Protocols

Comparison of poisoning deaths in mice before and after the concoction of Epiphyllum officinale

Summary

The toxic constituent of epiphyllum is mainly aconitine. Its nature is unstable, after a long time of soaking in water and heating and decocting the concoction, can make aconitine hydrolyzed into less toxic benzoyl aconitine and aconitine. The content of aconitine in raw epiphyllum is high, and after concoction, the content of aconitine is reduced, and the toxicity is also reduced, so the dosage of causing poisoning and death of animals is much larger than that of raw epiphyllum.


For more product details, please visit Aladdin Scientific website.

https://www.aladdinsci.com/

Categories: Protocols
Explore topics: Laboratory animal

Da — when not otherwise indicated, molecular weight units are daltons.   Mw — weight-average molecular weight.   Mn — number-average molecular weight.

Products are supplied for research and development use only. Not for use in humans, animals, diagnosis, or therapy.

Cite this article

Aladdin Scientific. "Comparison of poisoning deaths in mice before and after the concoction of Epiphyllum officinale" Aladdin Knowledge Base, updated Dec 24, 2024. https://www.aladdinsci.com/us_en/faqs/comparison-of-poisoning-deaths-in-mice-b-en.html
Was this article helpful? Yes No 2 out 3 found this helpful

Shall we send you a message when we have discounts available?

Remind me later

Thank you! Please check your email inbox to confirm.

Oops! Notifications are disabled.