1899
Peyote Effect September 4, 2018 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1525/california/9780520285422.003.0003
Summary
In the late 1800s, Mexican scientists knew little about peyote while research accelerated elsewhere. Mexico's Instituto Médico Nacional then sponsored peyote studies around 1900, using historical accounts, government reports, animal experiments, and tests on patients in Mexico City. Unable to extract mescaline, they used whole peyote buttons, focused on bodily effects rather than consciousness, and aimed to prove peyote could be a heart tonic. Their work ended when the 1910 Revolution closed the institute in 1915.
Study at a glance
| Design | historical analysis |
|---|---|
| Key finding | Mexican researchers at the Instituto Médico Nacional studied peyote's corporeal effects, particularly its potential as a heart tonic, but their work was halted by the 1910 Revolution. |
Abstract
While research on peyote accelerated in the United States, United Kingdom, and Germany during the last decade of the nineteenth century, Mexican scientists remained largely ignorant of the properties of the cactus. This changed when Mexico’s Instituto Médico Nacional (IMN) sponsored a series of peyote studies at the turn of the century. In part, those studies relied on historical accounts and reports from government agents working in regions where indigenous peyotists lived. In part, they entailed experiments, first with a variety of animals and then with patients in the Hospital General de San Andrés in Mexico City. In contrast to their counterparts elsewhere, Mexican researchers lacked the capacity to extract mescaline from peyote, and they depended on solutions made from whole peyote buttons for their research. They were also much less inclined to experiment on themselves than researchers elsewhere, and they were more interested in the corporeal effects of peyote than its capacity to affect states of consciousness. In particular, they attempted to demonstrate peyote’s potential to be used as a heart tonic. Their work was ultimately undone by Mexico’s 1910 Revolution, which resulted in the closing of the IMN in 1915.