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Monday, July 13, 2009

Anaesthesia - History and Origins

About Anaesthesia

"Doctor, will you give me chloroform or anaesthesia?"

This is the often-repeated query by many patients about to undergo an operation. Little do they know that chloroform became obsolete decades ago. Anaesthesia has come a long way since then, being much more safe today than it was a long time ago. General anaesthesia as it is called today can be administered with just a small prick of a needle, injecting the anaesthetic into the person's vein of the hand, while he falls into deep slumber to wake up after the surgery.

What would it be like to undergo an operation without anaesthesia? A torture of the worst kind. And that is how our ancestors felt when they had to have an operation. No wonder then, without the benefit of anaesthesia to make them oblivious to the pain of surgery, they depended on magic, rituals and incantations to cure their symptoms. Advancement in anesthesia techniques helped the development of surgery too and take it to new heights in last ten to twenty years.

It would be difficult to talk about the origin of anaesthesia without taking note of the first pain relieving drugs. The ancient Egyptians used poppy seeds (from which opium is derived) during the operations. The Romans used the extract of the Mandragora plant to alleviate pain, the Greek used herbs like hemp and the Chinese used cannabis. Some of these were used for surgery, but anaesthesia as it exists today was unknown.

Between 2nd and 5th century, people used mandragora mixed with wine and opium for surgery. Sometimes physical methods like compression of blood vessels or the nerves by means of clamps applied over the limbs were used to numb the area. 'Refrigeration anaesthesia' meant using cold water or snow to numb the region so that surgeries like amputations or abscesses drainage could be done; however the numbing procedure itself meant nothing short of torture. Blood letting, hypnosis, even the barbaric custom of giving a forceful knock on the patient's head, to give rise to a concussion and render the patient unconscious were used as a means of anaesthetizing someone.

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