Tag: drug

  • 10 Drugs That Changed the World

    10 Drugs That Changed the World

    Throughout the history of medicine, important pharmaceutical discoveries have changed the course of healthcare and the human experience. So chemotherapy drugs, penicillin, insulin, ether, chlorpromazine, thalidomide, contraception, idoxuridine, and azidothymidine are not just chemical molecules. They are symbols of the revolutionary forces that changed medicine and society. The history of these drugs is a story of technological progress, moral dilemmas, and social transformation, beginning with the development of anesthesia and ending with the eradication of infectious diseases.

    Ether

    V0018140 The first use of ether in dental surgery, 1846. Oil painting.Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images.images@wellcome.ac.uk.http://images.wellcome.ac.uk.The first use of ether in dental surgery, 1846. Oil painting by Ernest Board
    V0018140 The first use of ether in dental surgery, 1846. Oil painting.Credit: Wellcome Library, London

    Ether is a volatile liquid that can produce anesthesia when inhaled. Ether was first discovered in the 13th century by a Spanish chemist named Raymundus Lullus (Ramon Llull). However, its use as an anesthetic began in the mid-19th century. Crawford Long, a physician from Georgia in the USA, used it as a surgical anesthetic for the first time in 1842. He removed a tumor from the neck of a patient who was under the influence of ether. However, he did not publish his results until 1848.

    The first public demonstration of ether anesthesia was done by William Morton, a dentist from Boston, USA, in 1846 at the Massachusetts General Hospital.

    Aspirin

    Aspirin
    Bayer’s aspirin commercial.

    Aspirin is a drug that can relieve pain, inflammation, and fever. It is derived from salicylic acid, a compound found in the bark of willow trees and other plants. The use of salicylic acid as a medicine dates back to ancient times when people chewed willow bark or drank tea made from it to treat various ailments. In 1828, Johann Buchner, a German chemist, isolated salicin, a precursor of salicylic acid, from willow bark.

    In 1897, Felix Hoffmann, a German chemist working for Bayer, synthesized acetylsalicylic acid, a more stable and less irritating form of salicylic acid, and named it aspirin. Bayer patented the drug in 1899 and marketed it as a painkiller.

    Insulin

    Front page of the Toronto Daily Star, March 1922.
    Front page of the Toronto Daily Star, March 1922.

    Insulin is a hormone that regulates blood sugar levels. The pancreas, a gland located in the abdomen, is responsible for producing this hormone. In individuals with diabetes, insulin is either insufficient or ineffective, leading to elevated blood sugar levels and various complications. In 1889, German physiologists Oskar Minkowski and Joseph von Mering discovered that removing the pancreas from dogs caused them to develop diabetes. This suggested that the pancreas contained a substance that prevented diabetes.

    In 1921, three Canadian researchers, Frederick Banting, Charles Best, and James Collip, working at the University of Toronto, isolated insulin from the pancreas of dogs. They successfully lowered blood sugar levels by injecting insulin into diabetic dogs. In 1922, they achieved a successful treatment by administering insulin injections to a 14-year-old child with type 1 diabetes.

    Insulin became the first effective treatment for diabetes, saving millions of lives. Banting and the head of the Toronto laboratory, John Macleod, shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1923 for the discovery of insulin.

    Penicillin

    Penicillin
    A sample of penicillium mould, gifted by Alexander Fleming to a colleague at St Marys Hospital, London, 1935. Image: Science Museum.

    Penicillin is an antibiotic that can kill or inhibit the growth of certain bacteria. Penicillium is a type of mold that produces it. The discovery of penicillin is attributed to the Scottish bacteriologist Alexander Fleming, who worked at St. Mary’s Hospital in London.

    In 1928, Fleming discovered that mold had contaminated a Staphylococcus bacterial culture he had left on his workbench, preventing the bacteria around the mold from growing. He identified the mold as Penicillium and named the antibacterial substance it produced penicillin. However, he struggled to purify and mass-produce penicillin, and his discovery went largely unnoticed.

    In 1939, two biochemists from the University of Oxford, Howard Florey and Ernst Chain, revived Fleming’s work and developed a method to obtain and purify penicillin from mold cultures. They tested penicillin on mice and humans, demonstrating its effectiveness against various bacterial infections.

    During World War II, with the assistance of the U.S. and British governments and pharmaceutical companies, penicillin entered mass production and became a lifesaving drug for wounded soldiers and civilians. Fleming, Florey, and Chain shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1945 for the discovery and development of penicillin.

    Chemotherapy Drugs

    Chemotherapy drugs are medications that can kill or halt the growth of cancer cells, which are abnormal cells that divide uncontrollably and invade other tissues. The first chemotherapy drug, nitrogen mustard, is a chemical warfare agent that damages DNA and inhibits cell division.

    In 1942, pharmacologists Alfred Gilman and Louis Goodman from Yale University tested nitrogen mustard on mice with lymphoma, a cancer type affecting lymph nodes. They found that the drug reduced tumor size and prolonged the survival of the mice.

    In 1943, they treated a non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma patient with nitrogen mustard, achieving temporary remission. Nitrogen mustard became the prototype of alkylating agents, a class of chemotherapy drugs that interfere with DNA synthesis and function. Dr. Sidney Farber’s work in the 1940s laid the foundation for modern cancer chemotherapy.

    Later, new types of chemotherapy drugs were found or created. These include antimetabolites, which copy and damage the building blocks of DNA and RNA, vincristine and paclitaxel, which come from plants and stop cells from dividing, and cisplatin and carboplatin, which are made of platinum and stop DNA from replicating by creating cross-links in it.

    Chemotherapy drugs are often used in combination to enhance efficacy and reduce side effects.

    Chlorpromazine

    Chlorpromazine is a drug that can reduce the symptoms of psychosis, such as hallucinations, delusions, and agitation. It belongs to a class of drugs called antipsychotics or neuroleptics, which affect the activity of certain brain chemicals called neurotransmitters. Paul Charpentier, a chemist at the French pharmaceutical company Rhône-Poulenc, created chlorpromazine for the first time in 1950. It was originally designed as an antihistamine, a drug that blocks the effects of histamine, a substance that causes allergic reactions.

    In 1951, Henri Laborit, a French surgeon, tested chlorpromazine on surgical patients and found that it induced a state of calmness and indifference without causing a loss of consciousness. He suggested that the drug could be used to treat psychiatric disorders. In 1952, Jean Delay and Pierre Deniker, two psychiatrists at the Sainte-Anne Hospital in Paris, tried chlorpromazine on patients with schizophrenia, a severe mental disorder characterized by psychosis.

    They observed that the drug reduced the intensity and frequency of psychotic symptoms, such as delusions, hallucinations, and disorganized speech and behavior. Chlorpromazine became the first drug to treat schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders and opened a new era of psychopharmacology. Chlorpromazine also inspired the development of other antipsychotic drugs, such as haloperidol, clozapine, and risperidone.

    Thalidomide

    Thalidomide is a drug that can treat certain inflammatory and autoimmune diseases, such as leprosy and multiple myeloma, a type of blood cancer. It also has sedative and anti-nausea effects. However, taking thalidomide while pregnant is well known to lead to severe birth defects. Wilhelm Kunz, a chemist at the German pharmaceutical company Chemie Grünenthal, created the first synthetic version of thalidomide in 1953. It was marketed as a safe and effective sedative and antiemetic, especially for pregnant women suffering from morning sickness.

    However, in the late 1950s and early 1960s, thousands of babies were born with severe malformations, such as missing or shortened limbs, due to their mothers’ exposure to thalidomide during pregnancy. The drug was withdrawn from the market in 1961 after the link between thalidomide and birth defects was established by several researchers, including Frances Oldham Kelsey, a pharmacologist at the US Food and Drug Administration, who refused to approve thalidomide for sale in the US.

    Thalidomide became one of the biggest medical disasters in history and led to stricter regulations and ethical standards for drug testing and approval. In the 1990s, thalidomide was rediscovered as a treatment for leprosy and multiple myeloma after researchers found that it had immunomodulatory and anti-angiogenic properties, meaning that it could modulate the immune system and inhibit the formation of new blood vessels.

    Thalidomide was approved for these indications, under strict conditions and monitoring, in several countries, including the US. Thalidomide also served as a model for the development of other drugs with similar mechanisms of action, such as lenalidomide and pomalidomide.

    Birth Control

    Birth control is a term that refers to any method or device that can prevent pregnancy. Hormonal methods include birth control pills, patches, injections, implants, or intrauterine devices (IUDs), such as hormonal IUDs. Barrier methods include condoms, diaphragms, or cervical caps. Natural methods involve techniques like abstinence, withdrawal, or fertility awareness. Surgical options include vasectomy or tubal ligation.

    The history of birth control dates back to ancient times, when people used various herbs, plants, animal products, or physical methods to prevent pregnancy or induce abortion. Among the earliest documented forms of birth control are the use of vaginal suppositories by the ancient Egyptians, the use of the plant silphium by the ancient Greeks and Romans due to its contraceptive and abortifacient properties, and the practice of coitus interruptus or withdrawal, in various cultures.

    The development of modern birth control pills began in the 1950s, with key contributions from scientists such as Carl Djerassi, Gregory Pincus, and John Rock. The first oral contraceptive, Enovid, was approved for contraceptive use in 1960.

    Idoxuridine

    Idoxuridine is a drug that can treat herpes simplex keratitis, an eye infection caused by a virus. It is a nucleoside analogue, a modified form of deoxyuridine, that can block the replication of viral DNA. It was first synthesized by William Prusoff, a chemist at Yale University, in 1958. He initially developed it as an anticancer drug but later found that it had antiviral activity against the herpes simplex virus. In 1962, the US Food and Drug Administration approved it as the first antiviral agent.

    Azidothymidine

    Azidotimidin, also known as zidovudine or AZT, is a drug that can prevent and treat HIV/AIDS. It is also a nucleoside analogue, a modified form of thymidine, that can inhibit the enzyme reverse transcriptase that HIV uses to make DNA. Jerome Horwitz, a chemist at Wayne State University, created the first version of it in 1964. He intended it as a cancer therapy, but it proved ineffective and was shelved. In the 1980s, it was included in a screening program by the National Cancer Institute to identify drugs to treat HIV/AIDS. It showed promising results in laboratory and clinical trials, and it became the first drug to gain approval from the US Food and Drug Administration for treating AIDS in 1987.

  • The Drug Addiction of Hitler

    The Drug Addiction of Hitler

    Hitler’s personal physician was waiting for him when he awoke in the wee hours of the morning. Hitler rolled up the sleeve of his pajamas and moaned, “Doctor, I’m very delighted when you arrive in the morning.” He had, as usual, stayed up all night and only fallen into a narcotic slumber early in the morning after taking barbiturates.

    The doctor administered the daily “vitamin” cocktail through injection. Its energizing effects were felt right away. Adolf Hitler was grateful for it. Since the conflict was still raging outside, crucial choices had to be taken.

    Hitler believed his personal physician, Berlin urologist Dr. Theodor Morell, had supernatural abilities. Hitler’s secretary, Traudl Junge, said thereafter that Hitler had been “downright hooked on Morell,” and Hitler himself believed the drug had saved his life several times.

    To the extent of becoming hooked, like a fixer who awaits his dealer’s daily arrival.

    Vitamin cocktail, or so they said

    At the very least, there were valid reasons to dispute Morell’s claim that the “Vitamultin A” ampoules he gave Hitler every morning contained nothing but vitamins. Crystal meth, or pervitin, was added to the supposedly vitamin-rich concoction, lending further credence to the claim.

    It was discovered in the 1979 research “Medical Casebook of Adolf Hitler” by U.S. psychiatrist Professor Leonhard Heston of the University of Minnesota and his nursing wife Renate Heston that vitamins alone did not work as energy boosters. Hitler’s Germany had only Pervitin, a mild stimulant, at its disposal.

    Theodor Morell and Hitler.
    Theodor Morell and Hitler.

    The Hestons concluded through interviews with eyewitnesses, reviews of medical literature, and analysis of Morell’s legacy that Hitler was likely prescribed a combination of vitamins, pervitin, and caffeine by his personal physician to augment the effects of methamphetamine.

    General Building Inspector Albert Speer, a close friend of Hitler’s who passed away in 1981, found the Hestons’ research to be “the first scientific medical examination of Hitler’s medical history,” thus the argument must have some merit.

    Chocolate for housewives

    Japanese scientist Nagai Nagayoshi first synthesized methamphetamine in liquid form in 1893. Research on a private method of making the psychoactive compound started in 1934 in Germany, and Temmler-Werke GmbH was granted a patent for it in 1937.

    It wasn’t until a year later, under the brand name Pervitin, that the medication finally made its way into pharmacies, and at first, it was completely free. “Housewife’s chocolate,” or chocolate mixed with Pervitin, was a huge hit. The firm advertised it as “Pervitin makes housewives happy.”

    The stimulant’s euphoric and disinhibiting effects, together with its ability to boost focus and performance while simultaneously dulling the sensations of pain, fear, hunger, and thirst, quickly piqued the attention of the Wehrmacht.

    Soldiers are pepped up with “Panzerschokolade”

    Millions of doses of Pervitin were distributed, especially during the “Blitzkrieg” attacks on Poland and France in 1939 and 1940. “Tank chocolate” (Panzerschokolade), “Stuka tablets” (Stuka-Tabletten), “Pilot’s marzipan” (Flieger-Marzipan), and “Hermann Göring pills” (Hermann Göring-Pillen) were some of the street names that the armed forces used to refer to the substance.

    Hitler saluting sieg heil.
    Hitler saluting sieg heil.

    Between April and June of 1940, the Wehrmacht received 35 million tablets of methamphetamine, which they purchased from both Temmler-Werke (who had the rights to Pervitin until 2015) and Knoll AG (which was situated in Ingelheim and had released their own formulation, Isophan).

    Every single German soldier, from infantrymen to fighter pilots, carried about a supply of “Wachhaltemittel” (as the company named it). Substance dependence developed in several of them.

    A future Nobel Prize winner puts in a request for Pervitin

    On November 9, 1939, a young soldier wrote to his “dear parents and siblings,” explaining that “the service is tight and you must understand if subsequently I write to you only every two to four days.” “Today I write mainly for Pervitin.”

    May 20, 1940: “Perhaps you could obtain me some more Pervitin for my supply,” a 22-year-old Polish soldier from occupied France wrote. This time, he wrote on July 19, 1940, “Send me some more Pervitin soon, if possible.”

    The young private went on to win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1972, having become an author. Heinrich Böll was his name.

    Doctors on the front lines detected a pattern of widespread drug use. Reich Health Leader Leonardo Conti told the National Socialist German Medical Association in Berlin on March 19, 1940: “Whoever wants to eliminate fatigue with Pervitin can be sure that the collapse of his efficiency must come one day.”

    The message he was trying to send was not yet heard. Only after a sex scandal broke did the Ministry of the Interior feel compelled to place Pervitin and other methamphetamine preparations under the Opium Act on July 1, 1941, effectively banning them. A drug distributor in Berlin unlawfully obtained significant amounts of Pervitin and distributed it not just to pharmacies but also to a brothel.

    What Hitler now faces

    Hitler and his physician had a lot of trouble with the new legislation. While it’s true that Hitler had immunity from prosecution, the control authorities now had a direct line of sight to every pill of methamphetamine being distributed.

    Hitler’s personal doctor, Morell, now had his “Vitamultin” produced in his own Hamma factory to prevent the news of Hitler’s drug addiction from spreading.

    Gold-wrapped pills were readily available to Hitler at all times. There were reports of his consuming up to 12 of them daily. For the most part, but especially in times of crisis. Indeed, right up to the moment of his death.

    The Hestons believe that by early 1942 at the latest, Hitler was now receiving the stimulant through intravenous injection in addition to oral medication. As a result, Hitler’s personal physician had to make a daily trip to the Reich Chancellery.

    Known as the “Reich Master of Injections”

    The overweight celebrity doctor Theodor Morell was not well-liked by Hitler’s inner circle. Morell was referred to as the “Reich Master of Injections” by Luftwaffe leader Hermann Göring (who was himself addicted to morphine) and the “unsavory, obese crank” by Colonel General Heinz Guderian.

    Eva Braun, Hitler’s wife, complained to her partner that the doctor Morell was unclean. Hitler told her that Morell was not there to be touched but rather to maintain his health.

    By his own admission, Hitler made a promise to his “beloved doctor” in November 1944: “If we both come through the war happy, then you shall see how much I will pay you.”

    There, Adolf Hitler had a methamphetamine dependency. Many of his men, including a future Nobel laureate, used “Hitler Speed” to get psyched up before heading into war.

    Bibliography

    1. Ohler, Norman (2017) Blitzed: Drugs in the Third Reich. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. ISBN 978-1-328-66379-5
    2. The Medical Casebook of Adolf Hitler: Final Diagnoses and World War II – Dr Leonard L Heston, M.D. – Google Books
    3. Morell, Theodor; Irving, David (1983). The Secret Diaries of Hitler’s Doctor. New York: Macmillan. ISBN 978-0025582507.