Aloes
Botanical: Aloe Perryi (J. G. BAKER), Aloe vera (LINN) Family: N.O. Liliaceae
---Part Used---Leaves. ---Habitat---Aloes are
indigenous to East and South Africa, but have been introduced into the
West Indies (where they are extensively cultivated) and into tropical
countries, and will even flourish in the countries bordering on the
Mediterranean.
The drug Aloes consists of the liquid exuded from the
transversely-cut bases of the leaves of various species of Aloes,
evaporated to dryness.
---Description---They are succulent plants
belonging to the Lily family, with perennial, strong and fibrous roots and
numerous, persistent, fleshy leaves, proceeding from the upper part of the
root, narrow, tapering, thick and fleshy, usually beset at the edges with
spiney teeth. Many of the species are woody and branching. In the remote
districts of S.W. Africa and in Natal, Aloes have been discovered 30 to 60
feet in height, with stems as much as 1O feet in circumference.
The flowers are produced in erect, terminal spikes. There is no calyx,
the corolla is tubular, divided into six narrow segments at the mouth and
of a red, yellow or purplish colour. The capsules contain numerous angular
seeds.
The true Aloe is in flower during the greater part of the year and is
not to be confounded with another plant, the Agave or American Aloe
(Agave Americana), which is remarkable for the long interval
between its periods of flowering. This is a succulent plant, without stem,
the leaves being radical, spiney, and toothed. There is a variety with
variegated foliage. The flower-stalk rises to many feet in height, bearing
a number of large and handsome flowers. In cold climates there is usually
a very long interval between the times of its flowering, though it is a
popular error to suppose that it happens only once in a hundred years for
when it obtains sufficient heat and receives a culture similar to that of
the pineapple, it is found to flower much more frequently. Various species
of Agave, all of which closely resemble each other, have been largely
grown as ornamental plants since the first half of the sixteenth century
in the south of Europe, and are completely acclimatized in Spain, Portugal
and Southern Italy, but though often popularly called Aloes all of them
are plants of the New World whereas the true Aloes are natives of the Old
World. From a chemical point of view there is also no analogy at all
between Aloes and Agaves.
Although the Agave is not employed medicinally, the leaves have been
used in Jamaica as a substitute for soap, the expressed juice (a gallon of
the juice yields about 1 lb. of the soft extract), dried in the sun, being
made into balls with wood ash. This soap lathers with salt water as well
as fresh. The leaves have also been used for scouring pewter and kitchen
utensils. The inner spongy substance of the leaves in a decayed state has
been employed as tinder and the fibres may be spun into a strong, useful
thread.
The fleshy leaves of the true Aloe contain near the epidermis or
outer skin, a row of fibrovascular bundles, the cells of which are much
enlarged and filled with a yellow juice which exudes when the leaf is cut.
When it is desired to collect the juice, the leaves are cut off close to
the stem and so placed that the juice is drained off into tubs. This juice
thus collected is concentrated either by spontaneous evaporation, or more
generally by boiling until it becomes of the consistency of thick honey.
On cooling, it is then poured into gourds, boxes, or other convenient
receptacles, and solidifies.
Aloes require two or three years' standing before they yield their
juice. In the West Indian Aloe plantations they are set out in rows like
cabbages and cutting takes place in March or April, but in Africa the drug
is collected from the wild plants.
---Constituents---The most important
constituents of Aloes are the two Aloins, Barbaloin and Isobarbaloin,
which constitute the so-called 'crystalline' Aloin, present in the drug at
from 1O to 30 per cent. Other constituents are amorphous Aloin, resin and
Aloe-emodin. The proportion in which the Aloins are present in the
respective Aloes is not accurately known.
The manner in which the evaporation is conducted has a marked effect on
the appearance of the Aloes, slow and moderate concentration tending to
induce crystallization of the Aloin, thus causing the drug to appear
opaque. Such Aloes is termed 'livery' or hepatic, and splinters of it
exhibit minute crystals of Aloin when examined under the microscope. If,
on the other hand, the evaporation is carried as far as possible, the
Aloin does not crystallize and small fragments of the drug appear
transparent; it is then termed 'glassy,' 'vitreous,' or 'lucid' Aloes and
exhibits no crystals of Aloin under the microscope.
---Varieties---The chief varieties of Aloes are
Curacao or Barbados, Socotrine (including Zanzibar) and Cape. Other
varieties of Aloes, such as black 'Mocha' Aloes, occasionally find their
way to the London market. Jafferabad Aloes, supposed to be the same
as 'Mocha' Aloes, is of a black, pitch-like colour and a glassy, somewhat
porous fracture; it is the product of Aloe Abyssinica and is
imported to Bombay from Arabia. It does not enter into English commerce.
Musambra Aloes is made in India from A. vulgaris.
Uganda Aloes, imported from Mossel Bay, not from Uganda, is a
variety of Cape Aloes produced by careful evaporation. Natal Aloes,
another South African variety, is no longer a commercial article in this
country. The A. Purificata of the United States Pharmacopoeia is
prepared by adding Alcohol to melted Aloes, stirring thoroughly, straining
and evaporating the strained liquid. The product occurs in irregular,
brittle, dull- brown or reddish pieces and is almost entirely soluble in
Alcohol.
Curacoa Aloes is obtained from A. chinensis (Staud.)
A. vera (Linn.) and probably other species. It was formerly
produced on the island of Barbados, where it was largely cultivated,
having been introduced at the beginning of the sixteenth century, and is
still frequently, but improperly called Barbados Aloes. It is now
almost entirely made on the Dutch islands of Curacoa, Aruba and Bonaire by
boiling the Aloe juice down and pouring the viscid residue into empty
spirit cases, in which it is allowed to solidify. Formerly gourds of
various sizes were used (usually containing from 60 to 70 lb.) but Aloes
in gourds is now seldom seen. It is usually opaque and varies in colour
from bright yellowish or rich reddish brown to black. Sometimes it is
vitreous and small fragments are then of a deep garnet-red colour and
transparent. It is then known as 'Capey Barbados' and is less valuable,
but may become opaque and more valuable by keeping. Curacoa Aloes
possesses the nauseous and bitter taste that is characteristic of all
Aloes and a disagreeable, penetrating odour. It is almost entirely soluble
in 60 per cent alcohol and contains not more than 30 per cent of
substances insoluble in water and 12 per cent of moisture. It should not
yield more than 3 per cent of ash.
Commercial Aloin is obtained usually from Curacoa Aloes.
Solutions of Curacoa and other Aloes gradually undergo change, and may
after a month no longer react normally, and may also lose the bitterness
natural to Aloes.
Socotrine Aloes is prepared to a certain extent on the island of
Socotra, but probably more largely on the African and possibly also on the
Arabian mainland, from the leaves of A. Perryi (Baker). It is
usually imported in kegs in a pasty condition and subsequent drying is
necessary. It may be distinguished principally from Curacoa Aloes by its
different odour. Much of the dry drug is characterized by the presence of
small cavities in the fractured surface, but the variety of Socotrine
Aloes distinguished as Zanzibar Aloes often very closely resembles
Curacoa in appearance and is usually imported in liver-brown masses which
break with a dull, waxy fracture, differing from that of Socotrine Aloes
in being nearly smooth and even. When it is prepared, it is commonly
poured into goat skins, which are then packed into cases.
---Constituents---The name 'Socotrine' Aloes is
officially applied to both Socotrine and Zanzibar Aloes. Its chief
constituents are Barbaloin (formerly called Socaloin and Zanaloin) and B.
Barbaloin, no Isobarbaloin being present in this variety of Aloes. Resin
water-soluble substances other than Aloin and Aloe-emodin are also
present.
Socotrine Aloes should be of a dark, reddish-brown colour, and almost
entirely soluble in alcohol. Not more than 50 per cent should be insoluble
in water and it should yield not more than 3 per cent of ash.
Garnet-coloured, translucent Socotrine Aloes is not now found in commerce,
though fine qualities of Zanzibar Aloes are sometimes slightly
translucent. Samples of the drug which are nearly black are unfit for
pharmaceutical purposes. The odour of Zanzibar Aloes is strong and
characteristic, and its taste nauseous and bitter.
Cape Aloes is prepared in Cape Colony from A. ferou
(Linn.), A. spicata (Thumb.) A. Africana, A. platylepia and
other species of Aloe. It possesses more powerfully purgative properties
than any other variety of the drug and is preferred to other varieties on
the Continent, but is chiefly employed in this country for veterinary
purposes only though for this purpose the Curacoa Aloes is as a rule
preferred. Another form of the drug used for veterinary purposes, called
Caballine or Horse Aloes, usually consists of the residue
from the purification of the more valuable sorts.
Cape Aloes almost invariably occurs in the vitreous modification; it
forms dark coloured masses which break with a clean glassy fracture and
exhibit in their splinters a yellowish, reddish-brown or greenish tinge.
Its translucent, glossy appearance and very characteristic, red-currant
like odour sufficiently distinguish it from all other varieties of Aloes.
Uganda Aloes is also obtained from A. ferox. It occurs in
bricks or fragments of hepatic, yellowish-brown colour, with a bronze gold
fracture and its odour resembles that of Cape Aloes.
Cape Aloes contains 9 per cent or more of Barbaloin (formerly known as
Capaloin) and B. Barbaloin. Only traces of Capalores not annol combined
with paracumaric acid. Cape Aloes should not contain more than 12 per cent
of water; it should yield at least 45 per cent of aquoeus extract but not
more than 2 per cent of ash Uganda Aloes yields about 6 per cent of Aloin,
part of which is B. Barbaloin. The leaves of the plants from which Cape
Aloes is obtained are cut off near the stem and arranged around a hole in
the ground, in which a sheepskin is spread, with smooth side upwards. When
a sufficient quantity of juice has drained from the leaves it is
concentrated by heat in iron cauldrons and subsequently poured into boxes
or skins in which it solidifies on cooling. Large quantities of the drug
are exported from Cape Town and Mossel Bay.
Natal Aloes. The source of this variety which is seldom
imported, is not yet definitely ascertained, but it is probably prepared
from one or more species of Aloe, probably including A. ferox.
Natal Aloes is prepared with greater care than Cape Aloes the leaves being
cut obliquely into slices and the juice allowed to exude in the hot
sunshine, after which it is boiled down in iron pots the liquid being
stirred until it becomes thick and then poured into wooden cases to
solidify. Natal Aloes is much weaker than any other variety, having little
purgative action on human beings, apparently because it contains no
Emodin. It is no longer of commercial importance. It resembles Cape Aloes
in odour and occurs in irregular pieces which are almost always opaque and
have a characteristic, dull greenish-black or brown colour. It is much
less soluble than Cape Aloes. It has not a glassy fracture like that of
Cape Aloes and when powdered is of a greenish colour.
Good Aloes should yield 40 per cent of soluble matter to cold water.
Both Curacoa and Cape Aloes in powder give a crimson colour with nitric
acid, Socratine Aloes powder touched with nitric acid does not give
a crimson colour.
---History---The Mahometans, especially those in
Egypt, regard the Aloe as a religious symbol, and the Mussulman who has
made a pilgrimage to the shrine of the Prophet is entitled to hang the
Aloe over his doorway. The Mahometans also believe that this holy symbol
protects a householder from any malign influence.
In Cairo, the Jews also adopt the practice of hanging up the Aloe.
In the neighbourhood of Mecca, at the extremity of every grave, on a
spot facing the epitaph, Burckhardt found planted a low shrubby species of
Aloe whose Arabic name, saber, signifies patience. This
plant is evergreen and requires very little water. Its name refers to the
waiting-time between the burial and the resurrection morning.
All kinds of Aloes are admirably provided by their succulent leaves and
stems against the drought of the countries where they flourish. The
cuticle which covers every part of the plant is, in those which contain a
great quantity of pulpy material, formed so as to imbibe moisture very
easily and to evaporate it very slowly. If the leaf of an Aloe be
separated from the parent plant, it may be laid in the sun for several
weeks without becoming entirely shrivelled; and even when considerably
dried by long exposure to heat, it will, if plunged into water, become in
a few hours plump and fresh.
---Medicinal Action and Uses---The drug Aloes is
one of the safest and best warm and stimulating purgatives to persons of
sedentary habits and phlegmatic constitutions. An ordinary small dose
takes from 15 to 18 hours to produce an effect. Its action is exerted
mainly on the large intestine, for which reason, also it is useful as a
vermifuge. Its use, however, is said to induce Piles.
- From the Chemist and Druggist (July 22, 1922):
- 'Aloes, strychnine and belladonna in pill form was criticized
by Dr. Bernard Fautus in a paper read before the Chicago branch of the
American Pharmaceutical Society. He pointed out that when given at the
same time they cannot possibly act together because of the different
speed and duration of the three agents. Aloin is slow in action,
requiring from 10 to 12 hours. Strychnine and Atropine, on the other
hand, are rapidly absorbed, and have but a brief duration of action.'
Preparations of Aloes are rarely prescribed alone, they require the
addition of carminatives to moderate the tendency to griping. The compound
preparations of Aloes in use generally contain such correctives, but
powdered Aloes and the extracts of Aloes represent the crude drug.
Aloes in one form or another is the commonest domestic medicine and is
the basis of most proprietary or so-called 'patent' pills.
There is little to choose medicinally between the Curacoa and Socotrine
varieties, but the former is somewhat more powerful, 2 grains of Curacoa
Aloes being equal to 3 grains of Socotrine Aloes in purgative action. The
latter is more expensive, but varies much in quality.
Aloes is the purgative in general uses for horses, it is also used in
veterinary practice as a bitter tonic in small doses, and externally as a
stimulant and desiccant.
Aloes was employed by the ancients and was known to the Greeks as a
production of the island of Socotra as early as the fourth century B.C.
The drug was used by Dioscorides, Celsus and Pliny, as well as by the
later Greek and Arabian physicians, though it is not mentioned either by
Hippocrates or Theophrastus.
From notices of it in the Anglo-Saxon leech-books and a reference to it
as one of the drugs recommended to Alfred the Great by the Patriarch of
Jerusalem, we may infer that its use was not unknown in Britain as early
as the tenth century. At this period the drug was imported into Europe by
way of the Red Sea and Alexandria. In the early part of the seventeenth
century, there was a direct trade in Aloes between England and Socotra,
and in the records of the East Indian Company there are notices of the
drug being bought of the King of Socotra, the produce being a monopoly of
the Sultan of the island.
The word Aloes, in Latin Lignum Aloes, is used in the Bible and
in many ancient writings to designate a substance totally distinct from
the modern Aloes, namely the resinous wood of Aquilaria agallocha,
a large tree growing in the Malayan Peninsula. Its wood constituted a drug
which was, down to the beginning of the present century, generally valued
for use as incense, but now is esteemed only in the East.
A beautiful violet colour is afforded by the leaves of the Socotrine
Aloe, and it does not require a mordant to fix it.
---Preparations---Fluid extract: dose, 5 to 30
drops. Powdered extract: dose, 1 to 5 grains. Comp decoc., B.P.: dose, 1/2
to 2 OZ. Tincture B.P.: dose, 1/4 to 2 drachms. Tincture aloes myrrh,
U.S.P.: dose, 30 drops.
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