Nutmeg is extremely poisonous if injected intravenously.
Why Nutmeg Is Deadly When Injected Into Your Veins
That aromatic spice sitting in your kitchen cabinet harbors a dark secret: inject it directly into your bloodstream, and it becomes a potentially lethal poison. While nutmeg is perfectly safe sprinkled on eggnog or baked into cookies, introducing it intravenously transforms this festive flavoring into a dangerous toxin.
The culprit is myristicin, an organic compound found in nutmeg oil that gives the spice its distinctive aroma and psychoactive properties. When you eat nutmeg normally, your digestive system processes myristicin gradually, and your liver works to break it down. But inject it straight into a vein? That safety mechanism vanishes.
What Happens During IV Injection
Intravenous injection delivers myristicin directly into the bloodstream at full concentration, bypassing every natural barrier your body uses to protect itself. This sudden flood overwhelms your liver and attacks your central nervous system immediately.
The effects are swift and severe:
- Rapid heart rate (tachycardia) and cardiac arrhythmias
- Respiratory depression or failure
- Seizures and violent tremors
- Acute organ failure
- Cardiac arrest
Unlike oral ingestion, which takes 1-7 hours to produce symptoms, IV injection can trigger life-threatening reactions within minutes.
The Oral Toxicity Reference Point
To understand just how dangerous IV injection is, consider that even eating nutmeg can be toxic. Just 2 teaspoons (10 grams) of ground nutmeg—equivalent to 1-2 mg of myristicin per kilogram of body weight—can cause hallucinations, severe nausea, and anticholinergic effects like urinary retention and dry mouth.
At 50 grams or more, oral nutmeg poisoning becomes severely dangerous. Documented cases include psychotic symptoms, feelings of impending doom, seizures, and hypothermia. There's even been at least one fatal case recorded in medical literature.
Now imagine that dose hitting your bloodstream all at once, with no digestive process to slow it down.
Why Would Anyone Even Try This?
Nutmeg has a long, dubious history as a recreational drug. Some people have attempted to get high from its psychoactive properties, consuming large amounts orally or through insufflation (snorting). The "high" comes from myristicin's structural similarity to amphetamines and the hallucinogen MDMA.
But the reality is brutal: nutmeg intoxication causes horrible side effects—vomiting, blurred vision, extreme agitation, and a hangover that can last days. Poison control centers tracked 179 unique nutmeg poisoning cases in recent studies, with 25% experiencing dangerous tachycardia and 18% suffering psychotic symptoms.
Intravenous injection represents an even more reckless escalation, one that medical professionals warn is potentially fatal.
A Kitchen Spice, Not a Drug
This fact serves as a stark reminder that "natural" doesn't mean "safe" in high doses or alternate delivery methods. Nutmeg belongs in pumpkin pie, not syringes. The same compound that makes your holiday cookies smell amazing becomes a poison when concentrated and injected.
Medical literature is clear: nutmeg should never be used in any way other than as a culinary spice. The practice of injecting it intravenously is not just dangerous—it's potentially deadly.