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1.
J Hist Dent ; 69(3): 205-215, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35238745

ABSTRACT

Quackery in medicine is as old as medicine itself. In times of crisis, desperate patients often believe extraordinary claims. In the annals of pain-killer quack medicine, snake oil, elixirs, nostrums and Indian liniments hold a special position. NYU College of Dentistry (NYUCD) has a collection of 234 bottles of such medicines dating from the mid-1800s through 1940. This paper is the fifth in a series of articles featuring "Elixirs of the Past" in which we bring to light six more samples with claims to traditional Chinese or American Indian medicine using snake oil: Virex Compound, Rattlesnake Bill's Oil, Electric Indian Liniment, The King of All Indian Oils, Millerhaus Antiseptic Oil and Celebrated Indian Lotion. The six examples are just a few quack medications linked to fraud, overdose, addiction or death. In 1906, Congress enacted The Pure Food and Drug Act and reinforced it with the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act of 1938, to stop unsubstantiated medicinal claims and control the use of addictive and dangerous substances. The modern-day use of social media to advertise quack medicine is in some ways even more brazen than selling patent medicine a century ago.


Subject(s)
Drug Overdose , Nostrums , Quackery , Humans , Liniments , Nostrums/history , Oils , Quackery/history
2.
J Hist Dent ; 69(3): 191-199, 2021.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35238743

ABSTRACT

Quackery in medicine is as old as medicine itself. In times of crisis desperate patients often believe extraordinary claims. In the annals of pain killer quack medicine, elixirs, nostrums and liniments hold a special position. The College of Dentistry at NYU received a collection of 234 bottles of nostrums and liniments dating from approximately 1850 through 1940. In this paper, the FOURTH in a series of articles featuring "Elixirs of the Past" we bring to light four more samples claiming to have magnetic properties: Dr. J.R. Miller's Magnetic Balm, Havens' Electromagnetic Liniment, Headman's Magnetic Liniments, and Magnetic Cream. It goes without saying that none of these had any magnetic properties. In 1906, Congress enacted The Pure Food and Drug Act to prohibit exaggerated or unsubstantiated claims in the marketing and labeling of household products and to control the use of potentially harmful ingredients. The modern-day use of internet advertisements to make unsupported claims is in some ways even more brazen than the advertisements from a century ago.


Subject(s)
Nostrums , Quackery , Analgesics , Humans , Marketing , Nostrums/history , Physical Phenomena , Quackery/history
4.
Forensic Sci Med Pathol ; 15(2): 314-318, 2019 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30259392

ABSTRACT

Mahomet Allum was a flamboyant philanthropist and herbalist who worked in South Australia in the early part of last century, whose herbal therapies generated some controversy at the time. Two of his preparations have survived to the present day, a general tonic and a treatment for liver and kidney dysfunction. Given the frequent use of pharmaceutical drugs in "tonics" at the time, toxicological analysis was undertaken at Forensic Science SA, Adelaide with liquid chromatography/quadrupole-time-of-flight mass-spectrometer (LC-QTOF MS), liquid-chromatography/ diode array detector (LC/UV) and gas chromatography/ nitrogen phosphorous- detector/mass-spectrometer (GC-NPD/MS), to look for common drugs. In addition DNA analysis was also undertaken at Trace and Environmental DNA (TrEnD) Laboratory (Curtin University) to evaluate the types of plant products used to make these remedies. The general tonic contained genera from the Triticeae (wheat) family as well as the Medicago family (includes alfalfa), possibly as fillers. Other genera found included Utrica (nettle) and Passiflora (passion flower). The preparation for liver and kidney disease also contained genera from the Medicago family as well as genera Arctostaphylos (bear berry) which has traditionally been used for the treatment of dysuria and bladder stones. No common drugs were found. Thus it appears that the two treatments prepared by Mahomet Allum contained only herbal substances and not adulterant pharmaceutical agents. The herbals identified provide an insight into herbalist practices in the early twentieth century.


Subject(s)
Herbal Medicine/history , Nostrums/history , Afghanistan , Australia , History, 20th Century , Humans
5.
Notes Rec R Soc Lond ; 68(3): 227-43, 2014 Sep 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25254277

ABSTRACT

Our archival researches at the Royal Society reveal that a small envelope attached to a 1675 letter from an Antwerp apothecary, A. Boutens, contained a sample of the 'Ludus' prepared as a remedy for the 'stone disease' then sweeping through Europe, which was first announced in J. B. van Helmont's De lithiasi (1644). After examining the fascination with the medical use of the Ludus (which required the 'alkahest' for its preparation) and the tenacious efforts to procure it, we trace the fortunae of two other ludi in England, brought to and offered by Francis Mercurius van Helmont during his English sojourn. Both eventually found their way to the geologist John Woodward, one of them through Sir Isaac Newton. Finally we show how the allure of the Ludus helmontii vanished, with transformations in mineral analysis and reclassifications from Woodward to John Hill.


Subject(s)
Lithiasis/history , Nostrums/history , Urinary Calculi/history , Archives , Belgium , England , History, 17th Century , Lithiasis/prevention & control , Nostrums/analysis , Societies, Scientific , Urinary Calculi/prevention & control
6.
Gesnerus ; 69(2): 207-46, 2012.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23923337

ABSTRACT

Avicenna spoke on pharmacology in several works, and this article considers his discussions in the Canon, a vast synthesis of the greco-arabian medicine of his time. More precisely, it focuses on book II, which treats simple medicines. This text makes evident that the Persian physician's central preoccupation was the efficacy of the treatment, since it concentrates on the properties of medicines. In this context, the article examines their different classifications and related topics, such as the notion of temperament, central to Avicenna's thought, and the concrete effects medicines have on the body. Yet, these theoretical notions only have sense in practical application. For Avicenna, medicine is both a theoretical and a practical science. For this reason, the second book of the Canon ends with an imposing pharmacopoeia, where the properties described theoretically at the beginning of the book appear in the list of simple medicines, so that the physician can select them according to the intended treatment's goals. The article analyzes a plant from this pharmacopoeia as an example of this practical application, making evident the logic Avicenna uses in detailing the different properties of each simple medicine.


Subject(s)
Manuscripts, Medical as Topic/history , Materia Medica/history , Medicine, Arabic/history , Nostrums/history , History, Medieval , Persia
9.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 158-160, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921487

ABSTRACT

United Brethren minister Thomas S. McNeil formulated an analgesic nostrum in 1848, most likely from opium, alcohol, ether, and other proprietary ingredients. Massaged on externally as a pain liniment, his so-called pain exterminator could also be mixed in sweetened water and imbibed as an analgesic, antitussive, and antidiarrheal. A familiar antebellum remedy for both Union and Confederate forces in the Civil War, McNeil's Pain Exterminator would be manufactured by McNeil's pastor and then successors, for more than a half-century after McNeil's accidental drowning in 1874.


Subject(s)
Analgesics/history , Nostrums/history , Advertising/history , Analgesics/adverse effects , Analgesics/chemistry , Clergy/history , History, 19th Century , Humans , Nostrums/adverse effects , Nostrums/chemistry , United States
10.
Wurzbg Medizinhist Mitt ; 28: 186-96, 2009.
Article in German | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20509441

ABSTRACT

When the French patent law of 1791 was introduced, the ancient discussion about the division of the pharmaceutical market was sparked off again and fuelled the competitive conflict between doctors and non-legitimized healers. Friedericke Burtz was one of those who followed the spirit of times. But Friedericke Burtz failed to consider that the so called Publikandum zur Ermunterung des Kunstfleisses patented only inventions, but not discoveries from nature. As invention was only accepted under Prussian legislation what did not exist in nature yet. Under tough competitive conditions the access to a patent was complicated by the fact, that pharmacists and doctors, in capacity of experts, could decide on every patent request. The professions so got a lead over the non-legitimized healers that strengthened their position; they proved to be winners in this competition.


Subject(s)
Gynecology/history , Mastitis/history , Nostrums/history , Patents as Topic/history , Puerperal Disorders/history , Female , Germany , History, 18th Century , Humans
12.
J Med Biogr ; 24(1): 30-5, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26873169

ABSTRACT

Nathaniel Hodges was the son of Thomas Hodges (1605-1672), an influential Anglican preacher and reformer with strong connections in the political life of Carolingian London. Educated at Westminster School, Trinity College Cambridge and Christ Church College, Oxford, Nathaniel established himself as a physician in Walbrook Ward in the City of London. Prominent as one of a handful of medical men who remained in London during the time of the Great Plague of 1665, he wrote the definitive work on the outbreak. His daily precautions against contracting the disease included fortifying himself with Théodore de Mayerne's antipestilential electuary and the liberal consumption of Sack. Hodges' approach to the treatment of plague victims was empathetic and based on the traditional Galenic method rather than Paracelsianism although he was pragmatic in the rejection of formulae and simples which he judged from experience to be ineffective. Besieged by financial problems in later life, his practice began to fail in the 1680s and he eventually died in a debtor's prison.


Subject(s)
Disease Outbreaks/history , Plague/history , Historiography , History, 17th Century , Humans , Nostrums/history , Plague/therapy , Reference Books, Medical , United Kingdom
17.
J Hist Dent ; 48(3): 99-105, 2000 Nov.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11806256

ABSTRACT

The Great Patent Medicine Era (1865-1907) was the golden age of secret remedies--quack, non-prescription medicinal products, sold over-the-counter. Making outrageous and unsubstantiated claims, the makers of dental nostrums purported to effectively treat stained teeth, bad breath, diseased gums, toothache and teething discomfort. No proof was required to substantiate the safety and effectiveness of these concoctions. Advertisements for patent medicines were widespread, appearing in newspapers, almanacs, magazines, trade cards and multiple other media forms. Many dental patent medicines contained acids, abrasive substances, alcohol and/or narcotics, such as heroin, cocaine and morphine. Sozodont Tooth Powder, the most widely promoted and successful dentifrice of this era, claimed to "harden and invigorate the gums, purify and perfume the breath and beautify and preserve the teeth from youth to old age." Early dental researchers found that this remedy contained harsh ingredients (such as acid, sharp abrasives and astringents) which could destroy tooth substance. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup, an extremely popular dental nostrum, was intended to quiet a fretful child during the teething process. However, it contained generous levels of alcohol and morphine sulfate which could cause coma, addiction or death in an infant. Although somewhat chemically altered, these two products were eventually removed from the market in the 1930s.


Subject(s)
Analgesics, Opioid/history , Dentifrices/history , Nonprescription Drugs/history , Nostrums/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Infant , Tooth Eruption , United States
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