Ohio History Journal

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THE INTRODUCTION OF ANESTHESIA INTO OHIO

THE INTRODUCTION OF ANESTHESIA INTO OHIO

 

By HOWARD DITTRICK, M.D.

 

Since the practical application of anesthesia for the relief of

dental and surgical pain originated in the United States, it is not

strange that early Ohio practitioners followed closely along the

trails blazed by colleagues in the Eastern States and in foreign

centers of science.

Even the name anesthesia was coined by our own Dr. Oliver

Wendell Holmes directly following William Thomas Green Mor-

ton's historic demonstration in the Massachusetts General Hos-

pital on October 16, 1846. He grasped the significance of anes-

thesia, saying that it would be on the lips of every person of all

races who in time to come would dwell on this planet.

Previous experiment abroad had covered a considerable

period of time without practical application of the resulting knowl-

edge. Joseph Priestley, discoverer of oxygen, prepared the first

anesthetic to be later generally accepted. In 1776, he prepared

nitrous oxide, but his laboratory accomplishment remained merely

another experiment. In America, Horace Wells's demonstration

in 1844 failed through use of faulty apparatus.

Shortly before this, in 1842, ether had been used by Dr. Craw-

ford Long as a surgical anesthetic, but his experimental work was

not publicized until three years after Morton's successful dem-

onstration in Boston.

Upon the heels of the American introduction, Sir James

Simpson of Edinburgh did pioneer work in persuading the public

to accept the benefits of anesthesia, and experimented with a

variety of agents. His struggle against the prejudice of both

physicians and patients, who objected on religious grounds to any

mitigation of the pain of childbirth, needs no rehearsal. Not quite

so well known is the story that Sir Walter Scott devised an

escutcheon for Simpson which was designed around a new born

babe, and had for a motto "Does your mother know you're out?"

(338)