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A Clinical and Metabolic Study of Acute Intoxication with <i>Cannabis Sativa</i> and its Role in the Model Psychoses
183
Citations
15
References
1958
Year
Substance UsePsychopathologyPsychopharmacologyAcute IntoxicationCannabinoid PharmacologyOccurring PsychosesSouth AfricaAddiction MedicineNarcotic DrugPsychoactive Substance UseCannabinoidsDrug ToxicityHealth SciencesCannabis UsePsychoactive DrugPsychiatryBehavioural PharmacologyBehavioral PharmacologyMetabolic StudyNeuropharmacologyPsychedelic PharmacologyPharmacologyCannabisSubstance AbuseAddictionNeuroscienceMedicineModel Psychoses
Cannabis sativa has been used as a narcotic for centuries, and its psychoactive effects resemble those of hallucinogens such as mescaline and lysergic acid, prompting some researchers to consider it a model psychosis, yet it has been understudied because of unclear chemistry and variable preparations. The study investigates the acute effects of orally administered hashish/marihuana (dagga) on clinical and metabolic parameters.
This paper describes an inquiry into the effects of giving oral doses of the narcotic drug variously known as hashish, marihuana and, in South Africa, dagga. The drug is a preparation from the plant Cannabis sativa whose narcotic effect has been known for centuries. The writer's interest in it was inspired by the work in recent years on the mental disturbances produced by the active principles of other plants, e.g. mescaline and lysergic acid. Because of the similarity of these changes to those occurring in conditions such as schizophrenia, some workers have suggested that these “model psychoses” could be used as a research tool in attempts to elucidate the mechanisms and causes of the naturally occurring psychoses. Although there has been a great deal of work on mescaline and lysergic acid, cannabis has not received much attention. This may be because its chemistry is still not fully worked out and preparations of the plant are difficult to standardize and vary in their potency.
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