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Review Historical Article
Trepanation practices in Asclepieia: systematizing a neurosurgerical innovation.
- Gregory Tsoucalas, Antonis A Kousoulis, Theodoros Mariolis-Sapsakos, and Markos Sgantzos.
- History of Medicine Department, Faculty of Medicine, University of Thessaly, Larissa, Greece. Electronic address: gregorytsoucalas@yahoo.gr.
- World Neurosurg. 2017 Jul 1; 103: 501-503.
BackgroundAs ancient Greeks started looking for deities that could fulfill the pragmatic needs of common people, local heroes started being mythologized and worshipped through cults.MethodsThe most widespread such example was Asclepius, possibly a skilled war surgeon who followed military expeditions to Colchis and Troy. Our study investigates the possibility of the early neurosurgery to have been started inside Asclepieia by Asclepius and his followers.ResultsAsclepius was worshipped at religious temples called Asclepieia where certain specific medical and surgical techniques were followed. The most advanced technique was skull trepanation, which was most likely done as an acute operation to release intracranial pressure. The contemporary Hippocratic corpus provided extensive descriptions of the technique, and archaeologic evidence has shown that many patients survived the operation.ConclusionsDecompressive craniectomy techniques have been practiced for millennia but it is possible that they were first systematized as a neurosurgical innovation through the Ancient Greek religious cult followed in Asclepieia.Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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