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Twilight sleep in obstetrics The term "twilight sleep" applied to the combination of analgesia (pain relief) and amnesia (loss of memory) that was produced by a mixture of morphine and scopolamine ("scope") given by a hypodermic injection (an injection under the skin). The mixture of the two drugs created a state in which the woman, while responding somewhat to pain, did not remember it after delivering her baby. Twilight sleep was once in vogue in obstetrics. Morphine and scopolamine are both venerable drugs that have been around a long time. Both are also naturally occurring members of the very large chemical class of compounds called alkaloids: Morphine:
The name "morphine" was coined
in 1805 by the German pharmacist Adolf
Serturner -- "morphine" refers
to Morpheus, the mythologic god of
dreams -- to designate the main alkaloid
contained in opium. Opium, of course,
comes from a plant: the poppy. Morphine
is a powerful narcotic agent with strong
analgesic action and other significant
effects on the central nervous system.
It is dangerously addicting.
Scopolamine: Scopolamine was introduced
in 1902 and used up until the 1960s. The
name comes from that of the 18th-century
Italian naturalist Giovanni Scopoli. Twilight
sleep has, therefore, fallen entirely
out of favor and is now merely a chapter
in the past history of obstetrics. |

