Publication | Closed Access
Harvey Cushing's Paradigmatic Contribution to Neurosurgery and the Evolution of His Thoughts about Specialization
36
Citations
30
References
2003
Year
Interdisciplinary NeurosurgerySurgical ScienceSurgeryAnatomyModern EraNeuro-oncologyGross AnatomyMedical HistoryIntracranial PressureBrain InjuryNeurologyParadigmatic ContributionNeuropathologyClinical NeurosurgeryHealth SciencesNeurologic Intensive CareNeurological MonitoringHarvey CushingHistory Of SurgeryNeurological AssessmentNeurological SurgeryInterventional NeuroradiologyNeuroanatomyJohns HopkinsNeuroscienceCraniofacial SurgeryMedicineAnesthesiology
The modern era of neurosurgery began in 1879 with the amalgamation of three technologies: anesthesia, antisepsis/asepsis, and cerebral localization. However, when Harvey Cushing (1869-1939) took his first tentative steps toward a neurosurgical career in 1901, the outlook for the field was dismal, because mortality and morbidity rates were horrific. For brain tumors, surgical mortality rates were 30-50%. I will argue that Cushing made intracranial surgery clinically effective, rather than just feasible, by adding a critical fourth technology: knowledge and control of intracranial pressure (ICP). During his Wanderjahr in Europe (1900-1) Cushing came to understand ICP in biophysical terms. At Johns Hopkins, these lessons were quickly translated to acute human traumatic cases (1901-4) and then to tumor patients with raised ICP (1903-5). By 1910, he had accumulated enough tumor cases (180) to have convincing statistics. His mortality rate for tumors was 10-15%. Nonetheless, the successful paradigm was not fully instantiated until a community of practitioners formed a neurosurgical society in 1920. As this process unfolded, Cushing's ideas about specialization also evolved in interesting ways.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1