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🔗 All our links, sources, and socials:https://linktr.ee/thecadaverslessons
This week we explore the bizarre — and surprisingly persistent — history of bloodletting and medicinal leeches.
From ancient Egyptian practices and the theory of balancing bodily humors to the 19th-century leech craze fueled by François Joseph Victor Broussais, leeches were once prescribed by the millions across Europe. Harvested in dangerous conditions and nearly driven to extinction, they eventually fell out of favor as modern science advanced.
But here’s the twist: leeches made a comeback.
Today, Hirudo medicinalis is FDA-regulated and used in reconstructive and plastic surgery to relieve venous congestion, thanks to its powerful anticoagulant properties.
Ancient theory. Modern application.
Sometimes medicine comes full circle. 🪱
📚 References
By Bernadette & Samantha Smith🔗 All our links, sources, and socials:https://linktr.ee/thecadaverslessons
This week we explore the bizarre — and surprisingly persistent — history of bloodletting and medicinal leeches.
From ancient Egyptian practices and the theory of balancing bodily humors to the 19th-century leech craze fueled by François Joseph Victor Broussais, leeches were once prescribed by the millions across Europe. Harvested in dangerous conditions and nearly driven to extinction, they eventually fell out of favor as modern science advanced.
But here’s the twist: leeches made a comeback.
Today, Hirudo medicinalis is FDA-regulated and used in reconstructive and plastic surgery to relieve venous congestion, thanks to its powerful anticoagulant properties.
Ancient theory. Modern application.
Sometimes medicine comes full circle. 🪱
📚 References