Everything about Thomas Bartholin totally explained
Thomas Bartholin (
Thomas Bartolinus) (
October 20,
1616 –
December 4,
1680) was a
Danish physician,
mathematician, and
theologian. He is best known for his work in the discovery of the
lymphatic system in humans and for his advancements of the theory of refrigeration
anesthesia, being the first to describe it scientifically.
Thomas Bartholin came from a family that has become famous for its pioneering scientists, twelve of whom became professors at the
University of Copenhagen. Three generations of the Bartholin family made significant contributions to anatomical science and medicine in the 17th and 18th centuries: Thomas Bartholin's father,
Caspar Bartholin the Elder (1585-1629), his brother
Rasmus Bartholin (1625-1698), and his son
Caspar Bartholin the Younger (1655 – 1738).
Contributions to medical research
In December 1652, Bartholin published the first full description of the human
lymphatic system.
Jean Pecquet had previously noted the lymphatic system in
animals in 1651, and Pecquet's discovery of the thoracic duct and its entry into the veins made him the first person to describe the correct route of the lymphatic fluid into the blood. Shortly after the publication of Pecquet's and Bartholin's findings, a similar discovery of the human lymphatic system was published by
Olof Rudbeck in 1653, although Rudbeck had presented his findings at the court of Queen Christina of Sweden in April-May 1652, before Bartholin, but delayed in writing about it until 1653 (after Bartholin). As a result, an intense priority dispute ensued.
Niels Stensen or Steno became his most famous pupil.
Thomas and
Rasmus Bartholin's publication
De nivis usu medico observationes variae Chapter XXII, contains the first known mention of refrigeration
anaesthesia, a technique whose invention Thomas Bartholin credits to the
Italian Marco Aurelio Severino of Naples. According to Bartholin, Severino was the first to present the use of freezing mixtures of snow and ice (1646), and Thomas Bartholin initially learnt about the technique from him during a visit to Naples.
Bartholin-Patau syndrome, first described by Thomas Bartholin, is a congenital syndrome of multiple abnormalities produced by
trisomy of
chromosome number 13.
Caspar Bartholin the Elder, Thomas Bartholin's father; his brother Rasmus Bartholin; and his son Caspar Bartholin the Younger, all contributed in crucial ways to the practice of modern medicine through their discoveries of important anatomical structures and phenomena.
Bartholin the Elder started his tenure as professor at Copenhagen University in 1613, and over the next 125 years, the scientific accomplishments of the Bartholin while serving on the medical faculty of the
University of Copenhagen won international acclaim and contributed to the reputation of the institution.
Personal life
Thomas Bartholin was the second of the six sons of Caspar Bartholin the Elder, a physician born in
Malmö,
Scania and his spouse Anne Fincke.
Bartholin the Elder published the first collected anatomical work in
1611. This work was later illustrated and revised by Thomas Bartholin, becoming the standard reference on
anatomy.
Bartholin visited the Italian botanist
Pietro Castelli at
Messina in
1644. In 1663 Bartholin bought Hagestedgaard, which burned down in
1670 including his
library, with the loss of many
manuscripts.
King Christian V of Denmark appointed Bartholin as his physician with a substantial salary and freed the farm from taxation as recompense for the loss. In
1680 Bartholin's health failed, the farm was sold, and he moved back to Copenhagen, where he died. He was buried in
Vor Frue Kirke (Church of Our Lady).
The
sublingual gland's major duct is named after Thomas Bartholin's brother Rasmus Bartholin; it's referred to as the sublingual duct of Bartholin. The
Bartholinsgade, a street in Copenhagen, is named for the family. Nearby is the Bartholin Institute (
Bartholin Institutet).
Partial bibliography
- Historiarum anatomicarum rariorum centuria I et II. Amsterdam: Apud Johannem Henrici, 1641. Second edition 1654. (Case histories of unusual anatomical and clinical structures, including descriptions and illustrations of anomalies and normal structures)
- De unicornu. Padua, 1645.
- De lacteis thoracis in homine brutisque nuperrime observatis. Hafniae (Copenhagen), M. Martzan, 1652. (Bartholin’s discovery of the thoracic duct).
- Vasa lymphatica nuper hafniae in animalibus inventa et hepatis exsequiae. Hafniae (Copenhagen), Petrus Hakius, 1653.
- Vasa lymphatica in homine nuper inventa. Hafniae (Copenhagen), 1654.
- Historarium anatomicarum rariorum centuria I-VI. Copenhagen, 1654-1661.
- Anatomia. The Hague. Ex typographia Adriani Vlacq, 1655. * Dispensarium hafniense. Copenhagen, 1658.
- De nivis usu medico observationes variae. Accessit D. Erasmi Bartholini de figura nivis dissertatio. Co-authored with Rasmus Bartholin. Copenhagen: Typis Matthiase Godichii, sumptibus Petri aubold, 1661. (Contains the first known mention of refrigeration anaesthesia)
- Cista medica hafniensis. Copenhagen, 1662.
- De pulmonum substantia et motu. Copenhagen, 1663.
- De insolitis partus humani viis. Copenhagen, 1664.
- De medicina danorum domestica. Copenhagen, 1666.
- De flammula cordis epistola. Copenhagen, 1667.
- Orationes et dissertationes omnino varii argumenti. Copenhagen, 1668.
- Carmina varii argumenti. Copenhagen, 1669.
- De medicis poetis dissertatio. Hafinae, apud D. Paulli, 1669.
- De bibliothecae incendio. Copenhagen, 1670.
- De morbis biblicis miscellanea medica. Francofurti, D. Paulli, 1672.
- Acta medica et philosophica. 1673-1680
Further Information
Get more info on 'Thomas Bartholin'.
|
External Link Exchanges
Do you know how hard it is to get a link from a large encyclopaedia? Well we're different and will prove it. To get a link from us just add the following HTML to your site on a relevant page:
<a href="http://thomas_bartholin.totallyexplained.com">Thomas Bartholin Totally Explained</a>
Then simply click through this link from your web page. Our crawlers will verify your link, extract the title of your web page and instantly add a link back to it. If you like you can remove the words Totally Explained and embed the link in article text.
As long as your link remains in place, we'll keep our link to you right here. Please play fair - our crawlers are watching. Your site must be closely related to this one's topic. Any kind of spamming, dubious practises or removing the link will result in your link from us being dropped and, potentially, your whole site being banned. |