History Taking
In 1929, a twenty-five-year-old German intern named Werner Forssmann numbed his own arm, slid a urinary catheter into a vein at his elbow, and walked sixty centimeters of tubing into his own beating heart — then strolled to the X-ray department to prove it. The dogma of the day held the heart was untouchable, sacred ground no surgeon would dare enter. Forssmann was fired, accused of plagiarism, and exiled to small-town urology for twenty-seven years. Then in 1956, the Nobel Prize Committee called. How a stunt dismissed as more suited to the circus became the foundation for every cardiac cath, central line, and coronary stent placed today.
11 episodios
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