Mescaline is a drug, not a disease, so you can't treat it.
No. Mescaline is very rarely tested for, simply because it's not a common drug of abuse.
You are thinking of peyote, mescaline is one of the psychoactive drugs in peyote. If you are interested in mescaline SWIM always likes to make a tea of out a one foot San Pedro clipping, bouncing bear is a good source.
Yes, tolerance can develop to mescaline, especially when one doses on consecutive days. Cross-tolerance between mescaline and other psychedelics is also possible. Nevertheless, the tolerance usually fades quickly with abstinence from the drug.
LSD ,mescaline , and Fly Agaric
Although the exact number is impossible to know (for one thing, mescaline is typically grouped under the category of "other hallucinogens in teen drug surveys), it is likely that the number is very low. Peyote, the cactus which contains mescaline, only grows in a limited range and is not usually sold on the street. Also, due to the greater availability of other psychedelics, pills sold as mescaline on the street often contain other chemicals such as LSD.
Various studies were conducted on peyote/mescaline during the 20th Century. No useful medical application of the drug was found. Peyote/mescaline was banned in the U.S. in 1967 and placed on Schedule I in 1970. You can purchase Peyote seeds as well as other cacti containing mescaline online. It should be noted that what is sold as "mescaline" on the street is typically another psychedelic such as LSD.
After consuming mescaline, the individual experienced vivid hallucinations and altered perceptions of reality.
Yes. It is considered to be the source of an hallucinogenic drug called mescaline.
mescaline
Marijuana, cocaine (can be but definitely not normally done), shrooms, mescaline, lsd,
Mescaline with some serious opiates thrown in