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“Divine Stramonium”: The Rise and Fall of Smoking for Asthma
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 December 2011
Extract
On the evening of Saturday 31 August 1901, the celebrated French novelist Marcel Proust wrote to his mother with characteristic intimacy, recounting his struggle to quell a severe attack of asthma the previous day. Having suffered from periodic attacks of asthma since the age of nine, Proust was familiar with the range of contemporary treatments for the condition: over the years, he had been prescribed opium, caffeine, iodine, and morphine (which had once been injected by his father, Dr Adrien Proust), his nose had been cauterized numerous times, he had adopted a milk diet, and he had occasionally attempted to relieve both his asthma and his hay fever by visiting health resorts, such as Evian-les-Bains, on the shores of Lake Geneva. However, as his note to his mother suggests, Proust's favoured remedy involved the inhalation of smoke from anti-asthma cigarettes or powders:
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References
1George D Painter (ed.), Marcel Proust: letters to his mother, London, Rider, 1956, pp. 124–7.
2Matthew Hilton, Smoking in British popular culture 1800–2000, Manchester University Press, 2000, pp. 1–2. For a broad discussion of the early history of tobacco consumption, see also Jordan Goodman, Tobacco in history: the cultures of dependence, London, Routledge, 1993. For accounts of smoking opium and cannabis, particularly during the nineteenth century, see Virginia Berridge, Opium and the people: opiate use and drug control policy in nineteenth and early twentieth century England, London, Free Association Books, 1999; James H Mills, Cannabis Britannica: empire, trade, and prohibition, Oxford University Press, 2003; Louise Foxcroft, The making of addiction: the ‘use and abuse’ of opium in nineteenth-century Britain, Aldershot, Ashgate, 2007.
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5Ibid., p. 3.
6Berridge, op. cit., note 3 above, p. 12.
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15Ibid.
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17Ibid., p. 73.
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20Walker, op. cit., note 7 above; Goodman, op. cit., note 2 above.
21John Floyer, A treatise of the asthma, London, Richard Wilkin, 1698.
22Ibid., pp. 207, 226.
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27Bree, op. cit., note 12 above, pp. 375–83.
28Ibid., pp. 377–8. For a comparable discussion of the role of fumes and smoke in triggering asthma attacks, see Withers, op. cit., note 23 above.
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31Anon., ‘Communications relative to the Datura Stramonium, or thorn-apple: as a cure or relief of asthma’, Edinb. Med. Surg. J., 1812, 8: 364–7, at p. 365.
32Ibid., 367.
33Alexander Marcet, ‘On the medicinal properties of stramonium; with illustrative cases’, Medico-Chirurg. Trans., 1816, 7: 546–75.
34R T H Laennec, A treatise on the diseases of the chest and on mediate auscultation, 2nd ed., tr. John Forbes, London, T & G Underwood, 1827. The French first edition appeared as R T H Laennec, De l’auscultation médiate, Paris, J-A Brosson and J-S Chaudé, 1819.
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37Armand Trousseau, Lectures on clinical medicine, tr. P Victor Bazire, London, [1861], 1868.
38Henry Hyde Salter, On asthma: its pathology and treatment, London, John Churchill and Sons, 1860, pp. 161–204. See also idem, ‘Spasmodic asthma’, Lancet, 7 Jan. 1860, i: 12; idem, ‘On the treatment of the asthmatic paroxysm by full doses of alcohol’, Lancet, 14 Nov. 1863, ii: 558–9; idem, ‘On the treatment of asthma by belladonna’, Lancet, 30 Jan. 1869, ii: 152–3.
39Salter, On asthma, op. cit., note 38 above, p. 203. On the medical uses of cannabis in this period, see Mills, op. cit., note 2 above.
40Salter, On asthma, op. cit., note 38 above, pp. 198–201.
41See the discussion in Jackson, op. cit., note 13 above, ch. 2.
42Salter, On asthma, op. cit., note 38 above, p. 195.
43Thomas Pridham, ‘Observations on the treatment of asthma’, Br. Med. J., 17 Nov. 1860, ii: 896–8.
44Ibid.
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46Walker, op. cit., note 7 above; Salter, On asthma, op. cit., note 38 above, pp. 166–76.
47Walker, op. cit., note 7 above.
48Salter, On asthma, op. cit., note 38 above, p. 176.
49Berridge, op. cit., note 2 above; Foxcroft, op. cit., note 2 above; and Mills, op. cit., note 2 above.
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52Berridge, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 204.
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54Sanders, op. cit., note 8 above, p. 75.
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56For further examples of the range of medicated powders and cigarettes available, see Mark Sanders’ collection at http://inhalatorium.com; National Library of Medicine, Breath of life, Washington, 1998.
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59Céleste Albaret, Monsieur Proust, ed. Georges Belmont, London, Collins and Harvill Press, 1976, p. 63.
60Ibid., p. 62.
61Henry Hyde Salter, On asthma: its pathology and treatment, 2nd ed., London, John Churchill and Sons, 1868, p. 2.
62For a brief discussion of tobacco use in asthma during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, see H Silvette, P S Larson, and H B Haag, ‘Medical uses of tobacco, past and present’, Virginia Medical Monthly, 1958, 85: 472–84.
63William Osler, The principles and practice of medicine, 4th ed., New York, D Appleton, 1901, p. 632.
64Eric K Chu and Jeffrey M Drazen, ‘Asthma: one hundred years of treatment and onward’, Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., 2005, 171: 1202–8. Stramonium was also recommended for the treatment of asthmatic children during the inter-war years: L A Reynolds and E M Tansey (eds), Childhood asthma and beyond, Wellcome Witnesses to Twentieth Century Medicine, vol. 11, London, Wellcome Trust Centre for the History of Medicine at UCL, 2001.
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66For further discussion, see Mark Jackson, Allergy: the history of a modern malady, London, Reaktion Books, 2006, pp. 27–55.
67Berkart, op. cit., note 57 above, p. 97.
68Arthur Hurst, ‘An address on asthma’, Lancet, 28 May 1921, i: 1113–17, at p. 1117.
69Warren T Vaughan, Strange malady: the story of allergy, New York, Doubleday, Doran, 1941, pp. 179–80.
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76Jackson, op. cit., note 66 above, pp. 132–3.
77Sanders, op. cit., note 8 above; Anderson, op. cit., note 8 above.
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99Bethel, op. cit., note 97 above.
100Kenneth R Chapman, ‘Anticholinergic bronchodilators for adult obstructive airways disease’, Am. J. Med., supplement 4A, 1991, 91: 13–16.
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