• World Neurosurg · Oct 2023

    Review

    How War Has Shaped Neurosurgery.

    • Gersham J Rainone, Rebecca Zelmanovich, Dimitri Laurent, and Brandon Lucke-Wold.
    • Department of Neurosurgery, University of South Florida, Tampa, Florida, USA. Electronic address: gersham@usf.edu.
    • World Neurosurg. 2023 Oct 1; 178: 136144136-144.

    AbstractMany strides have been made in neurosurgery during times of war, helping to improve the outcomes of patients in dire circumstances. World War I introduced the concepts of early operation for trauma, forward-operating hospitals, and galeal sutures as well as techniques for careful debridement. It laid the groundwork for neurosurgery to become a specialty within medicine as well. World War II brought about the use of expedited medical evacuation, mobile neurosurgical units, improved resuscitation strategies, cranioplasty, and early laminectomy with decompression. The Korean and Vietnam Wars built on concepts from World Wars I and II, helping to establish the importance of watertight dural closure, external drainage systems after cranial trauma, multidisciplinary care, and infection prevention strategies. In the post-Vietnam period, we have seen significant technological advances allowing neurosurgeons to move farther ahead than most throughout history could have imagined. The significance of secondary brain injury, vascular injury, and the underlying pathophysiology of traumatic insults has been elucidated over the years since the Vietnam War, allowing for great advances in the care of our patients. Each major war throughout history has contributed greatly to the specialty of neurosurgery, each with its own innovations culminating in guidelines, strategies, and standards of practice that allow us to deliver the highest standard of care to our patients.Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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