Literature DB >> 11619497

The rise and fall of pink disease.

A Dally1.   

Abstract

This paper explores the social and medical history and context of pink disease (acrodynia), a serious disease of infants and young children that baffled the medical world during the first half of the twentieth century until it was shown to be caused by mercury poisoning. In the English-speaking world the commonest source of the mercury was teething powders, which were widely available and advertised with increasing sophistication. Efforts to control them (such as the BMJ's campaign against 'Secret Remedies') were as yet unsuccessful. The article discusses the social conditions that influenced the existence and recognition of pink disease, the delay in finding its cause, the way in which it was explained as a virus infection or nutritional deficiency and why it seldom occurred outside the teething period. It discusses both professional and lay attitudes to health and diseases during the early twentieth century and provides a model of how the disease developed in a specific social setting and how the medical profession attempted to deal with it within the limitations of contemporary professional thought. The resistance to the evidence of mercury poisoning is typical of resistance to new medical knowledge and declined only when the opponents and sceptics grew old and disappeared from the scene. Meanwhile, the cause having been identified and accepted, pink disease disappeared, but its consequences emerged much later, in an unexpected quarter, as a cause of male infertility.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 11619497     DOI: 10.1093/shm/10.2.291

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Soc Hist Med        ISSN: 0951-631X            Impact factor:   0.973


  7 in total

1.  The puzzle of pink disease.

Authors:  J Black
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  1999-09       Impact factor: 5.344

2.  Pink ladies: mercury poisoning in twin girls.

Authors:  Michael Weinstein; Stacey Bernstein
Journal:  CMAJ       Date:  2003-01-21       Impact factor: 8.262

3.  An old autopsy report sheds light on a "new" disease: infantile polyarteritis nodosa and kawasaki disease.

Authors:  Howard I Kushner; Carlos R Abramowsky
Journal:  Pediatr Cardiol       Date:  2010-01-07       Impact factor: 1.655

4.  The plausibility of a role for mercury in the etiology of autism: a cellular perspective.

Authors:  Matthew Garrecht; David W Austin
Journal:  Toxicol Environ Chem       Date:  2011-05-20       Impact factor: 1.437

5.  Biomedical communication and the reaction to the Queensland childhood lead poisoning cases elsewhere in the world.

Authors:  J C Burnham
Journal:  Med Hist       Date:  1999-04       Impact factor: 1.419

6.  Genetic variation associated with hypersensitivity to mercury.

Authors:  David William Austin; Briana Spolding; Shakuntla Gondalia; Kerrie Shandley; Enzo A Palombo; Simon Knowles; Ken Walder
Journal:  Toxicol Int       Date:  2014 Sep-Dec

Review 7.  Systematic Assessment of Research on Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) and Mercury Reveals Conflicts of Interest and the Need for Transparency in Autism Research.

Authors:  Janet K Kern; David A Geier; Richard C Deth; Lisa K Sykes; Brian S Hooker; James M Love; Geir Bjørklund; Carmen G Chaigneau; Boyd E Haley; Mark R Geier
Journal:  Sci Eng Ethics       Date:  2017-12       Impact factor: 3.525

  7 in total

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