Agave is an unproved remedy. The juice of it fermented is the Mexican
intoxicating beverage called "Pulque." The plant has a local reputation as a remedy for
- ▸hydrophobia.
- ▸A striking case is quoted by the H.
- ▸Recorder from El Siglo Medico.
- ▸A boy
developed the classical symptoms of hydrophobia four and a half months after being bitten:
Quarrelsomeness, excitement, fright, inability to swallow, small frequent pulse, great anxiety.
Finally swallowing was impossible, restraint had to be used to prevent him biting his nurses in
the hospital, when, as a last resource, a piece of Agave was offered to the boy by the doctor in
attendance, cut from a hedge of the plant with which the hospital grounds were fenced. To the
astonishment of all, the boy reached for it and ate it greedily, almost without chewing. By
evening a decrease in the violence of the nervous attacks was manifest, though they remained as
frequent as before. The improvement was slow but continued. On the fourth day he took some
nourishment, but also continued chewing Agave and swallowing the juice. On the fifth day he
recovered consciousness by still demanded Agave. On the eighth day he said he did not want any
more as "it tasted too bitter and caused a burning in the mouth." He had no further symptoms of
the disease. According to Hansen Agave is indicated in scurvy, stomacace, and painful erections
in gonorrheea.