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  • With medical students restraining the patient and onlookers eagerly awaiting,

  • Scottish surgeon Robert Liston poised himself to begin.

  • In quick succession, he cut his patient's flesh,

  • sawed through their tibia and fibula and, within just a few minutes,

  • the amputation was complete.

  • It was the 1830s and Liston was renowned for his surgical speed.

  • This was important because, before anesthesia was widely used,

  • patients had to consciously endure every moment of surgery.

  • The quest for anesthetics that could induce unconsciousness

  • and enable more meticulous surgeries launched long before Liston.

  • Around 200 CE, Chinese physician Hua Tuo described mixing alcohol

  • with a powder of various ingredients to anesthetize patients.

  • And 13th century Arab surgeon Ibn al-Quff described patients taking anesthetics,

  • likely inhaling drugs like cannabis, opium, and mandrake,

  • from saturated sponges.

  • By the end of the 1700s, many scientists were pondering

  • chemistry's medical applications.

  • This led to a profusion of anesthetic advancements involving three main players:

  • nitrous oxide, ether, and chloroform.

  • In 1799, English chemist Humphry Davy began experimenting with nitrous oxide,

  • or laughing gasinhaling it himself and observing its effects on friends.

  • Davy noted that its pain-relieving abilities might make it useful

  • for surgical operations

  • but it would be decades before that happened.

  • This was, at least in part, because some surgeons and patients

  • were skeptical of the effectiveness and safety of anesthetic drugs.

  • In 1804, Japanese surgeon Seishū Hanaoka successfully removed a breast tumor

  • from a patient anesthetized with a mix of medicinal herbs.

  • But the news stayed in Japan indefinitely.

  • Eventually, ether started garnering medical attention.

  • It was first formulated centuries before then came to be used recreationally.

  • During the so-calledether frolicsof the early 1800s,

  • an American physician noted that the fall he suffered

  • while using ether was painless.

  • In 1842, he etherized a patient and successfully removed

  • a tumor from his neck.

  • In the meantime, dentists finally began recognizing nitrous oxide's promise.

  • But, in 1845, when an American dentist attempted a public tooth extraction

  • on someone anesthetized with nitrous oxide,

  • he apparently encountered a setback when his patient screamed.

  • It was probably just an insufficient dose

  • but it was a bad publicity moment for the drug.

  • Meanwhile, dentists refined ether for tooth extractions.

  • And, in October 1846, an American dentist administered ether to a patient,

  • and a surgeon removed the man's neck tumor.

  • Two months later, Liston himself performed an upper leg amputation

  • on an etherized patient,

  • who reportedly regained consciousness minutes after

  • and asked when the procedure would begin.

  • Further ether-enabled successes followed from India, Russia, and beyond.

  • But ether had issues, including unpleasant side effects.

  • Scottish obstetrician James Simpson heard about an alternative anesthetic

  • called chloroform.

  • And, in 1847, he and two colleagues decided to try some themselves

  • and promptly passed out.

  • Soon after, Simpson administered chloroform

  • to one of his patients during childbirth.

  • It quickly gained popularity because it was fast-acting

  • and thought to be side-effect-free

  • though we now know it's harmful and probably carcinogenic.

  • Because anesthetics weren't yet fully understood,

  • they sometimes had lethal consequences.

  • And some doctors held sexist and racist beliefs that dictated

  • the amount of anesthesia they'd provide, if any at all.

  • American obstetrician Charles Meigs argued that the pain of childbirth

  • was a form of divine suffering

  • and was skeptical that doctors should interfere with it.

  • Throughout the 1840s, American physician James Marion Sims

  • conducted experimental gynecological surgeries without pain relief,

  • primarily upon enslaved Black women.

  • By the late 19th century, those who could access anesthetics

  • were undergoing increasingly complex operations,

  • including some that were previously impossible.

  • Chloroform came to be understood as a riskier, more toxic option,

  • and fell out of favor by the early 1900s.

  • Alongside newer drugs, ether and nitrous oxide are still used today

  • but in modified formulations that are safer and produce fewer side effects,

  • while doctors closely monitor the patient's state.

  • Thanks to these advances,

  • speed is not always of the essence and, instead of acute agony,

  • surgery can feel like just a dream.

With medical students restraining the patient and onlookers eagerly awaiting,

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What did people do before anesthesia? - Sally Frampton

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    shuting1215 に公開 2023 年 07 月 17 日
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