Sir William Osler was considered by some to be the greatest doctor in the history of the world (Figure).Reference Bliss 1 His 1892 textbook The Principles and Practice of Medicine became the dominant medical text in the English-speaking world.Reference Bliss 1 Although he was against specialization in internal medicine, Osler had a keen interest in neurology and wrote two books on neurological topics (chorea and cerebral palsy). He once described neurology as an interesting but difficult specialty.Reference Osler 2 The topic of migraine is succinctly covered in his 1892 text. Osler was labeled a therapeutic nihilist by someReference Golden 3 and a number of Osler aphorisms support this view. He noted that “the desire to take medicine is one feature which distinguishes man, the animal, from his fellow creatures.”Reference Osler, Bean and Bean 4 He commented that “one of the first duties of the physician is to educate the masses not to take medication,” and that “nickel-in-the-slot, press-the-button therapeutics are no good … you cannot have a drug for every malady.”Reference Osler, Bean and Bean 4 One of his favorite prescriptions was “Time, in divided doses.”Reference Golden 5 This article will review Osler’s thoughts on migraine and outline his therapeutic recommendations.
Methods
The author reviewed the migraine chapters of the nine editions of The Principles and Practice of Medicine that Osler contributed to, as well as his publications. Biographies of Osler by Bliss and Cushing, and Bibliotheca Osleriana were reviewed. The Osler Library Archive Collections at McGill University were searched for material on migraine. Osler published no articles on migraine, and no unpublished manuscripts by Osler on migraine exist in the Osler Library Archives at McGill University.
Results
In the first edition of his book, Osler divided the three-page migraine chapter into definition, etiology, symptoms, and treatment. He mentioned the following authors in the chapter: George Airy, Edward Liveing, Wharton Sinkler, T. Lauder Brunton, William Gowers, Richard Thoma, Möllendorff, Peter Wallwork Latham, and Edward Seguin.Reference Osler 6 Osler noted that “Edward Liveing’s work is the standard authority upon which most of the subsequent articles have been based.”
Symptoms
In addition to describing the cardinal features of migraine in his chapter, Osler commented that “remarkable prodromata have been described, particularly in connection with vision... apparitions may appear—visions of animals, such as mice, dogs, etc.”Reference Osler 6
Pathophysiology
Osler stated that the nature of the disease was unknown. He mentioned both the neurogenic (Liveing) and vasomotor (Möllendorff, Latham) theories in the first seven editions of his text but focused more on the vascular hypothesis by emphasizing ipsilateral temporal artery atherosclerosis in migraine. Osler commented that “the temporal artery on the affected side may be firm and hard, and in a condition of arterio-sclerosis—a fact which has been confirmed anatomically by [the pathologist] Thoma.”Reference Osler 6 In the chapter on angina pectoris in The Principles and Practice of Medicine, Osler commented that “it is interesting to note in connection with the almost constant sclerosis of the coronary arteries in angina that Thoma has found marked sclerosis of the temporal artery in migraine.”Reference Osler 6 Osler also stated:
“Mollendorf (sic), Latham, and others regard it as a vaso-motor neurosis, and hold that the early symptoms are due to vaso-constrictor and the later symptoms to vaso-dilator influences. The fact of the development of arterio-sclerosis in the arteries of the affected side is a point of interest bearing upon this view.”Reference Osler 6
In the eighth and ninth editions of his text, Osler quit mentioning Liveing’s neurogenic hypothesis, and outlined four main theories of migraine pathogenesis: 1. toxic (disordered digestion, disturbed uric acid output, or “from some self-manufactured poison”), 2. vascular, 3. reflexive (from troubles in the eyes, nose, or sexual organs), and 4. transient plugging of the foramen of Monro with increased pressure in the ventricles.Reference Osler and McCrae 7 , Reference Osler and McCrae 8
Treatment
Osler’s treatment recommendations included avoidance of excitement, regularity in the meals, moderation in diet, and trigger avoidance. Preventively he mentioned bromides, iron and arsenic (if anemia was present), and nitroglycerin (if arterial tension was increased) but he noted that “not too much, however, should be expected of the preventive treatment of migraine... It must be confessed that in a very large proportion of cases the headaches recur in spite of all we can do.”Reference Osler 6 For acute attacks, Osler recommended bed rest in a quiet room, as well as a small cup of strong coffee, chloroform, Cannabis indica (also used preventively), antipyrin (phenazone; an analgesic and antipyretic), antifebrin (acetanilide), phenacetin (acetophenetidin), caffeine citrate, nux vomica (created from the seeds of the strychnine tree), or ergot. He thought cannabis was the most satisfactory remedy, and reported that antipyrin and similar drugs worked best when used at the very outset of the paroxysm. He warned against overdosing acute headache medication like antifebrin or antipyrin, noting in a patient with migraine “unpleasant collapse symptoms following a twenty-five-grain dose of antipyrin.”Reference Osler 6 Osler ended the treatment section in the first edition of his book by stating that “electricity does not appear to be of much service.”Reference Osler 6 In the third edition of his text, he mentioned washing out the stomach with water at 105 degrees and giving a brisk saline cathartic early in a migraine attack.Reference Osler 9 In the fourth edition of his text he added the following treatment:
“And lastly, in obstinate cases, an ordinary tape seton may be inserted through the skin at the back of the neck, to be worn for three months, a plan of treatment which has the strongest possible recommendation from Mr. Whitehead, of Manchester.”Reference Osler 10
In the eighth edition Osler recommended irrigation of the colon with hot saline, and alkaline water by mouth.Reference Osler and McCrae 7
Discussion
Osler gave credit to Edward Liveing at the beginning of his chapter, underlining the importance of his 1873 book On Megrim, Sick-headache, and Some Allied Disorders: A Contribution to the Pathology of Nerve-Storms.Reference Liveing 11 Möllendorff and Peter Wallwork Latham were mentioned because they helped describe the vasomotor hypothesis of migraine,Reference Koehler and Isler 12 , Reference Weatherall 13 and Osler emphasized the vascular theory of migraine in his chapters over the years. Overall, he summarized the thoughts of others regarding pathophysiology, rather than hypothesizing anew.
Osler was well aware of the cardinal features of migraine, and mentioned unusual manifestations such as formed visual hallucinations. The apparitions mentioned by Osler likely refer to a paper by Silas Weir Mitchell on that topic, given the similar clinical descriptions. In 1887, Weir Mitchell published a paper entitled “Neuralgic Headaches With Apparitions of Unusual Character.”Reference Weir Mitchell 14 In that paper, he described unusual “visual prodromes” in four patients with migraine.Reference Weir Mitchell 14 One patient saw a “large black and very hairy dog”, followed by a severe unilateral headache.Reference Weir Mitchell 14 Other apparitions included a dead sister, a blood-covered living relative, a spider, and white-robed veiled figures. Weir Mitchell later stated that “this paper called out an interesting series of such cases [headaches with apparitions], not before known to medicine.”Reference Mitchell 15 Osler does not cite the author, which is not unusual in his textbook. There are only 137 citations in the book, although he often refers to authors by name.Reference Golden 3
Silas Weir Mitchell was instrumental in bringing Osler from McGill University to the University of Pennsylvania and Osler dedicated his book The Cerebral Palsies of Children to him. In 1902, Weir Mitchell topped Osler’s list of the seven leading American physicians.Reference Golden 3 After Weir Mitchell’s death in 1914, Osler wrote that “during five years’ residence in Philadelphia, had I been his son, he could not have done more, in every possible way, to promote my welfare.”Reference Osler 16
Osler taught that physicians should try to relieve painful symptoms and life-threatening conditions.Reference Bliss 1 Accordingly, he was not a therapeutic nihilist when it came to migraine. His cautious recommendations reflect his therapeutic principles: 1. There is an inherent tendency in many diseases to recovery quite irrespective of any treatment, 2. Nature, in the majority of cases, is quite competent to restore the patient to health, and 3. The functions of the physician are to co-operate with Nature.Reference Bliss 1 Osler was a therapeutic rationalist.Reference Macht 17
Osler’s treatment recommendations were similar to those of Edward Liveing, Wharton Sinkler, William Gowers, and other physicians of the late 1800s/early 1900s.Reference Liveing 11 , Reference Pepper and Starr 18 - Reference Eadie 20 Eadie recently commented on migraine treatment in that time period:
“Treatment recommendations largely depended on the published views of prominent individual medical figures whose opinions were based on a mixture of the writings of earlier authorities and of their own interpretations of their personal experience.”Reference Eadie 20
Liveing listed numerous acute and preventive medications without clearly clarifying his favorites. Osler thought cannabis was the best acute treatment and noted that New York neurologist Edward Sequin recommended a prolonged course of the drug on a preventive basis. Seguin himself learned about cannabis preventively from the English physician Richard Greene.Reference Seguin 21 Sinkler preferred bromide of lithium acutely, and cannabis preventively. Gowers favored bromide plus cannabis acutely, and nitroglycerine preventively.
Gowers wrote extensively on migraine, and had a significant influence on Osler’s textbook. Thus, it is not surprising that he was referred to in the migraine chapter. Gowers’ name was mentioned more often than any other author in the first edition of Osler’s textbook.Reference Golden 3 Osler copied three tables and one figure from Gowers’ Manual of Diseases of the Nervous System (tables on vocal cord paralysis, Brown-Séquard syndrome, and spells; figure of pyramidal tract) (Osler 1892 pages 807, 854, 893, 954; Gowers 1886/1888 vol. 2 pg. 265, Gowers vol. 1 pg. 158, Gowers vol. 2 pg 25, Gowers vol. 2 pg 702). van Gijn noted recently that Osler’s nervous system section mostly followed the outline of Gowers’ book.Reference van Gijn 22 Osler wrote in 1888:
“The recently completed work of Gowers on the Diseases of the Nervous System is the most solid contribution to systematic neurology produced by the British school, and as a text book on the subject stands unrivaled in any language. We need not read between the lines to see the untiring industry, the powers of patient observation and the clear, strong judgment which have made this work possible, and have made the author, at a comparatively early age, among the highest living authorities on all matters relating to diseases of the nervous system.”Reference Osler 23
Osler dedicated his book On Chorea and Choreiform Affections to Gowers, addressing himself as Gowers’ sincere friend. Gowers wrote Osler a letter of recommendation when Osler was being considered for a job at the University of Pennsylvania, commenting that “no English physician of the same standing had achieved a wider or higher reputation.” 24 Two warm letters between Osler and Gowers exist in the Osler Library Archives, highlighting their strong friendship. 25 , 26 Gowers’ son Ernest wrote Osler a letter after the death of his father. Referring to the relationship between William Osler and William Gowers, he noted that Osler had “indeed been a good friend to him all through.” 27
Osler did not draw upon his personal experience as one of the best academic clinicians of his time to contribute new knowledge about migraine. He did not appear to have a significant interest in migraine, as reflected by the fact that he wrote no articles on the subject. Regardless, given the popularity (500,000 copies were printed) and clarity of his text, Osler’s well-summarized migraine chapter had a great influence on practicing physicians. The author owns a copy of Bayard Horton’s Osler text (the 9th edition of The Principles and Practice of Medicine), and the migraine section is well underlined by Horton. Horton was to go on to be an expert in the area of headache at the Mayo Clinic.Reference Boes 28
Disclosures
CB has nothing to disclose. This research received no specific grant from any funding agency in the public, commercial, or not-for profit sectors.