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Atropine, psychoactivity

Certain plants of the family Solanaceae, such as Atropa belladonna L., Hyoscyamus niger L., and Datura stramonium L., have been used medicinally for centuries in Europe because they contain tropane-type alkaloids.For example, atropine (1) [a racemic mixture of (+)- and (—)-hyoscyamine (2)] and (-)-hyoscyamine are competitive antagonists at the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor site, leading to antispasmodic and antiallergic effects. Scopolamine [(—)-hyoscine)] (3) is used in a transdermal patch for the prevention of motion sickness. Since these tropane alkaloids penetrate the blood-brain barrier, they also have psychoactive effects. ... [Pg.18]

Since this mushroom s mental effects are undisputedly strong, other guesses were made, notably atropine and bufotenine. Such ideas have now been discarded. Modern research into this question began in 1967 with the work in Zurich of the chemist C.H. Eugster and the pharmacologist P.G. Wasser. They discovered that the main psychoactives are ibotenic acid, muscimol and muscazone, aided possibly by a few other constituents. [Pg.472]

The family Solanaceae, made up of more than 2,400 species, is especially noteworthy. Many of its members contain the alkaloids atropine (dl-hyoscyamine) and scopolamine (hyosdne). Atropine shows up in mandrake root, henbane and thorn apple it constitutes just over 4.5 percent of the asthmatic preparation called Asthmador. Schultes and Hofmann claim that there are no reports on the effects of atropine alone "which could explain the addition of belladonna as an ingredient of magic brews in medieval Europe. But Hoffer and Osmond recall several historical incidents that attest to its psychoactivity. One story involved a family of five who in 1963 ate tomato plants that had been grafted onto jimson weed, producing 6.36 mg. of atropine per tomato "All five developed deliroid reactions of varying intensity and some had to be treated in the hospital several days. This seems to be the first known instance of hallucinogenic tomatoes. ... [Pg.479]


See other pages where Atropine, psychoactivity is mentioned: [Pg.75]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.213]    [Pg.99]    [Pg.346]    [Pg.150]    [Pg.207]    [Pg.115]    [Pg.387]    [Pg.163]    [Pg.27]    [Pg.113]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.339 ]




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