Records
Tröhler
U. James Lind and scurvy: 1747 to 1795.
Commentary on: Lind
J (1753). A treatise of the scurvy. In three parts. Containing an inquiry
into the nature, causes and cure, of that disease. Together with a critical
and chronological view of what has been published on the subject. Edinburgh:
Printed by Sands, Murray and Cochran for A Kincaid and A Donaldson.
Cite as: Tröhler U (2003). James Lind and
scurvy: 1747 to 1795. The James Lind Library (www.jameslindlibrary.org).
Accessed
© Ulrich Tröhler, 2003.
Author contact details: Ulrich Tröhler, Institute of Social and Preventive Medicine (ISPM), University of Bern, Finkenhubelweg 11, CH-3012 Bern, Switzerland, Email: utroehler@ispm.unibe.ch
Lind's Treatise of the Scurvy
(Lind 1753) is a good illustration of the basis for mid-18th century judgement
and decision-making in at least two respects: it quotes the contributions
of others at length, and its therapeutic recommendations had little impact
(Tröhler 1978; 2000). Lind dedicated his book to Lord Anson because
an account of Anson's circumnavigation published in 1748 had prompted
Lind's interest in scurvy: at least 380 out of a crew of 510 on one of
Anson's ships had died of the disease. When Lind began to read the literature
on scurvy, he realised that the only existing descriptions of the disease
were by lay seamen and doctors who had never been to sea. "No physician
conversant with this disease at sea had undertaken to throw light upon
the subject," and Lind felt that this was one of the reasons why
there was so much confusion about the diagnosis, prevention and cure of
the disease. As Lind wrote bluntly: "Indeed, before the subject could
be set in clear and proper light, it was necessary to remove a great deal
of rubbish." (Lind 1753, p viii)
There is no direct evidence that, in using these words,
Lind was paraphrasing the empiricist philosopher-physician John Locke,
who had represented himself as "an under-labourer in clearing the
ground a little, and removing some of the rubbish that lies in the way
to knowledge." But Lind certainly wrote in the spirit of Locke. Locke's
"master-builders" were his friends Boyle, Sydenham, Huygens
and Newton, all of whom worked by observation and generation of "facts",
the very method Lind proposed for advancing an understanding of scurvy.
Lind's Treatise stressed that his work was to be founded "upon
attested facts and observations, without suffering the illusions of theory
to influence and pervert the judgement." (Lind 1753, p xii)
What were Lind's facts? First, he had had direct experience
of scurvy since he first went to sea in the late 1730s. His longest cruise
in the Channel Fleet was made during the War of the Austrian Succession
aboard a 4th class ship named the "Salisbury." During a ten-week
absence from shore, 80 out of 350 sailors were struck down by scurvy,
and Lind's prospective controlled experiment
- in which he compared the relative merits of six treatments then in use
for treating the disease in 12 patients - began on board on 20 May 1747.
Lind subsequently added to his first hand experience
in two ways: he searched for, abstracted and evaluated previous reports
of the disease; and he drew on accounts sent to him by members of the
Society of Naval Surgeons. In other words, he
conducted a systematic review of what had been written on the topic
by others.
Lind judged his relatively small number of observations
on twelve patients, reported in some detail, as convincing, particularly
because the differences shown were so dramatic. In fact he "confirmed"
them by selected observations on other patients, but these were not as
reliable as his experimental results, nor were they quantitative. In these,
as well as in other experiments designed in advance, it was the quality
of basic observations rather than their quantity that was important for
Lind. Careful observation of a single case could even be decisive; for
instance, Lind said that that he had never had a great opinion of the
elixir of vitriol because he had witnessed a patient contracting scurvy
to whom he had prescribed it as a 'reconstituent', that is, "while
under a course of medicine recommended for its prevention" (Lind
1753, p 196). Similarly, postulated treatments for scurvy had not only
been debunked by Lind's experiment, but were "contradicted by the
daily experience of seamen, [and] by the journals of our sea-hospitals..."
When claiming this, he seems to have such evidence in mind, although he
did not quote it explicitly.
Lind's therapeutic findings made little impact on medical
opinion in Britain: indeed, the year after their publication (1753) the
Navy's 'Sick and Hurt Board' rejected a proposal to provide sailors with
supplies of fruit juice. In fact, aware of the storage problems for adequate
amounts of fresh fruit or fruit-juice during long cruises, Lind recommended
that a condensate (called "rob") should be prepared by evaporating
a dilution of fresh fruit juice in nearly boiling water over several hours.
Unfortunately, as we now know, heat destroys much of the ascorbic acid
in fresh juice, and it is unsurprising that subsequent observers were
unable to detect any beneficial effect of the condensate.
In hindsight the story of how Lind's work was received,
entailing a lag of 42 years between his clearly described and experimentally
"proven" treatment and its actual introduction by the relevant
authorities, seemed to some "one of the most foolish episodes in
the whole history of medical science and practice". However, the
Navy Sick and Hurt Board did not, during the first thirty years, act unreasonably
when one considers that Lind's was only one of a great number of treatises
on the subject (see Lind's own 'Bibliotheca Scorbutica', an appendix
to the first edition of his work); the Board was inundated with suggestions
concerning scurvy; lemon juice was by no means a new cure (a fact of which
Lind was perfectly aware); and not least because, together with his 'rob',
he also recommended a list of vegetables for preventing scurvy which,
on the basis of modern analyses, were unlikely to have been effective.
Lind's recommendations thus sometimes ignored his declared rejection of
unwarranted speculation and his professed reliance on carefully observed
facts.
It is worth noting in addition that Lind's experiment
had not been based on pathophysiological theory, but rather "controlled
empiricism": He gave no reason for the choice of his possible treatments.
His trial succeeded because one of the remedies contained Vitamin C. He
knew how to perform a comparative experiment, well controlled for time
and environment, but perhaps less well, which experiment he should do.
Had it been based on theory, his work might have been more likely to receive
credit with the medical establishment, and Lind may have been seeking
such credit when he developed a theory of scurvy, accompanied by excuses
for being speculative (Lind 1753, p 272-310)!
It seems historically relevant to recognise that Lind
was successful in promoting comparative clinical trials quickly, possibly
even within the Sick and Hurt Board, whose lethargy has often been criticized.
Besides the further trials with antiscorbutics mentioned below, the Board
later also ordered trials of drugs against 'fevers' (see Commentary
on Lind 1763). This was a new development and an application of the
much-praised observational medicine.
In 1772 Lind published the third edition of his Treatise
of the Scurvy. In a 'Postscript' he inserted the substance of four
volumes of observations, daily and carefully made on the wards at Haslar
Hospital. Just as he had done during his service afloat, Lind had kept
records of all his patients: during the first two years of his activity
at Haslar he saw 1146 cases of scurvy out of 5743 patients (Lind 1772,
p 141). During the Seven Years' War (1756-63) he said he had frequently
visited three or four hundred scorbutic patients a day. What use did he
make of this unique opportunity?
Lind did not publish lists of his cases, nor numerical
results of his therapeutic trials, nor accounts of his autopsies. But
there was a change in his theory on scurvy according to his autopsy findings
and laboratory experiments with clotted blood, reflecting the "inflammatory
nature" of a disease (see Commentary
on Lind 1762). Lind became reluctant to assert that scurvy was a "putrid"
disease, which he now recognised was an unsatisfactory designation. He
had changed his theory of scurvy based on his own observations, a fact
worth stressing in view of recently expressed doubts that he practised
experimental science. This was important, for it shook the rationale for
the therapy with unfermented malt, which had obvious practical and economical
advantages: it was easily available, readily stored and cheap. Its main
champion was David Macbride, an Irishman who had studied in Edinburgh
at the same time as Lind. Unsurprisingly, the Admiralty became interested
in it.
Justifying his change of view concerning putrefaction,
Lind wrote:
"some doubtful theoretical doctrines remained
unaltered, as resting on the faith and dissections of other authors,
and as being agreeable to the present theories of physic; ... but the
theory of ...[scurvy] as well as of many other diseases, is in general
merely conjectural, and is always the most exceptional part of a medical
performance... it is indeed not probable, that a remedy for the scurvy
will ever be discovered, from a preconceived hypothesis; or by speculative
men in the closet, who have never seen the disease, or.... at most,
only a few cases of it."
Lind's new clinical experiences were summarised in the
'Postscript,' which referred to experiences relating to, for example,
"some thousand", "several thousand", "above two
thousand", "some hundreds", or "ten or twelve out
of the number of 100 scorbutic patients". As to the therapy of scurvy,
he inserted letters from four naval surgeons relating a total of 232 patients
with the disease who were cured with fruit juices during the Seven Years'
War. He said that the wort had not produced "any considerable effect"
in the trials on Wallis's and Carteret's circumnavigations; however he
quoted the testimony of one of Carteret's soldiers who had assured him
personally that he had been restored to health by it! Macbride's infusion
of malt was the only omission from Lind's list of "all the medicines
and methods of cure that have been recommended for this disease"
of which he had made it his "study for some years, with unvaried
diligence, to observe the effects by putting them to the fairest trials"
(that is, 'scorbutic juices', scurvy-grass juice, Peruvian bark in large
quantities, infusions of guianac...). Nor was the wort dealt with in the
main text, but only mentioned in a footnote as follows:
"I put 130 scorbutic patients under a course of
it for fourteen days,... it has the advantages, when newly made, to
be extremely palatable, the patients were very fond of it, and there
was not one instance of its occasioning sickness, gripes, or purging.
On the whole, it is a very nourishing liquor, well adapted for scorbutic
patients" (Lind, 1772, p 537-40).
It was a cautious, non-committal statement, but considering
Lind's popularity among his naval colleagues in 1772, they might well
have interpreted it as evidence in favour of the wort.
Lind's studies of the wort had been controlled. Patients
were confined in special wards, strictly watched and "debarred from
eating any green vegetable, fruits or roots whatever, though many of them
had not tasted anything of that sort for several months; they were not
even permitted to taste the hospital broth"; and their state was
monitored daily. Comparative effects of different fruits and vegetables
were assessed likewise. These experimental conditions had impressed colleagues
working on scurvy, like John Clark, whose work is also included in the
James Lind Library. Yet in terms of therapeutic recommendations,
Lind at best remained neutral, and at worst acquiesced in the views of
the authorities in the Admiralty, who had based their views on confusing
reports from circumnavigators like Cook and their surgeons. And, as a
naval surgeon, Lind's status was lower than, say, that of an Oxonian scholar
with an FRCP, pronouncing with authority from the detachment of his study,
or of a friend of Sir James Pringle, the Kings physician, whose views
were in open contrast with Lind's. Pringle, by the way was loyal to the
Hanoverians, whereas it has been suggested that Lind, as a Scot, may have
had Jacobite sympathies.
Like his counterpart in the Army, John Pringle, Lind
was both an experimental scientist and a theoretician working in the speculative
framework of his time. But at least Lind undertook the verification of
one of his hypotheses. Even with respect to therapy for scurvy, he may
have been more objective an observer than sometimes suggested, for many
of his scurvy patients probably suffered from a mixed deficiency of both
vitamins B and C, and wort was rich in vitamin B complex.
By the time third edition of Lind's Treatise appeared,
James Cook had already departed on his second voyage (1772-1775), which,
in terms of survival from disease, proved to be an even more spectacular
success than the first (during a voyage of 70,000 miles lasting over three
years in every variety of climate there were only three deaths from accidents
and one from consumption out of a total complement of 118 men). On the
basis of the same kind of superficial evidence as on his first voyage,
the value of malt wort was professed in a paper that Cook read at the
Royal Society on 7th March 1776. Cook admitted to having been provided
with rob of lemons, "which the surgeon found useful in several cases".
But on 7th July he wrote to Sir John Pringle, then President of the Royal
Society, reiterating his low opinion of the rob as opposed to the high
price of the malt wort.
It seems that Cook's and Pringle's inability to discriminate
between essential and contributory factors in scurvy delayed the general
introduction of lemon juice. The unusually low incidence of scurvy on
Cook's ships is rightly attributed to his leadership and his opportunities
for obtaining fresh vegetables. Pringle himself thought it probable that
the fresh juices had been weakened during evaporation to condensate (rob),
"having lost their aqueous parts [and] not a little of their aerial,
on which so much of their antiseptic virtue depended". He proposed
further trials with entirely purified juice, because there were "some
numerous and some strong" testimonies in favour of its salutary qualities
that a few failures - as in Cook's case - were not sufficient for striking
it off the list of probable preservatives against scurvy.
Cook's and Pringle's statements were overwhelming, and
internationally recognized. Macbride quickly and proudly quoted them in
1777 as his principal testimonies for the use of malt (wort) in the Navy
and in garrisons. Fairly enough, he gave Lind the entire credit for the
prescription of fruit juices and fresh vegetables. Their drawback, however,
was that they presupposed favourable circumstances for obtaining them.
A change of general opinion was only brought about by the extensive numerical
data from the American War of Independence. It had begun in 1774 and was
to become widespread by 1778. The official policy for the prevention of
scurvy derived from Cook's recommendations: the Sick and Hurt Board allowed
malt (wort), sauerkraut and potable soup, whereas the condensate (rob)
of fruit juice was considered ineffective and too expensive. Some naval
surgeons, however, looked on it as a medicament that they might occasionally
provide from their own purse.
The deliberate use of quantitative methods during the
American War yielded a clearer description of the aetiology of scurvy,
and, by the mid-1780s, Robertson (1777), Blane (1785), and John Clark
had advanced understanding of which treatments were likely to be useful.
Clark, in particular, contributed importantly with his blunt numerical
evidence suggesting that currently used treatments had been largely ineffective
(1783). On the other hand, such observational books, especially if they
contained many figures, were sometimes considered a new kind of dull literature,
and were despised by many. However, they must have proved more convincing
in the long run, even to the authorities, than conjectural arguments of
men of the opposition. It was perhaps luck that the "right"
side fought with those better weapons, for, as has been shown repeatedly,
statistics can be abused.
The Admiralty remained unconvinced in the 1780s that
fruit juices were useful, and their final approval by the Sick and Hurt
Board was apparently accidental. Part of the story says that in 1793,
upon Blane's advice to a friend appointed to East India, a fleet well
supplied with lemon juice (preserved with alcohol) reached Madras scurvy-free
after nineteen weeks without putting in to any port. This remarkable demonstration
of the effect of lemon juice enabled Blane, now himself a commissioner
on the Board, to persuade the Admiralty in 1795 to sanction the issue
of lemon juice on a far more generous scale than ever before. A number
of other naval surgeons claimed equal credit for introducing lemon juice
in the fleets under their responsibility before a general order was issued.
This is perhaps of less concern to us than the fact that the consequences
were again easily expressed numerically. For instance, it is said that,
when in 1797, the First Lord of the Admiralty asked to see a patient with
scurvy when visiting Haslar Hospital, no such patient could be found.
In 1815 Gilbert Blane showed that the scurvy had almost disappeared from
the fleet: according to the figures sent to him by Dr John Lind, the son
and successor of James at Haslar, only two cases had been sent to the
Hospital during the last four years of the Napoleonic Wars.
In summary, the history of scurvy in the British Navy
during the second half of the 18th century shows how comparative clinical
trials in controlled conditions of time and environment were well described
by Lind, yet, initially for understandable reasons, imperfectly translated
into practice, and only on a very small scale. The pathophysiological
explanation of scurvy remained speculative, at least in its earlier decades,
thus not avoiding the episode of Macbride's malt (wort). Due to the interplay
of accurate observation and simple numerical records from individual ships
and whole fleets in wartime kept by Robertson and Blane, however, both
the clinical features of scurvy and the effects of preventive and therapeutic
strategies became better assessed. This led ultimately to a change of
professional and political opinion in favour of lemon juice among the
authorities directing the naval service, and thus to the conquest of scurvy.
This James Lind Library commentary has been republished in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 2005;98:51-522.
References
Tröhler U (1978). Quantification in British medicine
and Surgery 1750-1830, with special reference to its introduction into
therapeutics. PhD Thesis, University of London: 346-396.
Tröhler U (1981). Towards clinical research on a
numerical basis: James Lind at Haslar Hospital 1758-1783. Proc XXVII Int
Congr Hist Med Barcelona 1980. Barcelona: Academia de Ciènces Mediques
de Catalunya I Balears 1:414-419.
Tröhler U (2000). "To improve the evidence
of medicine": The 18th century British origins of a critical approach."
Edinburgh: Royal College of Physicians, 2000:59-68.

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