Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword – Alan B. Scott
- Preface
- 1 The pretherapeutic history of botulinum toxin
- 2 Botulinum toxin: history of clinical development
- 3 Pharmacology of botulinum toxin drugs
- 4 Immunological properties of botulinum toxins
- 5 Treatment of cervical dystonia
- 6 Treatment of hemifacial spasm
- 7 Treatment of blepharospasm
- 8 Treatment of oromandibular dystonia
- 9 Treatment of focal hand dystonia
- 10 Botulinum toxin applications in ophthalmology
- 11 Botulinum toxin therapy of laryngeal muscle hyperactivity syndromes
- 12 The use of botulinum toxin in otorhinolaryngology
- 13 Spasticity
- 14 The use of botulinum toxin in spastic infantile cerebral palsy
- 15 Hyperhidrosis
- 16 Cosmetic uses of botulinum toxins
- 17 Botulinum toxin in the gastrointestinal tract
- 18 Botulinum toxin in urological disorders
- 19 Use of botulinum toxin in musculoskeletal pain and arthritis
- 20 The use of botulinum toxin in the management of headache disorders
- 21 Treatment of plantar fasciitis with botulinum toxin
- 22 Treatment of stiff-person syndrome with botulinum toxin
- 23 Botulinum toxin in tic disorders and essential hand and head tremor
- 24 Developing the next generation of botulinum toxin drugs
- Index
- References
1 - The pretherapeutic history of botulinum toxin
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Foreword – Alan B. Scott
- Preface
- 1 The pretherapeutic history of botulinum toxin
- 2 Botulinum toxin: history of clinical development
- 3 Pharmacology of botulinum toxin drugs
- 4 Immunological properties of botulinum toxins
- 5 Treatment of cervical dystonia
- 6 Treatment of hemifacial spasm
- 7 Treatment of blepharospasm
- 8 Treatment of oromandibular dystonia
- 9 Treatment of focal hand dystonia
- 10 Botulinum toxin applications in ophthalmology
- 11 Botulinum toxin therapy of laryngeal muscle hyperactivity syndromes
- 12 The use of botulinum toxin in otorhinolaryngology
- 13 Spasticity
- 14 The use of botulinum toxin in spastic infantile cerebral palsy
- 15 Hyperhidrosis
- 16 Cosmetic uses of botulinum toxins
- 17 Botulinum toxin in the gastrointestinal tract
- 18 Botulinum toxin in urological disorders
- 19 Use of botulinum toxin in musculoskeletal pain and arthritis
- 20 The use of botulinum toxin in the management of headache disorders
- 21 Treatment of plantar fasciitis with botulinum toxin
- 22 Treatment of stiff-person syndrome with botulinum toxin
- 23 Botulinum toxin in tic disorders and essential hand and head tremor
- 24 Developing the next generation of botulinum toxin drugs
- Index
- References
Summary
Unintended intoxication with botulinum toxin (botulism) occurs only rarely, but its high fatality rate makes it a great concern for those in the general public and in the medical community. In the United States an average of 110 cases of botulism are reported each year. Of these, approximately 25% are food borne, 72% are infant botulism, and the rest are wound botulism. Outbreaks of food-borne botulism involving two or more persons occur most years and are usually caused by eating contaminated home-canned foods.
Botulism in ancient times
Botulinum toxin poisoning probably has afflicted humankind through the mists of time. As long as humans have preserved and stored food, some of the chosen conditions were optimal for the presence and growth of the toxin-producing pathogen Clostridium botulinum: for example, the storage of ham in barrels of brine, poorly dried and stored herring, trout packed to ferment in willow baskets, sturgeon roe not yet salted and piled in heaps on old horsehides, lightly smoked fish or ham in poorly heated smoking chambers, and insufficiently boiled blood sausages.
However, in ancient times there was no general knowledge about the causal relationship between the consumption of spoiled food and a subsequent fatal paralytic disease, nowadays recognized as botulism. Only some historical sources reflect a potential understanding of the life-threatening consumption of food intoxicated with botulinum toxin.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Manual of Botulinum Toxin Therapy , pp. 1 - 8Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009
References
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