| Literature DB >> 35200428 |
William R Moritz1, Shreya Raman2, Sydney Pessin1, Cameron Martin1, Xiaowei Li1, Amanda Westman1, Justin M Sacks1.
Abstract
Surgical technique and technology frequently coevolve. The brief history of blood vessel anastomosis is full of famous names. While the techniques pioneered by these surgeons have been well described, the technology that facilitated their advancements and their inventors deserve recognition. The mass production of laboratory microscopes in the mid-1800s allowed for an explosion of interest in tissue histology. This improved understanding of vascular physiology and thrombosis laid the groundwork for Carrel and Guthrie to report some of the first successful vascular anastomoses. In 1916, McLean discovered heparin. Twenty-four years later, Gordon Murray found that it could prevent thrombosis when performing end-to-end anastomosis. These discoveries paved the way for the first-in-human kidney transplantations. Otolaryngologists Nylen and Holmgren were the first to bring the laboratory microscope into the operating room, but Jacobson was the first to apply these techniques to microvascular anastomosis. His first successful attempt in 1960 and the subsequent development of microsurgical tools allowed for an explosion of interest in microsurgery, and several decades of innovation followed. Today, new advancements promise to make microvascular and vascular surgery faster, cheaper, and safer for patients. The future of surgery will always be inextricably tied to the creativity and vision of its innovators.Entities:
Keywords: anastomosis; innovation; microsurgery; surgical history; surgical technology; vascular surgery
Year: 2022 PMID: 35200428 PMCID: PMC8869402 DOI: 10.3390/bioengineering9020075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioengineering (Basel) ISSN: 2306-5354
Figure 1The early methods of vascular anastomosis. (a) The invagination technique developed by J.B. Murphy in 1897. (b) The triangulation technique developed by Carrel in 1902. Special care was taken to avoid piercing the intima. (c) Payr’s sutureless anastomotic device designed in 1904. (d) The patch technique developed by Guthrie and Carrel in 1906. Surgeons no longer avoided piercing the intima with their stitches.
Figure 2Important figures in the history of heparin. (a) Jay McLean. As a medical student, McLean isolated heparin from liver extracts [25]. (b) William Henry Howell. The professor at Johns Hopkins University who hired McLean and worked to characterize the compound until his death in the 1940s [25]. (c) Gordon Murray. In 1940, Murray described the first use of heparin as an adjunct to end-to-end anastomosis in the clinical setting. His repair of a lacerated brachial artery was successful [24].
Figure 3The evolution of the operative microscope. (a) The Brinell-Leitz microscope, used by Carl Nylen in 1921 to perform the first microsurgery [29]. (b) The Zeiss diploscope, developed by Hans Littman at the request of Julius Jacobson, used beam-splitting technology developed during the Second World War. It was the first microscope that allowed the surgeon and one assistant to view the operative field simultaneously. Source: Zeiss Archives. (c) The Zeiss OPMI Pentero, a modern operative microscope that allows for fluorescent imaging in situ. Source: Zeiss Archives. (d) The Olympus ORBEYE three-dimensional exoscope, a new alternative that provides a real-time, high-definition, and magnified video feed to the entire surgical team [31].
Early innovations in microsurgery.
| Year | Achievement | Innovator |
|---|---|---|
| 1964 | Zeiss Diploscope | Littman [ |
| 1964 | First arm replantation | Malt and McKhann [ |
| 1965 | First total thumb replantation | Komatsu and Tamai [ |
| 1965 | Experimental thumb replantation | Buncke [ |
| 1966 | First toe-to-thumb transplantation | Buncke [ |
| 1966 | First total ear replantation | Buncke [ |
| 1972 | Omentum transfer for scalp reconstruction | Buncke and McLean [ |
| 1973 | First free skin flap | Daniel and Taylor [ |
| 1974 | First pectoralis major transfer | Harii [ |
| 1975 | First free fibular flap | Taylor [ |
| 1975 | First free dorsalis pedis flap | McGraw [ |
| 1977 | First penile and scrotal replantation | Tamai [ |
| 1982 | First free scapular flap | Gilbert [ |
| 1984 | First free peroneal flap | Yoshimura [ |
Figure 4Technological and surgical milestones of blood vessel anastomosis.