Aelius Galenus (AD 129 – 199) was one of the first persons to explore the blood
vasculature. During his work as physician and surgeon, he recognized distinct
differences in blood vessels. During surgery, he observed that vessels were filled with
either dark or bright blood. He believed that the human blood vascular system contained
two one-way blood distribution routes. The dark (venous) blood was generated directly
from food uptake in the liver, whereas the bright (arterial) blood was generated in the
heart. From the heart and liver, blood was then equally distributed and ‘consumed’
by all other organs in the body. To complete the vascular system, blood was then regenerated
in either the heart or liver (reviewed in (Carmeliet, 2005).
This ‘two-one way circulation’ theory was believed for centuries and it was only
until the 16th century that the British biologist and medical doctor William Harvey
could show that Galenus was wrong. Harvey characterized and quantified the blood
volume which passes the heart and concluded that this was much larger than the
amount of blood that could be generated by the body itself (On the Motion of the
Heart and Blood in Animals, 1628, William Harvey). Harvey postulated that there had
to be a circulatory loop in the body which consisted of the heart and a connected
vessel system. With a simple experiment, by tightening a ligature on to the upper arm
of an individual, he indeed identified a circulatory loop which was connected to the
heart and identified the presence of arteries and veins but also functional differences
between arteries and veins (On The Motion Of The Heart And Blood In Animals, 1628,
William Harvey, (Carmeliet, 2005).
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/26735/FBos_Thesis2011_compressed.pdf
http://repub.eur.nl/res/pub/26735/FBos_Thesis2011_compressed.pdf
No comments:
Post a Comment