Everything about Quinine totally explained
| PubChem = 8549
| DrugBank = APRD00563
| C = 20 |H = 24 |N = 2 |O = 2
| molecular_weight = 324.417
g/
mol
| bioavailability = 76 to 88%
| protein_bound = ~70%
| metabolism =
Hepatic (mostly
CYP3A4 and
CYP2C19-mediated)
| elimination_half-life = ~18 hours
| excretion =
Renal (20%)
| pregnancy_category = X
(USA), D
(Au)
| legal_status =
| routes_of_administration = Oral,
intravenous
| melting_point = 177
}}
Quinine is a natural white
crystalline
alkaloid having anti-smallpox,
analgesic (painkilling), and
anti-inflammatory properties and a bitter taste. It is a
stereoisomer of
quinidine.
Quinine was the first effective treatment for
malaria caused by
P. falciparum, appearing in therapeutics in the 17th century. It remained the antimalarial drug of choice until the 1940s, when other drugs took over. Since then, many effective antimalarials have been introduced, although quinine is still used to treat the disease in certain critical situations. Quinine is available with a prescription in the
United States. Quinine is also used to treat
nocturnal leg cramps and
arthritis, and there have been attempts (with limited success) to treat
prion diseases. It was once a popular
heroin adulterant.
It was first brought to Europe by Jesuits and it was also used to cure King Louis XIV.
Chemical structure
Quinine contains two major fused-ring systems: The
aromatic quinoline and the
bicyclic quinuclidine.
Mechanism of action against P. falciparum
The drug acts by inhibiting the hemozoin biocrystallization, thus facilitating an aggregation of cytotoxic heme. Toxic free heme accumulates in the parasites, leading to their death.
Sources of quinine
Quinine was extracted from the bark of the
South American
cinchona tree and was isolated and named in
1817 by French researchers
Pierre Joseph Pelletier and
Joseph Bienaimé Caventou. The name was derived from the original
Quechua (Inca) word for the cinchona tree bark, "Quina" or "Quina-Quina", which roughly means "bark of bark" or "holy bark". Prior to 1820, the bark was first dried, ground to a fine powder and then mixed into a liquid (commonly wine) which was then drunk.
Large scale use of quinine as a
prophylaxis started around
1850, although it had been used in un-extracted form by Europeans since at least the early
1600s. Quinine was first used to treat malaria in Rome in 1631. During the 1600s, malaria was endemic to the
swamps and
marshes surrounding the city of
Rome. Over time, malaria was responsible for the death of several
Popes, many
Cardinals and countless common citizens of Rome. Most of the
priests trained in Rome had seen malaria victims and were familiar with the
shivering brought on by the cold phase of the disease. In addition to its anti-malarial properties, quinine is an effective muscle relaxant, long used by the
Quechua Indians of
Peru to halt shivering brought on by cold temperatures. The
Jesuit Brother Agostino Salumbrino (1561-1642), an
apothecary by training and who lived in
Lima, observed the Quechua using the quinine-containing bark of the
cinchona tree for that purpose. While its effect in treating malaria (and hence malaria-induced shivering) was entirely unrelated to its effect in controlling shivering from cold, it was still the correct medicine for malaria. At the first opportunity, he sent a small quantity to Rome to test in treating malaria. In the years that followed, cinchona bark became one of the most valuable commodities shipped from Peru to Europe.
Quinine also played a significant role in the colonization of Africa by Europeans. As the dawn of modern pharmacology, Quinine was the prime reason why Africa ceased to be known as the white man's grave. According to
socialist historian Clifford D. Conner in "A People's History of Science", "It was quinine's efficacy that gave colonist fresh opportunities to swarm into the Gold Coast, Nigeria and other parts of west Africa..."(Conner pp 95-96) also cites Porter, "The Greatest Benefit to Mankind," pp. 465-466)
Synthetic quinine
Cinchona trees remain the only practical source of quinine. However, under wartime pressure, research towards its artificial production was undertaken. A formal chemical synthesis was accomplished in
1944 by American chemists
R.B. Woodward and
W.E. Doering. Since then, several more efficient
quinine total syntheses have been achieved, but none of them can compete in economic terms with isolation of the alkaloid from natural sources.
Dosing
Quinine is a basic
amine and is therefore always presented as a salt. Various preparations that exist include the
hydrochloride, dihydrochloride,
sulfate, bisulfate and
gluconate. This makes quinine dosing very complicated, because each of the salts has a different weight.
The following amounts of each form are equal:
- quinine base 100 mg
- quinine bisulfate 169 mg
- quinine dihydrochloride 122 mg
- quinine hydrochloride 122 mg
- quinine sulfate 121 mg
- quinine gluconate 160 mg.
All quinine salts may be given orally or
intravenously (IV); quinine gluconate may also be given
intramuscularly (IM) or rectally (PR). The main problem with the rectal route is that the dose can be expelled before it's completely absorbed, but this can be rectified by giving a half dose again.
The IV dose of quinine is 8 mg/kg of quinine base every eight hours; the IM dose is 12.8 mg/kg of quinine base twice daily; the PR dose is 20 mg/kg of quinine base twice daily. Treatment should be given for seven days.
The preparations available in the UK are quinine sulfate (200 mg or 300 mg tablets) and quinine hydrochloride (300 mg/ml for injection). Quinine isn't licensed for IM or PR use in the
UK. The adult dose in the UK is 600 mg quinine dihydrochloride IV or 600 mg quinine sulfate orally every eight hours.
In the United States quinine sulfate is available as 324 mg tablets under the brand name Qualaquin; the adult dose is two tablets every eight hours. There is no injectable preparation of quinine licensed in the U.S.:
quinidine is used instead.
Quinine isn't recommended for malaria prevention because of its side effects and poor tolerability, not because it's ineffective. When used for prophylaxis, the dose of quinine sulfate is 300–324mg once daily, starting one week prior to travel and continuing for four weeks after returning.
Side effects
» See: cinchonism
It is usual for quinine in therapeutic doses to cause
cinchonism; in rare cases, it may even cause death (usually by
pulmonary edema). The development of mild cinchonism isn't a reason for stopping or interrupting quinine therapy and the patient should be reassured. Blood glucose levels and electrolyte concentrations must be monitored when quinine is given by injection; the patient should also ideally be in cardiac monitoring when the first quinine injection is given (these precautions are often unavailable in developing countries where malaria is most a problem).
Cinchonism is much less common when quinine is given by mouth, but oral quinine isn't well tolerated (quinine is exceedingly bitter and many patients will vomit after ingesting quinine tablets): other drugs such as Fansidar (
sulfadoxine (sulfonamide antibiotic) with
pyrimethamine) or Malarone (
proguanil with
atovaquone) are often used when oral therapy is required. Blood glucose, electrolyte and cardiac monitoring are not necessary when quinine is given by mouth.
Quinine can cause paralysis if accidentally injected into a nerve. It is extremely toxic in overdose and the advice of a
poisons specialist should be sought immediately.
Quinine and pregnancy
In very large doses, quinine also acts as an
abortifacient; in the United States quinine is classed as a Category X
teratogen by the Food and Drug Administration, meaning that it can cause
birth defects if taken by a woman during
pregnancy. In the UK, the recommendation is that pregnancy is
not a contra-indication to quinine therapy for
falciparum malaria (which directly contradicts the US recommendation), although it should be used with caution; the reason for this is that the risks to the pregnancy are small and theoretical, as opposed to the very real risk of death from falciparum malaria.
Quinine and interactions with other diseases
Quinine can cause
hemolysis in
G6PD deficiency, but again this risk is small and the physician shouldn't hesitate to use quinine in patients with
G6PD deficiency when there's no alternative. Quinine can also cause
drug-induced immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP).
Quinine can cause abnormal heart rhythms and should be avoided if possible in patients with
atrial fibrillation,
conduction defects or
heart block.
Quinine must not be used in patients with
hemoglobinuria,
myasthenia gravis or
optic neuritis, because it worsens these conditions.
Quinine and hearing impairment
Some studies have related the use of quinine and
hearing impairment, which can cause some high-frequency loss, but it hasn't been conclusively established whether such impairment is temporary or permanent.
Regulation by the United States Food and Drug Administration
From
1969 to
1992, the
U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) received 157 reports of health problems related to quinine use, including 23 which had resulted in death. In
1994, the FDA banned the use of
over-the-counter (OTC) quinine as a treatment for nocturnal leg cramps.
Pfizer Pharmaceuticals had been selling the brand name Legatrin for this purpose. Doctors may still prescribe quinine, but the FDA has ordered firms to stop marketing unapproved drug products containing quinine. The FDA is also cautioning consumers about off-label use of quinine to treat leg cramps. Quinine is approved for treatment of malaria, but is also commonly prescribed to treat leg cramps and similar conditions. Because malaria is life-threatening, the risks associated with quinine use are justified for that condition. But because of the drug's risks, FDA believes it shouldn't be used to prevent or treat leg cramps.
Non-medical uses of quinine
Quinine is a flavour component of
tonic water,
bitter lemon, and
vermouth. According to tradition, the bitter taste of anti-malarial quinine tonic led British colonials in
India to mix it with
gin, thus creating the
gin and tonic cocktail, which is still popular today in many parts of the world.
In some areas non-medical use of quinine is regulated, in the
United States (by the
Food and Drug Administration ) and in
Germany quinine is limited to between 83-85
parts per million (83-85 mg/kg), which is 0.5% to 0.25% the
concentration used in
therapeutic tonic.
In
France, quinine is an ingredient of an
apéritif known as
Quinquina.
Because of its relatively constant and well-known
fluorescence quantum yield, quinine is also used in
photochemistry as a common fluorescence
standard.
Quinine (and quinidine) are used as the chiral moiety for the ligands used in
Sharpless asymmetric dihydroxylation.
Quinine is often added to street drugs cocaine or ketamine in order to "cut" the product and make more profit.
In
Canada, quinine is an ingredient in the
carbonated chinotto beverage called
Brio.
In the
United Kingdom, Scottish company
A.G. Barr's uses quinine as an
ingredient in the carbonated and
caffeinated beverage
Irn-Bru.
In
England,
Australia and
New Zealand, quinine is an ingredient in
Schweppes and other Indian
Tonic waters, at a concentration of 0.5%.
In
Uruguay and
Argentina, quinine is an ingredient of a
Pepsico Inc.
Tonic water named
Paso de los Toros (drink).
In
South Africa, quinine is an ingredient of a Clifton Instant Drink named Chikree produced by Tiger Food Brands.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Quinine'.
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