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ASEPTIC SURGERY.

A LOST ART THAT HAS BEEN RECOVERED. In an article In the Nineteenth Century on "Aseptic Surgery in the Fourteenth Century,” G. D. Bindley, M.C., M.D., writes; “When it suggested that aseptic surgery is really one of the old lost arts now recovered, something more than the mere assertion of so very unlikely a thesis seems to be required. For Listerism has been hailed by the civilised world as one of the greatest discoveries of an ingenious age, and the originality of this discovery can hardly be Impugned. Let it therefore bo stated, with all the solemnity that so remarkable a fact demands, that In the early fourteenth century they were men who not only know that wounds could be healed without suppuration, but who practised continually, and with marked success, that cleanly letting alone the wounds which is the basis of aseptic surgery to-day. They used as a mild antiseptic application warm wine alone. Th» story of the evolution of antiseptic methods by Lister in the nineteenth century has\often been told. His Ingenious and determined Interpretation of Pasteur’s work on microbes in connection with fermentation and putrefaction has been the theme of Innumerable orations, lectures, essays, and writings during the 50 odd years that have passed since his early publications. But the wonderful story of Henry do Mondevllle’s work, developed from what was really little more than a hint by his teacher and predecessor, Theodorlc, has yet to bo’told In Its entirely. 1 '

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/ODT19260710.2.131

Bibliographic details

Otago Daily Times, Issue 19838, 10 July 1926, Page 18

Word Count
246

ASEPTIC SURGERY. Otago Daily Times, Issue 19838, 10 July 1926, Page 18

ASEPTIC SURGERY. Otago Daily Times, Issue 19838, 10 July 1926, Page 18