Traditional Muzzleloading Association
The Center of Camp => People of the Times => Topic started by: rollingb on February 09, 2019, 12:01:52 PM
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Rush's Thunderbolts
In the early 1800's Calomel (mercurous chloride) was believed to stimulate the liver and the gall bladder, although the opposite was true. Colocynth, or bitter apple, from India and Saharan Africa, was termed a "drastic" and "powerful" purge.
According to the United States Dispensatory of 1918, the compound extract of colocynth "combined with calomel, extract of jalap, and gamboge . . . forms a highly efficient and safe cathartic, especially useful in congestion of the portal circle and torpidity of the liver."
Jalapa
Ipomoea purga
Courtesy Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia
The only species with known medical value as a purgative is jalapa, so-named from the town of Jalapa in Mexico, 120 miles southeast of Oaxaca on the isthmus of Mexico, where it was first found in use by Indian people sometime in the 16th century. Three hundred years later it still fulfilled the role of an all-around tonic and cureall, which was no doubt why Clark administered it—along with some "Salts & Tarter emetic" for good measure—to the men who had become ill after eating their first meal of dried salmon and camas bread, which the Nez Perce Indians fed them upon their arrival at Weippe Prairie in late September of 1805.
Lewis bought only a half-pound of powdered jalap for his medicine chest, but it happens also to be one of the two active ingredients—the other being calomel (mercurous chloride)—that doubled the purgative effects of Dr. Rush's "Bilious Pills," of which Lewis carried a supply of 50 dozen.
A patient was said to be "bilious" when supposed poor flow of bile in the body caused a complex of symptoms including constipation, headache, and lassitude.)
Dr. Rush had expressly indicated to Lewis that when one of his men showed the "sign of an approaching disease . . . take one or two of the opening pills." Nicknamed "Rush's Thunderbolts," the pills were reputed to contain 10 grains of calomel and 10 to 15 grains of jalap, both potent laxatives. By opening up the bowels, Rush believed that the body would then expel the excess bile or other matter causing illness. (With active ingredients weighing at least 1295 mg, these would have been large pills indeed. A common aspirin tablet weighs 5 grains or ¼ the weight of the "thunderbolts.")
Calomel
The two active ingredients had widely different sources and histories. Calomel (mercurous chloride) had entered medical practice in the 1600s as a milder and more palatable mercury compound. The liquid metal mercury had been applied externally in different forms since ancient times to treat a variety of skin lesions. A confluence of factors led to its rise as an internal medicine: the appearance of syphilis in Europe and the increasing influence of alchemy and chemistry on medical theories. The Swiss physician Paracelsus (1493-1541) and his followers argued that some of the new chemicals coming out of laboratories could better treat the diseases of a new age with a "new world." The apparent success of mercury compounds against syphilis helped to spur the growing reputation of chemical medicines. Like almost all of the other fine chemicals in the medicine chests, the calomel came to the young United States from London suppliers.
By 1800, calomel was widely accepted for its general powers as an "alterative," i. e., medicine that altered the overall constitution of the body. In large doses, calomel acted quickly as a laxative; in small doses over time, it produced what we today would characterize as mercury poisoning–abundant salivation, sore gums, loosening of teeth, metallic halitosis, and discolored stool. At this level, the drug was obviously "working" and had the power, in theory, to eliminate syphilis from the body. Because of its dual activity, calomel was included in both Rush's Pills–eliminating excess bile through purging–and by itself in powder form, where it could be given in small doses over time to combat syphilis.
Jalap
Jalap came from the vegetable kingdom–the appropriately named plant Exogonium purga. The Edinburgh New Dispensatory, a book known well by Rush, calls jalap "a safe purgative, performing its office mildly; seldom occasioning nausea or gripes." It came to the attention of European physicians in the early 1600s. Two hundred years later, when Rush used it liberally, the exact source of the root was not yet determined. It would be Rush's student, John Redman Coxe, who in 1829 reported that jalap came from a Mexican plant. Jalap remained an official drug in the United States until 1965. Like calomel, powdered jalap was included in the medicine chest of the Corps as a separate drug.
Traveling down the Ohio on his way to St. Louis to start the expedition, Lewis came down with an attack of ague and dosed himself with Bilous Pills. He believed it helped. Both Lewis and Clark were free with their use of Rush's Pills, which is not too surprising since so many of the complaints they faced had gastro-intestinal sequelae. The uneven and impure food supply, the back and forth switching from foods without fiber to high fiber, among other factors, no doubt contributed to a significant amount of constipation. In addition, some fevers and other complaints were associated with theories of excess bile or blood in the body. A good purging helped with that problem! Fortunately, Lewis and Clark had chosen their men well. Hardy frontiersmen, they were able to survive both the severe conditions of the long journey and the strong medicines imported from around the globe!
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Most interesting! An excellent resource when reading the history of the Corps of Discovery. Thanks for posting it!
~Kees~