From the Department of Anesthesiology, Geneva University Hospitals, Geneva, Switzerland.
Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Cliniques universitaires Saint-Luc, Université catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.
Anesth Analg. 2022 Jan 1;134(1):216-224. doi: 10.1213/ANE.0000000000005745.
At the outbreak of World War II (WWII), anesthesiology was struggling to establish itself as a medical specialty. The battlefield abruptly exposed this young specialty to the formidable challenge of mass casualties, with an urgent need to provide proper fluid resuscitation, airway management, mechanical ventilation, and analgesia to thousands. But while Europe was suffering under the Nazi boot, anesthesia was preparing to rise to the challenge posed by the impending war. While war brings death and destruction, it also opens the way to medical advances. The aim of this study is to measure the evolution of anesthesia owing to WWII. We conducted a retrospective observational bibliometric study involving a quantitative and statistical analysis of publications. The following 7 journals were selected to cover European and North American anesthesia-related publications: Anesthesia & Analgesia, the British Journal of Anaesthesia, Anesthesiology, Schmerz-Narkose-Anaesthesie, Surgery, La Presse Médicale, and The Military Surgeon (later Military Medicine). Attention was focused on journal volumes published between 1920 and 1965. After reviewing the literature, we selected 12 keywords representing important advances in anesthesiology since 1920: "anesthesia," "balanced anesthesia," "barbiturates," "d-tubocurarine," "endotracheal intubation," "ether," "lidocaine," "morphine," "spinal anesthesia," "thiopental," "transfusion," and "trichloroethylene." Titles of original articles from all selected journals editions between 1920 and 1965 were screened for the occurrence of 1 of the 12 keywords. A total of 26,132 original article titles were screened for the occurrence of the keywords. A total of 1815 keywords were found. Whereas Anesthesia & Analgesia had the highest keyword occurrence (493 citations), Schmerz-Narkose-Anaesthesie had the lowest (38 citations). The number of publications of the 12 keywords was significantly higher in the postwar than in the prewar period (65% and 35%, respectively; P < .001). Not surprisingly, the anesthesiology journals have a higher occurrence of keywords than those journals covering other specialties. The overall occurrence of keywords also showed peaks during other major conflicts, namely the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939), the Korean War (1950-1953), and the Vietnam War (1955-1975). For the first time, this study demonstrates statistically the impact of WWII on the progress of anesthesiology. It also offers an objective record of the chronology of the major advances in anesthesiology before and after the conflict. While the war arguably helped to enhance anesthesiology as a specialty, in return anesthesiology helped to heal the wounds of war.
在第二次世界大战(WWII)爆发时,麻醉学正在努力确立自己作为一门医学专业的地位。战场上突然使这个年轻的专业面临着大量伤员的严峻挑战,迫切需要为数以千计的人提供适当的液体复苏、气道管理、机械通气和镇痛。但是,当欧洲在纳粹的统治下受苦受难时,麻醉学正准备迎接即将到来的战争所带来的挑战。战争带来死亡和破坏,但也为医学进步开辟了道路。本研究旨在衡量由于二战而导致的麻醉学的演变。我们进行了一项回顾性观察性文献计量研究,对出版物进行了定量和统计分析。选择了以下 7 种期刊来涵盖欧洲和北美的麻醉相关出版物:《麻醉与镇痛》、《英国麻醉杂志》、《麻醉学》、《疼痛-麻醉-麻醉》、《外科》、《医学新闻》和《军事外科医生》(后来的《军事医学》)。重点关注 1920 年至 1965 年期间出版的期刊卷。在回顾文献后,我们选择了 12 个自 1920 年以来代表麻醉学重要进展的关键词:“麻醉”、“平衡麻醉”、“巴比妥类药物”、“d-筒箭毒碱”、“气管内插管”、“乙醚”、“利多卡因”、“吗啡”、“脊髓麻醉”、“硫喷妥钠”、“输血”和“三氯乙烯”。筛选了 1920 年至 1965 年期间所有选定期刊版本的原始文章标题,以查找 12 个关键词中的 1 个关键词的出现情况。共筛选了 26132 篇原始文章标题,发现了 1815 个关键词。虽然《麻醉与镇痛》的关键词出现频率最高(493 次引用),但《疼痛-麻醉-麻醉》的关键词出现频率最低(38 次引用)。12 个关键词的出版物数量在后战后时期明显高于战前时期(分别为 65%和 35%;P<0.001)。毫不奇怪,麻醉学期刊的关键词出现频率高于涵盖其他专业的期刊。在其他重大冲突期间,包括西班牙内战(1936-1939 年)、朝鲜战争(1950-1953 年)和越南战争(1955-1975 年),关键词的总体出现也出现了高峰。首次,这项研究从统计学上证明了第二次世界大战对麻醉学发展的影响。它还提供了冲突前后麻醉学主要进展的客观记录。尽管战争可以说是有助于增强麻醉学作为一门专业,但反过来,麻醉学也有助于治愈战争的创伤。