I was just browsing Wikipedia and came across an Alkaloid named
Glaucine.
Wikipedia: wrote:Glaucine is an alkaloid found in several different plant species such as Glaucium flavum[1], Glaucium oxylobum, Croton lechleri and Corydalis yanhusuo. It has bronchodilator and antiinflammatory effects, acting as a PDE4 inhibitor and calcium channel blocker, and is used medically as an antitussive in some countries. Glaucine may produce side effects such as sedation, fatigue, and a hallucinogenic effect characterised by colourful visual images,[7][8] and has recently been detected as a novel recreational drug.
Glaucium Flavum, the Yellow Horned Poppy, is it's richest natural source and it grows abundantly throughout the world's temparate climate zones, only along shorelines. May this Alkaloid indeed be the fine Entheogen it seems, there seems to be no shortage of it's most abundant natural source.
It is only reasonable my interrest was peaked so I checked some of the sources of the Wikipedia Glaucine article
and found this:
Quote:[Acute glaucine syndrome in the physician's practice: the clinical picture and potential danger].
[Article in Russian]
Rovinskiĭ VI.
Abstract
The author describes a clinical symptom complex which appears in some patients as a central nervous system side-effect of conventional doses of glaucine, a non-narcotic antitussive preparation, used in outpatients; the symptom complex is described by the author as acute glaucine syndrome (AGS). Clinical manifestations of AGS are the following: 1) very prominent fatigue, which occurs acutely after taking a conventional dose of glaucine and making any kind of professional activity impossible at the moment; 2) very prominent sleepiness, which occurs acutely together with fatigue and is always combined with it; 3) unusual clear but somewhat estranged perception of the environment: the patient sees and understands everything and is oriented well enough, but cannot take a clear and adequate action, 4) full recovery of the impaired functions after the drug is discontinued; 5) AGS recurrence after the drug is taken again. The hallucination-like effect of glaucine, described earlier by the author of this article, which is manifested by bright and colorful visual images, may be considered a facultative AGS component. The author stresses a potential danger of AGS development in persons who control moving mechanisms or vehicles and adduces some clinical observations.
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Link^^
Could be me but these symptoms, accept for the sedation, seem quite parallel to the effects of many of the Entheogens.
-unusually clear & estranged perception of the enviroment.
-Inability to take clear & adequate action. ( Maybe like the suspended state of undecided-ness as experienced with Entheogens? )
-Hallucinations of colorful visual images.
Has anyone here had any experience with Glaucine? Or can anyone bring some more information on Glaucine than the tiny bit Wikipedia has?
This molecule also seems like it could possibly be converted to very interresting analogues.