Medical
Defenses
Much
of early medicine was practiced by trial and error,
but ancient peoples also looked for causes and cures
for disease by studying the body and observing the sick.
In Greece during the 5th century bc, the physician Hippocrates
stressed that medical care was a science that could
be learned through clinical observation and experimentation.
The connection between health and hygiene was made in
several ancient cultures, including those of India and
Rome. The Romans drained marshes where malaria-carrying
mosquitoes bred, and they built underground sewers and
aqueducts to carry clean water in the cities. Laws governed
the cleanliness of streets and the storage of food.
Because of limited contact between cultures, most early
knowledge of the efficacy of various measures did not
spread from place to place. With the collapse of the
Roman Empire around ad 400, much medical knowledge was
lost, to be replaced by superstition. It was not until
the 14th century that a medical renaissance began. Thereafter,
progress occurred exponentially. Accurate descriptions
of the structure and functioning of the human body were
made, and the invention of the printing press in the
middle of the 15th century enabled this information
to be published and easily disseminated. The development
of microscopes in the late 16th century prompted the
discovery of microorganisms, although it was not until
the 19th century that scientists were able to show that
bacteria and other microbes caused disease. Also in
the 19th century, people recognized the importance of
sanitation and cleanliness, improving the survival rate
in hospitals. Anesthesia was discovered and the first
vaccines were produced.
During the 20th century, the importance of vitamins
and other nutrients in preventing disease was recognized.
Antibiotics, sulfa drugs, blood types, and genes that
cause disease were discovered. A host of diagnostic
and surgical tools were created that incorporated inventions
such as X rays, fiber optics, lasers, and computers.
Techniques such as organ transplantation (Medical Transplantation),
kidney dialysis, dental implants, gene therapy, and
fetal surgeries were introduced. Thousands of new drugs
were developed to treat everything from ulcers to zinc
malabsorption.
The list of medical techniques for fighting disease
continues to grow. More effective methods are expected
to be introduced in the coming years as scientists gain
a better understanding of such subjects as the molecular
biology of normal and abnormal cells, gene structure
and action, and the relationship between environmental
stresses and disease.
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