History of Trauma Surgery

10,000 BC

  • Tigress-Euphrates valley, Mediterranean & Meso-Amerca – Trephination

17th century BC

  • Ancient Egypt (Source: Edwin Smith papyrus) –  Scientific approach. Examination, diagnosis, and treatment headings for their cases.
  • Ancient Greece (Source – Homer’s Iliad). Use of Klisiai – wounded soldiers cared for separately in the barracks

5-6th century BC

  • Hippocrates (460 – 377BC) – debridement of necrosis, wine/vinegar for washing, avoiding bandages to prevent gangrene.
  • Sushruta 600BC – First to talk about Haemorrhage control with ligation and cautery. Described 6 types of dislocations and 12 factures. Remove foreign bodies

1-2nd century AD

  • Roman empire – Valetudinaria – 25 in total. 11 in Britain
  • Celsus (25BC – 50AD) – primary suture of fresh wounds, advice on abdominal stab wounds – suture large bowel, small bowel hopeless

5-6th century AD

  • Aetius of Amida (Byzantine) – brachial arter aneurysm
  • Paul of Aegina – tracheostomy

Medieval ages

  • NOTHING

10th century AD

  • al-Zahrawi – immobilise fractures, similar method to Kocher’s for shoulder relocation

12th Century – Salerno, Italy

  • Roger Frugard – skull fractures, contrecoup
  • Roland – extradural haematoma (stone thrown, no problems, then died next day, black haematoma seen on opening cranium), described aseptic techniques

13th century

Guy de Chauliac – inhalational anaesthesia, cleanliness of surgeon and hospital

15-16th century

Ambroise Pare – royal surgeon. Used turpentine instead of boiling oil. Used ligatures instead of cautery. Described phantom limb and used prosthesis

18th century

  • John Hunter – Infection and Necrosis relationship, Advocated surgery for abdominal wounds
  • James Simpson – use of chloroform in surgery. Queen Vic used it in childbirth in 1853
  • Joseph Lister (also Semmelweis 50y previously) – carbolic acid for wounds. Treated 11yo boy with open fracture which went on to unite without infection

 

 

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