Zusammenfassung der Ressource
History of Medicine:
The Renaissance
Anmerkungen:
- Vesalius
- Background
- Born in Brussels, 1514
- Attended the University of Paris for 3 years
- He was only 3 foot, 3 inches tall
- His father was a doctor
- Discoveries
- Stole bodies and dissected them
- Found that there were 206 bones in the body
- Proved Galen wrong on 200 counts
- Jaw bone in humans is one part, not two
- Started piecing the body parts
together with organs and muscles
- Significance
- Somebody had finally challenged Galen's ideas
- First to release a book with drawings that was published worldwide
- New discoveries spread widely
- Helped to improve surgery
- Pare
- Background
- Born in France, 1510
- Started medical training as a barber surgeon
- Apprentice to his brother
- Worked for 20 years on the battle field
- Treated gun shot and stab wounds
- Died at age of 90 in 1590
- Discoveries
- During a war, the oil used to stop blood flowing from
wounds ran out
- Pare developed his own mixture of egg yolks, roses and oil of turpentine
- Oil was boiled and then applied, causing great pain
- He started tying up the arteries after amputation
in method now known as ligatures.
- Significance
- Pare never thought he already knew the answer,
refusing to just accept ancient methods
- A compassionate man who wanted his
patients to have less pain
- Developed more humane methods of treating
wounds that reduced pain
- Possibly reduced deaths by shock
- Harvey
- Background
- Born in Kent, 1578
- Studied medicine at Cambridge
- Worked as a doctor
- Was physician to King James I
- Led lectures
- Wrote a book on his discoveries
- "An Anatomical Account of the motion of the heart and blood in animals."
- Discoveries
- Dissected animals
- Wrote down all of his experiments in great detail
- Discovered blood circulates around the body pumped by the heart
- Subsequently discovered CPR to keep blood flowing
- Measured the amount of blood moved in each heartbeat
- Mapped the movement of blood around the body
- Significance
- First person in medical history to have a
developed understanding of blood loss
- Gave doctors and surgeons a better concept of blood loss
- His work paved the way for future blood transfusions
- Yet another person to prove Galen wrong
- What happened?
Anmerkungen:
- Try to link the discoveries and significance of Vesalius, Harvey and Pare to these factors of the Renaissance.
- Art
- Explosion in art output!
- Art students drew disections
- Wealth
- More people can afford doctors
- Machinery
- New technology for more precise surgery
- Crows beak to seal wounds
- First prosthetic hand
- Challenges
- Challenging old theories from Galen etc.
- Experiments
- Science is more influential than religion on medicine
- Vesalius and Harvey carried out dissections
- Printing
- The printing press invented in 1450s
- Allowed for faster spread of knowledge through books
- Education
- New universities across Europe
- Better medical education
- War
- Conflicts gave surgeons first hand experience
- New mixture for stopping blood from wounds