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  Vol. 135 No. 9, September 2000 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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  Moments in Surgical History
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Trephination

How Did They Do It?

Ira M. Rutkow, MD, MPH, DrPH

Arch Surg. 2000;135:1119.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text and any section headings.

WHEN ROBERT RIPLEY (1893-1949) started his famous cartoon feature in 1918, the many odd and unusual facts were labeled "Believe It or Not." The stories were so amazing that the average reader had a difficult time understanding how such "strange" things could occur. A similar scenario surrounds the early history of trephination. That human beings in the preanesthetic era (ie, before 1846) had their skulls bore open and that the patient lived to tell about it is a surgical "believe it or not." Trephination (or trepanation) remains the earliest example of actual major surgery, although when and why skull boring originated are matters of scientific conjecture. However, skulls from the Mesolithic (Middle Stone Age) cultural period have been found to have round depressions suggestive of rudimentary trephination efforts, which would date the earliest examples at 10,000 BC. Certainly, since many Neolithic (New Stone Age) . . . [Full Text of this Article]







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