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Quiz about The Great Thalidomide Caper
Quiz about The Great Thalidomide Caper

The Great Thalidomide Caper Trivia Quiz


In the years after the births, thalidomide was spurned as a drug of evil and the cause of the worst human disaster of the 20th century. After being deemed unsafe to use, this drug seemed to go into hiding, and many interesting things happened...

A multiple-choice quiz by Flynn_17. Estimated time: 7 mins.
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Author
Flynn_17
Time
7 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
229,350
Updated
Jul 23 22
# Qns
10
Difficulty
Tough
Avg Score
6 / 10
Plays
1172
Awards
Top 35% Quiz
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Question 1 of 10
1. In the beginning, life looked rosy for thalidomide. Advertised under the names "Distaval" and "Thalomid", this drug came about when a failed anti-allergy drug proved to be somewhat of a wonder cure for people suffering from anxiety disorders. These included morning sickness, which in the swinging 60's, was seen to be a result of stress. Why was thalidomide such a breakthrough? Hint


Question 2 of 10
2. Unknowing, thousands of mothers were taking thalidomide pills to combat their morning sickness and dizziness, blissfully unaware of what was going on with their poor foetuses. The shock came when the children were born and the mothers were not allowed to see their offspring. What are the symptoms of thalidomide damage? Hint


Question 3 of 10
3. After the foetal damage, thalidomide soon went out of vogue. It was put on the shelf for years after the dangers became apparent, and it was only when a doctor in Israel was searching for a cure to the horrible disease leprosy that thalidomide was considered. Which of the following symptoms of leprosy does thalidomide prevent? Hint


Question 4 of 10
4. Thalidomide was then found to be something of an immune system regulator, and was used to treat certain immune system diseases. One of the success stories was that of Sarah Craven, who suffered from Behçet's disease. Behçet's causes horrible ulceration of the tongue and genitals as the immune system refuses to believe that these areas belong to the sufferer. In what way does thalidomide help sufferers of this grisly disease? Hint


Question 5 of 10
5. Sarah Craven was lucky to have been given thalidomide, as within three weeks, the ulceration caused by her Behçet's disease cleared up completely on both her tongue and genitals. She soon became healthy enough to have a child, and staved off thalidomide for the first five months of pregnancy so as not to damage to unformed foetus. Sadly, her Behçet's symptoms soon came back, and by the sixth month of her pregnancy, she had to take the drug again. There were fears that at this stage, thalidomide could still harm the child, but how? Hint


Question 6 of 10
6. Nothing happened to Sarah Craven's child at all, and she now has a healthy son named Jake. Sadly, most people who take thalidomide and then become pregnant have children who suffer terribly from the afflictions of the drug. When thalidomide was licensed to treat the effects of leprosy, the recipients of the drug has to sign a legal form. What did this form declare? Hint


Question 7 of 10
7. After being used to treat leprosy and Behçet's disease, the life of thalidomide suddenly got a lot more interesting. While treating cancer sufferers, it was found that thalidomide could help to kill solid tumours within the body by preventing angiogenesis. What is angiogenesis? Hint


Question 8 of 10
8. Not only solid tumours can be treated by thalidomide. In another famous case study, it was found that the usually fatal blood cancer multiple myeloma can be treated with the drug. Nancy Touhey found that thalidomide stopped the myeloma attacking the blood cells by preventing blood vessels growing around the bones. This prevents cancerous white cells generating. She also claimed that it was much better to use than chemotherapy. Why would thalidomide be better than chemo- or radiotherapy? Hint


Question 9 of 10
9. After all of the positive attributes of thalidomide came to light, many companies tried to make the drug safer. Celgene have manufactured "Revomid". This drug was created by altering the make up of thalidomide, producing a pill that is far safer to use. It is also more effective. How did they engineer this new, more effective form? Hint


Question 10 of 10
10. But after all the success and all the research into thalidomide, there was still one major problem. Thalidomide is unstable, but clearly restricts blood flow. This treats cancer, but also causes the deformation of foetuses. Which component of the drug actually restricts the blood supply, producing the aforementioned effects? Hint



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Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. In the beginning, life looked rosy for thalidomide. Advertised under the names "Distaval" and "Thalomid", this drug came about when a failed anti-allergy drug proved to be somewhat of a wonder cure for people suffering from anxiety disorders. These included morning sickness, which in the swinging 60's, was seen to be a result of stress. Why was thalidomide such a breakthrough?

Answer: It was a tranquilliser that was impossible to overdose on.

Thalidomide first came about when an anti-allergen was being tested on rats, but instead of preventing the allergies, it caused the rats to become drowsy and placid. No matter how much thalidomide was given to the rats, they remained healthy, and so it was regarded as one of the greatest medical breakthroughs of the 1960's - a tranquilliser that worked, but was essentially harmless to the fully formed adult.
2. Unknowing, thousands of mothers were taking thalidomide pills to combat their morning sickness and dizziness, blissfully unaware of what was going on with their poor foetuses. The shock came when the children were born and the mothers were not allowed to see their offspring. What are the symptoms of thalidomide damage?

Answer: A normal head and trunk with shortened or no limbs

To this day, doctors have no idea how the mutations form, as they still don't know exactly how thalidomide works. The newest theory is that the blood restricting effects of the drug had prevented a copious supply of blood reaching the developing limbs.

This meant the limbs had failed to develop adequately. The drug was withdrawn in 1962, after 8,000 children in 46 countries were born with the deformities.
3. After the foetal damage, thalidomide soon went out of vogue. It was put on the shelf for years after the dangers became apparent, and it was only when a doctor in Israel was searching for a cure to the horrible disease leprosy that thalidomide was considered. Which of the following symptoms of leprosy does thalidomide prevent?

Answer: ENL Sores (skin lesions)

ENL sores (erythema nodosum leprosum sores) are large, hideous growths that occur below the skin. These are nothing more than the immune system reacting against the bacteria which cause the disease. The swellings themselves are caused by cytokines and activated macrophages, which eventually destroy tissue and mutilate flesh in a desperate attempt to expel the bacteria from the body. Leprosy, as a disease, is in fact related to tuberculosis, and the paucibaccilary form of leprosy is very similar to the deadly lung disease.
4. Thalidomide was then found to be something of an immune system regulator, and was used to treat certain immune system diseases. One of the success stories was that of Sarah Craven, who suffered from Behçet's disease. Behçet's causes horrible ulceration of the tongue and genitals as the immune system refuses to believe that these areas belong to the sufferer. In what way does thalidomide help sufferers of this grisly disease?

Answer: It suppresses immune receptors, which decreases ulceration

Thalidomide causes blood supply to be decreased, and there is no evidence to show that thalidomide causes antiseptic tissue fluid to be produced. It is this immune system suppression that stops the production of ENL sores on the bodies of leprosy sufferers, and the occurence of ulceration on the bodies of Behçet's victims. Both the ulceration and sores are a result of the human immune system battling desperately against what it believes to be foreign bodies.
5. Sarah Craven was lucky to have been given thalidomide, as within three weeks, the ulceration caused by her Behçet's disease cleared up completely on both her tongue and genitals. She soon became healthy enough to have a child, and staved off thalidomide for the first five months of pregnancy so as not to damage to unformed foetus. Sadly, her Behçet's symptoms soon came back, and by the sixth month of her pregnancy, she had to take the drug again. There were fears that at this stage, thalidomide could still harm the child, but how?

Answer: It can cause severe neurological impairment.

The neurological impairment is far rarer than the foetal distortion, and has been found in very few of the children whose mothers took the drug during the last trimester of pregnancy. There is, however, little information on these neurological problems, as very few women who take thalidomide today choose to have children in fear of the potential disfigurement.
6. Nothing happened to Sarah Craven's child at all, and she now has a healthy son named Jake. Sadly, most people who take thalidomide and then become pregnant have children who suffer terribly from the afflictions of the drug. When thalidomide was licensed to treat the effects of leprosy, the recipients of the drug has to sign a legal form. What did this form declare?

Answer: That the drug's recipients would use two forms of contraception during intercourse while using thalidomide.

It was imperative that, in the few places thalidomide was commissioned to use for diseases such as leprosy, children would not be affected by the drug. It is for this reason that women who used the drug had to sign a release form declaring that they would use two forms of contraception during intercourse while taking the drug. Few countries ever licensed thalidomide, but in countries such as Israel, it was felt that the drug was of great use due to the abundance of leprosy. For this reason, the aforementioned legal agreements had to be signed in Israel and all other countries where thalidomide was being prescribed.
7. After being used to treat leprosy and Behçet's disease, the life of thalidomide suddenly got a lot more interesting. While treating cancer sufferers, it was found that thalidomide could help to kill solid tumours within the body by preventing angiogenesis. What is angiogenesis?

Answer: An action whereby the tumour ensures a copious blood supply by creating blood vessels that feed the tumour and nothing else.

Both solid tumours and blood cancers use angiogenesis to ensure that the cancer grows and spreads. Blood cancers create a blood supply to the bone marrow to generate cancerous blood cells (as in leukaemia), and solid tumours generate systems of veins around themselves. They then use the copious blood supply to grow and multiply.
8. Not only solid tumours can be treated by thalidomide. In another famous case study, it was found that the usually fatal blood cancer multiple myeloma can be treated with the drug. Nancy Touhey found that thalidomide stopped the myeloma attacking the blood cells by preventing blood vessels growing around the bones. This prevents cancerous white cells generating. She also claimed that it was much better to use than chemotherapy. Why would thalidomide be better than chemo- or radiotherapy?

Answer: All of these reasons make thalidomide a better choice

Thalidomide has also proven to be something of a wonder drug for cancers, but scientists are still unsure about how the drug works. It is not a cure, but has given many people suffering from multiple myeloma much more time with their families, as it controls the cancer.

The only drawback is that once the cancer has become accustomed to the thalidomide, the thalidomide will become less and less effective. Thalidomide also has side effects, such as constipation and peripheral neuropathy (numbness in the extremities.)
9. After all of the positive attributes of thalidomide came to light, many companies tried to make the drug safer. Celgene have manufactured "Revomid". This drug was created by altering the make up of thalidomide, producing a pill that is far safer to use. It is also more effective. How did they engineer this new, more effective form?

Answer: They removed an oxygen atom and replaced it with a nitrogen atom.

Although the scientists carrying out this procedure had no idea how the drug worked in the first place, and had even less idea how to alter the drug to make it safe, the new formula has been almost completely successful. "Removid" is now an even more effective drug to use than thalidomide against once-fatal cancers.

It is also being used in the treatment of AIDS and multiple sclerosis. Sadly, it cannot provide a cure - only a drug to make these diseases more bearable.
10. But after all the success and all the research into thalidomide, there was still one major problem. Thalidomide is unstable, but clearly restricts blood flow. This treats cancer, but also causes the deformation of foetuses. Which component of the drug actually restricts the blood supply, producing the aforementioned effects?

Answer: No one knows for sure

The drug breaks down into many compounds when dissolved in even the simplest solvents. As mentioned before, no one knows how the drug caused the mutations, and equally, no one is sure what part of the drug retards angiogenesis. As the theory of mutation is based on the restriction of angiogenesis, the research has turned on to why angiogenesis is prevented using thalidomide. Scientists, therefore, are now examining the drug's effects on the immune system. Maybe one day we will know how thalidomide truly works, but for now, this tranquilliser and cancer cure remains shrouded in mystery.
Source: Author Flynn_17

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