Ambroise Paré

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Ambroise Paré and the examination of a patient

Ambroise Paré (1510-1590) was an important French surgeon of the 16th century.<ref name=MedDisc>

Paré, Ambroise(link). '. Medical Discoveries.



</ref> He caused a major change in how medicine was practiced.<ref> Charles B. Drucker. Ambroise Paré and the Birth of the Gentle Art of Surgery(link). '. Yale Journal of Biology & Medicine. December 2008.



</ref> Unlike surgeons before him, he cared about his patients. He worked to promote healing and minimize a patient's pain. His said "I dressed him, God cured him."<ref name=MedDisc/> Paré was a royal surgeon to several French kings including Henry II.<ref name=SciMus>

Ambroise Paré (1510-90)(link). '. Science Museum.org.uk.



</ref> He considered by many to be the father of modern surgery.

Career

Paré was born about 1510 in France.<ref name=BriSid>

Famous doctors: Ambroise Paré(link). '. Brightside.



</ref> His father was a country artisan. As a youth he was an apprentice to a barber.<ref name=BriSid/> Then he trained as a barber-surgeon in Paris.<ref name=LienhardUH> John H. Lienhard. AMBROISE PARÉ(link). '. University of Houston.



</ref> This was at the Hôtel-Dieu de Paris hospital.<ref name=BriSid/>

There were three levels of those who practiced medicine. Physicians were at the top and were the only ones who could be members of the Faculty of Medicine. Master surgeons were the next group. Paré belonged to the lowest group, the barber-surgeons.<ref>

Ambroise Paré ; Surgeon to Paupers and Kings(link). '. cherrychapman.com.



</ref> At the time wars were being fought all around him. Battlefield medicine was brutal and dirty. Firearms were a new weapon on the battlefield and were causing new and different wounds.<ref name=LienhardUH/> Shrapnel, shot and bullets were a new problem for surgeons. They also believed gunpowder was poisonous.<ref name=LienhardUH/> To stop the bleeding, they poured boiling oil over the wound. This burned an already suffering soldier.<ref name=LienhardUH/>

In 1536, Paré was a young war surgeon just getting started on the battlefield.<ref name=SciMus/> He ran out of oil to seal soldiers' wounds after amputations. He made up a mix of egg yolks, oil of roses and turpentine.<ref name=SciMus/> He applied this to several soldier's wounds. The next morning he was surprised to see those soldiers with the mix he made up were much better than the soldiers who had been scalded.<ref name=SciMus/> He used ligatures to tie off arteries during amputations to stop bleeding.<ref name=BBC>

Renaissance surgery(link). '. BBC.



</ref>

Royal surgeon

In 1552, Paré became the official royal surgeon.<ref name=BriSid/> He was surgeon to four French kings: Henry II, Francis II, Charles IX and Henry III.<ref name=BriSid/>

Paré wrote his first book, Methods of Treating Wounds, in 1545. He wrote it in French because he did not speak Latin. In 1575 he published his collected works. He was severely criticized by the Faculty of Physicians.<ref name=Kelly66>Nigel Kelly; Bob Rees; Paul Shuter, Medicine Through Time (Oxford: Heinemann, 2002), p. 66</ref> This was the top school of physicians in France. Paré was called an ignorant fraud by Etienne Gourmelen, the dean of the Faculty.<ref name=Kelly66/> He stated no books on medicine could be published except through the Faculty of Physicians.<ref name=Kelly66/> Paré had the support of the king so his books sold without the Faculty. He wrote three more books. Paré wrote his own story titled The Apology and Treatise of Ambroise Paré.<ref name=Kelly66/>

References

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