Crude drug sample data base

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Crude drug name

Market nameセンナ
Formal nameセンナ
Japanese nameせんな, Senna
Latin nameSennae Folium (JP), (CP)
English nameSenna Leaf (JP), (CP)
Original plant nameCassia angustifolia Vahl, (Tinnevelly Senna)
Family nameLeguminosae
Used partClassificationPlant origin
Sub classification leaf
Collection informationJapan, Osaka Pref., Nippon Funmatsu Yakuhin Co., Ltd.
Collection date1985/11/16
CollectorTsuneo Namba
TMPW No.8021

The capital city, provincial capital city or the representative  
location of its administrative area is indicated.  
Production area information
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34.6937378
135.50216509999996
Collection information
Japan,Osaka Pref.
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Scientific information data base

Common nameセンナ, Sennae Folium (JP18, CP2020), Senna Leaf (JP18, CP2020)
Synonyms番瀉葉 (Fanxieye)
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Original plant nameCassia angustifolia Vahl or Cassia acutifolia Delile, (Tinnevelly senna, Alexandria senna)
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Family nameLeguminosae
Used partleaflet
Quality for selectionGood Senna contains few foreign material such as leaf rachis and petiole. (TN)
Official compendiumJP XVIII, CP (2020 ed.)
Clinical applicationLaxative. Senna promotes digestion as an amaroid stomachic at low doses. It has a laxative effect at proper quantity (3~6g/day) and cures stagnation of undigested food, abdominal distention and constipation. It is especially used for heat-type constipation, and must not be used for diarrhea due to pathogenic cold.
Medical systemTraditional Chinese medicine
Drug effect in
traditional medicine
Traditional
classification
Purgatives, cathartics
Beneficial effect[Property and Flavor] Cold; sweet and bitter.
[Meridian Tropism] Large intestine meridian.
[Actions] To purge heat, move stagnation, open the bowels, and induce diuresis.
[Indications] Heat bind, accumulation, stagnation, constipation with abdominal pain, edema distention and fullness.
Chemical constituentAnthraquinones
(*C1-C11):
Sennoside A, Sennoside B, Rhein-aloe-emodin dianthrone diglucoside, Sennoside C, Sennoside D, Sennoside G, Aloe-emodin-dianthrone diglucoside, Rhein anthrone diglucoside, Chrysophanol, Aloe-emodin anthrone diglucoside, Rhein, Aloe-emodin-8-glucoside, Rhein 8-glucoside,
以下代謝物 / The following compounds are metabolites
8-Glucosylrheinanthrone, Rheinanthrone, 8-Glucosylrhein, Sennidin A-8-monoglucoside, Sennidin B-8-monoglucoside, Sennidin B-8'-monoglucoside, 8-Glucosylrheinanthrone

Flavones & Flavonols
(*C1):
Kaempferol, Kaempferin, Isorhamnetin

Naphthalenes
C. angustifolia (*C12):
6-Hydroxy musizin glucoside
C. acutifolia (*C12):
Tinnevellin glucoside

Chemical structure


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Pharmacological effectHyperperistalsis.Dianthrones such as sennoside A are metabolized into rheinanthrone by intestinal bacterium and have the cathartic effect.
DNA sequenceU74195
DiseaseConstipation, Full stomach, Abdominal pain, Ascites
FormulationCompound Rhubarb and Sennna Powder
Related drugsSenna pod (Sennae Fructus)
ReferencesJP18: The 18th edition of the Japanese Pharmacopoeia.
CP2020: Pharmacopoeia of the People's Republic of China 2020 edi.
C1)The Encyclopedia of Wakan-Yaku with Color Pictures Vol. II, pp 95-97.
C2)Outline of Pharmacognosy, a Textbook, p 283.
C3)Planta Med.,40,225(1980).
C4)Chem.Pharm.Bull.,30,1338(1982).
C5)J.Pharmaco-bio-Dyn.,8,800(1985).
C6)Chem.Pharm.Bull.,35,1998(1987).
C7)Pharmacology,36,172(1988).
C8)Appl.Envir.Microbiol.,60,1041(1994).
C9)Biol.Pharm.Bull.,19,701(1996).
C10)Biol.Pharm.Bull.,19,705(1996).
C11)Biol.Pharm.Bull.,19,136(1996).
C12)Planta Med.,43,11(1981).
RemarksSenna is listed in The Ebers Papyrus which is said to be the oldest medical document in the world. Yahya ben Masawaih, a court physician of an Arabian Calipf in 11th century, introduced it to Europe as a substitute laxative for Aloe. After that, Senna became a common laxative in Europe and the United States. In Japan, It has been listed in the Japanese Pharmacopoeia since the 1st edition. There are two kinds of Senna. One is Alexandrian Senna which is cultivated in the midstream area of the Nile. The other is Tinnevelly Senna which is cultivated in the states of Kerala and Madras, India. Japan imports Tinnevelly Senna. In Europe and the United States, mostly, Alexandrian Senna and its fruit (Senna Pod) are used. In China, it became a medicinal plant much later. It first appears in Chinese literature, "Yinpianxincan".
Last renewal date2021/09/27