Timeline of medicine and medical technology: Difference between revisions
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== Antiquity == |
== Antiquity == |
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* 3300 BC – During the [[Stone Age]], early doctors used very primitive forms of [[Herbalism|herbal medicine]].<ref>{{Cite news|title = Lessons in Iceman's Prehistoric Medicine Kit|url = https://www.nytimes.com/1998/12/08/science/lessons-in-iceman-s-prehistoric-medicine-kit.html|newspaper = The New York Times|date = 8 December 1998|access-date = 2015-12-07|issn = 0362-4331|first = John Noble|last = Wilford}}</ref> |
* 3300 BC – During the [[Stone Age]], early doctors used very primitive forms of [[Herbalism|herbal medicine]].<ref>{{Cite news|title = Lessons in Iceman's Prehistoric Medicine Kit|url = https://www.nytimes.com/1998/12/08/science/lessons-in-iceman-s-prehistoric-medicine-kit.html|newspaper = The New York Times|date = 8 December 1998|access-date = 2015-12-07|issn = 0362-4331|first = John Noble|last = Wilford}}</ref> |
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*3000 BC - [[Siddha medicine|Siddha]] is an ancient Indian [[Traditional medicine|traditional treatment system]] which evolved in [[South India]], and is dated to the times of 3rd millennium BCE. |
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* 3000 BC – [[Ayurveda]] The origins of Ayurveda have been traced back to around 4,000 BCE.<ref name="book9781464967566">{{cite book|title=Issues in Pharmaceuticals by Disease, Disorder, or Organ System: 2011 Edition|isbn=9781464967566|pages=P|edition=2011|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XbhvXzqwCRsC|date=9 January 2012}}</ref> |
* 3000 BC – [[Ayurveda]] The origins of Ayurveda have been traced back to around 4,000 BCE.<ref name="book9781464967566">{{cite book|title=Issues in Pharmaceuticals by Disease, Disorder, or Organ System: 2011 Edition|isbn=9781464967566|pages=P|edition=2011|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=XbhvXzqwCRsC|date=9 January 2012}}</ref> |
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* c. 2600 BC – [[Imhotep]] the priest-physician who was later deified as the Egyptian god of medicine.<ref name="MagillAves1998" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/imhotep?showCookiePolicy=true|title=Imhotep|accessdate=30 December 2015|publisher=Collins Dictionary|date=n.d.}}</ref> |
* c. 2600 BC – [[Imhotep]] the priest-physician who was later deified as the Egyptian god of medicine.<ref name="MagillAves1998" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.collinsdictionary.com/dictionary/english/imhotep?showCookiePolicy=true|title=Imhotep|accessdate=30 December 2015|publisher=Collins Dictionary|date=n.d.}}</ref> |
Revision as of 17:45, 12 August 2020
This is a timeline of the history of medicine and medical technology.[a]
Antiquity
- 3300 BC – During the Stone Age, early doctors used very primitive forms of herbal medicine.[1]
- 3000 BC – Ayurveda The origins of Ayurveda have been traced back to around 4,000 BCE.[2]
- c. 2600 BC – Imhotep the priest-physician who was later deified as the Egyptian god of medicine.[3][4]
- 2500 BC – Iry Egyptian inscription speaks of Iry as [eye-doctor of the palace,] [palace physician of the belly,] [guardian of the royal bowels,] and [he who prepares the important medicine (name cannot be translated) and knows the inner juices of the body.][5]
- 1900 BC – 1600 BC Akkadian clay tablets on medicine survive primarily as copies from Ashurbanipal's library at Nineveh.[6]
- 1800 BC – Code of Hammurabi sets out fees for surgeons and punishments for malpractice[5]
- 1800 BC – Kahun Gynecological Papyrus
- 1600 BC – Hearst papyrus, coprotherapy and magic[7]
- 1551 BC – Ebers Papyrus, coprotherapy and magic[8]
- 1500 BC – Saffron used as a medicine on the Aegean island of Thera in ancient Greece
- 1500 BC – Edwin Smith Papyrus, an Egyptian medical text and the oldest known surgical treatise (no true surgery) no magic[5]
- 1300 BC – Brugsch Papyrus and London Medical Papyrus
- 1250 BC – Asklepios[5]
- 9th century – Hesiod reports an ontological conception of disease via the Pandora myth. Disease has a "life" of its own but is of divine origin.[7]
- 8th century – Homer tells that Polydamna supplied the Greek forces besieging Troy with healing drugs Homer also tells about battlefield surgery Idomeneus tells Nestor after Machaon had fallen: A surgeon who can cut out an arrow and heal the wound with his ointments is worth a regiment.[5]
- 700 BC – Cnidos medical school; also one at Cos
- 500 BC – Darius I orders the restoration of the House of Life (First record of a (much older) medical school)[5]: 47
- 500 BC – Bian Que becomes the earliest physician known to use acupuncture and pulse diagnosis
- 500 BC – the Sushruta Samhita is published, laying the framework for Ayurvedic medicine
- c. 490 – c. 430 – Empedocles four elements[8]
- 500 BC - Pills were used. They were presumably invented so that measured amounts of a medicinal substance could be delivered to a patient.
- 510–430 BC – Alcmaeon of Croton scientific anatomic dissections. He studied the optic nerves and the brain, arguing that the brain was the seat of the senses and intelligence. He distinguished veins from the arteries and had at least vague understanding of the circulation of the blood.[5] Variously described by modern scholars as Father of Anatomy; Father of Physiology; Father of Embryology; Father of Psychology; Creator of Psychiatry; Founder of Gynecology; and as the Father of Medicine itself.[9] There is little evidence to support the claims but he is, nonetheless, important.[8][10]
- fl. 425 BC – Diogenes of Apollonia[8]
- c. 484 – 425 BC – Herodotus tells us Egyptian doctors were specialists: Medicine is practiced among them on a plan of separation; each physician treats a single disorder, and no more. Thus the country swarms with medical practitioners, some undertaking to cure diseases of the eye, others of the head, others again of the teeth, others of the intestines,and some those which are not local.[5]
- 496–405 BC – Sophocles "It is not a learned physician who sings incantations over pains which should be cured by cutting."[11]
- 420 BC – Hippocrates of Cos maintains that diseases have natural causes and puts forth the Hippocratic Oath. Origin of rational medicine.
Medicine after Hippocrates
- c. 400 BC – 1 BC – The Huangdi Neijing (Yellow Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine) is published, laying the framework for traditional Chinese medicine
- 4th century BC – Philistion of Locri[8] Praxagoras distinguishes veins and arteries and determines only arteries pulse[12]
- 375–295 BC – Diocles of Carystus[3][8][13]
- 354 BC – Critobulus of Cos extracts an arrow from the eye of Phillip II, treating the loss of the eyeball without causing facial disfigurement.[14]
- 3rd century BC – Philinus of Cos founder of the Empiricist school. Herophilos and Erasistratus practice androtomy. (Dissecting live and dead human beings)
- 280 BC – Herophilus Dissection[10] studies the nervous system and distinguishes between sensory nerves and motor nerves and the brain. also the anatomy of the eye and medical terminology such as (in Latin translation "net like" becomes retiform/retina.[8]
- 270 – Huangfu Mi writes the Zhenjiu Jiayijing (The ABC Compendium of Acupuncture), the first textbook focusing solely on acupuncture
- 250 BC – Erasistratus studies the brain and distinguishes between the cerebrum and cerebellum physiology of the brain, heart and eyes, and in the vascular, nervous, respiratory and reproductive systems.
- 219 – Zhang Zhongjing publishes Shang Han Lun (On Cold Disease Damage).
- 200 BC – the Charaka Samhita uses a rational approach to the causes and cure of disease and uses objective methods of clinical examination
- 124–44 BC – Asclepiades of Bithynia[10]
- 116–27 BC – Marcus Terentius Varro Germ theory of disease No one paid any attention to it.[15]
- 1st century AD – Rufus of Ephesus; Marcellinus a physician of the first century AD;[8] Numisianus[9]
- 23 AD – 79 AD – Pliny the Elder writes Natural History
- c. 25 BC – c. 50 AD – Aulus Cornelius Celsus Medical encyclopedia[16]
- 50–70 AD – Pedanius Dioscorides writes De Materia Medica – a precursor of modern pharmacopoeias that was in use for almost 1600 years
- 2nd century AD Aretaeus of Cappadocia
- 98–138 AD – Soranus of Ephesus[17]
- 129–216 AD – Galen – Clinical medicine based on observation and experience.[13] The resulting tightly integrated and comprehensive system, offering a complete medical philosophy dominated medicine throughout the Middle Ages and until the beginning of the modern era.[18]
After Galen 200 AD
- d. 260 – Gargilius Martialis, short Latin handbook on Medicines from Vegetables and Fruits[13]
- 4th century Magnus of Nisibis, Alexandrian doctor and professor book on urine[19]
- 325–400 – Oribasius 70 volume encyclopedia[6]
- 362 – Julian orders xenones built, imitating Christian charity (proto hospitals)[19]
- 369 – Basil of Caesarea founded at Caesarea in Cappadocia an institution (hospital) called Basilias, with several buildings for patients, nurses, physicians, workshops, and schools[17]
- 375 – Ephrem the Syrian opened a hospital at Edessa[17] They spread out and specialized nosocomia for the sick, brephotrophia for foundlings, orphanotrophia for orphans, ptochia for the poor, xenodochia for poor or infirm pilgrims, and gerontochia for the old.[17]
- 400 – The first hospital in Latin Christendom was founded by Fabiola at Rome[17]
- 420 – Caelius Aurelianus a doctor from Sicca Veneria (El-Kef, Tunisia) handbook On Acute and Chronic Diseases in Latin.[13]
- 447 – Cassius Felix of Cirta (Constantine, Ksantina, Algeria), medical handbook drew on Greek sources, Methodist and Galenist in Latin[13]
- 480–547 Benedict of Nursia founder of "monastic medicine"[20]
- 484–590 – Flavius Magnus Aurelius Cassiodorus[21]
- fl. 511–534 – Anthimus Greek: Ἄνθιμος[22]
- 536 – Sergius of Reshaina (died 536) – A Christian theologian-physician who translated thirty-two of Galen's works into Syriac and wrote medical treatises of his own[23]
- 525–605 – Alexander of Tralles[19] Alexander Trallianus
- 500–550 – Aetius of Amida Encyclopedia 4 books each divided into 4 sections[6][6][19]
- second half of 6th century building of xenodocheions/bimārestāns by the Nestorians under the Sasanians, would evolve into the complex secular "Islamic hospital", which combined lay practice and Galenic teaching[23]
- 550–630 Stephanus of Athens[13][24]
- 560–636 – Isidore of Seville
- c. 620 Aaron of Alexandria Syriac . He wrote 30 books on medicine, the "Pandects". He was the first author in antiquity who mentioned the diseases of smallpox and measles[25] translated by Māsarjawaih a Syrian Jew and Physician, into Arabic about A. D. 683
- c. 630 – Paul of Aegina Encyclopedia in 7 books very detailed surgery used by Albucasis[13][19][26]
- 790–869 – Leo Itrosophist also Mathematician or Philosopher wrote "Epitome of Medicine"
- c. 800–873 – Al-Kindi (Alkindus) De Gradibus
- 820 – Benedictine hospital founded, School of Salerno would grow around it[6]
- 857d – Mesue the elder (Yūḥannā ibn Māsawayh) Syriac Christian[18]
- c. 830–870 – Hunayn ibn Ishaq (Johannitius) Syriac-speaking Christian also knew Greek and Arabic. Translator and author of several medical tracts.[18]
- c. 838–870 – Ali ibn Sahl Rabban al-Tabari, writes an encyclopedia of medicine in Arabic.[27]
- c. 910d – Ishaq ibn Hunayn
- 9th century – Yahya ibn Sarafyun a Syriac physician Johannes Serapion,[18] Serapion the Elder
- c. 865–925 – Rhazes pediatrics,[6][28] and makes the first clear distinction between smallpox and measles in his al-Hawi.
- d. 955 – Isaac Judaeus Isḥāq ibn Sulaymān al-Isrāʾīlī Egyptian born Jewish physician[18]
- 913–982 – Shabbethai Donnolo alleged founding father of School of Salerno wrote in Hebrew[29]
- d. 982–994 – 'Ali ibn al-'Abbas al-Majusi Haly Abbas[6]
- 1000 – Albucasis (936–1018) surgery Kitab al-Tasrif, surgical instruments.[18]
- d. 1075 – Ibn Butlan Christian physician of Baghdad Tacuinum sanitatis the Arabic original and most of the Latin copies, are in tabular format[18]
- 1018–1087 – Michael Psellos or Psellus a Byzantine monk, writer, philosopher, politician and historian. several books on medicine[19]
- c. 1030 – Avicenna The Canon of Medicine The Canon remains a standard textbook in Muslim and European universities until the 18th century.
- c. 1071–1078 – Simeon Seth or Symeon Seth an 11th-century Jewish Byzantine translated Arabic works into Greek[19]
- 1084 – First documented hospital in England Canterbury[17]
- 1087d – Constantine the African[18]
- 1083–1153 – Anna Komnene, Latinized as Comnena
- 1095 – Congregation of the Antonines, was founded to treat victims of "St. Anthony's fire" a skin disease.[17]
- late 11th early 12th century – Trotula[30]
- 1123 – St Bartholomew's Hospital founded by the court jester Rahere Augustine nuns originally cared for the patients. Mental patients were accepted along with others[31]
- 1127 – Stephen of Antioch translated the work of Haly Abbas
- 1100–1161 – Avenzoar Teacher of Averroes[32]
- 1170 – Rogerius Salernitanus composed his Chirurgia also known as The Surgery of Roger
- 1126–1198 – Averroes[6]
- c. 1161d – Matthaeus Platearius
1200–1499
- 1203 – Innocent III organized the hospital of Santo Spirito at Rome inspiring others all over Europe
- c. 1210–1277 – William of Saliceto, also known as Guilielmus de Saliceto
- 1210–1295 – Taddeo Alderotti – Scholastic medicine[33]
- 1240 Bartholomeus Anglicus[7]
- 1242 – Ibn an-Nafis suggests that the right and left ventricles of the heart are separate and discovers the pulmonary circulation and coronary circulation[18]
- c. 1248 – Ibn al-Baitar wrote on botany and pharmacy,[18] studied animal anatomy and medicine veterinary medicine.
- 1249 – Roger Bacon writes about convex lens spectacles for treating long-sightedness
- 1257 – 1316 Pietro d'Abano also known as Petrus De Apono or Aponensis[34]
- 1260 – Louis IX established Les Quinze-vingt; originally a retreat for the blind, it became a hospital for eye diseases, and is now one of the most important medical centers in Paris[17]
- c. 1260–1320 Henri de Mondeville
- 1284 – Mansur hospital of Cairo[6]
- c. 1275 – c. 1328 Joannes Zacharias Actuarius a Byzantine physician wrote the last great compendium of Byzantine medicine[19]
- 1275–1326 – Mondino de Luzzi "Mundinus" carried out the first systematic human dissections since Herophilus of Chalcedon and Erasistratus of Ceos 1500 years earlier.[35][36]
- 1288 – The hospital of Santa Maria Nuova founded in Florence, it was strictly medical.[7]
- 1300 – concave lens spectacles to treat myopia developed in Italy.[37]
- 1310 – Pietro d'Abano's Conciliator (c. 1310)[7]
- d. 1348 – Gentile da Foligno[33]
- 1292–1350 – Ibn Qayyim al-Jawziya[6]
- 1306–1390 – John of Arderne[35][38][39]
- d. 1368 – Guy de Chauliac[35][40]
- f. 1460 – Heinrich von Pfolspeundt[35][36][41][42][43]
- 1443–1502 – Antonio Benivieni[35][44] Pathological anatomy[45]
- 1493–1541 – Paracelsus[35] On the relationship between medicine and surgery[46] surgery book[47]
1500–1799
- early 16th century:
- Paracelsus, an alchemist by trade, rejects occultism and pioneers the use of chemicals and minerals in medicine. Burns the books of Avicenna, Galen and Hippocrates.[48]
- Hieronymus Fabricius[35] His "Surgery" is mostly that of Celsus, Paul of Aegina, and Abulcasis citing them by name.[49]
- Caspar Stromayr[35][50]
- 1500?–1561 Pierre Franco[35][43][51][52][self-published source]
- Ambroise Paré (1510–1590) pioneered the treatment of gunshot wounds.[35][53][54]
- Bartholomeo Maggi at Bologna, Felix Wurtz of Zurich, Léonard Botal in Paris, and the Englishman Thomas Gale (surgeon), (the diversity of their geographical origins attests to the widespread interest of surgeons in the problem), all published works urging similar treatment to Paré's. But it was Paré's writings which were the most influential.[55]
- 1518 – College of Physicians founded now known as Royal College of Physicians of London is a British professional body of doctors of general medicine and its subspecialties. It received the royal charter in 1518[56]
- 1510–1590 – Ambroise Paré surgeon[56]
- 1540–1604 – William Clowes[35][42][57] – Surgical chest for military surgeons[57][58]
- 1543 – Andreas Vesalius publishes De Fabrica Corporis Humani which corrects Greek medical errors and revolutionizes European medicine[59][60]
- 1546 – Girolamo Fracastoro proposes that epidemic diseases are caused by transferable seedlike entities
- 1550–1612 – Peter Lowe[35][58][61]
- 1553 – Miguel Serveto describes the circulation of blood through the lungs. He is accused of heresy and burned at the stake
- 1556 – Amato Lusitano describes venous valves in the Ázigos vein
- 1559 – Realdo Colombo describes the circulation of blood through the lungs in detail
- 1563 – Garcia de Orta founds tropical medicine with his treatise on Indian diseases and treatments
- 1570–1643 – John Woodall Ship surgeons used lemon juice to treat scurvy[58] wrote "The Surgions Mate"[62]
- 1590 – Microscope was invented, which played a huge part in medical advancement
- 1596 – Li Shizhen publishes Běncǎo Gāngmù or Compendium of Materia Medica
- 1603 – Girolamo Fabrici studies leg veins and notices that they have valves which allow blood to flow only toward the heart
- 1621–1676 – Richard Wiseman[35][42][58][63][64]
- 1628 – William Harvey explains the circulatory system in Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cordis et Sanguinis in Animalibus
- 1683–1758 – Lorenz Heister[35][58][65]
- 1688–1752 – William Cheselden[35][58][66][67][68]
- 1701 – Giacomo Pylarini gives the first smallpox inoculations in Europe. They were widely practised in the East before then.
- 1714–1789 – Percivall Pott[35][69][70][71][72]
- 1720 – Lady Mary Wortley Montagu
- 1728–1793 – John Hunter[35][73][74][75]
- 1736 – Claudius Aymand performs the first successful appendectomy
- 1744–1795 – Pierre-Joseph Desault[35][58][76] First surgical periodical[77]
- 1747 – James Lind discovers that citrus fruits prevent scurvy
- 1749–1806 – Benjamin Bell – Leading surgeon of his time and father of a surgical dynasty[35], author of "A System of Surgery"[78]
- 1752–1832 – Antonio Scarpa[35][58][79][80]
- 1763–1820 – John Bell[35][42][81][82]
- 1766–1842 – Dominique Jean Larrey Surgeon to Napoleon[35][42][58][83][84][85][86]
- 1768–1843 – Astley Cooper surgeon[35][58][79] lectures[87] principles and practice[88]
- 1774–1842 – Charles Bell, surgeon[35][42][81][89]
- 1774 – Joseph Priestley discovers nitrous oxide, nitric oxide, ammonia, hydrogen chloride and oxygen
- 1777–1835 – Baron Guillaume Dupuytren[35] – Head surgeon at Hôtel-Dieu de Paris,[90] The age Dupuytren[91][92]
- 1785 – William Withering publishes "An Account of the Foxglove" the first systematic description of digitalis in treating dropsy
- 1790 – Samuel Hahnemann rages against the prevalent practice of bloodletting as a universal cure and founds homeopathy
- 1796 – Edward Jenner develops a smallpox vaccination method
- 1799 – Humphry Davy discovers the anesthetic properties of nitrous oxide
1800–1899
- 1800 – Humphry Davy announces the anaesthetic properties of nitrous oxide.
- 1803–1805 – Morphine was first isolated by Friedrich Sertürner, this is generally believed to be the first isolation of an active ingredient from a plant.
- 1813–1883 – James Marion Sims vesico-vaganial surgery[35][93][94] Father of surgical gynecology.[42][95]
- 1816 – Rene Laennec invents the stethoscope.
- 1827–1912 – Joseph Lister antiseptic surgery[35][58][96] Father of modern surgery[97]
- 1818 – James Blundell performs the first successful human transfusion.
- 1842 – Crawford Long performs the first surgical operation using anesthesia with ether.
- 1845 – John Hughes Bennett first describes leukemia as a blood disorder.
- 1846 – First painless surgery with general anesthetic.
- 1847 – Ignaz Semmelweis discovers how to prevent puerperal fever.
- 1849 – Elizabeth Blackwell is the first woman to gain a medical degree in the United States.
- 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.[98]
- 1858 – Rudolf Carl Virchow 13 October 1821 – 5 September 1902 his theories of cellular pathology spelled the end of Humoral medicine.
- 1867 – Lister publishes Antiseptic Principle of the Practice of Surgery, based partly on Pasteur's work.
- 1870 – Louis Pasteur and Robert Koch establish the germ theory of disease.
- 1878 – Ellis Reynolds Shipp graduates from the Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania and begins practice in Utah.
- 1879 – First vaccine for cholera.
- 1881 – Louis Pasteur develops an anthrax vaccine.
- 1882 – Louis Pasteur develops a rabies vaccine.
- 1890 – Emil von Behring discovers antitoxins and uses them to develop tetanus and diphtheria vaccines.
- 1895 – Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen discovers medical use of X-rays in medical imaging
1900–1999
- 1901 – Karl Landsteiner discovers the existence of different human blood types
- 1901 – Alois Alzheimer identifies the first case of what becomes known as Alzheimer's disease
- 1903 – Willem Einthoven invents electrocardiography (ECG/EKG)
- 1906 – Frederick Hopkins suggests the existence of vitamins and suggests that a lack of vitamins causes scurvy and rickets
- 1907 – Paul Ehrlich develops a chemotherapeutic cure for sleeping sickness
- 1907 – Henry Stanley Plummer develops the first structured patient record and clinical number (Mayo clinic)
- 1908 – Victor Horsley and R. Clarke invents the stereotactic method
- 1909 – First intrauterine device described by Richard Richter.[99]
- 1910 – Hans Christian Jacobaeus performs the first laparoscopy on humans
- 1917 – Julius Wagner-Jauregg discovers the malarial fever shock therapy for general paresis of the insane
- 1921 – Edward Mellanby discovers vitamin D and shows that its absence causes rickets
- 1921 – Frederick Banting and Charles Best discover insulin – important for the treatment of diabetes
- 1921 – Fidel Pagés pioneers epidural anesthesia
- 1923 – First vaccine for diphtheria
- 1926 – First vaccine for pertussis
- 1927 – First vaccine for tuberculosis
- 1927 – First vaccine for tetanus
- 1928 – Alexander Fleming discovers penicillin
- 1929 – Hans Berger discovers human electroencephalography
- 1930 - first successful sex reassignment surgery performed on lili Elbe in Dresden, Germany.
- 1932 – Gerhard Domagk develops a chemotherapeutic cure for streptococcus
- 1933 – Manfred Sakel discovers insulin shock therapy
- 1935 – Ladislas J. Meduna discovers metrazol shock therapy
- 1935 – First vaccine for yellow fever
- 1936 – Egas Moniz discovers prefrontal lobotomy for treating mental diseases; Enrique Finochietto develops the now ubiquitous self-retaining thoracic retractor
- 1938 – Ugo Cerletti and Lucio Bini discover electroconvulsive therapy
- 1938 – Howard Florey and Ernst Chain investigate Penicillin and attempted to mass-produce it and tested it on the policeman Albert Alexander (police officer) who recovered but died due to a lack of Penicillin
- 1943 – Willem J. Kolff build the first dialysis machine
- 1944 – Disposable catheter – David S. Sheridan
- 1946 – Chemotherapy – Alfred G. Gilman and Louis S. Goodman
- 1947 – Defibrillator – Claude Beck
- 1948 – Acetaminophen – Julius Axelrod, Bernard Brodie
- 1949 – First implant of intraocular lens, by Sir Harold Ridley
- 1949 – Mechanical assistor for anesthesia – John Emerson
- 1952 – Jonas Salk develops the first polio vaccine (available in 1955)
- 1952 – Cloning – Robert Briggs and Thomas King
- 1953 – Heart-lung machine – John Heysham Gibbon
- 1953 – Medical ultrasonography – Inge Edler
- 1954 – Joseph Murray performs the first human kidney transplant (on identical twins)
- 1954 – Ventouse – Tage Malmstrom
- 1955 – Tetracycline – Lloyd Conover
- 1956 – Metered-dose inhaler – 3M
- 1957 – William Grey Walter invents the brain EEG topography (toposcope)
- 1958 – Pacemaker – Rune Elmqvist
- 1959 – In vitro fertilization – Min Chueh Chang
- 1960 – Invention of cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)
- 1960 – First combined oral contraceptive approved by the FDA[99]
- 1962 – Hip replacement – John Charnley
- 1962 – Beta blocker James W. Black
- 1962 – First oral polio vaccine (Sabin)
- 1963 – Artificial heart – Paul Winchell
- 1963 – Thomas Starzl performs the first human liver transplant
- 1963 – James Hardy performs the first human lung transplant
- 1963 – Valium (diazepam) – Leo H. Sternbach
- 1964 – First vaccine for measles
- 1965 – Frank Pantridge installs the first portable defibrillator
- 1965 – First commercial ultrasound
- 1966 – C. Walton Lillehei performs the first human pancreas transplant
- 1966 – Rubella Vaccine – Harry Martin Meyer and Paul D. Parkman[100]
- 1967 – First vaccine for mumps
- 1967 – Christiaan Barnard performs the first human heart transplant
- 1968 – Powered prothesis – Samuel Alderson
- 1968 – Controlled drug delivery – Alejandro Zaffaron
- 1969 – Balloon catheter – Thomas Fogarty
- 1969 – Cochlear implant – William House
- 1970 – Cyclosporine, the first effective immunosuppressive drug is introduced in organ transplant practice
- 1971 - MMR Vaccine - developed by Maurice Hilleman
- 1971 – Genetically modified organisms – Ananda Chakrabart
- 1971 – Magnetic resonance imaging – Raymond Vahan Damadian
- 1971 – Computed tomography (CT or CAT Scan) – Godfrey Hounsfield
- 1971 – Transdermal patches – Alejandro Zaffaroni
- 1971 – Sir Godfrey Hounsfield invents the first commercial CT scanner
- 1972 – Insulin pump Dean Kamen
- 1973 – Laser eye surgery (LASIK) – Mani Lal Bhaumik
- 1974 – Liposuction – Giorgio Fischer
- 1976 – First commercial PET scanner
- 1978 – Last fatal case of smallpox[101]
- 1979 – Antiviral drugs – George Hitchings and Gertrude Elion
- 1980 – Raymond Damadian builds first commercial MRI scanner
- 1980 – Lithotripter – Dornier Research Group
- 1980 – First vaccine for hepatitis B – Baruch Samuel Blumberg
- 1981 – Artificial skin – John F. Burke and Ioannis V Yannas
- 1981 – Bruce Reitz performs the first human heart-lung combined transplant
- 1982 – Human insulin – Eli Lilly
- Interferon cloning – Sidney Pestka
- 1985 – Automated DNA sequencer – Leroy Hood and Lloyd Smith
- 1985 – Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) – Kary Mullis
- 1985 – Surgical robot – Yik San Kwoh
- 1985 – DNA fingerprinting – Alec Jeffreys
- 1985 – Capsule endoscopy – Tarun Mullick
- 1986 – Fluoxetine HCl – Eli Lilly and Co
- 1987 – Ben Carson, leading a 70-member medical team in Germany, was the first to separate occipital craniopagus twins.
- 1987 – commercially available Statins – Merck & Co.
- 1987 – Tissue engineering – Joseph Vacanti & Robert Langer
- 1988 – Intravascular stent – Julio Palmaz
- 1988 – Laser cataract surgery – Patricia Bath
- 1989 – Pre-implantation genetic diagnosis (PGD) – Alan Handyside
- 1989 – DNA microarray – Stephen Fodor
- 1990 – Gamow bag® – Igor Gamow
- 1992 – First vaccine for hepatitis A available[102]
- 1992 – Electroactive polymers (artificial muscle) – SRI International
- 1992 – Intracytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI) – Andre van Steirteghem
- 1995 Adult stem cell use in regeneration of tissues and organs in vivo - B. G Matapurkar U.S . International Patent
- 1996 – Dolly the Sheep cloned
- 1998 – Stem cell therapy – James Thomson
2000–present
- 2000 26 June – The Human Genome Project draft was completed.
- 2001 The first telesurgery was performed by Jacques Marescaux.
- 2003 – Carlo Urbani, of Doctors without Borders alerted the World Health Organization to the threat of the SARS virus, triggering the most effective response to an epidemic in history. Urbani succumbs to the disease himself in less than a month.
- 2005 – Jean-Michel Dubernard performs the first partial face transplant.
- 2006 – First HPV vaccine approved.
- 2006 – The second rotavirus vaccine approved (first was withdrawn).
- 2007 – The visual prosthetic (bionic eye) Argus II.
- 2008 – Laurent Lantieri performs the first full face transplant.
- 2011 - first successful Uterus transplant from a deceased donor in Turkey
- 2013 – The first kidney was grown in vitro in the U.S.
- 2013 – The first human liver was grown from stem cells in Japan.
- 2014 - A 3D printer is used for first ever skull transplant.
- 2016 - The first ever artificial pancreas was created
- 2019 – 3D-print heart from human patient's cells.
See also
- Timeline of antibiotics
- Timeline of vaccines
- Timeline of hospitals
- 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica, Volume 18, Medicine, Wikisource.[103]
Notes,
- ^ The dates given for these medical works are uncertain. A Tribute to Hinduism suggests that Sushruta lived in the 5th century BC.
- ^ Wilford, John Noble (8 December 1998). "Lessons in Iceman's Prehistoric Medicine Kit". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 7 December 2015.
- ^ Issues in Pharmaceuticals by Disease, Disorder, or Organ System: 2011 Edition (2011 ed.). 9 January 2012. pp. P. ISBN 9781464967566.
- ^ a b Magill, Frank Northen; Aves, Alison (1998). Dictionary of World Biography. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781579580407. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
- ^ "Imhotep". Collins Dictionary. n.d. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Silverberg, Robert (1967). The dawn of medicine. Putnam. Retrieved 18 August 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Colón, A. R.; Colón, P. A. (January 1999). Nurturing children: a history of pediatrics. Greenwood Press. p. 61. ISBN 9780313310805. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
- ^ a b c d e Loudon, Irvine (2001). Western Medicine: An Illustrated History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199248131. Retrieved 16 December 2013.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Longrigg, James (28 July 1993). Greek Rational Medicine: Philosophy and Medicine from Alcmaeon to the Alexandrians. Psychology Press. ISBN 9780415025942. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ^ a b Harris, Charles Reginald Schiller (1973). The heart and the vascular system in ancient Greek medicine, from Alcmaeon to Galen. Clarendon Press. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ^ a b c Magill, Frank N. (23 January 2003). Dictionary of World Biography: The Ancient World. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 9781579580407. Retrieved 23 August 2012.
- ^ Carrick, Paul (2001). Medical Ethics in the Ancient World. Georgetown University Press. ISBN 9780878408498. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ^ Traver, Andrew G. (2002). From Polis to Empire, the Ancient World, C. 800 B.C.-A.D. 500: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313309427. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g Nutton, Dr Vivia (19 July 2005). Ancient Medicine. Taylor & Francis US. ISBN 9780415368483. Retrieved 19 August 2012.
- ^ Philip II of Macedonia: Greater Than Alexander by Richard A. Gabriel, 2010, pg. 10
- ^ Adler, Robert E. (29 March 2004). Medical Firsts: From Hippocrates to the Human Genome. Wiley. ISBN 9780471401759. Retrieved 16 May 2014.
- ^ Celsus, Aulus Cornelius (1837). The first four books of Aur. Corn. Celsus de re medica, with an ordo verborum and tr. by J. Steggall. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Durant, Will (March 1993). The Age of Faith: A History of Medieval Civilization-Christian, Islamic, and Judaic-From Constantine to Dante: A.D. 325-1300. Fine Communications. ISBN 9781567310153. Retrieved 9 September 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Loudon, Irvine (7 March 2002). Western Medicine: An Illustrated History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199248131. Retrieved 29 August 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Prioreschi, Plinio (2001). A History of Medicine: Byzantine and Islamic medicine. Horatius Press. ISBN 9781888456042. Retrieved 10 September 2012.
- ^ Prioreschi, Plinio (1996). A History of Medicine: Medieval Medicine. Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 9781888456059. Retrieved 28 December 2012.
- ^ Getz, Faye (2 November 1998). Medicine in the English Middle Ages. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9781400822676. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
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- ^ a b Russell, Gül. "GREECE x. GREEK MEDICINE IN PERSIA – Encyclopaedia Iranica". Retrieved 19 May 2013.
- ^ Athens.), Stephanus (of; Dickson, Keith M. (1998). Stephanus the Philosopher and Physician: Commentary on Galen's Therapeutics to Glaucon. BRILL. ISBN 9789004109353. Retrieved 9 December 2012.
- ^ Riggs, Christina (21 June 2012). The Oxford Handbook of Roman Egypt. Oxford University Press. pp. 311–312. ISBN 9780191626333. Retrieved 10 October 2014.
- ^ Pormann, P. E. (2004). The Oriental Tradition of Paul of Aegina's "Pragmateia". BRILL. ISBN 9789004137578. Retrieved 19 May 2013.
- ^ Selin, Helaine, ed. (1997). Encyclopaedia of the history of science, technology and medicine in non-western cultures. Kluwer. p. 930. ISBN 0-7923-4066-3.
- ^ David W. Tschanz, PhD (2003), "Arab Roots of European Medicine", Heart Views 4 (2).
- ^ Graetz, Heinrich; Bloch, Philipp (1894). History of the Jews. Jewish Publication Society of America. Retrieved 30 October 2012.
- ^ Schulman, Jana K. (2002). The Rise of the Medieval World, 500-1300: A Biographical Dictionary. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313308178. Retrieved 19 October 2012.
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As a proof of his ignorance and his arrogance, he commenced his very first lecture by publicly consigning to the flames the works of Galen and Avicenna, impudently declaring that his cap contained more knowledge than all the physicians, and the hair of his beard more experience than all the universities in the world. "Greeks, Romans, French, and Italians," he exclaimed, "you Avicenna, you Galen, you Rhazes, you Mesne; you Doctors of Paris, of Montpellier, of Swabia, of Misnia, of Cologne, of Vienna, and all you through out the countries bathed by the Danube and the Rhine; and you who dwell in the islands of the sea, Athenian, Greek, Arab, and Jew! you shall all follow and obey me. I am your king; to me belongs the sceptre of physic."
- ^ M.D., FREDERIC S. DENNIS (1895). SYSTEM OF SURGERY. pp. 56–57. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
- ^ Schumpelick, Volker (2000). Hernien. Georg Thieme Verlag. ISBN 9783131173645. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
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- ^ Tallett, Frank (1997). War and Society in Early-Modern Europe: 1495-1715. Routledge. ISBN 9780415160735. Retrieved 15 January 2013.
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- ^ Asling, C. W. (September 2010). The Epitome of Andreas Vesalius. Kessinger Publishing. ISBN 9781163151303. Retrieved 15 October 2014.
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{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Cooper, Sir Astley; Green, Joseph Henry (1832). A manual of surgery: founded upon the principles and practice lately taught by Sir Astley Cooper ... and Joseph Henry Green ... Printed for E. Cox. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
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- ^ Eaton, Charles; Seegenschmiedt, M. Heinrich; Bayat, Ardeshir; Giulio Gabbiani; Paul Werker; Wolfgang Wach (20 March 2012). Dupuytren's Disease and Related Hyperproliferative Disorders: Principles, Research, and Clinical Perspectives. Springer. pp. 200–. ISBN 9783642226960. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
- ^ Wylock, Paul (1 September 2010). The Life and Times of Guillaume Dupuytren, 1777-1835. Asp / Vubpress / Upa. ISBN 9789054875727. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
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- ^ Sims, James Marion (1886). Clinical notes on uterine surgery c. 3. William Wood. Retrieved 7 December 2012.
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- ^ "History of the Institution," Drexel University College of Medicine Legacy Center. Retrieved 25 June 2015.
- ^ a b "Evolution and Revolution: The Past, Present, and Future of Contraception". Contraception Online (Baylor College of Medicine). 10 (6). February 2000. Archived from the original on 6 June 2009.
- ^ Wolfgang Saxon. "Harry Martin Meyer Jr., 72; Helped Create Rubella Vaccine". New York Times. Retrieved 6 July 2013.
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- ^ Allbutt, Thomas Clifford (1911). . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 18 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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Matapurkar B G. (1995). US international Patent 6227202 and 20020007223.medical use of Adult Stem cells. A new physiological phenomenon of Desired Metaplasia for regeneration of tissues and organs in vivo. Annals of NYAS 1998.
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- Singer, Charles, and E. Ashworth Underwood. A Short History of Medicine (2nd ed. 1962)
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External links
- Interactive timeline of medicine and medical technology (requires Flash plugin)
- The Historyscoper