PASSION FLOWER (PASSIFLORA INCARNATA)
PASSIFLORA INCARNATA
DEPRESSANT,
MILD HYPNOTIC, RELAXANT, SEDATIVNARCOTIC, PAIN RELIEVER
MILD
HALLUCINOGEN, MILD PSYCHEDELIC
APHRODISIAC
Common Names: Flower of Five Wounds, Maracuja, Apricot Vine,
Maypop, Mayapple, Maypop Passion flower, Passion Vine, Purple Passion Flower,
Passifl ora, Passionfl ower, Wild Passion Flower.
Passiflora, known
also as the passion flowers or passion
vines, is a genus of about 500 species of flowering plants, the type genus of the family Passifloraceae.
They are mostly vines,
with some being shrubs,
and a few species being herbaceous. For information about the fruit
of the passiflora plant, see passionfruit. The monotypic genus Hollrungia seems to be inseparable from Passiflora,
but further study is needed.
Almost all
species of Passiflora are indigenous to the tropical rain forests of the
Americas, most to Central and South America. Some species may be found in the
Caribbean and southeastern North America. There are only a few Passiflora
species that can survive in more temperate climates, with several species now
known to grow wild in Italy, Greece, Portugal, and Spain, as well as Southeast
Asia. During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, botanists helped to
spread various passionflower species across much of the globe (Ratsch 1998,
415).
All species of Passiflora may be grown from seed, which are sown in very
loose, airy soil throughout the year in warmer and tropical climates. In
Central Europe, the seeds are best planted in the period between November to
April, and will germinate within two to six weeks at the onset of warmer
weather. As a houseplant, passionflowers like to be watered well between
April and September, and given fertilizer every fourteen days. In Spring, the
shoots may be cut back to four to seven inches (Ratsch 1998, 416).
TRADITIONAL USES: In Pre-Columbian times, South American
peoples used many of the up-to-sixty edible Passiflora species as food, as well
as to prepare medicines and sedatives. When Spanish missionaries invaded the
New World, they took Passiflora as a sign from God, seeing the unusual flowers
as a symbol of the mystery and the passion of Jesus Christ. It was the Spanish
Friars who first called the plant “Flos Passionis,” or Passion Flower in
English, because of their conception that Passiflora was the living epitome of
the passion story of their Lord Savior (Klock 1996 cited in Ratsch 1998, 415).
The Spaniards of the West Indies named the plant “Granadilla” due to the
similarities of passion flower fruits to pomegranate fruits. The passion fruit
species that thrives in the West Indies is large and red and bears a striking
resemblance to the pomegranate, only the passion fruit husk is thinner, the
fruit is mostly tasteless, and the juice is sour. This fruit has mild laxative
effects.
In the region of Iquitos, the roots of the Amazonian species Passiflora
involucrata are used as an additive to ayahuasca to intensify the visions
experienced during ceremonial rituals. Maracuja (P.
edulis) juice plays a significant role in Brazilian jurema rituals,
which are similar to ayahuasca rituals, but which are not particularly well
understood at this time (Ratsch 1998, 416).
TRADITIONAL PREPARATION: To make
a calming tea, dried Passiflora incarnata herbage may be combined with valerian root (Valeriana
officinalis), hop cones (Humulus lupulus), and St. John’s Wort
(Hypericum perforatum). Another variation includes the dried herbage of Passiflora
incarnata blended with valerian root,lemon balm (Melissa
officinalis), anise (Pimpinella anisum), and mint (menthe). The
recommended daily dosage of dried herbage of Passiflora incarnata is four to
eight grams; as a tea the suggested dosage is two and one half grams per cup,
taken three to four times daily. Tea may also be made by combining
fifteen grams of passionflower herbage and one hundred and fifty grams of
boiling water (Meier et al. 1994 cited in Ratsch 199, 416).
In Mexico, the flowers of Passiflora foetida are known as amapola, or
“opium,” and are brewed into a tea that is used as an opium substitute (Argueta et al. 1994 cited
in Ratsch 1998, 416). The roots of Passiflora involucrata are suitable for use
in preparing ayahuasca analogs. Passion fruit juice is used together with
Mimosa tenuiflora and species of the Pithecellobium family to produce the
ayahuasca-like drink known as Jurema of
Brazil, and is represented in various artifacts of the people who use this
medicine (Ratsch 1998, 416). It has been rumored that the Passiflora
rubra of the Dominican Republic is used to produce a zombie-like state in
unwitting victims, but those reports have not been substantiated
(Voogelbreinder 2009, 262-263).
The seeds of various Passiflora species are easy to obtain, and tea
mixtures and herbal supplements created using Passiflora incarnata are widely
available. Passion fruits may now be found at fruit stands and markets almost
everywhere in the world, and are delicious eaten by themselves, or made in to
various delicious desserts.
MEDICINAL USE: In
the Amazon, a tea of maracuja (Passiflora
edulis) leaves is imbibed as a sedative. Maracujafruit juice allegedly has MAO-inhibiting properties. A tea made form the leaves
of tumbo (Passiflora quadrangularis) is used as
a narcotic and sedative. The Kubeo people tell us that a decoction of the
leaves of Passiflora laurifolia has sleep-inducing effects. The Indians of the
Caribbean and Central America also use several species of Passiflora as
sedatives and sleeping agents (Ratsch 1998, 416).
In European folk medicine and phytotherapy, Passiflora incarnata is either
taken as a tea or as part of a combination preparation for states of nervous
unrest. In homeopathy, a Passiflora incarnata mother tincture is used for such
purposes as calming and to promote sleep. Experimentation with animals has
demonstrated that an aqueous extract of Passiflora incarnata both deepens and
prolongs sleep (Meier et al. 1994 cited in Ratsch 1998, 416).
Currently, P. incarnata is used in Europe as an antispasmodic medicine for
Parkinson’s patients. A tea made from P. incarnata root is used by the
Cherokee as a ‘social drink’, for weaning infants, and as a liver tonic and
external wash for wounds. Other American Indian groups use the herb to treat
swelling and eye troubles (Voogelbreinder 2009, 263).
TRADITIONAL EFFECTS: Today,
passion fruits are one of the most highly valued exotic fruits in the world. It
has been reported that the psychoactive components in Passiflora incarnata and
other Passiflora species are harmane alkaloids. One may sometimes read that one
hundred grams of dried Passiflora incarnata contains about ten micrograms of
harmane alkaloid. This finding is highly controversial. Maltol, once believed
to be the main active constituent in the plant, is actually a by-product that
is created when the raw plant is heated. The pulp of the passion fruit consists
primarily of two to four percent citric acid, traces of ascorbic acid,
cartenoids, starch and more than two hundred aromatic substances (Meier et al.
cited in Ratsch 1998, 416).
The psychoactive properties of the Passiflora genus as a whole is still
awaiting thorough ethnopharmacological study. However there are several species
that have a rich history of entheogenic use. The psychoactive compounds
documented to be found in Passiflora incarnata include vicenine-2,
isoorientine, isovitexine-2”-O-glucoside, schaftoside, isoschaftoside,
isoorientine2”-O-glucoside, isovitexine and swertisine. Saponarine, once
thought to be a constituent, is in fact absent in the plant (Meier 1995 cited
in Ratsch 1998, 417). Passiflora jorullensis contains passicol, harmol,
harmane, harmine, and harmaline (Emboden 1979). The roots of Passiflora
involucrata appear to be rich in B-carbolines with MAO-inhibiting properties (Argueta et al. 1994 cited in Ratsch
1998, 417).
The neuropharmacological effects of P. incarnata have been compared to
those of Cannabis sativa. When smoked, the herbages of both
Passiflora incarnata and Passiflora jorullensis induce a mild, marijuana-type
high. The herbage may be smoked alone or in smoking blends with other
plants (Emboden 1979). Claims have been made that smoking Passiflora has
MAO-inhibiting effects, thus making oral doses of N,N-DMT containing plants
more effective (Ratsch 1998, 417).
If you would like to try making your own Passion Flower tea to calm the
nervous system, you may make it withdried Passion Flower herbage. You may also be
interested in Passion Flower Capsules and Passion Flower Liquid Extract.
DRUG EFF ECTS: A
component in some European sedative drug mixtures as it has an overall calming
eff ect.
SHORT TERM EFF ECTS: Calming,
libido & virility enhancing, cns sedative, relaxant, stimulant, euphoria,
relieve anxiety, refreshing, sleep-inducing, very mild marijuana-like high,
virility
enhancing.
LONG TERM EFF ECTS: Anodyne,
anthelmintic, antiarrhythmic, antibacterial, antipyretic, antiseptic, antispasmodic,
astringent, bradycardic, cardiovascular, climacteric, desmutagenic,
hypertension,hypotensive, nervine tranquilliser, vasodilator.
NEGATIVE/OVERDOSE RISK: Confusion,
convulsions, drowsiness, large doses – hallucinogenic, mental slowing, nausea,
phototoxic, rapid heart rhthym, neurotoxic, sweat inducing, tremors, dizziness,
tranquilizing eff ect, vomiting.
ACTIVE CONSTITUENTS: Alkaloids,
Alpha-Alanine, Apigenin, Ascorbic Acid, Beta-Carboline, Beta- Carotene,
Campherol, Chlorogenic-Acid, Cinnamic Acid, Coumarin, Cynocardine,
Ethyl-Maltol, Flavonoids, Formic-Acid, Gynocardin, Harmaline, Harmalol, Harman,
Harmine, Harmol, Homoorientin, Isoorientin, Isoorientin-2’-Glucoside,
Kaempferol, Lucenin-2, Lutenin-2, Luteolin, Magnesium, Maltol, Niacin,
Orientin, Passicol, Passifl orine, Phenylalanine, Phosphorus, Quercetin, Raffi
nose, Saponaretin, Saponarin, Saponarine, Saponin, Schaftoside, Scopoletin,
Selenium, Stigmasterol, Thiamine, Tyrosine, Vitexin, Zinc.
CONTRAINDICATIONS / INTERACTIONS: Caution in conjunction with cns-depressants or stimulants, cns-depressant,
analgesic, methotrimeprazine, benzodiazepines. Can lessen the eff ect of oral anticoagulant
therapy, may increase the risk of bleeding or potentiate the eff ects of warfarin
therapy, antiepileptic medications, increasing their sedative and cognitive eff
ects. Do not use if pregnant or scheduled for surgery in the next two weeks.
The psychoactive alkaloids are MAO inhibitors, and when combined with other mao
inhibitors, vomiting and headaches will result.
PSYCHOACTIVE INGREDIENT IN: Smoking
Blends, Ayahuasca Analogs, Algerian Blend, Till Dawn, Trip-E, U4-E, Mister-E
and Trip-E Happy Caps.
REFERENCES
Emboden, W.A. Narcotic Plants. Macmillan Pub Co, 1980.
Ratsch, Christian., The Encyclopedia of Psychoactive Plants:
Ethnopharmacology and its Applications. Rochester: Park Street Press, 1998.
Voogelbreinder, Snu, Garden of Eden: The Shamanic Use of Psychoactive
Flora and Fauna, and the Study of Consciousness. Snu Voogelbreinder, 2009.
Sinead O’Mahony Carey
; Psychoactives Substances.
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