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This article is or was the subject of a Wiki Education Foundation-supported course assignment. Further details are available on the course page. Student editor(s): ZAM627.

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Serafeddin Sabuncuoglu (1385 - 1470) was a physician, surgeon, author, calligrapher, and graphic artist of surgical textbooks active during the early period of the Ottoman Empire. He is best known for 3 scientific books: 1. Pharmacognosy, which is mainly a translation of Zahire-i Hazemsahi, but also added his own chapter. 2. Mucerrbname (the experiment book), and 3. Cerrahiyyetu-i Haniyye "surgery of the imperial court."

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Serafeddin Sabuncuoglu practiced medicine in Amasya Hospital, which was built in 1308. In 1465, at the age of 80 years, he wrote a book called Cerrahiyet’ül Haniye (Imperial Surgery). This is the first illustrated Turkish-written medical text book, consisting of three chapters, 191 topics, and 412 pages. There are three original handwritten copies, one in Istanbul's Fatih Millet Library, one at the Capa Medical History Department of Istanbul University, and one in the Bibliothèque Nationale in Paris. Each copy differs somewhat from the others, and none is complete.

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Born in Amasya, one of the ancient cities of central Anatolia, he was an Ottoman,Turkish surgeon and physician (doctor). He practiced 14 years in Amasya hospital. He is most famous for his surgical book "the earliest paediatric surgical atlas: Cerrahiye-i Ilhaniye." He wrote the book in 1465 in Turkish. It contains pictures and diagrams of paediatric surgical procedures, trials and new techniques. The book contributed many vital and key information and presented several new ideas to surgical literature. His contributions were based from the Greek, Roman, Arabic and Turkish paediatric surgeries. The book includes 4 major parts: Cauterisation techniques, General surgery including paediatric and plastic surgery, Orthopaedics, and Medical preparations innovated by him (Sabuncuoglu). In his manuscript he illustrated and explained numerous surgical techniques, incisions and instruments. It included theoretical and practical points about paediatric surgery. He was one of the first surgeons to utilize and draw on various drainage techniques and materials for neurosurgical procedures in paediatric cases. He also mentioned the importance of the implications of haemorrhage during neurosurgical operations and supposed that contact of cerebrospinal fluid and blood was associated with a extremely lethal outcome. He was a immense advocator of a long post-operative drainage period for prevention of haematoma and infection. Serafeddin Sabuncuoglu was the first person to describe the classical position for gynaecological examination and pointed out the importance of female physicians rather than the midwives which was not at all the case with. There are three original handwritten copies of Sabuncuoglu's book two of which are found in the Istanbul in (the Istanbul national library of faith and the Capa Medical history department. The third copy is in Paris's National library.

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Serafeddin Sabuncuoglu operated through the human body well before the advance progress of the sterile technique and modern anaesthesia. He used mandrake root and almond oil for analgesia and general anaesthesia. He discusses surgical and operational anaesthesia and says some patients might resist the anaesthesia, in other words their bodies might reject it and the outcome might not be the same and so he suggest a narcotic medicine called murkid to be set for just in case.[1]

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He told his students "Keep your compassion separate from your fame and ambition." [3]

Dialectric (talk) 23:28, 30 April 2010 (UTC)[reply]

References

  1. ^ Basagaoglu, Ibrahim, S Karaca, and Ziya Salihoglu . "Anesthesia techniques in the fifteenth century by Serafeddin Sabuncuoglu ." Anesth Analg102 (2006): 1289-1290.anesthesia-analgesia . Web. 7 Mar. 2010.
  2. ^ Sungur, Mukadder . "Anaesthesia and surgery in 15th century in Anatolia: Art and Illustrations of Serefeddin Sabuncuoglu ." Anestezjologia i Ratownictwo 3 (2009): 10-12.Anesthesiology and Rescue Medicine - Poland and the world . Web. 7 Mar. 2010.
  3. ^ Sungur, Mukadder . "Anaesthesia and surgery in 15th century in Anatolia: Art and Illustrations of Serefeddin Sabuncuoglu ." Anestezjologia i Ratownictwo 3 (2009): 10-12.Anesthesiology and Rescue Medicine - Poland and the world . Web. 7 Mar. 2010.