A half century  of research in structural chemistry, much of it focusing on the ability of some amino acids to form constant,  stable bonds with metal ions, preceded the rapid development in  the 1930s and 1940s of a new
range of compounds, initially  applied to industrial, and then
increasingly to medical, uses.
First in Germany and then
in the USA, different methods were  developed for the production
of chelating substances for specific  industrial use, such as
the prevention of calcium in hard water  from causing staining
or other problems in textile printing. Citric  acid was commonly
used for this purpose until first a compound  known as NTA, and
then EDTA (ethylenediaminetetraacetic  acid), were
developed and patented to do the job more efficiently.
During the Second World War
research was carried out on  sodium salts of EDTA in order to
establish whether these would  be useful as an antidote to poison
gas. Earlier chelating  compounds which had been used in this
role, such as BAL (British  antiLewisite), had proved effective
when either externally applied  or used systemically in neutralizing
the arsenic in poison gas, but  had themselves been found to be
severely toxic in other ways.
A compound of sodium citrate
was used in 1941 to chelate lead  from the bodies of people poisoned
by this heavy metal and later  research established that EDTA
contained a highly effective  antidote to heavy metal toxicity
(lead poisoning, for example),  since it chelated just as well
with lead as it did with calcium when  it was infused into the
bloodstream, and without any side effects.
It was at Georgetown University
that Dr. Martin Rubin (who had  studied under Frederick Bersworth,
the major American pioneer researcher into EDTA)
conducted the first research into  the biological effects of EDTA
on humans. These studies showed  its effects on lowering calcium
levels, although this had not been  the objective of the work,
which had focused on discovering its  degree, or lack, of toxicity.
According to Dr Rubin, who
was the chief researcher into  EDTA's applications in treatment
of humans at that time, a Dr  Geschikter was the first to use
an EDTA compound for treatment  of a human. This work was also
done at Georgetown University,  using the chelating ability of
EDTA to assist in the carrying into a  patient of the heavy metal
nickel  with which it had been  chemically bound 
in a vain attempt to treat an advanced tumour.  There were sadly
no benefits to the patient, but perhaps more  importantly from
the viewpoint of the benefits later seen with  EDTA usage, there
were no harmful effects either: all of the  nickelEDTA
complex which was put into the patient was found to  be excreted
via the urine, unchanged.
It was in the early 1950s
that EDTA was first used in the  treatment of lead poisoning,
with pleasantly surprising and often  dramatically unexpected
results. Workers in battery factories  frequently developed lead
poisoning, as did sailors in the US Navy who painted ships with
leadbased paint. Intravenous infusions of  EDTA successfully
dealt with this problem, and indeed to this day  the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) in the USA suggests  EDTA chelation
as the ideal method of treating not only lead  poisoning but also
as the emergency treatment for hypercalcaemia.  It was found that
there was often a marked improvement in the  circulatory status
of patients with chronic lead poisoning, who also  had atherosclerotic
(atheromatous deposits in the arteries)  conditions and who were
being treated by EDTA infusion.