OPIUM

substance derived by collecting and drying the milky juice in the unripe seed pods of the opium poppy, Papaver somniferum. Opium varies in color from yellow to dark brown and has a characteristic odor and a bitter taste. Its chief active principle is the alkaloid morphine, a narcotic. Other constituents are the alkaloids codeine, papaverine, and noscapine (narcotine); heroin is synthesized from morphine. Morphine, heroin, and codeine are addicting drugs; papaverine and narcotine are not. A tincture of opium is called laudanum; paregoric is a mixture of opium, alcohol, and camphor.

Effects and Addictive Nature

Opium and its various constituents exert effects upon the body ranging from analgesia, or insensitivity to pain, to narcosis, or depressed physiological activity leading to stupor. Opium users describe experiencing a feeling of calm and well-being. Opium addicts in otherwise good physical and mental health whose drug needs are met are thought to experience no debilitating physiological effects from their addiction, although there is some evidence that immune function is compromised. However, their preoccupation with the drug and its acquisition can lead to malnutrition and general poor self-care and an increased risk of disease.

Medical Uses

Opium was commonly used as an analgesic until the development of morphine. Morphine continues to be prescribed for relief of severe pain, but fears of its addictive potential have limited its use. Laudanum was used in the 1800s to promote sleep and alleviate pain; codeine suppresses coughing; paregoric stops diarrhea. Medicinal opiates were freely available in the United States and Europe in the 19th cent., and the number of addicted people surged as a result.

History

The medicinal properties of opium have been known from the earliest times, and it was used as a narcotic in Sumerian and European cultures at least as early as 4000 b.c. The drug was introduced into India by the Muslims and its use spread to China. Early in the 19th cent., against Chinese prohibitions, British merchants began smuggling opium into China in order to balance their purchases of tea for export to Britain, an act that set the stage for the Opium Wars. Chinese emigrants to the United States, who were employed to build the transcontinental railroad, brought the opium-smoking habit to the West Coast.

During the 19th cent. opium was grown in the United States as well as imported. Besides indiscriminate medical use, opiates were available in the United States in myriad tonics and patent medicines, and smoking in opium dens was unhindered, resulting in an epidemic of opiate addiction by the late 1800s. The generous use of morphine in treating wounded soldiers during the Civil War also produced many addicts.

Importation of opium by Chinese nationals was prohibited in 1887; in 1906 the Pure Food and Drug Act required accurate labeling of patent medicines. The Harrison Narcotics Act of 1914 taxed and regulated the sale of narcotics and prohibited giving maintenance doses to addicts who made no effort to recover, leading to the arrest of some physicians and the closing of maintenance-treatment clinics. Since then, numerous laws attempting to regulate importation, availability, use, and treatment have been passed, and the concern with opium addiction per se has largely been replaced by concern with heroin, cocaine, marijuana, and other illegal drugs.

Large quantities of opium are still grown, some for legitimate use, on opium poppy farms in Southeast Asia (the "Golden Triangle:" primarily in Myanmar), Southwest Asia (primarily Afghanistan and Pakistan), and Latin America (primarily Colombia). The opium gum may be crudely refined and smoked (e.g., "brown sugar") or converted to morphine and heroin. Growers usually make more for opium than for other crops, and the cultivation and refining employ hundreds of thousands of people, but the real profits go to the drug traffickers. It is estimated that the street price for heroin is 153 to 183 times that of the opium bought from the farmer. Despite laws and agreements to control its use, a worldwide illicit opium traffic persists.

See also drug addiction and drug abuse.

Bibliography

See publications of the Drugs & Crime Data Center and Clearinghouse, the Bureau of Justice Statistics Clearinghouse, and the National Clearinghouse for Alcohol and Drug Information.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Opium  - 9025 results

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OPIUM AND FOREIGN POLICY WILLIAM O. WALKER III Opium and Foreign Policy The Anglo-American Search for...Cataloging-in-Publication Data Walker William O., 1946- Opium and foreign policy: the Anglo-American search for order in...
Opium and Empire By the same author: Prince of Pirates: The...Temenggongs and the Development of Johor and Singapore, 1784-1885 Opium and Empire Chinese Society in Colonial Singapore, 1800-1910...of Southeast Asia 29 3 Opium and the Singapore Economy 50...
OPIUM AS AN INTERNATIONAL PROBLEM THE GENEVA CONFERENCES BY...volume is in the nature of a report upon the work of the two Opium Conferences recently held in Geneva, Switzerland. In this...fight in the United States for the control of the use of opium and habit-forming drugs, and who so ably represented the...
Opium Regimes Opium Regimes China, Britain, and Japan, 1839 1952 EDITED BY Timothy...University of California Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Opium regimes : China, Britain, and Japan, 1839 1952 / edited by Timothy Brook...
...OFFICE ON DRUGS AND CRIME Vienna THE OPIUM ECONOMY IN AFGHANISTAN An International...Thailand, Pakistan and Turkey (on the opium front), Bolivia and Peru (on the cocaine...against cultivation, trade and abuse of opium have been crucial steps towards solving...
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Opium and Empire: Some Evidence from Colonial-Era Asian Stock and...exports and immigration, the article assesses the impact of the opium trade on the economies of colonial Malaya, the Netherlands...to international trade are significantly correlated with opium price changes, as are prices for labour-intensive, Chinese-dominated...
Opium, Empire, and Modern History. by James L. Hevia Alan Baumler, editor. Modern China and Opium: A Reader. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 2001...0. Timothy Brook and Bob Tadashi Wakabayashi, editors. Opium Regimes: China, Britain, and Japan, 1839-1952. Berkeley...
British policy discussions on the opium question in the Federated Shan States...been examined at many levels; however, the opium policy applied in the indirectly ruled...over the production and distribution of opium in the trans-Salween region of the States...
Opium and the beginnings of Chinese capitalism in Southeast Asia...Trocki This article deals with the relationship between opium revenue farming and the development of capitalist enterprises in Southeast Asia. It examines the role which opium played in the transformation of all Asian economies during...
Opium-Reduction Programmes, Discourses of Addiction and Gender...Laos. by Paul T. Cohen , Chris Lyttleton Opium use is widespread in northern provinces of Laos, Myanmar...referred to as the "Golden Triangle". The cultivation of opium is associated with a number of highland ethnic minorities...
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magazine articles on: Opium  - 780 results

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Britains Opium Wars. by John Newsinger It...the world has ever seen. The smuggling of opium into China was by the 1830s a source of...overlooked in the history books where the opium trade is either played down or ignored altogether...
...of the poppies; Leslie Marchant sees the Opium Wars as a philosophical clash between two...Leslie Marchant THE ANGLO-CHINESE Opium Wars of 1839-42 and 1856-60, and the later...China had the right to legislate against opium trafficking and usage in its own territory...
Afghanistans Opium Addiction: Afghanistan Is the Worlds First...position as the worlds largest producer of the opium poppy and its heroin by-product. He is...Drugs and Crime (UNODC), Afghanistans 2007 opium harvest is set to be bigger than last years...
Afghan Poppies Bloom: The War-Ravaged, Opium-Dependent Country Lives in Fear of a New...around here, his real business is farming opium poppy. Mr. Attocks land lies about an hour...again soared. Globally, Afghanistans opium business is estimated to be worth more...
...Exclusive Tony Blairs Ambition to Eradicate Opium Production in Afghanistan Has Failed Miserably...intimately bound up with the expansion of opium production in the province under the armed...in the New York Times. The figures for opium production in Afghanistan over the five-year...
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No Opium, No Money. Byline: Rukmini Callimachi...currency was what grew in everyones backyard opium. When children felt like buying candy, they...fathers fields and returned with a few grams of opium folded inside a leaf. Their mothers collected...
The Opium Fields of England; Beauty: The Opium Poppy. Byline: Tamara Cohen IT is a crop more usually associated...made into more than 100 tons of morphine and codeine. Extracting opium from the poppies and turning it into morphine - or heroin - isso...
Our 5,000 Troops Cant Stop a Record Afghanistan Opium Crop; Crackdown: Afghan Police Burn a Pile of Seized Opium Poppies Yesterday Lucrative: A Man Harvests Opium. OPIUM poppy production in Afghanistan has hit record levels...
Our 5,000 Troops Cant Stop a Record Afghanistan Opium Crop; Lucrative: A Man Harvests Opium Crackdown: Afghan Police Burn a Pile of Seized Opium Poppies Yesterday. Byline: Ian Drury OPIUM poppy production in Afghanistan...
Mission to Chinatown Found Opium to Be Rife. AN on-the-spot investigation...Mercury in January, 1889, found that opium smoking was rife there, but that was...them a lamp on which they heated the opium for their pipes. They were well dressed...
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encyclopedia articles on: Opium  - 56 results

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OPIUM substance derived by collecting and drying the milky juice in the unripe seed pods of the opium poppy , Papaver somniferum. Opium varies in color from yellow to dark brown and has a characteristic odor and a bitter taste. Its chief...
OPIUM WARS 1839 42 and 1856 60, two wars between China and...Early in the 19th cent., British merchants began smuggling opium into China in order to balance their purchases of tea for...1839, China enforced its prohibitions on the importation of opium by destroying at Guangzhou (Canton) a large quantity of opium...
MORPHINE principal derivative of opium , which is the juice in the unripe seed pods of the opium poppy , Papaver somniferum. It was first isolated from opium in 1803 by the German pharmacist F. W. A. Serturner, who named it after Morpheus...
AFYONKARAHISAR afyon ka rahisar Turk.,=black castle of opium, city (1990 pop. 95,643), capital of Afyonkarahisar prov., W...is the commercial center of a region where grains are grown. Opium poppies, once a main product, were banned in 1971, except for...
PAREGORIC par gor ik, alcoholic solution of opium and camphor first prepared in the 18th cent. Because of the constipating effect of opium, paregoric has been used to control diarrhea. It was formerly a constituent of many cough elixirs...
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