• DPMC Moderators: thegreenhand | tryptakid
  • Drug Policy & Media Coverage Welcome Guest
    View threads about
    Posting Rules Bluelight Rules
    Drug Busts Megathread Video Megathread

Tramadol discovered in African plant!

Can anyone confirm the genus of this plant? a preliminary search yielded "Nauclea".
 
This reminds me of the time they found meth in a tree in Texas.

"The acacia debacle" turned out to be massive sample contamination. Nobody could reproduce it.

In this paper they do a very rigorous job proving the tramadol is plant-derived and not a contaminant. Reported alkaloid contents are about 0.4 - 1% in root bark of Nauclea latifolia. They report that there's some related species that are used medicinally.
 
Hrm, I was hoping the concentrations would have been higher, but then again, I'm complaining about a plant that evolved biosynthesis of tramadol.
 
So because of that supplement law (not sure the name of the law) in the USA, this means its legal to sell extracts of this plant in capsules over the counter?
 
So we're to assume them calling it "Synthetic" still means it was formed by means of the plant without significant human interference?
 
So we're to assume them calling it "Synthetic" still means it was formed by means of the plant without significant human interference?

That would mean it isn't synthetic...

Like the difference between man made morphine and natural morphine.

The source is the key to the definition. IMHO
 
I suppose that if these results hold up, they'll stop calling it synthetic.

How does that work with natural molecules produced in glassware? Like the melatonin I take was probably not extracted from a pineal gland, but the bottle still says "natural".
 
Ho-Chi-Minh said:
So we're to assume them calling it "Synthetic" still means it was formed by means of the plant without significant human interference?

They mean that, until now, it was formerly considered to be synthetic. Now tramadol will be reclassified as a natural product too, I think.

If you want to prove the origin of a natural product, you can do isotope profiling, which is what they did. Plants uptake a certain ratio of isotopes of carbon, nitrogen, & oxygen, and the ratio of e.g. nitrogen-15 to nitrogen-14 is reflected in their products.
 
That would mean it isn't synthetic...

Like the difference between man made morphine and natural morphine.

The source is the key to the definition. IMHO

Saying that "synthetic" tramadol was found in a plant is saying that a substance which itself was manufactured by man was found in a plant. I didn't read the study, but assuming that what sekio said was true (I don't doubt it), it was a problem of improper semantic phrasing, not a legal loophole in a flawed study, as the other experiment which found a bunch of common psychotropics was. I'd imagine though that after that latter bungle they'd want to replicate this study before re-classifying tramadol.
 
An analgesic molecule discovered in its natural state in Africa

http://presse-inserm.fr/en/an-analgesic-molecule-discovered-in-its-natural-state-in-africa/9600/


A team of researchers led by Michel De Waard, Inserm Research Director at the Grenoble Institute of Neurosciences (Inserm, University Joseph Fourier, CNRS), has discovered that an African medicinal plant produces large quantities of molecules with analgesic properties. Even more surprising, analysis show that the molecule is identical to Tramadol, a wholly synthetic medication that is used world-wide as a painkiller. According to the research team, this is the first time ever that a synthetic medication produced by the pharmaceutical industry has been discovered in strong concentrations in a natural source. This unexpected discovery had just been published in the chemical journal’ “Angewandte Chemie“.

Nauclea latifolia (also know as the pin cushion tree) is a small shrub that is widely abundant throughout Sub-Saharan Africa. In traditional medicine, in particular in Cameroon, this plant is used to treat different pathologies including epilepsy, fevers, malaria and pain.

In order to identify the presence and the type of potential active substances in this plant, Michel De Waard, Inserm Research Director, organised joint scientific research with the Grenoble Institute of Neurosciences (Inserm unit 836 UJF/CEA/CHU), the Department of Molecular Pharmacological Chemistry (UMR UJF/CNRS 5063, Pr Ahcène Boumendjel) and the University of Buea (Dr. Germain Sotoing Taiwe).

Thanks to this work, the researchers were able to isolate and determine the properties of the component in the plant that was responsible for the presumed analgesic effects, by analysing part of the root bark. And to everyone’s surprise, they found that this component was already commercially available under the name: Tramadol.

The biggest surprise in this study was the fact that this molecule was a known one. “It was identical to Tramadol, a synthetic medication developed in the seventies and often used to treat pain”, explained Michel De Waard, Inserm research director. This medication is used world-wide, because although it is a derivative of morphine, it has less side effects than morphine, in particular addiction problems.

Tramadol1 is in fact a simplified form of morphine that has conserved the elements needed to produce analgesic effects.

structure tramadol vs morphine

crédit : Structure of Tramadol versus structure of morphine

In order to confirm their results, the researchers tested different processes with the aim of proving that the substance discovered was of natural origin. Their analyses were confirmed by three independent laboratories that had received different samples at different times of the year.

“All results converge and confirm the presence of Tramadol in the root bark of Nauclea latifolia. On the other hand, no trace of this molecule was detected in the aerial part of the shrub (leaves, trunk or branches)“, explained the researcher.

Finally, in order to exclude the possibility of accidental contamination of the samples by synthetic Tramadol, the researchers took samples from inside the roots themselves and thus confirmed the presence of the molecule.

From a quantitative point of view, the concentration of Tramadol in the dried bark extracts was measured at 0.4% and 3.9%. These are extremely high levels of active substance.

In addition to the unprecedented aspect of this discovery (the first ever potentially exploitable case where a hitherto synthetically produced medication has been discovered in a natural form and in high quantities), this major result opens up prospects for local populations, giving them access to a source of cheap treatment and validating the concepts of traditional medicines (as decoctions made from barks and roots).

“There are over 10 different varieties of this shrub in Africa, so we can envisage repeating the tests in order to determine which varieties contain Tramadol”, concludes Michel De Waard.

This study can also be used to provide a warning as to the risks of drug dependency linked to over-consumption of the roots of this plant. Tramadol is listed as an opiate product, just like morphine from which it is derived.
 
Even more surprising, analysis show that the molecule is identical to Tramadol, a wholly synthetic medication that is used world-wide as a painkiller. According to the research team, this is the first time ever that a synthetic medication produced by the pharmaceutical industry has been discovered in strong concentrations in a natural source.


Wouldn't that mean it's non-synthetic? I guess it's still made through synthetic means, though.
 
Wow, pretty amazing to say the least. Makes you wonder about all the other stuff out there we havnt discovered yet. I always found iboga pretty incredible, how huge the molecule is and how powerful it is. Wild stuff in africa, literally.
 
The real question is how feasible is it to grow and how much does it yield?
 
Top