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Digitalis

Digitalis (/ˌdɪɪˈtlɪs/[2] or /ˌdɪɪˈtælɪs/[3]) is a genus of about 20 species of herbaceous perennial plants, shrubs, and biennials, commonly called foxgloves.

Foxglove
Digitalis purpurea (Common foxglove)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Lamiales
Family: Plantaginaceae
Tribe: Digitalideae
Genus: Digitalis
Tourn. ex L.[1]
Species

Over 20 species, see text:

Pink common foxglove with bee

Digitalis is native to Europe, western Asia, and northwestern Africa. The flowers are tubular in shape, produced on a tall spike, and vary in colour with species, from purple to pink, white, and yellow. The scientific name means "finger". The genus was traditionally placed in the figwort family, Scrophulariaceae, but phylogenetic research led taxonomists to move it to the Veronicaceae in 2001.[4] More recent phylogenetic work has placed it in the much enlarged family Plantaginaceae.

The best-known species is the common foxglove, Digitalis purpurea. This biennial is often grown as an ornamental plant due to its vivid flowers which range in colour from various purple tints through pink and purely white. The flowers can also possess various marks and spottings. Other garden-worthy species include D. ferruginea, D. grandiflora, D. lutea, and D. parviflora.[5]

The term digitalis is also used for drug preparations that contain cardiac glycosides, particularly one called digoxin, extracted from various plants of this genus. Foxglove has medicinal uses but is also very toxic to humans and other animals, and consumption can even lead to death.

Etymology

 
Hendrik Goltzius, A Foxglove in Bloom, 1592, National Gallery of Art, NGA 94900

The generic epithet Digitalis is from the Latin digitus (finger).[6] Leonhart Fuchs first invented the name for this plant in his 1542 book De historia stirpium commentarii insignes, based upon the German vernacular name Fingerhut,[7][8] which translates literally as 'finger hat', but actually means 'thimble'.

The name is recorded in Old English as 'foxes glofe/glofa' or 'fox's glove'.[9] Over time, folk myths obscured the literal origins of the name, insinuating that foxes wore the flowers on their paws to silence their movements as they stealthily hunted their prey. The woody hillsides where the foxes made their dens were often covered with the toxic flowers. Some of the more menacing names, such as "witch's glove", reference the toxicity of the plant.[8]

Henry Fox Talbot (1847) proposed 'folks' glove', where 'folk' means fairy. Similarly, R. C. A. Prior (1863) suggested an etymology of 'foxes-glew', meaning 'fairy music'. However, neither of these suggestions account for the Old English form foxes glofa.[9]

Taxonomy

Species

The Flora Europaea originally recognised a number of species now seen as synonyms of Digitalis purpurea, or others: D. dubia, D. leucophaea, D. micrantha and D. trojana.[10] As of 2017, Plants of the World Online recognises the following 27 species (and a number of hybrids):[1]

Hybrids

  • Digitalis × coutinhoi Samp.
  • Digitalis × fulva Lindl.
  • Digitalis × macedonica Heywood
  • Digitalis × media Roth
  • Digitalis × pelia Zerbst & Bocquet
  • Digitalis × purpurascens Roth
  • Digitalis × sibirica (Lindley) Werner had been considered a valid species since it was first described by the English botanist and gardener John Lindley in 1821,[11] but it was considered a hybrid of D. grandiflora and D. laevigata by the German botanist Klaus Werner [de] in 1960.[12]

Systematics

The first full monograph regarding this genus was written by Lindley in 1821. He included two sections, a section Isoplexis including two species, and the main section Digitalis with three subsections, including 2Y species, a number of which are now seen as synonyms or hybrids.[11]

In the last full monograph of the genus in 1965, Werner classified the 19 recognised species in five sections (four species from Macaronesia were separated in the genus Isoplexis at the time):[13][14][15]

In their 2000 book about Digitalis, Luckner and Wichtl continued to uphold Werner's classification of the 19 species,[15][14][16] but molecular studies into the phylogeny of the genus published in 2004 found that although four of Werner's sections were supported by the genetics, the section Tubiflorae was polyphyletic, and that the species D. lutea and D. viridiflora should be placed in the section Grandiflorae.[17] This study, as well as a number of other studies published around that time, reunited the genus Isoplexis with Digitalis, increasing the number of species to 23.[14][17]

Peter Hadland Davis, an expert on the flora of Turkey, had used a different circumscription than Werner in his works, and recognised eight species in the country. A 2016 molecular phylogenetic study into the relationships of the Turkish species in the section Globiflorae aimed to reconcile this discrepancy, finding that the classification as proposed by Davis was largely correct: Globiflorae contained as distinct species D. cariensis, D. ferruginea, D. lamarckii, D. lanata and D. nervosa, and D. trojana was subsumed at the infraspecific rank as D. lanata subsp. trojana. This study listed 23 species: D. transiens, D. cedretorum, D. ikarica and D. fuscescens were not mentioned. D. parviflora and D. subalpina were not tested in this study,[12] but the 2004 study found these two species situated within the section Globiflorae.[17]

Ecology

 
A patch of Digitalis purpurea in Seattle

Larvae of the foxglove pug, a moth, consume the flowers of the common foxglove for food. Other species of Lepidoptera eat the leaves, including the lesser yellow underwing.[18]

Uses

Historical

Nicholas Culpeper included Foxglove in his 1652 work The English Physician, an early English herbal. He cited its use for healing wounds (both fresh and old), as a purgative, for 'the King's Evil', for 'the falling sickness' (epilepsy), and for 'a scabby head'.[19]

Cardiac

Digitalis is an example of a drug derived from a plant that was formerly used by herbalists; herbalists have largely abandoned its use because of its narrow therapeutic index and the difficulty of determining the amount of active drug in herbal preparations. Once the usefulness of digitalis in regulating the human pulse was understood, it was employed for a variety of purposes, including the treatment of epilepsy and other seizure disorders, which are now considered to be inappropriate treatments.

A group of medicines extracted from foxglove plants are called digitalin. The use of D. purpurea extract containing cardiac glycosides for the treatment of heart conditions was first described in the English-speaking medical literature by William Withering, in 1785,[20][21][22] which is considered the beginning of modern therapeutics. In contemporary medicine digitalis (usually digoxin) is obtained from D. lanata.[23][24] It is used to increase cardiac contractility (it is a positive inotrope) and as an antiarrhythmic agent to control the heart rate, particularly in the irregular (and often fast) atrial fibrillation. Digitalis is hence often prescribed for patients in atrial fibrillation, especially if they have been diagnosed with congestive heart failure. Digoxin was approved for heart failure in 1998 under current regulations by the Food and Drug Administration on the basis of prospective, randomized study and clinical trials. It was also approved for the control of ventricular response rate for patients with atrial fibrillation. American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association guidelines recommend digoxin for symptomatic chronic heart failure for patients with reduced systolic function, preservation of systolic function, and/or rate control for atrial fibrillation with a rapid ventricular response. Heart Failure Society of America guidelines for heart failure provide similar recommendations. Despite its relatively recent approval by the Food and Drug Administration and the guideline recommendations, the therapeutic use of digoxin is declining in patients with heart failure—likely the result of several factors. The main factor is the more recent introduction of several drugs shown in randomised controlled studies to improve outcomes in heart failure.[25] Safety concerns regarding a proposed link between digoxin therapy and increased mortality seen in observational studies may have contributed to the decline in therapeutic use of digoxin, however a systematic review of 75 studies including four million patient years of patient follow-up showed that in properly designed randomised controlled studies, mortality was no higher in patients given digoxin than in those given placebo.[26]

Variations

 
Digitalis purpurea -- light purple

A group of pharmacologically active compounds are extracted mostly from the leaves of the second year's growth, and in pure form are referred to by common chemical names, such as digitoxin or digoxin, or by brand names such as Crystodigin and Lanoxin, respectively. The two drugs differ in that digoxin has an additional hydroxyl group at the C-3 position on the B-ring (adjacent to the pentane). This results in digoxin having a half-life of about one day (and increasing with impaired kidney function), whereas digitoxin's is about 7 days and not affected by kidney function. Both molecules include a lactone and a triple-repeating sugar called a glycoside.

Mechanism of action

Digitalis works by inhibiting sodium-potassium ATPase. This results in an increased intracellular concentration of sodium ions and thus a decreased concentration gradient across the cell membrane. This increase in intracellular sodium causes the Na/Ca exchanger to reverse potential, i.e., transition from pumping sodium into the cell in exchange for pumping calcium out of the cell, to pumping sodium out of the cell in exchange for pumping calcium into the cell. This leads to an increase in cytoplasmic calcium concentration, which improves cardiac contractility.[27] Under normal physiological conditions, the cytoplasmic calcium used in cardiac contractions originates from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, an intracellular organelle that stores calcium. Human newborns, some animals, and patients with chronic heart failure lack well developed and fully functioning sarcoplasmic reticula and must rely on the Na/Ca exchanger to provide all or a majority of the cytoplasmic calcium required for cardiac contraction. For this to occur, cytoplasmic sodium must exceed its typical concentration to favour a reversal in potential, which naturally occurs in human newborns and some animals primarily through an elevated heart rate; in patients with chronic heart failure it occurs through the administration of digitalis. As a result of increased contractility, stroke volume is increased. Ultimately, digitalis increases cardiac output (cardiac output = stroke volume x heart rate). This is the mechanism that makes this drug a popular treatment for congestive heart failure, which is characterized by low cardiac output.

Digitalis also has a vagal effect on the parasympathetic nervous system, and as such is used in re-entrant cardiac arrhythmias and to slow the ventricular rate during atrial fibrillation. The dependence on the vagal effect means digitalis is not effective when a patient has a high sympathetic nervous system drive, which is the case with acutely ill persons, and also during exercise.[28][29]

Digoxigenin

Digoxigenin (DIG) is a steroid found in the flowers and leaves of Digitalis species, and is extracted from D. lanata. Digoxigenin can be used as a molecular probe to detect mRNA in situ and label DNA, RNA, and oligonucleotides.[30] It can easily be attached to nucleotides such as uridine by chemical modifications. DIG molecules are often linked to nucleotides; DIG-labelled uridine can then be incorporated into RNA via in vitro transcription. Once hybridisation occurs, RNA with the incorporated DIG-U can be detected with anti-DIG antibodies conjugated to alkaline phosphatase. To reveal the hybridised transcripts, a chromogen can be used which reacts with the alkaline phosphatase to produce a coloured precipitate.[citation needed]

Toxicity

 
Digitalis purpurea drawings by Franz Köhler

Depending on the species, the digitalis plant may contain several deadly physiological and chemically related cardiac and steroidal glycosides. Thus, the digitalis plants have earned several, more sinister, names: dead man's bells and witch's gloves.

Digitalis intoxication, known as digitalism, results from an overdose of digitalis and causes gastrointestinal disturbances and pain, severe headache, nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea, cardiac arrhythmias, as well as sometimes resulting in xanthopsia (jaundiced or yellow vision).[31] The toxins can be absorbed via the skin[32] or ingestion; early symptoms of digitalism include nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain, wild hallucinations, delirium, and severe headache. Depending on the severity of the toxicosis, the victim may later suffer irregular and slow pulse, tremors, various cerebral disturbances, especially of a visual nature (unusual colour visions (see xanthopsia) with objects appearing yellowish to green, and blue halos around lights), convulsions, and deadly disturbances of the heart rhythm.[33] Other oculotoxic effects of digitalis include generalized blurry vision, as well as the appearance of blurred outlines ('halos').[34] Other things mentioned are dilated pupils, drooling, weakness, collapse, seizures, and even death. Because a frequent side effect of digitalis is reduction of appetite, some individuals have used the drug as a weight-loss aid.

Digitalis poisoning can cause heart block and either bradycardia (decreased heart rate) or tachycardia (increased heart rate), depending on the dose and the condition of one's heart. The electric cardioversion (to "shock" the heart) is generally not indicated in ventricular fibrillation in digitalis toxicity, as it can increase the dysrhythmia.[35] Furthermore, the classic drug of choice for ventricular fibrillation in emergency setting,[36] amiodarone, can worsen the dysrhythmia caused by digitalis, therefore, the second-choice drug lidocaine is more commonly used.[37]

The entire plant is toxic (including the roots and seeds). Mortality is rare, but case reports do exist. Most plant exposures occur in children younger than six years and are usually unintentional and without associated significant toxicity. More serious toxicity occurs with intentional ingestion by adolescents and adults.[38]

In some instances, people have confused foxglove with the relatively harmless comfrey (Symphytum) plant, which is sometimes brewed into a tea, with fatal consequences. Other fatal accidents involve children drinking the water in a vase containing digitalis plants.[39] Drying does not reduce the toxicity of the plant. The plant is toxic to animals, including all classes of livestock and poultry, as well as felines and canines.

Trivia

According to 1981 speculation Vincent van Gogh's "Yellow Period" may have been influenced by digitalis, because it had been proposed as a therapy to control epilepsy around this time, and there are two paintings by the artist where the plant is present.[40] Other studies immediately questioned this: there are a large number of other possible explanations for van Gogh's choice of palette,[41][42] there is no evidence that van Gogh was ever given the drug or that his physician prescribed it, he was tested and had no xanthopsia, and in his many letters of the time he makes it clear that he simply liked using the colour yellow,[42][43][44] but it has remained a popular concept.[45]

References

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  2. ^ Oxford English Dictionary: "Digitalis"
  3. ^ "Digitalis". Dictionary.com.
  4. ^ Olmstead, R. G.; de Pamphilis, C. W.; Wolfe, A. D.; Young, N. D.; Elisons, W. J.; Reeves, P. A. (2001). "Disintegration of the Scrophulariaceae". American Journal of Botany. 88 (2): 348–361. doi:10.2307/2657024. JSTOR 2657024. PMID 11222255. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
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  7. ^ Fuchs, Leonhart (1542). De historia stirpium commentarii insignes (in Latin). Basel: In officina Isingriniana. pp. 892–893. Apellauimus autem Digitalem, alludentes ad germanicam nomenclaturam...
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  9. ^ a b Liberman, Anatoly (10 November 2010). . OUPblog. Archived from the original on 8 May 2013. Retrieved 10 August 2015. In sum, foxglove means foxglove, and this disturbing fact has to be accepted.
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  12. ^ a b Eker, İsmail; Yücesan, Buhara; Sameeullah, Muhammad; Welß, Walter; Müller-Uri, Frieder; Gürel, Ekrem; Kreis, Wolfgang (January 2016). "Phylogeny of Anatolian (Turkey) species in the Digitalis sect. Globiflorae (Plantaginaceae)" (PDF). Phytotaxa. 244 (3): 263. doi:10.11646/phytotaxa.244.3.3. ISSN 1179-3163. S2CID 87777389. (PDF) from the original on 2 December 2021. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
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  15. ^ a b Wichtl, Max (2001). "Digitalis L. -Fingerhut (Scrophulariaceae) - eine wichtige Arzneipflanzengattung". Stapfia (in German). 75 (164): 89–100. Retrieved 25 November 2020.
  16. ^ Luckner, M.; Wichtl, Max (2000). Digitalis: Geschichte, Biologie, Chemie, Physiologie, Molekularbiologie, medizinische Anwendung. Handbuch für Ärzte, Apotheker und andere Naturwissenschaftler (in German). Stuttgart: Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft. ISBN 3-8047-1705-5.
  17. ^ a b c Bräuchler, C.; Meimberg, H.; Heubl, G. (2004). "Molecular phylogeny of the genera Digitalis L. and Isoplexis (Lindley) Loudon (Veronicaceae) based on ITS- and trnL-F sequences". Plant Systematics and Evolution. 248 (1–4): 111–128. doi:10.1007/s00606-004-0145-z. S2CID 25480255.
  18. ^ Robinson, G. S.; Ackery, P. R.; Kitching, I. J.; Beccaloni, G. W.; Hernández, L. M. (2010). "Digitalis". HOSTS – A Database of the World's Lepidopteran Hostplants. Natural History Museum, London. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  19. ^ Culpeper, Nicholas (1652). The English Physician, Etc (1st ed.). London: William Bentley. pp. 97–98. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  20. ^ Withering, William (1785). An Account of the Foxglove and some of its Medical Uses. Birmingham, England: M. Swinney.
  21. ^ Goldthorp, W. O. (2009). "Medical Classics: An Account of the Foxglove and Some of its Medicinal Uses by William Withering, published 1785". British Medical Journal. 338: b2189. doi:10.1136/bmj.b2189. S2CID 72429441.
  22. ^ Simpson, Beryl Brintnall; Ogorzaly, Molly Coner (2001). Economic Botany (3rd ed.). Boston: Mc Graw Hill. p. 529. ISBN 9780072909388.
  23. ^ Hollman, A. (April 1996). "Drugs for atrial fibrillation. Digoxin comes from Digitalis lanata". BMJ (Clinical Research Ed.). 312 (7035): 912. doi:10.1136/bmj.312.7035.912. PMC 2350584. PMID 8611904.
  24. ^ Weisse, Allen B. (January 2010). "A Fond Farewell to the Foxglove? The Decline in the Use of Digitalis". Journal of Cardiac Failure. 16 (1): 45–48. doi:10.1016/j.cardfail.2009.08.001. PMID 20123317.
  25. ^ Anon. "Medications Used to Treat Heart Failure". www.heart.org. American Heart Association. Retrieved 13 August 2020.
  26. ^ Ziff, Oliver J.; Lane, Deirdre A.; Samra, Monica; Griffith, Michael; Kirchhof, Paulus; Lip, Gregory Y. H.; Steeds, Richard P.; Townend, Jonathan; Kotecha, Dipak (30 August 2015). "Safety and efficacy of digoxin: systematic review and meta-analysis of observational and controlled trial data". British Medical Journal. 351: h4451. doi:10.1136/bmj.h4451. PMC 4553205. PMID 26321114. S2CID 9995597.
  27. ^ Akera, Tai; Brody, Theodore M. (1985). "Sodium ion and the cardiac actions of digitalis". Trends in Pharmacological Sciences. 6: 296–298. doi:10.1016/0165-6147(85)90136-1.
  28. ^ Watanabe, August M. (1 May 1985). "Digitalis and the autonomic nervous system". Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 5 (5): 35A–42A. doi:10.1016/S0735-1097(85)80461-7. ISSN 0735-1097. PMID 3886751.
  29. ^ Tonkon, M. J.; Lee, G.; DeMaria, A. N.; Miller, R. R.; Mason, D. T. (December 1977). "Effects of digitalis on the exercise electrocardiogram in normal adult subjects". Chest. 72 (6): 714–718. doi:10.1378/chest.72.6.714. ISSN 0012-3692. PMID 923306.
  30. ^ Glick, Bernard R. (4 May 2018). Methods in Plant Molecular Biology and Biotechnology. CRC Press. p. 183. ISBN 978-1-351-09139-8.
  31. ^ Lewis, Robert Alan (1998). Lewis Dictionary of Toxicology. p. 387. ISBN 978-1-56670-223-2. Symptoms may include gastrointestinal disturbances and pain, severe headache, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, irregular pulse, and yellow vision...
  32. ^ "GRECIAN FOXGLOVE". Minnesota Department of Agriculture. Retrieved 1 July 2021.
  33. ^ Lacassie, E; Marquet, P.; Martin-Dupont, S.; Gaulier, J.M.; Lachâtre, G. (September 2000). "A non-fatal case of intoxication with foxglove, documented by means of liquid chromatography-electrospray-mass spectrometry". Journal of Forensic Sciences. 45 (5): 1154–1158. doi:10.1520/JFS14845J. PMID 11005196.
  34. ^ Goldfrank, L. W. (2006). Goldfrank's Toxicologic Emergencies (8th ed.). New York: McGraw-Hill.
  35. ^ Abou-Donia, Mohamed (2015). Mammalian Toxicology. John Wiley & Sons. p. 631. ISBN 9781118683316.
  36. ^ "European Resuscitation Council".[verification needed]
  37. ^ Lee Lopez, Orchid (2011). Back to Basics: Critical Care Transport Certification Review. Xlibris Corporation. p. 290. ISBN 9781456862749.
  38. ^ "Cardiac Glycoside Plant Poisoning: Medscape reference". Retrieved 3 July 2012.
  39. ^ Anon. . Canadian poisonous plants information system. Canadian Biodiversity Information Facility. Archived from the original on 13 October 2011. Retrieved 9 March 2013.
  40. ^ Lee, T. C. (20 February 1981). "Van Gogh's vision. Digitalis intoxication?". JAMA. 245 (7): 727–729. doi:10.1001/jama.1981.03310320049025. PMID 7007674.
  41. ^ Lanthony, P. (October 1989). "[Van Gogh's xanthopsia]". Bulletin des Sociétés d'Ophtalmologie Française (in French). 89 (10): 1133–1134. PMID 2695267.
  42. ^ a b Arnold, Wilfred Niels; Loftus, Loretta S. (1 September 1991). "Xanthopsia and van Gogh's yellow palette" (PDF). Eye. 5 (5): 503–510. doi:10.1038/eye.1991.93. PMID 1794418. S2CID 26723081. (PDF) from the original on 30 October 2018. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  43. ^ Gruener, Anna (July 2013). "Vincent van Gogh's yellow vision". British Journal of General Practice. 63 (612): 370–371. doi:10.3399/bjgp13X669266. PMC 3693787. PMID 23834871. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  44. ^ Voskuil, Piet (October 2020). "Vincent van Gogh and his illness. A reflection on a posthumous diagnostic exercise". Epilepsy & Behavior. 111 (107258): 107258. doi:10.1016/j.yebeh.2020.107258. PMID 32629415. S2CID 220323719.
  45. ^ Harkup, Kathryn (10 August 2017). "It was all yellow: did digitalis affect the way Van Gogh saw the world?". The Guardian (UK). Retrieved 28 November 2020.

External links

digitalis, foxglove, redirects, here, other, uses, foxglove, disambiguation, drug, used, treat, heart, conditions, digoxin, foxglove, tree, which, similar, looking, blooms, paulownia, tomentosa, genus, about, species, herbaceous, perennial, plants, shrubs, bie. Foxglove redirects here For other uses see Foxglove disambiguation For the drug used to treat heart conditions see Digoxin For the foxglove tree which has similar looking blooms see Paulownia tomentosa Digitalis ˌ d ɪ dʒ ɪ ˈ t eɪ l ɪ s 2 or ˌ d ɪ dʒ ɪ ˈ t ae l ɪ s 3 is a genus of about 20 species of herbaceous perennial plants shrubs and biennials commonly called foxgloves FoxgloveDigitalis purpurea Common foxglove Scientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder LamialesFamily PlantaginaceaeTribe DigitalideaeGenus DigitalisTourn ex L 1 SpeciesOver 20 species see text Digitalis lutea Pink common foxglove with bee Digitalis is native to Europe western Asia and northwestern Africa The flowers are tubular in shape produced on a tall spike and vary in colour with species from purple to pink white and yellow The scientific name means finger The genus was traditionally placed in the figwort family Scrophulariaceae but phylogenetic research led taxonomists to move it to the Veronicaceae in 2001 4 More recent phylogenetic work has placed it in the much enlarged family Plantaginaceae The best known species is the common foxglove Digitalis purpurea This biennial is often grown as an ornamental plant due to its vivid flowers which range in colour from various purple tints through pink and purely white The flowers can also possess various marks and spottings Other garden worthy species include D ferruginea D grandiflora D lutea and D parviflora 5 The term digitalis is also used for drug preparations that contain cardiac glycosides particularly one called digoxin extracted from various plants of this genus Foxglove has medicinal uses but is also very toxic to humans and other animals and consumption can even lead to death Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomy 2 1 Species 2 2 Hybrids 2 3 Systematics 3 Ecology 4 Uses 4 1 Historical 4 2 Cardiac 4 2 1 Variations 4 2 2 Mechanism of action 4 3 Digoxigenin 5 Toxicity 6 Trivia 7 References 8 External linksEtymology Edit Hendrik Goltzius A Foxglove in Bloom 1592 National Gallery of Art NGA 94900 The generic epithet Digitalis is from the Latin digitus finger 6 Leonhart Fuchs first invented the name for this plant in his 1542 book De historia stirpium commentarii insignes based upon the German vernacular name Fingerhut 7 8 which translates literally as finger hat but actually means thimble The name is recorded in Old English as foxes glofe glofa or fox s glove 9 Over time folk myths obscured the literal origins of the name insinuating that foxes wore the flowers on their paws to silence their movements as they stealthily hunted their prey The woody hillsides where the foxes made their dens were often covered with the toxic flowers Some of the more menacing names such as witch s glove reference the toxicity of the plant 8 Henry Fox Talbot 1847 proposed folks glove where folk means fairy Similarly R C A Prior 1863 suggested an etymology of foxes glew meaning fairy music However neither of these suggestions account for the Old English form foxes glofa 9 Taxonomy EditSpecies Edit The Flora Europaea originally recognised a number of species now seen as synonyms of Digitalis purpurea or others D dubia D leucophaea D micrantha and D trojana 10 As of 2017 Plants of the World Online recognises the following 27 species and a number of hybrids 1 Digitalis atlantica Pomel Digitalis canariensis L Digitalis cariensis Boiss ex Jaub amp Spach Digitalis cedretorum Emb Maire Digitalis chalcantha Svent amp O Shan Albach Brauchler amp Heubl Digitalis ciliata Trautv Digitalis davisiana Heywood Digitalis ferruginea L Digitalis fuscescens Waldst amp Kit Digitalis grandiflora Mill Digitalis ikarica P H Davis Strid Digitalis isabelliana Webb Linding Digitalis laevigata Waldst amp Kit Digitalis lamarckii Ivanina Digitalis lanata Ehrh Digitalis lutea L Digitalis mariana Boiss Digitalis minor L Digitalis nervosa Steud amp Hochst ex Benth Digitalis obscura L Digitalis parviflora Jacq Digitalis purpurea L Digitalis sceptrum L f Digitalis subalpina Braun Blanq Digitalis thapsi L Digitalis transiens Maire Digitalis viridiflora Lindl Hybrids Edit Digitalis coutinhoi Samp Digitalis fulva Lindl Digitalis macedonica Heywood Digitalis media Roth Digitalis pelia Zerbst amp Bocquet Digitalis purpurascens Roth Digitalis sibirica Lindley Werner had been considered a valid species since it was first described by the English botanist and gardener John Lindley in 1821 11 but it was considered a hybrid of D grandiflora and D laevigata by the German botanist Klaus Werner de in 1960 12 Systematics Edit The first full monograph regarding this genus was written by Lindley in 1821 He included two sections a section Isoplexis including two species and the main section Digitalis with three subsections including 2Y species a number of which are now seen as synonyms or hybrids 11 In the last full monograph of the genus in 1965 Werner classified the 19 recognised species in five sections four species from Macaronesia were separated in the genus Isoplexis at the time 13 14 15 In the section Digitalis along with the type species D purpurea four other species as recognised as the time were placed D thapsi D dubia D heywoodii and D mariana The monotypic section Frutescentes contained only D obscura The section Grandiflorae which was also called section Macranthae by Vernon Hilton Heywood It included along with the type species D grandiflora also D atlantica D ciliata and D davisiana Globiflorae included five species D laevigata D nervosa D ferruginea D cariensis and D lanata Tubiflorae included four species D subalpina D lutea D viridiflora and D parviflora In their 2000 book about Digitalis Luckner and Wichtl continued to uphold Werner s classification of the 19 species 15 14 16 but molecular studies into the phylogeny of the genus published in 2004 found that although four of Werner s sections were supported by the genetics the section Tubiflorae was polyphyletic and that the species D lutea and D viridiflora should be placed in the section Grandiflorae 17 This study as well as a number of other studies published around that time reunited the genus Isoplexis with Digitalis increasing the number of species to 23 14 17 Peter Hadland Davis an expert on the flora of Turkey had used a different circumscription than Werner in his works and recognised eight species in the country A 2016 molecular phylogenetic study into the relationships of the Turkish species in the section Globiflorae aimed to reconcile this discrepancy finding that the classification as proposed by Davis was largely correct Globiflorae contained as distinct species D cariensis D ferruginea D lamarckii D lanata and D nervosa and D trojana was subsumed at the infraspecific rank as D lanata subsp trojana This study listed 23 species D transiens D cedretorum D ikarica and D fuscescens were not mentioned D parviflora and D subalpina were not tested in this study 12 but the 2004 study found these two species situated within the section Globiflorae 17 Ecology Edit A patch of Digitalis purpurea in Seattle Larvae of the foxglove pug a moth consume the flowers of the common foxglove for food Other species of Lepidoptera eat the leaves including the lesser yellow underwing 18 Uses EditHistorical Edit Nicholas Culpeper included Foxglove in his 1652 work The English Physician an early English herbal He cited its use for healing wounds both fresh and old as a purgative for the King s Evil for the falling sickness epilepsy and for a scabby head 19 Cardiac Edit Digitalis is an example of a drug derived from a plant that was formerly used by herbalists herbalists have largely abandoned its use because of its narrow therapeutic index and the difficulty of determining the amount of active drug in herbal preparations Once the usefulness of digitalis in regulating the human pulse was understood it was employed for a variety of purposes including the treatment of epilepsy and other seizure disorders which are now considered to be inappropriate treatments A group of medicines extracted from foxglove plants are called digitalin The use of D purpurea extract containing cardiac glycosides for the treatment of heart conditions was first described in the English speaking medical literature by William Withering in 1785 20 21 22 which is considered the beginning of modern therapeutics In contemporary medicine digitalis usually digoxin is obtained from D lanata 23 24 It is used to increase cardiac contractility it is a positive inotrope and as an antiarrhythmic agent to control the heart rate particularly in the irregular and often fast atrial fibrillation Digitalis is hence often prescribed for patients in atrial fibrillation especially if they have been diagnosed with congestive heart failure Digoxin was approved for heart failure in 1998 under current regulations by the Food and Drug Administration on the basis of prospective randomized study and clinical trials It was also approved for the control of ventricular response rate for patients with atrial fibrillation American College of Cardiology American Heart Association guidelines recommend digoxin for symptomatic chronic heart failure for patients with reduced systolic function preservation of systolic function and or rate control for atrial fibrillation with a rapid ventricular response Heart Failure Society of America guidelines for heart failure provide similar recommendations Despite its relatively recent approval by the Food and Drug Administration and the guideline recommendations the therapeutic use of digoxin is declining in patients with heart failure likely the result of several factors The main factor is the more recent introduction of several drugs shown in randomised controlled studies to improve outcomes in heart failure 25 Safety concerns regarding a proposed link between digoxin therapy and increased mortality seen in observational studies may have contributed to the decline in therapeutic use of digoxin however a systematic review of 75 studies including four million patient years of patient follow up showed that in properly designed randomised controlled studies mortality was no higher in patients given digoxin than in those given placebo 26 Variations Edit Digitalis purpurea light purple A group of pharmacologically active compounds are extracted mostly from the leaves of the second year s growth and in pure form are referred to by common chemical names such as digitoxin or digoxin or by brand names such as Crystodigin and Lanoxin respectively The two drugs differ in that digoxin has an additional hydroxyl group at the C 3 position on the B ring adjacent to the pentane This results in digoxin having a half life of about one day and increasing with impaired kidney function whereas digitoxin s is about 7 days and not affected by kidney function Both molecules include a lactone and a triple repeating sugar called a glycoside Mechanism of action Edit Digitalis works by inhibiting sodium potassium ATPase This results in an increased intracellular concentration of sodium ions and thus a decreased concentration gradient across the cell membrane This increase in intracellular sodium causes the Na Ca exchanger to reverse potential i e transition from pumping sodium into the cell in exchange for pumping calcium out of the cell to pumping sodium out of the cell in exchange for pumping calcium into the cell This leads to an increase in cytoplasmic calcium concentration which improves cardiac contractility 27 Under normal physiological conditions the cytoplasmic calcium used in cardiac contractions originates from the sarcoplasmic reticulum an intracellular organelle that stores calcium Human newborns some animals and patients with chronic heart failure lack well developed and fully functioning sarcoplasmic reticula and must rely on the Na Ca exchanger to provide all or a majority of the cytoplasmic calcium required for cardiac contraction For this to occur cytoplasmic sodium must exceed its typical concentration to favour a reversal in potential which naturally occurs in human newborns and some animals primarily through an elevated heart rate in patients with chronic heart failure it occurs through the administration of digitalis As a result of increased contractility stroke volume is increased Ultimately digitalis increases cardiac output cardiac output stroke volume x heart rate This is the mechanism that makes this drug a popular treatment for congestive heart failure which is characterized by low cardiac output Digitalis also has a vagal effect on the parasympathetic nervous system and as such is used in re entrant cardiac arrhythmias and to slow the ventricular rate during atrial fibrillation The dependence on the vagal effect means digitalis is not effective when a patient has a high sympathetic nervous system drive which is the case with acutely ill persons and also during exercise 28 29 Digoxigenin Edit Digoxigenin DIG is a steroid found in the flowers and leaves of Digitalis species and is extracted from D lanata Digoxigenin can be used as a molecular probe to detect mRNA in situ and label DNA RNA and oligonucleotides 30 It can easily be attached to nucleotides such as uridine by chemical modifications DIG molecules are often linked to nucleotides DIG labelled uridine can then be incorporated into RNA via in vitro transcription Once hybridisation occurs RNA with the incorporated DIG U can be detected with anti DIG antibodies conjugated to alkaline phosphatase To reveal the hybridised transcripts a chromogen can be used which reacts with the alkaline phosphatase to produce a coloured precipitate citation needed Toxicity EditMain article Digoxin poisoning Digitalis purpurea drawings by Franz Kohler Depending on the species the digitalis plant may contain several deadly physiological and chemically related cardiac and steroidal glycosides Thus the digitalis plants have earned several more sinister names dead man s bells and witch s gloves Digitalis intoxication known as digitalism results from an overdose of digitalis and causes gastrointestinal disturbances and pain severe headache nausea vomiting and diarrhoea cardiac arrhythmias as well as sometimes resulting in xanthopsia jaundiced or yellow vision 31 The toxins can be absorbed via the skin 32 or ingestion early symptoms of digitalism include nausea vomiting diarrhoea abdominal pain wild hallucinations delirium and severe headache Depending on the severity of the toxicosis the victim may later suffer irregular and slow pulse tremors various cerebral disturbances especially of a visual nature unusual colour visions see xanthopsia with objects appearing yellowish to green and blue halos around lights convulsions and deadly disturbances of the heart rhythm 33 Other oculotoxic effects of digitalis include generalized blurry vision as well as the appearance of blurred outlines halos 34 Other things mentioned are dilated pupils drooling weakness collapse seizures and even death Because a frequent side effect of digitalis is reduction of appetite some individuals have used the drug as a weight loss aid Digitalis poisoning can cause heart block and either bradycardia decreased heart rate or tachycardia increased heart rate depending on the dose and the condition of one s heart The electric cardioversion to shock the heart is generally not indicated in ventricular fibrillation in digitalis toxicity as it can increase the dysrhythmia 35 Furthermore the classic drug of choice for ventricular fibrillation in emergency setting 36 amiodarone can worsen the dysrhythmia caused by digitalis therefore the second choice drug lidocaine is more commonly used 37 The entire plant is toxic including the roots and seeds Mortality is rare but case reports do exist Most plant exposures occur in children younger than six years and are usually unintentional and without associated significant toxicity More serious toxicity occurs with intentional ingestion by adolescents and adults 38 In some instances people have confused foxglove with the relatively harmless comfrey Symphytum plant which is sometimes brewed into a tea with fatal consequences Other fatal accidents involve children drinking the water in a vase containing digitalis plants 39 Drying does not reduce the toxicity of the plant The plant is toxic to animals including all classes of livestock and poultry as well as felines and canines Trivia EditAccording to 1981 speculation Vincent van Gogh s Yellow Period may have been influenced by digitalis because it had been proposed as a therapy to control epilepsy around this time and there are two paintings by the artist where the plant is present 40 Other studies immediately questioned this there are a large number of other possible explanations for van Gogh s choice of palette 41 42 there is no evidence that van Gogh was ever given the drug or that his physician prescribed it he was tested and had no xanthopsia and in his many letters of the time he makes it clear that he simply liked using the colour yellow 42 43 44 but it has remained a popular concept 45 References Edit a b Digitalis Tourn ex L Plants of the World Online Royal Botanic Gardens Kew 2017 Retrieved 22 November 2020 Oxford English Dictionary Digitalis Digitalis Dictionary com Olmstead R G de Pamphilis C W Wolfe A D Young N D Elisons W J Reeves P A 2001 Disintegration of the Scrophulariaceae American Journal of Botany 88 2 348 361 doi 10 2307 2657024 JSTOR 2657024 PMID 11222255 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Brickell Christopher ed 2008 The Royal Horticultural Society A Z Encyclopedia of Garden Plants Dorling Kindersley p 377 ISBN 9781405332965 Hollman A September 1985 Plants and cardiac glycosides British Heart Journal 54 3 258 261 doi 10 1136 hrt 54 3 258 PMC 481893 PMID 4041297 Fuchs Leonhart 1542 De historia stirpium commentarii insignes in Latin Basel In officina Isingriniana pp 892 893 Apellauimus autem Digitalem alludentes ad germanicam nomenclaturam a b Klingaman Gerald 17 May 2002 Plant of the Week Foxglove University of Arkansas System Division of Agriculture Retrieved 17 April 2018 a b Liberman Anatoly 10 November 2010 Etymologists at War with a Flower Foxglove OUPblog Archived from the original on 8 May 2013 Retrieved 10 August 2015 In sum foxglove means foxglove and this disturbing fact has to be accepted Flora Europaea Digitalis species list a b Lindley John 1821 Digitalium monographia sistens historiam botanicam generis tabulis omnium specierum hactenus cognitarum illustratam ut plurimum confectis ad icones in Latin London Arthur Taylor for J H Bohte pp 1 27 doi 10 5962 bhl title 160067 a b Eker Ismail Yucesan Buhara Sameeullah Muhammad Welss Walter Muller Uri Frieder Gurel Ekrem Kreis Wolfgang January 2016 Phylogeny of Anatolian Turkey species in the Digitalis sect Globiflorae Plantaginaceae PDF Phytotaxa 244 3 263 doi 10 11646 phytotaxa 244 3 3 ISSN 1179 3163 S2CID 87777389 Archived PDF from the original on 2 December 2021 Retrieved 25 November 2020 Werner Klaus 1965 Taxonomie und Phylogenie der Gattungen Isoplexis Lindl Benth und Digitalis L Feddes Repertorium in German 70 1 3 109 135 doi 10 1002 fedr 19650700106 a b c Kreis Wolfgang 2017 The Foxgloves Digitalis Revisited Planta Medica 83 12 13 962 976 doi 10 1055 s 0043 111240 PMID 28561136 a b Wichtl Max 2001 Digitalis L Fingerhut Scrophulariaceae eine wichtige Arzneipflanzengattung Stapfia in German 75 164 89 100 Retrieved 25 November 2020 Luckner M Wichtl Max 2000 Digitalis Geschichte Biologie Chemie Physiologie Molekularbiologie medizinische Anwendung Handbuch fur Arzte Apotheker und andere Naturwissenschaftler in German Stuttgart Wissenschaftliche Verlagsgesellschaft ISBN 3 8047 1705 5 a b c Brauchler C Meimberg H Heubl G 2004 Molecular phylogeny of the genera Digitalis L and Isoplexis Lindley Loudon Veronicaceae based on ITS and trnL F sequences Plant Systematics and Evolution 248 1 4 111 128 doi 10 1007 s00606 004 0145 z S2CID 25480255 Robinson G S Ackery P R Kitching I J Beccaloni G W Hernandez L M 2010 Digitalis HOSTS A Database of the World s Lepidopteran Hostplants Natural History Museum London Retrieved 28 November 2020 Culpeper Nicholas 1652 The English Physician Etc 1st ed London William Bentley pp 97 98 Retrieved 22 January 2023 Withering William 1785 An Account of the Foxglove and some of its Medical Uses Birmingham England M Swinney Goldthorp W O 2009 Medical Classics An Account of the Foxglove and Some of its Medicinal Uses by William Withering published 1785 British Medical Journal 338 b2189 doi 10 1136 bmj b2189 S2CID 72429441 Simpson Beryl Brintnall Ogorzaly Molly Coner 2001 Economic Botany 3rd ed Boston Mc Graw Hill p 529 ISBN 9780072909388 Hollman A April 1996 Drugs for atrial fibrillation Digoxin comes from Digitalis lanata BMJ Clinical Research Ed 312 7035 912 doi 10 1136 bmj 312 7035 912 PMC 2350584 PMID 8611904 Weisse Allen B January 2010 A Fond Farewell to the Foxglove The Decline in the Use of Digitalis Journal of Cardiac Failure 16 1 45 48 doi 10 1016 j cardfail 2009 08 001 PMID 20123317 Anon Medications Used to Treat Heart Failure www heart org American Heart Association Retrieved 13 August 2020 Ziff Oliver J Lane Deirdre A Samra Monica Griffith Michael Kirchhof Paulus Lip Gregory Y H Steeds Richard P Townend Jonathan Kotecha Dipak 30 August 2015 Safety and efficacy of digoxin systematic review and meta analysis of observational and controlled trial data British Medical Journal 351 h4451 doi 10 1136 bmj h4451 PMC 4553205 PMID 26321114 S2CID 9995597 Akera Tai Brody Theodore M 1985 Sodium ion and the cardiac actions of digitalis Trends in Pharmacological Sciences 6 296 298 doi 10 1016 0165 6147 85 90136 1 Watanabe August M 1 May 1985 Digitalis and the autonomic nervous system Journal of the American College of Cardiology 5 5 35A 42A doi 10 1016 S0735 1097 85 80461 7 ISSN 0735 1097 PMID 3886751 Tonkon M J Lee G DeMaria A N Miller R R Mason D T December 1977 Effects of digitalis on the exercise electrocardiogram in normal adult subjects Chest 72 6 714 718 doi 10 1378 chest 72 6 714 ISSN 0012 3692 PMID 923306 Glick Bernard R 4 May 2018 Methods in Plant Molecular Biology and Biotechnology CRC Press p 183 ISBN 978 1 351 09139 8 Lewis Robert Alan 1998 Lewis Dictionary of Toxicology p 387 ISBN 978 1 56670 223 2 Symptoms may include gastrointestinal disturbances and pain severe headache nausea vomiting diarrhea irregular pulse and yellow vision GRECIAN FOXGLOVE Minnesota Department of Agriculture Retrieved 1 July 2021 Lacassie E Marquet P Martin Dupont S Gaulier J M Lachatre G September 2000 A non fatal case of intoxication with foxglove documented by means of liquid chromatography electrospray mass spectrometry Journal of Forensic Sciences 45 5 1154 1158 doi 10 1520 JFS14845J PMID 11005196 Goldfrank L W 2006 Goldfrank s Toxicologic Emergencies 8th ed New York McGraw Hill Abou Donia Mohamed 2015 Mammalian Toxicology John Wiley amp Sons p 631 ISBN 9781118683316 European Resuscitation Council verification needed Lee Lopez Orchid 2011 Back to Basics Critical Care Transport Certification Review Xlibris Corporation p 290 ISBN 9781456862749 Cardiac Glycoside Plant Poisoning Medscape reference Retrieved 3 July 2012 Anon Notes on poisoning Digitalis purpura Canadian poisonous plants information system Canadian Biodiversity Information Facility Archived from the original on 13 October 2011 Retrieved 9 March 2013 Lee T C 20 February 1981 Van Gogh s vision Digitalis intoxication JAMA 245 7 727 729 doi 10 1001 jama 1981 03310320049025 PMID 7007674 Lanthony P October 1989 Van Gogh s xanthopsia Bulletin des Societes d Ophtalmologie Francaise in French 89 10 1133 1134 PMID 2695267 a b Arnold Wilfred Niels Loftus Loretta S 1 September 1991 Xanthopsia and van Gogh s yellow palette PDF Eye 5 5 503 510 doi 10 1038 eye 1991 93 PMID 1794418 S2CID 26723081 Archived PDF from the original on 30 October 2018 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Gruener Anna July 2013 Vincent van Gogh s yellow vision British Journal of General Practice 63 612 370 371 doi 10 3399 bjgp13X669266 PMC 3693787 PMID 23834871 Retrieved 28 November 2020 Voskuil Piet October 2020 Vincent van Gogh and his illness A reflection on a posthumous diagnostic exercise Epilepsy amp Behavior 111 107258 107258 doi 10 1016 j yebeh 2020 107258 PMID 32629415 S2CID 220323719 Harkup Kathryn 10 August 2017 It was all yellow did digitalis affect the way Van Gogh saw the world The Guardian UK Retrieved 28 November 2020 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Digitalis Look up digitalis in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Digitalis Molecule of the Month Digitalis eMedicine link Foxglove Collier s New Encyclopedia 1921 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Digitalis amp oldid 1136332978, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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