Fowler's solution is a solution containing 1% potassium arsenite (KAsO2) which was first described and published as a treatment for malaria and syphilis in the late 1700s and was once prescribed as a remedy or a tonic.[1][2] Thomas Fowler (1736–1801) of Stafford, England, proposed the solution in 1786 as a substitute for a patent medicine, "tasteless ague drop". From 1865, Fowler's solution was a leukemia treatment.[2][3]
From 1905, inorganic arsenicals like Fowler's solution saw diminished use as attention turned to organic arsenicals, starting with Atoxyl.[4]
^Ho, Derek; Lowenstein, Eve J. (2016). "Fowler's Solution and the Evolution of the Use of Arsenic in Modern Medicine". Skinmed. 14 (4): 287–289. ISSN1540-9740. PMID27784519.