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Crawford Long

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Crawford Long
Crawford Long
Crawford Long
Born November 1, 1815
Danielsville, Georgia
Died June 16, 1878 (aged 62)
Athens, Georgia
Nationality United States
Fields Medicine
Alma mater University of Pennsylvania
Known for Anesthesia induced by ether

Crawford Williamson Long (November 1, 1815 – June 16, 1878) was an American physician and pharmacist best known for his early use of diethyl ether as an anesthetic.

Contents

[edit] Life and work

Long was born in Danielsville, Madison County, Georgia. He received his M.D. degree at the University of Pennsylvania in 1839. After observing the same physiological effects with diethyl ether ("ether") that Humphry Davy had described for nitrous oxide in 1800, Long used ether for the first time on March 30, 1842 to remove a tumor from the neck of a patient, James M. Venable, in Jefferson, Georgia. Long subsequently removed a second tumor from Venable and used ether as an anesthetic in amputations and childbirth. The results of these trials were published in 1848 in The Southern Medical and Surgical Journal. An original copy of this publication is held in the U.S. National Library of Medicine.

Crawford Long was a member of the Demosthenian Literary Society while a student at the University of Georgia and shared a room with Alexander Stephens, Vice President of the Confederate States of America during the American Civil War. Long was a cousin of the western legend Doc Holliday.

Long died in Athens, Georgia in 1878. The Emory-University-operated Crawford Long Hospital in downtown Atlanta, Georgia was named in his honor in 1931 and retained that name for 78 years. In 2009 the hospital was renamed "Emory University Hospital Midtown" [1]. The Crawford W. Long Museum in downtown Jefferson, Georgia has been in operation since 1957. A statue of Crawford Long stands in the crypt of the United States Capitol as one of the two designated monuments to represent the state of Georgia.

Although William T. G. Morton is well-known for performing his historic anesthesia on October 16, 1846 in Boston, Massachusetts, C. W. Long is now known to be the first to have used an ether-based anesthesia. Morton is now sometimes credited as performing the first "public" demonstration of ether as a surgical anesthetic, however this is also erroneous as Dr. Long publicly demonstrated ether's use as a surgical anesthetic on numerous occasions before 1846. In 1854, Long requested William Crosby Dawson, a U.S. Senator, to present his claims to the attention of Congress.[2]

[edit] References

  1. ^ http://www.emory.edu/EMORY_REPORT/erarchive/2009/February/Feb16/Hospital.htm
  2. ^ Northen, William J.; Graves, John Temple (1910). Men of Mark in Georgia: A Complete and Elaborate History of the State from Its Settlement to the Present Time, Chiefly Told in Biographies and Autobiographies of the Most Eminent Men of Each Period of Georgia's Progress and Development. 2. Atlanta, Georgia: A. B. Caldwell. pp. 131 – 136. http://www.archive.org/details/menofmarkingeorg02nort. 

[edit] Further reading

  • Crawford, W. M. (February 1984). "More on the ether operation". N. Engl. J. Med. 310 (8): 534 pmid = 6363934. 
  • Keys, T. E.. "Historical vignettes. Dr. Crawford Williamson Long (1815-1878)". Anesth. Analg. 51 (6): 86. PMID 4564633. 

[edit] External links

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