Tho-Radia
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tho-Radia was a French pharmaceutical company making cosmetics between 1932 and 1968. Tho-Radia-branded creams, toothpastes and soaps were notable for containing radium and thorium until 1937, as a scheme to exploit popular interest for radium after it was discovered by Pierre and Marie Skłodowska-Curie, in a fad of radioactive quackery.
So-called "microcurietherapy"

In the early 1910s, French pharmacist Alexandre Jaboin postulated the principles of "microcurietherapy", inspired by the success of curietherapy in treating certain cancers: he assumed that very small doses of radium would stimulate living cells and increase their energy. These notions were not scientifically demonstrated, but they triggered a fad for radium-laden medicine and cosmetics. Several brands started exploiting the market in the course of the 1910s, notably Activa and Radior.[1]
Dr Alfred Curie's formula
In the early 1920s, pharmacist Alexis Moussalli joined the Millot pharmaceutical laboratories in Paris. Using his expertise in rare-earth elements, he invented a beauty cream laden with thorium chloride and radium bromide.[2] In order to start his own brand and as a marketing device, he associated with Alfred Curie, a medical doctor, homonymous to Pierre and Marie Curie but with no connection to them.[3] Pierre and Marie Curie apparently considered legal action against the company.[3] Alfred Curie was to register the Tho-Radia brand on 29 November 1932 and approved the mention "after Dr Alfred Curie's formula" on the packaging and publicities.[2]

