| Literature DB >> 32576263 |
Christiane Matuschek1, Friedrich Moll2, Heiner Fangerau2, Johannes C Fischer3, Kurt Zänker4, Martijn van Griensven5, Marion Schneider6, Detlef Kindgen-Milles7, Wolfram Trudo Knoefel8, Artur Lichtenberg9, Bálint Tamaskovics1, Freddy Joel Djiepmo-Njanang1, Wilfried Budach1, Stefanie Corradini10, Dieter Häussinger11, Torsten Feldt11, Björn Jensen11, Rainer Pelka12, Klaus Orth13, Matthias Peiper14, Olaf Grebe15, Kitti Maas1, Edwin Bölke16, Jan Haussmann1.
Abstract
In the human population, social contacts are a key for transmission of bacteria and viruses. The use of face masks seems to be critical to prevent the transmission of SARS-CoV-2 for the period, in which therapeutic interventions are lacking. In this review, we describe the history of masks from the middle age to modern times.Entities:
Keywords: Bacterial transmission; Behavior; History of medicine; Pandemic crisis; Surgical mask; Viral transmission; Wound infection
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32576263 PMCID: PMC7309199 DOI: 10.1186/s40001-020-00423-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Res ISSN: 0949-2321 Impact factor: 2.175
Fig. 1Colored version of a copper engraving of Doctor Schnabel (i.e., Dr. Beak), a plague doctor in seventeenth-century Rome, circa 1656 by Paul Fürst (1608–1666) of Nuremberg made for a broadsheet, German derivate of a sheet of Sebastiano Zecchini, 1656
(source Wikipedia https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pestdoktor#/media/Datei:Paul_Fürst,_Der_Doctor_Schnabel_von_Rom_(coloured_version).png)
Fig. 2Face mask following Berkeley George Andrew Moynihan (1865–1936) Abdominal Operations 1906 Saunders, Philadelphia Vol I S 24, Repro Moll-Keyn, with permission
Fig. 3Hermann Otto Hoyer (1894–1968) 1922 Sauerbruch in a thoracotomy, Museum of Medical History at the Charité, art collection Charité, picture Bruns Inv.-Nr. 123330 Repro Moll-Keyn, with kind permission
Fig. 4‘Our introduced face mask and forehead bandage’ and ‘face mask for person with long hair’ from: Kirschner, M. Allgemeine und Spezielle Chirurgische Operationslehre Bd 1, Julius Springer, Berlin, 1927 S. 222, Repro Moll- Keyn, with kind permission. At this time, it was not common covering the nose with the cloth-made mask
Fig. 5Dr. med. Ewald Matuschek and his team
(source: PD Dr. med. Christiane Matuschek, daughter of Dr. med. Ewald Matuschek)