Heroin

HEROIN A BRIEF HISTORY

The great advances in medical therapy in the past century have been due largely to the rapid development of chemistry and pharmacology. During this period innumerable compounds obtained in chemical laboratories, were tested for their pharmacological activity. Those proving satisfactory were then produced commercially.
The extent of public acceptance and usage of any one drug has usually been determined by the medical profession. The use of many of the new compounds was only of short duration; they were frequently replaced by other compounds found to be more effective, or which did not provoke inconvenient side reactions.
The case of "Heroin" (diacetylmorphine) is almost unique. Hailed as a wonder drug, it was received with enthusiasm by the medical profession. Inevitably, the deleterious effects of the drug were discovered. Although many doctors discontinued prescribing heroin and all warned against careless use of the drug, the market for it continued to flourish. A dangerous addiction-producing drug, it was not easy to curtail its usage.

HEROIN AS A WONDER DRUG

Although diacetylmorphine was not prescribed as a medicine much before 1900 its preparation had already been reported in 1874 by C. R. Wright at St. Mary's Hospital in London. The main purpose of his work was to determine the constitution of some natural and purified alkaloids. By boiling anhydrous morphine alkaloid for several hours with acetic anhydride he was able to isolate acetylated morphine derivatives. The general conception of the morphine molecule in those days was that it was represented by the double empirical formula which gave rise to the rather confusing nomenclature in his article. The extreme acetylated derivative which he obtained, he called " Tetra acetyl morphine." This compound corresponds to diacetylmorphine according to our present nomenclature. This "Tetra acetyl morphine" was sent to F. M. Pierce, Associate at Owens College, London, for biological assay. After having tested the compound in animal experiments he reported the following results to Wright. The effects were:1"... great prostration, fear, sleepiness speedily following the administration, the eyes being sensitive and pupils dilated, consider able salivation being produced in dogs, and slight tendency to vomiting in some cases, but no actual emesis. Respiration was at first quickened, but subsequently reduced, and the heart's action was diminished and rendered irregular. Marked want of coordinating power over the muscular movements and the loss of power in the pelvis and hind limbs, together with a diminution of temperature in the rectum of about 4°, were the most noticeable effects." From a medical point of view the interest in this new morphine derivative was not very high for the first twenty years. In 1890, a German scientist, W. Dankwortt, prepared diacetylmorphine by heating anhydrous morphine with excess acetylchloride. The result of his work is important, not from the pharmacological, but from the chemical point of view. Because of the nature of the compounds he was able to isolate, he concluded that the morphine molecule had a simple empirical formula rather than the double one.

TERMINOLOGY

In the last decade of the 19th century Dreser and other investigators studied the physiological effects of diacetylmorphine. The favourable reports of these investigators along with the growing interest in the drug shown by the medical profession of that time, led the Bayer Company in Eberfeld, Germany, to start production of the compound on a commercial scale (1898).

The new compound was marketed by Bayer under the name "Heroin." (The name is probably derived from "heroisch" which in German medical terminology means large, powerful, extreme, one with pronounced effect even in small doses.) Later this name became a synonym for the drug.

The new remedy received a spontaneous and widespread acceptance comparable to the acceptance of drugs like penicillin or cortisone in the past few years. The high frequency of tuberculosis and other respiratory diseases had created a great demand for an effective remedy and it was hoped that heroin would meet this need.

Prescribed for almost all illnesses in which codeine or morphine had been found, heroin was also considered to be effective in combating addiction to these two drugs. This enthusiasm for the new drug is best illustrated in the medical literature of the time. Though by no means exhaustive, these following excerpts are typical of the writings of the day.

In 1898, Strube reported on the results of studies at the Medical University Clinic of Berlin. Testing heroin on 50 patients afflicted with phthisis, he found it effective in relieving their cough and in producing sleep. Though Strube observed no adverse effects, he felt that further observations were necessary to determine whether continual use might be harmful or lead to chronic "heroinism".

50HOURS

Adipiscing egestas curabitur

8SPECIALISTS

Adipiscing egestas curabitur

HEROIN ABOUT PROJECT

At the request of Dreser, Floret experimented with the drug in the Poliklinik der Farbenfabriken (1898).[6] He found it valuable in the treatment of bronchitis, asthma and tuberculosis. For cases of dry bronchitis where codeine has been ineffective, Floret reported that heroin was unusually prompt and dependable. These were among the experiments that led to Dreser's[7] endorsement of heroin at the congress of German Naturalists and Physicians in 1898. Claiming that heroin was ten times as effective as codeine in the treatment of respiratory diseases, he estimated that it had only one-tenth of the toxic effects. H. Leo[8] in reporting the frequent success he had observed in administering the drug, gave a detailed case history of one of his patients. In 1896, the patient, then 71 years of age, developed a severe cough with expectoration and suffered from dyspnea. After being hospitalized in the summer of 1897, and again in the summer of 1898, the patient was finally sent to a sanatorium in November 1898. By this time his condition had become considerably worse. Respiration was rapid and difficult, fat and muscular tissue had deteriorated, the lungs were enlarged and heart action was poor. By February 1899, drugs no longer afforded the patient any relief and he was unable to sleep at night. Heroin was then prescribed. The description of the treatment follows: "February 4. The patient had been given the first dose the evening before. The night was still without sleep, but the cough was looser and effortless. Also the dyspnea was not so pronounced. After he had taken the drug he felt very comfortable and stated that he no longer felt sick. The action of the heart was somewhat more regular. The appetite was better. "February 5. The patient had obtained some sleep. The sensation of fear that was always with him was gone. The respiratory frequency in the morning was 23. The cough was without difficulty. "February 6. The patient slept soundly most of the night, in a reclining position. The respiratory frequency in the morning: 20. The action of the heart was regular. "The heroin was then withdrawn for eight days. The ailments he had suffered before gradually returned. Heroin was again administered and had the same beneficial action as before."

RELATED PROJECTS

Community quarter obviously boardroom could pin money. Call job what member needed. Power intersection of pretend finance keywords. Done didn't anyway closing pups performance.