Authour: Maya Muir
Abstract
Dimethyl sulfoxide
(DMSO), a by-product of the wood industry, has been in use as a commercial
solvent since 1953. It is also one of the most studied but least understood
pharmaceutical agents of our time--at least in the United States. According
to Stanley Jacob, MD, a former head of the organ transplant program at
Oregon Health Sciences University in Portland, more than 40,000 articles on
its chemistry have appeared in scientific journals, which, in conjunction
with thousands of laboratory studies, provide strong evidence of a wide
variety of properties. (See Major Properties Attributed to DMSO) Worldwide,
some 11,000 articles have been written on its medical and clinical
implications, and in 125 countries throughout the world, including Canada,
Great Britain, Germany, and Japan, doctors prescribe it for a variety of
ailments, including pain, inflammation, scleroderma, interstitial cystitis,
and arthritis elevated intercranial pressure.
Yet in the United
States, DMSO has Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval only for use as
a preservative of organs for transplant and for interstitial cystitis, a
bladder disease. It has fallen out of the limelight and out of the
mainstream of medical discourse, leading some to believe that it was
discredited. The truth is more complicated.
DMSO: A
History of Controversy
The history of DMSO
as a pharmaceutical began in 1961, when Dr. Jacob was head of the organ
transplant program at Oregon Health Sciences University. It all started when
he first picked up a bottle of the colorless liquid. While investigating its
potential as a preservative for organs, he quickly discovered that it
penetrated the skin quickly and deeply without damaging it. He was
intrigued. Thus began his lifelong investigation of the drug.
The news media soon
got word of his discovery, and it was not long before reporters, the
pharmaceutical industry, and patients with a variety of medical complaints
jumped on the news. Because it was available for industrial uses, patients
could dose themselves. This early public interest interfered with the
ability of Dr. Jacob--or, later, the FDA--to see that experimentation and
use were safe and controlled and may have contributed to the souring of the
mainstream medical community on it.
Why, if DMSO
possesses half the capabilities claimed by Dr. Jacob and others, is it still
on the sidelines of medicine in the United States today?
"It's a square
peg being pushed into a round hole," says Dr. Jacob. "It doesn't
follow the rifle approach of one agent against one disease entity. It's the
aspirin of our era. If aspirin were to come along today, it would have the
same problem. If someone gave you a little white pill and said take this and
your headache will go away, your body temperature will go down, it will help
prevent strokes and major heart problems--what would you think?"
Others cite DMSO's
principal side effect: an odd odor, akin to that of garlic, that emanates
from the mouth shortly after use, even if use is through the skin.
Certainly, this odor has made double-blinded studies difficult. Such studies
are based on the premise that no one, neither doctor nor patient, knows
which patient receives the drug and which the placebo, but this drug
announces its presence within minutes.
Others, such as
Terry Bristol, a Ph.D. candidate from the University of London and president
of the Institute for Science, Engineering and Public Policy in Portland,
Oregon, who assisted Dr. Jacob with his research in the 1960s and 1970s,
believe that the smell of DMSO may also have put off the drug companies,
that feared it would be hard to market. Worse, however, for the
pharmaceutical companies was the fact that no company could acquire an
exclusive patent for DMSO, a major consideration when the clinical testing
required to win FDA approval for a drug routinely runs into millions of
dollars. In addition, says Mr. Bristol, DMSO, with its wide range of
attributes, would compete with many drugs these companies already have on
the market or in development.
The FDA and
DMSO
In the first flush
of enthusiasm over the drug, six pharmaceutical companies embarked on
clinical studies. Then, in November 1965, a woman in Ireland died of an
allergic reaction after taking DMSO and several other drugs. Although the
precise cause of the woman's death was never determined, the press reported
it to be DMSO. Two months later, the FDA closed down clinical trials in the
United States, citing the woman's death and changes in the lenses of certain
laboratory animals that had been given doses of the drug many times higher
than would be given humans.
Some 20 years and
hundreds of laboratory and human studies later, no other deaths have been
reported, nor have changes in the eyes of humans been documented or claimed.
Since then, however, the FDA has refused seven applications to conduct
clinical studies, and approved only 1, for intersititial cystitis, which
subsequently was approved for prescriptive use in 1978.
Dr. Jacob believes
the FDA "blackballed" DMSO, actively trying to kill interest in a
drug that could end much suffering. Jack de la Torre, MD, Ph.D., professor
of neurosurgery and physiology at the University of New Mexico Medical
School in Albuquerque, a pioneer in the use of DMSO and closed head injury,
says, "Years ago the FDA had a sort of chip on its shoulder because it
thought DMSO was some kind of snake oil medicine. There were people there
who were openly biased against the compound even though they knew very
little about it. With the new administration at that agency, it has changed
a bit." The FDA recently granted permission to conduct clinical trials
in Dr. de la Torre's field of closed head injury.
DMSO
Penetrates Membranes and Eases Pain
The first quality
that struck Dr. Jacob about the drug was its ability to pass through
membranes, an ability that has been verified by numerous subsequent
researchers.1 DMSO's ability to do this varies proportionally with its
strength--up to a 90 percent solution. From 70 percent to 90 percent has
been found to be the most effective strength across the skin, and, oddly,
performance drops with concentrations higher than 90 percent. Lower
concentrations are sufficient to cross other membranes. Thus, 15 percent
DMSO will easily penetrate the bladder.2
In addition, DMSO
can carry other drugs with it across membranes. It is more successful
ferrying some drugs, such as morphine sulfate, penicillin, steroids, and
cortisone, than others, such as insulin. What it will carry depends on the
molecular weight, shape, and electrochemistry of the molecules. This
property would enable DMSO to act as a new drug delivery system that would
lower the risk of infection occurring whenever skin is penetrated.
DMSO perhaps has
been used most widely as a topical analgesic, in a 70 percent DMSO, 30
percent water solution. Laboratory studies suggest that DMSO cuts pain by
blocking peripheral nerve C fibers.3 Several clinical trials have
demonstrated its effectiveness,4,5 although in one trial, no benefit was
found.6 Burns, cuts, and sprains have been treated with DMSO. Relief is
reported to be almost immediate, lasting up to 6 hours. A number of sports
teams and Olympic athletes have used DMSO, although some have since moved on
to other treatment modalities. When administration ceases, so do the effects
of the drug.
Dr. Jacob said at a
hearing of the U.S. Senate Subcommittee on Health in 1980, "DMSO is one
of the few agents in which effectiveness can be demonstrated before the eyes
of the observers....If we have patients appear before the Committee with
edematous sprained ankles, the application of DMSO would be followed by
objective diminution of swelling within an hour. No other therapeutic
modality will do this."
Chronic pain
patients often have to apply the substance for 6 weeks before a change
occurs, but many report relief to a degree they had not been able to obtain
from any other source.
DMSO and
Inflammation
DMSO reduces
inflammation by several mechanisms. It is an antioxidant, a scavenger of the
free radicals that gather at the site of injury. This capability has been
observed in experiments with laboratory animals7 and in 150 ulcerative
colitis patients in a double-blinded randomized study in Baghdad, Iraq.8
DMSO also stabilizes membranes and slows or stops leakage from injured
cells.
At the Cleveland
Clinic Foundation in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1978, 213 patients with
inflammatory genitourinary disorders were studied. Researchers concluded
that DMSO brought significant relief to the majority of patients. They
recommended the drug for all inflammatory conditions not caused by infection
or tumor in which symptoms were severe or patients failed to respond to
conventional therapy.9
Stephen Edelson,
MD, F.A.A.F.P., F.A.A.E.M., who practices medicine at the Environmental and
Preventive Health Center of Atlanta, has used DMSO extensively for 4 years.
"We use it intravenously as well as locally," he says. "We
use it for all sorts of inflammatory conditions, from people with rheumatoid
arthritis to people with chronic low back inflammatory-type symptoms,
silicon immune toxicity syndromes, any kind of autoimmune process.
"DMSO is not a
cure," he continues. "It is a symptomatic approach used while you
try to figure out why the individual has the process going on. When patients
come in with rheumatoid arthritis, we put them on IV DMSO, maybe three times
a week, while we are evaluating the causes of the disease, and it is amazing
how free they get. It really is a dramatic treatment."
As for side
effects, Dr. Edelson says: "Occasionally, a patient will develop a
headache from it, when used intravenously--and it is dose related." He
continues: "If you give a large dose, [the patient] will get a
headache. And we use large doses. I have used as much as 30ÝmlÝIV over a
couple of hours. The odor is a problem. Some men have to move out of the
room [shared] with their wives and into separate bedrooms. That is basically
the only problem."
DMSO was the first
nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory discovered since aspirin. Mr. Bristol
believes that it was that discovery that spurred pharmaceutical companies on
to the development on other varieties of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatories.
"Pharmaceutical companies were saying that if DMSO can do this, so can
other compounds," says Mr. Bristol. "The shame is that DMSO is
less toxic and has less int he way of side effects than any of them."
Collagen and
Scleroderma
Scleroderma is a
rare, disabling, and sometimes fatal disease, resulting form an abnormal
buildup of collagen in the body. The body swells, the skin--particularly on
hands and face--becomes dense and leathery, and calcium deposits in joints
cause difficulty of movement. Fatigue and difficulty in breathing may ensue.
Amputation of affected digits may be necessary. The cause of scleroderma is
unknown, and, until DMSO arrived, there was no known effective treatment.
Arthur Scherbel,
MD, of the department of rheumatic diseases and pathology at the Cleveland
Clinic Foundation, conducted a study using DMSO with 42 scleroderma patients
who had already exhausted all other possible therapies without relief. Dr.
Scherbel and his coworkers concluded 26 of the 42 showed good or excellent
improvement. Histotoxic changes were observed together with healing of
ischemic ulcers on fingertips, relief from pain and stiffness, and an
increase in strength. The investigators noted, "It should be emphasized
that these have never been observed with any other mode of therapy."10
Researchers in other studies have since come to similar conclusions.11
Does DMSO
Help Arthritis?
It was inevitable
that DMSO, with its pain-relieving, collagen-softening, and
anti-inflammatory characteristics, would be employed against arthritis, and
its use has been linked to arthritis as much as to any condition. Yet the
FDA has never given approval for this indication and has, in fact, turned
down three Investigational New Drug (IND) applications to conduct extensive
clinical trials.
Moreover, its use
for arthritis remains controversial. Robert Bennett, MD, F.R.C.P., F.A.C.R.,
F.A.C.P., professor of medicine and chief, division of arthritis and
rheumatic disease at Oregon Health Sciences University (Dr. Jacob's
university), says other drugs work better. Dava Sobel and Arthur Klein
conducted their own informal study of 47 arthritis patients using DMSO in
preparation for writing their book, Arthritis: What Works, and came to the
same conclusion.12
Yet laboratory
studies have indicated that DMSO's capacity as a free-radical scavenger
suggests an important role for it in arthritis.13 The Committee of Clinical
Drug Trials of the Japanese Rheumatism Association conducted a trial with
318 patients at several clinics using 90 percent DMSO and concluded that
DMSO relieved joint pain and increased range of joint motion and grip
strength, although performing better in more recent cases of the disease.14
It is employed widely in the former Soviet Union for all the different types
of arthritis, as it is in other countries around the world.
Dr. Jacob remains
convinced that it can play a significant role in the treatment of arthritis.
"You talk to veterinarians associated with any race track, and you'll
find there's hardly an animal there that hasn't been treated with DMSO. No
veterinarian is going to give his patient something that does not work.
There's no placebo effect on a horse."
DMSO and
Central Nervous System Trauma
Since 1971, Dr. de
la Torre, then at the University of Chicago, has experimented using DMSO
with injury to the central nervous system. Working with laboratory animals,
he discovered that DMSO lowered intracranial pressure faster and more
effectively than any other drug. DMSO also stabilized blood pressure,
improved respiration, and increased urine output by five times and increased
blood flow through the spinal cord to areas of injury.15-17 Since then, DMSO
has been employed with human patients suffering severe head trauma,
initially those whose intracranial pressure remained high despite the
administration of mannitol, steroids, and barbiturates. In humans, as well
as animals, it has proven the first drug to significantly lower intracranial
pressure, the number one problem with severe head trauma.
"We believe
that DMSO may be a very good product for stroke," says Dr. de la Torre,
"and that is a devastating illness which affects many more people than
head injury. We have done some preliminary clinical trials, and there's a
lot of animal data showing that it is a very good agent in dissolving
clots."
Other
Possible Applications for DMSO
Many other uses for
DMSO have been hypothesized from its known qualities hand have been tested
in the laboratory or in small clinical trials. Mr. Bristol speaks with
frustration about important findings that have never been followed up on
because of the difficulty in finding funding and because "to have on
your resume these days that you've worked on DMSO is the kiss of
death." It is simply too controversial. A sampling of some other
possible applications for this drug follows.
DMSO as long been
used to promote healing. People who have it on hand often use it for minor
cuts and burns and report that recovery is speedy. Several studies have
documented DMSO use with soft tissue damage, local tissue death, skin
ulcers, and burns.18-21
In relation to
cancer, several properties of DMSO have gained attention. In one study with
rats, DMSO was found to delay the spread of one cancer and prolong survival
rates with another.22 In other studies, it has been found to protect
noncancer cells while potentiating the chemotherapeutic agent.
Much has been
written recently about the worldwide crisis in antibiotic resistance among
bacteria (see Alternative & Complementary Therapies, Volume 2, Number 3,
1996, pages 140-144) Here, too, DMSO may be able to play a role. Researcher
as early as 1975 discovered that it could break down the resistance certain
bacteria have developed.23
In addition to its
ability to lower intracranial pressure following closed head injury, Dr. de
la Torre's work suggests that the drug may actually have the ability to
prevent paralysis, given its ability to speedily clean out cellular debris
and stop the inflammation that prevents blood from reaching muscle, leading
to the death of muscle tissue.
With its great
antioxidant powers, DMSO could be used to mitigate some of the effects of
aging, but little work has been done to investigate this possibility. Toxic
shock, radiation sickness, and septicemia have all been postulated as
responsive to DMSO, as have other conditions too numerous to mention here.
DMSO in the
Future
Will DMSO ever sit
on the shelves of pharmacies in this country as a legal prescriptive for
many of the conditions it may be able to address? Will the studies we need
to discover when this drug is most appropriate ever be done? Given the
difficulties the drug has run into so far and the recent development of new
drugs that perform some of the same functions, Mr. Bristol is doubtful.
Others, however, such as Dr. Jacob and Dr. de la Torre, see the FDA approval
of DMSO for interstitial cystitis and the more recent FDA go-ahead for DMSO
trials with closed head injury as new indications of hope. The cystitis
approval means that physicians may use it at their discretion for other
uses, giving DMSO a new legitimacy.
Dr. Jacob continues
to believe that DMSO should not even be called a drug but is more correctly
a new therapeutic principle, with an effect on medicine that will be
profound in many areas. Whether that is true cannot be known without
extensive a publicly reported trials, which are dependent on the willingness
of researchers to undertake rigorous studies in this still-unfashionable
tack and of pharmaceutical companies and other investors to back them up.
That this is a live issue is proved by the difficulty the investigators with
approval to test DMSO for closed head injury clinically are having finding
funds to conduct the trials.
In 1980, testifying
before the Select Committee on Agin of the U.S. House of Representatives,
Dr. Scherbel said, "The controversy that exists over the clinical
effectiveness of DMSO is not well-founded--clinical effectiveness may be
variable in different patients. If toxicity is consistently minimal, the
drug should not be restricted from practice. The clinical effectiveness of
DMSO can be decided with complete satisfaction if the drug is made available
to the practicing physician. The number of patient complaints about pain and
the number of phone calls to the doctor's office will decide quickly whether
or not the drug is effective."
It may be premature
to call for the full rehabilitation of DMSO, but it is time to call for a
full investigation of its true range of capabilities.
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Source: Alternative
& Complementary Therapies, July/August 1996, pages 230-235. DMSO
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