home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
-
-
-
- This is the nutmeg factfile, compiled by me. Currently it contains
- the following excerpts about nutmeg and its effective constituent,
- myristicin. Each excerpt begins with + sign in the first column.
- File contains ^L's (formfeeds) to facilitate its printing on the
- printers which have about sixty lines per page.
- Feel free to add more information to this file.
-
- ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA, Part VII Micropedia.
- General information about nutmeg, but mentions nothing about
- its psychoactive properties. (Why ?)
-
- DORLAND'S ILLUSTRATED MEDICAL DICTIONARY.
- MACMILLAN DICTIONARY OF TOXICOLOGY.
- ILLUSTRATED CHURCHILL'S MEDICAL DICTIONARY.
- INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY OF MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY.
- UUSI TIETOSANAKIRJA (in Finnish and in English).
- MARTINDALE THE EXTRA PHARMACOPOEIA TWENTY-NINTH EDITION.
- These tell some chemical and medical facts about myristicin
- and related substances.
-
- BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL 1970 1, 21 March 1970, page 754.
- NEW YORK STATE JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, February 1, 1969, pages 463-465.
- Two interesting case studies about the nutmeg intoxication
- and references.
-
- THE BRITISH JOURNAL OF ADDICTION, Vol.53, No.2.
- And finally, some information by William Burroughs.
-
-
- + ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA, Part VII Micropedia:
-
- nutmeg, spice consisting of the seed of the Myristica fragrans,
- a tropical, dioecious evergreen tree native to the Moluccas
- or Spice Islands of Indonesia. Nutmeg has a characteristic,
- pleasant fragrance and slightly warm taste; it is used to
- flavour many kinds of baked goods, confections, puddings,
- meats, sausages, sauces, vegetables, and such beverages as
- eggnog. Grated nutmeg has been used as a sachet; the Romans
- used it as incense.
- Around 1600 it became important as an expensive commercial
- spice of the Western world and was subject of Dutch plots
- to keep prices high and of English and French counterplots
- to obtain fertile seeds for transplantation. The nutmegs
- sold whole were dipped in lime to prevent their growth.
- The tree is cultivated in the Moluccas and the West Indies
- principally, and elsewhere with varying success. The trees
- may reach about 65 feet (20 metres) tall. They yield fruit
- 8 years after sowing, reach their prime in 25 years, and bear
- fruit for 60 years or longer. The stands on the Moluccas
- thrive in the shade under groves of lofty trees. The nutmeg
- fruit is a pendulous drupe, similar in appearance to an apricot.
- When fully mature it splits in two, exposing a crimson-coloured
- aril, the mace, surrounding a single shiny,
- brown seed, the nutmeg. The pulp of the fruit may be eaten
- locally. After collection, the aril-enveloped nutmegs are
- conveyed to curing areas where the mace is removed, flattened
- out, and dried. The nutmegs are dried gradually in the sun and
- turned twice daily over a period of six to eight weeks. During
- this time the nutmeg shrinks away from its hard seed coat
- until the kernels rattle in their shells when shaken. The
- shell is then broken with a wooden truncheon and the nutmegs
- are picked out. Dried nutmegs are grayish-brown ovals with
- furrowed surfaces. Large ones may be about 1.2 inches long
- and 0.8 inch in diameter.
- Nutmeg and mace contain 7 to 14 percent essential oil,
- the principal components of which are pinene,
- camphene, and dipentene, all having the empirical formula
- C10H16. Nutmeg on expression yields about 24 to 30 percent
- fixed oil called nutmeg butter, or oil of mace, the principal
- component of which is trimyristin, C45H86O6. The oils are
- used as condiments and carminatives and to scent soaps and
- perfumes. An ointment of nutmeg butter has been used as a
- counterirritant and in treatment of rheumatism.
- The name nutmeg is also applied in different countries
- to other fruits or seeds: the Jamaica, or calabash, nutmeg
- derived from Monodora myristica; the Brazilian nutmeg from
- Cryptocarya moschata; the Peruvian nutmeg from Laurelia
- aromatica; the Madagaskar, or clove, nutmeg from Ravensara
- aromatica; and the California, or stinking, nutmeg from
- Torreya californica.
-
-
- + DORLAND'S ILLUSTRATED MEDICAL DICTIONARY:
-
- myristic acid
- trivial name for tetradecanoic acid, the 14-carbon,
- straight-chain unsaturated fatty acid.
- Myristica
- <L.; Gr. myrizein = to anoint> a genus of trees of tropical
- countries. M. fragrans Houtt. (Myristicaceae), the nutmeg
- tree, is the source of myristica. M. ocuba is the source
- of ocuba wax.
- myristica
- nutmeg; the dried ripe seed of Myristica fragrans Houtt.
- (Myristicaceae) deprived of its seed coat and arillode and
- with or within a coating of lime. It is the source of nutmeg
- oil, which is used as a flavoring agent in pharmaceutical
- preparations. It has stimulating aromatic, carminative,
- and psychomimetic (sp? psychotomimethic?) properties.
- (carminative = flatulence relieving.)
- myristicene
- a fragrant eleopten, C10H14, from nutmeg (myristica) oil.
- myristicol
- a stearopten, or camphor, C10H16O, from nutmeg (myristica) oil.
- myristin
- chemical name: glyceryl trimyristate, C3H5(C14H27O2)3, found
- in spermaceti and many vegetable oils and fats, especially
- coconut oil and fixed nutmeg (myristica) oil.
-
-
- + MACMILLAN DICTIONARY OF TOXICOLOGY:
-
- myristicin
- A naturally occurring methylenedioxyphenyl compound found in
- nutmeg. It has been suggested that myristicin may be
- responsible, in whole or in part, for the toxicity of nutmeg.
- The spice (5-15g) causes symptoms similar to atropine
- poisoning: flushing of skin, tachycardia, absence of
- salivation, and excitation of the central nervous system.
- Euphoria and hallucinations have given rise to abuse of this
- material. As a methylenedioxyphenyl compound, myristicin
- gives rise to a type III spectrum with reduced cytochrome
- P-450 and can inhibit monooxygenations catalyzed by this
- cytochrome. See also AMPHETAMINES; CYTOCHROME P-450, OPTICAL
- DIFFERENCE SPECTRA; HALLUCINOGENS.
-
-
- + ILLUSTRATED CHURCHILL'S MEDICAL DICTIONARY (page 1227) and
- + INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY OF MEDICINE AND BIOLOGY (page 1868)
- (These have exactly the same text.)
-
- myristicin
-
- A toxic, crystalline, safrole derivative present in star
- anise, parsley seed oil, and nutmeg oil. When ingested in
- large quantities, it can cause convulsions, hallucinations,
- tachycardia, and possibly death.
-
-
-
- + UUSI TIETOSANAKIRJA 14 sivu 342 (in Finnish)
-
- Myristisiini, 5-metoksi-safroli, C11H12O3, kellert{v{,
- voimakkaan hajuinen, veteen liukenematon, alkoholiin ja
- eetteriin liukeneva |ljy, sulamisp. < -20 C, kiehumap. 149.5 C
- (15 mm:n paineessa). M:a on persiljassa sek{ muskottikukissa
- ja -p{hkin|iss{.
-
- My humble translation to English:
-
- Myristicin, 5-metoxy-safrole, C11H12O3, a yellowish,
- strong-odoured oil, insoluble in water, soluble in alcohol and
- in ether, melting point < -20 degrees centigrade, boiling point 149.5
- degrees centigrade (in 15 mm. pressure ?). There is myristicin in
- parsley, in mace and in nutmeg.
-
-
- + MARTINDALE THE EXTRA PHARMACOPOEIA TWENTY-NINTH EDITION:
-
- 4679-n
-
- Nutmeg
- Muscade; Myristica; Noz Moscada; Nuez Moscada; Nux Moschata.
-
- Pharmacopoeias. In Egypt., Port., Span., and Swiss. In
- B.P.C. 1973 which also includes Powdered Nutmeg.
-
- The dried kernels of the seeds of Myristica Fragrans
- (Myristicaceae).
-
- 4678-d.
-
- Nutmeg Oil (BAN, USAN).
- Atherisches Muskat|l; Esencia de Nuez Moscada;
- Essencia de Moscada; Essence de Muscade; Myristica Oil;
- Oleum Myristicae.
-
- CAS 0 8008-45-5.
-
- Pharmacopoeias. In Arg., Aust., and Br. Also in U.S.N.F.
-
- A volatile oil obtained by distillation from nutmeg. It is
- colourless, pale yellow or pale green liquid with an colour
- and taste of nutmeg. It is available as East Indian Nutmeg
- Oil and West Indian Nutmeg Oil.
- East Indian oil is soluble 1 in 3 of alcohol (90%), West
- Indian 1 in 4. Store at a temperature not exceeding 25 degrees
- in well-filled airtight containers. Protect from light.
-
- STANDARD FOR NUTMEG OILS. British Standard Specifications
- for East Indian and West Indian Nutmeg Oil (BS 2999/37/38: 1971)
- are published by the British Standards Institution.
-
- Adverse Effects
- Nutmeg, taken in large doses may cause nausea and vomiting,
- flushing, dry mouth, tachycardia, stimulation of the central
- nervous system possibly with epileptiform convulsions, miosis,
- mydriasis, euphoria, and hallucinations.
-
- Within 4 hours of taking 28 g of nutmeg in water and orange
- juice, a 19-year-old woman felt cold and shivery. This was
- followed after 6 to 8 hours by severe vomiting accompanied by
- hallucinations. For a week she had poor concentration and was
- disorientated. The hallucinogen in nutmeg was believed to be
- myristicin. - D. J. Panayotopoulos and D. D. Chisholm (letter),
- Br. med. J., 1970, 1, 754. A similar report. - R. A. Faguet
- and K. F. Rowland, Am. J. Psychiat., 1978, 135, 860.
- Within 3 days of receiving ground nutmeg 9 teaspoonfuls daily
- to control the diarrhoea associated with nodullary carcinoma
- of the thyroid, a patient complained of dry eyes and mouth,
- blurred vision, dizziness, tingling, and feelings of
- depersonalisation and remoteness. The symptoms gradually
- subsided as the dose was reduced. - G. S. Venables et al.
- (letter), Br. med. J., 1976, I, 96.
- Ingestion of freshly ground nutmeg 1.5 to 4 g three to four
- times daily for 2 days by 2 subjects produced constipation,
- but no aspirin-like effect on biphasic platelet aggregation
- was noted. Both subjects also felt light-headed, slightly
- disorientated, occassionally nauseated, flushed, and had
- nasal congestion and very dry mouths; pupil size was
- unaffected. - W. H. Dietz and M. J. Stuart (letter),
- New Engl. J. Med., 1976, 294, 503.
-
- Uses and Administration
- Nutmeg and nutmeg oil are aromatic and carminative and are
- used as flavouring agents. Nutmeg oil and expressed nutmeg oil,
- a solid fat, are rubefacient. Nutmeg is reported to inhibit
- prostaglandin synthesis.
- Reports of diarrhoea associated with increased
- plasmaprostaglandin concentrations responding to treatment
- with nutmeg: J. A. Barrowman et al., Br. med. J., 1975,
- 3, 11; idem (letter), 160; I. Shafran et al. (letter), New
- Engl. J. Med., 1977, 296, 694.
-
-
-
- + BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL 1970 1, 21 March 1970, page 754:
-
- Hallucinogenic Effect of Nutmeg
-
- Sir, - A patient tells us it is common knowledge among the
- drug-taking and hippie sub-culture that taking nutmeg is a
- potent way of taking a "trip". The hallucinogen in nutmeg
- is believed to be myristicin.
- An intelligent 19-year-old female with a hysterical
- personality took one ounce of nutmeg in water and orange
- juice. She had five fays previously taken L.S.D. with very
- little effect. She had also experimented with cannabis, but the
- only noticeable effect of this was that she developed a dry
- mouth. In contrast to this the effects of nutmeg were marked.
- At first she felt no effect, but after four hours she felt
- cold and shivery. Six to eight hours later she was vomiting
- severely. She saw faces and the room appeared distorted, with
- flashing lights and loud music. She felt a different person
- and everything seemed unreal. Time appeared to stand still.
- She felt vibrations and twitches in her limbs. When she shut
- her eyes she saw lights, black creatures, red eyes and felt
- sucked into the ground. Her mood was one of elation. She
- was taken by her friends to be seen by one of us (D.P.) as an
- emergency. She was admitted and quickly fell into a sound sleep.
- For the next week, however, she felt that she was walking in
- a cloud and complained that her thinking was confused and she
- found it difficult to follow what people were saying. Her
- concentration seemed poor and lapses of attention were noticed.
- The clinical features of this case have much in common with
- the effects of nutmeg ingestion previously reported (1). The
- physical symptoms were unpleasant, and the girl states that
- she would not take nutmeg again because of these. In her case
- vomiting was the most severe physical side-effect. Severe
- physical collapse following ingestion of nutmeg occurs (2).
- A dose of 10-15 g. however is required before acute intoxication
- occurs (3). Despite the side-effects, however, it is probable
- that with the increased drug-taking among young people more cases
- of nutmeg intoxication will come to medical attention.
- -We are, etc.,
- D. J. PANAYOTOPOULOS.
- D. D. CHISHOLM.
- Ross Clinic, Aberdeen.
-
- REFERENCES
-
- 1 Fras, I., and Friedman, J. J.,
- New York State Journal of Medicine, 1969, 69, 463.
- 2 Shulgin, A. T., Nature, 1966, 210, 380.
- 3 Truit, E. B., jun., Duritz, G., and Ebersberger, E.M.,
- Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine,
- 1963, 112, 647.
-
-
-
- + NEW YORK STATE JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, February 1, 1969, pages 463-465
-
- Hallucinogenic Effects of Nutmeg in Adolescent
-
- Ivan Fras, M.D., Binghamton, New York
- Joseph Joel Friedman, M.D., F.A.C.P., Binghamton, New York
-
- Child Psychiatrist (Dr. Fras), Director (Dr. Friedman),
- Broome County Mental Health Clinic.
-
- The household spice, nutmeg, has been known to have psychotropic
- effects. These have been described in varying details by a
- number of reports in the literature. Even authors who do not
- accord them much prominence, such as Payne, (1) do mention them.
- It is generally assumed that the active psychotropic substance
- is myristicin. The inability to imitate nutmeg intoxication
- with synthetic myristicin has given rise to speculation that
- other substances of the volatile oil obtained from the nutmeg
- seed, Myristica fragrans, may also be factors. (2)
- Weiss (3) has reported in detail the psychic experiences
- of adult prison inmates following the ingestion of powdered
- nutmeg. Nutmeg has been mentioned as one of the substances now
- prominent in illegal or quasi-legal use among adolescents. (4)
- There are no detailed reports about the use of this substance
- by adolescents.
-
- Case report
-
- The following is an account of the experiences of an
- eighteen-year-old student who ingested half a can (one fourth
- of a teacup) of commercially available nutmeg. His girl friend
- who was present throughout this experience did not partake of
- the nutmeg. He had taken marihuana on several occassions before
- that and had experienced vivid imagery under its influence.
- About two weeks had elapsed between the last time he had taken
- marihuana and the time he took nutmeg. The latter substance
- was taken partly out of curiosity (he had heard about its
- effect "by the grapevine"), but mainly because marihuana was
- not then available. Fifteen to twenty minutes after taking
- nutmeg, a teaspoon at a time, and flushing it down with
- Coca Cola, "things went funny." He felt "as if he had stayed
- awake for two days without sleeping" and "things started to
- look unreal" to him. His head shook back and forth, and when
- somebody said something to him, he could not see the connections
- between the sentences. He said he remembered that he "spoke up
- and nobody understood him" either.
-
- About one and a half hours after the ingestion, he started
- feeling "as though he had drunk fifty cups of coffee." He
- "could not stop shaking," he "was giggling," he "was saying
- stupid things," things he would not have said otherwise. His
- friend became aware of the change in him. The patient
- remembered she asked him whether or not he felt all right.
- "Peoples' voices appeared to come out of a porthole above my
- head." He "felt a tingling" in his hands, and presently his
- "whole body felt numb." Friends laid him down on the floor,
- and he remained there for some time. Finally he opened his
- eyes, looked at the lights on the ceiling, and felt they were
- cylinder-shaped. He raised his hands, grabbed one of those
- cylinder light beams, and sat up, "pulling himself up by that
- beam." He was still aware of his surroundings and noticed
- that people were watching him. His heart was beating fast, he
- was breathing hard, and his throat felt dry. Fortunately, he
- was constantly accompanied by his friend who subsequently
- corrobated his recollections. He "felt as though he was
- floating" but "he knew that in reality he was not floating."
- He knew that "friends were helping" him. His "legs felt numb"
- and as if "he was walking in a lake with the water up to his
- waist." His "hands appeared white and wrinkled" to him.
- At that point, he started feeling as if he was in a trance,
- and it was the first time that he did not know that people
- were around him. As he gradually came out of the trance, he
- could feel a ball in his hands; this ball would expand and
- contract as he moved his hands, but he could not see the ball.
- His friend said, "Touch something real!" He then touched the
- table and felt real again.
- Subsequently, he felt he kept going in and out of a
- trancelike state and could, on several occassions, even induce
- it himself. As he was walking, he felt that the floor was
- bow-shaped, and he had to hold on to the wall.
- He recalled that the following three hours were accompanied
- by these experiences: He would sit on a couch and he would
- drift away completely, "a great fog would be closing in" on
- him, and when he was surrounded by this fog "everything would
- turn black." "Spots of color, blue and red, would shine through
- this black cloud." Beyond the cloud, there seemed to him to be
- infinity. He "heard a massive confusion of sound," although to
- his knowledge there was no one talking and there were no sounds
- of any other nature at that time. But, again, when his friend
- called his name, he "came out of it." At times he felt excited,
- at times he felt relaxed. He remembered that he would often ask
- his friend to talk to him to keep him in reality. He found that
- he could, in this way, practically control his state of mind;
- that is, whether he would be in a trance state or not.
- When he looked at the picture of a countryside with deer in
- it, he felt as though he were floating into the picture and it
- took on a three-dimensional character. The deer were alive, the
- trees had shape. He started feeling everybody in the world
- could hear him. When he went out of the house and stepped onto
- the lawn, he anticipated that he would fall into it, as if
- into an ocean. He started writing in mirror writing,
- "Help! I'm trapped behind the world."
-
- He played a few notes on his recorder and felt that
- "each note was a brown disc." He then played a record; "the
- sound of music made a pattern of color. There was a central
- color and lines around it. The center was composed of the low
- notes, the bass, and the high notes were on the periphery."
- He remembered that sound made by "cymbals were silvery."
- This configuration kept changing, beating, and throbbing.
- Finally, he could not stand it no longer, and he turned the
- music off.
- By this time, some eight or nine hours had elapsed from the
- ingestion of nutmeg. He started becoming confused, and memory
- (recall) became very poor. He fell asleep and seemed to realize
- that he could finally go to sleep without "dropping out."
-
- Comment
-
- The preceding narrative was given spontaneously by an
- intelligent, perceptive, and sensitive adolescent who had had
- prior experience with marihuana and morning-glory seeds. The
- frequent connection of the two is known. (3, 5) He felt that on
- marihuana, the predominant feeling was one of enjoyment and
- happiness, of being liked and floating. Hallucinations were
- less marked. On morning-glory seeds, he also had a light,
- floating sensation, but it seemed to be of a different kind,
- and the most marked thing was a constant feeling of euphoria.
- On both these substances, he felt he never really left reality,
- and he thought that this was a major distinction between these
- substances and nutmeg.
- He repeated his experience with nutmeg in a smaller dose.
- On one tablespoon full of the substance he "felt high" or
- sometimes "weird," but without hallucinations; music sounded
- better although it did not sound louder. None of the colourful
- changes in perception occurred on the small dose of nutmeg.
- The description given by this patient is richer and more
- colorful than the previous reports, (3,6,7) although the
- previous descriptions also contained many of the experiences
- reported here, such as lapses of attention, although
- consciousness was retained, (6) depersonalization, (6) bright
- colors, (3) a floating feeling, (3) and music being more
- enjoyable. (3)
- Follow-up on this patient showed that he continued taking
- marihuana but stopped taking nutmeg. Psychodynamically, the
- patient was in the midst of an identity crisis, trying to
- deal with his leanings toward dependency and passivity by
- indentifying with the "hippie" groups. The patient's father
- had been incapacitated for several years because of psychiatric
- difficulties also centering around dependency and passivity.
-
- Summary
-
- Some of the pertinent literature on the use of nutmeg as a
- hallucinogen is briefly reviewed. It is noted that descriptions
- of experience with this substance in adolescents are lacking.
- Feelings of depersonalization and unreality, changes in
- perception, as well as illusions and hallucinations, especially
- visual, were the significant aspects of the subjective
- experience of an eighteen-year-old adolescent. The patient was
- also able to differentiate the effects of nutmeg from those of
- marihuana and morning-glory seeds, on the basis of a temporary
- break with reality which he experienced with nutmeg.
- Although the unfortunate easy availability of other
- hallucinogens probably makes nutmeg intoxication a relatively
- rare occurrence, mainly as experimentation or when other
- substances are not available, the medical profession should be
- reminded of its possible use and its hallucinogenic effects.
-
- References
-
- 1. Payne, R. B.: Nutmeg intoxication, New England J. Med.
- 269: 36 (1963).
- 2. Shulgin, A. T.: Possible implication of myristicin as
- psychotropic substance, ibid. 380
- 3. Weiss, G.: Hallucinogenic effects of powdered Myristica
- (nutmeg), Am. J. Psychiat. 346.
- 4. Stanton, A. H.: Drug use among adolescents, ibid. 122: 1282
- (May) 1966.
- 5. Goodman, L. S., and Gilman, A.: Pharmacological Basis of
- Therapeutics, New York, The Macmillan Company, 1965, p. 1785.
- 6. Truitt, E., et al.: Pharmacology of myristicin, Am. J.
- Psychiat. 205.
- 7. Green, R. C., Jr.: Nutmeg poisoning, J.A.M.A 171: 1342 (1959).
-
-
-
- + THE BRITISH JOURNAL OF ADDICTION, Vol.53, No.2
- Excerpt from the "letter from a master addict to dangerous drugs",
- sent by William Burroughs at August 3rd, 1956.
- This letter is also in Appendix I in his novel "The Naked Lunch",
- where this is quoted from. (ISBN 0-586-08560-2).
-
-
- Nutmeg. - Convicts and sailors sometimes have recourse to
- nutmeg. About a tablespoon is swallowed with water. Results
- are vaguely similar to marijuana with side effects of headache
- and nausea. Death would probably supervene before addiction
- if such addiction is possible. I have only taken nutmeg once.
- There are a number of narcotics of the nutmeg family in use
- among the Indians of South America. They are usually
- administered by sniffing a dried powder of the plant. The
- Medicine Men take these noxious substances, and go into
- convulsive states. Their twitchings and mutterings are thought
- to have prophetic significance. A friend of mine was violently
- sick for three days after experimenting with a drug of the
- nutmeg family in South America.
-
-
- END OF THE NUTMEG FACTFILE.
-
-
-