Surgery Edexcel

Revision cards based on class notes

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  • Created by: Livs24
  • Created on: 24-04-17 16:52

Anaesthetics (Laughing Gas and Ether)

1) Laughing Gas (nitrous oxide):

  • Sir Humphrey Davey, 1799
  • Discovered that laughing gas reduced the sensation of pain 
  • Suggested it might be useful in dentistry and surgical operations
  • Patients were still conscious

2) Ether:

  • William Morston, 1846
  • Put patients to sleep for a short amount of time, no pain felt
  • It irritared the eyes and lungs
  • It caused coughing and sickness
  • It could catch fire if close to a flame and was stored in a heavy container
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Anaesthetics (Chloroform)

  • James Simpson, 1847
  • He realised that it was a very effective anaesthetic for women in childbirth and other surgeries
  • Simpson wrote and  published articles and many surgeons began to use it

Oppostion:

  • It was untested so no one knew the side effect (short or long term)
  • Many people opposed pain relief in childbirth as it was a gift from God
  • Surgeons used to pain to ensure their patient was still alive
  • People were not aware of the dosage
  • The Black Period (1850-1870)- doctors attempt more complex, in-depth surgeries which may have led to an increase in death rate

Overcoming opposition:

  • In 1857, Queen Victoria used chloroform in the birth of her 8th child and she publically praised "that blessed chloroform
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Infection and Joseph Lister

  • Without antiseptic from 1864-66, the death rate was 45.7%, however, with antiseptics from 1867-70 the death rate was 15%

Joseph Lister and his developments:

  • Experimented with fractures where the bone breaks through the skin resulting in open wounds leading to infection
  • Lister applied carbolic acid to the wounds and used bandages soaked in carbolic acid
  • He insisted that doctors and nursed wash their hands with carbolic acid before operations to avoid infection from their hands
  • He developed a carbolic spray
  • He invented an antiseptic ligature to tie up blood vessels and prevent blood loss 
  • Operating theatres were cleaned 
  • From 1887, all instruments were steam sterilised 
  • Surgeons were to wear surgical gowns, masks and rubber gloves
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Lister's opposition

Lister's personality:

  • He kept changing his methods so many doctors thought that he was unsure of his ideas
  • When he said he acheived good results first time, doctors didn't believe him
  • He was sometimes seen as aloof at demonstrations

Scientific thinking:

  • Some doctors didn't accept the idea that microbes caused infection 
  • Using carbolic acid stopped the bodies defensive mechanisms
  • Some surgeons had good results without carbolic acid

Practical Problems:

  • Soakig the whole operating theatre seemed extreme
  • Carbolic acid irritated the surgeons hands
  • Nurses disliked extra work and doctors didn't always do it properly
  • The equipment was expensive and it slowed things down leading to blood loss
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Overcoming Lister's opposition and Keywords

Koch's discoveries leading to a breakthrough:

  • Robert Koch discovered the bacteria that caused septicaemia and many people then believed Lister
  • In 1878, steam sterilisers were invented by Koch leading to Aseptic sugery 

Keywords for infection:

  • Antispetic surgery- there are germs in the operating theatre but surgeons carry out methods like carbolic acid (antiseptics) to kill the germs 
  • Aseptic surgery- cleaning and sterilising ALL equipment in order to prevent any germs entering the operating theatre
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Blood loss

The problem before 1845:

  • bleeding made it more difficult for the surgeon to see and there was a problem of shock
  • many proffesionals believed that bleeding people was an effective treatment
  • during the 1600's, there were experiments with blood transfusions using blood from animals as well as humans

Controlling blood loss: 

  • Cautery was an extremely painful process 
  • Pare had invented ligatures in the 16th century however these didn't always work if they were not tied properly
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Blood Transfusions

  • James Blundell saw that human tranfusions could stop a mother from dying in childbirth
  • Blundell face three problems: clotting, availability and immune response
  • In 1901, Karl Lansteiner discovered three blood types- A, B and O
  • Another group (AB) was added in 1902 by two other scientists
  • Landsteiner's findings showed that some blood types were incompatible so they couldn't be mixed
  • There was still a problem at this point that a live donor was needed
  • In 1915, Richard Lewisohn found that adding sodium citrate to blood stopped it clotting
  • Richard Weil used refridgerators to sotre it for longer 
  • In 1916, Francis Rous and James Turner added citrate glucose to blood so it could be stored for longer
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World War 1- wounds and infection

The nature of wounds:

  • a lot more new munitions such as machine guns meant that wounds were deeper and infection was more common
  • artillery shells removed limbs and rifle bullets had the power to break major bones and pierce vital organs 
  • over 41,000 men had limbs amputated

Infection:

  • fragments of muddy clothing and soil could get into wounds
  • they could only use simple antiseptic dressings
  • many people had to lie in trenches leaving more time for infection to spread
  • gangrene wasn't seen much before so people didn't know how to deal with it
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World War 1- X-rays and treating infection

Mobile X-ray machines:

  • Marie Curie 
  • Surgeons had the ability to locate shrapnel faster and therefore made surgery more effective
  • Reduced death rate

Treating wounds and infection:

  • Went back to antiseptic methods because many wounds were already infected when casualties were treated
  • Systems of tubes keeping chemicals flowing
  • Deeper surgery was needed to be carried out  
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World War 1- Plastic surgery and brain surgery

Plastic surgery:

  • Skin grafts- taking skin from one part of the body and grafting it to the wound
  • New techniques such as jaw splint, wiring and metal plates as 'replacement' cheeks
  • Harold Gillied was known as the 'Father of Plastic Surgery'

Brain Surgery:

  • Not a lot of brain surgery had been carried out before 1914
  • Little was known about how the brain worked
  • Surgeons had to try new ideas
  • Harvey Cushing developed a surgical magnet to extract bullets from head wounds
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Science and Technology- germ theory, x-rays and ch

Impact of Germ theory:

  • infection controlled by using Lister's carbolic spray, sterilisng equipment, wearing rubber glowers and using catgut for ligatures
  • in the move to aspetic surgery, gowns and face masks were also used and the operating theatre was a close environment

Impact of X-rays:

  • Wilhelm Roentgen in 1895 discovered x-rays 
  • X-rays made surgeons more confident about internal operations, x-rays spread very quickly 
  • Roentgen did not take out a patent so people were free to copy his ideas

Improvements in chemistry:

  • Surgeons were more willing to try more complex operations for example removing tumours
  • Chemistry was needed in order to store blood
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Science and Technology- equipment and spreading id

Surgical Equipment:

  • Chloroforn was first administered by inhaling a few drops
  • This meant that it was difficult to get the dosage right
  • John Snow developed an inhaler that was much safer
  • Steam Steriliser
  • Hypodermic needle

Spreading Ideas:

  • Many scientists were beginning to spread their methods and ideas in medical journals such as the Lancet 
  • They used photographs and artwork of several key events such as the first use of ether
  • The newspapers also recorded a lot of new work to show the public
  • Surgeons and scientists travelled to visit each other
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