Summary
Leaflet for drug Cardiazol. Cardiazol is the trade name for the drug Pentylenetetrazol, a circulatory and respiratory stimulant, manufactured by Knoll A.G. Chemical Works, circa 1950. It was stocked in the pharmacy of a mental health hospital in Victoria. Cardiazol (also known as Metrazol) was prescribed for a number of uses: it was injected intravenously to rouse patients from comas, to diagnose comatose states, to reverse narcotic poisoning, and as a form of shock therapy by inducing convulsions. Shock therapies (including insulin coma, Cardiazol/Metrazol, and later ECT) were used in the treatment of schizophrenia - the effect of seizures or convulsions was thought to re-set the patient's brain and relieve the symptoms of schizophrenia.
Physical Description
The drug Cardiazol is contained in 30 x 5ccm glass ampoules, shaped like tiny wine bottles with tear-shaped necks. They are packed in a brown cardboard box with lift-off lid. Box is divided into compartments for each ampoule. Box also contains manufacturer's instruction leaflet.
Significance
Example of pharmaceuticals used in psychiatric hospitals in Victoria, Australia.
More Information
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Collection Names
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Collecting Areas
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Acquisition Information
Donation from Office of Psychiatric Services, May 1985
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Manufacturer
Knoll AG Chemical Works, Ludwigshafen-on-Rhine, Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, Circa 1950
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Place Used
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Inscriptions
Text: Cardiazol/ Ampullen zu 5 ccm/ Name geschutzt (text continues...)
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Classification
Medicine & health, Mental health - pharmacy, Pharmaceuticals
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Category
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Discipline
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Type of item
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Overall Dimensions
9.5 cm (Width), 13.5 cm (Height)
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References
See Parent Record
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Keywords
Hospitals, Psychiatric Services, Psychiatric Hospitals, Psychiatric Institutions, Pharmaceuticals, Drugs, Medicinals & Drugs, Medicines, Mental Health, Mental Health Institutions, Schizophrenia