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2.
Anesth Analg ; 2024 Mar 18.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38507520

RESUMEN

James Watt (1736-1819) is remembered as a steam engine innovator and industrial magnate. A polymath, he was also a hands-on contributor to the Medical Pneumatic Institution of Thomas Beddoes. Watt recruited Humphry Davy, who there discovered analgesic action of inhaled nitrous oxide in 1799. Watt also built pneumatic equipment, and he introduced a gas mixture, dubbed hydro-carbonate, as a medical tonic. The bioactive component was carbon monoxide, a readily-lethal inhibitor of the transport and utilization of respiratory oxygen. Despite appreciable toxicity, carbon monoxide is an endogenous product of heme catabolism, and low doses of the gas are under laboratory investigation for therapeutic purposes. However, Watt's hydro-carbonate constituted a setback in the development of pharmacologically useful gases.

6.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(3): 172-173, 2020 Sep.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32921493

RESUMEN

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.


Asunto(s)
Cocaína/historia , Caspa/historia , Preparaciones para el Cabello/historia , Publicidad/historia , Alopecia/historia , Alopecia/terapia , Anestésicos por Inhalación/historia , Cacao , Caspa/terapia , Éter/historia , Preparaciones para el Cabello/química , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos
7.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(1): 1-7, 2020 03.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32473760

RESUMEN

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.


Asunto(s)
Anestésicos por Inhalación/historia , Óxido Nitroso/historia , Boston , Química/educación , Química/historia , Éter/historia , Docentes/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Hospitales de Enseñanza/historia , Humanos , Universidades/historia
8.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(2): 29-34, 2020 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32593373

RESUMEN

In 1758, Benjamin Franklin froze water by means of the evaporation of diethyl ether. Diethyl ether became the coolant in early mechanical refrigerators and ice makers. Refrigeration advances by Carl von Linde and others provide medical oxygen from the air, liquid nitrogen for cryopreservation and cryoablation, xenon for inhaled anesthesia, and liquid helium for supercooling of magnetic resonance image scanners.


Asunto(s)
Éter/historia , Refrigeración/historia , Termometría/historia , Anestesia/historia , Personajes , Alemania , Historia del Siglo XVIII , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Estados Unidos
9.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(2): 96-97, 2020 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32593384

RESUMEN

In his Tractatus Quinque Medico-Physici of 1674, John Mayow wrote that a fifth of atmospheric air is comprised of nitro-aerial spirit. That so-called spirit participates in both respiration and combustion. The etymology of "nitro-aerial spirit" stems from a mineral long called niter and now specified as potassium nitrate. Niter mixed with sulfur and carbon is gunpowder, developed in the ninth century in China. Mayow appreciated that niter was the oxidant in the energy-yielding reaction of gunpowder. The word "oxygen," eventually prompting the word oxidant, was coined a century later by Antoine Lavoisier.


Asunto(s)
Nitrógeno/historia , Oxígeno/historia , Terminología como Asunto , Historia del Siglo XVII
10.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(2): 98-100, 2020 Jun.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32593385

RESUMEN

In the 1940s, Seymour S. Kety and Carl F. Schmidt measured cerebral blood flow in awake humans by means of subanesthetic doses of inhaled nitrous oxide. The inhalation route obviated the need for an arterial injection of the indicator, and nitrous oxide had virtues of metabolic inertness, rapid diffusion through the blood-brain barrier, comparable blood and brain solubility, and ease of analytical detection. The technique was also applied to the heart. Follow-up work by Kety contributed to the development of brain scanning methods.


Asunto(s)
Circulación Cerebrovascular/fisiología , Óxido Nitroso/metabolismo , Administración por Inhalación , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Hiperventilación/fisiopatología , Óxido Nitroso/administración & dosificación , Estados Unidos
12.
J Anesth Hist ; 6(4): 3-4, 2020 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33674029

RESUMEN

Irwin B. Wilson and anesthesiologist Richard J. Kitz found the enzyme acetylcholinesterase to be inactivated in two steps by covalently acting molecules resembling acetylcholine in structure. Such molecules rapidly and reversibly bind to the active site of the enzyme. Next, the reversible complex undergoes covalent fixation at a characteristic rate. The Kitz-Wilson phenomenon applies to many cases of time-dependent enzyme inhibition. Experimental data are commonly graphed in linear fashion on "Kitz-Wilson plots". Kitz also contributed to a gas chromatography-mass spectrometry assay for acetylcholine that was suitable for the nonbiological detection of that neurotransmitter in mammalian brain.


Asunto(s)
Acetilcolina/aislamiento & purificación , Acetilcolinesterasa/metabolismo , Anestesiólogos/historia , Anestesiología/historia , Cromatografía de Gases y Espectrometría de Masas/historia , Neurotransmisores/aislamiento & purificación , Animales , Química Encefálica , Inhibidores de la Colinesterasa/metabolismo , Historia del Siglo XX , Mamíferos/metabolismo , Estados Unidos
14.
J Anesth Hist ; 5(4): 147-148, 2019 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31735280

RESUMEN

Used as a ventilator for assisting victims of polio, the barospirator was described by Swedish physician-scientist Torsten Thunberg in 1924. An immediate predecessor of the iron lung of Philip Drinker, the barospirator fully encased the entire body. Cyclic air-pressure changes within the chamber achieved ventilation during equilibrations of intrapulmonary and ambient pressures. Pulmonary medicine innovator Alvan Leroy Barach used a modified barospirator for lung rest as a treatment of tuberculosis in the 1940s. Adverse effects included damage to patients' tympanic membranes. Despite its limited clinical success, the barospirator was successfully used by one of Drinker's competitors, John H. Emerson, to invalidate Drinker's US patent filings.


Asunto(s)
Ventiladores de Presión Negativa/historia , Diseño de Equipo , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Poliomielitis/historia , Poliomielitis/terapia
15.
J Anesth Hist ; 5(2): 36-43, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31400834

RESUMEN

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.


Asunto(s)
Anestesiología/historia , Anestésicos por Inhalación/historia , Historia de la Odontología , Óxido Nitroso/historia , Anestesiología/instrumentación , Anestésicos por Inhalación/administración & dosificación , Anestésicos por Inhalación/síntesis química , Ciclopropanos/administración & dosificación , Ciclopropanos/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Inventores/historia , New York , Óxido Nitroso/administración & dosificación , Óxido Nitroso/síntesis química
16.
J Anesth Hist ; 5(2): 60-61, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31400838

RESUMEN

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.


Asunto(s)
Anestésicos por Inhalación/historia , Intoxicación por Monóxido de Carbono/historia , Ahogamiento Inminente/historia , Óxido Nitroso/historia , Resucitación/historia , Anestésicos por Inhalación/uso terapéutico , Intoxicación por Monóxido de Carbono/terapia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Ahogamiento Inminente/terapia , Óxido Nitroso/uso terapéutico , Resucitación/métodos , Estados Unidos
17.
J Anesth Hist ; 5(1): 13-21, 2019 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30922536

RESUMEN

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.


Asunto(s)
Anestesia Dental/historia , Anestésicos por Inhalación/historia , Óxido Nitroso/historia , Charlatanería/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Historia del Siglo XX , Humanos , Actividades Recreativas , Estados Unidos
18.
J Anesth Hist ; 4(2): 115-122, 2018 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29960674

RESUMEN

Extravagant claims were made for proprietary dental anesthetics in Boston, MA, in the late 1800s. For instance, in 1883, Urial K. Mayo introduced an inhaled Vegetable Anaesthetic comprised of nitrous oxide that had been uselessly pretreated with botanical material. This misguided concept may have been inspired by homeopathy, but it was also in line with the earlier false belief of Elton R. Smilie, Charles T. Jackson, and William T.G. Morton that sulfuric ether could volatilize opium at room temperature. In 1895, the Dental Methyl Company advertised an agent they called Methyl, a supposedly perfect topical anesthetic for painless dental extraction. The active ingredient was probably chloroform. Anesthetic humbug did not cease in Boston on Ether Day of October 16, 1846.


Asunto(s)
Anestesia Dental/historia , Anestesia por Inhalación/historia , Cloroformo/historia , Odontólogos/historia , Éter/historia , Anestesia Dental/métodos , Anestesia por Inhalación/métodos , Anestesiología/historia , Boston , Cloroformo/administración & dosificación , Éter/administración & dosificación , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos
19.
J Anesth Hist ; 4(2): 128-129, 2018 Apr.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29960676

RESUMEN

The Jackson-Morton 1846 patent for surgical insensibility by means of sulphuric ether states that opiates can be added to the ether and co-administered by inhalation. The erroneous concept that ether could carry opiates in its vapor phase at room temperature was proposed in Boston in 1846 by Elton Romeo Smilie (1819-1889), who believed that the opiates were more important than the ether vehicle.


Asunto(s)
Anestesia/historia , Anestesiología/historia , Anestésicos por Inhalación/historia , Patentes como Asunto/historia , Anestesia/métodos , Anestesiología/métodos , Anestésicos por Inhalación/farmacología , Boston , Éter/historia , Historia del Siglo XIX , Opio/historia
20.
J Anesth Hist ; 4(1): 9-10, 2018 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29559092

RESUMEN

In 1847, British anesthesia pioneer John Snow (1813-1858) observed that patients did not manifest cyanosis during induction with hypoxic mixtures of ether vapor in air. He hypothesized a molecular mechanism that would be understood over a century later as the second gas effect.


Asunto(s)
Anestesia/historia , Anestesiología/historia , Anestesia/métodos , Anestesiología/métodos , Éter/historia , Éter/uso terapéutico , Historia del Siglo XIX , Humanos , Óxido Nitroso/historia , Óxido Nitroso/uso terapéutico , Reino Unido
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