Article ID: CBB000774435

The History of Gold Therapy for Tuberculosis (2004)

unapi

This is a historical study of the popularization of a medical therapy contrary to pertinent experimental findings. Presumably this circumstance reflects the desperation about tuberculosis: highly prevalent, highly fatal, and lacking any etiologically directed therapy. Gold compounds were introduced, based initially on the reputation of Robert Koch, who had found gold cyanide effective against M. tuberculosis in cultures, but not in experimentally infected animals. Treatment of pulmonary tuberculosis with these compounds was popularized, particularly by Danish physicians, in the mid-1920s, despite consistently negative experimental results, based on Paul Ehrlich's theories of antimicrobial drug effects. Difficulties in the design of interpretable clinical studies were soon recognized but also generally ignored, thus permitting data to be interpreted as favorable to antituberculous gold therapy. Eventually toxicity was considered to outweigh the alleged therapeutic benefit of all gold compounds. This resulted in their discard shortly before the introduction of streptomycin therapy.

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Authors & Contributors
Bakker, Nelleke
Michelle Slaughter
Karin Larkin
Venkat, Bharat Jayram
Jorgenson, Mica
Nicoletta Piazza
Journals
Medical History
Nuova Rivista di Storia della Medicina
Historical Archaeology
Technology and Culture
Studium: Tijdschrift voor Wetenschaps- en Universiteitgeschiedenis
Social History
Publishers
Self-published by the author
University of Leeds (United Kingdom
University Press of Colorado
Rio de Janeiro, Editora Fiocruz
Oxford University Press
McGill-Queen's University Press
Concepts
Tuberculosis
Medicine
Disease and diseases
Therapeutic practice; therapy; treatment
Public health
Sanatoriums
People
Wilde, Robert Willis
Spivak, Charles D.
Ravetllat Estech, Joaquim
Finsen, Niels Ryberg
Time Periods
20th century, early
19th century
20th century
20th century, late
18th century
17th century
Places
United States
Netherlands
Great Britain
Toronto (Ontario)
Iowa (U.S.)
Catalonia (Spain)
Institutions
Catholic University of Ireland (Dublin)
Royal Belfast Academical Institution
National Health Service (Great Britain)
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