1 / 15

Microbiology – Alcamo Origins of Aseptic Technique

Microbiology – Alcamo Origins of Aseptic Technique. The original interest in bacteria was disease. Ancient Techniques. Ancient records show that antiseptics date far back into history: the ancient Chinese, Persians, and Egyptians had methods for water sanitation and antisepsis for wounds

mandar
Download Presentation

Microbiology – Alcamo Origins of Aseptic Technique

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Microbiology – AlcamoOrigins of Aseptic Technique The original interest in bacteria was disease.

  2. Ancient Techniques • Ancient records show that antiseptics date far back into history: • the ancient Chinese, Persians, and Egyptians had methods for water sanitation and antisepsis for wounds • the ancient Greeks and Romans used silver vessels to store fresh liquids and wine

  3. Later Techniques • Pioneers of the American West put silver and copper coins in drinking water to keep it fresh and prevent algae • Settlers in the Australian outback put silverware in drinking water for the same purpose

  4. Later Techniques • Mercuric chloride was used to prevent sepsis in wounds by Arabian physicians in the Middle Ages • Hypochlorite and iodine were introduced as a treatment for open wounds in 1825 and 1839, respectively

  5. Before 1850 • 150 years ago it was difficult to distinguish between butcher and surgeon • Often the butcher was better • Surgeons advertised their experience by wearing their “surgical apron” over their street clothes. • Massive infections: post operative and post partum

  6. civil war medicine

  7. Louis Pasteur • 1861 Louis Pasteur proved that microorganisms caused spoilage and could be transported via the air • He placed broth in flasks with long S-shaped necks, then boiled the broth and observed that no microorganisms grew in the flasks • These experiments were the basis for the development of aseptic techniques 

  8. Louis Pasteur • Pasteur showed that heat could kill microorganisms • This process was later named pasteurization • We still do this with our dairy products

  9. Ignaz Semmelweis • Used knowledge gained from Louis Pasteur • He reduced the number of postpartum infections (sepsis) in the wards of Vienna’s hospitals • He did this by urging doctors to wash their hands between patients.

  10. Semmelweis Video

  11. Joseph Lister • By the mid-nineteenth century, post-operative sepsis infection accounted for the death of almost half the patients who underwent major surgery • Later in the 1860’s, an English surgeon named Joseph Lister also heard about Pasteur’s work

  12. Joseph Lister • He said sepsis was an infectious disease caused by bacteria • It was spread due to contaminated hands, instruments, articles • He made nurses, medical students, and midwives wash hands in a chlorine solution and insisted on clean sheets and garments for every patient

  13. Instituted “Aseptic Techniques” in operating rooms: boil instruments, clean hands, no more “aprons” or street clothes, clean operating room (no more “theatre”) • Lister: 1st antiseptic carbolic acid aerosol, and on wound, also rubber gloves

  14. Lister Video

  15. Antiseptics • Antiseptics are substances that kill and prevent the growth of disease-causing organisms. • They areusually used on external wounds. • Surgeons also use antiseptics to scrub their hands and prepare thepatient's skin before an operation. 

More Related