Literature DB >> 28989288

A Family of Early English Oculists (1600-1751), With a Reappraisal of John Thomas Woolhouse (1664-1733/1734).

Christopher T Leffler1, Stephen G Schwartz2.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: John Thomas Woolhouse (1666-1733/1734), who practiced in Paris, was part of a family with 5 generations of English oculists. Some historians have derided him as a "charlatan" and have criticized him for adhering to the old notion that a cataract was a membrane anterior to the lens.
METHODS: We reviewed treatises and digital records related to Woolhouse and his family and the handwritten notes of his 1721 lecture series at the Royal Society of Medicine.
RESULTS: We have identified 5 generations of oculists in Woolhouse's family, by the names of Atwood, Stepkins, Ivy, and Beaumont. Woolhouse taught students from across Europe. He was one of the early proponents in Europe, inspired by Asian medical practices, to perform paracentesis to release aqueous for a new condition called hydrophthalmia. In Woolhouse's system, some of these cases probably described angle-closure glaucoma. He was the first to attach the name glaucoma to the palpably hard eye in 1707. He may also have been the first to teach that a soft eye was unlikely to recover vision. Credit for these teachings has traditionally gone to one of his students, Johannes Zacharias Platner, in 1745. Some historians have stated that he proposed iridectomy as a theoretical procedure, which was later performed by Cheselden. In fact, Woolhouse described techniques he had performed which today would be called pupilloplasty, synechiolysis, or pupillary membrane lysis. He was also a pioneer in dacryocystectomy for chronic dacryocystitis and in congenital cataract surgery. His writings from 1716 onward repeatedly (and correctly) stressed that most of the patients with visual disorders required depression of the crystalline lens (for what he called glaucoma), as opposed to removal of an anterior membrane (which he called cataract).
CONCLUSIONS: Woolhouse was a bold ophthalmic innovator and teacher who made major contributions which have lasted to this day. Although he did not admit it, he ultimately adopted much of the evolving understanding of the nature of lens opacities. However, his stubborn refusal to adopt the newer semantics has detracted from a full appreciation of his contributions.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Medical history; cataract couching; glaucoma

Year:  2017        PMID: 28989288      PMCID: PMC5624362          DOI: 10.1177/1179172117732042

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ophthalmol Eye Dis        ISSN: 1179-1721


  15 in total

1.  Couching for cataract and Sino-Indian medical exchange from the sixth to the twelfth century AD.

Authors:  Ka Wai Fan
Journal:  Clin Exp Ophthalmol       Date:  2005-04       Impact factor: 4.207

2.  WOOLHOUSE (1666-1733-4).

Authors:  R R James
Journal:  Br J Ophthalmol       Date:  1934-04       Impact factor: 4.638

3.  Evolution and impact of eye and vision terms in written English.

Authors:  Christopher T Leffler; Stephen G Schwartz; Russell Stackhouse; Byrd Davenport; Karli Spetzler
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4.  Monteath's translation of Weller: an underappreciated trove of ophthalmology lexicon.

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Journal:  Arch Ophthalmol       Date:  2012-10

Review 5.  The early history of keratoconus prior to Nottingham's landmark 1854 treatise on conical cornea: a review.

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Journal:  Clin Exp Optom       Date:  2013-02-18       Impact factor: 2.742

6.  Congenital cataract surgery during the early enlightenment period and the Stepkins oculists.

Authors:  Christopher T Leffler; Stephen G Schwartz; Byrd Davenport
Journal:  JAMA Ophthalmol       Date:  2014-07       Impact factor: 7.389

7.  Dacryocystectomy: indications and results.

Authors:  Suzana Matayoshi; Alfred Van Baak; Alexandra Cozac; Mariluze Sardinha; José Byron Vicente Dias Fernandes; Euripedes da Mota Moura
Journal:  Orbit       Date:  2004-09

8.  Enduring influence of elizabethan ophthalmic texts of the 1580s: bailey, grassus, and guillemeau.

Authors:  Christopher T Leffler; Stephen G Schwartz; Byrd Davenport; Jessica Randolph; Joshua Busscher; Tamer Hadi
Journal:  Open Ophthalmol J       Date:  2014-05-30

Review 9.  The early history of glaucoma: the glaucous eye (800 BC to 1050 AD).

Authors:  Christopher T Leffler; Stephen G Schwartz; Tamer M Hadi; Ali Salman; Vivek Vasuki
Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol       Date:  2015-02-02

Review 10.  The first cataract surgeons in Latin America: 1611-1830.

Authors:  Christopher T Leffler; Ricardo D Wainsztein
Journal:  Clin Ophthalmol       Date:  2016-04-15
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  2 in total

1.  Aspiration of cataract in 1815 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Authors:  Christopher T Leffler; Charles E Letocha; Kasey Pierson; Stephen G Schwartz
Journal:  Digit J Ophthalmol       Date:  2017-12-30

2.  The First Cataract Surgeons in the British Isles.

Authors:  Christopher T Leffler; Stephen G Schwartz; Eric Peterson; Natario L Couser; Abdul-Rahman Salman
Journal:  Am J Ophthalmol       Date:  2021-03-17       Impact factor: 5.488

  2 in total

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