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A multidisciplinary overview of intoxicating snuff rituals in the western hemisphere.

P A De Smet

Journal of ethnopharmacology March 1, 1985 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1016/0378-8741(85)90060-1 via PubMed

Summary

The study categorizes various plants used in intoxicating snuff rituals across the western hemisphere based on their psychoactive properties and documented Indian use. It identifies four categories of plants, ranging from those with confirmed psychoactive effects and ritual use to those lacking evidence for both. Additionally, it discusses the effectiveness of nasal application for certain substances, noting that while atropine, cocaine, nicotine, and scopolamine are effective, harmine did not yield measurable plasma levels when administered nasally.

Study at a glance

Key finding Atropine, cocaine, nicotine, and scopolamine are effective when applied nasally, but harmine does not produce measurable plasma levels via this route.

Abstract

Part one of the paper discusses ethnobotanical, chemical and general pharmacological aspects of intoxicating snuff rituals in the western hemisphere. Four categories of ritual snuff ingredients arise from this multidisciplinary approach: It is well established that the plant contains one or more psychoactive principles and the Indian use of the plant as a ritual snuff ingredient is confirmed or quite probable: Anadenanthera, Erythroxylum, Nicotiana, Virola; It is well established that the plant contains one or more psychoactive principles, but the Indian use of the plant as a ritual snuff ingredient is not well recorded or even unlikely: Banisteriopsis, Cannabis, Datura, Ilex guayusa; The Indian use of the plant as a ritual snuff ingredient is confirmed or quite probable, but it is not well established that the plant contains one or more psychoactive principles: Justicia pectoralis, Pagamea macrophylla, Tanaecium nocturnum; The Indian use of the plant as a ritual snuff ingredient is not well recorded, and it is not well established that the plant contains one or more psychoactive principles: Acorus calamus, Capsicum, Macquira sclerophylla, Piper interitum. Part two of the paper discusses the nasal pharmacokinetics and efficacy of possible ritual snuff constituents. The literature yields convincing clinical evidence that atropine, cocaine, nicotine and scopolamine are effective following nasal application, but experimental confirmation of the efficacy of nasal tryptamine alkaloids is still awaited. In self-experiments, 6.4 mg/kg of caffeine produced substantial plasma levels via the nasal route, but 0.5 mg/kg of harmine did not produce measurable plasma levels, when taken as a nasal powder. Without additional experiments, it is difficult to give a definite explanation for this negative result.

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