The history of caesarean section (C-section) dates back as far
as Ancient Roman times. Pliny the Elder suggested that Julius Caesar was named
after an ancestor who was born by C-section.
During this
era, the C-section procedure was used to save a baby from the womb of a mother
who had died while giving birth.
The mother of
Julius Caesar himself, lived through childbirth, therefore eliminating the
possibility that the ruler was himself born by C-section.
Ancient Jewish
literature from Maimonides suggests that the surgical delivery of a baby was
possible without killing the mother, but the surgery was rarely performed.
Survival rates
would have been low after the procedure, due to the risk of bleeding and
infection.
Historically,
the surgery has always been performed to save the baby rather than the mother.
The first
recorded case of a mother surviving the surgery was in the 1580s in
Siegersausen, Switzerland where Jacob Nufer who was a pig gelder is said to
have performed the operation on his wife when her labour was not progressing.
The mother survived the operation and went on to have five more successful
deliveries naturally.
The
availability of cadavers during the seventeenth century and the development of
anaesthesia in the nineteenth century both helped to enhance medical
techniques, including the C-section procedure.
Queen Victoria used chloroform as an anesthetic during the birth
of Prince Leopoldo in 1853 and this paved the way for its use in obstetrics and
C-section.
Until the
1870s, the C-section technique remained relatively crude and the practice did
not include surgical suture (stitches) to close the opened womb.
In 1876,
Eduardo Porro, Professor of Obstetrics at Pavia advocated removal of the womb
itself after C-section as a way of controlling bleeding. Following this, the
first caesarean hysterectomy was performed in the United States by Richardson
in 1881.
In 1882,
however, German obstetricians, Adolf Kehrer and Max Sänger each developed
methods for preventing uterine bleeding by using suture to close the wound.
Silver wire was
developed by J. Marion Sims in the USA as a material that could be used for the
suturing technique.
Sänger
performed his surgeries using the classical vertical incision, while Kehrer
advocated the low horizontal incision that is still being practised today.
Kehrer
suggested that a low incision would aid recovery and reduce the risk of death
and his incision method became popular in the early twentieth century.
With the advent
of sterilization, hand washing and antibiotics, the surgical outcomes of
C-section improved further still. For example, Joseph Lister introduced
carbolic spray in 1867 for disinfecting the operative area.
In 1926, James
Munro Kerr, Professor of Obstetrics at Glasgow re-introduced the transverse
incision, which was preferred to the longitudinal incision and in the USA, the
procedure was also popularized by Beck and DeLee in the 1920s.
Oxytocin, a
natural hormone secreted after birth was synthesized in 1951 at Cornell.
The hormone was
found to reduce bleeding after C-section and is still used routinely today.
Regional
anesthesia including spinal and epidural anesthesia have also been developed
and become popular methods of relieving pain and improving outcomes after
C-section.

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