened arm leads...vial when the lighted vial is wetted with quinine. By contrast, most flies tested with...unconditioned stimulus (US-the taste of quinine) whereas the darkened arm is not associated...
...the odorant octanol, the bitter tastant quinine, SDS, high osmolarity, heavy metals...response to a variety of stimuli (including quinine) in osm-9 mutants (Hilliard et al...behavioral response to the bitter tastant quinine (Hilliard et al. 2004; this work...
...mild laxatives and stimulants such as quinine, camphor, alcohol, turpentine, and...for instance, relied on mercury and quinine to balance the humors during an illness...a purgative to clean the system, and quinine, to treat fever, can cause malaria and...
...rewards (sugar pellets) and punishments (quinine-treated sugar pellets; see below for...by unpalatable, but not uneatable, quinine-treated pieces of sweetened puffed wheat cereal (mice) or quinine-treated sugar pellets (rats). The...
...fields, and instead concentrated on a quinine policy.23 Watts argued that direction...anti-malarial sanitation and towards quinine prophylaxis was motivated by the need...malarial prophylaxis through the use of quinine. Most malariologists, led by Christophers...
More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

magazine articles on: Quinine  - 176 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
Stop to Marketing Quinine for Night Leg Cramps. Less than a year...marketing of over-the-counter (OTC) quinine sulfate for night leg cramps based on...stop to the marketing of prescription quinine for this use because even under a doctors...
Rx Quinine Products Are a new Drug, FDA Warns by...any prescription drug product containing quinine sulfate indicated for the treatment and...its decision that over-the-counter quinine products are not generally safe and effective...
...malaria, and what you will be taking is quinine, which for centuries in one form or another has been the best treatment. Quinine is the strongest of four fever-fighting...eastern spine of the Andes. While quinine was not isolated in pharmacological...
...the source then, as now, of the anti-malarial quinine. In 1860 quinine was the only cure for malaria, and Britons beset...Mysore, where they became the backbone of the Indian quinine plantations. ANDEAN ADVENTURE According to a map...
...cited the case of a woman who took OTC quinine sulfate tablets to treat leg cramps...a suit against the manufacturer of the quinine tablets as well as against the pharmacy...manufacturer continues to maintain that its quinine sulfate wasnt to blame for the womans...
More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

newspaper articles on: Quinine  - 189 results

       More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...magical ingredient, an alkaloid called quinine, which is classified as a drug and was...the magical substance which they named quinine. To this day, old wives still claim...prevent malaria. Gradually, natural quinine has been replaced by the chemically...
...prevention of idiopathic leg cramps is quinine sulfate, a drug which, strangely enough, is an anti-malarial. The efficacy of quinine sulfate in preventing leg cramps has been...Administration (FDA) does not allow sale of quinine-based products for leg cramps over...
...prevention of nocturnal leg cramps is quinine sulfate, a drug which, strangely enough, is an anti-malarial. The efficacy of quinine sulfate in preventing leg cramps at night...does not allow over the counter sale of quinine-based products for leg cramps because...
...cadwyd gyflenwad o denti riwbob, spirit neitar a quinine. Disgrifir quinine mewn geiriadur Saesneg fel hyn: Peruvian- Indian...gan gymaint o bobl yn nyddiau goludog y Raj) Gin - quinine? ynghyd a dwr tonic). Yn ystod y Rhyfel Byd Cyntaf...
...alcohol that damaged her health. It wasthe quinine in the tonic water she added to her gintwo...over 50,000 pints of tonic water. The quinine destroyed her adrenal gland and now she...overdosed onmalaria pills, which also contain quinine. It is ridiculous, she says,laughing...
More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

encyclopedia articles on: Quinine  - 29 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-29 >>  
 
QUININE kwi nin , kwinen , white crystalline alkaloid...quinacrine, chloroquine, and primaquine, quinine was the specific agent in the treatment...bark to Europe from South America, and quinine was isolated in 1820 by the French chemists...
...cultivated elsewhere for "Peruvian bark," the source of quinine . Quinine is still the drug of last resort in the treatment of...synthetic analogs in the 1950s. Several species yield quinine and several other antimalarial alkaloids. The bark...
...heart muscle relaxant used to maintain regular heart 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...
...cocaine as a local anesthetic. Other common alkaloids include quinine , caffeine , nicotine , strychnine , serotonin , and LSD . Aconitine is the alkaloid of aconite . Cinchonine and quinine are derived from cinchona , coniine is found in poison hemlock...
...economically for several tropical crops, e.g., coffee, quinine, and ipecac, and for many ornamentals, e.g., the gardenia...of the Old World tropics; many are African. The medicine quinine comes from the bark of evergreen trees ( cinchona ) native...
More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-29 >>

 About Questia   ::   Privacy   ::   Contact