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  2. Battlefield medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battlefield_medicine

    Medical advances also provided kinder methods for treatment of battlefield injuries, such as antiseptic ointments, which replaced boiling oil for cauterizing amputations. [15] During the Spanish Civil War there were two major advances. The first one was the invention of a practical method for transporting blood.

  3. Hypodermic needle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hypodermic_needle

    Syringe on left, hypodermic needle with attached colour coded Luer-Lock connector on right Hypodermic needle features. A hypodermic needle (from Greek ὑπο- (hypo-= under), and δέρμα (derma = skin)) is a very thin, hollow tube with one sharp tip. It is one of a category of medical tools which enter the skin, called sharps. [1]

  4. Charles Pravaz - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Pravaz

    Pravaz, c. 1852 Charles Gabriel Pravaz (24 March 1791 – 24 June 1853) a French orthopedic surgeon, pioneered the hypodermic syringe.. While the concept dated to Galen, [1] the modern syringe is thought [by whom?] to have originated in 15th-century Italy, although it took several centuries for the device to develop.

  5. Timeline of medicine and medical technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_medicine_and...

    1850 – Female Medical College of Pennsylvania (later Woman's Medical College), the first medical college in the world to grant degrees to women, is founded in Philadelphia. [ 99 ] 1858 – Rudolf Carl Virchow 13 October 1821 – 5 September 1902 his theories of cellular pathology spelled the end of Humoral medicine .

  6. Surgical suture - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surgical_suture

    Through many millennia, various suture materials were used or proposed. Needles were made of bone or metals such as silver, copper, and aluminium bronze wire. Sutures were made of plant materials (flax, hemp and cotton) or animal material (hair, tendons, arteries, muscle strips and nerves, silk, and catgut). [citation needed]

  7. History of general anesthesia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_general_anesthesia

    After World War I, further advances were made in the field of intratracheal anesthesia. Among these were those made by Sir Ivan Whiteside Magill (1888–1986). Working at the Queen's Hospital for Facial and Jaw Injuries in Sidcup with plastic surgeon Sir Harold Gillies (1882–1960) and anesthetist E. Stanley Rowbotham (1890–1979), Magill ...

  8. Military medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Military_medicine

    During the American Civil War (1860–65), for example, about twice as many soldiers died of disease as were killed or mortally wounded in combat. [1] The Franco-Prussian War (1870–71) is considered to have been the first conflict in which combat injury exceeded disease, at least in the German coalition army which lost 3.47% of its average ...

  9. History of surgery - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_surgery

    So much was he famed for his medical skill that he became the Egyptian god of medicine. [17] Other famous physicians from the Ancient Empire (from 2500 to 2100 BCE) were Sachmet, the physician of Pharaoh Sahure and Nesmenau, whose office resembled that of a medical director. [citation needed]

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