Hanigan William C
Department of Neurosurgery, University of Illinois College of Medicine at Peoria, Peoria, Illinois 61656, USA. joanna.gass2osfhealthcare.org
Neurosurgery. 2003 Sep;53(3):713-21; discussion 721-2. doi: 10.1227/01.neu.0000079626.37622.6a.
In 1917, the Sugeon General of the United States Army, William Gorgas, learned that almost 15% of the casualties on the Western Front sustained intracranial injuries. Soon after the United States declared war in April 1917, the Council of National Defense established a General Medical Board and attached a brain surgery subsection to its Committee of Ophthalmology. Postcards were sent to experts around the country, asking for the names of individuals who had specialty training or practice in brain surgery. In August, Gorgas assumed control of this subsection and created a Division of Surgery of the Head in the American Army Medical Department, with additional sections for plastic surgery, ophthalmology, and otolaryngology. He needed almost 300 brain surgeons; he received 50 names. As Harvey Cushing, Gilbert Horrax, and others went to France, neurosurgeons at home trained student officers. Schools were established in Philadelphia (Charles Frazier), Chicago (Dean Lewis), New York City (Charles Elsberg), St. Louis (Ernest Sachs), and Camp Greenleaf in Georgia (Claude Coleman), with 10-week intensive courses for selected candidates. Basic science and x-ray classes and operative clinics addressed most aspects of neurosurgical care. An army manual outlined clinical diagnoses and surgical techniques. Lewis H. Weed established a laboratory at Johns Hopkins Hospital, staffed by volunteers such as K.D. Blackfan and W.E. Dandy, to investigate infections of the central nervous system. By the time of the armistice, Gorgas had his complement of brain surgeons. The newly trained brain surgeons and their mentors gradually made their way to the Western Front during the summer of 1918. Plans for a neurosurgical school in France were quickly discarded as the American Army Medical Department changed the specialized assignments to front-line general surgical care. Some of the 190 brain surgeons in the American Expeditionary Forces, notably Gilbert Horrax, Charles E. Dowman, and Charles Neuhoff, treated head injuries exclusively, whereas others, such as Eustace Semmes and Howard Naffziger, treated all battle casualties depending on the tactical circumstances. The rational but naive recommendations for coordinated care made by Cushing, as senior consultant in neurosurgery, were hindered by the confusion of the St. Mihiel and Meuse-Argonne offensives and the chaos of war. Only three 70-day brain surgeons participated in the postwar development of the specialty. However, 9 of 10 original members of the Neurosurgical Club, which was established 18 months after the armistice, taught in American Army Medical Department courses or served on the Western Front. The schools and their teachers emphasized a growing recognition of neurosurgical expertise in the early 20th century.
1917年,美国陆军军医局局长威廉·戈尔加斯得知,西线战场上近15%的伤亡人员遭受了颅内损伤。1917年4月美国宣战后不久,国防委员会设立了一个普通医学委员会,并在其眼科委员会下设了一个脑外科分组。明信片被寄往全国各地的专家,询问那些在脑外科方面接受过专业培训或有实践经验的人员的姓名。8月,戈尔加斯接管了这个分组,并在美国陆军医务部设立了一个头部外科分部,另外还设有整形、眼科和耳鼻喉科科室。他需要近300名脑外科医生;他收到了50个名字。随着哈维·库欣、吉尔伯特·霍拉克斯等人前往法国,国内的神经外科医生培训学生军官。在费城(查尔斯·弗雷泽)、芝加哥(迪恩·刘易斯)、纽约市(查尔斯·埃尔斯伯格)、圣路易斯(欧内斯特·萨克斯)以及佐治亚州的格林利夫营地(克劳德·科尔曼)开设了学校,为选定的候选人提供为期10周的强化课程。基础科学、X射线课程和手术临床课程涵盖了神经外科护理的大部分方面。一本陆军手册概述了临床诊断和手术技术。刘易斯·H·威德在约翰·霍普金斯医院设立了一个实验室,由K.D.布莱克范和W.E.丹迪等志愿者组成,以研究中枢神经系统感染。到停战之时,戈尔加斯已经有了他所需的脑外科医生。新培训的脑外科医生及其导师在1918年夏天逐渐前往西线战场。随着美国陆军医务部将专门任务改为一线普通外科护理,在法国设立神经外科学校的计划很快被放弃。美国远征军的190名脑外科医生中,一些人,尤其是吉尔伯特·霍拉克斯、查尔斯·E·道曼和查尔斯·诺伊霍夫,专门治疗头部损伤,而其他人,如尤斯塔斯·塞姆斯和霍华德·纳夫齐格,则根据战术情况治疗所有战斗伤员。作为神经外科高级顾问,库欣提出的关于协调护理的合理但天真的建议,因圣米耶勒和默兹 - 阿贡攻势的混乱以及战争的无序而受阻。只有三名有70天经验的脑外科医生参与了战后该专业的发展。然而,停战18个月后成立的神经外科俱乐部的10名创始成员中有9人在美国陆军医务部的课程中授课或在西线服役。这些学校及其教师强调了20世纪初对神经外科专业知识认识的不断提高。