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Ah yes, the stethoscope.. A universal symbol of medicine.. But you must be wondering, what in the world are these pieces of rubber doing next to high
tech equipment like MRI scanners and robotic surgery?
Surely these are obsolete relics from the 19th century!
Well the answer lies at the intersection of history, the human body and technology.
The Stethoscope was invented in 1816 by a French Physician called René Laennec.
René invented it because he was a gentleman and he felt uncomfortable putting his ear
on women’s chests to hear their heart sounds.. And no I’m not making that up!. But why would you want to listen to the heart sounds in the first place?
A key challenge for a doctor is to find out what’s happening inside the human body,
without resorting to opening it up.. As technology has progressed, we have found different ways of peering inside a living
person without harming them, things like X-rays, ultrasound and MRI.
But the first X-ray wasn’t taken until 1895 and an X-ray can only provide you with a still
image.. It can’t tell you about what’s happening inside the body in real time.
As a physician in the early 1800s, René knew that listening to the heart sounds can provide
a clue to whether the heart valves are working properly.
/ˈhap(ə)niNG/
fashionable. event or occurrence. To take place or occur.
/ˈōp(ə)niNG/
initial. Action of starting something, e.g. a new business. To make accessible or able to be used, e.g. road.
/wəˈT͟Hout/
outside. without it being case that. in absence of.
/THro͞o/
From one end or side of something to the other. expressing movement into one side and out of other side of opening etc.. Allowing you to pass between, or to.
/ˈskanər/
device for examining, reading, or monitoring something. Machines that copies, reads, or records data.
/dəˈstiNGɡwiSHəb(ə)l/
clear enough to be recognized or identified as different.