A 'bezoar' or 'enterolith' is a sort of
calculus or
concretion, a
stone found in the
intestines of mostly
ruminant animals, but occurring among others including humans. There are several varieties of bezoar, some of which have
inorganic constituents and others
organic.
Bezoars were formerly sought after because they were believed to have the power of a universal
antidote against any
poison. It was believed that a drinking glass which contained a bezoar set within would neutralize any poison poured into the glass. The word "bezoar" ultimately comes from the
Persian ''pâdzahr'' (پادزهر), which literally means "protection from poison." In fact, some types of trichobezoar are apparently able to precipitate or bind
arsenic compounds (long used as poison) from a solution.
In 1575, the surgeon
Ambroise Paré described an experiment to test the properties of the Bezoar Stone. At the time, the Bezoar stone was deemed to be able to cure the effects of any poison, but Paré believed this was impossible. It happened that a cook at Paré's court was caught stealing fine silver cutlery. In his shame, the cook agreed to be poisoned. He then used the Bezoar stone to no great avail as he died in agony days after. Paré had proved that the Bezoar stone could not cure all poisons as was commonly believed at the time.
A famous case in the
common law of
England (''Chandelor v. Lopus'', 79 Eng Rep. 3, Cro. Jac. 4,
Eng. Ct. Exch. 1603) announced the rule of ''
caveat emptor'', "let the buyer beware" if the goods he purchased are in fact genuine and effective. The case concerned a purchaser who sued for the return of the purchase price of an allegedly
fraudulent bezoar. (How the
plaintiff discovered that the bezoar did not work is not discussed in the report.) Judicial
scepticism over the alleged
magical powers of bezoars may well have justified this judgment in this particular case. The ruling, however, was seized on and formed an impediment to the formation of effective
consumer protection remedies and the law of
implied warranty well into the
nineteenth century.
The ''Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy'' notes that
persimmons have been identified as causing epidemics of intestinal bezoars, and that up to ninety percent of food boluses that occur from eating too much of the fruit require surgery for removal.
[1]
Bezoar pearls
In addition to bivalve pearls, there are a group of sacred natural gemstones largely considered bezoar stones, which were first documented in the
Garuda Purana, one of the books of Hindu holy text
Atharvaveda.
In addition to oyster pearls, also enumerated are the Conch Pearl, Cobra Pearl, Boar Pearl, Elephant Pearl, Bamboo Pearl, Whale Pearl, Fish Pearl, and Cloud Pearl. These pearls were later documented in the treatise
Brihat-Samhita ("The Great Compilation") of
Varahamihira, the Indian mathematician. The first documented contact with these artifacts by the Western world is described in the sole volume of 18th Century scientist
Albertus Seba, entitled ''Cabinet of Natural Curiosities''. Therein, a large collection of bezoar stones and non-oyster pearls were hand-sketched, and the collection of these items were on display in a forum which was the precursor of the modern day museum. Today, the original 446-plate volume, part of the greater work ''Locupletissimi Rerum Naturalium Thesauri Accurata Descriptio'', is on permanent exhibit at the
Koninklijke Bibliotheek in
The Hague,
Netherlands.
While the sacred
Nine Pearls of
Vedic tradition are typically considered bezoars, the Bamboo Pearl forms in the stem of the
Bamboo plant, while others such as the
Cloud Pearl have no known formation process.
Types of bezoars
★ 'Food boli' (singular, bolus) imitate true bezoars and are composed of loose aggregates of food items such as seeds, fruit pith, or pits as well as other types of items such as shellac, bubble gum, and concretions of some medications.
★ 'Pharmacobezoars' (or medication bezoars) are mostly tablets or semi-liquid masses of drugs.
★ 'Phytobezoars' are composed of nondigestible food material (e.g., cellulose) and are frequently reported in patients with impaired digestion and decreased gastric motility.
★ 'Trichobezoar' is a bezoar formed from
hair - an extreme form of
hairball. Humans who frequently consume hair sometimes require these to be removed. This has also been called
Rapunzel syndrome.
Miscellaneous
★ Other types of bezoars are formed from items such as stone or sand, usually in young children.
★ Ox bezoars are used in Chinese
herbology, where they are called Niu-huang.
★ In alchemy, ''animal bezoar'' is the heart and lungs of the viper, pulverized together.
★ In alchemy, ''mineral bezoar'' is an
emetic powder of
antimony, correct with
spirit of nitre, and softened by repeated lotions, which were said to carry off the purgative virtue of the antimony, and substitute a
diaphoretic one. It promoted sweat like the stone of the same name.
In popular culture
★ Bezoars, a trichobezoar in particular, were featured in the
Sandman comic storyline "", in the graphic story collection '' by
Neil Gaiman.
★ Bezoars have made appearances in
Robert Jordan's ''Further Chronicles of Conan''
★ A
Darwin Award was awarded to someone who died from a bezoar resulting from compulsively eating her own hair
[1].
★ A Bezoar was used as an ingredient in one of several configurations in the Xbox game
Jade Empire.
★ The Mehrunes Razor extra content for the Xbox 360 and PC game features a Bezoar from an albino Guar, a cattle like creature. It also features a Trichobezoar Extract potion that cures poison and increases your poison resistance.
★ A fictional monster in the
Buffy The Vampire Slayer episode entitled "Bad Eggs" shared a name with the Bezoar. The subterranean creature birthed parasitic offspring which would infect human hosts enslaving them to the mother Bezoar.
★ The first mention of the bezoar stone is by the Arabic and Persian writers. In the Arabic work attributed to Aristotle, and which was certainly written by the ninth and possibly as early as the seventh century, it is even described among the precious stones. The same is true of the oldest Persian work on medicine, namely, that of Abu Mansur Muwaffak, composed about the middle of the tenth century. A valuable monograph on the bezoar was written in 1625 by Caspar Bauhin, a learned professor and physician of Basel; this work contains all that was then known of the various qualities ascribed to this substance by the older authors.
★ A patient in episode 2.13 (Begin the Begin) of ''
Grey's Anatomy'' was found to have a bezoar; he had eaten his novel because he thought it was so bad and wanted to literally "put it behind him."
★ In the
Harry Potter series, bezoars are, as noted by
Professor Snape in Harry's first potions lesson, "a stone taken from the stomach of a goat, which will protect from most poisons." In
Harry Potter and the Half-Blood Prince, Harry uses a bezoar to save
Ron Weasley's life when he accidentally drinks poisoned mead.
See also
★
bezoardicum
★
Snake-Stones
References
#
[2]
★
Barry Levine. 1999. ''Principles of Forensic Toxicology''. Amer. Assoc. for Clinical Chemistry. ISBN ISBN 1-890883-87-5.
★
The Poison Sleuths: Arsenic - The King of Poisons. Retrieved
March 10 2007.
: This webpage is a reprint by the author of an article originally published in the 1997 issue of Science Reporter, published by the National Institute of Science Communication (CSIR) in India.
External links
★
A trichobezoar at the National Museum of Health and Medicine, Washington DC.