Until the 1970s, Contac (an OTC cold remedy) contained a small amount of atropine (belladonna). What was its purpose?

Belladonna suppositories are still useful for certain things. Urethral spasm, irritable bladder, certain distal GI conditions…. Doctors are more knowledgeable about strong medicines and more hesitant to use them casually. Drug companies are sensitive to legal issues. Especially when much safer and more effective antisialogogues exist, which don’t cause fast heart rates or affect heart contraction strength.

Belladonna was once used in makeup IIRC to make the pupils all wide and sexy. Like when the eye doctor wants to examine your retina. A small price to pay for not being able to see very well for several hours, surely…

That’s sexy?

Isn’t that what happens when you die?

:shudder:

Takes all kinds. Most people get stiff.

I’ve read that dilated pupils indicate interest.

Or it’s dark.

Contac used to make me sleep.

That reminds me of a video I watched by John Green about the romanticization of tuberculosis (or consumption, as it was previously called). It was thought to make male artists better at their craft. And it was thought that the sick, delicate young women with it were beautiful, to the point that healthy women would use white powder to mimick the pallor and irritants in their eyes to make them more dilated.

That said, I do note that your eyes dilate when you look at someone you are strongly attracted to. So that might be the origin of seeing dilated eyes as attractive.

Yes, the eye dilation is said to make one look more interested, which people find attractive.

My mother had sleepy side effects too, so she would pull the capsule apart and dump out half. At least she didn’t have to use a knife or a pill splitter.

When the Tylenol poisoning started, one of my first thoughts was how easy it would have been to open a capsule and tinker with it.

Medication used to be quite the crapshoot!

What I wished was still available was the original kaopectate. Kaolin and pectin, worked by sopping up excess liquid from the waste stream. Now it is to stop peristalsis. When ones guts are a 36 foot road rash, you don’t need to halt peristalsis, you need to soak up the excess liquid. I was so freaking tempted to grab a gallon of porcelain slip [kaolin clay =) ] and some pectin from my pantry and a blender. Sigh.

But if she had bought some but didn’t give it to the baby, the baby might have died of a homeopathic OD. :smiley:

I think you can still get belladonna tablets anywhere they sell homeopathic “medicine”.

Hah! This one mother I once knew (nevermind how) wouldn’t let her daughter have a mint Milano cookie, because she might “OD” on her homeopathic medicine she was taking, that I guess at one time was in the same room with mint, before the horsehair stick.

The reason Lomotil contains atropine is because enough diphenoxylate to create a buzz, were one to take Lomotil, would also cause very unpleasant side effects from the atropine.

I’ve definitely heard of people using attapulgite orally, for this very reason.

‘Hot as a hare, red as a beet, dry as a bone, blind as a bat and mad as a hatter.’

When I spotted my own mother attempting to give my daughter a homeopathic “remedy” and objected, Mum said “oh it’s ok, they’re all safe”. I suggested I could prove that by consuming the entire bottle.

“Rhinorrhea” sounds like an odd-toed one-horned ungulate with the trots.

AKA, “the zookeeper’s nightmare.”

I had brutal environmental allergies as a high schooler in the mid 1960s. I took Contac to alleviate the symptoms. It worked great, but was incredibly sedating I woukd practically pass out in chemistry class each afternoon. My teacher knew the cause, and was nice about it. He’d quietly tell me to wake up. My eyes would practically be rolling back in my head. Now I know why.

If I remember correctly pre-1990 Contacs active ingredient was phenylpropanolamine.

That stuff would knock me completely out.

Thanks for all the information. I’ve been wondering what Indigo Girls could have meant when they sang in “Sugar Tongue,”

Bring me lullabies and morphine dreams
Belladonna with her atropine

It’s a song about the effects of colonialism exploiting the developing world versus the comfort of living in the developed world along with the privilege of being able to ignore the suffering that underlies that comfort. I guess it expresses a wish to be numbed out or put to sleep with drugs to avoid knowing about it. It’s just that “belladonna with her atropine” is such an odd reference in that context.