Senna is the common name for many
species in the
genera Senna
and
Cassia, both in the
subfamily
Caesalpinioideae. The term "Senna" is often used specifically for
the
medicinal
herb Cassia acutifolia.C. acutifolia is a small
shrub,
about 2 ft high, with a pale green smooth erect
stem, long
spreading
branches, bearing four or five pairs of
leaves.
The flowers
are small and yellow, the
pods broadly
oblong and containing about six
seeds.
Senna is an
Arabian name, and the plant is grown mostly in
Nubia.
Twice a year the plants are cut down, dried in the sun, stripped and
packed in palm-leaf
bags and sent on
camels to
Essouan and
Darao then up the
Nile to
Cairo or
else to
Red Sea ports.It is a
purgative, closely related to
aloe and
rhubarb,
the active ingredients being
anthraquinone derivatives and their
glucosides. Its action is on the lower
bowel,
and is especially useful in alleviating
constipation. It increases the
peristaltic movements of the colon.The pods are milder in their effects than the seeds as they contain
less of the
resin responsible for griping.Another species of senna, Cassia obovata, is used as a
hair
treatment with effects similar to
henna,
but without the red color. The active component is an anthraquinone
derivative called chrysophanic acid, which is also found in
higher concentrations in rhubarb root. It adds a slight yellow color.
Cassia obovata is often called "neutral hen