The
Dawn of Modern Medicine
The
event that dominated 17th-century medicine and marked
the beginning of a new epoch in medical science was
the discovery of how the blood circulates in the body
by the English physician and anatomist William Harvey.
Harvey's "Essay on the Motion of the Heart and
the Blood" (1628) established that the heart pumps
the blood in continuous circulation. The Italian anatomist
Marcello Malpighi advanced Harvey's work by his discovery
of tiny blood vessels called capillaries, and the Italian
anatomist Gasparo Aselli provided the first description
of the lacteals, capillaries found in the lymphatic
system. In England the physician Thomas Willis investigated
the anatomy of the brain and the nervous system and
was the first to describe diabetes mellitus. The English
physician Francis Glisson advanced the knowledge of
the anatomy of the liver, described the nutritional
disorder rickets (sometimes called Glisson's disease),
and was the first to prove that muscles contract when
activity is performed. The English physician Richard
Lower studied the anatomy of the heart, showed how blood
interacts with air, and performed one of the first blood
transfusions.
The
French mathematician and philosopher René Descartes,
who also made anatomical dissections and investigated
the anatomy of the eye and the mechanism of vision,
maintained that the body functioned as a machine. This
view was adopted by the so-called iatrophysicists, such
as Italian physician Sanctorius, who investigated metabolism,
and the Italian mathematician and physicist Giovanni
Alfonso Borelli, who worked in the area of physiology.
Opponents of this view were the iatrochemists, who regarded
life as a series of chemical processes, including Jan
Baptista van Helmont, a Flemish physician and chemist,
and Prussian anatomist Franciscus Sylvius, who studied
the chemistry of digestion and emphasized the treatment
of disease by drugs.
The
English physician Thomas Sydenham, called the English
Hippocrates, and later the Dutch physician Hermann Boerhaave,
reestablished the significance of bedside instruction
in their emphasis on the clinical approach to medicine.
Sydenham carried out extensive studies on malaria and
introduced the new treatment quinine, obtained from
cinchona bark, into Europe in 1632. After the invention
of the first compound microscope in 1590, Dutch scientist
Antoni van Leeuwenhoek used this groundbreaking technology
in 1676 to identify organisms later called bacteria.
This was the first step toward recognition that microbes
were the cause of infectious disease.
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