As the stricken man gave no indication that he would regain consciousness, Dr Trossach followed up his correct impulse with a few more dubious treatments from the arsenal of an eighteenth-century physician.
This included bleeding the man, massaging his body "to assist the motion of the blood" and administering sal volatile a powerful-smelling solution of ammonium carbonate in alcohol. After an hour, Blair's eyes began to move and eventually he yawned and regained consciousness. He was disoriented, and had no awareness that any time had passed since he'd collapsed the mine, but was otherwise fine.
Within a week, he was back at work, with no apparent ill-effects aside from pain in he back from being dragged up the ladder by his rescuers.
Moritz Schiff and the history of open-chest cardiac massage. Modern cardiopulmonary resuscitation—not so new after all. JR Soc Med. Clin Cardiol. Blood Pressure in Surgery: an experimental and clinical research. Cartwright prize essay for J R Soc Med. Kouwenhoven: Reviving the Body Electric. Johns Hopkins Engineering. Elam, MD Image Dr. Safar performs mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in Baltimore, Reprinted by permission from the Safar Center for Resuscitation Research.
Image l to r Dr. Saving more lives - together. The vision for Laerdal Medical Corporation. Three variations of Resuscitation Anne manikin heads. Medic One Foundation website. American Heart Association website. History of CPR Highlights from the 16th century to the 21st century.
The Bellows Method. The Hall Method. Notify me of follow-up comments by email. Notify me of new posts by email. George Crile — James Elam was the first to prove that expired air was sufficient to maintain adequate oxygenation When was CPR invented? You need more stuff on the history of CPR. Sorry, your blog cannot share posts by email. Other humane societies were soon established throughout Europe, especially in maritime cities with frequent drownings.
The founding of London's humane society in , initially known as "The Institute," was followed by earnest efforts to promote mouth-to-mouth EAV in England, and soon after in Scotland, but not until the s in North America.
Disenchantment with the mouth-to-mouth method as less desirable for various reasons led to decline in its general use.
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