Tho-Radia

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Tho-Radia powder box "made after Dr Alfred Curie's formula" at Musée Curie in Paris

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"

"Radium and Beauty": 1918 advert for Radior, another cosmetic brand whose products contained radium

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]

The Tho-Radia company

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