History
of Surgery
The
first surgical procedures were performed in the Neolithic
Age (about 10,000 to 6000 BC). Trepanning, a procedure in
which a hole is drilled in the skull to relieve pressure on
the brain, may have been performed as early as 8000 BC. In
Egypt, carvings dating to 2500 BC describe surgical circumcision-the
removal of foreskin from the penis and the clitoris from female
genitalia. Operations such as castration (the removal of a
male's testicles); lithotomy (the removal of stones from the
bladder); and amputation (the surgical removal of a limb or
other body part) are also believed to have been performed
by the Egyptians. Ancient Egyptian medical texts have been
found that provide instructions for many surgical procedures
including repairing a broken bone and mending a serious wound.
In ancient India, the Hindus surgically treated bone fractures
and removed bladder stones, tumors, and infected tonsils.
They are also credited with having developed plastic surgery
as early as 2000 BC in response to the punishment of cutting
off a person's nose or ears for certain criminal offenses.
Using skin flaps from the forehead, Hindu surgeons shaped
new noses and ears for the punished criminals. In the 4th
century BC, the Greek physician Hippocrates published descriptions
of various surgical procedures, such as the treatment of fractures
and skull injuries, with directions for the proper placement
of the surgeon's hands during these operations.
During most of the Middle Ages (5th century to 14th century
AD), the practice of surgery declined. It was viewed as inferior
to medicine, and its practice was left to barbers who traveled
from town to town cutting hair, removing tumors, pulling teeth,
stitching wounds, and bloodletting, the practice of draining
blood from the body, then thought to cure illness. The red-and-white
striped pole that today identifies barbershops derived its
design from this practice. The red stripes symbolize blood
and the white stripes signify bandages.
In 1316 the French surgeon Guy de Chauliac published Chirurgia
magna (Great Surgery). This massive text describes how to
remove growths, repair hernias (protrusion of an organ through
surrounding structures), and treat fractures using slings
and weights. The text helped surgery gain respect as a serious
science. At this time a new order of surgeons arose in France.
They were called surgeons of the long robe, distinguished
from the barber surgeons who were known as surgeons of the
short robe. The barber surgeons had little medical training,
while the surgeons of the long robe were studied physicians
and considered such practices as bloodletting primitive. Corporations,
or guilds, of surgeons of the long robe were formed in several
countries.
During the 16th, 17th, and 18th centuries, many discoveries
in surgical practice took place. Much credit belongs to the
French surgeon Ambroise Paré, often called the father
of modern surgery. Paré successfully employed the method
of ligating, or tying off, arteries to control bleeding, thus
eliminating the old method of cauterizing, or searing, the
bleeding part with a red-hot iron or boiling oil. Discoveries
about functions of the human body also helped make surgery
a more accurate science during this period. For example, the
English physician and anatomist William Harvey discovered
the process of blood circulation and Italian anatomist Marcello
Malpighi identified the existence of tiny blood vessels called
capillaries that carry blood from the major blood vessels
to the cells of the body. John Hunter, a British anatomist
and surgeon, stressed the close relationship between medicine
and surgery and performed many experimental operations that
advanced the practice of surgery.
Most surgery, however, continued to be restricted to less
critical areas of the body or to operations that did not penetrate
the skin too deeply. Surgeons rarely opened the abdomen, chest,
or skull because of the pain it caused the patient and the
risk of infection. This changed in 1846 when anesthesia was
used as a way to mask pain during surgery by American dentist
William Morton. Although Morton is often credited with the
discovery of surgical anesthesia, American surgeon Crawford
W. Long used anesthesia in 1842 during the removal of tumors
but did not publish his results until 1849.
Post-surgical infections remained a serious complication of
surgery until the mid-19th century when the French chemist
Louis Pasteur discovered that fermentation or putrefaction,
the decay and death of body tissue, is caused by bacteria
in the air. In 1865 the British surgeon Joseph Lister applied
Pasteur's work to surgery, developing antiseptic (germ-killing)
techniques including the use of a carbolic acid spray to kill
germs in the operating room before surgery. These antiseptic
procedures helped eliminate postoperative infection. Other
physicians, including Austrian Ignaz Semmelweiss and American
Oliver Wendell Holmes, determined that bacteria are also carried
on the hands and clothing and transferred from patient to
patient as a physician attends one after another. These physicians
pioneered techniques such as washing hands and changing into
clean clothing before surgery that prevent wounds from being
contaminated during surgery.
In the late 1800s, having solved the problems of pain and
infection, surgeons began performing new types of surgery
including procedures on the abdomen, brain, and spinal cord.
At the turn of the 20th century, improved diagnostic abilities
and methods of treatment helped surgery become even more effective.
When the German physicist Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen invented
X rays in 1895 to "photograph" the inside of the
body he changed the way surgery was performed. The discovery
of the blood groups A, B, and O by Austrian pathologist Karl
Landsteiner enabled surgeons to give patients transfusions
of their own blood type to ensure survival during surgery.
The need for a readily available supply of blood for transfusions
led to the creation of blood banks in 1937.
Other technological advances permitted surgeons to perform
increasingly complex and difficult operations. The introduction
of antibiotics in the 1940s further minimized the risk of
postoperative infection. The development of the heart-lung
machine in 1953 by American surgeon John H. Gibbon allowed
surgeons to more easily and successfully perform surgery on
these organs. It also marked the beginning of modern clinical
heart surgery. The operating microscope, developed in the
1950s, provided surgeons with a way to perform delicate operations
on minute body structures like the inner ear and the eye,
and more recently, enabled surgeons to reattach the tiny blood
vessels from severed limbs to the body (Microsurgery). The
first kidney transplants were performed in the 1950s, and
the first heart transplant, in 1967, was performed by South
African physician Christiaan Barnard.
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