Surgery
Operations
that people once regarded as impossible became routine in
the 20th century. Many of these surgical advances resulted
from improved drugs or medical technology. Better drugs to
prevent rejection of transplanted organs made transplantation
of hearts, kidneys, livers, lungs, and other organs removed
from donors possible. Patients were kept alive with artificial
kidneys and temporary artificial hearts while awaiting a transplant.
The heart-lung machine made it possible to stop and restart
the heart during coronary bypass surgery. Small fiber-optic
instruments called endoscopes led to the new field of minimally
invasive surgery. These new tools made it possible to remove
a diseased gallbladder or appendix, for example, through small
slits rather than large incisions, greatly reducing the amount
of anesthesia required during the surgery and lessening recovery
time. Transfusions of blood, plasma, and other saline solutions,
which went into use in the 1930s, helped prevent deaths from
shock in surgery patients. In the 1990s, physicians even began
performing surgery to repair defects in unborn infants.
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