The electric scalpel
Earlier this week I spent a day in an operating theatre watching heart surgery. It was one of the most […]
I began writing this blog while researching my first book The Matter of the Heart, a popular history of heart surgery, which was published by Bodley Head in June 2017. I spent many hours reading early medical journals and found that they were full of extraordinary and often scarcely believable stories, which though irrelevant to the book seemed too good to waste. In my spare time I collected some of the most quirky, bizarre or surprising cases I encountered and published them online for others to enjoy.
The blog quickly picked up a following, and its stories were featured on other websites including Listverse and BBC Future. Eventually a selection of my favourite cases became the basis for my second book The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth.
I am no longer adding new stories to the several hundred already published – but they are collected here for you to enjoy. A complete list can be found here.
Earlier this week I spent a day in an operating theatre watching heart surgery. It was one of the most […]
Until the early twentieth century, medicine had little to say about heart disease. Although the best specialists of the nineteenth
The medical experiments of earlier centuries often look odd to the modern eye. So odd, in fact, that it’s easy
A post last week referred to Andrew Duncan, founder of the Medical and Philosophical Commentaries, the first regular medical journal
Those who think that morbid obesity is a uniquely modern phenomenon should read William Wadd’s ‘Comments on Corpulency’, published over
A remarkable recovery from a goring by a bull was recorded in 1774 in the pages of the Medical and
An angry Dr Tuson from Fitzrovia writes to the London Medical Journal in 1831. He begins with an apology: Though I
An article from an 1831 edition of the London Medical Gazette begins unpromisingly: Enlargement of the testes, scrotal tumors, and hydrocele,
In June 1842 the Provincial Medical Journal devoted no less than ten pages to a long essay by the physician
The Scottish surgeon James Syme (1799-1870) has been described as the boldest and most original operator of the end of