Thursday, 16 October 2014

BBC Documentary: Pain, Pus and Poison - Part 1

Over the last 150 years or so, the story of the advancements of drugs, treatment, and techniques in medicine has developed at a great pace. Dr Michael Mosley recently presented a trilogy of documentaries for the BBC, telling tales of the beginnings of anaesthesia and the birth of the antibiotic era. In part one of the series, he focused on man's pursuit to free pain. It begins where you may not expect - the poppy. From this rather innocent-looking plant, a resin was extracted and given the name opium. Dissolved in alcohol, the medicine was called laudanum. Morphine, the drug we are familiar today with unprecedented properties in alleviating excruciating pain, was formerly discovered by 19th century pharmacist Friedrich Sertürner. Morphine works by blocking nerve endings associated with pain at the site of pain and in the brain. The direct blockage of these signals proves morphine very effective. Eventually isolating the active ingredients in raw opium, he had managed to obtain a substance that could now be quantified and measured for ease of administration. This fact is often underestimated about drugs - simply by being able to measure out a quantity of a substance offers a huge element of control and indeed safety. It was considered back then that medicines which originated from plant sources were alkaloids, containing the suffix -ine in their name. Hence we are familiar with morphine, whose former name was morphium. According to Dr Moseley, these alkaloids were considered 'our first real medicines'. Dr Walter Sneader, Former Head of Pharmacy at the University of Strathcylde says that the discovery of morphine was 'the single most important event that has ever occurred in drug discovery - far more important than the introduction of penicillin, in terms of advancing the science'. Sertürner then went on to isolate many more alkaloid chemicals, some of which include caffeine, nicotine and quinine. Another well known alkaloid that was discovered was cocaine. Ironically enough, at the point of introduction in industry this compound dissolved in alcohol was approved by the Pope himself. The famous neurologist Sigmund Freud went on to investigate more into the properties of cocaine.



Although these alkaloids were a start, these weren't considered potent enough to be effective in the operating theatre. Sir Humphrey Davy saw nitrous oxide as a potential drug for use in surgery, however surgeons still went on to attempt operations on people who were unfortunately, fully awake. It was only until William Morton and the introduction of ether as a gaseous anaesthetic agent, that anaesthesia started to advance rapidly. To read more on the subject of William Morton's discovery, visit my post, 'The History of Anaesthesia'.

After this remarkable discovery, chemists from all around the world began to experiment with various substances, coal tar notably being one of the 'more unlikely places'. Chemist and presenter Andrea Sella, mentions that using coal tar was able to open 'a whole new library of starting materials'. Some of the most iconic drugs in today's world were a product of this seemingly unpromising raw material, aspirin and heroin just to name a couple. In the 20th century, many more drugs with anaesthetic properties were developed. However it wasn't just anaesthetics; the world's first sleeping pill was discovered, chloral hydrate which became very popular. The barbiturates were another group of drugs that had the ability to put people to sleep. Sodium thiopental was one of the more notable ones, the 'truth drug' so given the name for it's use in interrogation, is featured in the documentary.

Now in the 21st century, we have made great strides in the development of even more effective and safer drugs for use in surgery, prescription, and treatment of diseases. It has come to a point where we can, with suitable starting materials such as simple molecules, develop any molecule we want to. This means we can develop any drug we want to. A surge in technological advances in the last few decades has supplemented our understanding of anaesthesia and how pain is managed.


Credit to the BBC for their medical documentary trilogy, 'Pain, Pus and Poison', broadcasted in September 2014.

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