A Short History of The Thyroid Gland: V. Leoutsakos
A Short History of The Thyroid Gland: V. Leoutsakos
Historical Note
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Gaius Plinius Secundus of Pliny (23 BC-79 AD) believed that goiter was caused by dirty water. He wrote: Only men and swine are subject to swellings of the throat, which are mostly caused by the noxious quality of the water they drink. The Chinese physician Tshui Chin-thi seems to have been the first who, in 85 AD, differentiated between solid (malignant) neck tumors, which were incurable, and movable (benign) ones, which were curable. Gallen (130-200 AD) was the most important physician of the Greco-Roman period. He described operations on two boys by ignorant physicians who removed tubercular nodes with their fingernails, rendering one boy mute and the other semi-mute. He also mentioned Spongia Usta for the treatment of goiter. Gallen believed that the secretions of the thyroid lubricated the larynx and the cartilage and that the aphonia was provoked by cutting the laryngeal nerves. The great Chinese alchemist Ko-Hung in about 340 AD recommended an alcoholic extract of seaweed for goiter, and it seems that the association of goiter with certain mountain regions was widespread in Chinese medicine from at least the 5th century AD onwards.
by surgery is described in as much detail as would be an operation performed in our own age. In 1110, a Persian doctor named Jurzani associated exophthalmos with goiter, and in 1170 AD, Roger of Palermo prescribed ashes of sponges and seaweed as a conservative treatment of goiter. However, he recommended surgical removal of the gland if this was deemed necessary. Marco Polo, both father and son, while traveling in Turkestan in 1271, wrote about the province of Karkan, the inhabitants of which are in general afflicted with swellings in the legs and tumors in the throat occasioned by the quality of the water they drink. During the 14th century, a number of doctors in various countries, including Hussu-Hui in China and A. Villanova (1235-1311) in Italy, treated goiters with marine products such as sponges, seaweeds and mollusks, which were sometimes mixed with saltpeter or antimony. During the same period, the French surgeon Guy de Chaliac (1300-1370) reported that goiter is frequently considered to be a local and hereditary disease, and recommended surgical removal of the thyroid gland.
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ment of goiter with ointments but, if no improvement was achieved, he advocated surgical removal and described the procedure masterfully. A few decades later, C.B. Morgagni (1682-1771) wrote about the thyroid: The neck has two glands in which moisture is generatedand by vessels it flows out An outstanding event that occurred at the beginning of the 19th century was the discovery of iodine in 1811 by Bernard Courtois (1771-1838) in Paris. William Prout in 1838, J.C.A. Lugol (1786-1851) and numerous other doctors round the world described iodine for the treatment of goiters on the basis of a report written by Coindet. In 1877, Theodore Billroth wrote that iodine, while beneficial in the early stages of goiter, was ineffective for the disease in its established form. In 1893, Theodore Cocher hypothesized that iodine may occur in the thyroid; however, it was Fugen Bauman (1846-1896) who, in 1896, demonstrated the presence of iodine in organic combination as a normal constituent of the thyroid gland. Aside from the increasing knowledge concerning the pathology of simple goiter, three types of goiter were recognized and named by Guillance Dupuytren during the first years of the 19th century: 1) cystic, 2) scirrvus and 3) hyperplastic. Theodore Billroth believed that most goiters were chronic, endemic, miasmatic tumors and local expressions of general infection. In 1880, Anton Wolfer added a third group, the fetal adenoma. At the beginning of the 20th century, James Berry in London described six types of goiter: 1) parenhymatous, usually occurring in young people; 2) Wolfers fetal adenoma, usually small, solid and encapsulated; 3) cystic adenoma; 4) fibrous; 5) malignant; and 6) exophthalmic. G. Crile in the U.S. in 1910 recognized three types of simple goiter: 1) hypertrophy, 2) hyperplasia, and 3) involution. In 1953, Selwin Taylor in London described five stages in its evolution. A few words are in order concerning exophthalmos. In 1110, Jurzani associated exophthalmos with goiter. In 1772, 1800 and 1802, Saint-Yves, 33, respec-
tively, described exophthalmos, palpitations and goiter. In 1786, C. H. Parry (1775-1822) described a patient with goiter, palpitations and protrusion of the eyes. In 1835, Robert James Graves, the famous Irish physician, described patients with palpitations and thyroid enlargement. Also in the mid-19th century in Merseburg, the German physician, Carl Adolph von Basedow, described three patients with exophthalmos due to hypertrophy of the cellular tissue of the orbit, goiter and palpitations. This syndrome came to be known as the Merseburg triad syndrome. However, especial credit should go to C.H. Parry who, in 1813 wrote of some connection between the malady of the heart and the bronchocele. Finally, to conclude this short history of the thyroid gland, we may refer briefly to the surgical treatment of thyroid disease. Early accounts of operations are unclear. Celsus, Gallen, Leonidas, Aetios, Albucasis have been tentatively credited with performing operations on goiters. The first known thyroidectomy was described in 1646 by Wilhelm Fabricius in Geneva. The first well documented partial thyroidectomy for a tumor of the thyroid, was undertaken in 1789, during the French Revolution, by P.S. Dessault (17441795) in Paris. A few years later, in 1808, Guillance Dupuytren (1777-1835) performed a total thyroidectomy for a tumor of the gland, and in 1880 Ludwig Rehn (1847-1930) carried out the first successful thyroidectomy for exophthalmic goiter.
REFERENCES
1. Needman J, Lu Grei-Pjen, 1996 Protoendocrinology in Mediaeval China. JPN Stud His Sci. 2. Jason A, 1946 The thyroid gland in Medical History. New York Froben press. 3. Merk F, 1984 History and iconography of endemic goitre and cretinism. Lancaster, England MTP Press. 4. Hippocrates (E. Littres edition of 1846) Des Epidemes in Oeuvres complete d Hippocratie transaction nouvelle avec le Texte grec en regard. Vol.V, pp 296-297. 5. Medrei VC, 1992 The history of clinical endocrinology. The Parthenon Publishing group, New York. 6. Gallen C, 1929 Introduction to the history of Medicine. 4th ed, Saunders. 7. Endemic goitre 1960. World Health Organization. Geneva 12-13. 8. Billroth Th, 1877 Lectures on surgical pathology and therapeutics 8th ed. London, Sydenham Society 9, 442.
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9. Taylor S, 1953 Evolution of nodular goitre. J Clin Endocrinol Metab 13: 1232- 47. 10. Grawes RJ, 1835 Newly observed affection of the thyroid gland in females. London, Med Surg J 1: 516.
11. Von Basedow CA, 1840 Exophthalmos durch hypertrophie des Zellgeweben in Augenhohle. Wogenscher, Genamte, Heilkande.