Google's masthead today shows two figures on either side of a pair of
lungs. One of them is a modern doctor with a stethoscope and the other
is an antique gentleman holding a sort of tube to his ear.
The tube is actually a stethoscope too, and it was the invention of René Laennec, whose 235th birthday it would have been today.
Laennec was a Breton, a brilliant doctor who was also a devout
Christian. Born in 1781, he studied medicine under his uncle and treated
soldiers wounded in France's revolutionary wars under Napoleon. Before
his death at the age of only 45 he made important discoveries about
cirrhosis of the liver, melanoma and tuberculosis, the disease that was
to kill him.
His most significant contribution to medicine, though, was the
invention of the stethoscope.
Before this, doctors used to listen
directly to patients' chests by placing an ear against the skin
('immediate auscultation'). This was rather awkward in the case of
female patients and when patients were obese it was hard to hear the
heart in any case.
Laennec recorded his experience of trying to treat a young woman who was rather plump.
"I recalled a well known acoustic phenomenon: if you place your ear
against one end of a wood beam the scratch of a pin at the other end is
distinctly audible. It occurred to me that this physical property might
serve a useful purpose in the case I was dealing with. I then tightly
rolled a sheet of paper, one end of which I placed over the precordium
(chest) and my ear to the other. I was surprised and elated to be able
to hear the beating of her heart with far greater clearness than I ever
had with direct application of my ear. I immediately saw that this might
become an indispensable method for studying, not only the beating of
the heart, but all movements able of producing sound in the chest
cavity."
He spent three years testing different materials and making tubes,
eventually settling on a hollow tube of wood 3.5cm in diameter and 25cm
long. Wooden stethoscopes were used until the second half of the 19th
century, when rubber tubing was introduced. The stethoscope made it
possible for doctors to listen to what the heart was actually doing and
was a huge step forward for medicine.
But Laennec was respected not just for his skill, but for his faith.
In the French biography translated by Sir John Forbes, it says he was "a
man of the greatest probity, habitually observant of his religious and
social duties. He was a sincere Christian, and a good Catholic, adhering
to his religion and his church through good report and bad report."
His death was that of a Christian. "Supported by the hope of a better
life, prepared by the constant practice of virtue, he saw his end
approach with composure and resignation. His religious principles,
imbibed with his earliest knowledge, were strengthened by the conviction
of his maturer reason. He took no pains to conceal them when they were
disadvantageous to his worldly interests; and he made no boast of them,
when their avowal might have been a title to favour and advancement."
It's common today for people to set science and faith in opposition
to each other, as though they are somehow mutually exclusive. Laennec's
life and work show that this is far from the case. He was a man of faith
whose early life was spent amid fanatical persecution of the Church,
the massacres of priests, the destruction of churches and the
confiscation of Church property. Tens of thousands of priests were
forced to leave the country and those who refused were executed. But
Laennec's faith remained firm.
No comments:
Post a Comment