scholarly journals Mendicants and Medicine: Āyurveda in Jain Monastic Texts

2014 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 63 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mari Jyväsjärvi Stuart

While early canonical Jain literature may well justify the assessment that some scholars have made about the Jains’ stoic resistance to medical aid, later post-canonical Śvetāmbara Jain texts reveal in fact a much more complex relationship to practices of healing. They make frequent references to medical practice and the alleviation of sickness, describing various medical procedures and instruments and devoting long sections to the interaction between doctors and monastics as issues that a monastic community would have to negotiate as a matter of course. The amount of medical knowledge — indeed fascination with healing human ailments — evident in these later texts invites us to pause before concluding that pre-modern Jain monastic traditions were disinterested in alleviating physical distress. It seems that, on the contrary, the question of when and how to treat the sick within the community emerged as a central concern that preoccupied the monastic authorities and commentators and left its mark on the texts they compiled. Moreover, from the early medieval period onwards, Jains enter the history of Indian medical literature as authors and compilers of actual medical treatises. In what follows, I try to trace this historical shift in Śvetāmbara Jain attitudes to medicine and healing, from the early canonical texts to post-canonical commentaries on the mendicants’ rules. Specifically, I focus on the treatment of medicine in three monastic commentaries composed around the sixth and seventh centuries CE.

2019 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
pp. 615-655
Author(s):  
Zofia Rzeźnicka ◽  
Maciej Kokoszko

The present study has resulted from a close reading of prescriptions for therapeutic wines inserted in book V of De materia medica by Pedanius Dioscorides, the eminent expert in materia medica of the 1st century A.D. The authors emphasise the role of wine varieties and selected flavourings (and especially of myrrh) in order to determine the social status of those to whom the formulas were addressed. This perspective gives the researchers ample opportunity for elaborating not only on the significance of wine in medical procedures but also for underscoring the importance of a number of aromatics in pharmacopoeia of antiquity and Byzantium. The analysis of seven selected formulas turns out to provide a fairly in-depth insight into Mediterranean society over a prolonged period of time, and leads the authors to draw the following conclusions. First, they suggest that medical doctors were social-inequality-conscious and that Dioscorides and his followers felt the obligation to treat both the poor and the rich. Second, they prove physicians’ expertise in materia medica, exemplifying how they were capable of adjusting market value of components used in their prescriptions to financial capacities of the patients. Third, the researchers circumstantiate the place of medical knowledge in ancient, and later on in Byzantine society. Last but not least, they demonstrate that medical treatises are an important source of knowledge, and therefore should be more often made use of by historians dealing with economic and social history of antiquity and Byzantium.


2018 ◽  
Vol 38 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandon W. Hawk

This article provides an examination of the earliest history of the term prosthesis in English, re-evaluating other such histories with previously unrecognized archival material from early printed books. These sources include sixteenth- and seventeenth-century early printed books such as handbooks of grammar, English dictionaries, British Latin dictionaries, and medical treatises on surgery. Such an investigation reveals both a more nuanced trajectory of the early history of the word in English and fuller context for a shift in meaning from usages in the study of grammar and rhetoric to the study of medicine and surgery. This narrative, then, speaks to the growth of medical knowledge and discourse in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, as well as concepts about disability that remain part of disability studies even in the present field.


BJHS Themes ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
pp. 75-92
Author(s):  
Marta Hanson

AbstractThis article focuses on transformations in the main metaphors in ancient to late medieval titles of Chinese medical books used to convey to potential readers their ‘learning-by-the-book’ contents. It finds that in contrast to the European preference for hand metaphors in the genre terms – enchiridions, manuals and handbooks – the Chinese medical archive preserves bodily metaphors within which the hand metaphor appears only rarely in the early medieval period and is then superseded by metaphors that rely on the fingers and palms more than the hands per se. This longue durée survey from roughly the fourth to the fourteenth centuries of the wide-ranging metaphors for ‘handy medical books’ places their historical emergence and transformation within the history of Chinese medical manuscripts and printed texts. Metaphors in medical titles conveyed to potential readers at the time significant textual innovations in how medical knowledge would be presented to them. For later historians, they provide evidence of profound changes in managing an increasingly complex and expanding archive of Chinese medical manuscripts and printed texts. Innovations in textual reorganization intended to facilitate ‘learning by the book’ were often creatively captured in an illuminating range of genre distinctions, descriptors and metaphors.


Author(s):  
Eduardo Sugizaki ◽  
Rosangela Barbiani ◽  
Fabiane Asquidamini

ABSTRACTIn this article, a new history of medical knowledge on Carrion's disease is presented. In a preliminary review of historiography (since 1885), we have found the following narrative nucleus (still repeated today): 1) until 'Oroya fever' appeared (1871), only an eruptive disease, the Peruvian wart, was known; 2) in 1875, Peruvian physicians proposed that Peruvian wart and Oroya fever should be the same disease; 3) in 1885, Daniel Carrión succeeded in experimentally unifying the clinical conditions when he inoculated blood from a patient of Peruvian wart in himself and died of Oroya fever; and 4) the disease was then renamed as 'Carrion's disease'. Herein, we question some of the foundations of this traditional version. The medical literature published in English, German, and French show that a global clinical description of the disease was already known in the period 1842-1871. Only the medical literature published in Spanish described the illness as an afebrile dermatosis. Obstacles to the knowledge of the disease were also found, which explain such divergence. Diversity and inconstancy of general and local symptoms (such as fever and eruptions, respectively): 1) made it difficult a comprehensive understanding of manifestations; 2) suggesting a constant complication of malaria; 3) and precluding analogy with eruptive fevers. Differently from what the traditional version suggests, these obstacles were overcome previously and independently from the appearance of the spurious notion of 'Oroya fever'. Overcoming of such obstacles was not achieved by unification of both diseases, but by perception of a coordination of manifestation of heterogeneous symptoms. Such rationalism allowed integration of symptoms that a shallow empiricism kept separated as isolated pathological phenomena, favoring clinical differential diagnosis between Peruvian wart and malaria. This epistemological study contributed to a greater understanding of mechanisms of building of nosologic unity in the Clinical Age of medicine.RESUMENNeste artigo, uma nova história do conhecimento médico sobre a doença de Carrión é construída. Em uma preliminar revisão da historiografia (existente desde 1885), encontramos o seguinte núcleo narrativo (ainda reiterado, atualmente): 1) até o surgimento da ‘febre de Oroya’, em 1871, conhecia-se apenas uma doença eruptiva, a verruga peruana; 2) em 1875, a medicina peruana propôs que a verruga peruana e a febre de Oroya deviam ser a mesma doença; 3) em 1885, Daniel Carrión conseguiu experimentalmente unificar os quadros clínicos quando inoculou em si mesmo sangue de um paciente com verruga peruana e morreu com febre de Oroya; 4) a enfermidade passou a denominar-se ‘doença de Carrión’. Este artigo questiona alguns dos fundamentos desta versão tradicional. A literatura médica publicada em inglês, alemão e francês mostra que, entre 1842 e 1871, já existia a descrição clínica global da doença. Apenas a literatura médica publicada em espanhol descrevia a doença como dermatose apirética. Descobriram-se também os obstáculos ao conhecimento da doença, que explicam esta divergência. A disparidade e a inconstância dos seus sintomas, os gerais e os locais (tal como febre e erupções, respectivamente): 1) dificultavam a compreensão global de suas manifestações; 2) sugeriam uma complicação constante do paludismo; 3) e barravam a analogia com as febres eruptivas. Diferentemente do que propõe a narrativa tradicional, estes obstáculos foram superados antes e independentemente do aparecimento da noção espúria de ‘febre de Oroya’. A superação não veio pela unificação de duas doenças, mas pela percepção de uma coordenação na manifestação dos sintomas heterogêneos. Este racionalismo conseguiu integrar sintomas que um empirismo raso apartava, como fenômenos patológicos isolados, e encaminhar o diagnóstico diferencial clínico entre a verruga e o paludismo. O saldo epistemológico deste trabalho é uma maior compreensão dos mecanismos da construção da unidade nosológica, na Idade Clínica da medicina.


2013 ◽  
Vol 28 (5) ◽  
pp. 566-568 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sujith Ovallath ◽  
P. Deepa

Author(s):  
Roshan Mathew ◽  
Ritin Mohindra ◽  
Ankit Sahu ◽  
Rachana Bhat ◽  
Akshaya Ramaswami ◽  
...  

Abstract Background Occupational hazards like sharp injury and splash exposure (SISE) are frequently encountered in health-care settings. The adoption of standard precautions by healthcare workers (HCWs) has led to significant reduction in the incidence of such injuries, still SISE continues to pose a serious threat to certain groups of HCWs. Materials and Methods This was a retrospective study which examined the available records of all patients from January 2015 to August 2019 who self-reported to our emergency department with history of sharp injury and/or splash exposure. Details of the patients, mechanism of injury, the circumstances leading to the injury, status of the source (hepatitis B surface antigen, human immunodeficiency virus, and hepatitis C virus antibody status), and the postexposure prophylaxis given were recorded and analyzed. Data were represented in frequency and percentages. Results During the defined period, a total of 834 HCWs reported with SISE, out of which 44.6% were doctors. Majority of the patients have SISE while performing medical procedures on patients (49.5%), while 19.2% were exposed during segregation of waste. The frequency of needle stick injury during cannulation, sampling, and recapping of needle were higher in emergency department than in wards. More than 80% of HCWs received hepatitis B vaccine and immunoglobulin postexposure. Conclusion There is need for periodical briefings on practices of sharp handling as well as re-emphasizing the use of personal protective equipment while performing procedures.


2020 ◽  
Vol 79 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 1521.2-1521
Author(s):  
Y. Santamaria ◽  
M. Galvis ◽  
A. Vanegas

Background:Thrombotic microangiopathy (TMA) is a clinicopathologic diagnosis defined as microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA) with associated features of thrombocytopenia and end-organ ischemia. Systemic lupus erythematosus, antiphospholipid antibody syndrome, and scleroderma, are within the autoimmune diseases, the more commonly associated with TMA. It has been considered that the association with Sjögren Syndrome (SS) is rare.Objectives:To describe one patient with TMA and SS, and to review all cases reported in the literature.Methods:We notified a clinical case of a patient with Sjögren’s syndrome and TMA. Then, we searched the medical literature finding a total of 17 cases reported with this association until 2019. Before the data obtained were tabulated by trained staff and descriptive, comparing groups and bivariate analysis was performed. The outcome of interest was the death of the patient. Stata 12.0 software was used.Results:A 26-years-old Colombian female presented with a 6-week history of petechiae in lower limbs, gingivorrhagia, menorrhagia and jaundice; and previous history of arthritis and xerostomia. On admission, in the context of severe thrombocytopenia and MAHA, MAT diagnosis was made. During hospitalization we confirm the diagnosis of SS with ANA, antiRo and salivary gland biopsy. The patient was treated with steroids (methylprednisolone 500 mg/day, 3 days), plasma exchange therapy (PLEX) and Cyclophosphamide (750 mg), with recovery of hemoglobin and platelet levels; however, the patient died due to a complication of the PLEX catheter removal procedure.A total of 18 patients diagnosed with de novo or prevalent Sjögren’s syndrome who had hospital admission with a diagnosis of TMA were included. The mean age was 54.55 years (Standard deviation (SD): 12.45) and 83.33% of the patients corresponded to the female gender.At admission, the mean of hemoglobin was 8.45 g/dL (SD: 2.55) and median platelets of 27250/mm3 (interquartile range (IQR) 10500 - 102000) were found. The most frequent clinical manifestations were central nervous system alterations (50%), followed by bleeding in the skin and renal failure (44.44%) and fever (27.78%). The most frequent antibodies found were anti-Ro (100%), anti-nuclear antibodies (80%) and anti-La (75%). The most frequently prescribed treatment was plasma exchange therapy (83.33%), intravenous steroids (61.11%), oral steroids (61.11%) and cyclophosphamide (27.78%). Of the total patients, 38.89% died and 27.7% had some relapse of TMA.In the group comparison analysis, differences were found in intravenous steroid (81.82% in those who lived vs. 28.57% in those who died p=0.039), use of PLEX (100% in those who survived vs. 57.14% in those who died p = 0.043), fever (9.09% in those who survived and 57.14% in those who died, p = 0.047), admission hemoglobin (7.65 g/dL in those who lived vs. 10.22 g/dL in those who died, p = 0.05), final platelets (148,000 in which who lived and 39,000 in those who died p = 0.02). Then, in the logistic regression analysis, an association was found between mortality and use of intravenous steroids (OR: 0.08, 95% CI 0.009 - 0.83, p = 0.35) and fever at admission (OR: 13.33 95% CI: 1.04 - 169.55, p = 0.046).Conclusion:While the association between TMA and SS is uncommon, so far 18 cases have been reported in the world medical literature. It is typically a condition of women age close to 50 years. The most frequent manifestations are neurological. Among the variables evaluated, only the use of endovenous steroids was associated with a decrease in the probability of mortality; on the contrary, the presence of fever at hospital admission increased the probability of death. The results should be evaluated with caution, since, due to the limited availability of information, they may not be generalizable to clinical practice. More information on this should be obtained in the future.Disclosure of Interests:None declared


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