A Brief History Of Medicine Part 4 Renaissance to early 1900’s.
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Transcript of A Brief History Of Medicine Part 4 Renaissance to early 1900’s.
A Brief History Of Medicine
Part 4
Renaissance to early 1900’s
People have had illness.People have tried to explain the cause of
disease.Humans have sought cures for
sicknesses.
Throughout History
The Renaissance
Time Period
1300 AD to 1600 AD “Re-birth” of
knowledge
Major Advancements
1543 Flemish Scholar Andreas Vesalius began to use human bodies for anatomy study
Wrote the first complete textbook on human anatomy: "De Humani Corporis Fabrica", meaning "On the Fabric of the Human Body".
Major Advancements
Girolamo Fracastoro 1546
Theory of contagion Said disease infection can
be caused by minute bodies (“germs”) capable of self-replication, transmitted from infector to infected.
Major Advancements
The French army doctor Ambroise Paré, born in 1510, revived the ancient Greek method of tying off blood vessels.
After amputation the common procedure was to cauterize the open end of the amputated appendage to stop the hemorrhaging. This was done by heating oil, water, or metal and touching it to the wound to seal off the blood vessels.
Major Advancements
Pare also believed in dressing wounds with clean bandages and ointments.
He was the first to design artificial hands and limbs for amputation patients. On one of the artificial hands, the two pairs of fingers could be moved for simple grabbing and releasing tasks and the hand look perfectly natural underneath a glove.
Major Advancements
1628, William Harvey explained the circulation of blood through the body in veins and arteries.
It was previously thought that blood was the product of food and was absorbed by muscle tissue.
William Harvey
The Heart is a pump – it does not make blood (as most doctors thought)
Blood circulates around and through the body.
Microscope Used for Science
Antonie van Leeuwenhoek , 1670’s
Dutch scientist Improved microscope*
with smaller, superior lenses
*Actually “invented” in 1590 by Zacharius Jannssen.
Leeuwenhoek
Was actually studying various fabrics
First to observe bacteria 1676
“Little beasties” Also observed protists
and muscle fibers Discovered blood cells
Marcello Malpighi
Italian physician & biologist
Malpighi first to study blood with microscope in 1690’s
Also studied skin, kidney & liver tissues
Revolutionized the study of biology
Treatment Changed Little
Despite changes in knowledge, the major treatments were still Bleed Blister Purge Avoid sickness
Who’s Who?
Physician – university trained doctor who could prescribe medicine & do surgery (most expensive!)
Apothecary – shopkeepers with a little training; skilled at mixing herbs
Surgeon – “bone cutter” who did amputations
Barber – minor surgery (like removing moles)
Midwife – women who assisted with childbirth
Beginnings of Modern Medicine
Time Period 1700’s to 1900’s
Hospitals in the 1700’s & 1800’s
Hospitals were often unsanitary
People were mixed in large rooms regardless of their disease
They were a “last resort” when all else failed.
Surgery Was Crude & Dangerous
Operations were still likely to lead to death as a result of infection - even if the patient had survived the operation.
Doctors wore dirty overcoats over their normal day coat in the operating theatre in anticipation of the blood and other fluids that might be spilt in quantity - they did not want to spoil their day-to-day clothes !!
Surgery Was Crude & Dangerous
Surgical instruments were not disinfected afterwards as they did not know about germs.
Operating tools would be used form one patient to another and not cleaned. One set of operating tools found at the old Guy’s Hospital had three sets of blood types on them - dried and stained into the wooden handles of the instruments.
William Morton, 1846
American Dentist Used ether as an
anesthetic to put the patient to sleep before surgery
Major Advancements - Nursing
The participation of women in medical care (beyond serving as midwives, sitters and cleaning women) was brought about by the likes of Florence Nightingale and Clara Barton.
These women showed a previously male dominated profession the importance of nursing in order to lessen the death rate which resulted from lack of hygiene and nutrition.
Major Advancements - Nursing
Florence Nightingale (1820-1910) was a nurse in London (rare for a woman from a wealthy family)
Nightingale took over the St Thomas hospital in 1852.
In 1854, the British army asked her to help during the Crimean War.
She revolutionized hospital care with cleanliness and organization
Set up school for nurses; soon all nurses were well-trained
Florence Nightingale
Nursing in America
Clara Barton (1821-1912) Coordinated medical supplies
for the Union Army in the Civil War
After the War, she coordinated the search from missing Union soldiers
Founded the American Red Cross in 1881
Clara Barton, Civil War nurse
Smallpox
Known since 10,000 BC Smallpox affected all levels of society. In the 1700’s in Europe, 400,000 people
died each yearUp to 60% who got it diedSmallpox killed thousands of Native
Americans when the Europeans brought the infection to the New World
Smallpox Symptoms
High fever, body-aches (like many viruses)
Pus-filled bumps covered the body, especially face, arms, and legs.
Bumps were hard and itchy then burst and spread the pus
1/3 of survivors went blind Most had disfiguring pock-marks Smallpox was highly contagious
and caused epidemics
Inoculation or Variolation
Lady Montague learned this process in Turkey
Introduced variolation to England in 1721
This process introduced a tiny amount of smallpox pus into a healthy person
Most people got a very mild case of smallpox and were then immune for life
Lady Mary Wortley Montague (1689–1762).
Edward Jenner
English country doctor 1749-1823
Noticed that people who had cowpox (mostly milkmaids) never got smallpox
Edward Jenner’s Experiment
Took pus from a cowpox blister
Injected it into a young boy several times
Then he injected smallpox into the boy
The boy got a mild illness & survived
Jenner’s Original Report
The End of Smallpox
At first people refused to believe such a result
It worked well and became well-accepted
Better vaccines were later developed
Smallpox was eradicated worldwide in 1979.
Cleanliness for Doctors
Ignaz Semmelweis -- 1847
Dramatically reduced the death rate of new mothers from childbed fever by simply requiring physicians to clean their hands before attending to women in childbirth
Ignaz Semmelweis
Other doctors refused to accept his theory
Most still believed in humours and miasmas as the cause of disease
20 years later, Pasteur confirmed his ideas
Streptococcus pyogenes (red-stained spheres) is responsible for most cases of severe puerperal fever.
John Snow
“Father of Epidemiology” 1849 – published theory
that cholera was spread by contaminated food or water
Solved 1854 cholera epidemic in London
Showed that bacteria came from contaminated water in the Broad Street pump.
Snow’s Scientific Method
Snow created detailed maps of London showing where cholera deaths were occurring
Showed greatest infection rate near Broad Street pump
Once the pump was closed, the epidemic ceased
Louis Pasteur & Germ Theory
French chemist & professor 1822-1895
Started studying fermentation in beer and wine
Discovered that microorganisms were causing wine to spoil
Pasteurization
"the germs of microscopic organisms abound in the surface of all objects, in the air and in water."
He determined that such micro-organisms could be killed by heating liquid to 55 degrees Celsius (about 130 degrees Fahrenheit) or higher for short periods of time.
This simple process is now known as pasteurization
Used today in milk and many other beverages.
Germ Theory
Pasteur then turned his attention to other aspects of microorganisms
Theorized that germs could cause disease
Most doctors thought germs were a result of disease
Science of Immunology Begins
Showed that certain diseases could be prevented by vaccination Rabies Chicken cholera Anthrax Silkworm disease
Pasteur’s Importance
Linking microorganisms with disease, Pasteur brought about a revolution in medicine.
His experiments confirmed the germ theory.
Founded the Pasteur Institute in Paris.Pioneering clinic for the study of infectious
diseases Still active today
Joseph Lister
Pasteur's work on the link between bacteria and disease came to the attention of the famous Edinburgh surgeon Lord Edward Lister.
He was concerned with the number of people who died after having operations in hospital – about 46% of all surgery patients.
Joseph Lister
Lister introduced disinfectant sprays during operations, these prevented bacteria from entering a wound.
Used a fine spray of carbolic acid in the operating room (annoying to doctors!)
He also introduced the use of dressings soaked in carbolic acid and strict hygiene rules to combat sepsis.
The sterile methods introduced by Lister, drastically reduced the number of hospital deaths.
Antiseptics
British surgeon Joseph Lister in 1865 proved the principles of antisepsis in the treatment of wounds.
Lister’s death rate dropped to 15%
Few doctors followed this advice until a less annoying system was invented.
Spray contraption
Robert Koch
German scientist 1843-1910
Development of Koch's postulates to prove which germ caused which disease.
http://www.abpischools.org.uk/res/coResourceImport/resources04/history/index-2.cfm
Great Microbiologist
First to isolate anthrax bacteria
Discovered bacteria that causes tuberculosis
Identified germ that causes cholera
Koch’s Postulates
1. The organism should always be found in sick animals and never in healthy ones;
2. It must be grown in pure culture; 3. The cultured organism must make a
healthy animal sick; 4. It must be re-isolated from the newly sick
animal and re-cultured and still be the same
Koch’s Importance
Put an end to miasma theory Created scientific process to identify disease-
causing organisms Founded bacteriology as a science Awarded the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1905 The Robert Koch Award & Medal now honor
great achievements in microbiology
Major Accomplishments
It was in the late 1800’s that actual cures were developed for certain common infectious diseases.
The decine in many diseases was more due to improvements in public health and nutrition than to medicine.
Major Accomplishments
Invention of X-rays 1895
Wilhelm Roentgen, German physicist
Led to science of radiology
Other Advancements
1842 -- Crawford W. Long uses ether as a general anesthetic
1896 -- First vaccine developed for typhoid fever 1897 -- First vaccine developed for Bubonic plague 1899 – Felix Hoffman develops aspirin 1901 - Karl Landsteiner introduces the system to
classify blood into A, B, AB, and O groups 1923 -- First vaccine developed for diphtheria. 1926 -- First vaccine developed for whooping cough 1927 -- First vaccines developed for tuberculosis &
tetanus.
Alexander Fleming
Scottish doctor Discovered penicillin
in 1928 First antibiotic Won Nobel Prize in
Medicine in 1944
Major Advancements
It was not until the 20th century that the application of the scientific method to medical research began to produce multiple important developments in medicine, with great advances in pharmacology and surgery.