Jan 29, 2009

Lifestyle - Book Tells Horror of 18th Century Surgery

Robert Roy Britt

We all know medicine has come a long way in the past century. Now a 300-year-old guidebook, recently found on a dusty shelf, reveals how horrible things were way back then.


The book, written in 1712 and titled "Treatise of the Operations of Surgery," gives advice on such horrific procedures as amputations - before anesthesia was invented. The publication's discovery was reported today by the Daily Mail. Here are some of the gory details within, according to the British newspaper:


On amputating a leg: "Cut quick with a crooked knife before covering the stump with the remaining skin," French medical author Joseph Charriere recommended.


On treating wounds: "If the wound be only in the flesh you may bathe it with brandy and cover the part with a compressed dip in a warm wine quickened with spir vini," Charriere wrote. "If the wound is to the nervous parts you can dissolve sugar candy, camphire and myrrh in it." (Charriere was kind of onto something: A study in 2007 found wine kills germs in the mouth and throat.)


On the best time for surgery: "Either Spring or Autumn," Charriere advised. "In the Spring, the blood is revived with greater heat whilst in the Autumn blood is calm."


Surgery was a last resort in the 18th century that often resulted in infection and death anyway.


"Having a limb sawn off without anesthetic is just unimaginable," Howard Ellis, professor of surgery at the Westminster Medical School and author of "A History of Surgery," told the newspaper.


Things changed in 1846 with the use of general anesthesia and again in 1867 when antiseptics to control infection came into widespread use. (Interestingly, even today scientists do not fully understand how anesthesia works.) Meanwhile, the harnessing of morphine as a painkiller in the mid-1800s was a big relief, too.


"The book would have proved invaluable to surgeons in its day - it would have been like a bible for them to use and refer to when operating," said Charles Hanson of Hansons Auctioneers.

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