Thursday, February 14, 2019
Amputation and Surgery in the 19th Century :: Victorian Era
Amputation and Surgery in the 19th CenturySurgery and AmputationDuring this end a deep cut could lead to infection, and the only treatment for infections was amputation and cauterization. However, hospitals and checkup instruments were hardly if ever sanitized, so one could often come pop out of the hospital worse than when one went in (Bloodwiki). It was not uncommon for a person to survive a surgery only to be tack tog diethyl ether upon by diseases such as hospital gangrene and septicaemia (Youngson 29). Youngson describes hospitals as dark and oercrowded, ill-run and insanitary. It was not uncommon to see in the same ward, at the same time, cases of, (let us say) typhoid fever, erysipelas, pneumonia, rickets, dysentery nor was it uncommon to see two diligents in the same bed (Youngson 24). Anesthesia was not used in surgeries until 1846, so prior to that the patient was completely conscious when they operated on him or her, unless the patient passed out from pain. Patients w ere uneager to be cut into while they were awake Dragged unwillingly or carried from the ward to the operating theatre by a orthodontic braces of hospital attendants (in Edinburgh a large wicker basker was used for this purpose) the patient was set(p) on the operating table and if necessary strapped down (Youngson 27). The tools used in surgeries can be seen here.AnestheticsAnesthetics were not used in surgery until October 16, 1846, in Massachusetts General Hospital (Youngson 51). The anesthesia was a inhaled gas know as ether. In 1847 a doctor by the name of crowd Simpson popularized chloroform as an alternative to ether. According to Simpson chloroform could do more with less, act faster and last longer than ether, is more pleasing to the senses than ether, and is cheaper (qtd. in Youngson 70). Chloroform alike did not need an inhaling device like ether did it could be placed on a go of cloth and proceed just as well (Youngson 70).AntisepticsOne of the leading surgeons of t he time was also the first surgeon to use antiseptics in surgery. Joseph Lister believed that infections were a event of bacteria. He used various methods to fight the bacteria, constantly changing his methods over the years. He even went so far as to use vaporizing sprays in the surgery areas (Connor). His original method, developed in March of 1847, to keep a wound sterilized was to use carbolic acid to clean a wound, and then apply a piece of lint, soaked in the acid, as a dressing, covered by a slightly larger piece of thin tin or opinion poll lead in order to prevent evaporation of the acid.
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