Excerpts from
THE
DISPENSATORY
OF THE
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
Fifth Edition
Philadelphia: Grigg and Elliot (1843)
by George B. Wood, M.D.,
Professor of materia medica and pharmacy in the University of
Pennsylvania, one of the physicians of the Pennsylvania Hospital, &c.,
&c.,
and Franklin Bache, M.D.,
Professor of chemistry in Jefferson Medical College of Philedelphia, one
of the vice-presidents of the American Philosophical Society, &c.,
&c.
CANNABIS SATIVA. Hemp. An annual plant, originally from Asia,
but now cultivated in various parts of Europe and North America. The
leaves are possessed of narcotic properties, and are employed in
Persia and the East Indies, in the form of infusion, as an intoxicating
drink.; They are also smoked, in these and other countries of the East, in
the same manner as tobacco, with which they are frequently mixed. A
resinous exudation from the plant is much employed for the same purpose.
Even the odour of the fresh plant is stated to be capable of producing
vertigo, headache, and a species of intoxication. According to
Dr. O’Shaughnessy*,
of Calcutta, who has experimented with this narcotic,
it alleviates pain,
exhilarates the spirits, increases the appetite, acts decidedly as an
aphrodisiac, produces sleep, and in large doses, occasions intoxication,
a peculiar kind of delirium, and catalepsy. Its operation, in the hands
of Dr. Pereira, appeared to resemble very much that of opium.
(Pereira’s Mat. Med.)
Dr. O’Shaughnessy employed an
alcoholic extract of the dried tops with great advantage in tetanus, and
with alleviating effects in a fatal case of hydrophobia. He gave the
remedy usually in doses of two or three grains, at intervals of two, three,
or four hours; though, in these violent affections, the quantity may be
much increased; and in hydrophobia from ten to twenty grains may be given
at once. He employed the remedy also in rheumatism and cholera, giving, in
the latter affection, ten drops every half hour, of a solution made with
three grains of the extract and a drachm of proof spirit. (Medical
Examiner, iii. 530) The seeds of hemp have also been used
in medicine. They are about the eighth of an inch long, roundish-ovate,
somewhat compressed, of a shining gray colour, inodorous, and of a
disagreeable, oily, sweetish taste. They contain a considerable quantity
of fixed oil, which is separated by expression, and used to some extend in
the arts. They contain also uncrystallizable sugar and albumen, and when
rubbed with water afford an emulsion, which may be used advantageously in
inflammatory affections of the mucous membranes, though it is not superior
to a similar preparation from other emulsive seeds. They are much used as
food for birds, which are fond of them. It is, however, for the fibrous
bark of hemp, and the various products manufactured from it, that the
plant is chiefly cultivated. Some consider the hemp cultivated in the East
as specifically different from the common hemp; and name it Cannabis
Indica, but most botanists think the two plants identical.
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