ESPD 55

Ethnopharmacologic Search for Psychoactive Drugs

ESPD 55
SPEAKERS

Laurel Sugden

Laurel Sugden

Laurel Sugden

Ethnobotanist

Ethnopharmacology and phytochemical profiling of Huachuma.

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“This presentation supports anecdotal evidence from traditional San Pedro use in Peru, which suggests that indigenous communities and practitioners distinguish types of San Pedro which science cannot tell apart.”

Biography

Laurel Anne Sugden is a Ph.D. candidate in Interdisciplinary Studies at the University of British Columbia. She grew up in rural Montana, where she developed deep connections with the Rocky Mountains and their creatures, and went on to earn a B.Sc. in Molecular Biology. She has traveled through much of Latin America and studied the shamanic practices of traditional healers in Peru. Her current work centers on the visionary San Pedro Cactus (Huachuma), and its cultural and ecological roles in the Andes. Laurel co-founded Huachuma Collective, a nonprofit association in Peru which works with Indigenous communities towards the biological and cultural sustainability of San Pedro. She lives in the Flathead watershed of Montana and the Rimac Valley of Peru.

Ethnopharmacology and phytochemical profiling of Huachuma.

“Shamanic practitioners across huachuma’s wide range have prepared the plants as a visionary drink for at least 3,000 years.”

Transcript Abstract

Huachuma, or San Pedro, is a psychedelic cactus in the genus Echinopsis native to the mid-elevation Andes. Shamanic practitioners across huachuma’s wide range have prepared the plants as a visionary drink for at least 3,000 years. Scientific and public interest in huachuma for its psychedelic effects is quickly increasing, but there is a noted lack of phytochemical information about the plants and their natural diversity. This study compares 5 geographically diverse San Pedro cacti from Peru and their resulting medicinal preparations, both phytochemically and in the qualitative experience of a Peruvian huachumero (San Pedro shaman). We employ a field sampling technique called solid phase microextraction (SPME) to capture quantitative data and metabolic fingerprints of the plants both raw and after preparation as medicine.

SPME has been used successfully in previous phytochemical studies and is particularly fast and inexpensive when collecting large numbers of samples in the field. LC-MS/MS was used to identify the major alkaloids mescaline and hordenine, and to discover how they vary quantitatively between diverse plants. For the qualitative portion of the study, the Peruvian huachumero who prepared the medicine drank each preparation separately and reflected verbally on the plants’ characters and personalities. Results of the phytochemical study showed very similar metabolic fingerprints and little difference in alkaloid quantities between plants, but the qualitative experience of ingesting each of the plants was unique. This supports anecdotal evidence from traditional San Pedro use in Peru, which suggests that Indigenous communities and practitioners distinguish types of San Pedro which science cannot tell apart. These results also show the utility of SPME as a field technique for psychedelic phytochemists.