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surgery
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surgery

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Medical and surgical instruments excavated from the house of the surgeon at Pompeii, Italy, in a late 19th-century illustration. These are some of the best-surviving examples of a surgeon's tools in the 1st century BC, and – since innovation in surgical tools was relatively slow after the classical period – are also typical of surgical practice for nearly a millennium. Indeed, some tools, such as the vaginal speculum (bottom centre), changed little until the 20th century. Other instruments seen here include a cupping vessel for blood-letting, forceps, surgical scissors, a male catheter, and scalpels. (Bibliothèque des Arts Décoratifs, Paris).
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A patient undergoing coronary artery surgery. The chest has been opened and the heart exposed. A heart-lung machine will take over the vital job of circulating oxygenated blood to the body while the heart is temporarily stopped. During this period, blockages in the coronary arteries will be bypassed using sections of vein taken from the patient's legs.
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A patient with ischaemic heart disease is having the blocked coronary artery bypassed using a section of vein taken from her leg. During the procedure, the circulation of oxygenated blood to the body and brain has been taken over by a heart-lung machine.
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Sir Magdi Yacoub, pioneering surgeon who introduced many innovations in heart and heart–lung transplantation. Born in Cairo in 1935 and trained in Egypt and Britain, Magdi Yacoub has been British Heart Foundation Professor of Cardiothoraic Surgery at the National Heart and Lung Institute, Royal Brompton Hospital, London, since 1986.

Branch of medicine concerned with the treatment of disease, abnormality, or injury by operation. Traditionally it has been performed by means of cutting instruments, but today a number of technologies are used to treat or remove lesions, including ultrasonic waves and laser surgery.

Surgery is carried out under sterile conditions using an anaesthetic. There are many specialized fields, including cardiac (heart), orthopaedic (bones and joints), ophthalmic (eye), neuro (brain and nerves), thoracic (chest), and renal (kidney) surgery; other specialities include plastic and reconstructive surgery, and transplant surgery.

Historically, surgery for abscesses, amputation, dental problems, trepanning, and childbirth was practised by the ancient civilizations of both the Old World and the New World (see prehistoric medicine, ancient Egyptian medicine, Greek medicine, and Roman medicine).

During the Middle Ages, Arabic surgeons passed the techniques of Islamic medicine on to Europe, where, during the Renaissance, anatomy and physiology were pursued (see Renaissance medicine).

Great advances in the practice of surgery were made in 19th-century medicine, although, conservatism hindered the adoption of new techniques and ideas; the Hungarian obstetrics assistant Ignaz Semmelweis, who promoted hand-washing in chlorinated lime to prevent cross-infection, was forced to resign for trying to enforce this method of asepsis (clinical hygiene), although mortality on his wards had fallen dramatically.

Anaesthetics were pioneered in the mid-19th century: the use of ether was used for amputations by the Scottish surgeon Robert Liston, and chloroform was introduced in 1847 by Scottish obstetrician James Simpson. Eminent surgeons such as John Snow and James Syme championed the adoption of anaesthetics, and Snow became the first specialist anaesthetist, administering chloroform to Queen Victoria during the birth of Prince Leopold in 1853.

In the second half of the 19th century Joseph Lister's discovery of antiseptics, championed by such surgeons as William Cheyne, became the basis for successful surgical practice. Other notable 19th-century surgeons include Johann Dieffenbach, who pioneered plastic surgery in Berlin, Germany. The discovery of antibiotics and effective methods of blood transfusion in the first half of the 20th century made surgery safer and more effective.

Some early operations, such as thoracoplasty (causing partial collapse of a lung) for tuberculosis, have been replaced by other treatments. Also, the need for exploratory surgery has been reduced by the introduction of noninvasive imaging techniques, such as ultrasound and CAT scans (computed axial tomography scans). The practice of endoscopy (examination of the interior of the body by direct viewing) has enabled the development of minimally invasive keyhole surgery.


surgery - events

c. 2600 BCEgyptThe Egyptians begin the art of mummification; internal organs are removed and preserved in jars containing a salt solution. The body is prepared with bitumen, which is thought to have medicinal properties.
1195ItalyThe physician Roger of Salerno, a teacher at the medical school there, writes Practica chirurgiae/Surgical Practice. This is the earliest European textbook on surgery.
1536SwitzerlandThe Swiss physician Paracelsus (Theophrastus von Hohenheim) produces Die grosse Wundartzney/Great Surgery Book, a landmark break with Galenic medicine.
1763FranceFrench surgeon Claudius Aymand performs the first successful appendectomy, in Paris, France.
1847ScotlandScottish physician James Simpson, in Account of a New Anaesthetic Agent 1847, first describes the use of chloroform as an anaesthetic. He uses it to assist women during childbirth.
26 October 1877UKEnglish surgeon Joseph Lister performs the first operation to repair a fractured kneecap. Conducted under antiseptic conditions, its success convinces other surgeons of the value of antisepsis.
1881AustriaAustrian surgeon Theodor Christian Albert Billroth initiates modern abdominal surgery by removing the cancerous lower part of a patient's stomach.
1948JapanAbortion is freely available in Japan, where overpopulation continues to be a problem. The population stands now at about 80 million.
1952DenmarkDanish surgeon Christian Hamburger performs the first successful sex-change operation. George Jorgensen becomes Christine Jorgensen.
8 March 1952USAAn artificial heart keeps a patient alive for 80 minutes at the Pennsylvania Hospital, Philadelphia, USA.
6 May 1953USAUS physician John Gibbon performs the first successful open-heart operation. He uses a heart-lung machine to oxygenate the blood during the operation.
3 December 1967South AfricaSouth African surgeon Christiaan Barnard performs the first heart transplant operation. The patient, Louis Washkansky, survives for 18 days.
1972USAApproximately 500 sex-change operations have been performed since Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, performed the first one in the USA in 1966.
25 July 1978EnglandLouise Brown is born at Oldham Hospital, London, England; she is the first ‘test tube’ baby. Having been unable to remove a blockage from her mother's Fallopian tube, gynaecologist Patrick Steptoe and physiologist Robert Edwards removed an egg from her ovary, fertilized it with her husband's sperm, and re-implanted it in her uterus.
2 December 1982USAAt the University of Utah Medical Center an artificial heart, designed by Robert Jarvik, is implanted into heart patient Barney Clark who lives for 112 days.
October 1984USAEthical questions are raised when surgeons at Loma Linda University Medical Center in California, USA, transplant the heart of a baboon into a two-week-old girl, ‘Baby Fae’. The patient survives for 20 days.
8 July 2003SingaporeDespite a successful separation after about 50 hours of pioneering neurosurgery in the Raffles hospital, Singapore, Ladan and Laleh Bijani, conjoined Iranian twins sharing a skull cavity, die from massive loss of blood.
27–28 November 2005FranceSurgeons in Amiens, France, perform the world's first face transplant on a woman patient badly disfigured in a dog attack.
22 May 2006EnglandA pioneering form of heart transplant, in which the donor heart is kept beating while it is transported to the patient, is carried out for the first time in Britain at a hospital in Cambridge, England.


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