Hydragogin is a shotgun mixture of semisecret composition; it is marketed under a therapeutically suggestive name, and advertised by means of unwarranted therapeutic claims. It is therefore in conflict with Rules 1, 6, 8 and 10. The Council held Hydragogin ineligible for New and Nonofficial Remedies.—(From The Journal A. M. A., Sept. 4, 1915.)
FILUDINE
Report of the Council on Pharmacy and Chemistry
Filudine is said to be prepared by J. L. Chatelain, Paris, and is sold in this country by Geo. J. Wallau, Inc., New York. It is offered as a remedy for “biliary insufficiency,” “hepatic insufficiency,” “intestinal dyspepsia,” “all affections of the liver (diabetes, cirrhosis, cancer, etc.),” “malaria,” “obesity” and “tuberculosis.”
No quantitative information is furnished as to the composition of the preparation and there are noteworthy discrepancies in the various statements regarding the ingredients. In one number of “Treatment,” a self-styled “Review” of medical literature (actually devoted to advertising the preparations sold by Wallau), we are told that
“This product [Filudine] is a more concentrated and potent extract of the liver, with which is combined an extract of the spleen. The liver and the spleen are so intimately interdependent, that the addition of a splenary extract to the liver extract is a signal improvement from which a synergistic action results. Thiarféine is also added, as it helps somewhat to combat the anaemia from which all diabetics suffer more or less.”
Thiarféine is said to be
“Thiomethylarsinate of Caffein, a new salt discovered by M. Chatelain.”
Another circular, which gives an imposing formula for “thiarféine” or “thiomethylarsinate of caffein,” states that