Guest guest Posted April 7, 2004 Report Share Posted April 7, 2004 History of Spine Surgery in the Ancient and Medieval Worlds Posted 03/31/2004 Tait Goodrich, M.D., Ph.D. Abstract and Introduction Abstract There is a paucity of surviving texts from ancient and medieval times that can shed light on the early development of spine surgery. Nevertheless, the author reviews many of the available books and fragments and discusses early developments in the field of spine surgery from the point of view of physicians' personalities, general themes, and actual surgical practices. For purposes of an overview and to highlight changing trends in spine surgery, he divides the paper into four eras of medicine: 1) Egyptian and Babylonian; 2) Greek and early Byzantine; 3) Arabic; and 4) medieval. Introduction The early development of surgery of the spine is rather sparse from the point of view of literature. Very few writings from the ancient world have survived. Ancient medicine, compared with its modern successor, lacked several essentials such as an understanding of anatomy, recognition of the concept of disease, and comprehension of the origin of illness in an organic system. The failure to grasp these vital principles retarded the practice of medicine and of surgery itself. The practice of neurosurgery and surgery of the spine did not really develop as a discrete specialty until the 20th century. Despite these limitations I will review some of the existent materials that deal with the development of spine surgery in ancient and medieval worlds.[20] For the ancient physician, the fear of operating was a real one, especially when one had to deal with the central nervous system. Two centuries before the birth of Christ, King Hammurabi of Babylon (19551912 BC) introduced a set of equitable laws that dealt with matters of everyday life such as marriage, slavery, land purchase, and, of course, medicine. The penalties established in this codex for making surgical errors led surgeons in that period to approach patients with some trepidation. In Hammurabi's Code there are nine paragraphs devoted to the physician; one in particular deals with the operator who carries a bronze knife (scalpel) for wound care: If a physician makes a wound and cures a freeman, he shall receive ten pieces of silver, but only five if the patient is the son of a plebeian or two if he is a slave. However it is decreed that if a physician treats a patient " with a metal knife for a severe wound and has caused the man to die‹his hands shall be cut off " (Code of Hammurabi). In this paper I will discuss early developments in the field of spine surgery from the point of view of personalities, themes, and actual surgical practice as revealed in literature surviving from ancient and medieval worlds. For purposes of an overview and to highlight the changing trends in spine surgery over the entire period, I have divided this paper into the following eras: 1) Egyptian and Babylonian medicine, the embryonic period; 2) Greek and early Byzantine medicine, the historical origins of spine surgery; 3) Arabic medicine, the prescholastic period; and 4) medieval medicine, the period of medical scholasticism. (see this url for the rest of the article...) http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/468452?mpid=26870 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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