Scopolamine scopolamine is an anticholinergic hallucinogen containing purine and atropine. They can be synthesized from various precursors in the laboratory, but of course they occur in the four genera of Solanaceae (Potatoes), Atropa, Dachura, Mandragora and Hyosium. People all over the world have used the role of scopolamine in various ways. The use of the extract of Atropa Belladonna means that beautiful women, ancient Egyptians and Roman women should juice their eyes.
Scopolamine's research involves many aspects and complex aspects. In this study, in addition to the physical and chemical properties and properties of scopolamine, pathways for biological synthesis and laboratory synthesis were revealed. 13 C-NMR and 1 H-NMR were generated from the collected data, and the separation and use of scopolamine was discussed. Introduction The use of scopolamine began in ancient times, and it has penetrated into the present. Heterocyclic tropane alkaloids exist naturally in Solanaceae plants and can be prepared from various precursors in the laboratory.
At the beginning of the 20th century, physicians began to induce a "twilight sleep" condition at birth using scopolamine, morphine and chloroform. Scopolamine is known to cause sedation and drowsiness, confusion and disorientation, discordance and oblivion during events occurring during intoxication. In 1922, a dermatologist Robert House of Dallas, Texas said that similar methods could be used to interrogate suspects, and that two prisoners in Dallas County Prison were guilty of scopolamine I got an interview with him. It seems clearly confirmed. According to drugs, both of them denied their allegations; both were innocent after the trial. Therefore, Robert House concluded that patients suffering from scopolamine "can not lie, there is no ability to think or to infer." His experiments and this conclusion attracted extensive attention and human thought.