Blood clots: the nineteenth-century debate over the substance and means of transfusion in Britain

Annals of Science
K Pelis

Abstract

Historians have devoted little attention to blood transfusion in the nineteenth century. In part, this neglect reflects the presentist assumption that, before Karl Landsteiner's discovery of blood types, this practice would have failed too often to gain currency. Yet, transfusion was in fact the subject of much debate, and was actively practised, primarily by obstetricians on haemorrhaging women. Examining this practice through the conceptual lens of 'blood clots', both as noun and as observation, I follow transfusors' assumptions about the nature of the blood and the problem of its coagulation. Tracing the medicalization of ideas about blood by the century's end, I map this shift onto changing notions about why transfusion was performed, what substance was best employed, and what instrument best fitted that substance's movement into the circulation. In this way, 'Blood Clots' reconstructs the discourse surrounding transfusion, extending that discourse to material culture in order to illuminate the rationale that guided transfusion's practice in nineteenth-century Britain.

References

Apr 1, 1980·Medical History·A D Farr
Jan 1, 1971·History of Science; an Annual Review of Literature, Research and Teaching·R D French
Jan 1, 1954·Journal of the History of Medicine and Allied Sciences·N S MALUF
Jan 10, 1874·British Medical Journal·H M Madge
Jan 1, 1818·Medico-chirurgical Transactions·J Blundell

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Citations

Jan 1, 1997·Vox Sanguinis·K Pelis
Sep 29, 2012·Transfusion Medicine·P Learoyd
Mar 31, 2015·Medicine, Conflict, and Survival·Frank Boulton
Nov 17, 2010·Journal of Medical Biography·Matthew WelckHarold Ellis

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