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Mimosa hostilis

Unchecked
From Pharmacopedia
Plant Medicine, Phantastica
Mimosa hostilis
Mimosa tenuiflora. Jurema preta, tepescohuite
Mimosa hostilis (now M. tenuiflora) is a thorny Fabaceae tree of the dry caatinga of northeastern Brazil and southern Mexico. The root bark is among the richest plant sources of DMT, with traditional use in indigenous jurema rituals (now "resurrected" by Brazilian groups after centuries of colonial suppression). The leaves are sold in Mexico as tepescohuite for burn and wound treatment.

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See also

Ayahuasca, DMT, Syrian rue

References

Summary
Classes
Plant Medicine, Phantastica
Common uses
Visionary (in ayahuasca-analogs)0, Wound treatment0
Pharmacy
Preparations
Root bark acid/base-extracted for DMT; or as the resurrected jurema preta brew (decocted with an MAOI such as Peganum harmala)
Pharmacology
Routes
Oral (with MAOI), smoked (extracted DMT)
Purported mechanism
Root bark contains ~1% N,N-dimethyltryptamine (DMT) and related tryptamines. Oral activity requires MAOI co-administration.