An exhibition by the College Library
for the symposium Hypertension
Exhibition prepared by John Dallas, Rare Books Librarian |
William
Harvey (1578-1657)
Exercitatio
anatomica de motu cordis et sanguinis in animalibus
Frankfurt, 1628
Harvey’s De motu cordis is generally regarded to be
the most important single work in the medical literature, and the foundation
of modern medicine. It provided for the first time an accurate description
of the heart's actions. Contrary to centuries of tradition Harvey argued
that the heart did not constantly produce blood, but circulated it through
the body and in one direction only. He noted that when an artery is
cut, the blood spurts out as if under pressure.
The College copy is from the library of Sir James Young Simpson. |
Johann
Jakob Wepfer (1620-1695)
Observationes
anatomicae, ex cadaveribus eorum, quos sustulit apoplexia
Schaffhausen, 1675
One of the most important books in the study of apoplexy. Wepfer was
city physician at Schaffenhausen in Switzerland when he carried out
meticulous examinations on the cerebral blood vessels and brains of
patients who had suffered apoplexy. The above work, describing four
cases with clinical and post-mortem findings, was the first to show
that apoplexy was a result of cerebral haemorrhage. Wepfer was also
the first to note that apoplexy could be caused by a blockage of one
of the main arteries supplying blood to the brain. |
Stephen
Hales (1677-1761)
Statical
essays, containing haemastaticks
London, 1740
Stephen Hales was the curate of a small country parish for over fifty
years. His invention of the manometer is probably the most outstanding
contribution to medicine made by a non-medical researcher. Hales inserted
one end of a brass tube into the artery of a horse. To the other end
he attached a vertically positioned glass tube, nine feet in length.
On untying the ligature on the artery, blood rose in the tube to a height
of eight feet three inches above the left ventricle of the heart. This
is the first recorded demonstration of the measurement of blood pressure.
His pioneering studies of blood pressure, peripheral resistance, cardiac
capacities and blood velocity were the greatest advance in circulatory
physiology since Harvey’s work over one hundred years earlier. |
Giambattista
Morgagni (1682-1771)
De
sedibus, et causis morborum
Venice, 1762
One of the most important books in the history of medicine. This monumental
work established the organ concept of disease and made pathological
anatomy a major medical discipline. In exhaustive detail Morgagni reports
on nearly 700 cases and autopsies. One case describes a patient who
died with edema and a bladder stone. This is generally regarded to be
the first description of familial hypertension. From his investigations,
Morgagni concluded that death was due to hereditary bladder stone disease
and apoplexy. |
John
Cheyne (1777-1836)
Cases
of apoplexy and lethargy
London, 1812
Cheyne graduated MD at Edinburgh and was a Fellow of this College.
Although better known for his description of periodic breathing (Cheyne-Stokes
respiration), he was also the author of the above classic treatise on
apoplexy.
It outlined his concept of the role played by cerebral circulation
in apoplexy, and includes the first illustration of a subarachnoid haemorrhage. |
Jean
Louis Marie Poiseuille (1799-1869)
Recherches
experimentales sur le mouvement des liquides dans les tubes de tres
petits diametres
Paris, 1841
Poiseuille improved upon blood pressure measuring apparatus by substituting
the short tube of a mercury manometer for the inconveniently long tube
that Hales had used. Connection with the artery was established by means
of a hollow lead tube filled with potassium carbonate to prevent coagulation.
Poiseuille’s haemodynamometer showed that blood pressure rises
and falls with expiration and inspiration. |
Karl
von Vierordt (1818-1884)
Die
Lehre vom Arterienpuls in gesunden und kranken Zustanden
Brunswick, 1855
The search for a more accurate method of determining blood pressure
led to Vierordt’s invention of the sphygmograph. This was the
first instrument with which a tracing of the human pulse could be made.
His method of using weights was cumbersome and inexact, but he did establish
the principle that blood pressure could be found by measuring the counter
pressure needed to obliterate the arterial pulsation. |
Etienne-Jules
Marey (1830-1904)
Physiologie
experimentale
Paris, 1876
The French physiologist Marey was a pioneer in the study of blood
pressure and the developer of the first practical sphygmograph. Marey’s
invention magnified the movement of the pulse and recorded a tracing
of it on to paper. The above work was a comprehensive study of the circulatory
system in its normal and diseased states.
Marey, who also pioneered the use of sequential photographs as a study
of the mechanics of locomotion, is regarded as a major contributor to
the development of the motion picture. |
Samuel von Basch (1837-1905)
Der
Sphygmomanometer
Berlin, 1887
The first instrument which did not necessitate puncturing the skin
was introduced by Samuel von Basch. A balloon was placed over the artery
in the wrist and compressed until no pulsation could be felt. The pressure
at which the pulsation disappeared gave a reasonably accurate measurement
of systolic pressure. Basch soon realised that the higher the systolic
pressure, the greater the risk of stroke and kidney disease. In 1896
the Italian physician Scipione Riva-Rocci introduced the inflatable
cuff which could be placed over the upper arm to constrict the brachial
artery. |
Harvey
Cushing (1869-1939)
On
routine determinations of arterial tension in operating room and clinic
(Boston Medical and Surgical Journal)
Boston, 1903
Riva-Rocci’s apparatus was little known until Harvey Cushing
visited Pavia in 1901. The American neurosurgeon was so impressed by
the Riva-Rocci sphygmomanometer he requested that he take one back to
Baltimore where he could promote its use. After successfully using it
in his surgical operations Cushing was invited to a specially convened
meeting in Boston to demonstrate the value of the instrument. Cushing’s
paper was published in the above journal. The mercury sphygmomanometer
was soon to become the standard instrument for measuring blood pressure. |
Fellows and Members can request scanned pages or images from any of the books in the library’s historic collection, as well as information about their authors.