20th
Century
Medicine's most revolutionary advances have occurred since
1900. By the end of the 20th century, medical advances helped to increase the
average person's life expectancy by almost 30 years. As people lived longer, new
medical challenges emerged. Heart disease, cancer, stroke, and other conditions
often associated with aging replaced infectious diseases as the leading causes
of death. Physicians began to devote greater attention to preventing disease and
keeping patients healthy into advanced age. Biomedical research also shifted
focus to the most basic causes of diseases, including defects in individual
genes. Infectious diseases that historically have killed millions of people each
year were conquered early in the 20th century by improved sanitation,
antibiotics, and vaccines. German physician Paul Ehrlich showed around 1910 that
a chemical compound, arsphenamine, could treat syphilis. He opened the era of
chemotherapy, in which physicians use chemical compounds that act selectively to
target specific diseases. In the early 1930s, German and French scientists
showed that sulfonamide was effective in treating streptococcal bacteria
infections. This discovery led to the first family of so-called wonder drugs,
the sulfonamide antibiotics. In 1938 British biochemists Howard Florey and Ernst
Chain purified penicillin, the bacteria-destroying compound that Alexander
Fleming observed in mold ten years earlier. Streptomycin, the first antibiotic
for tuberculosis, was discovered in 1944 by American microbiologist Selman
Waksman. Dozens of other antibiotics were subsequently discovered, each stronger
and more effective against a broader range of bacteria. Scientists learned more
about how the body's immune system protects itself from infections, resulting in
new tests for diagnosing infectious diseases and new vaccines to prevent them.
The Wasserman blood test for syphilis was developed in 1906 and the tuberculin
skin test for tuberculosis appeared in 1908. By the 1930s new techniques for
growing viruses in the laboratory led to vaccines against viral diseases. These
included a yellow fever vaccine in the late 1930s and the first effective
influenza vaccine in the 1940s. The American physician Jonas E. Salk developed a
polio vaccine in 1954. Later virologist Albert B. Sabin developed a safer oral
polio vaccine, which was in wide use by the 1960s. Later came vaccines for other
childhood diseases, including measles, German measles, mumps, and chicken pox.
Infectious diseases, once thought conquered by antibiotics, became a major
concern again in the 1990s. New forms of tuberculosis and other diseases
resistant to antibiotics spread. Concerns also arose over new or newly
recognized microbes, such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the cause of
acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), which became epidemic in 1981. As
human populations grow and expand into wilderness areas, humans and animals come
in closer contact. A number of diseases transmitted from animals have become
problematic in recent years, including the hemorrhagic fevers caused by the
Ebola and Marburg viruses, hantavirus pulmonary syndrome, and Lyme disease. In
other areas, physicians recognized that an easily curable bacterial infection
caused most peptic ulcers, a disease once blamed on stress and diet. Scientists
learned more about how the body's immune system protects itself from infections,
resulting in new tests for diagnosing infectious diseases and new vaccines to
prevent them. The Wasserman blood test for syphilis was developed in 1906 and
the tuberculin skin test for tuberculosis appeared in 1908. By the 1930s new
techniques for growing viruses in the laboratory led to vaccines against viral
diseases. These included a yellow fever vaccine in the late 1930s and the first
effective influenza vaccine in the 1940s. The American physician Jonas E. Salk
developed a polio vaccine in 1954. Later virologist Albert B. Sabin developed a
safer oral polio vaccine, which was in wide use by the 1960s. Later came
vaccines for other childhood diseases, including measles, German measles, mumps,
and chicken pox. Polish-born American biochemist Casimir Funk introduced the
term vitamine in 1912. Researchers later identified vitamins needed by the body
to prevent deficiency diseases such as beriberi, rickets, scurvy, and pellagra.
As better nutrition was developed and the quality of life improved, these
diseases almost disappeared from industrialized countries (Human Nutrition). But
by the end of the 20th century, other nutritional disorders emerged. Studies
conducted in the United States in the 1990s showed that more than 97 million
Americans were overweight and risked health problems, such as heart disease and
diabetes mellitus, commonly associated with obesity.
Operations that people once regarded as impossible became
routine in the 20th century. Many of these surgical advances resulted from
improved drugs or medical technology. Better drugs to prevent rejection of
transplanted organs made transplantation of hearts, kidneys, livers, lungs, and
other organs removed from donors possible. Patients were kept alive with
artificial kidneys and temporary artificial hearts while awaiting a transplant
(Medical Transplantation). The heart-lung machine made it possible to stop and
restart the heart during coronary bypass surgery. Small fibre-optic instruments
called endoscopes led to the new field of minimally invasive surgery. These new
tools made it possible to remove a diseased gallbladder or appendix, for
example, through small slits rather than large incisions, greatly reducing the
amount of anaesthesia required during the surgery and lessening recovery time.
Transfusions of blood, plasma, and other saline solutions, which went into use
in the 1930s, helped prevent deaths from shock in surgery patients. In the
1990s, physicians even began performing surgery to repair defects in unborn
infants.
New methods for viewing diseased structures inside the body
improved diagnosis of disease beginning in the 1970s (Radiology). A gamma camera
detects radioactive medication that attaches to certain forms of cancer cells.
Computed tomography (CT) scanners use X rays to produce lifelike
three-dimensional images of body structures. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)
scanners produce highly detailed images without X rays. Positron emission
tomography (PET) detects very early warning signs of disease. Sonograms, or
ultrasound, taken with high-frequency sound waves diagnose disease and monitor
the progress of pregnancies. X rays and high-energy particles emitted by linear
accelerators also are used to treat cancer. Lithotripsy uses high-frequency
sound waves to destroy some kidney stones and gallstones, conditions that once
required surgery.
Even in the early part of the 20th century, mental illness
was almost a sentence of doom, and mentally ill persons were handled with cruel
confinement and little medical aid. In the latter half of the century,
successful therapy for some mental illnesses has greatly improved the prognosis
for these diseases and has partly removed their stigma.
The theories advanced by Austrian physician Sigmund Freud
were among the first attempts to understand malfunctioning of the mind, but the
methods of psychoanalysis advocated by Freud and modified by his followers
proved ineffective for treating certain serious mental illnesses. Two early
attempts to treat psychotic illness were the destruction of parts of the brain
in a procedure called lobotomy, introduced in 1935, and electroconvulsive
therapy, devised in 1938. Lobotomy and less severe forms of psychosurgery are
now used only rarely, and electroconvulsive therapy is primarily a treatment for
depressive illness that has not responded to drug therapy.
A new era in treatment of schizophrenia, a severe form of
mental illness, began in the early 1950s with the introduction of phenothiazine
drugs. These drugs led to a new trend, deinstitutionalization, in which patients
were released from mental hospitals and treated in the community. Valium
(Diazepam) and other benzodiazepine drugs went into wide use in the 1970s for
treating anxiety and other emotional illness. Late in the century, there was
growing awareness about the importance of diagnosing and treating clinical
depression, a leading cause of suicide. Advanced imaging techniques that show
the structural and functional differences in the brains of people with certain
mental illnesses have opened the door for new treatment options.
The discovery of genes and their role in heredity and
disease was one of the most important medical advances in history (Genetics). In
1953 British biophysicist Francis Crick and American biochemist James Watson
identified the double-helix structure of deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA). This
discovery helped to explain how DNA carried genetic information. In the 1960s
American biochemist Marshall Nirenberg added key details about how DNA
determines the structure of proteins.
Indian-born American biochemist Har Gobind Khorana was the
first to synthesize a gene in the laboratory in 1970, forging the way for
scientists to develop ways to isolate, alter, and clone, or copy, genes. They
applied these genetic engineering techniques to the diagnosis and treatment of
diseases. Researchers identified genes associated with cancer, heart disease,
mental illness, and obesity. With the genes identified, they worked on ways of
modifying the genes to treat the disease. Gene therapy emerged as an
experimental medical field that used genetically modified genes to treat
diseases. In 2001, scientists completed a draft sequence of the Human Genome
Project to identify all the genes needed to make a human being.
Genetic engineering techniques enabled production of scarce
human hormones and other materials for use as drugs. A new biotechnology
industry started producing these materials for medical use. Scientists also
began genetically modifying sheep and other animals to produce drugs in their
milk.
In 1905, British scientist Ernest H. Starling introduced the
word hormone to describe substances secreted by the endocrine glands that
regulate body functions (Endocrine System). The discovery of adrenaline, or
epinephrine, in 1901 led to identification and isolation of other hormones. One
of the most important advances was the discovery of insulin by Canadian
scientists Frederick Banting and Charles H. Best and Scottish physiologist John
J. Macleod in 1921. For years people with diabetes mellitus used insulin
extracted from animal pancreases. In 1981, human insulin produced using
biotechnology became available. American physicians made another major advance
in endocrinology in 1949. They discovered that cortisone, an adrenal gland
hormone, relieved inflammation. New discoveries about human sex hormones later
led to the first birth control pills.
Great advances were made in birth control with the
improvement of intrauterine devices in the 1950s and the development of the
birth control pill in 1960 by the American biologist Gregory Pincus. By the
1990s long-lasting hormonal implants and contraceptive injections such as
Depo-Provera were developed. These options gave women more control in deciding
whether to become pregnant. Voluntary sterilization, involving vasectomies in
men and tubal ligation in women, emerged as a popular way of permanent birth
control. Unwanted pregnancies, however, remained a serious problem in the late
1990s. Researchers still sought more convenient and safer methods of birth
control, including a male birth control pill.
By 1975 physicians were able to diagnose some congenital or
inherited diseases before childbirth (see Birth Defects). Doctors take samples
of placental cells (Chorionic Villus Sampling) or of the amniotic fluid around
the foetus (Amniocentesis) to determine whether hereditary blood diseases, Down
syndrome, defects of the spine, or other congenital diseases are present. Even
the sex of a foetus may be known in advance.
In addition to advances in early diagnosis, progress
occurred in identifying the causes of some birth defects. Excess alcohol
consumption during pregnancy was linked to foetal alcohol syndrome, and
inadequate intake of the vitamin folic acid was linked to spina bifida and other
neural tube defects.
Advances in treating infertility, which prevents couples
from having children, began with the world's first so-called test-tube baby born
in the 1980s through in vitro fertilization. Other forms of assisted
reproduction soon became available. Researchers in 1997 cloned a lamb from cells
taken from an adult ewe. It led to speculation that human cloning could become
another option in human reproduction.
Heart disease emerged as one of the leading causes of death
in Western countries by the end of the 20th century. Great advances occurred in
diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of this widespread disease.
Diagnosis improved with the widespread use of cardiac
catheterization in the 1950s. This procedure involves threading a slender tube
into the heart to take measurements and identify blocked arteries. Less invasive
diagnostic methods, such as thallium scans in which a special imaging camera
detects the movement of thallium in heart muscle, provided additional diagnostic
improvements.
These techniques led to a new era in surgical treatment of
coronary heart disease, artery blockages that cause most heart attacks.
Physicians began treating blocked coronary arteries with a variety of new
techniques. The first bypass operation was performed in 1967 and involved the
creation of a new route for blood supply to reach blood-starved heart muscles.
In balloon angioplasty, developed in 1977, a deflated balloon is inserted into a
narrowed artery. The balloon is then inflated at the site of the narrowing to
widen it. Other surgical advances included replacement of diseased heart valves
with artificial valves; implantation of pacemakers that maintain normal heart
rhythm; use of temporary artificial hearts; and better methods for correcting
hereditary defects in the heart.
New drugs were developed to treat angina pectoris, the chest
pain of heart disease; high blood pressure; dangerous abnormalities in heart
rhythm; and high blood cholesterol levels. Studies showed that drug treatment
could reduce the risk of a heart attack or stroke. In the 1980s, aspirin went
into wide use to prevent blood clots that cause many heart attacks. Emergency
medical personnel also began using drugs that dissolve clots and stop a heart
attack if given soon after symptoms develop.
Advances have been made in the prevention of heart disease.
Studies have identified risk factors such as high blood pressure, high blood
cholesterol, cigarette smoking, diabetes, obesity, and lack of exercise.
Government health agencies and public health groups began public education
programs to help people reduce heart disease risks. These preventive methods
seem to be working.
Early detection and better treatment have resulted in major
improvements in survival of patients with cancer. By 2000, 59 percent of people
diagnosed with cancer were alive five years later, compared with only 25 percent
in 1940. New drugs, surgical procedures, and ways of treating cancer with X rays
and radioactive isotope radiation contributed to the improvement. In the 1990s,
physicians used new knowledge about the human immune system to develop
immunotherapy for some kinds of cancer, in which the immune system is stimulated
to produce antibodies against specific invaders. Another form of immunotherapy
is the use of monoclonal antibodies, genetically engineered antibodies that
target specific cancer cells. Screening tests for early detection of cancers of
the cervix, prostate, breast, and colon and rectum (Colorectal Cancer) became
widely available. Researchers also made progress in identifying cancer genes
that are associated with an increased risk of the disease and developed
screening tests for some cancer genes. Advances in gene therapy also offered
promise for new cancer treatments. Health groups placed great emphasis in the
second half of the century on cancer prevention through avoiding smoking and
eating a diet rich in fresh fruits and vegetables. Despite these advances, the
percentage of deaths from cancer increased from about 2 percent in 1900 to about
20 percent in 2000. Much of the rise, however, resulted from an increased
proportion of older people, who are more vulnerable to cancer, and from
cigarette smoking.
Advances in computer and Internet technologies created new
possibilities for doctors and their patients in the early 1990s. Using computers
to send live video, sound, and high-resolution images between two distant
locations, doctors can easily examine patients in offices thousands of miles
away. Rural patients no longer had to make long trips into urban centres to
consult specialists. In telemedicine, a computer fitted with special software
and a video camera turns a live video image of a patient into a digital signal.
This signal is transmitted over high-speed telephone lines to similar equipment
at the doctor’s office, where it is converted back into a format that can be
viewed live on a television screen. Telemedicine also includes machines
specially designed to measure and record a patient’s vital signs at home, then
transmit the information directly to a hospital nursing station. This electronic
remote home care enables health care professionals to monitor a patient’s
heart rate, temperature, blood pressure, pulse, blood-oxygen levels, and weight
several times a day, without the patient ever having to leave home. In addition
to providing a vehicle for doctors and patients in remote locations to interact,
telemedicine also enabled doctors in distant locations to share information.
Patient charts, X rays, and other diagnostic materials can be transmitted
between doctors’ offices. Moreover, doctors in rural areas of the world can
observe state-of-the-art medical procedures that they would otherwise have had
to travel thousands of miles to witness. Still in its infancy in the late 1990s,
telemedicine may one day alleviate some of the regional inequalities inherent in
modern medicine, not just between regions of North America, but also between
developing countries and urban medical centres in the industrialized world.