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Revision as of 16:59, 23 June 2008

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Cantharidin, a type of terpenoid, is a poisonous chemical compound secreted by many species of blister beetle, and most notably by the Spanish fly, Lytta vesicatoria. The false blister beetles and cardinal beetles also have cantharidin.

History

Black Blister Beetle Epicauta pennsylvanica

Cantharidin was first isolated by Pierre Robiquet in 1810. It is an odorless and colorless solid at room temperature. It is secreted by the male blister beetle and given to the female during the mating. Afterwards the female beetle will cover its eggs with it as a defense against predators. The complete mechanism of the biosynthesis is currently unknown. If cantharidin is ingested, it irritates the urinary tract as it is excreted, causing swelling of the genitalia. This can cause a harmful condition known as priapism in men, where an erection lasts more than about four hours.


Medical uses

Diluted, it can be used to remove warts,[1] tattoos and to treat the small papules of Molluscum contagiosum.[2]

Medical risks

Its potential for adverse effects have led it to being included in a list of "problem drugs" used by dermatologists.[3]

When ingested by humans, the LD50 is around 0.5 mg/kg, with a dose of as little as 10 mg being potentially fatal. This makes the use of cantharidin as an aphrodisiac highly dangerous and it is illegal to sell it for this purpose in many countries.

Footnotes

  1. ^ Epstein WL, Kligman AM (1958). "Treatment of warts with cantharidin". A. M. A. archives of dermatology. 77 (5): 508–11. PMID 13519856.
  2. ^ "Molluscum contagiosum". Merck Manuals. November 2005. Retrieved 2007-10-21.
  3. ^ Binder R (1979). "Malpractice--in dermatology". Cutis; cutaneous medicine for the practitioner. 23 (5): 663–6. PMID 456036.

External links