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William Stewart Halsted

William Stewart Halsted
Born September 23, 1852
New York City
Died September 7, 1922 (aged 69)
Nationality United States
Fields Medicine
Institutions Johns Hopkins Hospital

William Stewart Halsted (September 23, 1852September 7, 1922) was an American surgeon.

Contents

[edit] Early life and education

William S. Halsted was born on 1852 in New York City. His mother was Mary Louisa Haines and his father William Mills Halsted, Jr. The family was relatively well-to-do, with a nice house on Fifth Avenue, thanks to the father's successful business, Halsted, Haines and Company. Halsted was educated at home by tutors until the age of ten, when he was sent to boarding school in Monson, Massachusetts. He didn't like his new school and even ran away at one point. He was then sent to Phillips Academy in Andover, Massachusetts, where he graduated in 1869.

He entered Yale College in 1870. At Yale, Halsted excelled in athletics. He was captain of the football team, played baseball and rowed crew. He even scored the first touch-down in the Yale-Eton football game, the first football game played with 11 players on each side. Halsted was, however, a poor student. Indeed, it is said that there is no record of his ever checking out a book from the Yale library.

Halsted entered Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons in New York in 1874. He excelled in medical school and after three years, in 1877, he graduated at or near the top of his class.

[edit] Medical career

After graduation, Halsted joined the New York Hospital as house physician, where he introduced the hospital chart which tracks the patient's temperature, pulse and respiration. It was at New York Hospital that Halsted met his closest friend, the pathologist William H. Welch.

Halsted then went to Europe to observe the great European surgeons and scientists, including Chiari, Zuckerkandl, Schneck, Billroth, Braun, Wölfler, Mikulicz, Kölliker, Stoehr, von Bergmann, Volkmann, Schede, and Esmarch. He returned to New York in 1880 and for the next six years lead an extraordinarily vigorous and energetic life. He operated at multiple hospitals, including Roosevelt Hospital, the College of Physicians and Surgeons, Charity Hospital, Emigrant Hospital, Bellevue Hospital and Chambers Street Hospital. He was an extremely popular, inspiring and charismatic teacher. As a surgeon he was characterized as bold, daring, original and indefatigable. In 1882 he performed one of the first gallbladder surgeries in the United States (a cholecystotomy performed on his mother on the kitchen table at 2 A.M.!). He also performed one of the first blood transfusions in the United States. He had been called to see his sister after she had given birth. He found her moribund from blood loss, and in a bold move withdrew his own blood, transfused his blood into his sister, and then operated on her to save her life. This was long before the discovery of blood types.

Halsted's career and life forever changed on October 11, 1884. He read a report, from Dr. Carl Koller, describing the anesthetic power of cocaine when it is instilled into the eye. Halsted realized that cocaine may be a great local anesthetic, the solution to a terrible problem in the early days of surgery. Having learned the scientific method when he was in Europe, Halsted, together with his students and fellow physicians, began to experiment with cocaine. They injected each other's nerves and showed that cocaine when injected into a nerve can produce safe and effective local anesthesia. They all became addicted, and all died prematurely except for Halsted and his colleague Dr. Richard Hall.[citation needed] Halsted was sent to Butler Sanatorium in Providence, Rhode Island. There they attempted to cure him by converting his addiction from cocaine to morphine. After being discharged from Butler in 1886, Halsted moved to Baltimore, Maryland to join his friend William Welch at the soon-to-be-opened Johns Hopkins Hospital. At Johns Hopkins, Halsted was a fundamentally changed man. Gone was the gregarious risk-taker. At Johns Hopkins he was slow, methodical, and careful. Though few knew it, he remained a morphine addict until his death in 1922.

Halsted was named the first chief of the Department of Surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital when it opened in May 1889. He was named surgeon-in-chief in 1890 and promoted to professor of surgery in 1892. At Johns Hopkins, Halsted was credited with starting the first formal surgical residency training program in the United States.

Halsted’s surgical residency program consisted of an internship (the length was left undefined and individuals advanced once Halsted believed they were ready for the next level of training). Internship was followed by six years as an assistant resident and then two years as house surgeon. Halsted’s first resident was Frederick J. Brockway, who started in May 1889 but dropped out of the program in October 1890 to teach anatomy. Halsted went on to train many of the academic surgeons of the time including Harvey Cushing and Walter Dandy.

He is also known for many other medical and surgical achievements. As one of the first proponents of hemostasis and investigators of wound healing, Halsted pioneered modern surgical principles of control of bleeding, accurate anatomical dissection, complete sterility, exact approximation of tissue in wound closures without excessive tightness, and gentle handling of tissues. In short, he is the father of "safe" surgery. The first radical mastectomy for breast cancer was performed by Halsted (before this time, such a diagnosis was a virtual death sentence). Other achievements included the introduction of the surgical glove and advances in thyroid, biliary tree, hernia, intestinal and arterial aneurysm surgeries.

Though raised a Presbyterian, Halsted was an agnostic by adulthood.[1][2]

In 1890, Halsted married Caroline Hampton, the niece of famed Confederate general Wade Hampton III. They purchased the High Hampton mountain retreat in North Carolina from Caroline's three aunts. There, Halsted raised dahlias and pursued his hobby of astronomy.[3]

[edit] Timeline

Achievements, Personal events, Historical background.

1846

1852

1867

1870

1874

1876

  • October - Begins internship at Bellevue Hospital despite having completed only two years of medical school.

1878

  • July to October - Serves as house physician at New York Hospital
  • November - Begins training in Vienna under Theodor Billroth

1879

1880

  • Returns to New York

1880-1886

1881

  • First emergency blood transfusion, performed on sister
    • Upon discovering his sister nearly dead from a postpartum hemorrhage, Halsted boldly draws his own blood and injects it into his sister, saving her life.
    • Halsted implies knowledge of blood rejection possibility.
  • Performs one of first operations for gallstones in U.S., performed on mother
    • Visiting his mother in Albany, he finds her exhibiting Charcot's triad (fever, right upper quadrant pain, jaundice).

1882

1883-1886

  • Papers describe blood transfusions, autotransfusions, saline infusions
    • Among the first to suggest the replacement of blood during surgery as well as autotransfusion and intravenous saline for use in shock, although these ideas forgotten for dozens of years before becoming the standard of care.

1884

1885

    • He only publishes one paper on the topic, in the New York Medical Journal
      • Halstead's writing is indubitably stained by the evidence of intoxication.

1886

  • Attempts detoxification from cocaine
    • Pupil Harvey Cushing never suspects the cocaine habit.
    • This period between fighting cocaine addiction and beginning Johns Hopkins marks an abrupt personality change for Halsted from bold and vivacious extrovert to diffident, anti-social introvert.
    • In later years, Halsted becomes addicted to morphine, also unsuspected by nearly everyone. This was revealed in a book by William Osler: The Inner History of Johns Hopkins Hospital.

1888

1889

1890

  • Is appointed first Chief of Surgery at Johns Hopkins Hospital
  • June 4 - Marries Caroline Hampton, niece of General Wade Hampton of South Carolina.
    • The married couple are described as opposites in appearance.
      • A dandy garbed in European tailored suits and Parisian cobbled boots, Halsted is known to dress impeccably, even sending his dress shirts yearly to Paris to be laundered.
      • Mrs. Halsted's style is described as austere.
    • Halsted and wife never had children, but they did have Dachshunds, including Sisley (or Sisly,) Fritz, Nip and Tuck. In 1915, he wrote that Nip had died just a few weeks after Sisly (MacCallum, 1930, p 120).
    • They live separately in a three-story brick home in Baltimore: Halsted on the second floor, Caroline and canines on the third.
    • Each summer they spend one month at High Hampton, Caroline's 2000-acre (8 km²) North Carolina family estate.

1892

  • Performs first successful subclavian artery ligation

1893

  • *First Johns Hopkins medical students, 15 men and 3 women, begin training
    • This is due to the efforts of four young Baltimoreans—all women—who raised the money needed to open the school only on the condition that women be granted equal opportunity admission.
    • These women were university trustees' daughters: M. Carey Thomas, Mary Elizabeth Garrett, Mary Gwinn, and Elizabeth King.
    • Garrett contributed an additional amount with additional conditions attached: these established the prerequisites for medical school admission.

1896

1898

1901

1909

1918

  • Halsted elected president of the Maryland Medical Chirugical Society.

1919

  • Halsted's gall-bladder is removed by former student Richard Follis

1920

  • Publishes The Operative Story of Goiter

1922

[edit] Eponyms

  • Halsted's law - Transplanted tissue will grow only if there is a lack of that tissue in the host.
  • Halsted's operation I - Operation for inguinal hernia.
  • Halsted's operation II - Radical mastectomy for cancer of the breast.
  • Halsted's sign - A sign for carcinoma of the breast.
  • Halsted's suture - A mattress suture for wounds that produced less scarring.
  • Halsted mosquito forceps - A variant of hemostat.

[edit] Trivia

[edit] References

[edit] Notes




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