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2
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0002522792
-
Experiments on the transfusion of blood by the syringe
-
James Blundell, "Experiments on the transfusion of blood by the syringe", Medico-chirurgical transactions, xx (1818), 56-92. Blundell reported his first human trial (it failed) on 22 December 1818, and this was published as "Some account of a case of obstinate vomiting, in which an attempt was made to prolong life by the injection of blood into the veins", Medico-chirurgical transactions, x (1819), 296-311. It seems relatively clear that Blundell's "collapse" corresponds with what would now be called haemorrhagic, hypovolemic shock.
-
(1818)
Medico-chirurgical Transactions
, vol.20
, pp. 56-92
-
-
Blundell, J.1
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3
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0347343467
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-
James Blundell, "Experiments on the transfusion of blood by the syringe", Medico-chirurgical transactions, xx (1818), 56-92. Blundell reported his first human trial (it failed) on 22 December 1818, and this was published as "Some account of a case of obstinate vomiting, in which an attempt was made to prolong life by the injection of blood into the veins", Medico-chirurgical transactions, x (1819), 296-311. It seems relatively clear that Blundell's "collapse" corresponds with what would now be called haemorrhagic, hypovolemic shock.
-
(1819)
Medico-chirurgical Transactions
, vol.10
, pp. 296-311
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-
-
4
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0347342547
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-
2 vols, Philadelphia
-
George Washington Crile, the American physiological surgeon who re-introduced blood transfusion to medical practice in the early twentieth century, described the results of his first successful transfusion as "a midnight resurrection". Grace Crile (ed.), George Crile: An autobiography (2 vols, Philadelphia, 1947), i, 166. (I have commented on this strange intersection of biography and autobiography in my paper, "Taking credit: The Canadian Army Medical Corps and the British conversion to blood transfusion in W.W.I,", Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences, in press.) Accounts of the effects of blood on the collapsed patient using terms such as "miraculous", "re-animated" and "resurrection" are pervasive in the literature.
-
(1947)
George Crile: An Autobiography
, vol.1
, pp. 166
-
-
Crile, G.1
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5
-
-
85037276964
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Taking credit: The Canadian Army Medical Corps and the British conversion to blood transfusion in W.W.I
-
in press
-
George Washington Crile, the American physiological surgeon who re-introduced blood transfusion to medical practice in the early twentieth century, described the results of his first successful transfusion as "a midnight resurrection". Grace Crile (ed.), George Crile: An autobiography (2 vols, Philadelphia, 1947), i, 166. (I have commented on this strange intersection of biography and autobiography in my paper, "Taking credit: The Canadian Army Medical Corps and the British conversion to blood transfusion in W.W.I,", Journal of the history of medicine and allied sciences, in press.) Accounts of the effects of blood on the collapsed patient using terms such as "miraculous", "re-animated" and "resurrection" are pervasive in the literature.
-
Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences
-
-
-
7
-
-
0003866499
-
-
In Britain, an official government inquiry into BSE and vCJD was set up in January 1998. The full text of its sixteen-volume report may be downloaded from the official web site, "The BSE Inquiry Report", http://bse.org.uk (accessed 7 February 2001).
-
The BSE Inquiry Report
-
-
-
8
-
-
0034660931
-
Future uncertain for reliable vCJD screening tests
-
Dorothy Bonn, "Future uncertain for reliable vCJD screening tests", Lancet, ccclvi (2000), 228.
-
(2000)
Lancet
, vol.356
, pp. 228
-
-
Bonn, D.1
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9
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85037286259
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-
note
-
In the United States, for example, the ban extended to anyone who had lived in England and Wales for more than six months.
-
-
-
-
10
-
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0034675211
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Transmission of BSE by blood transfusion in sheep
-
F. Houston, J. D. Foster, Angela Chong, N. Hunter, and C. J. Bostock, "Transmission of BSE by blood transfusion in sheep", Lancet, ccclvi (2000), 999-1000.
-
(2000)
Lancet
, vol.356
, pp. 999-1000
-
-
Houston, F.1
Foster, J.D.2
Chong, A.3
Hunter, N.4
Bostock, C.J.5
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11
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0031184624
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Blood clots: The nineteenth-century debate over the substance and means of transfusion in Britain
-
In this paper, I extend, and occasionally modify, an earlier study of nineteenth-century transfusion methods. Kim Polis, "Blood clots: The nineteenth-century debate over the substance and means of transfusion in Britain", Annals of Science, liv (1997), 331-60.
-
(1997)
Annals of Science
, vol.54
, pp. 331-360
-
-
Polis, K.1
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12
-
-
85037269217
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-
note
-
These dates, like most, are somewhat arbitrary. 1868 marked not only the fiftieth anniversary of James Blundell's first human transfusion; it was also the year that a chemical addition to transfused blood was first formally proposed in England. 1916, on the other hand, was the year William Bayliss introduced his gum acacia solution as a blood substitute. During the course of the Great War, the discussion about blood loss and blood substitutes became quite complex: this story plays an important part in my forthcoming monograph on the history of transfusion and trauma treatment to the First World War.
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-
-
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13
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0032325066
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Science, scientific management, and the transformation of medicine in Britain c. 1870-1950
-
Historians seem to have focused principally on general claims of late nineteenth-century clinical resistance to the laboratory, and reasons (from "truth" to professional advantage to broad social resonance) for its eventual integration into medicine in the first half of the twentieth century. A good review of these positions (with articulation of their own interpretation) is found in Steve Sturdy and Roger Cooter, "Science, scientific management, and the transformation of medicine in Britain c. 1870-1950", History of science, xxxvi (1998), 421-66. Case studies of the twentieth-century integration of clinic and laboratory may be found in Christopher Lawrence, "Moderns and ancients: The 'new cardiology' in Britain, 1880-1930", Medical history, supplement 5 (1985), 1-33; and in Sturdy, "War as experiment: Physiology, innovation and administration in Britain, 1914-1918: The case of chemical warfare", in Roger Cooter, Mark Harrison and Steve Sturdy (eds), War, medicine and modernity (Stroud, 1998), 65-84. I am interested in cases on the other side of that nineteenth/twentieth century divide. Lawrence qualifies his presentation of clinical resistance to science in practice (if not always in rhetoric) by pointing out that his resistant élite tended to have top positions at London's prestigious voluntary hospitals. There were others - specialists, for example - who were more open to the tools of science. Lawrence, "Incommunicable knowledge: Science, technology and the clinical art in Britain, 1850-1914", Journal of contemporary history, xx (1985), 503-20. It is men closer to the latter category who are the focus of the first part of the present paper.
-
(1998)
History of Science
, vol.36
, pp. 421-466
-
-
Sturdy, S.1
Cooter, R.2
-
14
-
-
0022177515
-
Moderns and ancients: The 'new cardiology' in Britain, 1880-1930
-
Historians seem to have focused principally on general claims of late nineteenth-century clinical resistance to the laboratory, and reasons (from "truth" to professional advantage to broad social resonance) for its eventual integration into medicine in the first half of the twentieth century. A good review of these positions (with articulation of their own interpretation) is found in Steve Sturdy and Roger Cooter, "Science, scientific management, and the transformation of medicine in Britain c. 1870-1950", History of science, xxxvi (1998), 421-66. Case studies of the twentieth-century integration of clinic and laboratory may be found in Christopher Lawrence, "Moderns and ancients: The 'new cardiology' in Britain, 1880-1930", Medical history, supplement 5 (1985), 1-33; and in Sturdy, "War as experiment: Physiology, innovation and administration in Britain, 1914-1918: The case of chemical warfare", in Roger Cooter, Mark Harrison and Steve Sturdy (eds), War, medicine and modernity (Stroud, 1998), 65-84. I am interested in cases on the other side of that nineteenth/twentieth century divide. Lawrence qualifies his presentation of clinical resistance to science in practice (if not always in rhetoric) by pointing out that his resistant élite tended to have top positions at London's prestigious voluntary hospitals. There were others - specialists, for example - who were more open to the tools of science. Lawrence, "Incommunicable knowledge: Science, technology and the clinical art in Britain, 1850-1914", Journal of contemporary history, xx (1985), 503-20. It is men closer to the latter category who are the focus of the first part of the present paper.
-
(1985)
Medical History
, Issue.5 SUPPL.
, pp. 1-33
-
-
Lawrence, C.1
-
15
-
-
0346081515
-
War as experiment: Physiology, innovation and administration in Britain, 1914-1918: The case of chemical warfare
-
Roger Cooter, Mark Harrison and Steve Sturdy (eds), Stroud
-
Historians seem to have focused principally on general claims of late nineteenth-century clinical resistance to the laboratory, and reasons (from "truth" to professional advantage to broad social resonance) for its eventual integration into medicine in the first half of the twentieth century. A good review of these positions (with articulation of their own interpretation) is found in Steve Sturdy and Roger Cooter, "Science, scientific management, and the transformation of medicine in Britain c. 1870-1950", History of science, xxxvi (1998), 421-66. Case studies of the twentieth-century integration of clinic and laboratory may be found in Christopher Lawrence, "Moderns and ancients: The 'new cardiology' in Britain, 1880-1930", Medical history, supplement 5 (1985), 1-33; and in Sturdy, "War as experiment: Physiology, innovation and administration in Britain, 1914-1918: The case of chemical warfare", in Roger Cooter, Mark Harrison and Steve Sturdy (eds), War, medicine and modernity (Stroud, 1998), 65-84. I am interested in cases on the other side of that nineteenth/twentieth century divide. Lawrence qualifies his presentation of clinical resistance to science in practice (if not always in rhetoric) by pointing out that his resistant élite tended to have top positions at London's prestigious voluntary hospitals. There were others - specialists, for example - who were more open to the tools of science. Lawrence, "Incommunicable knowledge: Science, technology and the clinical art in Britain, 1850-1914", Journal of contemporary history, xx (1985), 503-20. It is men closer to the latter category who are the focus of the first part of the present paper.
-
(1998)
War, Medicine and Modernity
, pp. 65-84
-
-
Sturdy1
-
16
-
-
0022170407
-
Incommunicable knowledge: Science, technology and the clinical art in Britain, 1850-1914
-
Historians seem to have focused principally on general claims of late nineteenth-century clinical resistance to the laboratory, and reasons (from "truth" to professional advantage to broad social resonance) for its eventual integration into medicine in the first half of the twentieth century. A good review of these positions (with articulation of their own interpretation) is found in Steve Sturdy and Roger Cooter, "Science, scientific management, and the transformation of medicine in Britain c. 1870-1950", History of science, xxxvi (1998), 421-66. Case studies of the twentieth-century integration of clinic and laboratory may be found in Christopher Lawrence, "Moderns and ancients: The 'new cardiology' in Britain, 1880-1930", Medical history, supplement 5 (1985), 1-33; and in Sturdy, "War as experiment: Physiology, innovation and administration in Britain, 1914-1918: The case of chemical warfare", in Roger Cooter, Mark Harrison and Steve Sturdy (eds), War, medicine and modernity (Stroud, 1998), 65-84. am interested in cases on the other side of that nineteenth/twentieth century divide. Lawrence qualifies his presentation of clinical resistance to science in practice (if not always in rhetoric) by pointing out that his resistant élite tended to have top positions at London's prestigious voluntary hospitals. There were others - specialists, for example - who were more open to the tools of science. Lawrence, "Incommunicable knowledge: Science, technology and the clinical art in Britain, 1850-1914", Journal of contemporary history, xx (1985), 503-20. It is men closer to the latter category who are the focus of the first part of the present paper.
-
(1985)
Journal of Contemporary History
, vol.20
, pp. 503-520
-
-
Lawrence1
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17
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85037259288
-
-
note
-
As will become evident, I do not use 'physiology' in any absolute, essential sense; thus, the "shifting" undercurrent. I am suggesting that the very changes in the persons, institutions, and ideas then attached to 'physiology' both permitted a blood substitute to be sought and guided the composition of the substitute proposed.
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21
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0347342542
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London
-
It was Blundell who introduced human-to-human blood transfusion into medical practice. The idea was being discussed, however, well before 1818. In 1805, for example, one of John Haighton's midwifery students reported Haighton as lecturing that, in cases of severe haemorrhage, "something must be done to stop the struggle. If left to yourself you would convey 30 or 40 oz. of blood into the system by the process of transfusion, but this could seldom be done in sufficient time, and if it could the prejudice is such as to prevent you". "Unidentified student's notes [ca. 1805]", taken in John Haighton, A syllabus of the lectures on midwifery delivered at Guy's Hospital (London, 1799), 131. Manuscript at the Wellcome Archives. Haighton was Blundell's uncle and predecessor at Guy's.
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(1799)
A Syllabus of the Lectures on Midwifery Delivered at Guy's Hospital
, pp. 131
-
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Haighton, J.1
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22
-
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0347972776
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On transfusion of blood, its history, and application in cases of severe haemorrhage
-
Charles Waller, "On transfusion of blood, its history, and application in cases of severe haemorrhage", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, i (1859), 61-72. By this time Blundell, still very much alive, had severed all connections to medical institutions, enjoying instead a lucrative private practice.
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(1859)
Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, vol.1
, pp. 61-72
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-
Waller, C.1
-
23
-
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85037267530
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ref. 9
-
See Pelis, op. cit. (ref. 9), 340-1, for more on detibrination.
-
Annals of Sciences
, pp. 340-341
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-
Pelis1
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24
-
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85037277672
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-
note
-
Despite overwhelming evidence to the contrary, the myth that ignorance of blood typing and fear of disease transmission led to the fall of transfusion in the nineteenth century persists. Doctors did sometimes note reactions that would now be classified as haemolytic; then, however, they were generally thought to be the product of small clots in the transfused blood. The possibility of syphilis transmission was occasionally noted but, at least in England, did not in any observed way drive the early search for blood alternatives. This may have been a product of the most common identities of English patient and donor: the birthing mother and her husband. If the husband had syphilis, it most probably would have been transmitted already by means other than transfusion. The next two donor sets, too - doctors and coachmen - may have been assumed trustworthy in reporting their state of health.
-
-
-
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25
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0346081511
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Transfusion with lamb's blood
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The Lancet published a number of articles on international efforts to replace human blood; the British medical journal, on the other hand, essentially ignored the phenomenon. See "Transfusion with lamb's blood", Lancet, 1874, i, 777; "A transfusor in trouble", Lancet, 1875, i, 37. In Britain, transfusion with lamb's blood was attempted at the German Hospital. "Transfusion", Lancet, 1874, ii, 462. A participant in the operation, Dr C. Farber, the hospital's Resident Medical Officer, wrote a letter to the journal following its notice of this transfusion. Farber commented that "in Germany direct transfusion from the lamb is coming into fashion just now, and has already proved a most powerful remedy in very different diseases", C. Farber, "Transfusion at the German Hospital", Lancet, 1874, ii, 541. Clearly, these fluids were used to overcome a variety of problems presented by blood.
-
(1874)
Lancet
, vol.1
, pp. 777
-
-
-
26
-
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0346711990
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A transfusor in trouble
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The Lancet published a number of articles on international efforts to replace human blood; the British medical journal, on the other hand, essentially ignored the phenomenon. See "Transfusion with lamb's blood", Lancet, 1874, i, 777; "A transfusor in trouble", Lancet, 1875, i, 37. In Britain, transfusion with lamb's blood was attempted at the German Hospital. "Transfusion", Lancet, 1874, ii, 462. A participant in the operation, Dr C. Farber, the hospital's Resident Medical Officer, wrote a letter to the journal following its notice of this transfusion. Farber commented that "in Germany direct transfusion from the lamb is coming into fashion just now, and has already proved a most powerful remedy in very different diseases", C. Farber, "Transfusion at the German Hospital", Lancet, 1874, ii, 541. Clearly, these fluids were used to overcome a variety of problems presented by blood.
-
(1875)
Lancet
, vol.1
, pp. 37
-
-
-
27
-
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0347342545
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Transfusion
-
The Lancet published a number of articles on international efforts to replace human blood; the British medical journal, on the other hand, essentially ignored the phenomenon. See "Transfusion with lamb's blood", Lancet, 1874, i, 777; "A transfusor in trouble", Lancet, 1875, i, 37. In Britain, transfusion with lamb's blood was attempted at the German Hospital. "Transfusion", Lancet, 1874, ii, 462. A participant in the operation, Dr C. Farber, the hospital's Resident Medical Officer, wrote a letter to the journal following its notice of this transfusion. Farber commented that "in Germany direct transfusion from the lamb is coming into fashion just now, and has already proved a most powerful remedy in very different diseases", C. Farber, "Transfusion at the German Hospital", Lancet, 1874, ii, 541. Clearly, these fluids were used to overcome a variety of problems presented by blood.
-
(1874)
Lancet
, vol.2
, pp. 462
-
-
-
28
-
-
0346081508
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Transfusion at the German Hospital
-
The Lancet published a number of articles on international efforts to replace human blood; the British medical journal, on the other hand, essentially ignored the phenomenon. See "Transfusion with lamb's blood", Lancet, 1874, i, 777; "A transfusor in trouble", Lancet, 1875, i, 37. In Britain, transfusion with lamb's blood was attempted at the German Hospital. "Transfusion", Lancet, 1874, ii, 462. A participant in the operation, Dr C. Farber, the hospital's Resident Medical Officer, wrote a letter to the journal following its notice of this transfusion. Farber commented that "in Germany direct transfusion from the lamb is coming into fashion just now, and has already proved a most powerful remedy in very different diseases", C. Farber, "Transfusion at the German Hospital", Lancet, 1874, ii, 541. Clearly, these fluids were used to overcome a variety of problems presented by blood.
-
(1874)
Lancet
, vol.2
, pp. 541
-
-
Farber, C.1
-
29
-
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0347342543
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Transfusion with milk
-
"Transfusion with milk", Lancet, 1876, i, 937. W. S. Playfair pointed out that the operation was also supported by C. E. Brown-Séquard on the basis of animal experiments. W. S. Playfair, A treatise on the science and practice of midwifery (3rd edn, 2 vols, London, 1882), ii, 254.
-
(1876)
Lancet
, vol.1
, pp. 937
-
-
-
30
-
-
0347342544
-
-
2 vols, London
-
"Transfusion with milk", Lancet, 1876, i, 937. W. S. Playfair pointed out that the operation was also supported by C. E. Brown-Séquard on the basis of animal experiments. W. S. Playfair, A treatise on the science and practice of midwifery (3rd edn, 2 vols, London, 1882), ii, 254.
-
(1882)
A Treatise on the Science and Practice of Midwifery 3rd Edn
, vol.2
, pp. 254
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Playfair, W.S.1
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31
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0346081525
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Blood drinking
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"Blood drinking", Lancet, 1876, ii, 346.
-
(1876)
Lancet
, vol.2
, pp. 346
-
-
-
32
-
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0347342546
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London
-
An exception is found in Robert Barnes, who supported the addition of saline or milk to blood, as well as transfusion with animal blood: "To supply an answer to a vulgar dread that with the blood of animals some noxious vital principle may be imparted, it ought to be enough to remember that man lives upon the flesh and blood of animals." He went on to mention Galton's pangenesis experiments, in which blood of other species was injected into rabbits, as providing further evidence for the safety of foreign blood. Robert Barnes, Lectures on obstetric operations (3rd edn, London, 1876), 575-7, p. 577.
-
(1876)
Lectures on Obstetric Operations 3rd Edn
, pp. 575-577
-
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Barnes, R.1
-
33
-
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0007354116
-
On transfusion, and new mode of management
-
Summary of talk given to "Midwifery" section of the British Medical Association Annual Meeting. J. Braxton Hicks, "On transfusion, and new mode of management", British medical journal, 1868, ii, 151. I have drawn attention to the term 'saline' solution to underscore its meaning for those using it in the 1860s and 1870s. While we tend to assume a mixture of sodium chloride and water, they used it to describe the solution resulting from any salt dissolved in water.
-
(1868)
British Medical Journal
, vol.2
, pp. 151
-
-
Hicks, J.B.1
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34
-
-
33749613759
-
-
ref. 24
-
It is unclear whether Hicks himself made the claim of sufety (which would not be assumed today), or whether it was the journalist reporting on the annual meeting. Hicks, op. cit. (ref. 24), 151.
-
British Medical Journal
, pp. 151
-
-
Hicks1
-
35
-
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0346081510
-
Report of experimental inquiry. Instituted to determine with what fluids and by what methods the operation of blood-transfusion may best be performed, and to ascertain the effects, immediate or remote, which result from the operation in animals
-
Braxton Hicks credited Pavy with this suggestion in the "Discussion" following E. A. Schaefer's presentation before the Obstetrical Society of London, "Report of experimental inquiry. instituted to determine with what fluids and by what methods the operation of blood-transfusion may best be performed, and to ascertain the effects, immediate or remote, which result from the operation in animals", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, xxi (1879), 316-47, p. 345.
-
(1879)
Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, vol.21
, pp. 316-347
-
-
-
38
-
-
0346081517
-
-
M.D. Thesis, Edinburgh University
-
Andrew Elliot, "Transfusion: With special reference to intravenous infusion of saline solution" (M.D. Thesis, Edinburgh University, 1894), 16-22. Elliot appears to have studied medicine at the West London Hospital in 1892/93, then taken his M.D. thesis at Edinburgh. I am grateful to Michael Barfoot for kindly bringing this thesis to my attention.
-
(1894)
Transfusion: With Special Reference to Intravenous Infusion of Saline Solution
, pp. 16-22
-
-
Elliot, A.1
-
39
-
-
85037267530
-
-
ref. 9
-
For a review of the apparatus debate, see Pelis, op. cit. (ref. 9), 345-9.
-
Annals of Sciences
, pp. 345-349
-
-
Pelis1
-
40
-
-
0346081516
-
Committee to investigate the subject of transfusion
-
"Committee to investigate the subject of transfusion", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, xiv (1872); proposed by Charles Henry Felix Routh, p. 20. This committee was composed of the OSL's most esteemed members, including John Hall Davis, Alfred Meadows, and T. Spencer Wells. In 1873, Wells left the committee; in 1874, James Hobson Aveling joined it. It should also be noted that this inquiry was being conducted in the broader context of obstetricians" efforts to keep midwives out of the more profitable parts of their trade. One might hypothesise that a well-timed study of a potentially life-saving procedure that could be performed only by trained doctors would have aided their cause. For a participant's perspective on the midwife controversies, see James Hobson Aveling, English midwives: Their history and prospects (London, 1872; rev. edn, 1967). An excellent historical overview is given in Omella Moscucci, The science of woman: Gynaecology and gender in England, 1800-1929 (Cambridge, 1990).
-
(1872)
Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, vol.14
-
-
-
41
-
-
0010993770
-
-
London, rev. edn
-
"Committee to investigate the subject of transfusion", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, xiv (1872); proposed by Charles Henry Felix Routh, p. 20. This committee was composed of the OSL's most esteemed members, including John Hall Davis, Alfred Meadows, and T. Spencer Wells. In 1873, Wells left the committee; in 1874, James Hobson Aveling joined it. It should also be noted that this inquiry was being conducted in the broader context of obstetricians" efforts to keep midwives out of the more profitable parts of their trade. One might hypothesise that a well-timed study of a potentially life-saving procedure that could be performed only by trained doctors would have aided their cause. For a participant's perspective on the midwife controversies, see James Hobson Aveling, English midwives: Their history and prospects (London, 1872; rev. edn, 1967). An excellent historical overview is given in Omella Moscucci, The science of woman: Gynaecology and gender in England, 1800-1929 (Cambridge, 1990).
-
(1872)
English Midwives: Their History and Prospects
-
-
Aveling, J.H.1
-
42
-
-
0003643003
-
-
Cambridge
-
"Committee to investigate the subject of transfusion", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, xiv (1872); proposed by Charles Henry Felix Routh, p. 20. This committee was composed of the OSL's most esteemed members, including John Hall Davis, Alfred Meadows, and T. Spencer Wells. In 1873, Wells left the committee; in 1874, James Hobson Aveling joined it. It should also be noted that this inquiry was being conducted in the broader context of obstetricians" efforts to keep midwives out of the more profitable parts of their trade. One might hypothesise that a well-timed study of a potentially life-saving procedure that could be performed only by trained doctors would have aided their cause. For a participant's perspective on the midwife controversies, see James Hobson Aveling, English midwives: Their history and prospects (London, 1872; rev. edn, 1967). An excellent historical overview is given in Omella Moscucci, The science of woman: Gynaecology and gender in England, 1800-1929 (Cambridge, 1990).
-
(1990)
The Science of Woman: Gynaecology and Gender in England, 1800-1929
-
-
Moscucci, O.1
-
43
-
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0346711977
-
Transfusion
-
"Transfusion", Lancet, 1873, i, 216.
-
(1873)
Lancet
, vol.1
, pp. 216
-
-
-
45
-
-
0347342515
-
On transfusion of blood
-
Henry Madge, "On transfusion of blood", British medical journal, 1874, i, 42-44, p. 44.
-
(1874)
British Medical Journal
, vol.1
, pp. 42-44
-
-
Madge, H.1
-
46
-
-
0347342514
-
Annual address
-
The Council's approval for this physiological study appears in William Priestley, "Annual address", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, xix (1877), 17-36, p. 29. It is discussed in W. S. Playfair, "Annual address", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, xxii (1880), 55-72, p. 61.
-
(1877)
Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, vol.19
, pp. 17-36
-
-
Priestley, W.1
-
47
-
-
0346081523
-
Annual address
-
The Council's approval for this physiological study appears in William Priestley, "Annual address", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, xix (1877), 17-36, p. 29. It is discussed in W. S. Playfair, "Annual address", Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London, xxii (1880), 55-72, p. 61.
-
(1880)
Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, vol.22
, pp. 55-72
-
-
Playfair, W.S.1
-
48
-
-
0015262375
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Social and institutional factors in the stagnancy of English physiology, 1840-1870
-
The state of English physiology at mid-century is discussed in several sources. See Gerald L. Geison, "Social and institutional factors in the stagnancy of English physiology, 1840-1870", Bulletin of the history of medicine, xlvi (1972), 30-58; and Richard D. French, Antivivisection and medical science in Victorian society (Princeton, 1975). For a review of the complex lineage and basic ideas of nineteenth-century Continental physiology, Karl E. Rothschuh, History of phisiology (Huntington, NY, 1973).
-
(1972)
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
, vol.46
, pp. 30-58
-
-
Geison, G.L.1
-
49
-
-
0015262375
-
-
Princeton
-
The state of English physiology at mid-century is discussed in several sources. See Gerald L. Geison, "Social and institutional factors in the stagnancy of English physiology, 1840-1870", Bulletin of the history of medicine, xlvi (1972), 30-58; and Richard D. French, Antivivisection and medical science in Victorian society (Princeton, 1975). For a review of the complex lineage and basic ideas of nineteenth-century Continental physiology, Karl E. Rothschuh, History of phisiology (Huntington, NY, 1973).
-
(1975)
Antivivisection and Medical Science in Victorian Society
-
-
French, R.D.1
-
50
-
-
0015262375
-
-
Huntington, NY
-
The state of English physiology at mid-century is discussed in several sources. See Gerald L. Geison, "Social and institutional factors in the stagnancy of English physiology, 1840-1870", Bulletin of the history of medicine, xlvi (1972), 30-58; and Richard D. French, Antivivisection and medical science in Victorian society (Princeton, 1975). For a review of the complex lineage and basic ideas of nineteenth-century Continental physiology, Karl E. Rothschuh, History of phisiology (Huntington, NY, 1973).
-
(1973)
History of Phisiology
-
-
Rothschuh, K.E.1
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51
-
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85037289133
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-
ref. 27
-
After taking his M.D. at Edinburgh in 1823, Sharpey studied anatomy in London, surgery and natural history in Paris, and physiology (under Johannes Mueller's teacher, Karl Rudolphi) in Berlin. In 1836, he was offered the chair of General Anatomy and Physiology at University College, London, which he held until 1874. Sharpey-Schaefer, op. cit. (ref. 27), 17-19.
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History of the Physiological Society during Its First Fifty Years, 1876-1926
, pp. 17-19
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-
Sharpey-Schaefer1
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54
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84927766958
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ref. 11
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Sturdy and Cooter, op. cit. (ref. 11); Lawrence, op. cit. (ref. 11), See also S. E. D. Shortt, "Physicians, science, and status: Issues in the professionalization of Anglo-American medicine in the nineteenth century", Medical history, xxvii (1983), 51-68. For the American parallel to this story, with an emphasis on the embrace of science as a professional strategy, see Gerald L. Geison, "Divided we stand: Physiologists and clinicians in the American context", in Morris J. Vogel and Charles E. Rosenberg (eds), The therapeutic revolution: Essays in the social history of American medicine (Philadelphia, 1979), 67-90. A more recent study of experimental medicine in America, which attempts to combine explanations from science and culture, is John Harley Warner, "The fall and rise of professional mystery: Epistemology, authority and the emergence of laboratory medicine in nineteenth-century America", in Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams (eds), The laboratory revolution in medicine (Cambridge, 1992), 110-41.
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History of Science
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-
Sturdy1
Cooter2
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55
-
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84895668751
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op. cit. ref. 11
-
Sturdy and Cooter, op. cit. (ref. 11); Lawrence, op. cit. (ref. 11), See also S. E. D. Shortt, "Physicians, science, and status: Issues in the professionalization of Anglo-American medicine in the nineteenth century", Medical history, xxvii (1983), 51-68. For the American parallel to this story, with an emphasis on the embrace of science as a professional strategy, see Gerald L. Geison, "Divided we stand: Physiologists and clinicians in the American context", in Morris J. Vogel and Charles E. Rosenberg (eds), The therapeutic revolution: Essays in the social history of American medicine (Philadelphia, 1979), 67-90. A more recent study of experimental medicine in America, which attempts to combine explanations from science and culture, is John Harley Warner, "The fall and rise of professional mystery: Epistemology, authority and the emergence of laboratory medicine in nineteenth-century America", in Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams (eds), The laboratory revolution in medicine (Cambridge, 1992), 110-41.
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Medical History
-
-
Lawrence1
-
56
-
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0020540757
-
Physicians, science, and status: Issues in the professionalization of Anglo-American medicine in the nineteenth century
-
Sturdy and Cooter, op. cit. (ref. 11); Lawrence, op. cit. (ref. 11), See also S. E. D. Shortt, "Physicians, science, and status: Issues in the professionalization of Anglo-American medicine in the nineteenth century", Medical history, xxvii (1983), 51-68. For the American parallel to this story, with an emphasis on the embrace of science as a professional strategy, see Gerald L. Geison, "Divided we stand: Physiologists and clinicians in the American context", in Morris J. Vogel and Charles E. Rosenberg (eds), The therapeutic revolution: Essays in the social history of American medicine (Philadelphia, 1979), 67-90. A more recent study of experimental medicine in America, which attempts to combine explanations from science and culture, is John Harley Warner, "The fall and rise of professional mystery: Epistemology, authority and the emergence of laboratory medicine in nineteenth-century America", in Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams (eds), The laboratory revolution in medicine (Cambridge, 1992), 110-41.
-
(1983)
Medical History
, vol.27
, pp. 51-68
-
-
Shortt, S.E.D.1
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57
-
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0009165420
-
Divided we stand: Physiologists and clinicians in the American context
-
Morris J. Vogel and Charles E. Rosenberg (eds), Philadelphia
-
Sturdy and Cooter, op. cit. (ref. 11); Lawrence, op. cit. (ref. 11), See also S. E. D. Shortt, "Physicians, science, and status: Issues in the professionalization of Anglo-American medicine in the nineteenth century", Medical history, xxvii (1983), 51-68. For the American parallel to this story, with an emphasis on the embrace of science as a professional strategy, see Gerald L. Geison, "Divided we stand: Physiologists and clinicians in the American context", in Morris J. Vogel and Charles E. Rosenberg (eds), The therapeutic revolution: Essays in the social history of American medicine (Philadelphia, 1979), 67-90. A more recent study of experimental medicine in America, which attempts to combine explanations from science and culture, is John Harley Warner, "The fall and rise of professional mystery: Epistemology, authority and the emergence of laboratory medicine in nineteenth-century America", in Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams (eds), The laboratory revolution in medicine (Cambridge, 1992), 110-41.
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(1979)
The Therapeutic Revolution: Essays in the Social History of American Medicine
, pp. 67-90
-
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Geison, G.L.1
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58
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0004457302
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The fall and rise of professional mystery: Epistemology, authority and the emergence of laboratory medicine in nineteenth-century America
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Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams (eds), Cambridge
-
Sturdy and Cooter, op. cit. (ref. 11); Lawrence, op. cit. (ref. 11), See also S. E. D. Shortt, "Physicians, science, and status: Issues in the professionalization of Anglo-American medicine in the nineteenth century", Medical history, xxvii (1983), 51-68. For the American parallel to this story, with an emphasis on the embrace of science as a professional strategy, see Gerald L. Geison, "Divided we stand: Physiologists and clinicians in the American context", in Morris J. Vogel and Charles E. Rosenberg (eds), The therapeutic revolution: Essays in the social history of American medicine (Philadelphia, 1979), 67-90. A more recent study of experimental medicine in America, which attempts to combine explanations from science and culture, is John Harley Warner, "The fall and rise of professional mystery: Epistemology, authority and the emergence of laboratory medicine in nineteenth-century America", in Andrew Cunningham and Perry Williams (eds), The laboratory revolution in medicine (Cambridge, 1992), 110-41.
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(1992)
The Laboratory Revolution in Medicine
, pp. 110-141
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Warner, J.H.1
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59
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85037282989
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ref. 35
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Playfair, op. cit. (ref. 35), 41. Of course, the actual influence this report had on the way ordinary, individual general practitioner-obstetricians did or did not perform transfusion is another matter. To answer such questions of day-to-day practice, if at all possible with extant records, would take an overwhelming amount of detective work: a problem which, in itself, sheds light on the complex issues surrounding any detailed appreciation of the relations between clinic and laboratory in the last third of the nineteenth century.
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Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, pp. 41
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Playfair1
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62
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85037261077
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ref. 26
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Schaefer, op. cit. (ref. 26), 319. During the 1870s, blood transfusion was being used to treat an increasing array of conditions, from chronic anaemia to bacterial infection. While such efforts were being carried out in England, too, English transfusion remained firmly in obstetrical hands until the final decade of the century.
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Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, pp. 319
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Schaefer1
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63
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85037268493
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ref. 26
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Schaefer repeated many of these experiments, both in vitro and in vivo; confirming Landois, he described what would now be called a haemolytic reaction: destruction of red cells, bloody urine, potential for emboli, and possible death. Schaefer, op. cit. (ref. 26), 316-19. It would be another twenty-five years before Karl Landsteiner recognized that human blood itself came in different types, which could be mutually incompatible.
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Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, pp. 316-319
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Schaefer1
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64
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85037272103
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ref. 26
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Schaefer, op. cit. (ref. 26), 320, 321. Schaefer's blood pressure measurements were on animals. At this time, blood pressure apparatus, though popular in laboratory experiments, were not yet adapted for use at the bedside. Yet, after 1896. when clinical apparatus became available. English clinicians in general tended to prefer the measurement of their trained finger to that of the instrument. Lawrence, "Moderns" (ref. 11), 9-10.
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Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, pp. 320
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Schaefer1
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65
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0347342516
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ref. 11
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Schaefer, op. cit. (ref. 26), 320, 321. Schaefer's blood pressure measurements were on animals. At this time, blood pressure apparatus, though popular in laboratory experiments, were not yet adapted for use at the bedside. Yet, after 1896. when clinical apparatus became available. English clinicians in general tended to prefer the measurement of their trained finger to that of the instrument. Lawrence, "Moderns" (ref. 11), 9-10.
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Moderns
, pp. 9-10
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Lawrence1
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66
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84944484760
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ref. 26
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Schaefer, op. cit. (ref. 26), 319. The physiologist Ernest Starling confirmed that this post- haemorrhagic blood dilution had been "known to physiologists for the last fifty years". E. H. Starling, "On the absorption of fluids from the connective tissue spaces", Journal of physiology, xix (1896), 312-26, p. 314. Schaefer's confident interpretation of this observation was, however, far from comentional clinical wisdom in 1879.
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Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, pp. 319
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Schaefer1
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67
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84944484760
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On the absorption of fluids from the connective tissue spaces
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Schaefer, op. cit. (ref. 26), 319. The physiologist Ernest Starling confirmed that this post-haemorrhagic blood dilution had been "known to physiologists for the last fifty years". E. H. Starling, "On the absorption of fluids from the connective tissue spaces", Journal of physiology, xix (1896), 312-26, p. 314. Schaefer's confident interpretation of this observation was, however, far from comentional clinical wisdom in 1879.
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(1896)
Journal of Physiology
, vol.19
, pp. 312-326
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Starling, E.H.1
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70
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85037281003
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ref. 26
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Schaefer comments about the transfused dog that "the patient was strong enough to run about, and take its usual food the next day". This and the abovve quotations from Schaefer, op. cit. (ref. 26), 328.
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Transactions of the Obstetrical Society of London
, pp. 328
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Schaefer1
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72
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85037274903
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note
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I use the terms "shock", "collapse", and "exhaustion" with qualification. Throughout the nineteenth century (and, indeed, into the twentieth), they were used with a kind of fluidity that prevents any simple description of their respective meanings.
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73
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0346081496
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Notes of unsuccessful and successful cases of saline alcoholic injections into the veins for relief of collapse of malignant cholera, treated during the epidemic of 1848-9
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Little himself described the lineage of saline infusions for cholera treatment . W. J. Little, "Notes of unsuccessful and successful cases of saline alcoholic injections into the veins for relief of collapse of malignant cholera, treated during the epidemic of 1848-9", Clinical lectures and reports, by the medical and surgical staff of the London Hospital, iii (1866), 132-68.
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(1866)
Clinical Lectures and Reports, by the Medical and Surgical Staff of the London Hospital
, vol.3
, pp. 132-168
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Little, W.J.1
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74
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85037286086
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note
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I should stress that transfusion was thought of as an operative procedure, relying as it did upon 'cutting down' on veins. This operative status would persist into the twentieth century, arguably even until blood banking replaced hospital-based donation.
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76
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0346081514
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ref. 55
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Jennings, op. cit. (ref. 55), 1-2. Jennings was one of the few doctors of his day to bring attention to the dangers of infection, both to donor and patient. He continued his story by pointing out that the poor donor might develop "an ugly-looking pulsatile tumour" where the blood had been taken, giving him the role of hospital patient. Slightly later (p. 3), he mentioned - in passing, but still significantly - the dangers inherent in emergency transfusion, when there was no time to determine whether the donor had syphilis or "other specific communicable diseases".
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Transfusion: Its History, Indications, and Modes of Application
, pp. 1-2
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Jennings1
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81
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85037273401
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T. Spencer Wells, "Special preface", in Jennings, op. cit. (ref. 60). Wells qualifies, with Jennings, that this substitution would be "within certain limits".
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Special preface
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Wells, T.S.1
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83
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0346711985
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ref. 60
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The most significant textual change comes in the second edition's inclusion of several cases in which blood or saline had been used to treat a variety of conditions other than acute haemorrhage. Included in this list is Mackenzie's work on using intravenous saline for treatment of diabetic coma. Jennings, op. cit. (ref. 60), 35-37.
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On Transfusion of Blood and Saline Fluids 2nd Edn
, pp. 35-37
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Jennings1
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86
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0346711985
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ref. 60
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He continues: "which, whilst sternly denying to us the right of experimenting on lower animals, in no way prohibits, and probably never contemplated the performance of experiments on men!" Jennings, op. cit. (ref. 60), 49.
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On Transfusion of Blood and Saline Fluids 2nd Edn
, pp. 49
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Jennings1
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87
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50549109221
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Report of two experimental transfusions on dogs, performed in Guy's Hospital Laboratory
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Charles Egerton Jennings, "Report of two experimental transfusions on dogs, performed in Guy's Hospital Laboratory", Lancet, 1883, ii, 364-6, p. 364.
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(1883)
Lancet
, vol.2
, pp. 364-366
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Jennings, C.E.1
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89
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0346711985
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ref. 60
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Jennings, op. cit. (ref. 60), 57. The emphasis is again Jennings's. In preserving a place for blood's nutritive property, Jennings did believe that a blood/saline combination would be better than saline alone "in some rare cases, such as carbolic acid poisoning and some of the varieties of chronic anaemia".
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On Transfusion of Blood and Saline Fluids 2nd Edn
, pp. 57
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Jennings1
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90
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0014756134
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Tissue oxidation and theoretical physiology: Bernard, Ludwig, and Pflueger
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Spallanzani's ideas, which he set forth in 1803, challenged Lavoisier's belief that respiration, as well as the production of animal heat, took place when the blood passed through the lungs. An elegant presentation, and interpretation, of the eventual acceptance of tissue respiration is Charles A. Culotta, "Tissue oxidation and theoretical physiology: Bernard, Ludwig, and Pflueger", Bulletin of the history of medicine, xliv (1970), 109-40.
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(1970)
Bulletin of the History of Medicine
, vol.44
, pp. 109-140
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Culotta, C.A.1
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91
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84888794184
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ref. 69
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Culotta, op. cit. (ref. 69), 116-20 (on Bernard); 120-8 (on Ludwig and his school). Culotta emphasises that neither Bernard nor Ludwig denied that respiration occurred in the tissues; rather, they objected to the view that the tissues, and not the blood, controlled the process (p. 128).
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Bulletin of the History of Medicine
, pp. 116-120
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Culotta1
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92
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84888794184
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ref. 69
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Culotta, op. cit. (ref. 69), 139-40, 130. Rothschuh, op. cit. (ref. 36), 226, further underscores the teleological framework in which Pflueger viewed his physiological studies.
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Bulletin of the History of Medicine
, pp. 139-140
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Culotta1
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93
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0004186094
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ref. 36
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Culotta, op. cit. (ref. 69), 139-40, 130. Rothschuh, op. cit. (ref. 36), 226, further underscores the teleological framework in which Pflueger viewed his physiological studies.
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History of Physiology
, pp. 226
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Rothschuh1
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94
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0346711979
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Obituary, Sidney Ringer
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I have found the following description of Ringer's typical workday such a striking portrait of a London clinician's determination to conduct both clinical and laboratory work - at a time when institutional structures hardly facilitated such efforts - that I quote it at length: "he would rise early, dispatch a hasty breakfast at eight, and the next few minutes would see him on his way to hospital, always on foot, carrying, perhaps, with him some casual co-breakfaster, astonished at the celerity of things. The hospital visit would generally, in pharmacological days, conclude with a quick-change appearance in the physiological laboratory - Ringer the physician transformed into Ringer the pharmacologist.... 'Fielder!' would have been hailed, a tracing taken, various suggestions made, and off he was again on his way back to Cavendish Place and the morning's consulting work.... The afternoon would be filled with visits, consultations, the hospital round, a post-mortem examination, and again, when possible, and for as long as possible, a visit to the laboratory. His attraction to this workshop was quite wonderful. Nothing could withstand it, not even the college palings, over which he clambered in the dark, upon one occasion at least, when the gates would not yield." "Obituary, Sidney Ringer", British medical journal, 1910, ii, 1384-6.
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(1910)
British Medical Journal
, vol.2
, pp. 1384-1386
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95
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0347342529
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Sydney Ringer
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William F. Bynum, "Sydney Ringer", Dictionary of scientific biography, xi, 462-3. Butler, op. cit. (ref. 38), 214-20, describes the contrast between the Univerity College lab's openness to a wide variety of projects, and the focused investigations that took place in Michael Foster's Cambridge lab. On Foster and his laboratory, see Gerald L. Geison, Michael Foster and the Cambridge school of physiology: The scientific enterprise in late Victorian society (Princeton, 1978).
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Dictionary of Scientific Biography
, vol.11
, pp. 462-463
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Bynum, W.F.1
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96
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85037257656
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ref. 38
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William F. Bynum, "Sydney Ringer", Dictionary of scientific biography, xi, 462-3. Butler, op. cit. (ref. 38), 214-20, describes the contrast between the Univerity College lab's openness to a wide variety of projects, and the focused investigations that took place in Michael Foster's Cambridge lab. On Foster and his laboratory, see Gerald L. Geison, Michael Foster and the Cambridge school of physiology: The scientific enterprise in late Victorian society (Princeton, 1978).
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Science and the Education of Doctors in the Nineteenth Century: A Study of British Medical Schools with Particular Reference to the Development and Uses of Physiology
, pp. 214-220
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Butler1
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97
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85012170356
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Princeton
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William F. Bynum, "Sydney Ringer", Dictionary of scientific biography, xi, 462-3. Butler, op. cit. (ref. 38), 214-20, describes the contrast between the Univerity College lab's openness to a wide variety of projects, and the focused investigations that took place in Michael Foster's Cambridge lab. On Foster and his laboratory, see Gerald L. Geison, Michael Foster and the Cambridge school of physiology: The scientific enterprise in late Victorian society (Princeton, 1978).
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(1978)
Michael Foster and the Cambridge School of Physiology: The Scientific Enterprise in Late Victorian Society
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Geison, G.L.1
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99
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0346711985
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ref. 60
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To twenty ounces of distilled water, Jennings added sodium chloride and, in lesser amounts, potassium phosphate, "sulphate of soda", "carbonate of soda", and "phosphate of soda". He carried pre-prepared packets of this salt mixture (as had Little before him) in his apparatus case. In some cases - again, following Little - he added "absolute alcohol" to his saline mixture. Jennings, op. cit. (ref. 60), 56.
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On Transfusion of Blood and Saline Fluids 2nd Edn
, pp. 56
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Jennings1
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101
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0347342530
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Author's preface to the third edition
-
London
-
Jennings mentions this research trip in the 1888 edition of his transfusion treatise. Charles Ecerton Jennings, "Author's preface to the third edition", On transfusion of blood and saline fluids (3rd edn, London 1888).
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(1888)
On Transfusion of Blood and Saline Fluids 3rd Edn
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Jennings, C.E.1
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103
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0346711985
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ref. 77
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Jennings, op. cit. (ref. 77), 57. That Jennings continued to hold to blood's nutritive value, and did not simply omit revisions of this passage from the earlier editions, is strongly suggested by a discussion hold on a transfusion apparatus presented to the Harveian Society in 1885. Jennings, having championed the case of saline, qualified his assertion, which was noted in the Lancet's summary of the evening: "the nutritive value of blood was not to be underrated; and where transfusion was indicated for the sake of nutrition, the employment of whole blood would be better than that of defibrinated blood." "Meeting, Harveian Society of London", Lancet. 1885, i, 664.
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On Transfusion of Blood and Saline Fluids 3rd Edn
, pp. 57
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Jennings1
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104
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0347972772
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Meeting, Harveian Society of London
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Jennings, op. cit. (ref. 77), 57. That Jennings continued to hold to blood's nutritive value, and did not simply omit revisions of this passage from the earlier editions, is strongly suggested by a discussion hold on a transfusion apparatus presented to the Harveian Society in 1885. Jennings, having championed the case of saline, qualified his assertion, which was noted in the Lancet's summary of the evening: "the nutritive value of blood was not to be underrated; and where transfusion was indicated for the sake of nutrition, the employment of whole blood would be better than that of defibrinated blood." "Meeting, Harveian Society of London", Lancet. 1885, i, 664.
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(1885)
Lancet
, vol.1
, pp. 664
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-
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107
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The coagulation question
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L. C. Wooldridge. "The coagulation question", Journal of physiology, x (1889), 329-40. This paper was published posthumously, with a note by Michael Foster. The article is in fact a spirited defence of his own work against the critiques of W. D. Halliburton.
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(1889)
Journal of Physiology
, vol.10
, pp. 329-340
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Wooldridge, L.C.1
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108
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84963959213
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Summary of three lectures on transfusion: Its physiology, pathology, and practice
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William Hunter, "Summary of three lectures on transfusion: Its physiology, pathology, and practice", British medical journal, 1889, ii, 116-19, 237-40, 305-9. Hunter's work came at a time when several European investigators, whose studies he cited, were reaching the same conclusions.
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(1889)
British Medical Journal
, vol.2
, pp. 116-119
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Hunter, W.1
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110
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0347342528
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The history of transfusion, with short notes of cases in which the method of infusion of saline fluid into the veins has been adopted
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Whereas Elliot, following Jennings, tended to use around two pints of saline, Bernard Pitts, at St Thomas's hospital, infused between four and thirteen pints into his patients. Bernard Pitts, "The history of transfusion, with short notes of cases in which the method of infusion of saline fluid into the veins has been adopted", Saint Thomas's Hospital reports, xxi (1893), 253-70, 262-4. Both authors describe these patients as "collapsed" or "exhausted"; Pitts adds "moribund" and, in one instance, refers to the condition as "shock".
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(1893)
Saint Thomas's Hospital Reports
, vol.21
, pp. 253-270
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Pitts, B.1
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112
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85037267857
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note
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My initial review of later literature suggests that obstetrical interest in blood transfusion was only rekindled in the 1930s, when concerns about maternal mortality became acute.
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113
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ref. 29
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Elliot, op. cit. (ref. 29), 53. The case of 13 transfused pints is in Pitts, op. cit. (ref. 85), 263. It is possible that Wooldridge and Horrocks were conducting the work at Guy's in the 1880s that encouraged the use of mass infusions; further research must be done before this hypothesis can be stated with more certainty.
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Transfusion: With Special Reference to Intravenous Infusion Solution
, pp. 53
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Elliot1
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114
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0347972773
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ref. 85
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Elliot, op. cit. (ref. 29), 53. The case of 13 transfused pints is in Pitts, op. cit. (ref. 85), 263. It is possible that Wooldridge and Horrocks were conducting the work at Guy's in the 1880s that encouraged the use of mass infusions; further research must be done before this hypothesis can be stated with more certainty.
-
Saint Thomas's Hospital Reports
, pp. 263
-
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Pitts1
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115
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0348241557
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-
Westport, CT and London, ch. 6
-
Peter C. English, Shock, physiological surgery, and George Washington Crile: Medical innovation in the progressive era (Westport, CT and London, 1980), ch. 6.
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(1980)
Shock, Physiological Surgery, and George Washington Crile: Medical Innovation in the Progressive Era
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English, P.C.1
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116
-
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0348241557
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(ref. 89), chs. 5 and 6
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English argues that Crile's use of blood pressure measurement was key to his understanding of the nature and treatment of shock. English, op. cit. (ref. 89), chs. 5 and 6. In hospital, where most doctors were estimating the effects of saline, blood pressure measurements were not yet taken. At the same time, it is also possible that Crile's ideas about blood itself had some considerable bearing on his interpretation of the relative efficacy of the two fluids.
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Shock, Physiological Surgery, and George Washington Crile: Medical Innovation in the Progressive Era
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English1
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119
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Starling: The formulation of his hypothesis of microvascular fluid exchange and its significance after 100 years
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Wooldridge was one of three men who shared the position of leaching practical physiology at Guy's. It was not until several years later that the position was consolidated and filled by a single individual. C. C. Michel, "Starling: The formulation of his hypothesis of microvascular fluid exchange and its significance after 100 years", Experimental physiology, lxxxii (1997), 1-30, pp. 2-3.
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(1997)
Experimental Physiology
, vol.82
, pp. 1-30
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Michel, C.C.1
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ref. 92
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Not only did Starling take Wooldridge's position at Guy's, he also eventually married Wooldridge's widow. Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 2-6. Jens Henriksen's biography of Starling appeared last year; however, I have not yet been successful in my efforts to find a copy. Jens H. Henriksen, Ernest Henry Starling (1866-1927), physician and physiologist: A short biography (Copenhagen, 2000).
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Experimental Physiology
, pp. 2-6
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Michel1
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Copenhagen
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Not only did Starling take Wooldridge's position at Guy's, he also eventually married Wooldridge's widow. Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 2-6. Jens Henriksen's biography of Starling appeared last year; however, I have not yet been successful in my efforts to find a copy. Jens H. Henriksen, Ernest Henry Starling (1866-1927), physician and physiologist: A short biography (Copenhagen, 2000).
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Ernest Henry Starling (1866-1927), Physician and Physiologist: A Short Biography
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Henriksen, J.H.1
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122
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ref. 92
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Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 3. Starling was awarded scholarships by the British Medical Association and the Grocer's Company.
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Experimental Physiology
, pp. 3
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Michel1
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124
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ref. 92
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Starling lays out pieces of Heidenhain's theories and evidence in his own publications: Michel brings them together nicely. Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 6-7. In his presentation of Heidenhain's work, Rothschuh is relatively cautious about vitalistic labels, arguing that, principally, Heidenhain abhorred over-hasty reductionism, preferring biological explanations while avoiding vitalism proper. Rothschuh, op. cit. (ref. 36), 231-2. This may well be so: I have not studied Heidenhain's work directly. It is clear, however, that Starling and his collaborator saw a vitalistic component in Heidenhain's interpretations: "the force which causes absorption ... is clearly something more than osmosis, and that it originates in the vital properties of the intestinal epithelium, Prof. Heidenhain argues, is rendered probable...." J. B.
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Experimental Physiology
, pp. 6-7
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Michel1
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125
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0347972766
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ref. 36
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Starling lays out pieces of Heidenhain's theories and evidence in his own publications: Michel brings them together nicely. Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 6-7. In his presentation of Heidenhain's work, Rothschuh is relatively cautious about vitalistic labels, arguing that, principally, Heidenhain abhorred over-hasty reductionism, preferring biological explanations while avoiding vitalism proper. Rothschuh, op. cit. (ref. 36), 231-2. This may well be so: I have not studied Heidenhain's work directly. It is clear, however, that Starling and his collaborator saw a vitalistic component in Heidenhain's interpretations: "the force which causes absorption ... is clearly something more than osmosis, and that it originates in the vital properties of the intestinal epithelium, Prof. Heidenhain argues, is rendered probable...." J. B. Leathes and Ernest H. Starling, "On the absorption of salt solutions from the pleural cavities", Journal of physiology, xviii (1895), 106-16, p. 107. Quite possibly, the answer simply comes down to one's definition of the ever-slippery concept, 'vitalism'.
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History of Physiology
, pp. 231-232
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Rothschuh1
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126
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On the absorption of salt solutions from the pleural cavities
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Starling lays out pieces of Heidenhain's theories and evidence in his own publications: Michel brings them together nicely. Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 6-7. In his presentation of Heidenhain's work, Rothschuh is relatively cautious about vitalistic labels, arguing that, principally, Heidenhain abhorred over-hasty reductionism, preferring biological explanations while avoiding vitalism proper. Rothschuh, op. cit. (ref. 36), 231-2. This may well be so: I have not studied Heidenhain's work directly. It is clear, however, that Starling and his collaborator saw a vitalistic component in Heidenhain's interpretations: "the force which causes absorption ... is clearly something more than osmosis, and that it originates in the vital properties of the intestinal epithelium, Prof. Heidenhain argues, is rendered probable...." J. B. Leathes and Ernest H. Starling, "On the absorption of salt solutions from the pleural cavities", Journal of physiology, xviii (1895), 106-16, p. 107. Quite possibly, the answer simply comes down to one's definition of the ever-slippery concept, 'vitalism'.
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(1895)
Journal of Physiology
, vol.18
, pp. 106-116
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Leathes, J.B.1
Starling, E.H.2
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127
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ref. 92
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Michel plausibly suggests that Wooldridge encouraged Starling to take up the question of lymph formation. Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 6.
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Experimental Physiology
, pp. 6
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Michel1
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128
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ref. 92
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Michel clearly and systematically lays out how Starling overturned each of Heidenhain's hypotheses. Michel, op. citf. (ref. 92), 7-9. See Leonard G. Wilson, "Starling's discovery of osmotic equilibrium in the capillaries", Episteme, ii (1968), 3-25.
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Experimental Physiology
, pp. 7-9
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Michel1
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129
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0342391115
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Starling's discovery of osmotic equilibrium in the capillaries
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Michel clearly and systematically lays out how Starling overturned each of Heidenhain's hypotheses. Michel, op. citf. (ref. 92), 7-9. See Leonard G. Wilson, "Starling's discovery of osmotic equilibrium in the capillaries", Episteme, ii (1968), 3-25.
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(1968)
Episteme
, vol.2
, pp. 3-25
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Wilson, L.G.1
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131
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The wisdom of the body
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Starling's ongoing fascination with Claude Bernard's milieu interieur was most fully realized in 1923, in his Harveian Lecture. Ernest Starling, "The wisdom of the body, Lancet, 1923, ii, 865-70.
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(1923)
Lancet
, vol.2
, pp. 865-870
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Starling, E.1
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132
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0004199238
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NewYork
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Aaron J. Ihde, The development of modern chemistry (NewYork, 1964, 1984), 410-13, provides a good summary of nineteenth-century work on osmotic pressure.
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(1964)
The Development of Modern Chemistry
, pp. 410-413
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Ihde, A.J.1
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133
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ref. 101
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I have found that the botanical experiments of Hugo de Vries provide a good illustrative example of osmosis. When he placed a plant in plain water, the plant became turgid. When he placed it in a moderately concentrated salt solution, it withered. Finally, when he used a solution that had the same salt balance as was found in the plant itself, the plant remained unchanged. Ihde, op. cit. (ref. 101), 411.
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The Development of Modern Chemistry
, pp. 411
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Ihde1
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134
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0012339412
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Contributions to the physiology of lymph secretion
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Ernest Starling, "Contributions to the physiology of lymph secretion", Journal of physiology, xiv (1893), 131-53.
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(1893)
Journal of Physiology
, vol.14
, pp. 131-153
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Starling, E.1
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135
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On absorption from and secretion into the serous cavities
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Starling and Alfred H. Tubby, "On absorption from and secretion into the serous cavities", Journal of physiology, xvi (1894), 140-55; Leathes and Starling, op. cit. (ref. 96).
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(1894)
Journal of Physiology
, vol.16
, pp. 140-155
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Starling1
Tubby, A.H.2
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136
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op. cit. ref. 96
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Starling and Alfred H. Tubby, "On absorption from and secretion into the serous cavities", Journal of physiology, xvi (1894), 140-55; Leathes and Starling, op. cit. (ref. 96).
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Journal of Physiology
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Leathes1
Starling2
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137
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0001344484
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ref. 47
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Starling, op. cit. (ref. 47), 312-13, 313. Orlow had originally demonstrated this in 1894.
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Journal of Physiology
, pp. 312-313
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Starling1
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140
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0012487983
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The glomular functions of the kidney
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Ernest Starling, "The glomular functions of the kidney", Journal of physiology, xxiv (1899). 317-30. For an overview of the history of renal physiology, with particular reference to Starling, Leon G. Fine, "British contributions to renal physiology: Of dynasties and diuresis", American journal of nephrology, xix (1999), 257-65.
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(1899)
Journal of Physiology
, vol.24
, pp. 317-330
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Starling, E.1
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141
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British contributions to renal physiology: Of dynasties and diuresis
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Ernest Starling, "The glomular functions of the kidney", Journal of physiology, xxiv (1899). 317-30. For an overview of the history of renal physiology, with particular reference to Starling, Leon G. Fine, "British contributions to renal physiology: Of dynasties and diuresis", American journal of nephrology, xix (1999), 257-65.
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(1999)
American Journal of Nephrology
, vol.19
, pp. 257-265
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Fine, L.G.1
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144
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0346711984
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ref. 92
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Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 3. Starling was a firmi believer in the value of collaboration.
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Experimental Physiology
, pp. 3
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Michel1
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145
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0014569539
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Bayliss and Starling and the happy fellowship of physiologists
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Bayliss married Starling's sister in 1903. For a first-hand review of the Starling/Bayliss collaboration, see A. V. Hill, "Bayliss and Starling and the happy fellowship of physiologists", Journal of physiology, cciv (1969), 1-13. (This was, in fact, the "Third Bayliss-Starling Memorial Lecture".) Also, P. R. Fleming, "The other Bloomsbury set: Bayliss, Starling, and Thomas Lewis", International journal of microcirculation, xiv (1494), 91-94. The pair are perhaps most famous for their discovery of secretin in 1902.
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(1969)
Journal of Physiology
, vol.204
, pp. 1-13
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Hill, A.V.1
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146
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0028191669
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The other Bloomsbury set: Bayliss, Starling, and Thomas Lewis
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Bayliss married Starling's sister in 1903. For a first-hand review of the Starling/Bayliss collaboration, see A. V. Hill, "Bayliss and Starling and the happy fellowship of physiologists", Journal of physiology, cciv (1969), 1-13. (This was, in fact, the "Third Bayliss-Starling Memorial Lecture".) Also, P. R. Fleming, "The other Bloomsbury set: Bayliss, Starling, and Thomas Lewis", International journal of microcirculation, xiv (1494), 91-94. The pair are perhaps most famous for their discovery of secretin in 1902.
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(1494)
International Journal of Microcirculation
, vol.14
, pp. 91-94
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Fleming, P.R.1
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148
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The chemical correlation of the functions of the body
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Ernest Starling, "The chemical correlation of the functions of the body", Lancet, 1905, ii, 339-41. 423-5, 501-3, 579-83, p. 340. Butler argues that Starling's hormone concept mirrored his ideas for the reform of medical education, thereby providing scientific justification for his social ideas. Butler, op. cit. (ref. 38), ch. 7. There is certainly an overlap in Starling's thinking about the functions of hormones and the ideal system of medical education. And, there is that coincidence of liming between Starling's hormone work and his move to University College. Yet, it seems that one must take account of Starling's earlier interest in Heidenhain's theories to decide whether he developed the science to substantiate the social, or instead tended to see the world generally in these organizational terms.
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(1905)
Lancet
, vol.2
, pp. 339-341
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Starling, E.1
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149
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85037263403
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(ref. 38), ch. 7
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Ernest Starling, "The chemical correlation of the functions of the body", Lancet, 1905, ii, 339-41. 423-5, 501-3, 579-83, p. 340. Butler argues that Starling's hormone concept mirrored his ideas for the reform of medical education, thereby providing scientific justification for his social ideas. Butler, op. cit. (ref. 38), ch. 7. There is certainly an overlap in Starling's thinking about the functions of hormones and the ideal system of medical education. And, there is that coincidence of liming between Starling's hormone work and his move to University College. Yet, it seems that one must take account of Starling's earlier interest in Heidenhain's theories to decide whether he developed the science to substantiate the social, or instead tended to see the world generally in these organizational terms.
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Science and the Education of Doctors in the Nineteenth Century: A Study of British Medical Schools with Particular Reference to the Development and Uses of Physiology
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Butler1
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150
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Wound shock in front line areas
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W. G. Macpherson. A. A. Bowlby, Cuthbert Wallace, and Crisp English (eds), 2 vols. London
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Ernest Cowell, "Wound shock in front line areas", in W. G. Macpherson. A. A. Bowlby, Cuthbert Wallace, and Crisp English (eds), Official History of the War - Medical Services - Surgery of the War (2 vols. London, 1922), i, 58-78, p. 59.
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(1922)
Official History of the War - Medical Services - Surgery of the War
, vol.1
, pp. 58-78
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Cowell, E.1
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note
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Several historians of medicine have underscored what appears to be a sudden interest on the part of physiologists in clinically-relevant questions during the war. In the war-time debate on fluid replacement, we see a complex set of interactions between physiologists, surgeons, and several who fall between the two categories in a fashion seemingly related to the institutions that gave them their medical training. I will develop these relationships more fully in my forthcoming monograph.
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152
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Further observations on the results of blood transfusion in war surgery
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L. Bruce Robertson, with a note by C. Gordon Watson, "Further observations on the results of blood transfusion in war surgery", British medical journal, 1917, ii, 679-83, p. 683.
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(1917)
British Medical Journal
, vol.2
, pp. 679-683
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Robertson, L.B.1
Watson, C.G.2
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0346081498
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13 March Public Records Office, London, PRO FD1/5262
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Starling was, in fact, named chairman of the Medical Research Committee's special committee on shock. By this time, however, his physiological interests lay elsewhere. (He was also working on gas poisoning and nutrition.) When he resigned from his position on the shock committee in March 1918, it was Bayliss who became chairman. "Special committee on shock and allied conditions. Minute Book", 13 March 1918, Public Records Office, London, PRO FD1/5262.
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(1918)
Special Committee on Shock and Allied Conditions. Minute Book
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155
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0346081505
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The influence of colloids on diuresis
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Frank P. Knowlton, "The influence of colloids on diuresis", Journal of physiology, xliii (1911), 219-31, p. 220.
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(1911)
Journal of Physiology
, vol.43
, pp. 219-231
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Knowlton, F.P.1
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156
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51249163819
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ref. 120
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Knowlton, op. cit. (ref. 120), 231. From Cincinnati the following year, James J. Hogan and Martin H. Fischer published their independent findings on the effects of gelatine on fluid retention. James J. Hogan and Martin H. Fischer, "Zur theorie und praxis der transfusion", Kolloidchemische Beihefte, iii (1912), 385-416. I have done no further research on Hogan and am therefore uncertain as to why he decided to publish his work in German.
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Journal of Physiology
, pp. 231
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Knowlton1
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157
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Zur theorie und praxis der transfusion
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Knowlton, op. cit. (ref. 120), 231. From Cincinnati the following year, James J. Hogan and Martin H. Fischer published their independent findings on the effects of gelatine on fluid retention. James J. Hogan and Martin H. Fischer, "Zur theorie und praxis der transfusion", Kolloidchemische Beihefte, iii (1912), 385-416. I have done no further research on Hogan and am therefore uncertain as to why he decided to publish his work in German.
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(1912)
Kolloidchemische Beihefte
, vol.3
, pp. 385-416
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Hogan, J.J.1
Fischer, M.H.2
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158
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0346711984
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ref. 92
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Starling, on the other hand, did join the Royal Army Medical Corps, but found that his personal philosophy of integrated collaboration and the army's preference for hierarchy and discipline didn't mix. Starling soon decided he would serve his country's interests better back in London and resigned his commission. Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 5. It should also be noted that British physiologists did not confine their efforts to improving the defensive part of the war effort. On the war work of the Medical Research Committee and the Royal Society, see Steve Sturdy, "From the trenches to the hospitals at home: Physiologists, clinicians and oxygen therapy, 1914-30", in John V. Pickstone (ed.), Medical innovations in historical perspective (Basingstoke, 1992), 104-23.
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Experimental Physiology
, pp. 5
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Michel1
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159
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0042746277
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From the trenches to the hospitals at home: Physiologists, clinicians and oxygen therapy, 1914-30
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John V. Pickstone (ed.), Basingstoke
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Starling, on the other hand, did join the Royal Army Medical Corps, but found that his personal philosophy of integrated collaboration and the army's preference for hierarchy and discipline didn't mix. Starling soon decided he would serve his country's interests better back in London and resigned his commission. Michel, op. cit. (ref. 92), 5. It should also be noted that British physiologists did not confine their efforts to improving the defensive part of the war effort. On the war work of the Medical Research Committee and the Royal Society, see Steve Sturdy, "From the trenches to the hospitals at home: Physiologists, clinicians and oxygen therapy, 1914-30", in John V. Pickstone (ed.), Medical innovations in historical perspective (Basingstoke, 1992), 104-23.
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(1992)
Medical Innovations in Historical Perspective
, pp. 104-123
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Sturdy, S.1
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160
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50749111291
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Memorandum upon surgical shock and some allied conditions
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It is quite possible that T. R. Elliott, the Medical Research Committee's official liaison in France, alerted Bayliss to the problem. Elliott had been conducting physiological research at Cambridge for several years before coming to University College in 1906 to study medicine. In 1910, he was appointed Assistant Physician at UC Hospital. In France during the war, Elliott was concerned quite early on with the treatment of acute blood loss and may well have asked Bayliss to work on the problem. The official announcement of the impending formation of the "shock committee" came in March 1917. "Memorandum upon surgical shock and some allied conditions", Lancet, 1917, i, 502-5.
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(1917)
Lancet
, vol.1
, pp. 502-505
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161
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0346081501
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Methods of raising a low arterial pressure
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W. M. Bayliss, "Methods of raising a low arterial pressure", Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B, lxxxix (1917), 380-93. Bayliss submitted the paper on 29 August 1916. As was commonly done through the First World War, Bayliss divided the condition once called "collapse" into two clinically similar, but etiologically distinct, categories. On the one hand, there was haemorrhage, with its evident fluid loss; on the other, was "pure shock", which was not, he argued, the result of fluid loss, but of "peripheral vaso-dilation". The relations between these two categories is too complex for consideration at this time; therefore, I will treat only his work on haemorrhage.
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(1917)
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B
, vol.89
, pp. 380-393
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Bayliss, W.M.1
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165
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0347972763
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ref. 124
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Bayliss, op. cit. (ref. 124), 388; 393. A year earlier in the United States, James Hogan - whom we saw working on colloids earlier - advocated instead the addition of gelatine for the treatment of shock. James J. Hogan, "The intravenous use of colloidal (gelatin) solutions in shock", Journal of the American Medical Association, lxiv (1915), 721-6. In this article, Hogan greatly simplifies his colloidal studies for his medical audience.
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Proceedings of the Royal Society of London, B
, pp. 388
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Bayliss1
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166
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0347972763
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The intravenous use of colloidal (gelatin) solutions in shock
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Bayliss, op. cit. (ref. 124), 388; 393. A year earlier in the United States, James Hogan - whom we saw working on colloids earlier - advocated instead the addition of gelatine for the treatment of shock. James J. Hogan, "The intravenous use of colloidal (gelatin) solutions in shock", Journal of the American Medical Association, lxiv (1915), 721-6. In this article, Hogan greatly simplifies his colloidal studies for his medical audience.
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(1915)
Journal of the American Medical Association
, vol.64
, pp. 721-726
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Hogan, J.J.1
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167
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0346081524
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ref. 1
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Bayliss, op. cit. (ref. 1), 80. Bayliss appears to have chosen gum acacia over gelatine shortly after submitting this paper. The best proportion of acacia was debated by those who used it.
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Intravenous Injection in Wound Shock
, pp. 80
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Bayliss1
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168
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0346081524
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ref. 1
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Bayliss, op. cit. (ref. 1), 85. Gum acacia was comprised of "a mixture of polymerised anhydrides of salactose ... and of a pentose sugar, arabinose ... in varying proportions".
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Intravenous Injection in Wound Shock
, pp. 85
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Bayliss1
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169
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note
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Although surgeons and physiologists technically worked together to solve the problem of shock in wartime, their collaboration was far more complex than has generally been appreciated.
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