The film was loaded to YouTube some time ago where it was largely forgotten, but it’s gaining attention now due to the new research that supports the film’s importance. The study, which has been accepted for publication in the Journal of Anesthesia History, notes that multiple film libraries in Europe have confirmed the film’s historical significance.
Venturini, who is also director of the Museum and Historical Library of the Association of Anesthesia, Analgesia and Reanimation of Buenos Aires, explained that the 1899 film shows a male patient having a lung cyst removed. The procedure took place at the old Hospital de Clínicas in Buenos Aires.
Argentine surgeon Alejandro Posadas (1870–1902) performed the surgery, assisted by medical students. One of these assistants, Rodolfo Santiago Roccatagliata, administered anesthesia by sporadically dropping it from a bottle into a mask placed over the patient’s face.
“It is likely that anesthesia was performed with chloroform and (a) hand mask ‘chloroform cone’,” Venturini said. “This handmade mask was widely used in the countries of the New World. At this time period in the Americas, young surgical house officers and medical students were expected to be able to fold their own cones, from a variety of textiles, around a stiff paper or cardboard conical shell.”
Read more at Discovery News
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