Medical History Timeline - Marylyn Pascual P:6

  • 460 BCE

    Hippocrates - 460BC

    Hippocrates - 460BC
    Its the many writing on exams&treatment of the condition of the patients, also it became a thing to keep a patients condition privet.
  • 430 BCE

    Smallpox - 430BC

    Smallpox - 430BC
    The cause for this is by variola virus. This could easily be spread by physical touch, any bodily fluids,and air its self. Smallpoxs killed thousands and thousands of people in Athens and Greece.
  • 130 BCE

    Galen - 130 BC

    Galen - 130 BC
    He was a guy who become Chertoff physician to the gladdiator school in Pergamum. He had lots of experiences with treating wounds.
  • 111 BCE

    Leonardo Da Vinci BC

    Leonardo Da Vinci BC
    He has created a lot of famous paining. He has also done painting of the human body, he would be so pracies with his art work.
  • 100 BCE

    Medical Symbol BC

    Medical Symbol  BC
    Asclepius was the Greek god of healing and its symbol was a snake. In the modern ages we use it as a heathcare symbol.
  • 865

    Rhazes - 865AD

    Rhazes - 865AD
    He built upon the idea of hippocrates and documented the differences between smallpox and the measles.
  • 1000

    Medieval Surgery - 1000AD

    Medieval Surgery - 1000AD
    It was the first "barber surgeons", physicians performed surgery so rarely that barbers had to do surgery in a painful way of course.
  • 1025

    The cannon of Medicine - 1025AD

    The cannon of Medicine - 1025AD
    Its the encyclopedia of medicine in five books compiled by Persian philosopher Avicenna and completed in 1025.
  • 1037

    Avicenna - 1037AD

    Avicenna - 1037AD
    Avicenna he is the most significant philosopher in the Islamic tradition and most influential philosopher of the pre-modern era.
  • 1340

    The plague - 1340AD

    The plague - 1340AD
    It was also known as the Black Death because it killed about 25million peaple. It was caused by rats being bitten by infected fleas.
  • 1500

    Deaf (Renaissance)

    Deaf (Renaissance)
    Deafness can be caused by infectious diseases, such as shingles, meningitis, and cytomegalovirus.
  • 1500

    Anatomy (Renaissance)

    Anatomy (Renaissance)
    Its a branch of science concerned with the bodily structure of any living organism.
  • Scientific Method (Renaissance)

    Scientific Method (Renaissance)
    Its a procedure, observation, measurement, and experiment, and the formulation, testing, and modification of hypotheses.
  • Appendicitis (Renaissance)

    Appendicitis (Renaissance)
    The apendix gets inflamated and filled with pus, causing pain.
  • Cateracts (Renaissance)

    Cateracts (Renaissance)
    Cateracts was the first significant advance in cataract surgery since couching was invented.
  • James Lind (Industrial Revolution)

    James Lind (Industrial Revolution)
    Scottish physician that conducted the first ever clinical trial. He developed the theory that citrus fruits cured scur.
  • Color blind (Industrial Revolution )

    Color blind (Industrial Revolution )
    John Dalton discribed his own color blindness, most times color blindness is genetic. Unfortunately theres no cure for color blindness.
  • Bronchitis (Industrial Revolution)

    Bronchitis (Industrial Revolution)
    Its normally passes person to person by a coughing. Charles Badham was the first person to discover bronchitis.
  • James Morion (Industrial Revolution)

    He was an American physician/a pioneer in the field of surgery, he was known as the "father of modern gynecology.
  • Rene Laennec (Industrial Revolution)

    Rene Laennec (Industrial Revolution)
    Hyacinthe Laennec was a French physician that invented the stethoscope while working at the Hôpital Necker, it was used to help treat various chest conditions.
  • Elizabeth Blackwell (Modern Era)

    Elizabeth Blackwell (Modern Era)
    She was a British-born physician, first woman to receive a medical degree in the United States(first woman on the UK Medical Register).
  • Carcinoid (Modern Era)

    Carcinoid (Modern Era)
    Theodor Langhans was the first to describe the histology of a carcinoid tumor in 1867.
  • Diabetes (Modern Era)

    Diabetes (Modern Era)
    Joseph von Mering and Oskar Minkowski discovered diabetes. They found that dogs had symptoms of now what we know as diabetes and shortly died.
  • Norman Bethune (Modern Era)

    Norman Bethune (Modern Era)
    He was a Canadian physician, medical innovator, and noted communist. He later went to international prominence for his service as a frontline surgeon.
  • Daniel Hale Williams

    Daniel Hale Williams
    He was a Chicago surgeon, he performed the second successful heart surgery in the US. It was a medical advancement.
  • X-rays (Modern Era)

    X-rays (Modern Era)
    A German physicist Wilhelm Röntgen accidentally discovered the first "X-ray". Wilhelm Röntgen names it x-rays because X was for unknow because he didnt know how it happened it all started off with an accident and rays was for the ray of light.
  • Alexis Carrie (Modern Era)

    He was a French surgeon and biologist who was awarded the Nobel Prize. He is also known as the unknown of the human body and human life.
  • Insulin (Modern Era)

    Insulin (Modern Era)
    Canadian physician Frederick Banting and medical student Charles H. Discovered insulin. Insulin helped with diabetic people in need to help with their suguar levels.
    (They first tested it on dogs that had symtomps of diabetes and the results where positive, the dogs where soom feeling better)
  • HeLa Cells (Modern Era)

    HeLa Cells (Modern Era)
    Its the type in an immortal cell line used in scientific the/a research, the oldest and most commonly used in the human cell line.
  • HIV (Modern Era)

    HIV (Modern Era)
    Scientists discovered the virus that causes AIDS. It was first named HTLV-III/LAV, this name was later changed to HIV (human immunodeficiency virus).