Frontier Illness Solved by Mid-Wife

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How an 1800s Midwife Solved a Poisonous Mystery
For decades before Doctor Anna's discovery, "milk sickness" terrorized the Midwest, killing thousands of Americans on the frontier...

Milk Sickness
Milk sickness, also called "milk sick fever" and "sick stomach," is caused by the excretion of tremetol or tremetone, the toxin in white snakeroot and rayless goldenrod, when these common plants are consumed by herbivorous animals. The human poisonings resulting from the consumption of contaminated meat and milk products were a serious problem in North Carolina from colonial days through the nineteenth century...

Milk Sickness (Tremetol Poisoning)
Milk sickness, usually called milksick by early nineteenth-century American pioneers, denotes what we now know to be poisoning by milk from cows that have eaten either the white snakeroot or the rayless goldenrod plants. The white snakeroot, common in the Midwest and upper South, is a member of the Compositae called Eupatorium urticaefolium. It is also known as white sanicle, squaw weed, snake weed, pool wort, and deer wort. A shade-loving plant, it is frequently seen growing on roadsides, in damp open areas of the woods, or on the shaded north side of ridges. The rayless goldenrod, Haplopappus heterophyllus, is the cause of the disease in southwestern states, such as Arizona and New Mexico...