1: History of Medicine, Faculty of Medicine, University of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece
2: Department of Anatomy, Faculty of Medicine, University of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece
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Podagra (from the Greek words "pous," meaning “foot”, and "agra," meaning “seizure” - gout) disease, a complex form of arthritis currently known as gout, was apparently accumulated among Byzantine Emperors, and common citizens of Constantinople. It has been considered that gout may be a disease caused by lead poisoning: a contributing cause for this accumulation may have been exposure to high levels of lead, originating from Constantinople's water pipes, wine containers and cooking pots used for producing the sweetening grape syrup sapa (Greek: έψημα). Hippocrates (ca 460-370 BC), 10 eons earlier, suggested that podagra (Greek: ποδάγρα) was the result of the excess-accumulation of the body humours (4 humours theory) inside the articular capsule of the joints. The disease was called "podagra", meaning in Greek severe pain grabbing the leg. As podagra seems to have been a significant, widespread and invalidating disease at the era, a disease that was prevalent in Byzantium, but also a well-known entity in ancient Greece.1-3 Colchicine, the alkaloid of Colchicum autumnale is currently used for the treatment of gout. Colchicum autumnale (Greek: κολχικό του φθινοπώρου), or bitter hermodactyl (Greek: ερμοδάκτυλον, the finger of Hermes), or cochlicon (Greek: κοχλικόν), or articulorum (the soul of the joints), later named as saffron, or autumn crocus, was most probably known since the early rhizotomi (Greek: ριζοτόμοι), the pharmacobotanists practicing herbal medicine since the Prehippocratic era (Figure 1).
Severus Iatrosophista (Greek: Σευήρος ο Ιατροσοφιστής), was a 5th century medicophilosopher, known for his masterpiece "De Clysteribus" (Greek: Περί Ενετήρων); suggesting clysters for various diseases such as skin rash. He was the first Byzantine physician to describe the allergic shock from food and drugs, while he had noted women's hysteria proposing acute intervention. He had also presented a thorough report upon the surgical instruments availliable in that period. He is considered by Alexander of Tralles the first to introduce hermodactyl (Colchicum).8,11 Theodosius the Philosopher, an eminent scholar of the same era, had also proposed the same plant as a botanic cure against podagra.3
The Byzantine physician Jacobus Psychrestos (Greek: Ιάκωβος Ψυχριστής, or Ψυχρηστός, or Ιάκωβος Κίλιξ), was the offspring of Hesychios from Damascus, a known physician of the era. He had exercised both medicine and philosophy in Constantinople during the 5th century AD. He was considered an authority (Greek: άριστος), capable to treat a plethora of diseases. He had soon become the personal head physician (Greek: αρχίατρος) of the Byzantine emperor Leo the 1st, known as the Thracian (Greek: Λέων Α' ὁ Θρᾷξ) (401-474 AD) (Figure 4).12
Although Jacobus was an eminent physician in the imperial court of the Byzantine empire, his work was lost, and only fragments survived inside the treatises of other important medical figures such as Damascius the philosopher (458-550 AD), Alexander of Tralles, and Aetius of Amida (ca mid 5th-mid 6th century AD).13,15,16 His pioneering thought to use colchicine to treat podagra should grant him a place among the significant figures of the history of rheumatology.
It appears that a great number of Sovereigns (14 of the 86 Byzantine Emperors) of the Byzantine Empire and officials of the State and leaders of the Church suffered from what in most cases seems to have been the podagra disease. The texts of the most Byzantine writers referred to the main medicine for arthritis during that era, hermodactylus, a constituent of the herb Colchicum autumnale. Hermodactylus means, in the Hellenic language, the "finger of Hermes"; the Olympian messenger god of the ancient Greeks (Figure 5), thus, perhaps, suggesting the speed of cure that the herbal drug provided for the patients. Although by many researchers Alexander of Tralles is considered to be the physician who introduced this drug in the treatment of podagra, it was the personal physician of Emperor Leon the 1st, Jacob Psychrestus, who epitomized Severus’ and Theodosius’ proposals and systematized its use; quickly gaining substantial fame.
In the history of medicine, a plethora of forgotten physicians, such as our three Byzantine healers, still seek their rightful place in medical history. Rheumatology owes them an honourable citation.