Twilight sleep

Twilight sleep
A term applied to the combination of analgesia (pain relief) and amnesia (loss of memory) 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 are naturally occurring members of a large chemical class of compounds called alkaloids: {{}}Morphine: The name "morphine" was coined in 1805 by a German pharmacist Adolf Serturner to designate the main alkaloid in opium. Opium, of course, comes from the poppy plant. Morphine is a powerful narcotic agent with strong analgesic action and other significant effects on the central nervous system. It is dangerously addicting. The name "morphine" refers to Morpheus, the mythologic god of dreams. Scopolamine: Scopolamine was introduced in 1902. The name comes from the 18th-century Italian naturalist Giovanni Scopoli. Scopolamine is, together with atropine, a component of belladonna which comes from a plant called "deadly nightshade," once used as a means of poisoning. When scopolamine is given in lower (non-poisonous) doses, it causes drowsiness and amnesia. Scopolamine + morphine provided childbirth without pain (or without the memory of pain), once a much sought-after objective. However, there were serious problems with twilight sleep. It completely removed the mother from the birth experience and it gravely depressed the baby's central nervous system. This sometimes made for a drowsy depressed baby with poor breathing capacity. Twilight sleep therefore has fallen entirely out of favor and is now a chapter in the history of obstetrics.

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twi·light sleep 'twī-.līt- n a state in which awareness of pain is dulled and memory of pain is dimmed or effaced and which is produced by hypodermic injection of morphine and scopolamine and used esp. formerly chiefly in childbirth

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a condition of analgesia and amnesia, produced by hypodermic administration of morphine and scopolamine. In this state the patient, although responding to pain, does not retain it in memory. Formerly widely used in obstetrics.

Medical dictionary. 2011.

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  • Twilight sleep — (English translation of the idiomaticcite news |first=H. J. last=Boldt authorlink= coauthors= title= TWILIGHT SLEEP. ; An Inaccurate Translation of the German Daemmerschlaf. url=http://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9504E6DE123FE233A25754… …   Wikipedia

  • twilight sleep — n. [transl. of Ger dämmerschlaf] a state of partial anesthesia induced by the injection of morphine and scopolamine, formerly used to lessen the pains of childbirth …   English World dictionary

  • twilight sleep — /ˈtwaɪlaɪt slip/ (say twuyluyt sleep) noun a state of semiconsciousness usually produced by hypodermic injections of scopolamine and morphine, in order to effect relatively painless childbirth. {translation of German Dämmerschlaf} …  

  • twilight sleep — Med. a state of semiconsciousness, usually produced by hypodermic injections of scopolamine and morphine, used chiefly to effect relatively painless childbirth. [1910 15] * * * …   Universalium

  • twilight sleep — noun Medicine a state of partial narcosis or stupor without total loss of consciousness, in particular a state induced by an injection of morphine and scopolamine …   English new terms dictionary

  • twilight sleep — noun a state of general anesthesia in which the person retains a slight degree of consciousness; can be induced by injection of scopolamine or morphine • Hypernyms: ↑general anesthesia, ↑general anaesthesia …   Useful english dictionary

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