Dictionary Definition
curare n : a toxic alkaloid found in certain
tropical South American trees that is a powerful relaxant for
striated muscles; used by South American indians as an arrow
poison; "curare acts by blocking cholinergic transmission at the
myoneural junction" [syn: tubocurarine]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
Karib “Mawa Cure”, referring the Mawa vine, or Strychnos toxiferaNoun
- A substance containing the alkaloid D-tubocurarine, used historically as a muscle relaxant during surgery.
Scientific names
Verb
curare- to treat or cure (a disease)
- to look after
- to edit
Conjugation
Spanish
Noun
- curare
Verb
curare- Future subjunctive of curar.
Swedish
Noun
curareExtensive Definition
distinguish Curara Curare [koo
rah ree] is a common name for various dart poisons (arrow
poisons) originating from South America. The three main types
or families of curare are:
- tubocurare (also known as tube or bamboo curare, because of its packing into hollow bamboo tubes; main toxin is D-tubocurarine). It is a mono-quaternary alkaloid, an isoquinoline derivative.
- calebas curare (also called "gourd curare" by older British classifications, being packed into hollow gourds; main toxins are alloferine and toxiferine)
- pot curare (packed in terra cotta pots; main toxins are protocurarine, protocurine, and protocuridine).
Of these three families, some formulas belonging
to the calebas curare are the most toxic, relative to their
LD50
values.
History
In 1596 Sir Walter
Raleigh mentioned the arrow poison
in his book Discovery of the Large, Rich, and Beautiful Empire of
Guiana (now Guyana). It is
possible that the poison
he described was not curare at all. The deadly effects of various
Amazonian plant mixtures called curare were learned by early
European explorers. In 1800, Alexander
von Humboldt gave the first western account of how the toxin
was prepared from plants by Orinoco River
natives.
During 1811-1812
Sir Benjamin Collins Brody (1783-1862) experimented with curare
He was the first to show that curare does not kill the animal and
the recovery is complete if the animal’s respiration is maintained
artificially. In 1825 Charles
Waterton (1783-1865) (who gained fame by riding a captured
alligator) described a
classical experiment in which he kept a curarized she-ass alive by
artificial
ventilation with a bellows through a tracheostomy. Waterton is
also credited with bringing curare to Europe. Robert
Hermann Schomburgk, who was a trained botanist, identified the
vine as one of the Strychnos species
and gave it the now accepted name Strychnos toxifera.
George
Harley (1829-1896) showed in 1850 that curare (wourali) was
effective for the treatment of tetanus and strychnine poisoning. From
1887 the Burroughs Wellcome catalogue listed under its 'Tabloids'
brand name, tablets of curare at 1/12 grain (price 8 shillings) for
use in preparing a solution for hypodermic injection. In 1914
Henry
Hallett Dale (1875-1968) described the physiological actions of
acetylcholine.
After twenty-five years he showed that acetylcholine is responsible
for neuromuscular
transmission which can be blocked by curare.
The most known and historically important toxin
(because of its medical applications) is d-tubocurarine. It was
isolated from the crude drug (from a museum sample of curare) in
1935 by Harold King
(1887-1956) of London, working in Sir Henry
Dale’s laboratory. He also established its chemical structure.
It was introduced into anesthesia in the early 1940s as a muscle
relaxant for surgery. Curares are active (i.e. toxic or muscle
relaxing, dependent on the intention of their use) only if
given/applied parenterally, that is, by an injection, or direct
wound contamination by poisoned dart/arrow tip. It is harmless if
taken orally because curare compounds are too large and too highly
charged to pass through the lining of the digestive tract to get
absorbed into the blood. This is crucial, because the native tribes
use curares mainly for hunting purposes, thus the curare-poisoned
prey must remain safe to eat. In medicine, curare has been
superseded by a number of curare-like agents (pancuronium, an
alkaloid-like substance with steroidal skeleton in its molecule),
that have a similar pharmacodynamic profile but with fewer side
effects. Curare has also been used historically as a paralyzing
poison by South American indigenous people. The prey is killed by
asphyxiation as the respiratory muscles are unable to contract
resulting in apnea.
Pharmacological properties
Curare is an example of a non-depolarizing muscle relaxant (aka, competitive antagonist) which blocks the nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, one of the two types of cholinergic (acetylcholine) receptors, on the post synaptic membrane of the neuromuscular junction. Curare does not occupy the agonist position, but likely binds within the channel pore.Curare and anesthesia
Isolated attempts to use curare during anesthesia dates back to 1912 by Arthur Lawen of Leipzig. But curare came to anesthesia via psychiatry (electroplexy). In 1939 Abram Elting and Bennett used it to modify metrazol induced convulsive therapy. Muscle relaxants are used in modern anesthesia for many reasons, such as providing optimal operating conditions and facilitating intubation of the trachea. Before muscle relaxants, anesthesiologists needed to use larger doses of the anesthetic agent, such as ether, chloroform or cyclopropane to achieve these aims. Such deep anesthesia risked killing patients that were elderly or had heart conditions. The source of curare in the Amazon was first researched by Richard Evans Schultes in 1941. Since the 1930s, it was being used in hospitals as a muscle relaxant. He discovered that different types of curare called for as many as 15 ingredients, and in time helped to identify more than 70 species that produced the drug [1].On January 23, 1942, Dr. Harold
Griffith and Dr. Enid Johnson gave a synthetic preparation of
curare (Intracostin/ Intocostrin) to a patient undergoing an
appendectomy (to supplement conventional anesthesia). Curare
(d-tubocurarine) is now not used for anesthesia and surgery as
better drugs are now available. When used with halothane d-tubocurarine can
cause profound fall in blood pressure in some patients as both the
drugs are ganglion
blockers. . However, it is safer to use d-tubocurarine with
ether.
In 1954, a sensational article was published by
Beecher and Todd suggesting that the use of muscle
relaxants (drugs similar to curare) increased death due to
anesthesia nearly six
fold.. This has been completely disproved.
Modern anesthetists have at their disposal a
variety of muscle
relaxants for use in anesthesia. The ability to produce muscle
relaxation independently from anesthesia has permitted
anesthesiologists to adjust the two effects separately as needed to
ensure that their patients are safely unconscious and sufficiently
relaxed to permit surgery. However, because the muscle relaxants
have no effect on consciousness, it is possible, through error or
accident, that a patient may remain fully conscious and sensitive
to pain during surgery, but unable to move or speak, and thus
unable to alert attending staff about their pain and state of
awareness. This problem is now greatly solved by BIS
monitor.
Plants from which primary components of curare can be extracted
Names
Curare is also known as Ampi, Woorari, Woorara, Woorali, Wourali, Wouralia, Ourare, Ourari, Urare, Urari, and Uirary.d-Tubocurarine, the popular alkaloid of Curare
used as a medicine, was available as Tubocurarin, Tubocurarinum,
Delacurarine, Tubarine, Metubine, Jexin, HSDB 2152, Isoquinoline
Alkaloid, Tubadil, Mecostrin, Intracostin and Intocostrin.
External links
Popular culture
- In an episode of the TV series Heroes, Sylar is drugged with curare, when drinking a cup of chai.
- In an episode of the TV series M*A*S*H, "The Light That Failed" (1977) Dr. Winchester fails to read the label on a bottle of "pain medication" and inadvertently injects a patient with curare which stops the patient's breathing. Drs. Honeycutt and Pierce successfully resuscitate the patient.
- An episode of the cartoon TV series Batman Beyond is titled A Touch of Curare after an eponymous female assassin.
- In an episode of the cartoon TV series American Dad, two characters jokingly shoot each other with curare darts, temporarily paralysing them.
References
- Foldes, F.F. "Anesthesia before and after curare", Anasthesieabteilung des Albert-Einstein-College of Medicine. Anaesthesiol Reanim, 1993, 18(5):128-31. (retrieved June 20 2005)
- James, Mel. "Harold Griffith",Heirloom Series, Volume 6. (retrieved June 20 2005)
- "Curare", Blue Planet Biomes, 2000. (retrieved September 27 2005)
- Smith, Roger. "Cholernergic Transmission", (retrieved March 13, 2007)
- Strecker G J et al. "Curare binding and the curare-induced subconductance state of the acetylcholine receptor channel.", Biophysical Journal 56: 795-806 (1989). (retrieved May 12, 2007)
curare in Czech: Kurare
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