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cinchona
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cinchona
cinchona or chinchona , 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.
Bibliography: 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).
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
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Bark: nature's "tree-shirts."
Magazine article from: Ranger Rick; 4/1/1998; ; 700+ words
; ...cork layer. To get the cork, workers strip big pieces of bark from large cork oak trees (right). It doesn't harm the tree if it's done the right way. DR. BARK If you take aspirin, thank a willow tree. Aspirin comes from a chemical that was first found in willow bark. People make medicine from other kinds ...
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Quinine's: Feverish tales and trails
Magazine article from: Americas; 9/1/2003; ; 700+ words
; ...ground from "Jesuit's bark" peeled off a "fever...will be taking is quinine, which for centuries...the best treatment. Quinine is the strongest...alkaloids found in the bark of trees of the genus...the Andes. While quinine was not isolated...until 1820, cinchona bark had been known ...
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Bark has a lot to say about the tree
Newspaper article from: The Topeka ; 11/20/2004; ; 700+ words
; ...joke: "How can you identify a dogwood tree?" (By it's bark!). But bark is, in fact, a unique identifying characteristic in many tree species. Green ash trees have vertically fissured bark. The bark on hackberry trees has characteristic corky...
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Gerald 'Jerry' Bark, 61, pitching coach, salesman.
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COLORFUL BARK AN EYE-CATCHING STANDOUT IN WINTER.(At Home)
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; Byline: Lee Reich Associated Press Hear the word bark and you're apt to think, first, of a dog and, second, of a birch tree. Well, foxes also bark, and the cinnamon brown, flaky bark of paperbark maple is every bit as eye-catching...
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Country & Garden: HERBS: No 50: QUININE
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Harvesting of bark places trees at risk in Cameroon.
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; The commercial harvesting of the bark of Prunus africana, a multiple-use tree...Division of Ecological Sciences. The tree's bark is the major source of an extract used...common health problem in older men. All the bark is taken from wild P. africana trees, which...
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Tree Talk: Importance of bark
Newspaper article from: Capital (Annapolis); 5/26/2005; ; 560 words
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Impact of bark content on the properties of medium density fiberboard (MDF) in four species grown in eastern Canada.
Magazine article from: Forest Products Journal; 3/1/2006; ; 700+ words
; ...density fiberboard (MDF) is generally produced from bark-free raw materials. The maximum bark content of MDF products is about 1 percent by weight. The potential of using large amounts of bark as raw material for MDF and the effects of bark...
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Crime in the forest Medicinal value of yew bark makes it target of poachers
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 7/5/1991; ; 578 words
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Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses
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cinchona
Book article from: Britannica Concise Encyclopedia
...species, mostly trees, that make up the genus Cinchona in the madder family . Cinchona is native to the Andes Mountains. Four species...living in the tropics led naturalists to smuggle cinchona seeds from South America to plantations in Asia...
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cinchona
Book article from: A Dictionary of Nursing
cinchona (sing- koh -nă) n. the dried bark of Cinchona trees, formerly used in medicine to stimulate the appetite and to prevent haemorrhage and diarrhoea. Cinchona is the source of quinine.
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Cinchona
Book article from: A Dictionary of Plant Sciences
Cinchona (family Rubiaceae ) A genus of trees, several species of which were formerly widely cultivated for quinine and related drugs, contained in the bark. There are 40 species, native to the Andes.
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cinchona
Book article from: World Encyclopedia
cinchona Genus of evergreen trees native to the Andes and grown in South America, Indonesia and Congo. The dried bark of the trees is a source of quinine and other medicinal products. Family Rubiaceae.
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cinchona
Book article from: The Oxford Pocket Dictionary of Current English
...x2C8; ch ōnə / • n. an evergreen South American tree or shrub (genus Cinchona ) of the bedstraw family. ∎ (also cinchona bark ) the bark of this tree, a source of quinine. ∎ a drug made from this bark...
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