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Warburg's tincture

Warburg's tincture was a pharmaceutical drug, now obsolete. It was invented in 1834 by Dr. Carl Warburg.

Warburg's tincture was well known in the Victorian era as a medicine for fevers, especially tropical fevers, including malaria. It was considered, by some, to be superior to quinine.

Warburg's Tincture was a secret, proprietary remedy. The formula was not published until 1875. Later, it was included in the first edition of Martindale: The Extra Pharmacopoeia. Warburg's Tincture included an array of ingredients, including quinine.[1][2][3]

Synonyms Edit

List of alternative names by which Warburg's Tincture was known or referred to:

  • 'Warburg Tincture' [4][5][6]
  • 'The Warburg Tincture' [2]
  • 'Warburg's Fever Tincture'
  • 'Warburg's Fever Tincture and Tonic Medicine'
  • 'Warburg Fever Tincture and Tonic Medicine'
  • 'Warburg's Vegetable Fever Tincture'
  • 'Dr Warburg's Vegetable Fever Drops' [7]
  • 'Warburg's Vegetable Fever Drops'
  • 'Dr Warburg's Tincture'
  • 'Dr Warburg's Fever Tincture'
  • 'Warburg Drops'
  • 'Warburg's Drops'
  • 'Warburg's Fever Drops'
  • 'Dr Warburg's Fever Drops' [8]
  • 'Dr Warburg's Drops'
  • 'Tinctura Warburgi' [8]
  • 'Tinctura Warburgii'
  • 'Tinctura antifebrilis Warburgi'
  • 'Tinctura antifebrilis Warburgii'
  • 'Tinctura Antiperiodica'
  • 'Antiperiodica Tincture'
  • 'Warburg' (informal)

Appearance and format Edit

As its name implies, Warburg's Tincture was originally available only in liquid form. It was deep brown to golden yellow in colour; its taste was bitter and not very palatable. It was sold in small bottles of unique design, containing about one ounce.[3] The label affixed to each bottle bore the registered trademark, which depicted an image of the bottle accompanied by a facsimile of Carl Warburg's signature.[9] By 1888 the drug was available in tablet form.[10]

History Edit

Warburg's Tincture was invented by Dr Carl Warburg in 1834, in British Guiana (now Guyana). It was introduced into Europe in 1839.[7][11] Warburg's Tincture received medical trials in British Guiana in the 1830s, and then elsewhere around the world in the 1840s and 1850s. In 1846, Warburg's Tincture was extensively trialled in Austria and, the following year, it was adopted as an official medicine by the Austrian Empire, by imperial order.[8]

Warburg's Tincture was sold as a secret, proprietary medicine for over forty years, and was marketed and manufactured by Carl Warburg for many decades. He wanted the British Government to procure the formula of Warburg's Tincture from him, but such an arrangement never came to fruition. Nevertheless, the British Government was a significant client, procuring Warburg's Tincture for military forces serving overseas in India and Ceylon (now Sri Lanka); in Africa, in Gold Coast (now Ghana), Gambia and Sierra Leone; in the West Indies; and in Cyprus, Corfu, Mauritius and China.[2][3] In 1867, in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom, Sir Robert Anstruther, 5th Baronet asked the Secretary of War why Warburg's Tincture was not being supplied in larger quantities to troops in India.[12]

Writing in 1870, Carl Warburg lamented that his eponymous drug was "comparatively unknown".[2] The formula was disclosed by him in November 1875 when it was published on his behalf in The Lancet and The Medical Times.[3][13] In 1855, it retailed at 6s/6d a bottle.[14]

Famous users Edit

Famous Victorians who are documented to have used Warburg's Tincture include:

Medicinal uses Edit

Medicinal claims Edit

Warburg's Tincture was promoted by its inventor, Dr Carl Warburg, as a medicine suitable for treating all types of fevers, but especially tropical fevers, including malaria and yellow fever; and that it could also be used as a tonic in debility and convalescence. He claimed that his eponymous tincture was superior to any other antipyretic, including quinine. "I assert that for perfect safety, for efficacy, rapidity of action, and for economy, my tincture has no rival, nor any approach to it". He also stated that quinine only "relieves", whereas Warburg's Tincture "cures". He advocated that Warburg's Tincture could be employed at all stages of fever, as well as a prophylactic.[2]

" [Warburg’s Tincture] is an unfailing remedy in all cases of Intermittent, Continued, Continued-Remittment, Nervous and Typhus Fevers; Cholera, Diarrhoea, and Dysentery; Scrofula in all its forms; Incipient Consumption, Chronic Bronchitic Cough, Want of Appetite, Delirium Tremens, Morbid Digestion, arising from excess in the use of spirituous drinks, Scurvy and every disease of a scorbutic character. "

Official advertisement, 1855[25]

19th century Edit

In the Victorian era Warburg's Tincture was principally employed in the treatment of tropical fevers, including malaria, yellow fever and typhus. It was therefore an antipyretic, and an antimalarial drug.[2][3][26]

20th century Edit

Warburg's Tincture was vaunted as being superior to quinine in the treatment of malaria by many in the Victorian era. Quinine remained the first-line antimalarial drug of choice until the 1940s, when other drugs replaced it. Until recently Chloroquine was the most widely used antimalarial drug.[citation needed] Warburg's Tincture was included in Burroughs Wellcome & Company's tabloid medicine cases of the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

"There is now no exact equivalent of Warburg's Tincture ....The most similar modern preparation is ammoniated tincture of quinine. This omits aloes and rhubarb, whose function was a laxative to 'purge' the patient's system, an approach to fever treatment now redundant. Ammoniated tincture of quinine last appeared in the British Pharmaceutical Codex of 1963, but still remains an official preparation that could be prepared if necessary....it was popular as an over the counter medicine for colds until c. 1980, but is now rarely used."[27]

Reputation and efficacy Edit

'Warburg's Tincture' was a well-known drug in the Victorian era.[10][28][29] It earned itself a well regarded international reputation in certain quarters of the medical profession, many attesting to its efficacy and value.[2][30][31]

One of the most notable and strongest advocates of Warburg's Tincture was Surgeon-General W. C. Maclean, C.B, (1811–1898), Professor of Military Medicine at the Army Medical School, at Chatham and later at the Royal Victoria Military Hospital, Netley, from 1860 until 1885.[32][33][34] Maclean contributed the chapters on malarial fevers and dysentery in A System of Medicine, edited by Sir John Russell Reynolds (the latter being "an eminent and highly influential physician in the Victorian era who held the Presidencies of the Royal College of Physicians of London, and of the British Medical Association"[35]). Maclean considered Warburg's Tincture to be the best drug for the treatment of malaria and, in his lectures and writings on tropical diseases, he strongly recommended its use.[3][36][37][38]

" I have treated remittent fevers of every degree of severity contracted in the jungles of the Deccan and the Mysore, at the base of the mountain ranges in India, on the Coromandel Coast, in the pestilential highlands of the northern division of the Madras Presidency, on the malarial rivers of China, and in men brought to [Royal Victoria Military Hospital, Netley] from the swamps of the Gold Coast, and I affirm that I have never seen quinine, when given alone, act in the characteristic of this tincture....I have never seen a single dose of [quinine] given alone, to the extent of nine grains and half, suffice to arrest an exacerbation of remittent fever, much less prevent its recurrence, while nothing is more common than to see the same quantity of the alkaloid in Warburg’s tincture bring about both results. "

Surgeon-General W. C. Maclean, Professor of Military Medicine at the Army Medical School, Netley - The Lancet, 1875[3]

In addition to Surgeon-General Maclean, Warburg's Tincture was highly praised by many other eminent medical professionals of the Victorian era, including:

Detractors, secret remedy Edit

As a consequence of Warburg's Tincture being sold as a secret, proprietary remedy, many in the medical profession, particularly in England, derided, distrusted and dismissed it as a 'patent medicine' or 'quack medicine', and disliked it and criticised Carl Warburg on grounds of professional ethics.[2][3]

Status, entries in pharmacopoeia, formulary and other pharmaceutical compendia Edit

  • Warburg's Tincture was adopted by the Austrian empire as an official medicine in 1847; it was added to the Austrian 'Materia Medica' under the name 'Tinctura Warburgi'.
  • Warburg's Tincture appeared in the first edition of Martindale: The Extra Pharmacopoeia (now known as Martindale: The complete drug reference) in 1883, and was included until the 19th edition of 1928.[41]
  • Warburg's Tincture was included in the National Formulary Section of The Dispensatory for the United States of America in the 20th edition in 1918, listed under the entry for 'Tinctura Antiperiodica'.[42]
  • The Pocket Formulary, and synopsis of the British & Foreign pharmacopoeias: comprising standard and approved formulae for the preparation and compounds employed in medical practice London, by Henry Beasley. Included in various editions, e.g. 1851 (fifth edition), 1856, 1877.
  • Jahresbericht der Pharmazie, 1910, Munich, Germany.
  • Warburg's Tincture is now obsolete as a medicinal drug. It last appeared in the Martindale: The Extra Pharmacopoeia in 1928.

Properties / formula Edit

The formula of Warburg's Tincture was disclosed by its inventor in November 1875 when it was published in The Lancet and The Medical Times on his behalf - see below.

Ingredients and directions for preparation

Take: 4 ounces each of Socotrine aloes, Rhubarb root (East India), Angelica seeds, and Confection Damocratric; 2 ounces each of Helenis root (Elecampane root), Saffron, Fennel seeds, and Prepared chalk; and 1 ounce each of Gentian root, Zedoary root, Cubelis (tailed pepper), Myrrh, Camphor, and boletus laricis (Polyporus officinalis, a fungus). Above ingredients to be digested with 500 ounces of proof spirit in a water-bath for 12 hours; then expressed and ten ounces of Disulphate of Quinine added; the mixture to be replaced in the water-bath till all quinine is dissolved. The liquor, when cool, is to be filtered, and is then fit for use.[3]

Warburg's Tincture therefore contained quinine in addition to various purgatives, aromatics and carminatives.

The ingredient Confection Damocratric is a complex preparation which has not been obtainable for over a century; it contained many different aromatic substances.[citation needed]

The prepared chalk was used to correct the otherwise extremely acrid taste of the tincture.

Dosage

A bottle of Warburg's Tincture contained about one ounce of liquid. The drug was to be administered in two equal doses, a few hours apart.

See also Edit

References and notes Edit

  1. ^ Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, 1913
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Warburg, Carl (1870, London), Warburg Tincture: Statement proving by numerous official documents its remarkable curative powers in fevers...
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i The Lancet, edition 1875-11-13, 'Professor Maclean, C.B., on the true composition and therapeutic value of Warburg's Tincture', pp. 716–718.
  4. ^ British Medical Journal, 1957-01-31
  5. ^ the dublin quarterly journal of medical science vol xlvii
  6. ^ The Lancet, 1851
  7. ^ a b Warburg, Carl (1839, London), Specific for fever, now first introduced into Europe, pamphlet
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i Medical Times, edition, 1851-1-4, pp. 700–702, letter from Carl Warburg
  9. ^ archives of joint stock companies, National Archives, Kew.
  10. ^ a b The British Medical Journal, edition 1888-12-01, p. 1232
  11. ^ a b The medico-chirurgical review and journal of medical science, Volume 34, p. 658, 1839
  12. ^ Hansard, 1867-5-28
  13. ^ Medical Times and Gazette, November 1875
  14. ^ official advertisement, 1855
  15. ^ Burton, Sir Richard Francis, and Cameron, Verney Lovett (1883) To the Gold Coast for gold; a personal narrative, pp. 231–232, 239.[1]
  16. ^ article Burton, Sir Richard Francis, 'Gold on the Gold Coast', Journal of the Society of the Arts, edition 1882-6-2.
  17. ^ The Times, edition 1878-08-28, letter from Burton, Sir Richard Francis.
  18. ^ Burton, Sir Richard Francis, The Lake Regions of Central Africa, pp. 388–389 [2]
  19. ^ The Life of Capt. Sir Richard F. Burton
  20. ^ The True Life of Capt. Sir Richard F. Burton, Georgiana M. Stisted, p. 395 [3]
  21. ^ The Life of Gordon, Vol. 1 (2009) by Boulger, D. C
  22. ^ Note by David Livingstone, 1860-11-28
  23. ^ British Medical Journal, edition 1861-06-29
  24. ^ a b letter from Rossetti to Frederic Shields, dated 1869-8-27 - The life and letters of Frederic Shields [4].
  25. ^ Official advertisement for Warburg's Tincture, 1855
  26. ^ The Medical Times – Pharmaceutical Number, December 1844, pp. 182–184.
  27. ^ correspondence from the Museum of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain to Roland Sparkes, December 1998.
  28. ^ The Chemist and Druggist, edition 1890-6-14, letter from Sir Sydney Holland
  29. ^ Dr Alexander Silver, minutes of meeting of Harveian Society, The British Medical Journal, edition 1868-02-29, p. 206
  30. ^ Cantlie, James, Some Tropical Diseases and the Remedies required for their Treatment and Phrophylxis, pp. 23–24, 1908, Royal Society of Medicine [5]
  31. ^ a b Dr William Henry Broadbent, article, The Practitioner, edition February 1877, pp.196–202.
  32. ^ obituary, The British Medical Journal, 1898
  33. ^ The British Medical Journal, 1899-07-29
  34. ^ article by JSG Blair, Army Medical Corps journal, 2005, pp.49–50
  35. ^ M.J. Eadi, article, 'The neurological legacy of John Russell Reynolds(1828–1896)'.[6]
  36. ^ 'Malarial Fevers' by Dr W. C. Maclean, A System of Medicine, 1866, edited by Sir John Russell Reynolds [7]
  37. ^ The Times, edition 1878-9-18, letter from Surgeon-General W.C. Maclean
  38. ^ The British Medical Journal, edition 1890-09-18, correspondence
  39. ^ advertisement, 1851
  40. ^ The Lancet, 1851-04-19
  41. ^ Martindale: The Extra Pharmacopoeia – various editions
  42. ^ United States Dispensatory 20th Edition, p. 1834, 1918, Joseph P. Remington et al.

Further reading Edit

  • Owen, William, "Warburg's Tincture in Indian Fevers", article, Dublin Journal of Medical Science, 1879. pp. 11–16.

Secondary/tertiary sources Edit

  • Wootton, A. (1910), Chronicles of Pharmacy, pp. 206–208.
  • Poser, Charles M.; Bruyn, G. W. (1999), An Illustrated History of Malaria, p. 87.
  • Sparkes, Roland - article, 'Dr Carl Warburg, his Belmont laboratory, and his famous fever drug', 2003/2009, [8][permanent dead link]

warburg, tincture, pharmaceutical, drug, obsolete, invented, 1834, carl, warburg, well, known, victorian, medicine, fevers, especially, tropical, fevers, including, malaria, considered, some, superior, quinine, warburg, tincture, secret, proprietary, remedy, f. Warburg s tincture was a pharmaceutical drug now obsolete It was invented in 1834 by Dr Carl Warburg Warburg s tincture was well known in the Victorian era as a medicine for fevers especially tropical fevers including malaria It was considered by some to be superior to quinine Warburg s Tincture was a secret proprietary remedy The formula was not published until 1875 Later it was included in the first edition of Martindale The Extra Pharmacopoeia Warburg s Tincture included an array of ingredients including quinine 1 2 3 Contents 1 Synonyms 2 Appearance and format 3 History 3 1 Famous users 4 Medicinal uses 4 1 Medicinal claims 4 2 19th century 4 3 20th century 5 Reputation and efficacy 5 1 Detractors secret remedy 6 Status entries in pharmacopoeia formulary and other pharmaceutical compendia 7 Properties formula 8 See also 9 References and notes 10 Further reading 10 1 Secondary tertiary sourcesSynonyms EditList of alternative names by which Warburg s Tincture was known or referred to Warburg Tincture 4 5 6 The Warburg Tincture 2 Warburg s Fever Tincture Warburg s Fever Tincture and Tonic Medicine Warburg Fever Tincture and Tonic Medicine Warburg s Vegetable Fever Tincture Dr Warburg s Vegetable Fever Drops 7 Warburg s Vegetable Fever Drops Dr Warburg s Tincture Dr Warburg s Fever Tincture Warburg Drops Warburg s Drops Warburg s Fever Drops Dr Warburg s Fever Drops 8 Dr Warburg s Drops Tinctura Warburgi 8 Tinctura Warburgii Tinctura antifebrilis Warburgi Tinctura antifebrilis Warburgii Tinctura Antiperiodica Antiperiodica Tincture Warburg informal Appearance and format EditAs its name implies Warburg s Tincture was originally available only in liquid form It was deep brown to golden yellow in colour its taste was bitter and not very palatable It was sold in small bottles of unique design containing about one ounce 3 The label affixed to each bottle bore the registered trademark which depicted an image of the bottle accompanied by a facsimile of Carl Warburg s signature 9 By 1888 the drug was available in tablet form 10 History EditWarburg s Tincture was invented by Dr Carl Warburg in 1834 in British Guiana now Guyana It was introduced into Europe in 1839 7 11 Warburg s Tincture received medical trials in British Guiana in the 1830s and then elsewhere around the world in the 1840s and 1850s In 1846 Warburg s Tincture was extensively trialled in Austria and the following year it was adopted as an official medicine by the Austrian Empire by imperial order 8 Warburg s Tincture was sold as a secret proprietary medicine for over forty years and was marketed and manufactured by Carl Warburg for many decades He wanted the British Government to procure the formula of Warburg s Tincture from him but such an arrangement never came to fruition Nevertheless the British Government was a significant client procuring Warburg s Tincture for military forces serving overseas in India and Ceylon now Sri Lanka in Africa in Gold Coast now Ghana Gambia and Sierra Leone in the West Indies and in Cyprus Corfu Mauritius and China 2 3 In 1867 in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom Sir Robert Anstruther 5th Baronet asked the Secretary of War why Warburg s Tincture was not being supplied in larger quantities to troops in India 12 Writing in 1870 Carl Warburg lamented that his eponymous drug was comparatively unknown 2 The formula was disclosed by him in November 1875 when it was published on his behalf in The Lancet and The Medical Times 3 13 In 1855 it retailed at 6s 6d a bottle 14 Famous users Edit Famous Victorians who are documented to have used Warburg s Tincture include Captain Sir Richard Francis Burton explorer and diplomat 15 16 17 18 19 20 General Charles George Gordon of Khartoum senior army officer and colonial administrator 21 Dr David Livingstone missionary and explorer 22 23 Dante Gabriel Rossetti Pre Raphaelite artist 24 Frederic Shields artist and illustrator 24 Medicinal uses EditMedicinal claims Edit Warburg s Tincture was promoted by its inventor Dr Carl Warburg as a medicine suitable for treating all types of fevers but especially tropical fevers including malaria and yellow fever and that it could also be used as a tonic in debility and convalescence He claimed that his eponymous tincture was superior to any other antipyretic including quinine I assert that for perfect safety for efficacy rapidity of action and for economy my tincture has no rival nor any approach to it He also stated that quinine only relieves whereas Warburg s Tincture cures He advocated that Warburg s Tincture could be employed at all stages of fever as well as a prophylactic 2 Warburg s Tincture is an unfailing remedy in all cases of Intermittent Continued Continued Remittment Nervous and Typhus Fevers Cholera Diarrhoea and Dysentery Scrofula in all its forms Incipient Consumption Chronic Bronchitic Cough Want of Appetite Delirium Tremens Morbid Digestion arising from excess in the use of spirituous drinks Scurvy and every disease of a scorbutic character Official advertisement 1855 25 dd 19th century Edit In the Victorian era Warburg s Tincture was principally employed in the treatment of tropical fevers including malaria yellow fever and typhus It was therefore an antipyretic and an antimalarial drug 2 3 26 20th century Edit Warburg s Tincture was vaunted as being superior to quinine in the treatment of malaria by many in the Victorian era Quinine remained the first line antimalarial drug of choice until the 1940s when other drugs replaced it Until recently Chloroquine was the most widely used antimalarial drug citation needed Warburg s Tincture was included in Burroughs Wellcome amp Company s tabloid medicine cases of the late 19th and early 20th centuries There is now no exact equivalent of Warburg s Tincture The most similar modern preparation is ammoniated tincture of quinine This omits aloes and rhubarb whose function was a laxative to purge the patient s system an approach to fever treatment now redundant Ammoniated tincture of quinine last appeared in the British Pharmaceutical Codex of 1963 but still remains an official preparation that could be prepared if necessary it was popular as an over the counter medicine for colds until c 1980 but is now rarely used 27 Reputation and efficacy Edit Warburg s Tincture was a well known drug in the Victorian era 10 28 29 It earned itself a well regarded international reputation in certain quarters of the medical profession many attesting to its efficacy and value 2 30 31 One of the most notable and strongest advocates of Warburg s Tincture was Surgeon General W C Maclean C B 1811 1898 Professor of Military Medicine at the Army Medical School at Chatham and later at the Royal Victoria Military Hospital Netley from 1860 until 1885 32 33 34 Maclean contributed the chapters on malarial fevers and dysentery in A System of Medicine edited by Sir John Russell Reynolds the latter being an eminent and highly influential physician in the Victorian era who held the Presidencies of the Royal College of Physicians of London and of the British Medical Association 35 Maclean considered Warburg s Tincture to be the best drug for the treatment of malaria and in his lectures and writings on tropical diseases he strongly recommended its use 3 36 37 38 I have treated remittent fevers of every degree of severity contracted in the jungles of the Deccan and the Mysore at the base of the mountain ranges in India on the Coromandel Coast in the pestilential highlands of the northern division of the Madras Presidency on the malarial rivers of China and in men brought to Royal Victoria Military Hospital Netley from the swamps of the Gold Coast and I affirm that I have never seen quinine when given alone act in the characteristic of this tincture I have never seen a single dose of quinine given alone to the extent of nine grains and half suffice to arrest an exacerbation of remittent fever much less prevent its recurrence while nothing is more common than to see the same quantity of the alkaloid in Warburg s tincture bring about both results Surgeon General W C Maclean Professor of Military Medicine at the Army Medical School Netley The Lancet 1875 3 dd In addition to Surgeon General Maclean Warburg s Tincture was highly praised by many other eminent medical professionals of the Victorian era including Sir James Johnson M D physician extraordinary to King William IV 2 11 Sir James Clark M D royal physician to Queen Victoria and Prince Albert 2 Sir William Henry Broadbent 1st Baronet M D St Mary s Hospital London and London Fever Hospital Physician in Ordinary to Queen Victoria and King Edward VII Warburg s Tincture has long held a high reputation in India as a remedy of undoubted and indeed unequalled power in the treatment of the malignant malarial fevers of that country and of cholera Testimony to its efficacy has come from men whose capability and opportunities of forming an opinion could not be disputed 1877 31 Dr Thomas Southwood Smith London Fever Hospital and recognised expert on the treatment of fevers 2 Dr Benjamin Guy Babington Guy s Hospital I consider it the most potent anti intermittent medicine I have ever employed 1851 2 8 Dr F C Skey St Bartholomew s Hospital and Professor of Surgery to Royal College of Surgeons of England 39 Sir James Gibson M D K C B Director General Army Medical Department Whitehall London 2 8 Sir Andrew Halliday M D Deputy Inspector General of Military Hospitals 2 8 40 Dr Macgrath Director General Army Medical Department Madras India 2 Dr Joseph Johann Knolz head of the civilian medical department of the Austrian Empire 2 Dr Rieken Belgium physician to Leopold I of Belgium 2 8 Count E Bylandt M D physician to William II of the Netherlands 2 8 Dr Salgues Dijon France 2 8 Dr Uyttrhoven Brussels Belgium 2 Detractors secret remedy Edit As a consequence of Warburg s Tincture being sold as a secret proprietary remedy many in the medical profession particularly in England derided distrusted and dismissed it as a patent medicine or quack medicine and disliked it and criticised Carl Warburg on grounds of professional ethics 2 3 Status entries in pharmacopoeia formulary and other pharmaceutical compendia EditWarburg s Tincture was adopted by the Austrian empire as an official medicine in 1847 it was added to the Austrian Materia Medica under the name Tinctura Warburgi Warburg s Tincture appeared in the first edition of Martindale The Extra Pharmacopoeia now known as Martindale The complete drug reference in 1883 and was included until the 19th edition of 1928 41 Warburg s Tincture was included in the National Formulary Section of The Dispensatory for the United States of America in the 20th edition in 1918 listed under the entry for Tinctura Antiperiodica 42 The Pocket Formulary and synopsis of the British amp Foreign pharmacopoeias comprising standard and approved formulae for the preparation and compounds employed in medical practice London by Henry Beasley Included in various editions e g 1851 fifth edition 1856 1877 Jahresbericht der Pharmazie 1910 Munich Germany Warburg s Tincture is now obsolete as a medicinal drug It last appeared in the Martindale The Extra Pharmacopoeia in 1928 Properties formula EditThe formula of Warburg s Tincture was disclosed by its inventor in November 1875 when it was published in The Lancet and The Medical Times on his behalf see below Ingredients and directions for preparation Take 4 ounces each of Socotrine aloes Rhubarb root East India Angelica seeds and Confection Damocratric 2 ounces each of Helenis root Elecampane root Saffron Fennel seeds and Prepared chalk and 1 ounce each of Gentian root Zedoary root Cubelis tailed pepper Myrrh Camphor and boletus laricis Polyporus officinalis a fungus Above ingredients to be digested with 500 ounces of proof spirit in a water bath for 12 hours then expressed and ten ounces of Disulphate of Quinine added the mixture to be replaced in the water bath till all quinine is dissolved The liquor when cool is to be filtered and is then fit for use 3 Warburg s Tincture therefore contained quinine in addition to various purgatives aromatics and carminatives The ingredient Confection Damocratric is a complex preparation which has not been obtainable for over a century it contained many different aromatic substances citation needed The prepared chalk was used to correct the otherwise extremely acrid taste of the tincture DosageA bottle of Warburg s Tincture contained about one ounce of liquid The drug was to be administered in two equal doses a few hours apart See also EditHistory of malaria History of medicine Pharmacology Clinical pharmacology Pharmaceutical drug Antimalarial drugs Tropical disease List of topics characterized as pseudoscienceReferences and notes Edit Webster s Revised Unabridged Dictionary 1913 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t Warburg Carl 1870 London Warburg Tincture Statement proving by numerous official documents its remarkable curative powers in fevers a b c d e f g h i The Lancet edition 1875 11 13 Professor Maclean C B on the true composition and therapeutic value of Warburg s Tincture pp 716 718 British Medical Journal 1957 01 31 the dublin quarterly journal of medical science vol xlvii The Lancet 1851 a b Warburg Carl 1839 London Specific for fever now first introduced into Europe pamphlet a b c d e f g h i Medical Times edition 1851 1 4 pp 700 702 letter from Carl Warburg archives of joint stock companies National Archives Kew a b The British Medical Journal edition 1888 12 01 p 1232 a b The medico chirurgical review and journal of medical science Volume 34 p 658 1839 Hansard 1867 5 28 Medical Times and Gazette November 1875 official advertisement 1855 Burton Sir Richard Francis and Cameron Verney Lovett 1883 To the Gold Coast for gold a personal narrative pp 231 232 239 1 article Burton Sir Richard Francis Gold on the Gold Coast Journal of the Society of the Arts edition 1882 6 2 The Times edition 1878 08 28 letter from Burton Sir Richard Francis Burton Sir Richard Francis The Lake Regions of Central Africa pp 388 389 2 The Life of Capt Sir Richard F Burton The True Life of Capt Sir Richard F Burton Georgiana M Stisted p 395 3 The Life of Gordon Vol 1 2009 by Boulger D C Note by David Livingstone 1860 11 28 British Medical Journal edition 1861 06 29 a b letter from Rossetti to Frederic Shields dated 1869 8 27 The life and letters of Frederic Shields 4 Official advertisement for Warburg s Tincture 1855 The Medical Times Pharmaceutical Number December 1844 pp 182 184 correspondence from the Museum of the Royal Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain to Roland Sparkes December 1998 The Chemist and Druggist edition 1890 6 14 letter from Sir Sydney Holland Dr Alexander Silver minutes of meeting of Harveian Society The British Medical Journal edition 1868 02 29 p 206 Cantlie James Some Tropical Diseases and the Remedies required for their Treatment and Phrophylxis pp 23 24 1908 Royal Society of Medicine 5 a b Dr William Henry Broadbent article The Practitioner edition February 1877 pp 196 202 obituary The British Medical Journal 1898 The British Medical Journal 1899 07 29 article by JSG Blair Army Medical Corps journal 2005 pp 49 50 M J Eadi article The neurological legacy of John Russell Reynolds 1828 1896 6 Malarial Fevers by Dr W C Maclean A System of Medicine 1866 edited by Sir John Russell Reynolds 7 The Times edition 1878 9 18 letter from Surgeon General W C Maclean The British Medical Journal edition 1890 09 18 correspondence advertisement 1851 The Lancet 1851 04 19 Martindale The Extra Pharmacopoeia various editions United States Dispensatory 20th Edition p 1834 1918 Joseph P Remington et al Further reading EditOwen William Warburg s Tincture in Indian Fevers article Dublin Journal of Medical Science 1879 pp 11 16 Secondary tertiary sources Edit Wootton A 1910 Chronicles of Pharmacy pp 206 208 Poser Charles M Bruyn G W 1999 An Illustrated History of Malaria p 87 Sparkes Roland article Dr Carl Warburg his Belmont laboratory and his famous fever drug 2003 2009 8 permanent dead link Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Warburg 27s tincture amp oldid 1146986771, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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