mescaline and Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage
mescaline has been researched along with Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage in 1 studies
Mescaline: Hallucinogenic alkaloid isolated from the flowering heads (peyote) of Lophophora (formerly Anhalonium) williamsii, a Mexican cactus used in Indian religious rites and as an experimental psychotomimetic. Among its cellular effects are agonist actions at some types of serotonin receptors. It has no accepted therapeutic uses although it is legal for religious use by members of the Native American Church.
mescaline : A phenethylamine alkaloid that is phenethylamine substituted at positions 3, 4 and 5 by methoxy groups.
Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage: Bleeding in any segment of the GASTROINTESTINAL TRACT from ESOPHAGUS to RECTUM.
Research
Studies (1)
Timeframe | Studies, this research(%) | All Research% |
---|---|---|
pre-1990 | 0 (0.00) | 18.7374 |
1990's | 1 (100.00) | 18.2507 |
2000's | 0 (0.00) | 29.6817 |
2010's | 0 (0.00) | 24.3611 |
2020's | 0 (0.00) | 2.80 |
Authors
Authors | Studies |
---|---|
Nolte, KB | 1 |
Zumwalt, RE | 1 |
Other Studies
1 other study available for mescaline and Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage
Article | Year |
---|---|
Fatal peyote ingestion associated with Mallory-Weiss lacerations.
Topics: Adult; Fatal Outcome; Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage; Hallucinogens; Humans; Male; Mallory-Weiss Syndro | 1999 |