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2.
J Anesth Hist ; 7(1): 1-10, 2021 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34120708

ABSTRACT

Letheon was the commercial name that Boston dentist William T. G. Morton chose for his ether-based "preparation" that was inhaled to produce insensibility during surgical and dental procedures. The multiple editions of Edward Warren's Some Account of the Letheon (1847) as well as Nathan P. Rice's Trials of a Public Benefactor (1859) provide the only known accounts of the meeting hosted by the physician Augustus A. Gould at which the name Letheon was chosen. Neither Warren nor Rice mentions when the meeting occurred. In all likelihood, it was held at some point in a three-week period from mid-November to just short of December 9, 1846, the publication date of the earliest known reference to the name. The absence of the word Letheon in Morton's public notices around the end of November 1846 or, indeed, in any document until his December 9 advertisement in The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal suggests a later date for the meeting than has been previously reported.


Subject(s)
Anesthesiology/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Ether/history , Physicians/history , Terminology as Topic , Boston , History, 19th Century
4.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 110-126, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921481

ABSTRACT

This paper is the continuation (Part 2) of an extensive, critical reappraisal of the international historiography on modern anesthesia and its technology. The first paper of this series provided general definitions, backgrounds and an update on recent research on one aspect of this topic: the history of professionalization / specialization (Part 1).1This paper goes on to provide a first, international comparison of entire anesthesia devices and on the history of nitrous-oxide-based anesthesia (c. 1900-1930s). Results: A comparative chronology of internationally recognized milestones of entire anesthesia machines does not suggest significant differences between the nations of continental Europe on one side, or the USA and Britain on the other. The international historiography on one of the key techniques for which these devices were designed (nitrous-oxide-based anesthesia), is likewise demonstrably biased. These findings are further evidence that a frequently held hypothesis, which suggests national dominances in these fields, is incorrect. Contributing factors and wider contexts of this phenomenon can be further confirmed: These are an under-recognition of non-Anglo-American (particularly continental-European) and of primarily surgical contributions; contemporary international conflicts and inter-professional demarcation disputes. In addition, it can be shown that these phenomena had already started around the same time (c. 1900s-1930s). There also is evidence to suggest that they were at times reciprocal and quite deliberate. The author illustrates and argues that the currently prevalent historiography on modern anesthesia requires a thorough reassessment. This should be based on a perspective of internationalism and transdisciplinary reciprocity and should recognize much broader historical contexts.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia/history , Anesthesiology/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Anesthesiology/instrumentation , Equipment and Supplies/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Internationality/history
5.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 156-157, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921486

ABSTRACT

J.Y. Simpson of Edinburgh, Scotland discovered chloroform anesthesia in November 1847. During this time, W.T.G. Morton's agents had been collecting royalties for the use of ether across much of the United States. After reading about the advantages of chloroform as cited in C.T. Jackson's writings in the Boston Daily Atlas, S.F. Gladwin, a dentist in Lowell, Massachusetts, who had been reluctant to pay any ether royalties, demonstrated his independence and opportunism in swiftly adopting chloroform in his practice and publicizing its use through local advertisements.


Subject(s)
Advertising/history , Anesthesia, Dental/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Chloroform/history , History, 19th Century , Humans , Massachusetts , Pamphlets/history
6.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 161-163, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921488

ABSTRACT

Born in New Hampshire but raised in Massachusetts, 14-year-old William J.A. DeLancey became "the man of the house" after the accidental death of his father. Amiable and good humored, young DeLancey supported his widowed mother and his three sisters until the girls all reached maturity. After he married, DeLancey moved to Illinois and took up dentistry, eventually settling in Centralia. Following anesthesia training back east at Manhattan's Colton Dental Association, DeLancey returned to Centralia. There he practiced the Coltonian method of testing freshly made nitrous oxide upon himself before using the gas upon patients. Before his training at Colton Dental, DeLancey had advertised in Centralia newspapers only in prose. After he began administering laughing gas to his patients and to himself, DeLancey waxed poetic and began advertising in heroic couplets in local newspapers.


Subject(s)
Advertising/history , Anesthesia, Dental/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Poetry as Topic/history , Chloroform/history , History, 19th Century , Humans , United States
7.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 164-165, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921489

ABSTRACT

Famous for pioneering the oxygenation of nitrous-oxide anesthetics, Chicago surgeon Edmund Andrews trusted the Manhattan-based Colton Dental Association's claim that they had conducted 75,000 nitrous-oxide anesthetics without a single mortality. Those statistics were cited in Andrews' 1870 journal article on anesthetic risks and then, remarkably, advertised on the business cards of dentist James M. Spencer, Jr., of Gouverneur, New York.


Subject(s)
Advertising/history , Anesthesia, Dental/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/adverse effects , History, 19th Century , Humans , Nitrous Oxide/adverse effects , Periodicals as Topic/history , United States
8.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 168-169, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921491

ABSTRACT

An Ohio dentist, Corydon Munson, patented a gasometer with an attachment for vaporizing trace amounts of volatile general anesthetics or their mixtures into unoxygenated nitrous oxide. After vaporizing a variant of George Harley's ACE mixture into nitrous oxide, Munson branded his own novel anesthetic combination as ACENO.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia, Dental/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Dental Equipment/history , Nebulizers and Vaporizers/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Alcohols/history , Anesthesia, Dental/instrumentation , Anesthetics, Inhalation/chemistry , Chloroform/history , Ether/history , History, 19th Century , United Kingdom , United States
9.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 172-173, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921493

ABSTRACT

Joseph Burnett manufactured the diethyl ether used for William T.G. Morton's public demonstration of inhaled surgical anesthesia on October 16, 1846 (Ether Day). A later Burnett product was a hairdressing oil claimed to prevent baldness and dandruff. It contained cocoa-nut oil and was called Cocoaine. In 1902 and 1903, it was sometimes advertised as Burnett's Cocaine (rather than Cocoaine), possibly to emulate the economic success of coca-based beverages such as Vin Mariani and Coca-Cola. Coca leaves are now decocainized before use in preparation of Coca-Cola, and the recovered cocaine is used for scientific and dwindling medical purposes.


Subject(s)
Cocaine/history , Dandruff/history , Hair Preparations/history , Advertising/history , Alopecia/history , Alopecia/therapy , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Cacao , Dandruff/therapy , Ether/history , Hair Preparations/chemistry , History, 19th Century , Humans
10.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 166-167, 2020 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921490

ABSTRACT

Urial K. Mayo (1816-1900) was a successful Boston dentist who was plagued by personal scandal. In 1883 he patented extending the duration of nitrous-oxide anesthesia with an alcoholic tincture of hops and poppies.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia, Dental/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Opium/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/chemistry , Ethanol/history , History, 19th Century , Humans , Humulus , Papaver , Solvents/history , United States
12.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(1): 1-7, 2020 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32473760

ABSTRACT

When teenaged Henry Jacob Bigelow was an undergraduate at Harvard College in 1833-1837, he prepared nitrous oxide gas for demonstrations to other students. Bigelow's son, William Sturgis Bigelow, related the claim, and there is an eyewitness account from Augustus Goddard Peabody, a fellow Harvard undergraduate with Bigelow. Peabody wrote to Henry David Thoreau about a nitrous frolic. College chemistry primed Bigelow to support the concept of inhaled surgical anesthesia when the idea came to Boston in 1845-1846. Bigelow's chemistry professor was John White Webster. According to Harvard alumnus Edward Everett Hale, in addition to demonstrating effects of nitrous oxide, Webster presciently treated two cases of carbon monoxide poisoning with copious volumes of synthetic oxygen gas. The career of Webster was inhibited by financial difficulties that were suspected to be contributory when he was convicted of the 1849 murder of physician George Parkman at the Harvard Medical School, then adjacent to Massachusetts General Hospital and its Ether Dome. Webster suffered the death penalty in 1850.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Boston , Chemistry/education , Chemistry/history , Ether/history , Faculty/history , History, 19th Century , Hospitals, Teaching/history , Humans , Universities/history
13.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(1): 17-26, 2020 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32473762

ABSTRACT

For millennia, mankind has sought a means of altering consciousness, often aided by naturally occurring elements. Psychotropic substances have been an integral part of spiritual, medicinal, and recreational aspects of life. The origin of anesthesiology stems directly from the use of recreational drugs; early inhaled anesthetics were first used as a means of entertainment. Hence, it is no surprise that many medications in the anesthesiologist's armamentarium are diverted for recreational use. In the 172 years following the first successful public demonstration of ether anesthesia, many drugs with abuse potential have been introduced to the practice of anesthesia. Although anesthesiologists are aware of the abuse potential of these drugs, how these drugs are obtained and used for recreational purposes is worthy of discussion. There are articles describing the historical and recreational use of specific drug classes. However, to the best of our knowledge, this is the first comprehensive review focusing on the breadth of drugs used by anesthesiologists.


Subject(s)
Analgesics, Opioid/history , Analgesics/history , Anesthesiology/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Anesthetics, Intravenous/history , Analgesics/therapeutic use , Analgesics, Opioid/therapeutic use , History, 18th Century , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , History, Ancient , History, Medieval , Humans
14.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(2): 38-41, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32593375

ABSTRACT

Milton Antony (1789-1839), an apprenticed trained physician, began educating medical apprentices in 1826 and helped to establish the Medical College of Georgia (MCG) in 1829. Antony recruited additional faculty, Louis Dugas (anatomy and physiology), and Paul Eve (surgery), and together they worked to promote the dissemination of new medical knowledge and enhance and reform medical education. As a result of their efforts, the Southern Medical and Surgical Journal (SMSJ) was established in 1836. The SMSJ became the most successful and widely read regional medical journal. Unfortunately, upon the death of Milton Antony because of the Augusta yellow fever epidemic, the SMSJ ceased publication in 1839. Paul Eve then became Dean of MCG and revived the SMSJ in 1844. Crawford Long (1815-1878) administered ether anesthesia for surgical removal of a neck tumor to James Venable in 1842. For several possible reasons, he did not publish his experience with ether until after Morton's demonstration of ether in Boston in 1846. Crawford Long did meet with Paul Eve, in Augusta at MCG, and was encouraged to publish his experiences with ether in the revived SMSJ, which he did in 1849. It is quite possible that if Milton Antony had lived, and the SMSJ had been continuously published, that Crawford Long may have published his use of ether well in advance of Morton's ether demonstration in 1846. Had that occurred, the great controversy during the mid-nineteenth century over who first used ether for surgical anesthesia would not have existed, and Crawford Long would have received appropriate credit during his lifetime.


Subject(s)
Anesthesiology/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Ether/history , Periodicals as Topic/history , Schools, Medical/history , Administrative Personnel/history , Georgia , History, 19th Century , Humans , Schools, Medical/organization & administration
15.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(2): 79-83, 2020 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32593381

ABSTRACT

Methoxyflurane was an inhaled agent commonly used for general anesthesia in the 1960s, but its clinical role gradually decreased in the 1970s because of reports of dose-dependent nephrotoxicity. In 1999 its manufacturer, Abbott Laboratories, discontinued distribution of methoxyflurane in the United States and Canada. Outside of North America, however, methoxyflurane has been reborn as an inhaled analgesic used for pain relief in the prehospital setting and for minor surgical procedures. First used in Australia and New Zealand, and subsequently in over thirty-seven other countries, low concentrations of methoxyflurane are administered with a hand-held inhaler which provides conscious sedation, so that patients can self-assess their level of pain and control the amount of inhaled agent. The Penthrox inhaler, originally developed in Australia after several other hand-held vaporizers were tried, is currently being used worldwide as a portable and disposable self-administered agent delivery system. Methoxyflurane-induced nephrotoxicity continues to be a major concern, but with cautious administration of recommended doses methoxyflurane has been established as a remarkably safe analgesic agent with minimal side effects for patients in need of rapid and potent pain relief.


Subject(s)
Analgesics/therapeutic use , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Methoxyflurane/history , Pain Management/methods , Administration, Inhalation , Analgesics/adverse effects , Analgesics/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/adverse effects , Anesthetics, Inhalation/therapeutic use , Conscious Sedation/methods , Contraindications, Drug , History, 20th Century , Humans , Kidney/drug effects , Methoxyflurane/adverse effects , Methoxyflurane/therapeutic use , Nebulizers and Vaporizers/history , Pain/drug therapy
16.
J Anesth Hist ; 5(2): 36-43, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31400834

ABSTRACT

Chemist and inventor Silas R. Divine (1838-1912) sold ammonium nitrate and other anesthesia supplies in New York City. He offered a carbon dioxide absorber for the purpose of rebreathing nitrous oxide. Like his colleague Gardner Q. Colton, he denied the need for nitrous oxide to be supplemented with O2 gas.


Subject(s)
Anesthesiology/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , History of Dentistry , Nitrous Oxide/history , Anesthesiology/instrumentation , Anesthetics, Inhalation/administration & dosage , Anesthetics, Inhalation/chemical synthesis , Cyclopropanes/administration & dosage , Cyclopropanes/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Inventors/history , New York , Nitrous Oxide/administration & dosage , Nitrous Oxide/chemical synthesis
17.
J Anesth Hist ; 5(2): 60-61, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31400838

ABSTRACT

In The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal of 1847 (later to be called The New England Journal of Medicine), Boston chemist George Washington Frost Mellen claimed that inhaled nitrous oxide gas supports human life in the manner of oxygen gas, and he proposed the use of nitrous oxide in resuscitation from drowning and from carbon monoxide poisoning. The claim was reprinted in at least one dental journal and was long cited as justification for the use of 100% nitrous oxide for inhaled anesthesia. Advocates included anesthesia pioneer and painless dentist Gardner Quincy Colton. Though misguided as to nitrous oxide, Mellen was a prominent member of the Boston community for the abolition of slavery.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Carbon Monoxide Poisoning/history , Near Drowning/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Resuscitation/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/therapeutic use , Carbon Monoxide Poisoning/therapy , History, 19th Century , Humans , Near Drowning/therapy , Nitrous Oxide/therapeutic use , Resuscitation/methods , United States
18.
J Anesth Hist ; 5(2): 62-63, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31400839

ABSTRACT

Inventor J.M. Osgood enabled a fellow Massachusetts inventor, A.W. Sprague, to manufacture heat-regulated nitrous-oxide generators. These generators assisted New Yorker G.Q. Colton in opening exodontia franchises nationwide which revived the use of nitrous-oxide anesthesia.


Subject(s)
Anesthesiology/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Patents as Topic/history , Anesthesiology/instrumentation , Anesthetics, Inhalation/chemical synthesis , History, 19th Century , Inventors/history , Nitrous Oxide/chemical synthesis
19.
J Anesth Hist ; 5(1): 13-21, 2019 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30922536

ABSTRACT

Phineas T. Barnum (1810-1891) and Gardner Q. Colton (1814-1898) both entered the laughing gas show business in Manhattan in 1844. With Horace Wells (1815-1848), Colton introduced inhaled nitrous oxide for dental anesthesia in December 1844. The Barnumesque nature of laughing gas exhibitions may have contributed to the initially negative reception of nitrous anesthesia as humbug. Colton continued laughing gas shows after 1844, and he performed in a Barnum forum in Boston in 1862. In 1863, Barnum encouraged Colton to establish a flourishing painless dentistry practice in Manhattan. Barnum designated himself to be the Prince of Humbug. He embraced humbug for entertainment purposes but decried medical humbug. Notwithstanding, Barnum explicitly evinced awareness of the power of the placebo response. Accordingly, the proneness of individuals to deem impersonal all-purpose assessments to be personally applicable is dubbed the Barnum effect. Barnum was indirectly connected to Painless Parker (1872-1952), a dentist who exploited sensational advertising and humbug and ran a circus.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia, Dental/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Quackery/history , History, 19th Century , History, 20th Century , Humans , Leisure Activities , United States
20.
J Anesth Hist ; 4(4): 237-239, 2018 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30558769

ABSTRACT

During the 19th century, patients undergoing anesthesia for surgical and dental procedures were at risk of being given hypoxic or dilute nitrous oxide on four separate occasions. Primary and secondary saturation during surgery could account for two administrations of 100% nitrous-oxide anesthesia, while both diagnostic and therapeutic doses of dilute nitrous oxide were frequently administered in mental asylums.


Subject(s)
Anesthesia, Dental/history , Anesthesia, Inhalation/history , Anesthetics, Inhalation/history , Hospitals, Psychiatric/history , Mental Disorders/history , Nitrous Oxide/history , Anesthesia, Dental/adverse effects , Anesthesia, Dental/methods , Anesthesia, Inhalation/adverse effects , Anesthesia, Inhalation/methods , Anesthetics, Inhalation/therapeutic use , Dental Care/history , Dental Care/methods , History, 19th Century , Humans , Hypoxia/chemically induced , Hypoxia/history , Mental Disorders/chemically induced , Nitrous Oxide/adverse effects , Patient Admission/standards
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