| History
Humans
have always experimented with substances derived from
minerals, plants, and animal parts to treat pain, illness,
and restore health. In ancient Egypt, physicians prescribed
figs, dates, and castor oil as laxatives and used tannic
acid to treat burns. The early Chinese and Greek pharmacies
included opium, known for its pain-relieving qualities,
while Hindus used the cannabis and henbane plants as
anesthetics and the root of the plant Rauwolfia serpentina,
which contains reserpine, as a tranquilizer.
A school of pharmacy established in Arabia from 750
to 1258 AD discovered many substances effective against
illness, such as burned sponge (which contains iodine)
for the treatment of goiters-a noncancerous enlargement
of the thyroid gland, visible as a swelling at the front
of the neck. In Europe, the 15th century Swiss physician
and chemist Philippus Aureolus Paracelsus identified
the characteristics of numerous diseases such as syphilis,
a chronic infectious disease usually transmitted in
sexual intercourse, and used ingredients such as sulfur
and mercury compounds to counter the diseases.
During the 17th and 18th centuries, physicians treated
malaria, a disease transmitted by the bite of an infected
mosquito, with the bark of the cinchona tree (which
contains quinine). Heart failure was treated with the
leaves of the foxglove plant (which contains digitalis);
scurvy, a disease caused by vitamin C deficiency, was
treated with citrus fruit (which contains vitamin C);
and smallpox was prevented using inoculations of cells
infected with a similar viral disease known as cowpox.
The therapy developed for smallpox stimulated the body's
immune system, which defends against disease-causing
agents, to produce cowpox- and smallpox-specific antibodies.
In the 19th century scientists continued to discover
new drugs including ether, morphine, and a vaccine for
rabies, an infectious, often fatal, viral disease of
mammals that attacks the central nervous system and
is transmitted by the bite of infected animals. These
substances, however, were limited to those occurring
naturally in plants, minerals, and animals. A growing
understanding of chemistry soon changed the way drugs
were developed. Heroin and aspirin, two of the first
synthetic drugs created from other elements or compounds
using chemical reactions, were produced in the late
1800s. This development, combined with the establishment
of a new discipline called pharmacology, the study of
drugs and their actions on the body, signaled the birth
of the modern drug industry.
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