| Literature DB >> 24453499 |
Josef Finsterer1, John Hayman2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Charles Darwin (CD), "father of modern biology," suffered from multisystem illness from early adulthood. The most disabling manifestation was cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS). This study aims at finding the possible cause of CVS in CD.Entities:
Keywords: cyclic vomiting; fatigue; hyperemesis; metabolic disease; mitochondrial disorder; multisystem disorder; respiratory chain
Year: 2014 PMID: 24453499 PMCID: PMC3892961 DOI: 10.2147/IJGM.S54846
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Gen Med ISSN: 1178-7074
Figure 1Family tree of Charles Darwin’s (CD) relatives.
Notes: First Generation: Susan Islam, who died relatively young (55 years), had three children. John, who died suddenly at age 42 years; Mary, who died in infancy; and Sarah, the mother of Susannah and grandmother of CD, who developed chronic illness.
Second Generation: John Wedgwood died suddenly, aged 42 years, “stricken with a severe illness.” He was seen by Dr Erasmus Darwin but “nothing could be done.” A sudden, severe illness, causing death after a week or so would be consistent with acute pancreatitis and peritonitis. Sarah (Sally) Wedgwood, wife of Josiah (Josiah I) Wedgwood, mother of Susannah and grandmother of CD, was healthy and active when young, but she developed chronic illness with severe arthritis and “rheumatism.” Some of her symptoms are those of the condition known today as fibromyalgia. In addition to her eight children, all of whom had evidence of hereditary disease, she had serious illness after a miscarriage. This illness was diagnosed by Dr Erasmus Darwin as “inflammation of the liver,” most likely an acute fatty liver. Mary Wedgwood died in 1736, the year of her baptism. British Genealogy108 states that she had died in the year of her birth. The widowed Richard Wedgwood is reported as having two children only.
Third Generation: Susannah (Sukey, Susan) Darwin, CD’s mother, had a history of vomiting and boils as a child and later had “difficulties” with pregnancies, which was probably hyperemesis. Famously “never quite well and never very ill” and “everyone seems young but me.” She had a history of motion sickness, and died with sudden, severe abdominal illness and probable acute hemorrhagic peritonitis, an illness similar to that of her maternal uncle John. John suffered from (essential?) tremor all his life. Essential tremor may occur in association with dysautonomia; both CD and his maternal uncle, Tom, had evidence of dysautonomia. Richard died in infancy with an “acute abdominal complaint” suggesting acute pancreatitis. Josiah II, developed parkinson’s disease in later life. Tom, suffered headaches and abdominal pains even as a student. He also had periods of lethargy, periodic vomiting, suffered severe seasickness, had heat and cold intolerance, became addicted to opium, and died by opium over-dosage at the age of 34 years. Catherine “Kitty” described as “somewhat masculine” and the least attractive of the adult sisters, developed an abdominal tumor that reached an immense size. Her masculine appearance suggests that she may have had polycystic ovaries or the Stein–Leventhal syndrome, the most common cause of such endocrine effects in females. patients with this syndrome may develop cystic ovarian tumors that, if untreated, may become very large. Sarah had no history of illness, but in the one portrait of the family she is depicted as having ocular hypertelorism. She never married, but she was apparently attractive and declined several proposals of marriage. Mary Anne was of short stature and had physical and intellectual disabilities. She suffered headaches, fits, periods of paralysis and blindness, and she progressively declined until death at the age of 8 years.
Fourth Generation: Marianne Parker, CD’s eldest sister, married Dr Henry Parker in 1824. Even before her marriage she had a reputation for irritability: “… of course you know how peevish Maryane (Marianne) is when she is unwell.” The Parkers had five children, four boys and a girl. There is no record of living female line descendants of any of these children. Marianne died in 1858, at the relatively young age of 60 years, 2 years after her husband. “We have just heard of my sisters Marianne parker’s death, – a blessed relief after long continued and latterly very severe suffering.” No detailed description of her sufferings has been found but it is possible she experienced symptoms that today would be called fibromyalgia. Caroline Wedgwood married her first cousin, Josiah III. They had four daughters; the first died in infancy. She had a prolonged period of mental illness that lasted for 12 years. Emma, Charles’ wife, writing to her daughter Henrietta, described her:
[…] looking so ill and depressed. Her health is so bad and she feels so desponding about her life and feels so utterly unable to reconcile herself to the loss of Margaret (a daughter who married) […]. She has grown so immensely large and feels so great a figure that she can hardly bear to go anywhere.90
Caroline became careless in her appearance and forgetful of even the simplest details of managing a household and a family. She recovered from this period of severe illness but was always described as being “eccentric” and “secretive.” In her old age she was severely handicapped with arthritis. Susan Darwin, the surrogate mother of the family after Susannah’s death, was the mistress of the household, the keeper of accounts, the schoolmistress who corrected Charles’ spelling, and as well, the generous aunt who brought up Marianne’s five children after her death in 1858. She never married or had any children of her own and died only a few months after her younger sister Catherine. Although she died at the relatively young age of 63 years, there is no record of her having had illness. Erasmus Alvey Darwin, CD’s elder brother was described as having “rheumatism” at an early age and being very pale and was regarded as a chronic invalid throughout his adult life. CD wrote: “All my sisters are well, except Mrs Parker, who is much out of health; and so is Erasmus at his poor average.” In later life he had episodic attacks of pain and nausea. CD noted of his brother: “He takes no wine or smoke, but sticks to his opium with many groans.” Erasmus died in August 1881 at the age of 76 years. Catherine Langton married Charles Langton, a widower, in 1863 at the age of 53 years. Like her mother before her and two of her older sisters, Catherine was never “completely well,” and at the time of her marriage she was described as being “in poor health” and having a “depressive disposition.” When she died, CD wrote to Hooker: “Poor thing she suffers much.” She never had children.
Fifth Generation: Initial searches have found little record of Marianne Parker’s five children, four boys and one girl, particularly no history of illness. The four boys were pallbearers at their grandfather’s (Dr Robert Darwin’s) funeral, a funeral that CD was unable to attend due to illness. The one daughter, 17-year-old Mary Susan Parker, was described by CD: “who though dull is a nice girl.” She married Major Edward Mostyn-Owen and had two daughters and three sons. Maud Mostyn-Owen died at the age of 18 years, and there is no record of her having children. No record of Henrietta Susan Mostyn-Owen has been found. Sophie Wedgwood died in infancy. Sophy Wedgwood, Caroline’s eldest surviving daughter, never married and became a recluse after her mother died. Even before this, Emma, CD’s wife, noted: “poor Sophy strikes one anew every time one sees her as utterly dead and quite as much dead to mother and sisters as to outsiders.” she is recorded as becoming very miserly, serving guests at a dinner party with a single orange, secreting food in corners throughout her house, and searching rubbish bins for scraps that she considered of value. Margaret Wedgwood, Caroline’s second surviving daughter, married Arthur Vaughan Williams. there is no record of Margaret having illness, and she helped her sickly elder sister, Sophy, nurse their dying mother. Their younger son, Ralph Vaughan Williams (1872–1958), became a famous composer, and was assisted in his music work by his older sister Margaret Susan (Meggie). Meggie, although vivacious and talented early in life, developed marked cognitive decline and spent the last decade of her life in a vegetative state. The older son, Hervey Wedgwood, is known to have married but no other details have been found. Lucy, Caroline’s third surviving daughter, married Matthew James Harrison, and they had three sons and two daughters. Lucy migrated with her husband to Canada where she died. No record of illness in herself, her children, or her children’s children has been found.
Abbreviations: b, born; dsp, decessit sine prole (died without issue); k, killed; MELAS, mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes.
Benchmark data of Charles Darwin’s biography
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| February 12, 1809 | Birth |
| Boyhood | School in Shrewsbury |
| October 1825 | Start of medical studies in Edinburgh |
| Summer 1826 | Climbs Mt Snowdon without problems |
| January 1828 | Starts theology studies at Cambridge |
| December 1831 | Start of the expedition with the “Beagle” |
| January 1832 | Praia, Cape Verde islands |
| February 1832 | Salvador de Bahia, Brasil |
| December 1832 | Fireland |
| April–November 1833 | Excursions to Uruguay and Argentina |
| July 1834 | Valparaiso, Chile |
| September 1835 | Galapagos islands |
| November 1835 | Tahiti |
| January 1836 | Sidney |
| May 1836 | Kapstadt |
| October 1836 | Return from the 5-year expedition |
| March 1837 | Residence in London |
| January 1839 | Marriage to Emma, his first cousin |
| November 1842 | Residence in Downe, London south |
| 1849 | Hydrotherapy in Malvern |
| April 1851 | Death of his favorite daughter Annie |
| November 1859 | Publication of “ |
| July 1858 | Presentation of the theory of evolution at the Linnean society |
| June 1860 | Session of the “British Assc for the Advancement of Science” |
| January 1868 | Publication of his book “ |
| 1871 | Publication of his book “ |
| 1872 | Publication of his book “ |
| April 19, 1882, 4 pm | Death |
Onset of Charles Darwin’s clinical manifestations, including those suggestive of mitochondrial disorder
| Symptom | Onset | Typical MID feature | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clear onset | |||
| Dyslexia | Boyhood | Yes | |
| Scarlet fever | 9 years | No | |
| Flatulence | Boyhood | Yes | |
| Painful lips, eczema | 19 years | No | |
| Periodic nausea, vomiting | 20 years | Yes | |
| Fatigue, lethargy | 20 years | Yes | |
| Abnormal seasickness | 22 years | Yes | |
| Palpitations | 22 years | Yes | |
| Faintness, sinking feeling | 23 years | Yes | |
| Exercise intolerance | 23 years | Yes | |
| Headache | 23 years | Yes | |
| Panic attacks, fear | 29 years | No | |
| Overtiredness | 30 years | Yes | |
| Exhaustion | 30 years | Yes | |
| Eructation, belching | 31 years | Yes | |
| Muscle weakness | 33 years | Yes | |
| Fatigue | 43 years | Yes | |
| Prostration | 49 years | Yes | |
| Loss of memory | 54 years | Yes | |
| Myalgia | 55 years | Yes | |
| Atrial fibrillation | 63 years | Yes | |
| Unclear onset | |||
| Finger numbness | Uk | Yes | |
| Dental problems | Uk | No | |
| Tan skin (hyperpigmentation) | Uk | No | |
| Transient weakness | Uk | Yes | |
| Bloating, abdominal pain | Uk | No | |
| Dizziness, whizzing, swimming head | Uk | Yes | |
| Muscle twitching | Uk | Yes | |
| Sweating, temperature sensitivity | Uk | Yes | |
| Muscle weakness | Uk | Yes | |
| Visual disturbances | Uk | Yes | |
| Edema of face, arm, knee, leg | Uk | Yes | |
| Lumbago | Uk | No | |
| Speech arrest | Uk | Yes | |
| Depression | Uk | Yes | |
| Tight chest, dyspnea | Uk | Yes | |
| Recurrent boils | Uk | No | |
| Hematemesis | Uk | No | |
| Chest pain, death April 19, 1882 from myocardial infarction | 73 years | ||
Abbreviations: MID, mitochondrial disorder; Uk, unknown.
Differential diagnoses that have been proposed for Charles Darwin’s illness
| Causes | Reference |
|---|---|
| Psychiatric causes | |
| Reaction to birth trauma | |
| Psychiatric disease | |
| Neurosis | |
| Hypomania | |
| Depression | |
| Hypochondria | |
| Bereavement syndrome | |
| Panic disorder | |
| Anxiety disorder, agoraphobia | |
| Neurasthenia | |
| Nervous indigestion | |
| Somatization disorder | |
| Obsessive compulsive disorder | |
| Repressed hatred towards father | |
| Device for father-son bonding | |
| Repressed hostility towards his wife | |
| Unexpressed grief for loss of mother | |
| Repressed anxiety over evolution | |
| Conflict with religious beliefs | |
| Repressed homosexual attraction to Fitzroy R | |
| Malingering (shamming) | |
| Central nervous system disease | |
| Narcolepsy | |
| Ocular disease | |
| Chronic eye strain | |
| Otologic | |
| Meniere’s disease | |
| Heart disease | |
| Heart disease | |
| Atrial fibrillation | |
| Gastro-intestinal disorder | |
| Irritable bowel syndrome | |
| Celiac disease | |
| Helicobacter infection | |
| Crohn’s disease | |
| Peptic ulcer | |
| Biliary tract disease, chronic cholecystitis | |
| Chronic appendicitis | |
| Duodenal ulcer | |
| Diaphragmatic hernia | |
| Metabolic disease | |
| Mitochondrial disorder | |
| Intermittent porphyria | |
| Metabolic disease | |
| Gout | |
| Hyperinsulinism | |
| Infection | |
| Chagas disease | |
| Amoeba infection | |
| Brucellosis | |
| Chilean fever | |
| Typhoid fever | |
| Smoldering hepatitis | |
| Borreliosis | |
| Malaria | |
| Pyorrhoea with septicemia | |
| Helicobacter pylori infection | |
| Candida overload | |
| Intoxication | |
| Arsenic poisoning | |
| Bismuth | |
| Amyl nitrite | |
| Quinine | |
| Calomel (mercury) | |
| Morphium | |
| Exposure to preservative chemicals | |
| Allergy | |
| Multiple allergies | |
| Allergy | |
| Pigeon allergy | |
| Autoimmune | |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus | |
| Blood | |
| Pyroluria | |
| Others | |
| Lactose intolerance | |