Studies in the field of forensic pharmacology and toxicology
would not be complete without some knowledge of the history of drug discovery,
the various personalities involved, and the events leading
to the development and introduction of new therapeutic agents. The first
medicinal drugs came from natural sources and existed in the form of herbs,
plants, roots, vines and fungi. Until the mid-nineteenth century nature's
pharmaceuticals were all that were available to relieve man's pain and
suffering.
The first synthetic drug, chloral hydrate, was discovered in
1869 and introduced as a sedative-hypnotic; it is still available today in some
countries. The first pharmaceutical companies were spin-offs from the textiles
and synthetic dye industry and owe much to the rich source of organic chemicals
derived from the distillation of coal (coal-tar). The first analgesics and
antipyretics, exemplified by phenacetin and acetanilide, were simple chemical
derivatives of aniline and p-nitrophenol, both of which were byproducts from
coal-tar. An extract from the bark of the white willow tree had been used for
centuries to treat various fevers and inflammation. The active principle in
white willow, salicin or salicylic acid, had a bitter taste and irritated the
gastric mucosa, but a simple chemical modification was much more palatable.
This was acetylsalicylic acid, better known as Aspirin®, the first blockbuster
drug. At the start of the twentieth century, the first of the barbiturate
family of drugs entered the pharmacopoeia and the rest, as they say, is history.For more details : Drug discovery 2023
Comments
Post a Comment