University Paris East, Creteil Cedex, France.
Int Orthop. 2022 Jul;46(7):1657-1666. doi: 10.1007/s00264-022-05397-y. Epub 2022 Apr 22.
The problems posed by trauma, fractures, and dislocations have not changed in human history. The traumas of prehistoric persons were similar to those observed by Imhotep, Hippocrates, and Galen or, more recently, by Ambroise Paré, Watson Jones, and Böhler. And the current road traumas are probably no more severe than those caused by mammoths, the construction of the pyramids, or middle age wars. Diagnostic methods have evolved, and the advent of radiography has revolutionized the diagnosis of traumatology. Before discovering radiography, another physical phenomenon made it possible to help in the diagnosis of fractures. This physical phenomenon is acoustic.
Curiously, no history of acoustics in fracture diagnosis has been published so far. This article proposes briefly reviewing the history and evolution of acoustics in orthopaedic surgery from antiquity to the present day.
Before the invention of radiography by Conrad Roentgen in 1895, the surgeons described crepitus as the most critical sign of fractures in antiquity. Surgeons remarked during the eighteenth and nineteenth century that bone was a good sound-conductor. Physicians improved first the diagnosis of fractures by using percussion established by Auenbrugger in 1755. The principle of chest mediate auscultation with a stethoscope was described by Laennec in 1818. Lisfranc used the stethoscope to amplify the crepitus sound of fractures. Surgeons also developed association of percussion and auscultation with a stethoscope to diagnose and reduce fracture. Recently, acoustic emission technology has seen a recent increase in applications to prevent femur fractures during cementless fixation.
The acoustic properties of bones were known to a prehistoric person who knew how to make flutes from animal or human bones. Surgeons used them for the diagnosis of fractures before radiography. Acoustic properties of bones currently remain a subject of research for the prevention of fractures.
创伤、骨折和脱位所带来的问题在人类历史上并未改变。史前人类所遭受的创伤与印何阗、希波克拉底和盖仑,或者更近一些,与安布罗瓦兹·帕雷、沃特森·琼斯和博勒观察到的创伤类似。而当前的道路创伤可能并不比猛犸象、金字塔的建造或中世纪战争所造成的创伤更严重。诊断方法已经发展,放射线照相术的出现彻底改变了创伤学的诊断。在发现放射线照相术之前,另一种物理现象使得帮助骨折诊断成为可能。这种物理现象就是声学。
奇怪的是,目前为止还没有关于声学在骨折诊断中的历史的出版物。本文简要回顾了从古代到现在,声学在骨科手术中的历史和演变。
在 1895 年康拉德·伦琴(Conrad Roentgen)发明放射线照相术之前,外科医生在古代将骨擦音描述为骨折最重要的体征。在 18 世纪和 19 世纪,外科医生注意到骨骼是良好的声音传导体。医生首先通过 1755 年由奥恩布鲁格(Auenbrugger)建立的叩诊术提高了骨折的诊断水平。1818 年,拉埃内克(Laennec)描述了使用听诊器进行胸部间接听诊的原理。利斯弗朗(Lisfranc)使用听诊器放大骨折的骨擦音。外科医生还将叩诊术和听诊术与听诊器结合起来,以诊断和复位骨折。最近,声学发射技术在预防非骨水泥固定股骨骨折方面的应用有了显著增加。
史前人类就已经知道骨骼的声学特性,他们懂得如何用动物或人的骨头制作长笛。在放射线照相术出现之前,外科医生就已经使用这些特性来诊断骨折。骨骼的声学特性目前仍是预防骨折的研究课题。