- William MacEwen
Infobox Medical Person
name =Sir William MacEwen
image_width =
caption =
birth_date =birth date|1848|6|22
birth_place =Rothesay,Isle of Bute ,Scotland
death_date =death date and age|1924|3|22|1848|6|22
death_place =
profession =Surgeon
specialism =Neurosurgery ,Orthopedic surgery
research_field =
known_for =Pioneering work in brain surgery, hernia surgery and bone grafts
endotracheal anaesthesiapneumonectomy
years_active =
education =University of Glasgow
work_institutions =Glasgow Royal Infirmary Western Infirmary Royal Hospital for Sick Children
prizes =Knighthood
relations =Sir William MacEwen FRS (
June 22 ,1848 -March 22 ,1924 ) was a Scottish surgeon. He was a pioneer in modern brain surgery and contributed to the development of bone graft surgery, the surgical treatment ofhernia and ofpneumonectomy (removal of thelung s).Career
Macewen was born in Rothesay,
Isle of Bute ,Scotland in 1848 and studied at theUniversity of Glasgow , receiving a medical degree in 1872. He was greatly influenced by Lord Joseph Lister (1827-1912), who revolutionized surgery by developingantisepsis , by the use ofphenol , thus decreasing drastically the enormous mortality of surgical patients due to infections. By following Lister and adopting systematically the use ofscrubbing (deep cleansing anddisinfection of hands and arms), sterilization of surgical tools, use of surgical gowns, and (recently discovered))anaesthesia , Macewen became one of the most innovative surgeons of his time and was able to greatly advance modern surgical technique and improve the recovery of patients.In 1875 he became an assistant surgeon at the
Glasgow Royal Infirmary , being promoted to full surgeon in 1877. From 1881 to 1889 he was a lecturer at the Royal Infirmary School of Medicine. On appointment as a Professor of Clinical Surgery he transferred his surgical activities to theWestern Infirmary . In 1883 he was appointed as Surgeon to theRoyal Hospital for Sick Children in Glasgow. In 1892 Macewen becameRegius Professor of Surgery at the University of Glasgow (the post which Lister had held when Macewen was a student).In 1916 MacEwen helped to found the
Princess Louise Scottish Hospital for Limbless Sailors and Soldiers inErskine (now the [http://www.erskine.org.uk/ Erskine Hospital] ), near Glasgow, which was urgently needed to treat the thousands of military that lost their limbs in theFirst World War . Macewen was its first chief surgeon and with the help of engineers and workers of the nearbyClydeside shipyard s, he designed the Erskineartificial limb . He trained a team of pattern-makers to manufacture them for the hospital.Neurosurgery
Following the work of
John Hughlings Jackson (1835–1911) andDavid Ferrier (1843-1924) on neurological mapping of functions in the brain, Macewen demonstrated in 1876 that it was possible to use a precise clinical examination to determine the possible site of atumor or lesion in thebrain , by observing its effects on the side and extension of alterations in motor and sensory functions. Thus, in 1876 he diagnosed an abscess in the frontal lobe of a boy, but the family refused permission to operate. When the patient died his diagnosis and localization were found to be correct.He performed the first successful intracranial surgery where the site of the lesion (a left frontal
meningioma ) was localized solely by the preoperative focal epileptic signs (twitching of the face and arms in the opposite site of the lesion). On the basis of these signs Macewen thought that there was good evidence of an “irritation to the lower and middle portions of the ascending convolutions…in the left frontal lobe”. A trephined hole in the skull near the purported site of the lesion showed a big subdural tumor. The patient, a teenage girl, lived for eight more years, and a subsequentautopsy showed no trace of the tumor. He later used this many times to successfully operate on brainabscess es (in 1876) andhematoma s and on the spine. This was a great triumph of medicine.According to one of his biographers, "his thorough knowledge of the natural history of pyogenic diseases of the
temporal bone andnasal sinus es, in addition to his clear description ofcranial anatomy, as illustrated in his "Atlas of Head Sections", were especially important in developing his successful treatment of brain abscess. TheX-ray had not yet been discovered; Macewen's diagnosis was based on clinical findings superbly illustrated by his three clinical stages of brain abscess development" (Canale, 1996).Contributions to surgery
One of his earliest contributions while at the Royal Infirmary, in 1877, was in orthopedics, by means of the development of the first bone grafts, but also in
knee surgery using a special instrument (Macewen's osteotome) both techniques becoming key treatments for the highly prevalent disease ofrickets (caused by a lack ofVitamin D ). Macewen was interested in the biology ofbone and carried out a classical series of experiments on animals in order to determine how bones grow and may be repaired. He developed surgical treatments formastoid disease andpyogenic cyst s of thetemporal bone and has identified an anatomical structure in this bone, thefoveola suprameatica , which was namedMacewen's triangle in his honor.His method of surgical removal of lungs became a major medical weapon in the treatment of
tuberculosis andlung cancer , thus saving many patients. His name was also immortalized in Medicine in two other instances: theMacewen's operation foringuinal hernia and theMacewen's sign forhydrocephalus and brainabscess .Another important contribution by Macewen to modern surgery was the technique of endotracheal anaesthesia with the help of orotracheal
intubation , which he described in 1880, and still in use today.Macewen was noted for his early and creative use of photographs for documenting patients cases and for teaching surgery and medicine. He pioneered the use of photos of body parts and pathological specimens, as well as photos taken before, after and during treatment/surgery.
Honours
* Fellow of the
Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of Glasgow in 1874;
* Fellow of theRoyal Society in 1895;
* Honorary Fellow of theRoyal College of Surgeons of England in 1900;
* President of theBritish Medical Association in 1922;
* Knighted in 1902.Macewen lived at Garrochty on the Isle of Bute until his death in 1924. He was buried nearby in the churchyard of St Blane's Chapel.
Archives
The archives of Sir William MacEwen are maintained by the Archives of the University of Glasgow (GUAS).
External links
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* description of a brain surgery carried out by Macewen around 1918
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*cite web| url=http://www.archives.gla.ac.uk/about/dunaskin/mar2003/sarcoma2.html| title=A clinical photograph| author=William Macewen's Glasgow Collection| accessdate=2007-04-07
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