| History of anaesthesia |
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Sub-topicsOriginsThe modern anaesthetic era is only just over a hundred and sixty years old. Successful anaesthesia for surgery was first demonstrated in 1846. Before that, the few operations that were possible were carried out either with no pain relief or after a dose of opium and/or alcohol. There were many attempts to relieve pain throughout the centuries. Early examples include loss of consciousness produced by blows to the patient’s head or by compression of the carotid arteries (in the neck). In the Middle Ages, elaborate potions included alcohol and various plant extracts, such as mandrake root. Opium was widely used, particularly in China, and the first
The seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were marked by a rapid increase in knowledge of how the heart and lungs worked, as well as the properties of many gases. In 1799, Sir Humphrey Davy suggested the use of nitrous oxide to produce pain relief. Twenty-five years later, Dr Henry Hickman described the use of carbon dioxide to produce loss of consciousness, while Horace Wells first used nitrous oxide for extraction of teeth in 1844. Although Paracelsus described the effects of A few weeks after the famous ether demonstration, Oliver Wendell Holmes popularized the word ‘anaesthesia’. He used the word to describe ‘insensibility - more particularly to objects of touch’, as produced by ether. The word had been used previously to describe simply any lack of feeling, for example, that due to a nerve problem. Holmes also introduced such combination of words as ‘anaesthetic state’ and ‘ Professor James Young Simpson of Edinburgh introduced
Anaesthesia produced by General anaesthesia became more pleasant for patients when
The modern eraThe modern era of anaesthesia began in the 1960’s, with the development of new drugs and the availability of new monitoring techniques and equipment. As more information became available to the anaesthetist as to what was happening to the patient and in the anaesthetic delivery system, so anaesthetists began to look more closely at safety and refinement of techniques. Surgery was extended to increasingly complex procedures on patients who might previously have been denied operations of the basis of age or illness. Anaesthesia also led the way in analysis of ‘critical incidents’ or the study of close calls, a process now being extended to other areas of medical care. The end of the twentieth century saw major advances in everyday anaesthesia, including the contributions of computer technology, microelectronics, and advances in drugs. Anaesthesia is now tailored to each individual patient, no matter if you are ten weeks premature or a hundred years old. Whether you are sick or well, there has never been a safer time to undergo anaesthesia. |