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Wikipedia

Datura

Datura is a genus of nine species of highly poisonous, vespertine-flowering plants belonging to the nightshade family (Solanaceae).[1] They are commonly known as thornapples or jimsonweeds, but are also known as devil's trumpets[2] (not to be confused with angel's trumpets, which are placed in the closely related genus Brugmansia). Other English common names include moonflower, devil's weed, and hell's bells. All species of Datura are extremely poisonous and potentially psychoactive, especially their seeds and flowers, which can cause respiratory depression, arrhythmias, fever, delirium, hallucinations, anticholinergic syndrome, psychosis, and even death if taken internally.[3]

Datura
Datura wrightii
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Asterids
Order: Solanales
Family: Solanaceae
Subfamily: Solanoideae
Tribe: Datureae
Genus: Datura
L.
Type species
Datura stramonium
L.
Species

9–14 (See text)

Due to their effects and symptoms, Datura species have occasionally been used not only as poisons, but also as hallucinogens by various groups throughout history.[4][5] Traditionally, their psychoactive administration has often been associated with witchcraft and sorcery or similar practices in many cultures, including the Western world.[5][6][7] Certain common Datura species have also been used ritualistically as entheogens by some Native American groups.[8][9]

Non-psychoactive use of plants in the genus is usually done for medicinal purposes, and the alkaloids present in some species have long been considered traditional medicines in both the New and Old Worlds due to the presence of the alkaloids scopolamine and atropine, which are also produced by Old World plants such as Hyoscyamus niger, Atropa belladonna, and Mandragora officinarum.[4][5][10]

Etymology

The generic name Datura is taken from Sanskrit धतूरा dhatūra "thorn-apple",[11] ultimately from Sanskrit धत्तूर dhattūra "white thorn-apple" (referring to Datura metel of Asia).[12] In the Ayurvedic text Sushruta Samhita, different species of Datura are also referred to as kanaka and unmatta.[12] Dhatura is offered to Shiva in Hinduism. Record of this name in English dates back to 1662.[13] Nathaniel Hawthorne refers to one type in The Scarlet Letter as "apple-Peru". In Mexico, its common name is toloache. The Mexican common name toloache (also spelled tolguacha) derives from the Nahuatl tolohuaxihuitl, meaning "the plant with the nodding head" (in reference to the nodding seed capsules of Datura species belonging to section Dutra of the genus).

Description

Datura species are herbaceous, leafy annuals and short-lived perennials, which can reach up to 2 m in height. The leaves are alternate, 10–20 cm long, and 5–18 cm broad, with a lobed or toothed margin. The flowers are erect or spreading (not pendulous like those of Brugmansia), trumpet-shaped, 5–20 cm long, and 4–12 cm broad at the mouth; colours vary from white to yellow and pale purple. The fruit is a spiny capsule, 4–10 cm long and 2–6 cm broad, splitting open when ripe to release the numerous seeds. The seeds disperse freely over pastures, fields, and even wasteland locations.

Datura belongs to the classic "witches' weeds", along with deadly nightshade, henbane, and mandrake. All parts of the plants are toxic, and the genus has a long history of use for causing delirious states and death. It was well known as an essential ingredient of magical ointments, potions, and witches' brews, most notably Datura stramonium.[14][15]

In India, D. metel has long been regarded as a poison and aphrodisiac, having been used in Ayurveda as a medicine since ancient times. It features in rituals and prayers to Shiva and also in Ganesh Chaturthi, a festival devoted to the deity Ganesha.[16] The larvae of some Lepidoptera (butterfly and moth) species, including Hypercompe indecisa, eat some Datura species. It has been observed that while insects may prefer to feed on Datura leaves, other animals such as cows will generally avoid consuming them.

Species and cultivars

 
Datura metel 'Fastuosa'

Classifying Datura as to its species is difficult, and the descriptions of new species often are accepted prematurely. Later, these "new species" are found to be simply varieties that have evolved due to conditions at a specific location. They usually disappear in a few years. Contributing to the confusion is the fact that various species, such as D. wrightii and D. inoxia, are very similar in appearance, and the variation within a species can be extreme. For example, Datura species can change size of plant, leaf, and flowers, all depending on location. The same species, when growing in a half-shady, damp location can develop into a flowering bush half as tall as an adult human of average height, but when growing in a very dry location, will only grow into a thin plant not much more than ankle high, with tiny flowers and a few miniature leaves.[14] Datura species are native to dry, temperate, and subtropical regions of the Americas, and are distributed mostly in Mexico, which is considered the center of origin of the genus. D. ferox was long thought native to China, D. metel to India and Southeast Asia, and D. leichardthii to Australia; however, recent research has shown these species to be early introductions from Central America.[17]

A group of South American species formerly placed in the genus Datura are now placed in the distinct genus Brugmansia[18] (Brugmansia differs from Datura in that it is woody (the species being shrubs or small trees) and has indehiscent fruits. The solanaceous tribe Datureae, to which Datura and Brugmansia belong, has recently acquired a new, monotypic genus Trompettia J. Dupin, featuring the species Trompettia cardenasiana, which had hitherto been misclassified as belonging to the genus Iochroma.

Datura specialists, the Preissels, accept only 9 species of Datura,[14] but Kew's Plants of the World Online currently lists the following 14 (out of which the current edition of The Plant List does not list D. arenicola, D. lanosa, and D. pruinosa as accepted spp.):

  • Datura arenicola Gentry ex Bye & Luna
  • Datura ceratocaula Ortega
  • Datura discolor Bernh.
  • Datura ferox L.
  • Datura innoxia Mill.
  • Datura kymatocarpa Barclay
  • Datura lanosa A.S.Barclay ex Bye
  • Datura leichhardtii Benth.
  • Datura metel L.
  • Datura pruinosa Greenm.
  • Datura quercifolia Kunth
  • Datura reburra Barclay
  • Datura stramonium L.
  • Datura wrightii Regel

Of the above, D. leichhardtii is close enough to D. pruinosa to merit demotion to a subspecies and likewise D. ferox and D. quercifolia are close enough in morphology to merit being subsumed in a single species. Furthermore, the Australian provenance of D. leichhardtii, the Chinese provenance of D. ferox, and the Afro-Asiatic provenance of D. metel have been cast into serious doubt, with the three species being almost certainly post-Columbian introductions to the regions to which they were originally thought native.[19]

The case of D. metel is unique in that not only is the plant not a true species at all, but an assemblage of ancient pre-Columbian cultivars created from D. innoxia in the Greater Antilles, but evidence is mounting that it was introduced to the Indian subcontinent no later than the second century CE – whether by natural or human agency is, as yet, unknown – making it one of the most ancient plant introductions (if not the most ancient) from the New World to the Old World (see Columbian Exchange).[19][16][20]

D. arenicola is a remarkable new species, described only in 2013, of very restricted range, and so distinctive as to have merited the creation for it of the new section Discola [not to be confused with the species name D. discolor] within the genus. The specific name arenicola means "loving (i.e. "thriving in") sand".[21]

Image Scientific name Common name Distribution
Datura arenicola Gentry ex Bye & Luna Sand thorn-apple, Baja datura, Vizcaíno Desert datura Baja California Sur, Mexico
  D. ceratocaula Jacq. torna loco, Sister of Ololiuhqui, swamp datura Mexico.
  D. discolor Bernh. (syn. D. kymatocarpa, D. reburra) desert thorn-apple Sonoran Desert of western North America
  D. ferox L. long-spined thorn-apple southeastern China (disputed[19])
  D. innoxia Mill. thorn-apple, downy thorn-apple, Indian-apple, moonflower, toloatzin, toloache Southwestern United States, Central and South America (cosmopolitan weed)
  D. leichhardtii F.Muell. ex Benth. (syn. D. pruinosa) Leichhardt's datura from Mexico to Guatemala
  D. metel L. Hindu datura, Indian thorn-apple, devil's trumpet[14] Asia, Africa (disputed[19])
  D. quercifolia Kunth oak-leaved thorn-apple Mexico and the Southwestern United States
  D. stramonium L. (syn. D. inermis, D. bernhardii) jimsonweed, thorn-apple, devil's snare Central America (cosmopolitan weed)
  D. wrightii Regel sacred datura, western jimsonweed, California jimsonweed, sacred thorn-apple, tolguacha, toloache Southwestern United States

American Brugmansia and Datura Society, Inc. (ABADS) is designated in the 2004 edition of the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants as the official International Cultivar Registration Authority for Datura. This role was delegated to ABADS by the International Society for Horticultural Science in 2002.

Past classified species

Cultivation

 
Fruit
 
Datura metel 'Fastuosa' (Hindi: काला धतूरा kāla dhatūra – "black datura")

Datura species are usually sown annually from the seed produced in the spiny capsules, but, with care, the tuberous-rooted perennial species may be overwintered. Most species are suited to being planted outside or in containers. As a rule, they need warm, sunny places and soil that will keep their roots dry. When grown outdoors in good locations, the plants tend to reseed themselves and may become invasive. In containers, they should have porous, aerated potting soil with adequate drainage. The plants are susceptible to fungi in the root area, so anaerobic organic enrichment such as anaerobically composted organic matter or manure, should be avoided.[14]

Toxicity

All Datura plants contain tropane alkaloids such as scopolamine and atropine, primarily in their seeds and flowers, as well as the roots of certain species such as D. wrightii. Because of the presence of these substances, Datura has been used for centuries in some cultures as a poison.[14][22][4] A given plant's toxicity depends on its age, where it is growing, and the local weather conditions. These variations make Datura exceptionally hazardous as a drug. Since datura directly causes the effects of anticholinergic syndrome, the symptoms of its toxicity are often cited by the traditional mnemonic: "Blind as a bat, mad as a hatter, red as a beet, hot as a hare, dry as a bone, the bowel and bladder lose their tone, and the heart runs alone".[23] Datura, as well as long-term psychoactive/toxic usage of other anticholinergic drugs, also appear to significantly increase the risk of developing dementia.[24][25]

In traditional cultures, a great deal of experience with and detailed knowledge of Datura was critical to minimize harm.[14] Many tragic incidents result from modern users ingesting or smoking Datura.[26] For example, in the 1990s and 2000s, the United States media reported stories of adolescents and young adults dying or becoming seriously ill from intentionally ingesting Datura.[27][28] Deliberate or inadvertent poisoning resulting from smoking jimsonweed and other related species has been reported as well.[29] Although most poisonings occur with more common species of Datura such as D. stramonium, several reports in the medical literature indicate deaths from D. ferox intoxication.[30][31][32] Children are especially vulnerable to atropine poisoning.[33][34]

 
D. inoxia with ripe, split-open fruit

In some parts of Europe and India, Datura has been a popular poison for suicide and murder.[35] From 1950 to 1965, the State Chemical Laboratories in Agra, India, investigated 2,778 deaths caused by ingesting Datura.[14][36] A group called Thugs (practicers of thuggee) were reportedly devotees of an Indian religious cult made up of robbers and assassins who strangled or poisoned their victims in rituals devoted to the Hindu goddess Kali. They were alleged to employ Datura in many such poisonings, using it also to induce drowsiness or stupefaction, making strangulation easier.[37]

Datura toxins may be ingested accidentally by consumption of honey produced by several wasp species, including Brachygastra lecheguana, during the Datura blooming season. These semi-domesticated honey wasps apparently collect Datura nectar for honey production, which can lead to poisoning.[38]

The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported accidental poisoning resulting in hospitalization for a family of six who inadvertently ingested Datura used as an ingredient in stew.[39]

In some places,[which?] buying, selling, or cultivating Datura plants is prohibited.[14][36] Solanaceous tribes with a similar chemistry (i.e. a similar tropane alkaloid content), include the Hyoscyameae, containing such well-known toxic species as Hyoscyamus niger and Atropa belladonna, the Solandreae containing the genus Solandra ("chalice vines") and the Mandragoreae, named for the famous Mandragora officinarum, most of which are considered traditional witches' herbs and poisons.

Effects of ingestion

Datura is considered a deliriant. Due to the potent combination of anticholinergic substances it contains, Datura intoxication typically produces the effects of anticholinergic delirium (usually involving a complete or relative inability to differentiate reality from fantasy); bizarre thoughts, hyperthermia; tachycardia; bizarre, and possibly violent behavior; dry skin; dry mouth; illusions; and severe mydriasis (dilated pupils) with resultant painful photophobia that can last several days.[40] Muscle stiffness, urinary retention, temporary paralysis, disrobing, emotional bluntness, dysphoria, and confusion are often reported, and pronounced amnesia is another commonly reported effect.[41][42] The psychoactive alkaloids scopolamine and atropine are also both known for their characteristic hyperactive effects and ability to cause stark and dream-like hallucinations.[43][44] The onset of symptoms generally occurs around 30 to 60 minutes after ingesting the herb. These symptoms generally last from 24 to 48 hours, but have been reported in some cases to last two weeks or longer.[29][45][46]

Treatment

Due to their agitated behavior and confused mental state, people with acute Datura poisoning or intoxication are typically hospitalized. Gastric lavage and the administration of activated charcoal can be used to reduce the stomach's absorption of the ingested material, and the drug physostigmine is used to reverse the effect of the poisons. Benzodiazepines can be given to calm the patient's agitation, and supportive care with oxygen, hydration, and symptomatic treatment is often provided. Observation of the patient is indicated until the symptoms resolve, usually from 24 to 36 hours after ingestion of the Datura.[36][45]

Psychoactive use

In Pharmacology and Abuse of Cocaine, Amphetamines, Ecstasy and Related Designer Drugs, Freye asserts: Few substances have received as many severely negative recreational experience reports as has Datura.[47] The overwhelming majority of those who describe their use of Datura find their experiences extremely unpleasant; both mentally and often physically dangerous.[41] However, anthropologists have found that indigenous groups, with a great deal of experience with and detailed knowledge of Datura, have been known to use Datura spiritually (including the Navajo and especially the Havasupai).[48][49] Adequate knowledge of Datura's properties is necessary to facilitate a safe experience.[14] The ancient inhabitants of what became central and southern California used to ingest Datura to "commune with deities through visions".[50] The Southern Paiute believe Datura can help locate missing objects.[51] In ancient Mexico, Datura also played an important role in the religion of the Aztecs and the practices of their medicine men and necromancers.[52] It was reportedly used by the Aztecs for ritual sacrifice and malevolent purposes as well.[53] In modern-day Mexico, some datura species are still used for sorcery and other occult practices, mostly in the southern region of Veracruz, specifically in the city of Catemaco.[54][55]

Bernardino de Sahagún, in around 1569, called attention to Datura in these words: "It is administered in potions in order to cause harm to those who are objects of hatred. Those who eat it have visions of fearful things. Magicians or those who wish to harm someone administer it in food or drink. This herb is medicinal and its seed is used as a remedy for gout, ground up and applied to the part affected."[52]

Christian Rätsch has said, "A mild dosage produces medicinal and healing effects, a moderate dosage produces aphrodisiac effects, and high dosages are used for shamanic purposes". Wade Davis, an ethnobotanist, also lists it as an essential ingredient of Haitian zombie potion.[56] In Western culture, the same species (Datura stramonium) has been said to have been commonly used by witches as an ingredient for their flying ointments and was regularly included in detailed recipes of magical ointments dating back as far as the early modern period, predominately in New England and Western Europe.[6][10][57] During the anti-witchcraft hysteria of colonial times it was considered unlucky or inappropriate to grow D. stramonium in one's garden due to its supposed reputation for aiding in incantations.[58]

In popular culture

  • The use of Datura, under its old English name of Dewtry, in relation to witchcraft, is referred to in Part 3, Canto 1 of Hudibras, a satirical poem by Samuel Butler (1613–1680)
  • Plants of the Datura genus have been famously depicted in certain works of art such as that of Georgia O'Keeffe (1887–1986).
  • The genus has been featured in a handful of films, series and books, usually under the name 'jimsonweed'.
  • Datura was mentioned as a formidable psychoactive drug in Hunter S. Thompson's 1971 novel Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas: A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream where character Dr. Gonzo recounts a prior encounter with the substance during Christmas of the previous year where he was likely gifted the Datura wrightii species of Southern California.
  • Namesake for the song "Datura" on Tori Amos's 1999 album To Venus and Back.
  • The song "Paegan Love Song" from Acid Bath's 1996 album Paegan Terrorism Tactics is about a Datura trip.
  • "Datura Stramonium" is the name of an instrumental track by MF DOOM which served as the beat for the Joey Bada$$ song "World Domination." The instrumental samples transition music from the 1977 Fat Albert Halloween Special
  • Jimsonweed is secretly given to a character in season 10, episode 13 of The Walking Dead (2020). She proceeds to have several severely distressing, delirious hallucinations.
  • A man killed his best friend after they both drank jimsonweed tea in the fifth episode of the series CSI: Crime Scene Investigation called "Friends and Lovers" (2000).
  • In Around the World in 80 Days (2021 TV series), the adventurer Phileas Fogg suffers severe poisoning by Datura.
  • The ancient peoples depicted in The Clan of The Cave Bear use Datura / Thorn Apple as part of their most sacred religious rituals to induce visions in an effort to become closer to their deities. The proper way to prepare the plant safely is known only by the Medicine Woman of the highest ranking Clan and passed on from mother to daughter.
  • Datura features in Léo Delibes's famous opera, Lakmé, which contains the Flower Duet. The Brahmin priestess, Lakmé, ingests Datura leaves in order to commit suicide after being abandoned by her lover Gérald.
  • In Shine or Go Crazy (2015 South Korean TV series), the king Wang Tae gradually suffers Datura poisoning from inhaling powder spread on petition letters.
  • In "Choomah Island 3: Denouement" (the finale of Season 4 of The Big Lez Show), Big Lez eats 5 Datura flowers and hallucinates being in a desert talking to a mysterious man. He is found naked and screaming by the side of the railroad tracks by Sassy and the gang before being informed of the flowers hallucinogenic qualities.
  • In the Honest Hearts expansion for Fallout: New Vegas (2010 video game), the player may collect Datura (labeled in-game as "Sacred datura root") while exploring Zion Canyon. The Datura can be given to a shaman who uses it to brew a tea. Upon drinking the tea, the player begins to hallucinate and must battle their hallucinations to regain their senses.
  • The British rock band from Blackpool, Boston Manor entitled their 2022 4th studio album and title track, Datura.
  • In the novel Coin Locker Babies by Ryu Murakami, datura is prominently featured in exaggerated form as a bioweapon that causes violent psychosis and increased strength.

Gallery

See also

References

  1. ^ 1959 Avery, Amos Geer, Satina, Sophie and Rietsema, Jacob Blakeslee: the genus Datura, foreword and biographical sketch by Edmund W. Sinnott, pub. New York : Ronald Press Co.
  2. ^ "Datura metel". plants.ces.ncsu.edu. Retrieved 17 January 2016.
  3. ^ Trancă, S. D.; Szabo, R.; Cociş, M. (2017). "Acute poisoning due to ingestion of Datura stramonium – a case report". Romanian Journal of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care. NCBI. 24 (1): 65–68. PMC 5555431. PMID 28913501.
  4. ^ a b c Fatur, Karsten (June 2020). "'Hexing Herbs' in Ethnobotanical Perspective: A Historical Review of the Uses of Anticholinergic Solanaceae Plants in Europe". Economic Botany. 74 (2): 140–158. doi:10.1007/s12231-020-09498-w. S2CID 220844064.
  5. ^ a b c Kennedy, David O. (2014). "The Deliriants - The Nightshade (Solanaceae) Family". Plants and the Human Brain. New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 131–137. ISBN 9780199914012. LCCN 2013031617.
  6. ^ a b Hansen, Harold A. The Witch's Garden pub. Unity Press 1978 ISBN 978-0913300473
  7. ^ Rätsch, Christian, The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants: Ethnopharmacology and Its Applications pub. Park Street Press 2005
  8. ^ Cecilia Garcia; James D. Adams (2005). Healing with medicinal plants of the west – cultural and scientific basis for their use. Abedus Press. ISBN 0-9763091-0-6.
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  10. ^ a b Schultes, Richard Evans; Hofmann, Albert (1979). The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens (2nd ed.). Springfield Illinois: Charles C. Thomas.
  11. ^ American Heritage Dictionary: datura
  12. ^ a b Monier-Williams, Monier (1899). A Sanskrit-English Dictionary: Etymologically and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo-European Languages. Oxford: Clarendon Press. OCLC 685239912.
  13. ^ the Oxford English Dictionary or OED
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  41. ^ a b Freye, E. (2010). "Toxicity of Datura stramonium". Pharmacology and Abuse of Cocaine, Amphetamines, Ecstasy and Related Designer Drugs. Netherlands: Springer. pp. 217–218. doi:10.1007/978-90-481-2448-0_34. ISBN 978-90-481-2447-3.
  42. ^ Fatur, Karsten; Kreft, Samo (April 2020). "Common anticholinergic solanaceaous plants of temperate Europe - A review of intoxications from the literature (1966–2018)". Toxicon. 177: 52–88. doi:10.1016/j.toxicon.2020.02.005. PMID 32217234. S2CID 213559151.
  43. ^ Volgin, Andrey D.; Yakovlev, Oleg A.; Demin, Konstantin A.; Alekseeva, Polina A.; Kyzar, Evan J.; Collins, Christopher; Nichols, David E.; Kalueff, Allan V. (16 January 2019). "Understanding Central Nervous System Effects of Deliriant Hallucinogenic Drugs through Experimental Animal Models". ACS Chemical Neuroscience. 10 (1): 143–154. doi:10.1021/acschemneuro.8b00433. PMID 30252437. S2CID 52824516.
  44. ^ Forest E (27 July 2008). "Atypical Drugs of Abuse". Articles & Interviews. Student Doctor Network. from the original on 27 May 2013.
  45. ^ a b Bliss, Molly (2001). "Datura Plant Poisoning" (PDF). Clinical Toxicology Review. 23 (6).
  46. ^ Fatur, Karsten; Kreft, Samo (April 2020). "Common anticholinergic solanaceaous plants of temperate Europe - A review of intoxications from the literature (1966–2018)". Toxicon. 177: 52–88. doi:10.1016/j.toxicon.2020.02.005. PMID 32217234. S2CID 213559151.
  47. ^ Fatur, Karsten (7 January 2021). "Peculiar plants and fantastic fungi: An ethnobotanical study of the use of hallucinogenic plants and mushrooms in Slovenia". PLOS ONE. 16 (1): e0245022. Bibcode:2021PLoSO..1645022F. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0245022. PMC 7790546. PMID 33412556.
  48. ^ Gaire, Bhakta Prasad; Subedi, Lalita (2013). "A review on the pharmacological and toxicological aspects of Datura stramonium L". Journal of Integrative Medicine. 11 (2): 73–9. doi:10.3736/jintegrmed2013016. PMID 23506688.
  49. ^ Fuller, Robert C (2000). Stairways to Heaven: Drugs in American Religious History. Basic Books. p. 32. ISBN 0813366127.
  50. ^ Austin, Alfredo López et al. (2005). Mexico's Indigenous Past. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 22. ISBN 978-0-8061-3723-0.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  51. ^ Kelly, Isabel T. (1939). Southern Paiute Shamanism (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 7 November 2017.
  52. ^ a b Safford, William (1916). Narcotic Plants and Stimulants of the Ancient Americans. United States: Economic Botanist. pp. 405–406.
  53. ^ Carod-Artal, F.J. (January 2015). "Alucinógenos en las culturas precolombinas mesoamericanas" [Hallucinogenic drugs in pre-Columbian Mesoamerican cultures]. Neurología (in Spanish). 30 (1): 42–49. doi:10.1016/j.nrl.2011.07.003. PMID 21893367.
  54. ^ Endredy, James (2011). The Flying Witches of Veracruz: A Shaman's True Story of Indigenous Witchcraft, Devil's Weed, and Trance Healing in Aztec Brujeria. Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 978-0-7387-3114-8.[page needed]
  55. ^ Jim Budd (27 October 2002). "Viajando Ligero/ El misterioso Catemaco". Reforma. Mexico City. p. 5.
  56. ^ A Dictionary of Hallucations. Oradell, NJ.: Springer. 2010. p. 127.
  57. ^ Kuklin, Alexander (February 1999). How Do Witches Fly?. DNA Press. ISBN 0-9664027-0-7.
  58. ^ Grieve, Maud (1971). A Modern Herbal: The Medicinal, Culinary, Cosmetic and Economic Properties, Cultivation and Folk-lore of Herbs, Grasses, Fungi, Shrubs, & Trees with All Their Modern Scientific Uses, Volume 2. Dover Publications. p. 804. ISBN 978-0-486-22799-3.

External links

  • "Datura Vault". Erowid.

Further reading

  • Rätsch, C. (2005) [1998]. The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants. Rochester, VT: Park Street Press. ISBN 978-0-89281-978-2.
  • Tropane Alkaloid Poisoning on eMedicine
  • Roblot, F; Montaz, L; Delcoustal, M; Gaboriau, E; Chavagnat, JJ; Morichaud, G; Pourrat, O; Scepi, M; Patte, D (1995). "Intoxication par Datura stramonium: Le diagnostic est clinique, le traitement est symptomatique [Datura stramonium poisoning: the diagnosis is clinical, treatment is symptomatic]". La Revue de Médecine Interne (in French). 16 (3): 187–90. doi:10.1016/0248-8663(96)80689-8. PMID 7740228.
  • Krenzelok, Edward P. (February 2010). "Aspects of poisoning and treatment". Clinical Toxicology. 48 (2): 104–110. doi:10.3109/15563651003630672. PMID 20229618. S2CID 28433567.

datura, other, uses, disambiguation, genus, nine, species, highly, poisonous, vespertine, flowering, plants, belonging, nightshade, family, solanaceae, they, commonly, known, thornapples, jimsonweeds, also, known, devil, trumpets, confused, with, angel, trumpe. For other uses see Datura disambiguation Datura is a genus of nine species of highly poisonous vespertine flowering plants belonging to the nightshade family Solanaceae 1 They are commonly known as thornapples or jimsonweeds but are also known as devil s trumpets 2 not to be confused with angel s trumpets which are placed in the closely related genus Brugmansia Other English common names include moonflower devil s weed and hell s bells All species of Datura are extremely poisonous and potentially psychoactive especially their seeds and flowers which can cause respiratory depression arrhythmias fever delirium hallucinations anticholinergic syndrome psychosis and even death if taken internally 3 DaturaDatura wrightiiScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade AsteridsOrder SolanalesFamily SolanaceaeSubfamily SolanoideaeTribe DatureaeGenus DaturaL Type speciesDatura stramoniumL Species9 14 See text Due to their effects and symptoms Datura species have occasionally been used not only as poisons but also as hallucinogens by various groups throughout history 4 5 Traditionally their psychoactive administration has often been associated with witchcraft and sorcery or similar practices in many cultures including the Western world 5 6 7 Certain common Datura species have also been used ritualistically as entheogens by some Native American groups 8 9 Non psychoactive use of plants in the genus is usually done for medicinal purposes and the alkaloids present in some species have long been considered traditional medicines in both the New and Old Worlds due to the presence of the alkaloids scopolamine and atropine which are also produced by Old World plants such as Hyoscyamus niger Atropa belladonna and Mandragora officinarum 4 5 10 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Description 3 Species and cultivars 3 1 Past classified species 4 Cultivation 5 Toxicity 6 Effects of ingestion 6 1 Treatment 7 Psychoactive use 8 In popular culture 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 References 12 External links 13 Further readingEtymology EditThe generic name Datura is taken from Sanskrit धत र dhatura thorn apple 11 ultimately from Sanskrit धत त र dhattura white thorn apple referring to Datura metel of Asia 12 In the Ayurvedic text Sushruta Samhita different species of Datura are also referred to as kanaka and unmatta 12 Dhatura is offered to Shiva in Hinduism Record of this name in English dates back to 1662 13 Nathaniel Hawthorne refers to one type in The Scarlet Letter as apple Peru In Mexico its common name is toloache The Mexican common name toloache also spelled tolguacha derives from the Nahuatl tolohuaxihuitl meaning the plant with the nodding head in reference to the nodding seed capsules of Datura species belonging to section Dutra of the genus Description EditDatura species are herbaceous leafy annuals and short lived perennials which can reach up to 2 m in height The leaves are alternate 10 20 cm long and 5 18 cm broad with a lobed or toothed margin The flowers are erect or spreading not pendulous like those of Brugmansia trumpet shaped 5 20 cm long and 4 12 cm broad at the mouth colours vary from white to yellow and pale purple The fruit is a spiny capsule 4 10 cm long and 2 6 cm broad splitting open when ripe to release the numerous seeds The seeds disperse freely over pastures fields and even wasteland locations Datura belongs to the classic witches weeds along with deadly nightshade henbane and mandrake All parts of the plants are toxic and the genus has a long history of use for causing delirious states and death It was well known as an essential ingredient of magical ointments potions and witches brews most notably Datura stramonium 14 15 In India D metel has long been regarded as a poison and aphrodisiac having been used in Ayurveda as a medicine since ancient times It features in rituals and prayers to Shiva and also in Ganesh Chaturthi a festival devoted to the deity Ganesha 16 The larvae of some Lepidoptera butterfly and moth species including Hypercompe indecisa eat some Datura species It has been observed that while insects may prefer to feed on Datura leaves other animals such as cows will generally avoid consuming them Species and cultivars Edit Datura metel Fastuosa Classifying Datura as to its species is difficult and the descriptions of new species often are accepted prematurely Later these new species are found to be simply varieties that have evolved due to conditions at a specific location They usually disappear in a few years Contributing to the confusion is the fact that various species such as D wrightii and D inoxia are very similar in appearance and the variation within a species can be extreme For example Datura species can change size of plant leaf and flowers all depending on location The same species when growing in a half shady damp location can develop into a flowering bush half as tall as an adult human of average height but when growing in a very dry location will only grow into a thin plant not much more than ankle high with tiny flowers and a few miniature leaves 14 Datura species are native to dry temperate and subtropical regions of the Americas and are distributed mostly in Mexico which is considered the center of origin of the genus D ferox was long thought native to China D metel to India and Southeast Asia and D leichardthii to Australia however recent research has shown these species to be early introductions from Central America 17 A group of South American species formerly placed in the genus Datura are now placed in the distinct genus Brugmansia 18 Brugmansia differs from Datura in that it is woody the species being shrubs or small trees and has indehiscent fruits The solanaceous tribe Datureae to which Datura and Brugmansia belong has recently acquired a new monotypic genus Trompettia J Dupin featuring the species Trompettia cardenasiana which had hitherto been misclassified as belonging to the genus Iochroma Datura specialists the Preissels accept only 9 species of Datura 14 but Kew s Plants of the World Online currently lists the following 14 out of which the current edition of The Plant List does not list D arenicola D lanosa and D pruinosa as accepted spp Datura arenicola Gentry ex Bye amp Luna Datura ceratocaula Ortega Datura discolor Bernh Datura ferox L Datura innoxia Mill Datura kymatocarpa Barclay Datura lanosa A S Barclay ex Bye Datura leichhardtii Benth Datura metel L Datura pruinosa Greenm Datura quercifolia Kunth Datura reburra Barclay Datura stramonium L Datura wrightii RegelOf the above D leichhardtii is close enough to D pruinosa to merit demotion to a subspecies and likewise D ferox and D quercifolia are close enough in morphology to merit being subsumed in a single species Furthermore the Australian provenance of D leichhardtii the Chinese provenance of D ferox and the Afro Asiatic provenance of D metel have been cast into serious doubt with the three species being almost certainly post Columbian introductions to the regions to which they were originally thought native 19 The case of D metel is unique in that not only is the plant not a true species at all but an assemblage of ancient pre Columbian cultivars created from D innoxia in the Greater Antilles but evidence is mounting that it was introduced to the Indian subcontinent no later than the second century CE whether by natural or human agency is as yet unknown making it one of the most ancient plant introductions if not the most ancient from the New World to the Old World see Columbian Exchange 19 16 20 D arenicola is a remarkable new species described only in 2013 of very restricted range and so distinctive as to have merited the creation for it of the new section Discola not to be confused with the species name D discolor within the genus The specific name arenicola means loving i e thriving in sand 21 Image Scientific name Common name DistributionDatura arenicola Gentry ex Bye amp Luna Sand thorn apple Baja datura Vizcaino Desert datura Baja California Sur Mexico D ceratocaula Jacq torna loco Sister of Ololiuhqui swamp datura Mexico D discolor Bernh syn D kymatocarpa D reburra desert thorn apple Sonoran Desert of western North America D ferox L long spined thorn apple southeastern China disputed 19 D innoxia Mill thorn apple downy thorn apple Indian apple moonflower toloatzin toloache Southwestern United States Central and South America cosmopolitan weed D leichhardtii F Muell ex Benth syn D pruinosa Leichhardt s datura from Mexico to Guatemala D metel L Hindu datura Indian thorn apple devil s trumpet 14 Asia Africa disputed 19 D quercifolia Kunth oak leaved thorn apple Mexico and the Southwestern United States D stramonium L syn D inermis D bernhardii jimsonweed thorn apple devil s snare Central America cosmopolitan weed D wrightii Regel sacred datura western jimsonweed California jimsonweed sacred thorn apple tolguacha toloache Southwestern United StatesAmerican Brugmansia and Datura Society Inc ABADS is designated in the 2004 edition of the International Code of Nomenclature for Cultivated Plants as the official International Cultivar Registration Authority for Datura This role was delegated to ABADS by the International Society for Horticultural Science in 2002 Past classified species Edit D lanosa D suaveolensCultivation Edit Fruit Datura metel Fastuosa Hindi क ल धत र kala dhatura black datura Datura species are usually sown annually from the seed produced in the spiny capsules but with care the tuberous rooted perennial species may be overwintered Most species are suited to being planted outside or in containers As a rule they need warm sunny places and soil that will keep their roots dry When grown outdoors in good locations the plants tend to reseed themselves and may become invasive In containers they should have porous aerated potting soil with adequate drainage The plants are susceptible to fungi in the root area so anaerobic organic enrichment such as anaerobically composted organic matter or manure should be avoided 14 Toxicity EditAll Datura plants contain tropane alkaloids such as scopolamine and atropine primarily in their seeds and flowers as well as the roots of certain species such as D wrightii Because of the presence of these substances Datura has been used for centuries in some cultures as a poison 14 22 4 A given plant s toxicity depends on its age where it is growing and the local weather conditions These variations make Datura exceptionally hazardous as a drug Since datura directly causes the effects of anticholinergic syndrome the symptoms of its toxicity are often cited by the traditional mnemonic Blind as a bat mad as a hatter red as a beet hot as a hare dry as a bone the bowel and bladder lose their tone and the heart runs alone 23 Datura as well as long term psychoactive toxic usage of other anticholinergic drugs also appear to significantly increase the risk of developing dementia 24 25 In traditional cultures a great deal of experience with and detailed knowledge of Datura was critical to minimize harm 14 Many tragic incidents result from modern users ingesting or smoking Datura 26 For example in the 1990s and 2000s the United States media reported stories of adolescents and young adults dying or becoming seriously ill from intentionally ingesting Datura 27 28 Deliberate or inadvertent poisoning resulting from smoking jimsonweed and other related species has been reported as well 29 Although most poisonings occur with more common species of Datura such as D stramonium several reports in the medical literature indicate deaths from D ferox intoxication 30 31 32 Children are especially vulnerable to atropine poisoning 33 34 D inoxia with ripe split open fruit In some parts of Europe and India Datura has been a popular poison for suicide and murder 35 From 1950 to 1965 the State Chemical Laboratories in Agra India investigated 2 778 deaths caused by ingesting Datura 14 36 A group called Thugs practicers of thuggee were reportedly devotees of an Indian religious cult made up of robbers and assassins who strangled or poisoned their victims in rituals devoted to the Hindu goddess Kali They were alleged to employ Datura in many such poisonings using it also to induce drowsiness or stupefaction making strangulation easier 37 Datura toxins may be ingested accidentally by consumption of honey produced by several wasp species including Brachygastra lecheguana during the Datura blooming season These semi domesticated honey wasps apparently collect Datura nectar for honey production which can lead to poisoning 38 The U S Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported accidental poisoning resulting in hospitalization for a family of six who inadvertently ingested Datura used as an ingredient in stew 39 In some places which buying selling or cultivating Datura plants is prohibited 14 36 Solanaceous tribes with a similar chemistry i e a similar tropane alkaloid content include the Hyoscyameae containing such well known toxic species as Hyoscyamus niger and Atropa belladonna the Solandreae containing the genus Solandra chalice vines and the Mandragoreae named for the famous Mandragora officinarum most of which are considered traditional witches herbs and poisons Effects of ingestion EditDatura is considered a deliriant Due to the potent combination of anticholinergic substances it contains Datura intoxication typically produces the effects of anticholinergic delirium usually involving a complete or relative inability to differentiate reality from fantasy bizarre thoughts hyperthermia tachycardia bizarre and possibly violent behavior dry skin dry mouth illusions and severe mydriasis dilated pupils with resultant painful photophobia that can last several days 40 Muscle stiffness urinary retention temporary paralysis disrobing emotional bluntness dysphoria and confusion are often reported and pronounced amnesia is another commonly reported effect 41 42 The psychoactive alkaloids scopolamine and atropine are also both known for their characteristic hyperactive effects and ability to cause stark and dream like hallucinations 43 44 The onset of symptoms generally occurs around 30 to 60 minutes after ingesting the herb These symptoms generally last from 24 to 48 hours but have been reported in some cases to last two weeks or longer 29 45 46 Treatment Edit Due to their agitated behavior and confused mental state people with acute Datura poisoning or intoxication are typically hospitalized Gastric lavage and the administration of activated charcoal can be used to reduce the stomach s absorption of the ingested material and the drug physostigmine is used to reverse the effect of the poisons Benzodiazepines can be given to calm the patient s agitation and supportive care with oxygen hydration and symptomatic treatment is often provided Observation of the patient is indicated until the symptoms resolve usually from 24 to 36 hours after ingestion of the Datura 36 45 Psychoactive use EditIn Pharmacology and Abuse of Cocaine Amphetamines Ecstasy and Related Designer Drugs Freye asserts Few substances have received as many severely negative recreational experience reports as has Datura 47 The overwhelming majority of those who describe their use of Datura find their experiences extremely unpleasant both mentally and often physically dangerous 41 However anthropologists have found that indigenous groups with a great deal of experience with and detailed knowledge of Datura have been known to use Datura spiritually including the Navajo and especially the Havasupai 48 49 Adequate knowledge of Datura s properties is necessary to facilitate a safe experience 14 The ancient inhabitants of what became central and southern California used to ingest Datura to commune with deities through visions 50 The Southern Paiute believe Datura can help locate missing objects 51 In ancient Mexico Datura also played an important role in the religion of the Aztecs and the practices of their medicine men and necromancers 52 It was reportedly used by the Aztecs for ritual sacrifice and malevolent purposes as well 53 In modern day Mexico some datura species are still used for sorcery and other occult practices mostly in the southern region of Veracruz specifically in the city of Catemaco 54 55 Bernardino de Sahagun in around 1569 called attention to Datura in these words It is administered in potions in order to cause harm to those who are objects of hatred Those who eat it have visions of fearful things Magicians or those who wish to harm someone administer it in food or drink This herb is medicinal and its seed is used as a remedy for gout ground up and applied to the part affected 52 Christian Ratsch has said A mild dosage produces medicinal and healing effects a moderate dosage produces aphrodisiac effects and high dosages are used for shamanic purposes Wade Davis an ethnobotanist also lists it as an essential ingredient of Haitian zombie potion 56 In Western culture the same species Datura stramonium has been said to have been commonly used by witches as an ingredient for their flying ointments and was regularly included in detailed recipes of magical ointments dating back as far as the early modern period predominately in New England and Western Europe 6 10 57 During the anti witchcraft hysteria of colonial times it was considered unlucky or inappropriate to grow D stramonium in one s garden due to its supposed reputation for aiding in incantations 58 In popular culture EditThe use of Datura under its old English name of Dewtry in relation to witchcraft is referred to in Part 3 Canto 1 of Hudibras a satirical poem by Samuel Butler 1613 1680 Plants of the Datura genus have been famously depicted in certain works of art such as that of Georgia O Keeffe 1887 1986 The genus has been featured in a handful of films series and books usually under the name jimsonweed Datura was mentioned as a formidable psychoactive drug in Hunter S Thompson s 1971 novel Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas A Savage Journey to the Heart of the American Dream where character Dr Gonzo recounts a prior encounter with the substance during Christmas of the previous year where he was likely gifted the Datura wrightii species of Southern California Namesake for the song Datura on Tori Amos s 1999 album To Venus and Back The song Paegan Love Song from Acid Bath s 1996 album Paegan Terrorism Tactics is about a Datura trip Datura Stramonium is the name of an instrumental track by MF DOOM which served as the beat for the Joey Bada song World Domination The instrumental samples transition music from the 1977 Fat Albert Halloween Special Jimsonweed is secretly given to a character in season 10 episode 13 of The Walking Dead 2020 She proceeds to have several severely distressing delirious hallucinations A man killed his best friend after they both drank jimsonweed tea in the fifth episode of the series CSI Crime Scene Investigation called Friends and Lovers 2000 In Around the World in 80 Days 2021 TV series the adventurer Phileas Fogg suffers severe poisoning by Datura The ancient peoples depicted in The Clan of The Cave Bear use Datura Thorn Apple as part of their most sacred religious rituals to induce visions in an effort to become closer to their deities The proper way to prepare the plant safely is known only by the Medicine Woman of the highest ranking Clan and passed on from mother to daughter Datura features in Leo Delibes s famous opera Lakme which contains the Flower Duet The Brahmin priestess Lakme ingests Datura leaves in order to commit suicide after being abandoned by her lover Gerald In Shine or Go Crazy 2015 South Korean TV series the king Wang Tae gradually suffers Datura poisoning from inhaling powder spread on petition letters In Choomah Island 3 Denouement the finale of Season 4 of The Big Lez Show Big Lez eats 5 Datura flowers and hallucinates being in a desert talking to a mysterious man He is found naked and screaming by the side of the railroad tracks by Sassy and the gang before being informed of the flowers hallucinogenic qualities In the Honest Hearts expansion for Fallout New Vegas 2010 video game the player may collect Datura labeled in game as Sacred datura root while exploring Zion Canyon The Datura can be given to a shaman who uses it to brew a tea Upon drinking the tea the player begins to hallucinate and must battle their hallucinations to regain their senses The British rock band from Blackpool Boston Manor entitled their 2022 4th studio album and title track Datura In the novel Coin Locker Babies by Ryu Murakami datura is prominently featured in exaggerated form as a bioweapon that causes violent psychosis and increased strength Gallery Edit D stramonium lateral view near Frankfurt Hesse Germany D wrightii in bloom lateral view near Twentynine Palms California U S Datura flower on the plant lateral view near Hyderabad Telangana India Datura flower on the plant top view near Hyderabad Telangana IndiaSee also EditScopolamine Anticholinergics Antimuscarinic Psychoactive plantReferences Edit 1959 Avery Amos Geer Satina Sophie and Rietsema Jacob Blakeslee the genus Datura foreword and biographical sketch by Edmund W Sinnott pub New York Ronald Press Co Datura metel plants ces ncsu edu Retrieved 17 January 2016 Trancă S D Szabo R Cocis M 2017 Acute poisoning due to ingestion of Datura stramonium a case report Romanian Journal of Anaesthesia and Intensive Care NCBI 24 1 65 68 PMC 5555431 PMID 28913501 a b c Fatur Karsten June 2020 Hexing Herbs in Ethnobotanical Perspective A Historical Review of the Uses of Anticholinergic Solanaceae Plants in Europe Economic Botany 74 2 140 158 doi 10 1007 s12231 020 09498 w S2CID 220844064 a b c Kennedy David O 2014 The Deliriants The Nightshade Solanaceae Family Plants and the Human Brain New York Oxford University Press pp 131 137 ISBN 9780199914012 LCCN 2013031617 a b Hansen Harold A The Witch s Garden pub Unity Press 1978 ISBN 978 0913300473 Ratsch Christian The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants Ethnopharmacology and Its Applications pub Park Street Press 2005 Cecilia Garcia James D Adams 2005 Healing with medicinal plants of the west cultural and scientific basis for their use Abedus Press ISBN 0 9763091 0 6 Smith Gordon 15 December 1983 The Kumeyaay rock art at Hakwin Hallucinogen datura explains symbols San Diego Reader a b Schultes Richard Evans Hofmann Albert 1979 The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens 2nd ed Springfield Illinois Charles C Thomas American Heritage Dictionary datura a b Monier Williams Monier 1899 A Sanskrit English Dictionary Etymologically and Philologically Arranged with Special Reference to Cognate Indo European Languages Oxford Clarendon Press OCLC 685239912 the Oxford English Dictionary or OED a b c d e f g h i j Preissel U Preissel H G 2002 BrugmansiaandDatura Angel s Trumpets and Thorn Apples Buffalo NY Firefly Books pp 106 129 ISBN 1 55209 598 3 Schultes Richard Evans Hofmann Albert 1979 The Botany and Chemistry of Hallucinogens 2nd ed Springfield Illinois Charles C Thomas pps 261 4 a b Siklos Bulcsu 1993 Datura rituals in the Vajramahabhairava Tantra Curare 16 2 71 76 INIST 3740667 Republished as Siklos Bulcsu 1994 Datura rituals in the Vajramahabhairava Tantra Acta Orientalia Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 47 3 409 416 JSTOR 23658487 Karinho Betancourt Eunice Agrawal Anurag A Halitschke Rayko Nunez Farf an Juan 2015 Phylogenetic correlations among chemical and physical plant defenses change with ontogeny New Phytologist 206 2 796 806 doi 10 1111 nph 13300 PMID 25652325 Lester R N Nee M Estrada N 1991 Hawkes J G ed Solanaceae III Taxonomy Chemistry Evolution Proceedings of Third International Conference on Solanaceae Kew Royal Botanic Gardens pp 197 210 ISBN 0 947643 31 1 a b c d Datura Solanaceae is a New World Genus by D E Symon and L Haegi in page 197 of Solanaceae III Taxonomy Chemistry Evolution Editors J G Hawkes R N Lester M Nee amp N Estrada published by The Royal Botanic Gardens Kew Richmond Surrey UK for The Linnean Society of London 1991 ISBN 0 947643 31 1 Cavazos Mario Luna Jiao Meijun Bye Robert August 2000 Phenetic analysis of Datura section Dutra Solanaceae in Mexico Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society 133 4 493 507 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8339 2000 tb01592 x Watson D Robert A July 2013 Datura arenicola Solanaceae A New Species in the New Section Discola from Baja California Sur Mexico Madrono 60 3 217 228 doi 10 3120 0024 9637 60 3 217 S2CID 86630069 Adams J D Jr Garcia C 2005 Spirit Mind and Body in Chumash Healing Evidence Based Complementary and Alternative Medicine 2 4 459 463 doi 10 1093 ecam neh130 PMC 1297503 PMID 16322802 Holzman RS July 1998 The legacy of Atropos the fate who cut the thread of life Anesthesiology 89 1 241 9 doi 10 1097 00000542 199807000 00030 PMID 9667313 S2CID 28327277 citing J Arena Poisoning Toxicology Symptoms Treatments 3rd edition Springfield Charles C Thomas 1974 p 345 Study suggests link between long term use of anticholinergics and dementia risk Alzheimer s Society 26 January 2015 Archived from the original on 12 November 2015 Retrieved 17 February 2015 More Sandeep Kumar Hemant Cho Duk Yeon Yun Yo Sep Choi Dong Kug 1 September 2016 Toxin Induced Experimental Models of Learning and Memory Impairment International Journal of Molecular Sciences 17 9 1447 doi 10 3390 ijms17091447 PMC 5037726 PMID 27598124 Fatur Karsten Kreft Samo April 2020 Common anticholinergic solanaceaous plants of temperate Europe A review of intoxications from the literature 1966 2018 Toxicon 177 52 88 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2020 02 005 PMID 32217234 S2CID 213559151 Goetz R Siegel E Scaglione J Belson M Patel M 2003 Suspected Moonflower Intoxication Ohio 2002 MMWR Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report CDC 52 33 788 791 PMID 12931077 Leinwand D 1 November 2006 Jimson weed users chase high all the way to hospital USA Today Retrieved 15 February 2009 a b Pennachio Marcello et al 2010 Uses and Abuses of Plant Derived Smoke Its Ethnobotany As Hallucinogen Perfume Incense and Medicine Oxford University Press p 7 ISBN 978 0 19 537001 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Michalodimitrakis M Koutselinis A 1984 Discussion of Datura stramonium A fatal poisoning Journal of Forensic Sciences 29 4 961 962 PMID 6502123 Boumba V A Mitselou A Vougiouklakis T 2004 Fatal poisoning from ingestion of Datura stramonium seeds Veterinary and Human Toxicology 46 2 81 82 OCLC 112473077 PMID 15080209 Steenkamp P A Harding N M Van Heerden F R Van Wyk B E 2004 Fatal Datura poisoning Identification of atropine and scopolamine by high performance liquid chromatography photodiode array mass spectrometry Forensic Science International 145 1 31 39 doi 10 1016 j forsciint 2004 03 011 PMID 15374592 Taha S A Mahdi A H 1984 Datura intoxication in Riyadh Transactions of the Royal Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene 78 1 134 135 doi 10 1016 0035 9203 84 90196 2 PMID 6710568 Djibo A Bouzou S B 2000 Acute intoxication with sobi lobi Datura Four cases in Niger Bulletin de la Societe de Pathologie Exotique in French 93 4 294 297 PMID 11204734 Fatur Karsten Kreft Samo April 2020 Common anticholinergic solanaceaous plants of temperate Europe A review of intoxications from the literature 1966 2018 Toxicon 177 52 88 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2020 02 005 PMID 32217234 S2CID 213559151 a b c Andrews Dale 28 February 2013 Daturas Crime Poisons Washington SleuthSayers Retrieved 4 March 2013 Dash Mike Thug the true story of India s murderous cult ISBN 1 86207 604 9 2005 Bequaert Joseph 29 November 1933 The Nearctic Social Wasps of the Subfamily Polybiinae Hymenopetra Vespidae Entomologica Americana 13 3 87 150 Centers for Disease Control Prevention 5 February 2010 Jimsonweed poisoning associated with a homemade stew Maryland 2008 Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report 59 4 102 104 PMID 20134399 Fatur Karsten Kreft Samo April 2020 Common anticholinergic solanaceaous plants of temperate Europe A review of intoxications from the literature 1966 2018 Toxicon 177 52 88 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2020 02 005 PMID 32217234 S2CID 213559151 a b Freye E 2010 Toxicity of Datura stramonium Pharmacology and Abuse of Cocaine Amphetamines Ecstasy and Related Designer Drugs Netherlands Springer pp 217 218 doi 10 1007 978 90 481 2448 0 34 ISBN 978 90 481 2447 3 Fatur Karsten Kreft Samo April 2020 Common anticholinergic solanaceaous plants of temperate Europe A review of intoxications from the literature 1966 2018 Toxicon 177 52 88 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2020 02 005 PMID 32217234 S2CID 213559151 Volgin Andrey D Yakovlev Oleg A Demin Konstantin A Alekseeva Polina A Kyzar Evan J Collins Christopher Nichols David E Kalueff Allan V 16 January 2019 Understanding Central Nervous System Effects of Deliriant Hallucinogenic Drugs through Experimental Animal Models ACS Chemical Neuroscience 10 1 143 154 doi 10 1021 acschemneuro 8b00433 PMID 30252437 S2CID 52824516 Forest E 27 July 2008 Atypical Drugs of Abuse Articles amp Interviews Student Doctor Network Archived from the original on 27 May 2013 a b Bliss Molly 2001 Datura Plant Poisoning PDF Clinical Toxicology Review 23 6 Fatur Karsten Kreft Samo April 2020 Common anticholinergic solanaceaous plants of temperate Europe A review of intoxications from the literature 1966 2018 Toxicon 177 52 88 doi 10 1016 j toxicon 2020 02 005 PMID 32217234 S2CID 213559151 Fatur Karsten 7 January 2021 Peculiar plants and fantastic fungi An ethnobotanical study of the use of hallucinogenic plants and mushrooms in Slovenia PLOS ONE 16 1 e0245022 Bibcode 2021PLoSO 1645022F doi 10 1371 journal pone 0245022 PMC 7790546 PMID 33412556 Gaire Bhakta Prasad Subedi Lalita 2013 A review on the pharmacological and toxicological aspects of Datura stramonium L Journal of Integrative Medicine 11 2 73 9 doi 10 3736 jintegrmed2013016 PMID 23506688 Fuller Robert C 2000 Stairways to Heaven Drugs in American Religious History Basic Books p 32 ISBN 0813366127 Austin Alfredo Lopez et al 2005 Mexico s Indigenous Past University of Oklahoma Press p 22 ISBN 978 0 8061 3723 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Kelly Isabel T 1939 Southern Paiute Shamanism PDF Archived PDF from the original on 7 November 2017 a b Safford William 1916 Narcotic Plants and Stimulants of the Ancient Americans United States Economic Botanist pp 405 406 Carod Artal F J January 2015 Alucinogenos en las culturas precolombinas mesoamericanas Hallucinogenic drugs in pre Columbian Mesoamerican cultures Neurologia in Spanish 30 1 42 49 doi 10 1016 j nrl 2011 07 003 PMID 21893367 Endredy James 2011 The Flying Witches of Veracruz A Shaman s True Story of Indigenous Witchcraft Devil s Weed and Trance Healing in Aztec Brujeria Llewellyn Worldwide ISBN 978 0 7387 3114 8 page needed Jim Budd 27 October 2002 Viajando Ligero El misterioso Catemaco Reforma Mexico City p 5 A Dictionary of Hallucations Oradell NJ Springer 2010 p 127 Kuklin Alexander February 1999 How Do Witches Fly DNA Press ISBN 0 9664027 0 7 Grieve Maud 1971 A Modern Herbal The Medicinal Culinary Cosmetic and Economic Properties Cultivation and Folk lore of Herbs Grasses Fungi Shrubs amp Trees with All Their Modern Scientific Uses Volume 2 Dover Publications p 804 ISBN 978 0 486 22799 3 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Datura Wikispecies has information related to Datura Datura Vault Erowid Further reading EditRatsch C 2005 1998 The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants Rochester VT Park Street Press ISBN 978 0 89281 978 2 Tropane Alkaloid Poisoning on eMedicine Roblot F Montaz L Delcoustal M Gaboriau E Chavagnat JJ Morichaud G Pourrat O Scepi M Patte D 1995 Intoxication par Datura stramonium Le diagnostic est clinique le traitement est symptomatique Datura stramonium poisoning the diagnosis is clinical treatment is symptomatic La Revue de Medecine Interne in French 16 3 187 90 doi 10 1016 0248 8663 96 80689 8 PMID 7740228 Krenzelok Edward P February 2010 Aspects of poisoning and treatment Clinical Toxicology 48 2 104 110 doi 10 3109 15563651003630672 PMID 20229618 S2CID 28433567 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Datura amp oldid 1138537957, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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