In this episode, we will explore the introduction of Western style surgery into feudal Japan, during the period of isolation, that lasted from 1639 to 1853. During this time, only a few of the European powers had access to Japan, and for most of that time, it was Holland alone. The Dutch, through trade by the Dutch East Indies Company, held a monopoly on trade with Japan, and came to greatly influence their practice of surgery. Along the way, we'll meet some of these surgeons, as well as a Japanese surgeon who was able to perform major surgery on patients while they slept, a breakthrough that beat the events of the Ether Dome by more than 40 years!
Episode 113 - Better know an instrument: Potts Scissors
Episode 112 - The Ongoing History of Surgery: The World's First Whole Eye Transplant
Episode 111 - The Code of Hammurabi
Episode 110 - The Loch Ness Monster and The Surgeon's Photo
Episode 109 - Was Jack the Ripper a surgeon?
Episode 108 - The Michelangelo of Medicine: Frank Netter and the Atlas of Human Anatomy
Episode 107 - "The Secret"
Episode 106 - From toxin to cure: The story of Botox
Episode 105 - Better know an instrument: the Yankauer suction tip
Episode 104 - Lamb's Blood, Monkey 'Glands', Pig Kidneys, and More: A Brief History of Xenotransplantation
Episode 103 - The Story of the Spleen
Bonus Episode - The Curious Case of Scarpa's Head
Episode 102 - Hua T'o and Surgery in Ancient China
Episode 101 - Galen, Part 2: His Works
Episode 100 - Galen, Part 1: The Story of his Life
Episode 99 - The History of Transgender Reassignment Surgery
Episode 98 - A Knot of Suture Tales
Bonus Episode - The Bizarre History of Bezoars
Episode 97 - The History of Blood Transfusions
Episode 96 - The History of the Esophagectomy
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