Francais | English | Espanõl

William Stewart Halsted

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jump to: navigation, search
The Four Doctors by John Singer Sargent, 1905.From left to right: Welch, Halsted, Osler, Kelly. It is said that Halsted's difficult personality prompted Sargent to paint him in colors that would fade in time.  Of note:Sargent's careful depiction of Halsted's short, stubby thumb.
The Four Doctors by John Singer Sargent, 1905.
From left to right: Welch, Halsted, Osler, Kelly.
It is said that Halsted's difficult personality prompted Sargent to paint him in colors that would fade in time. Of note:Sargent's careful depiction of Halsted's short, stubby thumb.

William Stewart Halsted (September 23 1852September 7 1922) is known as the father of American surgery.

Born in New York City, he was the founder of the American residency training system of progressive responsibility.

William S. Halsted was named the first chief of the Department of Surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital when it initially opened in May 1889. He was named Surgeon-in-chief in 1890 and promoted to Professor of Surgery in 1892. He is accredited with starting the first formal surgical residency training program in the United States.

Halsted’s surgical residency program consisted of an internship period (the length was left undefined and individuals advanced once Halsted believed they were ready for the next level of training). Internship was followed by 6 years as assistant resident and then 2 years as house surgeon. Halsted’s first resident was Frederick J. Brockway who started in May 1889 but dropped out of the program in October 1890 to teach anatomy. Halsted went on to train many of the academic surgeons of the time including Harvey Cushing and Walter Dandy.

He is also well known for his many other medical and surgical achievements. As one of the first proponents of hemostasis and investigators of wound healing, Halsted pioneered the modern surgical fundamental principles of absolute control of bleeding, accurate anatomical dissection, complete sterility, exact approximation of tissue in wound closures without excessive tightness, and gentle handling of tissues. The first radical mastectomy for breast cancer was performed by Halsted. Other achievements include advances in thyroid, biliary tree, hernia, intestinal, and arterial aneurysm surgeries.

Contents

[edit] Timeline

Achievements, Personal events, Historical background.

1846

1852

1867

1870

1874

1876

  • October - Begins internship at Bellevue Hospital despite having completed only two years of medical school.

1878

  • July to October - Serves as house physician at New York Hospital
  • November - Begins training in Vienna under Theodor Billroth

1879

1880

  • Returns to New York

1880-1886

1881

  • First emergency blood transfusion, performed on sister
    • Upon discovering his sister nearly dead from a postpartum hemorrhage, Halsted boldly draws his own blood and injects it into his sister, saving her life.
    • Halsted implies knowledge of blood rejection possibility.
  • Performs one of first operations for gallstones in U.S., performed on mother
    • Visiting his mother in Albany, he finds her exhibiting Charcot's triad (fever, right upper quadrant pain, jaundice).

1882

1883-1886

  • Papers describe blood transfusions, autotransfusions, saline infusions
    • Among the first to suggest the replacement of blood during surgery as well as autotransfusion and intravenous saline for use in shock, although these ideas forgotten for dozens of years before becoming the standard of care.

1884

1885

    • He only publishes one paper on the topic, in the New York Medical Journal
      • Halstead's writing is indubitably stained by the evidence of intoxication.

1886

1888

1889

1890

  • Is appointed first Chief of Surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital
  • June 4 - Marries Caroline Hampton, niece of General Wade Hampton of South Carolina.
    • The married couple are described as opposites in appearance.
      • A dandy garbed in European tailored suits and Parisian cobbled boots, Halsted is known to dress impeccably, even sending his dress shirts yearly to Paris to be laundered.
      • Mrs. Halsted's style is described as austere.
    • Halsted and wife never have children, but they do have Dachshunds, named Sisley and Fritz.
    • They live separately in a three-story brick home in Baltimore: Halsted on the second floor, Caroline and canines on the third.
    • Each summer they spend one month at High Hampton, Caroline's 2000-acre (8 km²) North Carolina family estate.

1892

  • Performs first successful subclavian artery ligation

1893

  • *First Johns Hopkins medical students, 15 men and 3 women, begin training
    • This is due to the efforts of four young Baltimoreans--all women--who raised the money needed to open the school only on the condition that women be granted equal opportunity admission .
    • These women were university trustees' daughters: M. Carey Thomas, Mary Elizabeth Garrett, Mary Gwinn, and Elizabeth King.
    • Garrett contributed an additional amount with additional strings: these established pre-requisites for medical school admission.

1896

1898

1901

1909

1918

  • Halsted elected president of the Maryland Medical Chirugical Society.

1919

  • Halsted's gall-bladder is removed by former student Richard Follis

1920

  • Publishes The Operative Story of Goiter

1922

[edit] Eponyms

  • Halsted's law - Transplanted tissue will grow only if there is a lack of that tissue in the host.
  • Halsted's operation I - Operation for inguinal hernia.
  • Halsted's operation II - Radical mastectomy for cancer of the breast.
  • Halsted's sign - A sign for carcinoma of the breast.
  • Halsted's suture - A mattress suture for wounds that produced less scarring.

[edit] Trivia

[edit] References

  • Sherman, Irwing, et al (Sept 2006). "Personal recollections of Walter E. Dandy and his Brain Team". Journal of Neurosurgery 105: 487.
  • Nuland, Sherwin B. (1988). Doctors: the Biography of Medicine. New York: Knopf. ISBN 0-394-55130-3.
  • Who named it?. William Stewart Halsted. Retrieved on August 3, 2005.
  • A Tribute to William Stewart Halsted, MD. William Stewart Halsted. Retrieved on August 18, 2005.
  • Bryan, Charles S. (1999). "Caring Carefully: Sir William Osler on the issue of competence vs. compassion in medicine". Baylor University Medical Center Proceedings 12 (4): 277–284.
  • Cameron, John. (1997). "Williams Stewart Halsted: Our Surgical Heritage". Annals of Surgery 225 (5): 445-458.
  • Halsted, William S. (1885). "Practical comments on the use and abuse of cocaine". The New York Medical Journal 42: 294-195.
  • Halsted, William S. (1887). "Practical Circular suture of the intestines; an experimental study". The American Journal of the Medical Sciences 94: 436-461.
  • Halsted, William S. (1889). "Practical The radical cure of hernia". The Johns Hopkins Hospital Bulletin 1: 12-13, 112.
  • Halsted, William S. (1890-1891). "The treatment of wounds with especial reference to the value of the blood clot in the management of dead spaces". The Johns Hopkins Hospital Reports 2: 255-314. First mention of rubber gloves in the operating room.
  • Halsted, William S. (1892). "Ligation of the first portion of the left subclavian artery and excision of a subclavio-axillary aneurism". The Johns Hopkins Hospital Bulletin 3: 93-94.
  • Halsted, William S. (1894-1895). "The results of operations for the cure of cancer of the breast performed at the Johns Hopkins Hospital from June, 1899, to January, 1894". The Johns Hopkins Hospital Reports 4: 297.
  • Halsted, William S. (1899). "The Contribution to the surgery of the bile passages, especially of the common bile-duct". The Boston Medical and Surgical Journal 141: 645-654.
  • Halsted, William S. (1925). "Auto- and isotransplantation, in dogs, of the parathyroid glandules". The Journal of Biological Chemistry, Baltimore 63: 395-438.
  • Halsted, William S. (1909). "Partial progressive and complete occlusion of the aorta and other large arteries in the dog by means of the metal band". The Journal of Experimental Medicine, New York 11: 373-391.
  • Halsted, William S. (1915). "A diagnostic sign of gelatinous carcinoma of the breast". Journal of the American Medical Association, Chicago, 64: 1653.
  • Burjet, W.C., Ed. (1924). Surgical Papers by William Stewart Halsted. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press.de:William Stewart Halsted

es:William Halsted it:William Stewart Halsted

Personal tools