## Correct Answer: B. Senna The brownish pigmented lesions seen on colonoscopy in a patient with chronic laxative abuse are pathognomonic for **melanosis coli**, a benign condition caused by chronic anthraquinone laxative use. Senna is an anthraquinone-based laxative commonly used in India for constipation management. Anthraquinones undergo hepatic metabolism and are excreted in bile; they accumulate in the colonic mucosa over weeks to months, causing lipofuscin deposition in macrophages within the lamina propria. This results in the characteristic dark brown or black discoloration of the colonic mucosa. Melanosis coli is reversible upon discontinuation of the laxative and carries no malignant potential, though it indicates chronic laxative abuse. The condition is well-documented in Indian populations where senna-based preparations (often in Ayurvedic formulations) are widely self-prescribed for chronic constipation. While other anthraquinones (aloe, cascara) can also cause this, senna is the most commonly implicated in Indian clinical practice due to its widespread availability and over-the-counter use. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Brain** — This is wrong because bran (likely a typo for 'Brain') is a bulk-forming laxative derived from cereal fiber. It works by increasing stool bulk and water retention, not through chemical pigment deposition. Bulk-forming agents do not cause melanosis coli and are actually recommended for long-term use in constipation management without mucosal pigmentation. **C. Methylcellulose** — This is wrong because methylcellulose is a synthetic bulk-forming laxative that increases stool bulk osmotically. It does not undergo hepatic metabolism or deposit pigments in the colonic mucosa. Chronic use of methylcellulose does not produce melanosis coli and is considered safe for prolonged use. **D. Psylium** — This is wrong because psyllium (ispaghula husk) is a natural bulk-forming laxative widely used in India. It increases stool bulk through fiber content and does not cause chemical pigmentation of the mucosa. Chronic psyllium use does not result in melanosis coli, making it a safer long-term alternative to anthraquinones. ## High-Yield Facts - **Melanosis coli** is caused by chronic anthraquinone laxative use (senna, aloe, cascara), not bulk-forming agents. - **Senna** is the most commonly implicated anthraquinone laxative in Indian practice due to widespread OTC availability. - Melanosis coli results from **lipofuscin deposition** in macrophages of the lamina propria, appearing as brown-black mucosal discoloration. - Melanosis coli is **reversible** upon discontinuation of the laxative and carries **no malignant potential**. - **Bulk-forming laxatives** (methylcellulose, psyllium, bran) are safe for chronic use and do not cause mucosal pigmentation. ## Mnemonics **ANTHRAQUINONE = MELANOSIS** Anthraquinone laxatives (Senna, Aloe, Cascara) → Melanosis coli. Bulk-forming (Bran, Psyllium, Methylcellulose) → No pigmentation. **SAFE vs STAIN** SAFE long-term: Bulk-formers (Bran, Psyllium, Methylcellulose). STAIN mucosa: Anthraquinones (Senna, Aloe). Use this when choosing laxatives for chronic constipation. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs "chronic laxative abuse" with pigmented lesions to test whether students confuse anthraquinone-induced melanosis coli with malignant transformation or inflammatory bowel disease. The trap is offering bulk-forming agents as distractors, which are chemically inert and never cause mucosal discoloration. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian outpatient practice, melanosis coli is frequently encountered in elderly patients on chronic senna-based preparations (often from Ayurvedic shops). Reassurance that the condition is benign and reversible, coupled with counseling to switch to psyllium or methylcellulose, prevents unnecessary investigations and reduces laxative abuse. _Reference: KD Tripathi Pharmacology Ch. 47 (GIT Agents); Harrison Ch. 283 (Constipation and Laxatives)_
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