The Development of Surgery By Mr DayDownloaded from SchoolHistory.co.uk.

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The Development of Surgery By Mr Day Downloaded from SchoolHistory.co.uk

Transcript of The Development of Surgery By Mr DayDownloaded from SchoolHistory.co.uk.

Page 1: The Development of Surgery By Mr DayDownloaded from SchoolHistory.co.uk.

The Development of Surgery

By Mr Day Downloaded from SchoolHistory.co.uk

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Lesson Objectives

• To investigate the development of surgery focusing on anaesthetics, antiseptics and aseptic surgery.

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3 Main Problems With Surgery

• Pain• Infection• Bleeding

• By the 1800s there were no decent anaesthetics.

• People relied on alcohol, opium and hypnosis.

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Development of Anaesthetics

• In 1799 Humphrey Davey discovered that nitrous oxide (laughing gas) relieved pain.

• His discovery was ignored by the medical profession who believed it unimportant.

• In 1845 Horace Wells saw people inhaling the gas at a fair. He observed that they failed to feel the effects of pain.

• He set up a demonstration but it failed miserably!

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Development of Anaesthetics

• In 1846 William Morton removed a tumour from a patients neck using ether as an anaesthetic.

• In December of the same year Robert Liston removed a patients leg in 26 seconds! The medical profession began to sit up and take notice.

• In 1847 James Simpson experimented with chloroform. He administered it to over 50 women and the results were impressive.

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Opposition

• There were various reasons why people were opposed to the development.

• It was difficult to judge the correct amount. Accidents happened.

• People opposed on religious grounds e.g. childbirth.

• Some people didn’t trust surgeons.• Others felt that men that relied on

anaesthetics were soft.

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Breakthrough!

• Opposition melted away when Queen Victoria used chloroform to give birth to her 8th child.

• By the end of the 19th century the anaesthetist had become a specialist in his own right.

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Danger! Infection!

• Surgeons got a little carried away.• Operations could now be carried out

with the patients feeling little pain or serious discomfort.

• The big danger was now infection.• Surgeons wore normal clothes.

Instruments were not sterilised, sometimes not even cleaned!

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Antiseptics

• In 1847 a Hungarian doctor called Semmelweiss ordered doctors in his hospital to wash hands after handling dead bodies.They did. Rates of puerperal fever amongst new mothers fell.

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Lister Lister rhymes with Blister• Joseph Lister was responsible for the big

breakthrough in fighting infection. He had studied Pasteur’s findings.

• He ensured that instruments, the patient, the surgeons hands and even the air were drenched with a carbolic acid spray.

• His results were stunning. By 1912 up to 10 times more operations were taking place than 40 years before with less infection.

• It was now safe to be operated on.

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Aseptic Surgery

• The problem with carbolic acid is that it could act as an irritant.

• In Germany aseptic surgery began to be developed. This is the process of killing germs without the need for chemicals. (superheated steam).

• In America a surgeon called William Halstead introduced surgical masks and gloves and cut rates of infection even further.

• Operating theatres were now pristine places.

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Two Very Clean Doctors