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Cherry, Wild
Botanical: Prunus serotina (EHRL.) Family: N.O. Rosaceae
---Synonyms---Virginian Prune. Black Cherry.
---Parts Used---Bark of root, trunk and branches.
---Habitat---North America generally, especially in Northern
and Central States.
---Description---This tree grows from 50 to 80 feet
high, and 2 to 4 feet in diameter. The bark is black and rough and
separates naturally from the trunk. Wood polishes well, as it is
fine-grained and compact, hence it is much used by cabinet-makers. Leaves
deciduous, 3 to 5 inches long, about 2 inches wide, on petioles which have
two pairs of reddish glands, they are obovate, acuminate, with incurved
short teeth, thickish and smooth and glossy on upper surface; flowers
bloom in May, and are white, in erect long terminal racemes, with
occasional solitary flowers in the axils of the leaves. Fruit about the
size of a pea, purply-black, globular drupe, edible with bitterish taste,
is ripe in August and September. The tree is most abundant and grows to
its full size in the south-western States. The root-bark is of most value,
but that of the trunk and branches is also utilized. This bark must be
freshly collected each season as its properties deteriorate greatly if
kept longer than a year. It has a short friable fracture and in commerce
it is found in varying lengths and widths 1 to 8 inches, slightly curved,
outer bark removed, a reddish-fawn colour. These fragments easily powder.
It has the odour of almonds, which almost disappears on drying, but is
renewed by maceration. Its taste is aromatic, prussic, and bitter. It
imparts its virtues to water or alcohol, boiling impairs its medicinal
properties.
---Constituents---Starch, resin, tannin, gallic
acid, fatty matter, lignin, red colouring matter, salts of calcium,
potassium, and iron, also a volatile oil associated with hydrocyanic acid
by distillation of water from the bark
---Medicinal Action and Uses---Astringent tonic,
pectoral, sedative. It has been used in the treatment of bronchitis of
various types. Is valuable in catarrh, consumption nervous cough,
whooping-cough, and dyspepsia.
---Dosages---Syrup, B.P. and U.S.P., 1 to 4
drachms. Tincture, B.P., 1/2 to 1 drachm. Infusion, U.S.P., 2 oz. Fluid
extract, 1/2 to 1 drachm. Prunin, 1 to 3 grains.
---Adulterant---A spurious cherry bark has been
noted which may be distinguished by the fact that no hydrocyanic acid is
found when macerated with water.
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