Non-Alkaloid Hallucinogens Flashcards
1
Q
Wormwood or Absinthe
BOTANICAL INFORMATION:
A
- Weed
- Aster family
- Eurasia
2
Q
Wormwood or Absinthe
HISTORY AS A MEDICINAL PLANT:
A
- Ebers Papyrus
- Dioscorides and Pliny-treating intestinal worms and gastrointestinal complaints
- Mixtures of alcohol and medicinal herbs
- Wine and wormwood=absinthites
- Steam distillation
- Switzerland-contained in alcohol liqueur
- Factory for commercial production
- Steeping herb in strong alcohol, distillation, green liquid (natural chlorophyll)
- Prevent fevers
- Wealthy and intelligentsia
- True was expensive, cheap was distilled grain alcohol with cupric acetate or antimony choloride
- Terpenes-thujone
- GABA blocker
- Moderates firing of neural synapses, resulting in tremors and convulsions
- Dazed condition, convulsions, enfeebled mind, terrifying hallucinations
- Aesthetic ritual
3
Q
Wormwood or Absinthe
MODERN UTILIZATION:
A
- Arles-high incidences of neurological disorders and stillbirths
- Banned in Belgium, Switzerland, Italy, and United States
- France after WWI
- Symptoms caused by acute alcohol intoxication
- Vincent van Gogh-led to his suicide
- “true”=green colour, “bohemian”=blue colour
- Today higher in alcohol content
4
Q
Nutmeg
BOTANICAL INFORMATION:
A
- Tree
- Banda Islands-Indonesia present day
- European spice trade
- Nutmeg from seed, mace from fleshy aril
5
Q
Nutmeg
HISTORY AS A MEDICINAL PLANT:
A
- Added to betel nut preparations and chewing or snuffing tobacco
- Aphrodisiac in Yemen
- Madashaunda “narcotic fruit”-Ayurvedic medicine
- Medieval Muslim-listed with opium, hashish, henbane as an intoxicating drug
- Egypt-stimulant
6
Q
Nutmeg
MODERN UTILIZATION:
A
- North America-psychoactive drug
- Used by jazz musicians in New Orleans
- Prisoners in jails
- Swallowed
- Immediate gagging, vomiting, severe headache, dizziness, nausea, giddiness, visual and auditory hallucinations, detachment from reality, sensations of floating or flying, apparent separation of limbs from the body, coma-like sleep, severe body aches, depression
- Phenolics-myristicin and elemicin
- Metabolized into amphetamine-like compounds:MMDA and TMM
- Mild inhibitor of MAO
7
Q
Diviner’s Safe or Salvia
BOTANICAL INFORMATION:
A
- Herbaceous
- Mint family
- Oaxaca in Mexico
- Propagated vegetatively (shoot cuttings)
8
Q
Diviner’s Safe or Salvia
PLANT UTILIZATION:
A
- Shamaistic-Mazate
- Substitute for sacred mushroom or morning glory seeds
- Schultes and Wasson-enthogenic, ritualistic ingestion of leaves, shamanistic drink called yerba de maria
- Leaf-chewing
- Hallucinations, out-of-body sensations, visual distortions
- Terpenoids-salvinorin-A and B
- Kappa opioid receptor KOR agonists
9
Q
Marijuana
BOTANICAL INFORMATION:
A
- East and Central Asia
- Separate male and female plants
- Potent resin sensemilla from unfertilized female
- Hemp