Product Code Database
Example Keywords: stitch -stocking $24-134
   » » Wiki: Abortifacient
Tag Wiki 'Abortifacient'.
Tag

An abortifacient ("that which will cause a " from : "miscarriage" and "making") is a substance that induces . This is a nonspecific term which may refer to any number of substances or medications, ranging from herbs to prescription medications.

Common abortifacients used in performing include , which is typically used in conjunction with in a two-step approach. , which is routinely used safely during term , is also commonly used to induce abortion in the second or third .

For thousands of years, writers in many parts of the world have described and recommended herbal abortifacients to women who seek to terminate a pregnancy, although their use may carry risks to the health of the woman.


Medications
Because "abortifacient" is a broad term used to describe a substance's effects on pregnancy, there is a wide range of drugs that can be described as abortifacients or as having abortifacient properties.

The most commonly recommended medication regimen for intentionally inducing abortion involves the use of followed by one to two days later. The use of these medications for the purpose of ending a pregnancy has been extensively studied, and has been shown to be both effective and safe with fewer than 0.4% of patients needing hospitalization to treat an infection or to receive a blood transfusion. This combination is approved for use up to 10 weeks' gestation (70 days after the start of the last menstrual period).

Other drugs with abortifacient properties can have multiple uses. Both synthetic oxytocin (Pitocin) and (Cervidil, Prepidil) are routinely used during healthy, term . Pitocin is used to induce and strengthen contractions, and Cervidil is used to prepare the for labor by inducing softening and widening of this opening to the . When used this way, neither medication is considered an abortifacient. However, the same drugs can be used to induce an abortion, particularly after 12 weeks of pregnancy. Misoprostol (discussed above) is also used to treat peptic ulcers in patients who have had gastric or intestinal damage from use of NSAIDs. Because its use in treatment of ulcers makes it easier to access, misoprostol alone is sometimes used for self-induced abortion in countries or regions where legal abortion is not available or readily accessible.John Leland: " Abortion Might Outgrow Its Need for Roe v. Wade", The New York Times, 2 October 2005

Not all abortifacient agents are taken with the intention to end a pregnancy. , a drug often used for management of rheumatoid arthritis, can induce abortion. For this reason contraception is often advised while using methotrexate for management of a chronic condition.

Sometimes are used in an attempt to induce abortion. In general, a dose sufficient to be effective poses a risk to the mother because of potential and damage; failed attempts may require a follow-up clinical abortion because the uterus did not evacuate completely.

Some drugs that are not abortifacients, such as , are referred to as abortifacients.


History
The medical literature of classical antiquity often refers to pharmacological means of abortion; abortifacients are mentioned, and sometimes described in detail, in the works of , Caelius Aurelianus, , , , , , Paul of Aegina, Pliny, Theodorus Priscianus, Soranus of Ephesus, and others.

In ancient texts, scholars have described multiple written prescriptions or instructions for ending pregnancies. Some of these instructions were explicitly for ingesting ingredients to end a pregnancy, whereas other texts discuss the ingestion of ingredients to return a missed (which is used repeatedly throughout history as a coded reference to abortion).

The ancient colony of Cyrene at one time had an economy based almost entirely on the production and export of the plant silphium, which had uses ranging from food to a salve for feral dog bites. It was also considered a powerful abortifacient used to "purge the uterus". Silphium figured so prominently in the wealth of Cyrene that the plant appeared on minted there.

In the Bible, Biblical scholars and learned Biblical commentators view the ordeal of the bitter water (prescribed for a sotah, or a wife whose husband suspects that she was unfaithful to him) as referring to the use of abortifacients to terminate her pregnancy. The wife drinks "water of bitterness," which, if she is guilty, causes the abortion or miscarriage of a pregnancy she may be carrying.

(2025). 9780521873659, Cambridge University Press. .
(2025). 9780813530161, Rutgers University Press. .
(1993). 9780385156516, Doubleday.
(1996). 9780664237363, Westminster John Knox Press. .
(1995). 9780805210491, Random House Digital. .
The Biblical scholar Tikva Frymer-Kensky has disputed the interpretation that the ordeal of the bitter water referred to the use of abortifacients.

The medieval Islamic physician documented various birth control practices, including the use of as an abortifacient. Similarly, 11th-century physician Constantine the African described multiple abortifacient herbs, which he classified by order of their intensity, starting with abortifacients that had weaker effects on the body and ending with the most potent substances.Riddle, John M. (1992). Contraception and Abortion from the Ancient World to the Renaissance. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press .

, known as the "father of botany", listed five abortifacients in his 1749 Materia medica.

(2025). 9780674014879, Harvard University Press.
According to the historian of science Londa Schiebinger, in the 17th and 18th centuries "many sources taken together – herbals, midwifery manuals, trial records, Pharmacopoeia, and Materia medica – reveal that physicians, midwives, and women themselves had an extensive knowledge of herbs that could induce abortion." Schiebinger further writes that "European exploration in the West Indies yielded about a dozen known abortifacients."

For Aboriginal people in Australia, plants such as giant boat-lip orchid ( Cymbidium madidum), quinine bush ( Petalostigma pubescens), or blue-leaved mallee ( Eucalyptus gamophylla) were ingested, inserted into the body, or were smoked with Cooktown ironwood ( Erythrophleum chlorostachys).

(1987). 9780949708335, Weldons. .

Historically, the First Nations people of eastern Canada used Sanguinaria canadensis (bloodwort) and Juniperus virginiana to induce abortions.

(2025). 9781894778244, Theytus Books.

According to Virgil Vogel, a historian of the indigenous societies of North America, the used blue cohosh ( Caulophyllum thalictroides) as an abortifacient, and the used for the same purpose.

(1970). 9780465030293, University of Oklahoma Press.
The appendix to Vogel's book lists red cedar ( Juniperus virginiana), American pennyroyal ( Hedeoma pulegioides), , ( Asarum canadense), and several other herbs as abortifacients used by various North American Indian tribes. The anthropologist wrote that ( Acorus calamus), which was one of the ten most common medicinal drugs of Native American societies, was used as an abortifacient by the , , , , and other tribes; and he listed more than one hundred substances used as abortifacients by Native Americans.
(1998). 9780881924534, Timber Press.

Following a tradition among European and English authors, colonial Americans were advised by Benjamin Franklin to use careful measurements in his recipe for an abortifacient that he used as an example in a book he published to teach mathematics and many useful skills.Farrell, Molly, Ben Franklin Put an Abortion Recipe in His Math Textbook: To colonial Americans, termination was as normal as the ABCs and 123s, Slate, May 5, 2022

The historian Angus McLaren, writing about Canadian women between 1870 and 1920, states that "A woman would first seek to 'put herself right' by drinking an infusion of one of the traditional abortifacients, such as tansy, quinine, pennyroyal, rue, black hellebore, ergot of rye, sabin, or cotton root."

(1981). 9780773503564, McGill/Queens University Press.

During the American slavery period, 18th and 19th centuries, root bark was used in to induce a miscarriage.

In the late 19th century, women in the UK and US increasingly ingested lead to abort pregnancies, sometimes in the form of pills made of or lead plaster. It would often cause the women to become ill and could kill them.Arthur Hall. The increasing use of lead as an abortifacient: a series of thirty cases of plumbism. British Medical Journal, 18 March 1905, pp 584-587, online at NIH web site.Troesken, Werner. 2006. The Great Lead Water Pipe Disaster. MIT Press.

In the 19th century provided mail-order abortifacients and surgical abortion to pregnant clients in New York.

Early 20th-century newspaper advertisements included coded advertisements for abortifacient substances which would solve menstrual "irregularities." Between 1919 and 1934 the U.S. Department of Agriculture issued legal restraints against fifty-seven "feminine hygiene products" including "Blair's Female Tablets" and "Madame LeRoy's Regulative Pills."


Quickening
For much of history, ending a pregnancy prior to "" (the moment when a pregnant woman first feels fetal movement) did not have the type of legal or political restrictions and taboos found in the 21st century. Early medieval laws did not discuss abortion prior to quickening. The early Catholic church held that human life began at "ensoulment" (at the time of quickening), a continuation of Roman norms and positions on the use of abortifacients prior to quickening. "Abortion and Catholic Thought: The Little-Told History" Abortion and the Politics of Motherhood by Kristin Luker, University of California Press David L. Hull, Michael Ruse (editors), The Cambridge Companion to the Philosophy of Biology (Cambridge University Press 2007 ), p. 328

In English law, abortion did not become illegal until 1803. "Women who took drugs before that time quickening would describe their actions as 'restoring the menses' or 'bringing on a period'."

(1978). 9780841903494, Holmes & Meier Publishers, Inc. US.

At that time, abortion after quickening became subject to the death penalty. In 1837, the significance of quickening was removed, but the death penalty was also abandoned.


External links
Page 1 of 1
1
Page 1 of 1
1

Account

Social:
Pages:  ..   .. 
Items:  .. 

Navigation

General: Atom Feed Atom Feed  .. 
Help:  ..   .. 
Category:  ..   .. 
Media:  ..   .. 
Posts:  ..   ..   .. 

Statistics

Page:  .. 
Summary:  .. 
1 Tags
10/10 Page Rank
5 Page Refs
1s Time