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Ancient Greece/Ancient Roman medicine

Ancient Greece/Ancient Roman medicine. By: Johnny Biondo and Shekinah Hollingsworth. Key people. Arcagathus was the first doctor to come to ancient Rome. He was an excellent wound surgeon, but he used the knife and cautery very vigorously, earning the name “executioner”.

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Ancient Greece/Ancient Roman medicine

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  1. Ancient Greece/Ancient Roman medicine By: Johnny Biondo and Shekinah Hollingsworth

  2. Key people • Arcagathus was the first doctor to come to ancient Rome. He was an excellent wound surgeon, but he used the knife and cautery very vigorously, earning the name “executioner”. • Hippocrates conducted studies on order to prove that disease was a natural cause, and to show that a physician was there to help the body’s natural resistance against disease. • The Iatros were a group of Greek physicians who brought the Greek medical philosophies to Rome.

  3. Tools • The Romans used many surgical tools made from bronze, some include probes, vaginal spectrum, and the rectal spectrum. • They also had the basic surgical tools such as scalpels and forceps.

  4. Medical Techniques-Remedies • Herbal remedies were very common for treating minor ailments such as nausea, joint pain, and upset stomach. • They would often times rely on religious rituals to heal the sickly. • They would submerge their medical tools in boiling water to sterilize them. • Opium was used to treat basic pain. • They would drain one of the humors believed to be an excess to help cure the disease.

  5. Cultural Factors Influencing Medical Philosophies • Religious rituals were heavily influenced on medical practices. • Certain herbs were more medically beneficial than others. • Some Greeks believed that diseases in specific people were the will of the Gods.

  6. Key Philosophies • Very ritualistic. • Dogmatists were the first to emphasize the study of anatomy. • Empiricists rejected the idea that a physician could detect the unknown functional origins of the body. • Methodists rejected all generalities in medical science, they believed that each individual had a different case. • Pneumatists were an offshoot of the Dogmatists and they believed that the (Pneuma) soul was primary in the source of life. • They believed “The Four Humors” which were blood, mucus, black bile, and yellow bile, when these substances were imbalanced, disease occurred.

  7. Health Problems In The Era • Food contamination was an overwhelming problem in Rome, so intestinal parasites were most common. • Lots of sanitation issues regarding the disposal of human waste. • Diseases such as tuberculosis, typhoid fever, and malaria were very common in Rome.

  8. Preventative Methods • The Romans had bath houses, which they believed to help keep them clean, but in reality it help spread diseases. • They would pray to the Gods to keep good health.

  9. The end!

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