Literature DB >> 8991015

Narcosis and nightshade.

A J Carter1.   

Abstract

Although this year marks the 150th anniversary of the discovery of modern surgical anaesthesia, surgery itself has a much longer history. It is well known that extracts from the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum, were used to dull the pain of surgery during ancient times but less well known that extracts from plants with sedative powers often accompanied them, producing primitive anaesthesia. Most of these sedative plants were members of a large botanical family, the Solanaceae. This paper describes some of them and discusses the ways in which they were administered. It also explains why, during the middle ages, these primitive techniques went out of use but how none the less they provided Shakespeare with the inspiration for some of his greatest plays. When the active principal of the Solanaceae was identified as scopolamine, it came to play a part in 20th century anaesthesia. The combination of omnopon and scopolamine lives on as a premedication, and the presence of poppy heads and mandrake roots on the arms of today's Association of Anaesthetists serves to remind us of the speciality's links with its past.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 8991015      PMCID: PMC2359130          DOI: 10.1136/bmj.313.7072.1630

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMJ        ISSN: 0959-8138


  3 in total

1.  Dwale: an anaesthetic from old England.

Authors:  A J Carter
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  1999 Dec 18-25

2.  Myths and mandrakes.

Authors:  Anthony John Carter
Journal:  J R Soc Med       Date:  2003-03       Impact factor: 5.344

3.  Love and death in Wagner's Tristan und Isolde--an epic anticholinergic crisis.

Authors:  Gunther Weitz
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2003-12-20
  3 in total

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