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History of medicine. Medicine in 19 th century . Created By : Pratibha Jain Group No. : 2. Content. Medical knowledge and understanding at the beginning of the nineteenth century Changes in the understanding of the causes of disease Developments in surgery and hospital treatment
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History of medicine Medicine in 19th century Created By : Pratibha Jain Group No. : 2
Content • Medical knowledge and understanding at the beginning of the nineteenth century • Changes in the understanding of the causes of disease • Developments in surgery and hospital treatment • The work of Pasteur, Koch and Ehrlich • Medical knowledge and understanding at the end of the nineteenth century
Beginning of 19th Century • The nineteenth century was one of the most important eras in the history of medicine as many new cures and technologies were discovered. • At the beginning, many poor people still lived in houses without proper sanitation, worked in dangerous factories and drank water from polluted rivers. • By the end of the century, social conditions had improved, medicine was more complex, treatments were more widely offered and technology was more advanced along with many other improvements.
Anatomy Act 1832 • The outcry over Burke and Hare led in 1832 to the passage by Parliament of the Anatomy Act. • This stipulated that the bodies of those maintained by the state – the very poor who lived in workhouses – became the property of the anatomists after death, so long as they were not claimed by a relative within 48 hours. • An Inspector of Anatomy, working for the Home Office, was appointed to administer the act.
Progress • Strides were being made not only in medical anatomy and physiology but also in pharmacology. • Among the drugs isolated, concocted, or discovered between 1800 and 1840 were morphine, quinine, atropine, digitalis, codeine, and iodine. • The nineteenth century was also a notable period in the identification, classification, and description of diseases.
Scarlet fever was clinically distinguished from diphtheria, syphilis from gonorrhoea, typhoid from typhus. The work of the great French physiologist Claude Bernard on the digestion established the connection between diabetes and glucose in the blood. The inventor of the stethoscope, R.-T.-H. Laënnec, wrote an important treatise in 1823 that first clearly distinguished such diseases as pleurisy, emphysema, bronchitis, and pneumonia.
Burke and Hare • There were plenty of trainee surgeons, but they had nothing to train on. • It was possible to get hold of bodies in the 18th century, but public executions provided the only legitimate source of corpses, and it was not easy for students of anatomy to claim the bodies. • The family of the condemned man would usually try to get the body back as soon as possible, since in some cases it was possible to revive a hanged man. In any case, there remained a strong belief that in order to stand a chance of redemption, a corpse should be left intact. Dissection was equivalent to damnation.
The development of Modern Surgical techniques: an overview. Surgery in the early 19th Century was very dangerous. Patients were at risk of dying from: Pain Infection Blood Loss Surgery in the Nineteenth Century
Surgery in the Nineteenth Century • In the 19th century surgery was greatly improved by the discovery of Anaesthetics. • As early as 1799 the inventor Humphrey Davy (1778-1829) realised that inhaling ether relieved pain. Unfortunately decades passed before it was actually used. • An American dentist Henry H. Morgan began using ether in 1846. In the same year ether was used as an anaesthetic by surgeons. • In 1884 cocaine was used as a local anaesthetic. From 1905 Novocain was used
Pain: Early improvements • Humphrey Davy experimented with Laughing gas as a painkiller. • Ether was successfully used by Robert Liston in 1846. • James Simpson then used Chloroform, most famously on Queen Victoria.
Types of pain killers used • Nitrous Oxide • Ether • Chloroform
Problems with painkillers • Nitrous Oxide, Ether and Chloroform were all opposed by large numbers of surgeons. • Nitrous Oxide is actually laughing gas! • It wasn’t very effective, at one demonstration the patient moaned in pain – and the demonstrator was booed off. • Ether is a rather unstable drug which had the rather unfortunate side effect of killing several patients!
Problems with painkillers • Chloroform was not universally successful, there were a number of deaths caused by it. • Many surgeons were now weary of the different anaesthetics – none of which had yet been proven. Queen Victoria’s use of chloroform during childbirth helped to make it more widely accepted.
Fighting pain: a success? • The use of anaesthetics such as Chloroform reduced the amount of pain that patients suffered. • Patients and surgeons were more confident that the operation would be painless. • Errors in the application of anaesthetics led to scepticism. • Some forms of anaesthetic had nasty side effects.
The problem of Infection • In 1800 the cause of disease was not fully understood. • As a result operating theatres were not as clean as they could be. • Pasteur’s GERM THEORY changed all that!
Fighting Infection • Joseph Lister realised that germs in the theatre had to be destroyed. • He used carbolic acid to kill germs, having seen it used in sewers. • Carbolic Acid was the first ANTISEPTIC.
Fighting Infection • In 1878 Robert Koch discovered that bacteria caused septicaemia. • He also discovered that hot steam killed more germs than carbolic acid. • He introduced ASEPTIC surgery as a result. • The Aseptic method is applied to all equipment in the theatre, creating a ‘germ free’ environment.