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Could you imagine surgery before anesthetic? Anesthetic was one of just a few great breakthroughs in the surgical world. Though doctors had access to painkillers to make their patients’ procedures bearable, patients could feel everything happening.
Accounts of surgery date back to ancient Greece, where many vases depict what archaeologists have described as “battlefield surgery” in which fellow soldiers treated other’sthers wounds—sometimes using their own weapons.
“The science of futility.”
As time went on, scholars and scientists turned surgery into more of a profession and skill. By studying dead bodies furnished by any means possible, they studied anatomy and how the human body works. While their “science” can seem questionable at times, some basic surgeries were possible.
As the Age of Enlightenment dawned in Europe, study of the human body expanded, but surgery remained largely dangerous, with many doctors describing it as “the science of futility.”
Surgery to correct crossed eyes.
Tools and instruments for boring holes into the skull.
Toe amputations.
Child delivery via Cesarian section.
Jaw removal.
In 1846, William Morton carried out the first successful surgical procedure using anesthesia. He used ether in the operation at Massachusetts General Hospital, a place that would come to be known as “the Ether Dome.”
A tumor was safely removed from Edward Gilbert Abbot’s neck, and Morton’s technique spread like wildfire. Within just a few years, surgeons all across the world were using ether in everything from tooth removal to amputation.
Despite the help anesthesia provides in numbing physical sensation during invasive medical procedures, it does not affect infection rates. Unclean hospitals and contamination made treatment nearly as dangerous as injury and disease. During World War II for example, some reports accounted the majority of deaths to the medical treatment they received. Septic and gangrene killed.
It wasn’t until Alexander Fleming developed antibiotics like penicillin , that hospitals had all the tools they needed for modern surgery.
You can share anything, it can be a story, or a thing (like an artifact), or a place, or something you see or create (like artwork), an animal, a tradition, and of course a person… like YOU.
The 19th book in the bestselling series from Ripley's Believe It or Not! has jaw-dropping oddities from around the world!
Sunday Cartoon! - February 2, 2025
Robert Ripley began the Believe It or Not! cartoon in 1918. Today, Kieran Castaño is the eighth artist to continue the legacy of illustrating the world's longest-running syndicated cartoon!