The Past of Medicine
Welcome back to The Past of Medicine! In today's "medical thriller", we explore a time when doctors used a gentleman's favorite alcoholic drink as a literal surgical weapon. 🎬 Prefer the shorter cinematic version?Watch the main video here:https://youtu.be/qHEsiVdJty4This video is the deep dive conversation of our episode on the strange and painful history behind early IV therapy, milk injections, wine treatments, cure of hydrocele, and the long road toward modern medicine.Discover the absolute Wild West of early medicine, where the line between a life-saving cure and pure torture was nonexistent. We uncover why 18th-century surgeons like Samuel Sharp treated a condition called a hydrocele by injecting raw, searing port wine directly into the scrotum. We also dive into the groundbreaking—and bizarre—experiments of 1656, where Christopher Wren created the very first IV kit. By using a pig's bladder and a sharpened goose quill, Wren successfully anesthetized a dog with a mix of opium and sweet wine. From the fatal milk injections used during the 1850s cholera epidemics to the invention of mass-produced, sterile plastic IV catheters in the 1950s, the history of the injection is a gallery of horrors. Find out how these terrifying trial-and-error treatments actually laid the foundation for modern IV therapy, saline drips, and painless sclerotherapy. ⚠️ Disclaimer:This content explores historical medical practices and is presented for educational and documentary purposes only.Do not attempt to recreate any methods shown. Many of these practices were dangerous and are not supported by modern medicine.Some materials may be used under fair use for educational purposes.
20 episodios
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