Henbane
COMMON
NAMES : Henbane, Devil's Eyes
- FAMILY
: Solanaceae (Nightshade)
- GENUS
: Hyoscyamus
- SPECIES
: niger
IDENTIFICATION
: A short plant which grows to 31 inches tall. It has sticky
serrated leaves and dullish yellow, funnel-shaped flowers
marked by characteristic veins and an unforgettable scent.
The fruits contain tiny black seeds.
ACTIVE CONSTITUENTS : Tropane alkaloids
The
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Henbane
(Hyoscyamus niger)
Henbane
(Hyoscyamus niger), any plant of the family Solanaceae (q.v.),
indigenous to Great Britain and found growing wild in waste
places and on rubbish heaps. It also occurs in central and
southern Europe and in western Asia extending to India and
Siberia, and has long been naturalized in the United States.
There
are two forms of the plant, an annual and a biennial. The
annual grows during the summer to a height of 30 to 60 centimetres
(1 to 2 feet) and then flowers and sets seed. The biennial
produces during the first season only a tuft of basal leaves,
which disappear in winter, leaving underground a thick fleshy
root, from the crown of which arises in spring a branched
flowering stem, usually much taller and more vigorous than
the flowering stems of the annual plants. The whole henbane
plant has a powerful, nauseous odour.
Commercial
henbane, which consists of the dried leaves of Hyoscyamus
niger and sometimes of H. muticus, of Egypt, yields three
dangerous drugs: atropine (q.v.), hyoscyamine, and scopolamine
(q.v.). Among the major suppliers of these leaves are Hungary,
Egypt, and the United States, all of which grow it commercially.
In France another species of henbane, H. albus, is used
for the same purpose.
The
leaves of H. niger are used in illicit preparations of smoking
mixtures and, in India, as a beverage. The seeds, which
contain more alkaloid than the foliage, have also been used
in India as a remedy for toothache. Medical use of henbane
is complicated by the fact that the leaves contain varying
amounts of the narcotics listed above. The isolated and
purified drugs derived from henbane, particularly the biennial
forms, are valuable remedies for spasmodic muscular contractions,
nervous irritation, and hysteria.
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