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eCAM Advance Access published online on January 28, 2005

eCAM, doi:10.1093/ecam/neh057
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© The Author (2005). Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Received October 12, 2004
Revised November 16, 2004
Accepted December 24, 2004

Review

Helix and Drugs: Snails for Western Health Care From Antiquity to the Present

Bruno Bonnemain 1*

1 58 rue du Maréchal Joffre, 77270, Villeparisis, France

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
Bruno Bonnemain, E-mail: bruno.bonnemain{at}wanadoo.fr


   Abstract

The land helix, or snail, has been used in medicine since antiquity and prepared according to several formulations. This historical report traces the understanding of their properties from the time of Hippocrates, who proposed the use of snail mucus against protoccle and Pliny who thought that the snail increased the speed of delivery and was "a sovereign remedy to treat pain related to burns, abscesses and other wounds", Galien recommended snails against hydrops foetails. In the 18th century, various snail "preparations" were also recommended for external use with dermatological disorders and internally for symptoms associated with tuberculosis and nephritis. Surprisingly, the 19th century saw a renewed interest in the pharmaceutical and medical use of snails with numerous indications for snail preparations. This interest in snails did not stop at the end of the 19th century. The 1945 edition of Dorvault devotes an entire paragraph to snails, indicating that the therapeutic usage of snails was still alive at that time. Recently the FDA has also shown an interest in snails. Ziconotide (SNXIII), a synthetic peptide coming from snail venom, has been under FDA review since 1999. Pre-clinical and clinical studies of this new drug are promising.

Keywords: Snail; helix; medical history.
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