Patent Medicines in the Age Before Scientific Pharmaceuticals

My Wife’s Grandfather worked as a chemist for The Tilden Company in Upstate New York during the early 1900s. As a result we came into possession of his “Recipe Book” for the plethora of nostrums and remedies he helped create. Some of the ingredients are still sold today under various brand names. Some are humorous, others are forgotten, while still others are downright dangerous. The following installments are my exploration of this unique window into the medical past. [Note: We donated the actual book to the historical section of the National Library of Medicine.]

The Tilden Company (circa 1930) source: NLHS

The book is mostly a unordered compilation of the labels that appeared on the various products they sold. There are a limited number of handwritten notes as well. Here is the full first page.

The words “Poison”, “Opium” and “Strychnine” sort of jump off the page. Let’s look a bit closer a the bottom/center item.

Good for What Ails You

Note the alcohol component of 12-17%. This would presumably “fortify” the patient. Alcohol was a common primary ingredient or base for many daily tonics. I wonder why?

Let’s start with Maltopepsine. This appears to be a Tilden brand concoction of digestive enzymes and acids. A search yielded nothing current about it, but plenty of very old medical journals mention it. Here is a full page ad from the 1895 Journal of Materia Medica.

source:google books

The rationalization for it being a “very perfect substitute” for missing (?) body fluids and relying on “the indubitable testimony” of a few “reliable” physicians is quaint but hardly evidence-based as they claim.

Moving on to the other ingredients, supplemental Iron (in alcohol of course!) may still be used as a tonic in some quarters. No big surprise there but it does have GI effects, mostly constipation.

Quinine (of gin & tonic fame) is next. During my early career it was given to patients with leg cramps. Apparently it helped because there was a hue and cry when it was taken off the market in the 2000s because it’s also known to cause bleeding and arrhythmias. It is still used to prevent and even treat malaria.

Finally there’s Strychnine!! Extracted from the plant Strychnos nux-vomica it is a central nervous stimulant, anti-emetic, and at higher doses a deadly poison. According to the ad the elixir was used by pregnant women and infants. Yikes!

Most of these patent medicines had multiple active ingredients (the “shotgun approach“) and were used to treat broad groups of symptoms and/or diseases. From the physician’s standpoint this made diagnosis and therapeutic decisions rather simple.

“Cerebral Sedative”

Now let’s consider the two labels marked “Poison” near the top. I’ll note here that these are the only oral medication labels in the collection thus marked.

Of course we start off with Alcohol 20%. Add a little Opium resin and you have a Tincture (one or more substances dissolved in alcohol). This is better known as Laudanum of novel and movie fame. The “40 M” may refer to molar concentration (?), but I can’t pin this down.

Chloral Hydrate is a potent sedative that was in common use until the past few decades. It may be the original date rape drug referred to as “slipping someone a Mickey” (a frequent plot element in old movies). It was commonly used to treat psychiatric patients and children. It is no longer available in the US.

Potassium Bromide is a sedative and anticonvulsant that is no longer used in human medicine. Gelsemium is a native plant containing alkaloids related to strychnine.

Units of Measure

The labels make reference to units of measure that are mostly gone, and in some cases obscure:

  • M – molar concentration??
  • m – ?? short for minim?
  • grs (grain) – 1/7000th of a pound (this is where we get the odd size of a standard aspirin tablet (5 grains = 325mg)
  • minim – 1/480th of a fluid ounce
  • dram – short for drachm, 60 grains or one eighth of an ounce, or 60 minims or one eighth of a fluid ounce

Haimased

Next we’ll consider the simpler concoction “Haimased” that was prescribed for high blood pressure. It has just two ingredients: Alcohol (no surprise there!) and Sodium Thiocyanate.

Here is a description (ad?) from an Ohio medical publication:

Lower blood pressure effectively…safely, with this time-tested Sodium Thiocyanate formula. The proved clinical record of Haimased for 27 years and more than 1,500,000 prescriptions shows this to be the therapy of choice over the newer, potentially more toxic Hexamethonium-veratrum-rauwolfia preparations.

Bulletin of the Mahoning County Medical Society (1962)

Sodium Thiocyanate was first used to treat hypertension around 1900. It was apparently effective and safe enough for the time. It is however unpredictable and potentially toxic and was taken off the market except as a treatment for cyanide poisoning.

End of Third Installment, More to Come!

Treatise on Panopainting

Panopainting (verb, noun) – Panoramic photographs captured in real-time with unpredictable, non-deterministic distortions due to movement of the camera (and sometimes the subject). The aesthetic value of these images depends on the camera’s “stitching” algorithm and the physical “brush stroke” performed by the photographer. A degree of “glitching” is expected and often leads to cubist or impressionistic effects. Each exposure is unique due to inevitable variation in subject and technique. [Gallery]

History

Panoramic works of art have been around since early man painted herds of animals on cave walls.

Lascaux Cave – Great Hall of the Bulls [source:pinterest]

Leonardo da Vinci painted his iconic Last Supper in a panoramic format that appeared to be an extension of the room.

Leonardo da Vinci – The Last Supper [source:wikipedia]

Large-scale painted panoramas (aka cycloramas) of major historic events were popular at the time of the Civil War.

Paul Philippoteaux – Gettysburg Cyclorama [source:fandom]

The earliest photographic multi-image panoramas date from around the same time.

1851 San Francisco by Martin Behrmanx [source:medium]

The same technique found its way into modern photo albums…

[source:Diana Pray]

Panographic film cameras were developed and ultimately became inexpensive and disposable.

With the digital age came specialized software that could stitch images together into a seamless whole.

Today panoramic photography is as easy as panning your phone!

Happy Discovery

For the first few years I took panoramas in the conventional way—sweeping the phone in a horizontal arc.

Then one day I faced a novel situation. I wanted to take a panoramic photo of colorful cloth on display in a cramped market. There was only six feet between booths. Using an arc would yield very distorted and unpleasing results, so I improvised. I kept the phone steady and walked parallel to the booth.

The resulting image was flat and undistorted (except the woman who moved as I passed).

Ecuador 2013

I refer to these images as “roll outs” because they remind me of the flattened images of pottery, etc. seen in journals. Link

Mythological Vase, Maya, Late Classic [source:mmoa]

The creative potential of this technique became clear one day when I had some time to experiment on the beach.

The interaction of the moving camera with the surf and my feet created interesting distortions and time lapse sequences. And thus panopainting was born!

Gallery

Here are examples of my best work so far. [Click on each image to see a high res version. More…]

Cellon Oak, Florida
St. Pete Triathlon

I especially like the sense of motion in the runners [detail], while the spectators on the left are totally unaffected!

Bayfield, Wisconsin
#MarchForOurLives Gainesville, Florida
Park City, Utah
St. Pete Beach
BWCA, Minnesota
Two Harbors, Minnesota

Guttenberg Idyl

I spent most of June on the river with my brother Mark. We had a great time and a visit from his son Austin. [Gallery]

There were lots of birds! To start we had this fellow right outside our front door for several mornings…

The Gray Catbird is related to Mockingbirds, and it shows!

The Turtles were on the march to lay their eggs…

There were several storms the first week, most with afternoon rainbows. Check out this HDR Panorama… [click to enlarge]

I went up to Pike’s Peak State Park for a walk in the woods. Very pleasant, few people, not many flowers, lots of ferns…


We had a family gathering for my Aunt Katherine’s 90th Birthday

Mark, Austin and I ventured over to Glen Haven, Wisconsin to partake of Taco Night and a friendly game of billiards…

A pair of Red-Winged Blackbirds had a nest in one of our shrubs. The young birds were up and out about ten days after hatching. I couldn’t get real close because the momma bird was very upset with me (and rightfully so!).

⇐ click to enlarge


Dickcissel

Yellow Warbler

American Redstart

I saw Indigo Buntings and Rose-Breasted Grosbeaks three or four times when I was cycling on the backroads. Other birds included…

Austin and I went over to the Motor Mill and it was unexpectedly open for tours! We went from the basement to the attic. It is a very cool building!

I now have a much better idea of how it worked. They think there was a wooden dam and a flume wall that brought the water into the basement (lower right below the grass) where it turned three vertical turbines (two for the grindstones and one for everything else). This Diagram gives some sense of the complexity inside.

After our tour we took a pleasant bike ride on the Pony Hollow Trail and ran into this Eastern Bluebird family…

It was a great day! Even the rain held off until we were off the trail.