This three-page document records a significant part that Ether played at the for North Staffs Infirmary at Etruria before which those requiring amputations went through the most agonising surgery with only alcohol as a way of lessening the pain as no anaesthetic had been discovered. Whilst searching the pages of the Staffordshire Advertiser for a totally different subject I came across a most interesting article relating to the first use of ether vapour as an anaesthetic for performing pain free operations as early as 1846 at what was the first North Staffs Infirmary at Etruria before the new one was built in Hartshill in1866.
Dr. Crawford Williamson Long, a physician and pharmacist attended one of the early examples of its use and observed the effects of ether and noticed that people who fell or got into fist fights did not feel any pain. Before this In 1842 Long started using ether for surgeries where he successfully removed a tumour from a patient’s neck using ether as an anaesthesia, and the patient felt little pain. However, Long did not publish his results for a further seven years, because he wanted to do further testing. Unfortunately, in those seven years, another person got the credit for discovering ether anaesthesia, and when Long’s discoveries were finally published, they were dismissed.
This story tells how it was a dentist who observed a fellow dentist use nitrous oxide, or “laughing gas,” as aesthetic for a medical demonstration. Unfortunately, the patient awoke while under the aesthetic and he was booed off the stage. After Morton observed this, he consulted a fellow a chemist who suggested using sulfuric ether as anaesthesia for surgery.
Things moved on quickly from this first trial to be successful, changing the previous method of amputation with all its complications of infections and sudden death as a result of shock. Many successful operations and their successes were published in the national press.
It makes fascinating and absorbing reading and for the student at whatever level it is a worthy introduction to the subject.
For those studying medicine this is a factual story of its very first recorded use at Etruria in Stoke-on-Trent.

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