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Authors: Simon Singh,Edzard Ernst M.D.

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For example, the trial called just three witnesses, who were all doctors sympathetic to Dr Rush’s approach to medicine. Also, the case was argued by seven lawyers, which suggests that powers of persuasion were more influential than evidence. Rush, with his wealth and reputation, had the best lawyers in town arguing his case, so Cobbett was always fighting an uphill battle. On top of all this, the jury was probably also swayed by the fact that Cobbett was not a doctor, whereas Rush was one of the fathers of American medicine, so it would have seemed natural to back Rush’s claim.

Not surprisingly, Rush won the case. Cobbett was ordered to pay $5,000 to Rush in compensation, which was the largest award ever paid out in Pennsylvania. So, at exactly the same time that George Washington was dying after a series of bloodletting procedures, a court was deciding that it was a perfectly satisfactory medical treatment.

We cannot, however, rely on an eighteenth-century court to decide whether or not the medical benefits of bloodletting outweigh any damaging side-effects. After all, the judgement was probably heavily biased by all the factors already mentioned. It is also worth remembering that Cobbett was a foreigner, whereas Rush was a national hero, so a judgement against Rush was almost unthinkable.

In order to decide the true value of bloodletting, the medical profession would require a more rigorous procedure, something even less biased than the fairest court imaginable. In fact, while Rush and Cobbett were debating medical matters in a court of law, they were unaware that exactly the right sort of procedure for establishing the truth about medical matters had already been discovered on the other side of the Atlantic and was being used to great effect. Initially it was used to test a radically new treatment for a disease that afflicted only sailors, but it would soon be used to evaluate blood letting, and in time this approach would be brought to bear on a whole range of medical interventions, including alternative therapies.

Scurvy, limeys and the blood test

 

In June 1744 a hero of the British navy named Commander George Anson returned home having completed a circumnavigation of the world that had taken almost four years. Along the way, Anson had fought and captured the Spanish galleon
Covadonga
, including its 1,313,843 pieces of eight and 35,682 ounces of virgin silver, the most valuable prize in England’s decade of fighting against Spain. When Anson and his men paraded through London, his booty accompanied him in thirty-two wagons filled with bullion. Anson had, however, paid a high price for these spoils of war. His crew had been repeatedly struck by a disease known as
scurvy
, which had killed more than two out of three of his sailors. To put this into context, while only four men had been killed during Anson’s naval battles, over 1,000 had succumbed to scurvy.

Scurvy had been a constant curse ever since ships had set sail on voyages lasting for more than just a few weeks. The first recorded case of naval scurvy was in 1497 as Vasco da Gama rounded the Cape of Good Hope, and thereafter the incidences increased as emboldened captains sailed further across the globe. The English surgeon William Clowes, who had served in Queen Elizabeth’s fleet, gave a detailed description of the horrendous symptoms that would eventually kill two million sailors:

Their gums were rotten even to the very roots of their very teeth, and their cheeks hard and swollen, the teeth were loose neere ready to fall out…their breath a filthy savour. The legs were feeble and so weak, that they were full of aches and paines, with many blewish and reddish staines or spots, some broad and some small like flea-biting.

 

All this makes sense from a modern point of view, because we know that scurvy is the result of vitamin C deficiency. The human body uses vitamin C to produce collagen, which glues together the body’s muscles, blood vessels and other structures, and so helps to repair cuts and bruises. Hence, a lack of vitamin C results in bleeding and the decay of cartilage, ligaments, tendons, bone, skin, gums and teeth. In short, a scurvy patient disintegrates gradually and dies painfully.

The term ‘vitamin’ describes an organic nutrient that is vital for survival, but which the body cannot produce itself; so it has to be supplied through food. We typically obtain our vitamin C from fruit, something that was sadly lacking from the average sailor’s diet. Instead, sailors ate biscuits, salted meat, dried fish, all of which were devoid of vitamin C and likely to be riddled with weevils. In fact, infestation was generally considered to be a good sign, because the weevils would abandon the meat only when it became dangerously rotten and truly inedible.

The simple solution would have been to alter the sailors’ diet, but scientists had yet to discover vitamin C and were unaware of the importance of fresh fruit in preventing scurvy. Instead, physicians proposed a whole series of other remedies. Bloodletting, of course, was always worth a try, and other treatments included the consumption of mercury paste, salt water, vinegar, sulphuric acid, hydrochloric acid or Moselle wine. Another treatment required burying the patient up to his neck in sand, which was not even very practical in the middle of the Pacific. The most twisted remedy was hard labour, because doctors observed that scurvy was generally associated with lazy sailors. Of course, the doctors had confused cause and effect, because it was scurvy that caused sailors to be lazy, rather than laziness that made sailors vulnerable to scurvy.

This array of pointless remedies meant that maritime ambitions during the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries continued to be blighted by deaths from scurvy. Learned men around the world would fabricate arcane theories about the causes of scurvy and debate the merits of various cures, but nobody seemed capable of stopping the rot that was killing hundreds of thousands of sailors. Then, in 1746, there came a major breakthrough when a young Scottish naval surgeon called James Lind boarded HMS
Salisbury
. His sharp brain and meticulous mind allowed him to discard fashion, prejudice, anecdote and hearsay, and instead he tackled the curse of scurvy with extreme logic and rationality. In short, James Lind was destined to succeed where all others had failed because he implemented what seems to have been the world’s first
controlled clinical trial
.

Lind’s tour of duty took him around the English Channel and Mediterranean, and even though HMS
Salisbury
never strayed far from land, one in ten sailors showed signs of scurvy by the spring of 1747. Lind’s first instinct was probably to offer sailors one of the many treatments popular at the time, but this was overtaken by another thought that crossed his mind. What would happen if he treated different sailors in different ways? By observing who recovered and who deteriorated he would be able to determine which treatments were effective and which were useless. To us this may seem obvious, but it was a truly radical departure from previous medical custom.

On 20 May Lind identified twelve sailors with similarly serious symptoms of scurvy, inasmuch as they all had ‘putrid gums, the spots and lassitude, with weakness of their knees’. He then placed their hammocks in the same portion of the ship and ensured that they all received the same breakfast, lunch and dinner, thereby establishing ‘one diet common to all’. In this way, Lind was helping to guarantee a fair test because all the patients were similarly sick, similarly housed and similarly fed.

He then divided the sailors into six pairs and gave each pair a different treatment. The first pair received a quart of cider, the second pair received twenty-five drops of elixir of vitriol (sulphuric acid) three times a day, the third pair received two spoonfuls of vinegar three times a day, the fourth pair received half a pint of sea water a day, the fifth pair received a medicinal paste consisting of garlic, mustard, radish root and gum myrrh, and the sixth pair received two oranges and a lemon each day. Another group of sick sailors who continued with the normal naval diet were also monitored and acted as a control group.

There are two important points to clarify before moving on. First, the inclusion of oranges and lemons was a shot in the dark. Although there had been a few reports of lemons relieving symptoms of scurvy as far back as 1601, late-eighteenth-century doctors would have viewed fruit as a bizarre remedy. Had the term ‘alternative medicine’ existed in Lind’s era, then his colleagues might have labelled oranges and lemons as alternative, as they were natural remedies that were not backed by a plausible theory, and thus they were unlikely to compare well against the more established medicines.

The second important point is that Lind did not include bloodletting in his trial. Although others may have felt that bloodletting was appropriate for treating scurvy, Lind was unconvinced and instead he suspected that the genuine cure would be related to diet. We shall return to the question of testing bloodletting shortly.

The clinicial trial began and Lind waited to see which sailors, if any, would recover. Although the trial was supposed to last fourteen days, the ship’s supply of citrus fruits came to an end after just six days, so Lind had to evaluate the results at this early stage. Fortunately, the conclusion was already obvious, for the sailors who were consuming lemons and oranges had made a remarkable and almost complete recovery. All the other patients were still suffering from scurvy, except for the cider drinkers who showed slight signs of improvement. This is probably because cider can also contain small amounts of vitamin C, depending on how it is made.

By controlling variables such as environment and diet, Lind had demonstrated that oranges and lemons were the key to curing scurvy. Whilst the numbers of patients involved in the trial were extremely small, the results he obtained were so striking that he was convinced by the findings. He had no idea, of course, that oranges and lemons contain vitamin C, or that vitamin C is a key ingredient in the production of collagen, but none of this was important – the bottom line was that his treatment led to a cure. Demonstrating that a treatment is effective is the number-one priority in medicine; understanding the exact details of the underlying mechanism can be left as a problem for subsequent research.

Had Lind been researching in the twenty-first century, he would have reported his findings at a major conference and subsequently published them in a medical journal. Other scientists would have read his methodology and repeated his trial, and within a year or two there would have been an international consensus on the ability of oranges and lemons to cure scurvy. Unfortunately, the eighteenth-century medical community was comparatively splintered, so new breakthroughs were often overlooked.

Lind himself did not help matters because he was a diffident man, who failed to publicize and promote his research. Eventually, six years after the trial, he did write up his work in a book dedicated to Commander Anson, who had famously lost over 1,000 men to scurvy just a few years earlier.
Treatise on the Scurvy
was an intimidating tome consisting of 400 pages written in a plodding style, so not surprisingly it won him few supporters.

Worse still, Lind undermined the credibility of his cure with his development of a concentrated version of lemon juice that would be easier to transport, store, preserve and administer. This so-called
rob
was created by heating and evaporating lemon juice, but Lind did not realize that this process destroyed vitamin C, the active ingredient that cured scurvy. Therefore, anybody who followed Lind’s recommendation soon became disillusioned, because the lemon rob was almost totally ineffective. So, despite a successful trial, the simple lemon cure was ignored, scurvy continued unabated and many more sailors died. By the time that the Seven Years War with France had ended in 1763, the tallies showed that 1,512 British sailors had been killed in action and 100,000 had been killed by scurvy.

However, in 1780, thirty-three years after the original trial, Lind’s work caught the eye of the influential physician Gilbert Blane. Nicknamed ‘Chillblain’ because of his frosty demeanour, Blane had stumbled upon Lind’s treatise on scurvy while he was preparing for his first naval posting with the British fleet in the Caribbean. He was impressed by Lind’s declaration that he would ‘propose nothing dictated merely from theory; but shall confirm all by experience and facts, the surest and most unerring guides’. Inspired by Lind’s approach and interested in his conclusion, Blane decided that he would scrupulously monitor mortality rates throughout the British fleet in the West Indies in order to see what would happen if he introduced lemons to the diet of all sailors.

Although Blane’s study was less rigorously controlled than Lind’s research, it did involve a much larger number of sailors and its results were arguably even more striking. During his first year in the West Indies there were 12,019 sailors in the British fleet, of whom only sixty died in combat and a further 1,518 died of disease, with scurvy accounting for the overwhelming majority of these deaths. However, after Blane introduced lemons into the diet, the mortality rate was cut in half. Later, limes were often used instead of lemons, which led to
limeys
as a slang term for British sailors and later for Brits in general.

Not only did Blane become convinced of the importance of fresh fruit, but fifteen years later he was able to implement scurvy prevention throughout the British fleet when he was appointed to the Sick and Hurt Board, which was responsible for determining naval medical procedures. On 5 March 1795 the Board and the Admiralty agreed that sailors’ lives would be saved if they were issued a daily ration of just three-quarters of an ounce of lemon juice. Lind had died just one year earlier, but his mission to rid British ships of scurvy had been ably completed by Blane.

The British had been tardy in adopting lemon therapy, as almost half a century had passed since Lind’s groundbreaking trial, but many other nations were even tardier. This gave Britain a huge advantage in terms of colonizing distant lands and winning sea battles with its European neighbours. For example, prior to the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805, Napoleon had planned to invade Britain, but he was prevented from doing so by a British naval blockade that trapped his ships in their home ports for several months. Bottling up the French fleet was possible only because the British ships supplied their crews with fruit, which meant that they did not have to interrupt their tour of duty to bring on board new healthy sailors to replace those that would have been dying from scurvy. Indeeed, it is no exaggeration to say that Lind’s invention of the clinical trial and Blane’s consequent promotion of lemons to treat scurvy saved the nation, because Napoleon’s army was much stronger than its British counterpart, so a failed blockade would probably have resulted in a successful French invasion.

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