It is commonly accepted that Louis Pasteur is the father of microbiology and Joseph Lister is the father of antisepsis. Middleton Goldsmith, a surgeon in the Union Army during the American Civil War, meticulously studied hospital gangrene and developed a revolutionary treatment regimen. The cumulative Civil War hospital gangrene mortality was 45 per cent. Goldsmith's method, which he applied to over 330 cases, yielded a mortality under 3 per cent. His innovative work predated Pasteur and Lister, making his success truly remarkable and worthy of historical and surgical note.
CITATION STYLE
Trombold, J. M. (2011). Gangrene therapy and antisepsis before lister: The Civil War Contributions of Middleton Goldsmith of Louisville. American Surgeon, 77(9), 1138–1143. https://doi.org/10.1177/000313481107700924
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