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List the ways in which this patient is in danger
What were the factors that influenced the discovery and
acceptance of anaesthetics in surgery?

Until the mid-19th century, surgery
was extremely painful and dangerous,
so major operations were not
possible. Surgeons would give
patients a drug like opium or try to get
them drunk before an operation, but
there were no effective anaesthetics.

In 1799 Humphrey Davy discovered
that the gas nitrous oxide ('laughing
gas') could dull pain and published a
pamphlet to bring attention to this.
Unfortunately, most surgeons ignored
this discovery. Those that did use it
found that it did not work on everyone,
so the search continued.

The use of ether was pioneered in the
USA by Dr Crawford Long in 1842,
who used it to remove a tumor from a                Five surgeons participating in an
man’s neck. In October 1846, a                       amputation before anaesthetic
Massachusetts dentist William
Thomas Green Morton (1815-68), painlessly removed a tumor from a man's jaw, after giving
him ether, a gas which had been recently discovered. News of the operation reached Britain
very quickly and by the end of the year, several successful operations had been performed
                                                       using it. However, ether was an
                                                       irritant and caused coughing and
                                                       vomiting in some patients. It was also
                                                       highly flammable.

                                                        Sir Robert Liston was the first British
                                                        surgeon to use ether for an operation
                                                        in December 1846.

                                                        In 1847 James Simpson, the
                                                        professor of midwifery at Edinburgh
                                                        University discovered chloroform,
                                                        which was quicker acting than ether
                                                        and didn't appear to have any side
                                                        effects. By the start of the 20th century
                                                        it was realized that chloroform could
                                                        cause liver and heart damage.
         Early operation with anaesthetic
                                                       Surprisingly, many people opposed
the introduction of anaesthetics. Some religious people thought that it was God's intention for
women to feel pain during childbirth. Others worried that surgeons would not have the
experience to give the right dose, and people sometimes did die from overdoses of ether and
chloroform. It worried other people that they wouldn't know what the surgeon was doing to
them while they were unconscious.

The death of Hannah Greener in 1848 from a chloroform overdose provided those who
argued against its use with powerful ammunition.

However, little opposition remained after Queen Victoria
was given chloroform for the birth of her eighth child
Prince Leopold, in 1853 and Princess Beatrice in 1857. In
addition, positive press reports did much to combat
people’s fears. Chloroform remained the most popular
anaesthetic until the 1900s, when it was realised that it
could damage the liver.




       Queen Victoria and Prince Albert
       with some of their children.


Think about this:

   •   Discovery is often the result of a chain of
       experimentation



   •   Royal approval helped bring about the acceptance of
       anaesthesia
                                                                    A device invented by Dr
                                                                    John Snow for inhaling
                                                                    chloroform
   •   The administration of anaesthesia required expertise.
'An Operation in 1846' Information Sheet
       This account describes an operation carried out by Sir Robert Liston on 21
                  December1846 at University College Hospital, London:
'He then takes from his long
narrow case one of the
straight amputating knives of
his own invention. It is
evidently a favourite
instrument, for on the handle
are little notches showing the
number of times he had used
it before. His house Surgeon,
Ransome, puts the saw and
the artery forceps onto the
chair close by, then threads a
wisp of well waxed hemp
ligature through his own
buttonhole

...... the porters are waiting
just outside, and the patient
(Frederick Churchill, a butler)
is carried in on a stretcher
and laid on the table.....
Liston stands by, trying the
edge of his knife against his
thumbnail, and the tension
increases...

Ransome holds the limb.
"Now gentlemen, time me,"
says Liston to the students.

The huge left hand grasps the
thigh, a thrust of the long
straight knife, two or three
rapid sawing movement(s)
and the upper flap (of skin) is
made. Half a dozen strokes
and Ransome places the limb
in the sawdust.

"Twenty - eight seconds!"
says William Squires. The
femoral artery is tied with two
stout ligatures, a strip of wet
lint placed between the flaps
and the stump raised'.
An Operation in 1846
Sir Robert Liston’s operation was the first operation in England to be carried out using
anaesthetic. The patient had been put to sleep with ether.


1. Do you think that the patient felt any pain during the operation?




2. Why do you think the surgeon worked so quickly?




3. What sort of equipment did the surgeon use?




4. Why do you think that the amputated leg was placed in sawdust?
James Simpson (1811-1870)
In the early 19th century, patients dreaded
surgical operations. Effective anaesthetics
were not discovered until 1842, so
patients had to endure excruciating pain.
In an amputation, the patient would be
held down while the surgeon cut through
all the soft tissue and bone. The horror of
pain forced surgeons to work quickly,
often leading to mistakes and a low
survival rate. The first successful steps in
the conquest of pain were taken by
James Simpson.

                                                     James Simpson and his assistants having

Who was James Simpson?                                inhaled chloroform
Simpson was the youngest son of a Scottish village baker. He trained as a doctor and
became Professor of Midwifery at Edinburgh University. Simpson wanted to cut down the
suffering of his patients in childbirth. He often used ether, but disliked it because of its strong
smell which made his patients cough.

How did he become well known?
In 1847, Simpson and two assistants experimented with a new anaesthetic, chloroform,
which had none of the side effects of ether. Within a month he had used it successfully on
over 50 patients.

Was there any opposition to Simpson's ideas?
Unfortunately, the use of chloroform was not without risks. Some doctors did not know how to
use it properly and in 1848, Hannah Greener, aged 15, died from an overdose of chloroform.
There was opposition from those who saw chloroform as unnatural and members of the
Calvinist Church of Scotland claimed its use was forbidden in the bible.

Why was chloroform accepted?
In 1853 Queen Victoria was successfully anaesthetised during the birth of her eight child.
This turned the tide and from then on chloroform became widely accepted. However, its
effects sometimes meant that surgeons spent too long on operations and patients could still
die from blood loss and infection as more complicated operations were attempted.

What was Simpson's legacy to medicine?
Although his name is always mentioned in books as the developer of anaesthetics, chloroform
was only used until around 1900 when it was discovered that it could damage the liver. From
then on surgeons returned to using ether. Today, surgeons use a complex mix of drugs
administered by a qualified anaesthetist. Simpson's use of chloroform helped to gain popular

support for the use of anaesthetics and removed one of the obstacles in the development of
safer surgery.
Improvements in 19th Century Surgery
What were the advantages and disadvantages of the following
anaesthetics?


     Advantages              Anaesthetic            Disadvantages
                          Nitrous oxide
                              1799




                               Ether
                               1842




                            Chloroform
                               1847
How have operations improved by the end of the 1860s?

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Anaesthetics in surgery notes

  • 1. List the ways in which this patient is in danger
  • 2. What were the factors that influenced the discovery and acceptance of anaesthetics in surgery? Until the mid-19th century, surgery was extremely painful and dangerous, so major operations were not possible. Surgeons would give patients a drug like opium or try to get them drunk before an operation, but there were no effective anaesthetics. In 1799 Humphrey Davy discovered that the gas nitrous oxide ('laughing gas') could dull pain and published a pamphlet to bring attention to this. Unfortunately, most surgeons ignored this discovery. Those that did use it found that it did not work on everyone, so the search continued. The use of ether was pioneered in the USA by Dr Crawford Long in 1842, who used it to remove a tumor from a Five surgeons participating in an man’s neck. In October 1846, a amputation before anaesthetic Massachusetts dentist William Thomas Green Morton (1815-68), painlessly removed a tumor from a man's jaw, after giving him ether, a gas which had been recently discovered. News of the operation reached Britain very quickly and by the end of the year, several successful operations had been performed using it. However, ether was an irritant and caused coughing and vomiting in some patients. It was also highly flammable. Sir Robert Liston was the first British surgeon to use ether for an operation in December 1846. In 1847 James Simpson, the professor of midwifery at Edinburgh University discovered chloroform, which was quicker acting than ether and didn't appear to have any side effects. By the start of the 20th century it was realized that chloroform could cause liver and heart damage. Early operation with anaesthetic Surprisingly, many people opposed the introduction of anaesthetics. Some religious people thought that it was God's intention for
  • 3. women to feel pain during childbirth. Others worried that surgeons would not have the experience to give the right dose, and people sometimes did die from overdoses of ether and chloroform. It worried other people that they wouldn't know what the surgeon was doing to them while they were unconscious. The death of Hannah Greener in 1848 from a chloroform overdose provided those who argued against its use with powerful ammunition. However, little opposition remained after Queen Victoria was given chloroform for the birth of her eighth child Prince Leopold, in 1853 and Princess Beatrice in 1857. In addition, positive press reports did much to combat people’s fears. Chloroform remained the most popular anaesthetic until the 1900s, when it was realised that it could damage the liver. Queen Victoria and Prince Albert with some of their children. Think about this: • Discovery is often the result of a chain of experimentation • Royal approval helped bring about the acceptance of anaesthesia A device invented by Dr John Snow for inhaling chloroform • The administration of anaesthesia required expertise.
  • 4. 'An Operation in 1846' Information Sheet This account describes an operation carried out by Sir Robert Liston on 21 December1846 at University College Hospital, London: 'He then takes from his long narrow case one of the straight amputating knives of his own invention. It is evidently a favourite instrument, for on the handle are little notches showing the number of times he had used it before. His house Surgeon, Ransome, puts the saw and the artery forceps onto the chair close by, then threads a wisp of well waxed hemp ligature through his own buttonhole ...... the porters are waiting just outside, and the patient (Frederick Churchill, a butler) is carried in on a stretcher and laid on the table..... Liston stands by, trying the edge of his knife against his thumbnail, and the tension increases... Ransome holds the limb. "Now gentlemen, time me," says Liston to the students. The huge left hand grasps the thigh, a thrust of the long straight knife, two or three rapid sawing movement(s) and the upper flap (of skin) is made. Half a dozen strokes and Ransome places the limb in the sawdust. "Twenty - eight seconds!" says William Squires. The femoral artery is tied with two stout ligatures, a strip of wet lint placed between the flaps and the stump raised'.
  • 5. An Operation in 1846 Sir Robert Liston’s operation was the first operation in England to be carried out using anaesthetic. The patient had been put to sleep with ether. 1. Do you think that the patient felt any pain during the operation? 2. Why do you think the surgeon worked so quickly? 3. What sort of equipment did the surgeon use? 4. Why do you think that the amputated leg was placed in sawdust?
  • 6. James Simpson (1811-1870) In the early 19th century, patients dreaded surgical operations. Effective anaesthetics were not discovered until 1842, so patients had to endure excruciating pain. In an amputation, the patient would be held down while the surgeon cut through all the soft tissue and bone. The horror of pain forced surgeons to work quickly, often leading to mistakes and a low survival rate. The first successful steps in the conquest of pain were taken by James Simpson. James Simpson and his assistants having Who was James Simpson? inhaled chloroform Simpson was the youngest son of a Scottish village baker. He trained as a doctor and became Professor of Midwifery at Edinburgh University. Simpson wanted to cut down the suffering of his patients in childbirth. He often used ether, but disliked it because of its strong smell which made his patients cough. How did he become well known? In 1847, Simpson and two assistants experimented with a new anaesthetic, chloroform, which had none of the side effects of ether. Within a month he had used it successfully on over 50 patients. Was there any opposition to Simpson's ideas? Unfortunately, the use of chloroform was not without risks. Some doctors did not know how to use it properly and in 1848, Hannah Greener, aged 15, died from an overdose of chloroform. There was opposition from those who saw chloroform as unnatural and members of the Calvinist Church of Scotland claimed its use was forbidden in the bible. Why was chloroform accepted? In 1853 Queen Victoria was successfully anaesthetised during the birth of her eight child. This turned the tide and from then on chloroform became widely accepted. However, its effects sometimes meant that surgeons spent too long on operations and patients could still die from blood loss and infection as more complicated operations were attempted. What was Simpson's legacy to medicine? Although his name is always mentioned in books as the developer of anaesthetics, chloroform was only used until around 1900 when it was discovered that it could damage the liver. From then on surgeons returned to using ether. Today, surgeons use a complex mix of drugs administered by a qualified anaesthetist. Simpson's use of chloroform helped to gain popular support for the use of anaesthetics and removed one of the obstacles in the development of safer surgery.
  • 7. Improvements in 19th Century Surgery What were the advantages and disadvantages of the following anaesthetics? Advantages Anaesthetic Disadvantages Nitrous oxide 1799 Ether 1842 Chloroform 1847
  • 8. How have operations improved by the end of the 1860s?