Literature DB >> 16865319

Tolstoy's report of five cases of chest trauma: its relevance to contemporary military surgical experience.

Tamas F Molnar1, Laszlo Lukacs.   

Abstract

Fragments of the history of trauma care, an important part of our surgical heritage, can offer a relevant message to contemporary science, even at the level of statistical evaluations. A surprisingly good match of results using two distinctively different approaches for calculating survival after a chest injury is reported in a historical model. Statistical data published by French and British surgeons serving in the Crimean War (1853-1856) were found to conform with the analysis of literary observations in Leo Tolstoy's Sebastopol Sketches. The nearly complete agreement on survival probabilities from two sources so different in their nature highlights the question of the relevance of nonstatistical methods in other fields of surgery as well.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16865319     DOI: 10.1007/s00268-005-0691-8

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  World J Surg        ISSN: 0364-2313            Impact factor:   3.352


  3 in total

1.  War wounds of the chest among marine and naval casualties in Korea.

Authors:  J D KING; J H HARRIS
Journal:  Surg Gynecol Obstet       Date:  1953-08

2.  Medical advances during the Civil War.

Authors:  F W Blaisdell
Journal:  Arch Surg       Date:  1988-09

3.  Changing dogmas: history of development in treatment modalities of traumatic pneumothorax, hemothorax, and posttraumatic empyema thoracis.

Authors:  Thomas F Molnar; Jochen Hasse; Kumarasingham Jeyasingham; Major Szilard Rendeki
Journal:  Ann Thorac Surg       Date:  2004-01       Impact factor: 4.330

  3 in total

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