Aconite, also known as 
aconitum, is a 
genus of 
plants belonging to the natural order 
Ranunculaceae, the 
buttercup[?] family, commonly known as aconite, monkshood, or wolfsbane, and embracing 
about 60 
species, chiefly natives of the mountainous parts 
of the northern hemisphere.  They are distinguished by 
having one of the five blue or yellow coloured sepals[?] (the 
posterior one) in the form of a helmet; hence the English name 
monkshood.  Two of the petals placed under the hood of 
the calyx are supported on long stalks, and have a hollow 
spur at their apex, containing honey.  They are handsome 
plants, the tall stem being crowned by racemes of showy 
flowers. Aconitum napellus, common monkshood, is a doubtful 
native of Britain, and is of therapeutic and toxicological 
importance.  Its roots have occasionally been mistaken for 
horseradish.  The aconite has a short underground stem, from 
which dark-coloured tapering roots descend.  The crown or upper 
portion of the root gives rise to new plants.  When put to 
the lip, the juice of the aconite root produces a feeling of 
numbness and tingling.  The horseradish root, which belongs 
to the natural order Cruciferae, is much longer than that of 
the aconite, and it is not tapering; its colour is yellowish, 
and the top of the root has the remains of the leaves on it. 
Many species of aconite are cultivated in gardens, some 
having blue and others yellow flowers. Aconitum lycoctonum, 
wolfsbane, is a yellow-flowered species common on the Alps of 
Switzerland.  The roots of Aconitum ferox supply the famous 
Indian (Nepal) poison called bikh, bish,
or nabee.  It contains 
considerable quantities of the alkaloid pseudaconitine[?], which 
is a very deadly poison. Aconitum palmatum yields 
another of the celebrated bikh poisons.  The root of Aconitum 
luridum, of the Himalayas, is said to be as virulent as that 
of A. ferox or A. napellus. As garden plants the aconites 
are very ornamental, hardy perennials.  They thrive well in 
any ordinary garden soil, and will grow beneath the shade of 
trees.  They are easily propagated by divisions of the root 
or by seeds; great care should be taken not to leave pieces 
of the root about owing to its very poisonous character. 
Aconite has been ascribed with supernatural powers relating to werewolves and other lycanthropes, either to repel them or in some way induce their lycanthropic condition.
The active principle of Aconitum napellus
is the alkaloid aconitine, first examined by P.L. Geiger and 
Hesse, Alder Wright and A.B. Luff 
obtained apoaconitine[?], aconine[?], and benzoic acid by hydrolysis; while, in 1802, C. Ehrenberg and A. Purfurst observed acetic acid as a hydrolytic product.  This, and allied alkaloids, have formed the subject of many investigations by Wyndham Dunstan and 
his pupils in England, and by Martin Freund and Paul Beck in 
Berlin.  But their constitution is not yet solved, there 
even being some divergence of opinion as to their empirical formulae.  Aconitine (C34H47NO11) is a crystalline base, soluble in alcohol, but very sparingly in water; its alcoholic solution is dextrorotatory[?], but its salts are levorotatory[?].  When heated it loses water and forms pyraconitine[?].  Hydrolysis gives acetic acid and benzaconine[?], the chief constituent of the alkaloids picraconitine[?] and napelline[?]; further hydrolysis gives aconine.  Pseudaconitine[?], obtained from Aconitum ferox, 
gives on hydrolysis acetic acid and veratrylpseudaconine[?], the 
latter of which suffers further hydrolysis to veratric acid[?] and 
pseudaconine.  Japaconitine[?], obtained from the Japanese 
aconites, known locally as kuza-uzu, hydrolyses to 
japbenzaconine[?], which further breaks down to benzoic acid and 
japaconine[?].  Other related alkaloids are lycaconitine[?] and 
myoctonine[?] which occur in wolfsbane, Aconitum lycoctonum. 
The usual test for solutions of aconitine consists in slight 
acidulation with acetic acid and addition of potassium permanganate[?], which causes the formation of a red crystalline precipitate.  In 1905, Dunstan and his collaborators discovered two new aconite alkaloids, indaconitine[?] in "mohri" (Aconitum chasmanthum, Stapf), and bikhaconitine in "bikh" (Aconitum spicatum); he also proposes to classify these alkaloids according to whether they yield benzoic or veratric acid on hydrolysis.
From the root of Aconitum napellus are prepared a liniment 
and a tincture.  The dose of the latter is of importance as being exceptionally small, for it is not advisable to give more than at most five drops at a time.  The official preparation is an ointment which contains one part of the alkaloid in fifty.  It must be used with 
extreme care, and in small quantities, and it must not be 
used at all where cuts or cracks are present in the skin. 
Aconite first stimulates and later paralyses the nerves of pain, touch and 
temperature, if applied to the skin, broken or unbroken, or 
to a mucous membrane; the initial tingling therefore gives 
place to a long-continued anaesthetic action.  Taken internally 
aconite acts very notably on the circulation, the respiration 
and the nervous system.  The pulse is slowed, the number of 
beats per minute being actually reduced, under considerable 
doses, to forty, or even thirty, per minute.  The blood-pressure 
synchronously falls, and the heart is arrested in 
diastole[?].  
Immediately before arrest the heart may beat much faster than 
normally, though with extreme irregularity, and in the lower 
animals the auricles may be observed occasionally to miss 
a beat, as in poisoning by 
veratrine[?] and 
colchicum.  The 
action of aconitine on the circulation is due to an initial 
stimulation of the cardio-inhibitory centre in the 
medulla oblongata (at the root of the 
vagus nerves), and later to a directly toxic influence on the nerve-ganglia and muscular fibres of the heart itself.  The fall in blood-pressure is not due to any direct influence on the vessels.  The respiration becomes slower owing to a paralytic action on the respiratory centre and, in warm-blooded animals, death is due to this 
action, the respiration being arrested before the action 
of the heart.  Aconite further depresses the activity of 
all nerve-terminals, the sensory being affected before the 
motor.  In small doses it therefore tends to relieve pain, if 
this be present.  The activity of the spinal cord is similarly 
depressed.  The pupil is at first contracted, and afterwards 
dilated.  The 
cerebrum[?] is totally unaffected by aconite, 
consciousness and the intelligence remaining normal to the 
last.  The 
antipyretic action which considerable doses of aconite 
display is not specific, but is the result of its influence on the 
circulation and respiration and of its slight diaphoretic action. 
The indications for its employment are limited, but definite.  It is of undoubted value as a local 
anodyne[?] in 
sciatica[?] and 
neuralgia[?], especially in ordinary facial or trigeminal neuralgia.  The best method of application is by rubbing in a small quantity of the aconitine ointment 
until numbness is felt, but the costliness of this preparation 
causes the use of the aconite liniment to be commonly resorted 
to.  This should be painted on the affected part with a 
camel's hair brush dipped in 
chloroform, which facilitates the 
absorption of the alkaloid.  Aconite is indicated for internal 
administration whenever it is desirable to depress the action 
of the heart in the course of a fever.  Formerly used in every 
fever, and even in the septic states that constantly followed 
surgical operations in the pre-Listerian epoch, aconite is 
now employed only in the earliest stage of the less serious 
fevers, such as acute 
tonsilitis[?], 
bronchitis[?], and, notably, 
laryngitis[?].  The extreme pain and rapid swelling of the vocal cords -- with threatened obstruction to the respiration that characterize acute laryngitis -- may often be relieved by the sedative action of this drug upon the circulation.  In order to reduce the pulse to its normal rate in these cases, without at the same time lessening the power of the heart, the drug must be given in doses of about two 
minims of the tincture every half-hour and then every hour until the pulse falls to the normal rate.  Thereafter the drug must be discontinued.  It is probably never right to give aconite in doses much larger than that named.  There is one condition of the heart itself in which aconite is sometimes useful.  Whilst absolutely contra-indicated in all cases of valvular disease, it is of value in cases of cardiac hypertrophy with over-action.  But the practitioner must be assured that neither valvular lesion nor degeneration of the myocardium is present. 
In a few minutes after the introduction of a poisonous dose of aconite, marked symptoms supervene.  The initial signs of poisoning are referable to the alimentary canal.  There is a sensation of burning, tingling and numbness in the mouth, and of burning in the abdomen.  Death usually supervenes before a numbing effect on the 
intestine can be observed.  After about an hour there is severe vomiting.  Much motor weakness and cutaneous sensations similar to those above described soon follow.  The pulse and respiration steadily fail, death occurring from asphyxia.  As in 
strychnine poisoning, the patient is conscious and clear-minded to the last.  The only post-mortem signs are those of 
asphyxia.  The treatment is to empty the stomach by tube or by a non-depressant 
emetic.  The physiological antidotes are 
atropine and 
digitalin[?] or 
strophanthin[?], which should be injected subcutaneously in maximal doses.  
Alcohol, 
strychnine, and warmth must also be employed. 
- based on an article from 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica
Several photographs of Aconite plants can be found here (http://plants.usda.gov/cgi_bin/gallery_page.cgi?earl=gallery.cgi&category=genus&classes=all&sort=scisort&txtparm=Aconitum&wetland=all&origin=all&results=thumbnails&pagenum=1), but they cannot be included in Wikipedia -- their licence requires that their copyright holder be credited.
Why not? Most copyright licenses, including wikipedia's GNU FDL, require that. Apparently, the main incompatibility lies in the restriction on commercial use.
 
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