4.5 • 1.4K Ratings
🗓️ 29 March 2007
⏱️ 42 minutes
🔗️ Recording | iTunes | RSS
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0:00.0 | Thanks for down learning the In Our Time podcast. For more details about In Our Time and for our terms of use, please go to BBC.co.uk. |
0:09.0 | I hope you enjoy the program. |
0:11.0 | Hello, today it's the history of anesthetics. Charles Darwin describes the horror of |
0:16.8 | surgery before anesthetics like this. I attended the operating theatre and saw two very bad |
0:22.2 | operations but I rushed away before they were completed. |
0:25.5 | Nor did I ever attend again, for hardly any inducement would have been strong enough to make me |
0:30.3 | do so. |
0:31.3 | This being long before the blessed days of chloroform, the two cases |
0:34.8 | fairly haunted me for many a long year. In the 19th century a simple fracture often led to |
0:39.7 | amputation carried out on a conscious patient whose senses would be doled only by Brandy or perhaps |
0:44.6 | some morphine. Many patients died of the shock. The properties of gases like nitrous |
0:49.5 | oxide or laughing gas held out hope. The chemist Humphrey Davy in the 1790s described it as |
0:54.3 | highly pleasurable, thrilling. He also noticed his toothache disappeared, but he |
0:58.5 | failed to apply his observations and it wasn't until the 1840s there was a |
1:02.3 | major breakthrough in |
1:03.2 | an ascetics when an enterprising dentist in Boston |
1:05.8 | managed to anesthetize a patient with ether. It became known as the Yankee Dodge. |
1:10.4 | Ether had its drawbacks and the search for suitable alternatives continued until chloroform was tried in 1847, winning many admirers, including Queen Victoria, the first English royal to use it, and other drugs followed. |
1:22.0 | So why did it take so long for |
1:23.9 | inhaled gases to advance from providing mere recreational highs to providing an |
1:28.2 | essential tool of humane surgery? How did the development of the atomic bomb |
1:32.4 | play a role in the development of anesthetics and how have societies changing attitudes to pain informed the debate? |
... |
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