| 释义 | 
		Definition of reserpine in English: reserpinenoun rɪˈsəːpiːn mass nounMedicine A compound of the alkaloid class obtained from Indian snakeroot and other plants and used in the treatment of hypertension.  Example sentencesExamples -  What do aspirin, codeine, ipecac, reserpine, scopolamine, theophylline, and vinblastine have in common?
 -  The class includes reserpine and tetrabenazine, which is not sold in the United States, but is used widely in Europe.
 -  The patient's medical history should be reviewed for conditions such as hypothyroidism, stroke, or exposure to certain drugs associated with mood changes, such as steroids, reserpine, beta-blockers, and particularly alcohol.
 -  Herbal medicine has contributed aspirin from willow bark, reserpine from snakeroot, taxol from the yew tree, but ‘natural’ is not automatically safe.
 -  Besides reserpine, other alkaloids used in hypertension and other cardiac disorders are ajmaline, rescinnamine, serpentinine, sarpagine, deserpidine, and chandrine.
 
 
 Origin   1950s: from the modern Latin species name R(auwolfia) serp(entina), named after Leonhard Rauwolf (see rauwolfia), + -ine4.    Definition of reserpine in US English: reserpinenoun Medicine A compound of the alkaloid class obtained from Indian snakeroot and other plants and used in the treatment of hypertension.  Example sentencesExamples -  Herbal medicine has contributed aspirin from willow bark, reserpine from snakeroot, taxol from the yew tree, but ‘natural’ is not automatically safe.
 -  What do aspirin, codeine, ipecac, reserpine, scopolamine, theophylline, and vinblastine have in common?
 -  The class includes reserpine and tetrabenazine, which is not sold in the United States, but is used widely in Europe.
 -  Besides reserpine, other alkaloids used in hypertension and other cardiac disorders are ajmaline, rescinnamine, serpentinine, sarpagine, deserpidine, and chandrine.
 -  The patient's medical history should be reviewed for conditions such as hypothyroidism, stroke, or exposure to certain drugs associated with mood changes, such as steroids, reserpine, beta-blockers, and particularly alcohol.
 
 
 Origin   1950s: from the modern Latin species name R(auwolfia) serp(entina), named after Leonhard Rauwolf (see rauwolfia), + -ine.     |