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Bloodletting

Bloodletting (or blood-letting) is the withdrawal of blood from a patient to prevent or cure illness and disease. Bloodletting, whether by a physician or by leeches, was based on an ancient system of medicine in which blood and other bodily fluids were regarded as "humours" that had to remain in proper balance to maintain health. It is claimed to have been the most common medical practice performed by surgeons from antiquity until the late 19th century, a span of over 2,000 years.[1] In Europe, the practice continued to be relatively common until the end of the 19th century.[2] The practice has now been abandoned by modern-style medicine for all except a few very specific medical conditions.[3] In the overwhelming majority of cases, the historical use of bloodletting was harmful to patients.[4]

Bloodletting
Bloodletting in 1860
MeSHD001815
[edit on Wikidata]
Ancient Greek painting on a vase, showing a physician (iatros) bleeding a patient

Today, the term phlebotomy refers to the drawing of blood for laboratory analysis or blood transfusion.[5] Therapeutic phlebotomy refers to the drawing of a unit of blood in specific cases like hemochromatosis, polycythemia vera, porphyria cutanea tarda, etc., to reduce the number of red blood cells.[6][7] The traditional medical practice of bloodletting is today considered to be a pseudoscience.[8]

In the ancient world edit

 
A chart showing the parts of the body to be bled for different diseases, c. 1310–1320
 
Points for bloodletting, Hans von Gersdorff, Field book of wound medicine, 1517

Passages from the Ebers Papyrus may indicate that bloodletting by scarification was an accepted practice in Ancient Egypt.[9][10][11] Egyptian burials have been reported to contain bloodletting instruments.[12] According to some accounts, the Egyptians based the idea on their observations of the hippopotamus,[13] confusing its red secretions with blood and believing that it scratched itself to relieve distress.[14][15]

In Greece, bloodletting was in use in the 5th century BC during the lifetime of Hippocrates, who mentions this practice but generally relied on dietary techniques.[16] Erasistratus, however, theorized that many diseases were caused by plethoras, or overabundances, in the blood and advised that these plethoras be treated, initially, by exercise, sweating, reduced food intake, and vomiting.[17] His student Herophilus also opposed bloodletting. But a contemporary Greek physician, Archagathus, one of the first to practice in Rome, did believe in the value of bloodletting.[citation needed]

"Bleeding" a patient to health was modeled on the process of menstruation. Hippocrates believed that menstruation functioned to "purge women of bad humours". During the Roman Empire, the Greek physician Galen, who subscribed to the teachings of Hippocrates, advocated physician-initiated bloodletting.[18]

The popularity of bloodletting in the classical Mediterranean world was reinforced by the ideas of Galen, after he discovered that not only veins but also arteries were filled with blood, not air as was commonly believed at the time.[19][20] There were two key concepts in his system of bloodletting. The first was that blood was created and then used up; it did not circulate, and so it could "stagnate" in the extremities. The second was that humoral balance was the basis of illness or health, the four humours being blood, phlegm, black bile, and yellow bile, relating to the four Greek classical elements of air, water, earth, and fire respectively. Galen believed that blood was the dominant humour and the one in most need of control. In order to balance the humours, a physician would either remove "excess" blood (plethora) from the patient or give them an emetic to induce vomiting, or a diuretic to induce urination.

Galen created a complex system of how much blood should be removed based on the patient's age, constitution, the season, the weather and the place. "Do-it-yourself" bleeding instructions following these systems were developed.[21] Symptoms of plethora were believed to include fever, apoplexy, and headache. The blood to be let was of a specific nature determined by the disease: either arterial or venous, and distant or close to the area of the body affected. He linked different blood vessels with different organs, according to their supposed drainage. For example, the vein in the right hand would be let for liver problems and the vein in the left hand for problems with the spleen. The more severe the disease, the more blood would be let. Fevers required copious amounts of bloodletting.

Cross-cultural bloodletting edit

Therapeutic uses of bloodletting were reported in 60 distinct cultures/ethnic groups in the eHRAF database, present in all inhabited continents. Bloodletting is also reported in 15 of the 60 cultures in the probability sample files (PSF) list.[22] The PSF is a subset of eHRAF data that includes only one culture from each of 60 macro-culture areas around the world. The prevalence of bloodletting in PSF controls for pseudo replication linked to common ancestry, suggesting that bloodletting has independently emerged many times. Bloodletting is varied in its practices cross-culturally, for example, in native Alaskan culture bloodletting was practiced for different indications, using different tools, on different body areas, by different people, and it was explained by different medical theories.[23]

According to Helena Miton et al.'s [22] analysis of the eHRAF database and other sources, there are several cross-cultural patterns in bloodletting.

  • Bloodletting is not self-administered. Out of 14 cultures in which the bloodletting practitioner was mentioned, the practitioner was always a third party. 13/14 of the cultures had practitioners with roles related to medicine, while one culture had a practitioner whose role was not related to medicine.
  • Idea of bloodletting removing 'bad blood' that needs to be taken out was common, and was explicitly mentioned in 10/14 cultures studied with detailed descriptions of bloodletting.
  • Bloodletting is not thought to be effective against illness caused supernaturally by humans (e.g. witchcraft). This is surprising, because in most cultures witchcraft and sorcery can be blamed for ailments.[24] But out of 14 cultures with detailed bloodletting descriptions, there was no evidence of bloodletting being used to cure witchcraft-related ailments, while bloodletting was recorded as a cure for ailments of other origins. The Azande culture has been recorded to believe that bloodletting does not work to cure human-related witchcraft ailments. [25]
  • Bloodletting is usually administered directly to the effected area, e.g. if the patient has a headache, a cut is made on the forehead. Out of 14 cultures with information on the localization of bloodletting, 11 at least sometimes removed blood from the affected area, while 3 specifically removed blood from a different area from the area in pain. Europe is the only continent with more instances of non-colocalized than colocalized bloodletting.

In a transmission chain experiment done on people living in the US through Amazon Mechanical Turk, stories about bloodletting in a non-affected area were much more likely to transition into stories about bloodletting being administered near the area in pain than vice versa.[22] This suggests that colocalized bloodletting could be a cultural attractor and is more likely to be culturally transmitted, even among people in the US who are likely more familiar with non-colocalized bloodletting.

Bloodletting as a concept is thought to be a cultural attractor, or an intrinsically attractive / culturally transmissible concept. This could explain bloodletting's independent cross-cultural emergence and common cross-cultural traits.[22]

Middle Ages edit

The Talmud recommended a specific day of the week and days of the month for bloodletting in the Shabbat tractate,[26] and similar rules, though less codified, can be found among Christian writings advising which saints' days were favourable for bloodletting.[citation needed] During medieval times bleeding charts were common, showing specific bleeding sites on the body in alignment with the planets and zodiacs.[21] Islamic medical authors also advised bloodletting, particularly for fevers. It was practised according to seasons and certain phases of the Moon in the lunar calendar. The practice was probably passed by the Greeks with the translation of ancient texts to Arabic and is different than bloodletting by cupping mentioned in the traditions of Muhammad. When Muslim theories became known in the Latin-speaking countries of Europe, bloodletting became more widespread. Together with cautery, it was central to Arabic surgery; the key texts Kitab al-Qanun and especially Al-Tasrif li-man 'ajaza 'an al-ta'lif both recommended it. It was also known in Ayurvedic medicine, described in the Susruta Samhita.

Use through the 19th century edit

 
Ioannis Sculteti, Armamentium Chirugiae, 1693 – diagrammed transfusion of sheep's blood
 
A barber surgeon's bloodletting set, beginning of the 19th century, Märkisches Museum Berlin

Bloodletting became a main technique of heroic medicine, a traumatic and destructive collection of medical practices that emerged in the 18th century.[27]

Even after the humoral system fell into disuse, the practice was continued by surgeons and barber-surgeons. Though the bloodletting was often recommended by physicians, it was carried out by barbers. This led to the distinction between physicians and surgeons. The red-and-white-striped pole of the barbershop, still in use today, is derived from this practice: the red symbolizes blood while the white symbolizes the bandages. Bloodletting was used to "treat" a wide range of diseases, becoming a standard treatment for almost every ailment, and was practiced prophylactically as well as therapeutically.

 
Scarificator
 
Scarificator mechanism
 
Scarificator, showing depth adjustment bar
 
Diagram of scarificator, showing depth adjustment

A number of different methods were employed. The most common was phlebotomy, or venesection (often called "breathing a vein"), in which blood was drawn from one or more of the larger external veins, such as those in the forearm or neck. In arteriotomy, an artery was punctured, although generally only in the temples. In scarification (not to be confused with scarification, a method of body modification), the "superficial" vessels were attacked, often using a syringe, a spring-loaded lancet, or a glass cup that contained heated air, producing a vacuum within (see fire cupping). There was also a specific bloodletting tool called a scarificator, used primarily in 19th century medicine. It has a spring-loaded mechanism with gears that snaps the blades out through slits in the front cover and back in, in a circular motion. The case is cast brass, and the mechanism and blades steel. One knife bar gear has slipped teeth, turning the blades in a different direction than those on the other bars. The last photo and the diagram show the depth adjustment bar at the back and sides.

Leeches could also be used. The withdrawal of so much blood as to induce syncope (fainting) was considered beneficial, and many sessions would only end when the patient began to swoon.

William Harvey disproved the basis of the practice in 1628,[2] and the introduction of scientific medicine, la méthode numérique, allowed Pierre Charles Alexandre Louis to demonstrate that phlebotomy was entirely ineffective in the treatment of pneumonia and various fevers in the 1830s. Nevertheless, in 1838, a lecturer at the Royal College of Physicians would still state that "blood-letting is a remedy which, when judiciously employed, it is hardly possible to estimate too highly",[28] and Louis was dogged by the sanguinary Broussais, who could recommend leeches fifty at a time. Some physicians resisted Louis' work because they "were not prepared to discard therapies 'validated by both tradition and their own experience on account of somebody else's numbers'."[29]

During this era, bloodletting was used to treat almost every disease. One British medical text recommended bloodletting for acne, asthma, cancer, cholera, coma, convulsions, diabetes, epilepsy, gangrene, gout, herpes, indigestion, insanity, jaundice, leprosy, ophthalmia, plague, pneumonia, scurvy, smallpox, stroke, tetanus, tuberculosis, and for some one hundred other diseases. Bloodletting was even used to treat most forms of hemorrhaging such as nosebleed, excessive menstruation, or hemorrhoidal bleeding. Before surgery or at the onset of childbirth, blood was removed to prevent inflammation. Before amputation, it was customary to remove a quantity of blood equal to the amount believed to circulate in the limb that was to be removed.[30]

There were also theories that bloodletting would cure "heartsickness" and "heartbreak". A French physician, Jacques Ferrand wrote a book in 1623 on the uses of bloodletting to cure a broken heart. He recommended bloodletting to the point of heart failure (literal).[31]

Leeches became especially popular in the early 19th century. In the 1830s, the French imported about 40 million leeches a year for medical purposes, and in the next decade, England imported 6 million leeches a year from France alone. Through the early decades of the century, hundreds of millions of leeches were used by physicians throughout Europe.[32]

Bloodletting was also popular in the young United States of America, where Benjamin Rush (a signatory of the Declaration of Independence) saw the state of the arteries as the key to disease, recommending levels of bloodletting that were high even for the time. George Washington asked to be bled heavily after he developed a throat infection from weather exposure. Within a ten-hour period, a total of 124–126 ounces (3.75 liters) of blood was withdrawn prior to his death from a throat infection in 1799.[34]

 
Bloodsticks for use when bleeding animals

One reason for the continued popularity of bloodletting (and purging) was that, while anatomical knowledge, surgical and diagnostic skills increased tremendously in Europe from the 17th century, the key to curing disease remained elusive, and the underlying belief was that it was better to give any treatment than nothing at all. The psychological benefit of bloodletting to the patient (a placebo effect) may sometimes have outweighed the physiological problems it caused. Bloodletting slowly lost favour during the 19th century, after French physician Dr. Pierre Louis conducted an experiment in which he studied the effect of bloodletting on pneumonia patients.[35] A number of other ineffective or harmful treatments were available as placebos—mesmerism, various processes involving the new technology of electricity, many potions, tonics, and elixirs. Yet, bloodletting persisted during the 19th century partly because it was readily available to people of any socioeconomic status.[36]

Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English write that the popularity of bloodletting and heroic medicine in general was because of a need to justify medical billing. Traditional healing techniques had been mostly practiced by women within a non-commercial family or village setting. As male doctors suppressed these techniques, they found it difficult to quantify various "amounts" of healing to charge for, and difficult to convince patients to pay for it. Because bloodletting seemed active and dramatic, it helped convince patients the doctor had something tangible to sell.[27]

Controversy and use into the 20th century edit

Bloodletting gradually declined in popularity over the course of the 19th century, becoming rather uncommon in most places, before its validity was thoroughly debated. In the medical community of Edinburgh, bloodletting was abandoned in practice before it was challenged in theory, a contradiction highlighted by physician-physiologist John Hughes Bennett.[37] Authorities such as Austin Flint I, Hiram Corson, and William Osler became prominent supporters of bloodletting in the 1880s and onwards, disputing Bennett's premise that bloodletting had fallen into disuse because it did not work. These advocates framed bloodletting as an orthodox medical practice, to be used in spite of its general unpopularity.[38] Some physicians considered bloodletting useful for a more limited range of purposes, such as to "clear out" infected or weakened blood or its ability to "cause hæmorrhages to cease"—as evidenced in a call for a "fair trial for blood-letting as a remedy" in 1871.[39]

Some researchers used statistical methods for evaluating treatment effectiveness to discourage bloodletting.[35] But at the same time, publications by Philip Pye-Smith and others defended bloodletting on scientific grounds.[38]

Bloodletting persisted into the 20th century and was recommended in the 1923 edition of the textbook The Principles and Practice of Medicine.[40] The textbook was originally written by Sir William Osler and continued to be published in new editions under new authors following Osler's death in 1919.[41]

Phlebotomy edit

Bloodletting is used today in the treatment of a few diseases, including hemochromatosis and polycythemia.[42] It is practiced by specifically trained practitioners in hospitals, using modern techniques, and is also known as a therapeutic phlebotomy. In most cases, phlebotomy now refers to the removal of small quantities of blood for diagnostic purposes. However, in the case of hemochromatosis, bloodletting (by venipuncture) has become the mainstay treatment option.[43][44] In the U.S., according to an academic article posted in the Journal of Infusion Nursing with data published in 2010, the primary use of phlebotomy was to take blood that would one day be reinfused back into a person.[45]

In alternative medicine edit

Though bloodletting as a general health measure has been shown to be pseudoscience, it is still commonly indicated for a wide variety of conditions in the Ayurvedic, Unani, and traditional Chinese systems of alternative medicine.[46][47][48][49][50][51] Unani is based on a form of humorism, and so in that system, bloodletting is used to correct supposed humoral imbalance.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ . British Science Museum. 2009. Archived from the original on 15 April 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  2. ^ a b B.) Anderson, Julie, Emm Barnes, and Enna Shackleton. "The Art of Medicine: Over 2,000 Years of Images and Imagination [Hardcover]." The Art of Medicine: Over 2, 000 Years of Images and Imagination: Julie Anderson, Emm Barnes, Emma Shackleton: ISBN 978-0226749365: The Ilex Press Limited, 2013.
  3. ^ Mestel, Rosie (6 August 2001). "Modern Bloodletting and Leeches". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  4. ^ . jameslindlibrary.org. 2009. Archived from the original on 2 January 2007. Retrieved 8 January 2017.
  5. ^ Phlebotomy (book). Bonnie K. Davis. 2001. ISBN 978-0-7668-2518-5. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  6. ^ . James C. Barton, M.D. 2009. Archived from the original on 8 April 2011. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  7. ^ . Carteret General Hospital. 2009. Archived from the original on 7 July 2009. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  8. ^ Williams, William F. (2013). Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience: From Alien Abductions to Zone Therapy. Routledge. ISBN 978-1135955298.
  9. ^ Papavramidou, Niki; Thomaidis, Vassilios; Fiska, Aliki (December 2011). "The ancient surgical bloodletting method of arteriotomy". Journal of Vascular Surgery. 54 (6): 1842–44. doi:10.1016/j.jvs.2011.05.100. PMID 21908152.
  10. ^ Parapia, Liakat Ali (September 2008). "History of bloodletting by phlebotomy". British Journal of Haematology. 143 (4): 490–95. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2141.2008.07361.x. PMID 18783398. S2CID 9589933.
  11. ^ Schneeberg, NG (December 2002). "A twenty-first century perspective on the ancient art of bloodletting". Transactions & Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia. 24: 157–85. PMID 12800324.
  12. ^ Stern, Heinrich (1915). Theory and Practice of Bloodletting. New York: Rebman Company. p. 9. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  13. ^ Davis, Audrey; Appel, Toby (1979). Bloodletting Instruments in the National Museum of History and Technology. Washington, DC: Smithsonian Institution Press. p. 1. hdl:10088/2440.
  14. ^ Kean, Sam (2018). "Sweating blood". Distillations. 4 (2): 5. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  15. ^ Mikhail, Alan (2014). The Animal in Ottoman Egypt. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 169. ISBN 978-0190655228. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  16. ^ "Degeneration of Medicine and the Grisly Art of Slicing Open Arms". BBC. 29 November 2002. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  17. ^ Encyclopedia of ancient Greece. Nigel Guy Wilson. 2006. ISBN 978-0-415-97334-2. Retrieved 12 July 2009.
  18. ^ Coutinho, Elsimar M. (1999). Is Menstruation Obsolete?. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-513021-9.
  19. ^ Western medical thought from antiquity to the Middle Ages. Mirko D. Grmek, Bernardino Fantini, Antony Shugaar. Cambridge, Ma.: Harvard University Press. 1998. ISBN 0-674-40355-X. OCLC 39257545.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  20. ^ The Western medical tradition : 800 B.C.–1800 A.D. Lawrence I. Conrad, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge University Press. 1995. ISBN 0-521-38135-5. OCLC 31077045.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  21. ^ a b Conrad, Lawrence I. (1995). The Western Medical Tradition: 800 B.C.–1800 A.D. Cambridge, Eng.: Cambridge UP. ISBN 0-521-38135-5.
  22. ^ a b c d Miton, Helena; Claidière, Nicolas; Mercier, Hugo (August 2015). "Universal cognitive mechanisms explain the cultural success of bloodletting". Evolution and Human Behavior. 36 (4): 303–312. doi:10.1016/j.evolhumbehav.2015.01.003.
  23. ^ Fortuine, R. (1985). "Lancets of stone: traditional methods of surgery among the Alaska natives". Arctic Anthropology. 22 (1): 23–45. ISSN 0066-6939. PMID 11616622.
  24. ^ Murdock, George P.; Wilson, Suzanne F.; Frederick, Violetta (October 1978). "World Distribution of Theories of Illness". Ethnology. 17 (4): 449. doi:10.2307/3773194. ISSN 0014-1828. JSTOR 3773194.
  25. ^ Schmitt, Rüdiger (2019), "Edward Evan Evans-Pritchard: Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic among the Azande (1937)", Schlüsselwerke der Religionssoziologie, Wiesbaden: Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden, pp. 167–171, doi:10.1007/978-3-658-15250-5_20, ISBN 978-3-658-15249-9, S2CID 201473885, retrieved 17 July 2023
  26. ^ Talmud, b. Shabbat 129b
  27. ^ a b Ehrenreich, Barbara; English, Deirdre (2005). For her Own Good. Anchor Books. pp. 49–52. ISBN 1400078008.
  28. ^ Clutterbuck, Henry (1838). Dr Clutterbuck's Lectures On Bloodletting: Lecture 1. The London Medical Gazette.
  29. ^ Rangachari, P. K. (1997). "Evidence-based medicine: old French wine with a new Canadian label?". J R Soc Med. 90 (5): 280–84. doi:10.1177/014107689709000516. PMC 1296268. PMID 9204029.
  30. ^ Carter (2005) p. 6
  31. ^ Lydia Kang MD & Nate Pederson, Quackery: A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything "Bleed Yourself to Bliss" (Workman Publishing Company; 2017)
  32. ^ Carter (2005) p. 7
  33. ^ During the Yellow Fever this practice was also used by Dr. Rush. Read the book Fever 1793 for more info of look up Yellow Fever or Dr. Ben Rush Delpech, M (1825). "Case of a Wound of the Right Carotid Artery". Lancet. 6 (73): 210–13. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(02)83521-8. quoted in Carter (2005):7–8
  34. ^ The Permanente Journal Volume 8 No. 2: The asphyxiating and exsanguinating death of president george washington 22 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine, p. 79, Spring, 2004, retrieved on 11 November 2012
  35. ^ a b Greenstone, Gerry (January–February 2010). "The history of bloodletting". British Columbia Medical Journal. 52 (1). Retrieved 17 February 2017.
  36. ^ Upshaw, John (2000). "The medicinal leech: Past and present". The American Surgeon. 66 (3): 313–14. doi:10.1177/000313480006600318. PMID 10759207. S2CID 2028394.
  37. ^ Warner, John Harley (July 1980). "Therapeutic explanation and the Edinburgh bloodletting controversy: Two perspectives on the medical meaning of science in the mid-nineteenth century". Medical History. 24 (3): 241–58. doi:10.1017/s0025727300040308. PMC 1082653. PMID 6997652.
  38. ^ a b Anders, Eli Osterweil (2016). "'A Plea for the Lancet': Bloodletting, Therapeutic Epistemology, and Professional Identity in Late Nineteenth-century American Medicine". Social History of Medicine. 29 (4): 781–801. doi:10.1093/shm/hkw026. Arguing that it was the physician's obligation to be active and to intervene when necessary, bloodletting proponents explicitly contrasted themselves with advocates of expectant treatment, whom they portrayed as passive, timid, and unwilling to do what was necessary to save their patients.
  39. ^ "Bloodletting". British Medical Journal. 1 (533): 283–91. 18 March 1871. doi:10.1136/bmj.1.533.283. PMC 2260507.
  40. ^ . UCLA Library: Biomedical Library History and Special Collections for the Sciences. 12 January 2012. Archived from the original on 13 March 2012. Retrieved 5 January 2012.
  41. ^ Ryan, Terence J (2015). "Osler and his teaching: relevant today". Postgraduate Medical Journal. 91 (1080): 540–41. doi:10.1136/postgradmedj-2015-133677. PMID 26404786. S2CID 41284621.
  42. ^ Tuttle, Kelly (2012). "Let it bleed". Science History Magazine. 30 (2): 17. Retrieved 20 August 2018.
  43. ^ Merryweather-Clarke, Alison T.; Worwood, Mark; Parkinson, Lisa; Mattock, Chris; Pointon, Jennifer J.; Shearman, Jeremy D.; Robson, Kathryn J. H. (May 1998). "The effect of HFE mutations on serum ferritin and transferrin saturation in the Jersey population". British Journal of Haematology. 101 (2): 369–73. doi:10.1046/j.1365-2141.1998.00736.x. PMID 9609537. S2CID 19683918.
  44. ^ Powell, Lawrie W; Seckington, Rebecca C; Deugnier, Yves (2016). "Haemochromatosis". The Lancet. 388 (10045): 706–16. doi:10.1016/s0140-6736(15)01315-x. PMID 26975792. S2CID 208791894.
  45. ^ Cook, Lynda S. (2010). "Therapeutic Phlebotomy". Journal of Infusion Nursing. 33 (2): 81–88. doi:10.1097/nan.0b013e3181d00010. PMID 20228645.
  46. ^ Lone AH; Ahmad T; Anwar M; Habib S; Sofi G; Imam H (2011). "Leech therapy – a holistic approach of treatment in unani (greeko-arab) medicine". Anc Sci Life. 31 (1): 31–35. PMC 3377041. PMID 22736888.
  47. ^ Ayurveda – Panchakarma 30 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine, holistic-online.com.
  48. ^ Ayurveda 22 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Cancer.org.
  49. ^ Bleeding Peripheral Points: An Acupuncture Technique
  50. ^ Treating Herpes Zoster (Shingles) with Bloodletting Therapy: Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine 2013-06-04 at the Wayback Machine
  51. ^ Chen PD, Chen GZ, Xu YX (2011). "Study strategies for bloodletting therapy in treatment of acute soft tissue injuries". Zhong Xi Yi Jie He Xue Bao. 9 (3): 237–41. doi:10.3736/jcim20110302. PMID 21419074.

Books cited edit

  • Carter, K. Codell; Barbara R. Carter (2005). Childbed fever. A scientific biography of Ignaz Semmelweis. Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4128-0467-7.
  • Carter, K. Codell (2012). The Decline of Therapeutic Bloodletting and the Collapse of Traditional Medicine. New Brunswick & London: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-4128-4604-2.
  • Kang, Lydia; Nate Pederson (2017). Quackery: A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything. Workman Publishing Company.[ISBN missing]

Further reading edit

  • McGrew, Roderick. Encyclopedia of Medical History (1985), brief history pp. 32–34[ISBN missing]

External links edit

  • Medical Antiques: Scarification and Bleeding
  • Pictures of antique bloodletting instruments 2 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  • PBS's Red Gold: The Story of Blood
  • Huge collection of antique bloodletting instruments
  • "Breathing a Vein" 14 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine phisick.com 14 Nov 2011

bloodletting, other, uses, disambiguation, blood, letting, withdrawal, blood, from, patient, prevent, cure, illness, disease, whether, physician, leeches, based, ancient, system, medicine, which, blood, other, bodily, fluids, were, regarded, humours, that, rem. For other uses see Bloodletting disambiguation Bloodletting or blood letting is the withdrawal of blood from a patient to prevent or cure illness and disease Bloodletting whether by a physician or by leeches was based on an ancient system of medicine in which blood and other bodily fluids were regarded as humours that had to remain in proper balance to maintain health It is claimed to have been the most common medical practice performed by surgeons from antiquity until the late 19th century a span of over 2 000 years 1 In Europe the practice continued to be relatively common until the end of the 19th century 2 The practice has now been abandoned by modern style medicine for all except a few very specific medical conditions 3 In the overwhelming majority of cases the historical use of bloodletting was harmful to patients 4 BloodlettingBloodletting in 1860MeSHD001815 edit on Wikidata Ancient Greek painting on a vase showing a physician iatros bleeding a patientToday the term phlebotomy refers to the drawing of blood for laboratory analysis or blood transfusion 5 Therapeutic phlebotomy refers to the drawing of a unit of blood in specific cases like hemochromatosis polycythemia vera porphyria cutanea tarda etc to reduce the number of red blood cells 6 7 The traditional medical practice of bloodletting is today considered to be a pseudoscience 8 Contents 1 In the ancient world 2 Cross cultural bloodletting 3 Middle Ages 4 Use through the 19th century 5 Controversy and use into the 20th century 6 Phlebotomy 7 In alternative medicine 8 See also 9 References 10 Books cited 11 Further reading 12 External linksIn the ancient world edit nbsp A chart showing the parts of the body to be bled for different diseases c 1310 1320 nbsp Points for bloodletting Hans von Gersdorff Field book of wound medicine 1517Passages from the Ebers Papyrus may indicate that bloodletting by scarification was an accepted practice in Ancient Egypt 9 10 11 Egyptian burials have been reported to contain bloodletting instruments 12 According to some accounts the Egyptians based the idea on their observations of the hippopotamus 13 confusing its red secretions with blood and believing that it scratched itself to relieve distress 14 15 In Greece bloodletting was in use in the 5th century BC during the lifetime of Hippocrates who mentions this practice but generally relied on dietary techniques 16 Erasistratus however theorized that many diseases were caused by plethoras or overabundances in the blood and advised that these plethoras be treated initially by exercise sweating reduced food intake and vomiting 17 His student Herophilus also opposed bloodletting But a contemporary Greek physician Archagathus one of the first to practice in Rome did believe in the value of bloodletting citation needed Bleeding a patient to health was modeled on the process of menstruation Hippocrates believed that menstruation functioned to purge women of bad humours During the Roman Empire the Greek physician Galen who subscribed to the teachings of Hippocrates advocated physician initiated bloodletting 18 The popularity of bloodletting in the classical Mediterranean world was reinforced by the ideas of Galen after he discovered that not only veins but also arteries were filled with blood not air as was commonly believed at the time 19 20 There were two key concepts in his system of bloodletting The first was that blood was created and then used up it did not circulate and so it could stagnate in the extremities The second was that humoral balance was the basis of illness or health the four humours being blood phlegm black bile and yellow bile relating to the four Greek classical elements of air water earth and fire respectively Galen believed that blood was the dominant humour and the one in most need of control In order to balance the humours a physician would either remove excess blood plethora from the patient or give them an emetic to induce vomiting or a diuretic to induce urination Galen created a complex system of how much blood should be removed based on the patient s age constitution the season the weather and the place Do it yourself bleeding instructions following these systems were developed 21 Symptoms of plethora were believed to include fever apoplexy and headache The blood to be let was of a specific nature determined by the disease either arterial or venous and distant or close to the area of the body affected He linked different blood vessels with different organs according to their supposed drainage For example the vein in the right hand would be let for liver problems and the vein in the left hand for problems with the spleen The more severe the disease the more blood would be let Fevers required copious amounts of bloodletting Cross cultural bloodletting editTherapeutic uses of bloodletting were reported in 60 distinct cultures ethnic groups in the eHRAF database present in all inhabited continents Bloodletting is also reported in 15 of the 60 cultures in the probability sample files PSF list 22 The PSF is a subset of eHRAF data that includes only one culture from each of 60 macro culture areas around the world The prevalence of bloodletting in PSF controls for pseudo replication linked to common ancestry suggesting that bloodletting has independently emerged many times Bloodletting is varied in its practices cross culturally for example in native Alaskan culture bloodletting was practiced for different indications using different tools on different body areas by different people and it was explained by different medical theories 23 According to Helena Miton et al s 22 analysis of the eHRAF database and other sources there are several cross cultural patterns in bloodletting Bloodletting is not self administered Out of 14 cultures in which the bloodletting practitioner was mentioned the practitioner was always a third party 13 14 of the cultures had practitioners with roles related to medicine while one culture had a practitioner whose role was not related to medicine Idea of bloodletting removing bad blood that needs to be taken out was common and was explicitly mentioned in 10 14 cultures studied with detailed descriptions of bloodletting Bloodletting is not thought to be effective against illness caused supernaturally by humans e g witchcraft This is surprising because in most cultures witchcraft and sorcery can be blamed for ailments 24 But out of 14 cultures with detailed bloodletting descriptions there was no evidence of bloodletting being used to cure witchcraft related ailments while bloodletting was recorded as a cure for ailments of other origins The Azande culture has been recorded to believe that bloodletting does not work to cure human related witchcraft ailments 25 Bloodletting is usually administered directly to the effected area e g if the patient has a headache a cut is made on the forehead Out of 14 cultures with information on the localization of bloodletting 11 at least sometimes removed blood from the affected area while 3 specifically removed blood from a different area from the area in pain Europe is the only continent with more instances of non colocalized than colocalized bloodletting In a transmission chain experiment done on people living in the US through Amazon Mechanical Turk stories about bloodletting in a non affected area were much more likely to transition into stories about bloodletting being administered near the area in pain than vice versa 22 This suggests that colocalized bloodletting could be a cultural attractor and is more likely to be culturally transmitted even among people in the US who are likely more familiar with non colocalized bloodletting Bloodletting as a concept is thought to be a cultural attractor or an intrinsically attractive culturally transmissible concept This could explain bloodletting s independent cross cultural emergence and common cross cultural traits 22 Middle Ages editThe Talmud recommended a specific day of the week and days of the month for bloodletting in the Shabbat tractate 26 and similar rules though less codified can be found among Christian writings advising which saints days were favourable for bloodletting citation needed During medieval times bleeding charts were common showing specific bleeding sites on the body in alignment with the planets and zodiacs 21 Islamic medical authors also advised bloodletting particularly for fevers It was practised according to seasons and certain phases of the Moon in the lunar calendar The practice was probably passed by the Greeks with the translation of ancient texts to Arabic and is different than bloodletting by cupping mentioned in the traditions of Muhammad When Muslim theories became known in the Latin speaking countries of Europe bloodletting became more widespread Together with cautery it was central to Arabic surgery the key texts Kitab al Qanun and especially Al Tasrif li man ajaza an al ta lif both recommended it It was also known in Ayurvedic medicine described in the Susruta Samhita Use through the 19th century edit nbsp Ioannis Sculteti Armamentium Chirugiae 1693 diagrammed transfusion of sheep s blood nbsp A barber surgeon s bloodletting set beginning of the 19th century Markisches Museum Berlin Bloodletting became a main technique of heroic medicine a traumatic and destructive collection of medical practices that emerged in the 18th century 27 Even after the humoral system fell into disuse the practice was continued by surgeons and barber surgeons Though the bloodletting was often recommended by physicians it was carried out by barbers This led to the distinction between physicians and surgeons The red and white striped pole of the barbershop still in use today is derived from this practice the red symbolizes blood while the white symbolizes the bandages Bloodletting was used to treat a wide range of diseases becoming a standard treatment for almost every ailment and was practiced prophylactically as well as therapeutically nbsp Scarificator nbsp Scarificator mechanism nbsp Scarificator showing depth adjustment bar nbsp Diagram of scarificator showing depth adjustmentA number of different methods were employed The most common was phlebotomy or venesection often called breathing a vein in which blood was drawn from one or more of the larger external veins such as those in the forearm or neck In arteriotomy an artery was punctured although generally only in the temples In scarification not to be confused with scarification a method of body modification the superficial vessels were attacked often using a syringe a spring loaded lancet or a glass cup that contained heated air producing a vacuum within see fire cupping There was also a specific bloodletting tool called a scarificator used primarily in 19th century medicine It has a spring loaded mechanism with gears that snaps the blades out through slits in the front cover and back in in a circular motion The case is cast brass and the mechanism and blades steel One knife bar gear has slipped teeth turning the blades in a different direction than those on the other bars The last photo and the diagram show the depth adjustment bar at the back and sides Leeches could also be used The withdrawal of so much blood as to induce syncope fainting was considered beneficial and many sessions would only end when the patient began to swoon William Harvey disproved the basis of the practice in 1628 2 and the introduction of scientific medicine la methode numerique allowed Pierre Charles Alexandre Louis to demonstrate that phlebotomy was entirely ineffective in the treatment of pneumonia and various fevers in the 1830s Nevertheless in 1838 a lecturer at the Royal College of Physicians would still state that blood letting is a remedy which when judiciously employed it is hardly possible to estimate too highly 28 and Louis was dogged by the sanguinary Broussais who could recommend leeches fifty at a time Some physicians resisted Louis work because they were not prepared to discard therapies validated by both tradition and their own experience on account of somebody else s numbers 29 During this era bloodletting was used to treat almost every disease One British medical text recommended bloodletting for acne asthma cancer cholera coma convulsions diabetes epilepsy gangrene gout herpes indigestion insanity jaundice leprosy ophthalmia plague pneumonia scurvy smallpox stroke tetanus tuberculosis and for some one hundred other diseases Bloodletting was even used to treat most forms of hemorrhaging such as nosebleed excessive menstruation or hemorrhoidal bleeding Before surgery or at the onset of childbirth blood was removed to prevent inflammation Before amputation it was customary to remove a quantity of blood equal to the amount believed to circulate in the limb that was to be removed 30 There were also theories that bloodletting would cure heartsickness and heartbreak A French physician Jacques Ferrand wrote a book in 1623 on the uses of bloodletting to cure a broken heart He recommended bloodletting to the point of heart failure literal 31 Leeches became especially popular in the early 19th century In the 1830s the French imported about 40 million leeches a year for medical purposes and in the next decade England imported 6 million leeches a year from France alone Through the early decades of the century hundreds of millions of leeches were used by physicians throughout Europe 32 One typical course of medical treatment began the morning of 13 July 1824 A French sergeant was stabbed through the chest while engaged in single combat within minutes he fainted from loss of blood Arriving at the local hospital he was immediately bled twenty ounces 570 ml to prevent inflammation During the night he was bled another 24 ounces 680 ml Early the next morning the chief surgeon bled the patient another 10 ounces 285 ml during the next 14 hours he was bled five more times Medical attendants thus intentionally removed more than half of the patient s normal blood supply in addition to the initial blood loss which caused the sergeant to faint Bleedings continued over the next several days By 29 July the wound had become inflamed The physician applied 32 leeches to the most sensitive part of the wound Over the next three days there were more bleedings and a total of 40 more leeches The sergeant recovered and was discharged on 3 October His physician wrote that by the large quantity of blood lost amounting to 170 ounces nearly eleven pints 4 8 liters besides that drawn by the application of leeches perhaps another two pints 1 1 liters the life of the patient was preserved By nineteenth century standards thirteen pints of blood taken over the space of a month was a large but not an exceptional quantity The medical literature of the period contains many similar accounts some successful some not 33 Bloodletting was also popular in the young United States of America where Benjamin Rush a signatory of the Declaration of Independence saw the state of the arteries as the key to disease recommending levels of bloodletting that were high even for the time George Washington asked to be bled heavily after he developed a throat infection from weather exposure Within a ten hour period a total of 124 126 ounces 3 75 liters of blood was withdrawn prior to his death from a throat infection in 1799 34 nbsp Bloodsticks for use when bleeding animalsOne reason for the continued popularity of bloodletting and purging was that while anatomical knowledge surgical and diagnostic skills increased tremendously in Europe from the 17th century the key to curing disease remained elusive and the underlying belief was that it was better to give any treatment than nothing at all The psychological benefit of bloodletting to the patient a placebo effect may sometimes have outweighed the physiological problems it caused Bloodletting slowly lost favour during the 19th century after French physician Dr Pierre Louis conducted an experiment in which he studied the effect of bloodletting on pneumonia patients 35 A number of other ineffective or harmful treatments were available as placebos mesmerism various processes involving the new technology of electricity many potions tonics and elixirs Yet bloodletting persisted during the 19th century partly because it was readily available to people of any socioeconomic status 36 Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English write that the popularity of bloodletting and heroic medicine in general was because of a need to justify medical billing Traditional healing techniques had been mostly practiced by women within a non commercial family or village setting As male doctors suppressed these techniques they found it difficult to quantify various amounts of healing to charge for and difficult to convince patients to pay for it Because bloodletting seemed active and dramatic it helped convince patients the doctor had something tangible to sell 27 Controversy and use into the 20th century editBloodletting gradually declined in popularity over the course of the 19th century becoming rather uncommon in most places before its validity was thoroughly debated In the medical community of Edinburgh bloodletting was abandoned in practice before it was challenged in theory a contradiction highlighted by physician physiologist John Hughes Bennett 37 Authorities such as Austin Flint I Hiram Corson and William Osler became prominent supporters of bloodletting in the 1880s and onwards disputing Bennett s premise that bloodletting had fallen into disuse because it did not work These advocates framed bloodletting as an orthodox medical practice to be used in spite of its general unpopularity 38 Some physicians considered bloodletting useful for a more limited range of purposes such as to clear out infected or weakened blood or its ability to cause haemorrhages to cease as evidenced in a call for a fair trial for blood letting as a remedy in 1871 39 Some researchers used statistical methods for evaluating treatment effectiveness to discourage bloodletting 35 But at the same time publications by Philip Pye Smith and others defended bloodletting on scientific grounds 38 Bloodletting persisted into the 20th century and was recommended in the 1923 edition of the textbook The Principles and Practice of Medicine 40 The textbook was originally written by Sir William Osler and continued to be published in new editions under new authors following Osler s death in 1919 41 Phlebotomy editBloodletting is used today in the treatment of a few diseases including hemochromatosis and polycythemia 42 It is practiced by specifically trained practitioners in hospitals using modern techniques and is also known as a therapeutic phlebotomy In most cases phlebotomy now refers to the removal of small quantities of blood for diagnostic purposes However in the case of hemochromatosis bloodletting by venipuncture has become the mainstay treatment option 43 44 In the U S according to an academic article posted in the Journal of Infusion Nursing with data published in 2010 the primary use of phlebotomy was to take blood that would one day be reinfused back into a person 45 In alternative medicine editThough bloodletting as a general health measure has been shown to be pseudoscience it is still commonly indicated for a wide variety of conditions in the Ayurvedic Unani and traditional Chinese systems of alternative medicine 46 47 48 49 50 51 Unani is based on a form of humorism and so in that system bloodletting is used to correct supposed humoral imbalance See also editBloodstopping Blood donation Cupping therapy Hematology History of medicine Trepanation Humorism Fleams PanaceaReferences edit Bloodletting British Science Museum 2009 Archived from the original on 15 April 2009 Retrieved 12 July 2009 a b B Anderson Julie Emm Barnes and Enna Shackleton The Art of Medicine Over 2 000 Years of Images and Imagination Hardcover The Art of Medicine Over 2 000 Years of Images and Imagination Julie Anderson Emm Barnes Emma Shackleton ISBN 978 0226749365 The Ilex Press Limited 2013 Mestel Rosie 6 August 2001 Modern Bloodletting and Leeches Los Angeles Times Retrieved 12 July 2009 Why fair tests are needed jameslindlibrary org 2009 Archived from the original on 2 January 2007 Retrieved 8 January 2017 Phlebotomy book Bonnie K Davis 2001 ISBN 978 0 7668 2518 5 Retrieved 12 July 2009 The Basis of Therapeutic Phlebotomy James C Barton M D 2009 Archived from the original on 8 April 2011 Retrieved 12 July 2009 Therapeutic Phlebotomy Carteret General Hospital 2009 Archived from the original on 7 July 2009 Retrieved 12 July 2009 Williams William F 2013 Encyclopedia of Pseudoscience From Alien Abductions to Zone Therapy Routledge ISBN 978 1135955298 Papavramidou Niki Thomaidis Vassilios Fiska Aliki December 2011 The ancient surgical bloodletting method of arteriotomy Journal of Vascular Surgery 54 6 1842 44 doi 10 1016 j jvs 2011 05 100 PMID 21908152 Parapia Liakat Ali September 2008 History of bloodletting by phlebotomy British Journal of Haematology 143 4 490 95 doi 10 1111 j 1365 2141 2008 07361 x PMID 18783398 S2CID 9589933 Schneeberg NG December 2002 A twenty first century perspective on the ancient art of bloodletting Transactions amp Studies of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia 24 157 85 PMID 12800324 Stern Heinrich 1915 Theory and Practice of Bloodletting New York Rebman Company p 9 Retrieved 20 August 2018 Davis Audrey Appel Toby 1979 Bloodletting Instruments in the National Museum of History and Technology Washington DC Smithsonian Institution Press p 1 hdl 10088 2440 Kean Sam 2018 Sweating blood Distillations 4 2 5 Retrieved 20 August 2018 Mikhail Alan 2014 The Animal in Ottoman Egypt Oxford Oxford University Press p 169 ISBN 978 0190655228 Retrieved 20 August 2018 Degeneration of Medicine and the Grisly Art of Slicing Open Arms BBC 29 November 2002 Retrieved 12 July 2009 Encyclopedia of ancient Greece Nigel Guy Wilson 2006 ISBN 978 0 415 97334 2 Retrieved 12 July 2009 Coutinho Elsimar M 1999 Is Menstruation Obsolete Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 513021 9 Western medical thought from antiquity to the Middle Ages Mirko D Grmek Bernardino Fantini Antony Shugaar Cambridge Ma Harvard University Press 1998 ISBN 0 674 40355 X OCLC 39257545 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link The Western medical tradition 800 B C 1800 A D Lawrence I Conrad Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine Cambridge Eng Cambridge University Press 1995 ISBN 0 521 38135 5 OCLC 31077045 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint others link a b Conrad Lawrence I 1995 The Western Medical Tradition 800 B C 1800 A D Cambridge Eng Cambridge UP ISBN 0 521 38135 5 a b c d Miton Helena Claidiere Nicolas Mercier Hugo August 2015 Universal cognitive mechanisms explain the cultural success of bloodletting Evolution and Human Behavior 36 4 303 312 doi 10 1016 j evolhumbehav 2015 01 003 Fortuine R 1985 Lancets of stone traditional methods of surgery among the Alaska natives Arctic Anthropology 22 1 23 45 ISSN 0066 6939 PMID 11616622 Murdock George P Wilson Suzanne F Frederick Violetta October 1978 World Distribution of Theories of Illness Ethnology 17 4 449 doi 10 2307 3773194 ISSN 0014 1828 JSTOR 3773194 Schmitt Rudiger 2019 Edward Evan Evans Pritchard Witchcraft Oracles and Magic among the Azande 1937 Schlusselwerke der Religionssoziologie Wiesbaden Springer Fachmedien Wiesbaden pp 167 171 doi 10 1007 978 3 658 15250 5 20 ISBN 978 3 658 15249 9 S2CID 201473885 retrieved 17 July 2023 Talmud b Shabbat 129b a b Ehrenreich Barbara English Deirdre 2005 For her Own Good Anchor Books pp 49 52 ISBN 1400078008 Clutterbuck Henry 1838 Dr Clutterbuck s Lectures On Bloodletting Lecture 1 The London Medical Gazette Rangachari P K 1997 Evidence based medicine old French wine with a new Canadian label J R Soc Med 90 5 280 84 doi 10 1177 014107689709000516 PMC 1296268 PMID 9204029 Carter 2005 p 6 Lydia Kang MD amp Nate Pederson Quackery A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything Bleed Yourself to Bliss Workman Publishing Company 2017 Carter 2005 p 7 During the Yellow Fever this practice was also used by Dr Rush Read the book Fever 1793 for more info of look up Yellow Fever or Dr Ben Rush Delpech M 1825 Case of a Wound of the Right Carotid Artery Lancet 6 73 210 13 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 02 83521 8 quoted in Carter 2005 7 8 The Permanente Journal Volume 8 No 2 The asphyxiating and exsanguinating death of president george washington Archived 22 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine p 79 Spring 2004 retrieved on 11 November 2012 a b Greenstone Gerry January February 2010 The history of bloodletting British Columbia Medical Journal 52 1 Retrieved 17 February 2017 Upshaw John 2000 The medicinal leech Past and present The American Surgeon 66 3 313 14 doi 10 1177 000313480006600318 PMID 10759207 S2CID 2028394 Warner John Harley July 1980 Therapeutic explanation and the Edinburgh bloodletting controversy Two perspectives on the medical meaning of science in the mid nineteenth century Medical History 24 3 241 58 doi 10 1017 s0025727300040308 PMC 1082653 PMID 6997652 a b Anders Eli Osterweil 2016 A Plea for the Lancet Bloodletting Therapeutic Epistemology and Professional Identity in Late Nineteenth century American Medicine Social History of Medicine 29 4 781 801 doi 10 1093 shm hkw026 Arguing that it was the physician s obligation to be active and to intervene when necessary bloodletting proponents explicitly contrasted themselves with advocates of expectant treatment whom they portrayed as passive timid and unwilling to do what was necessary to save their patients Bloodletting British Medical Journal 1 533 283 91 18 March 1871 doi 10 1136 bmj 1 533 283 PMC 2260507 Bloodletting UCLA Library Biomedical Library History and Special Collections for the Sciences 12 January 2012 Archived from the original on 13 March 2012 Retrieved 5 January 2012 Ryan Terence J 2015 Osler and his teaching relevant today Postgraduate Medical Journal 91 1080 540 41 doi 10 1136 postgradmedj 2015 133677 PMID 26404786 S2CID 41284621 Tuttle Kelly 2012 Let it bleed Science History Magazine 30 2 17 Retrieved 20 August 2018 Merryweather Clarke Alison T Worwood Mark Parkinson Lisa Mattock Chris Pointon Jennifer J Shearman Jeremy D Robson Kathryn J H May 1998 The effect of HFE mutations on serum ferritin and transferrin saturation in the Jersey population British Journal of Haematology 101 2 369 73 doi 10 1046 j 1365 2141 1998 00736 x PMID 9609537 S2CID 19683918 Powell Lawrie W Seckington Rebecca C Deugnier Yves 2016 Haemochromatosis The Lancet 388 10045 706 16 doi 10 1016 s0140 6736 15 01315 x PMID 26975792 S2CID 208791894 Cook Lynda S 2010 Therapeutic Phlebotomy Journal of Infusion Nursing 33 2 81 88 doi 10 1097 nan 0b013e3181d00010 PMID 20228645 Lone AH Ahmad T Anwar M Habib S Sofi G Imam H 2011 Leech therapy a holistic approach of treatment in unani greeko arab medicine Anc Sci Life 31 1 31 35 PMC 3377041 PMID 22736888 Ayurveda Panchakarma Archived 30 March 2013 at the Wayback Machine holistic online com Ayurveda Archived 22 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Cancer org Bleeding Peripheral Points An Acupuncture Technique Treating Herpes Zoster Shingles with Bloodletting Therapy Acupuncture and Chinese Medicine Archived 2013 06 04 at the Wayback Machine Chen PD Chen GZ Xu YX 2011 Study strategies for bloodletting therapy in treatment of acute soft tissue injuries Zhong Xi Yi Jie He Xue Bao 9 3 237 41 doi 10 3736 jcim20110302 PMID 21419074 Books cited editCarter K Codell Barbara R Carter 2005 Childbed fever A scientific biography of Ignaz Semmelweis Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 1 4128 0467 7 Carter K Codell 2012 The Decline of Therapeutic Bloodletting and the Collapse of Traditional Medicine New Brunswick amp London Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 1 4128 4604 2 Kang Lydia Nate Pederson 2017 Quackery A Brief History of the Worst Ways to Cure Everything Workman Publishing Company ISBN missing Further reading editMcGrew Roderick Encyclopedia of Medical History 1985 brief history pp 32 34 ISBN missing External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bloodletting The History and Progression of Bloodletting Medical Antiques Scarification and Bleeding Pictures of antique bloodletting instruments Archived 2 May 2012 at the Wayback Machine PBS s Red Gold The Story of Blood Huge collection of antique bloodletting instruments Breathing a Vein Archived 14 September 2015 at the Wayback Machine phisick com 14 Nov 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bloodletting amp oldid 1198578058, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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