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Your Good Health: Green Mountain Asthma Cure banned

Dear Dr. Roach: Back in the early 1930s, I had asthma. My dad had asthma all his life. When either of us had an attack, my dad would use a powder called Green Mountain Powder. He would set fire to some of the powder, and we would inhale the smoke.
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Dr. Keith Roach writes a medical question-and-answer column weekdays.

Dear Dr. Roach: Back in the early 1930s, I had asthma. My dad had asthma all his life. When either of us had an attack, my dad would use a powder called Green Mountain Powder. He would set fire to some of the powder, and we would inhale the smoke. It worked very well.

You could buy it in powder form and cigarettes, over the counter. Later, you had to have a prescription for it.

I went to see a doctor sometime in 1980. While I was waiting for him to come in the room, I smelled an odour. When he came in, I asked him what that odour was. He said that it was a paper that you could set fire to that smelled like marijuana. It was used to educate people to the smell. I told him that the odour smelled like Green Mountain Powder. He didn鈥檛 know about Green Mountain Powder. A pharmacist told me that Green Mountain Powder was a hallucinatory drug. What is Green Mountain Powder? Is it marijuana?

J.M.

The Green Mountain Asthma Cure began in 1869, when Dr. J.H. Guild of Rupert, Vermont, formulated dried leaves of stramonium and belladonna (not marijuana), intended to be a treatment for asthma when smoked. Stramonium leaves (also called 鈥渄evil鈥檚 snare鈥) contain atropine, which does have some activity against asthma. In higher doses, it can be hallucinogenic. It is not as effective as modern treatments for asthma, and inhaling smoke of any kind can worsen asthma.

Medications intended to be smoked were quite common in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Green Mountain Powder was popular through the 1950s until it was banned in 1985. Other people have noted that Green Mountain Powder smelled much like marijuana.

Dear Dr. Roach: My mom鈥檚 doctor decided that at 95, she needs to have a memory-retention test, after many years of my saying that her short-term memory was getting much worse. His assistant tested her, and said she falls into the 鈥渉igh moderate鈥 range, where the limits are Superior, Medium, Moderate and No Memory (can鈥檛 recall the correct word). He put her on Donepezil HCL 5 mg, and I have to take her to his office every two weeks for a vitamin B-12 shot. Is this regimen supposed to stop the progression of the memory loss? Does it work, or is this just a 鈥淢edicare charge鈥? It鈥檚 been two weeks, and the only thing Mom has is an upset stomach! I think the memory is just getting worse. Any suggestions?

T.H.

Donepezil (Aricept) is a treatment for dementia 鈥 usually Alzheimer鈥檚 disease, although it is sometimes used for other types of dementia. Although it is used frequently, its effectiveness is modest. It slows down the progression of disease somewhat in most people, and about 10 per cent of people have a significant improvement. Two weeks is not long enough to determine whether the medication is working. Most experts recommend a six-month trial. Unfortunately, stomach upset is a common (as high as 20 to 30 per cent) side- effect that sometimes limits the ability to use this medication. Her doctor is likely to redo the memory test when she returns, and that information, along with reports from the family on effectiveness and side effects, will determine whether to keep her on the medication.

Dr. Roach regrets that he is unable to answer individual letters, but will incorporate them in the column whenever possible. Readers may email questions to [email protected].