Abū al-Qāsim al-Zahrawi, a court physician to…
1000 CE
Abū al-Qāsim al-Zahrawi, a court physician to the late Andalusian caliph Al-Hakam II, has devoted his entire life and genius to the advancement of medicine as a whole and surgery in particular.
Abū al-Qāsim specializes in curing disease by cauterization.
He has invented several devices used during surgery, for purposes such as inspection of the interior of the urethra, applying and removing foreign bodies from the throat, inspection of the ear, etc.
He is also credited to be the first to describe ectopic pregnancy in 963, at this time a fatal affliction.
Al-Zahrawi is the first to illustrate the various cannulae and the first to treat a wart with an iron tube and caustic metal as a boring instrument.
He is also the first to draw hooks with a double tip for use in surgery.
Abū al-Qāsim's thirty-chapter medical treatise, Kitab al-Tasrif, completed in the year 1000, covers a broad range of medical topics, including dentistry and childbirth, which contains data that he has accumulated during a career that spanned almost fifty years of training, teaching and practice.
In it, he also writes of the importance of a positive doctor-patient relationship and writes affectionately of his students, whom he refers to as "my children".
He emphasizes the importance of treating patients irrespective of their social status.
He encourages the close observation of individual cases in order to make the most accurate diagnosis and the best possible treatment.