. of al-Zahrawi's
Kitab al-Tasrif Al-Zahrawi's thirty-volume medical encyclopedia,
Kitāb al-Taṣrīf, completed in the year 1000, covered a broad range of medical topics, including on
surgery,
medicine,
orthopaedics,
ophthalmology,
pharmacology,
nutrition,
dentistry,
childbirth, and
pathology. The first volume in the encyclopedia is concerned with general principles of
medicine, the second with
pathology, while much of the rest discuss topics regarding
pharmacology and
drugs. The last treatise and the most celebrated one is about
surgery. Al-Zahrawi stated that he chose to discuss
surgery in the last volume because surgery is the highest form of
medicine, and one must not practice it until he becomes well-acquainted with all other branches of
medicine. The work contained data that had accumulated during a career that spanned almost 50 years of training, teaching and practice. In it he also wrote of the importance of a positive
doctor-patient relationship and wrote affectionately of his students, whom he referred to as "my children". He also emphasized the importance of treating patients irrespective of their social status. He encouraged the close observation of individual cases in order to make the most accurate diagnosis and the best possible treatment. Not always properly credited, modern evaluation of
Kitab al-Tasrif manuscript has revealed on early descriptions of some medical procedures that were ascribed to later physicians. For example, Al-Zahrawi's
Kitab al-Tasrif described both what would later become known as "
Kocher's method" for treating a dislocated shoulder and "Walcher position" in
obstetrics. Moreover, the
Kitab al-Tasrif described how to
ligature blood vessels almost 600 years before
Ambroise Paré, and was the first recorded book to explain the hereditary nature of
haemophilia. Al-Zahrawi was, therefore, the first to describe the
migraine surgery procedure that is enjoying a revival in the 21st century, spearheaded by
Elliot Shevel, a South African surgeon.
On Surgery and Instruments On Surgery and Instruments is the 30th and last volume of the
Kitab al-Tasrif. It was without a doubt his most important work and the one which established his authority in Europe for centuries to come.
On Surgery and Instruments is the first illustrated surgical guide ever written. Its contents and descriptions has contributed in many technological innovations in
medicine, notably which tools to use in specific surgeries. In his book, al-Zahrawi draws diagrams of each tool used in different procedures to clarify how to carry out the steps of each treatment. The full text consists of three books, intended for medical students looking forward to gaining more knowledge within the field of surgery regarding procedures and the necessary tools. The book was translated into
Latin in the 12th century by
Gerard of Cremona. It soon found popularity in Europe and became a standard text in all major Medical universities like those of
Salerno and
Montpellier. It remained the primary source on surgery in Europe for the next 500 years, and as the historian of medicine,
Arturo Castiglioni, has put it: al-Zahrawi's treatise "in surgery held the same authority as did the
Canon of
Avicenna in medicine". Al-Zahrawi claims that his knowledge comes from careful reading of previous medical texts as well as his own experience: “...whatever skill I have, I have derived for myself by my long reading of the books of the Ancients and my thirst to understand them until I extracted the knowledge of it from them. Then through the whole of my life I have adhered to experience and practice... I have made it accessible for you and rescued it from the abyss of prolixity". In the beginning of his book, al-Zahrawi states that the reason for writing this treatise was the degree of underdevelopment
surgery had reached in the Islamic world, and the low status it held amongst physicians at the time. Al-Zahrawi ascribed such decline to a lack of
anatomical knowledge and a misunderstanding of the human
physiology. Noting the importance of
anatomy he wrote: {{Blockquote In
urology, al-Zahrawi wrote about taking stones out of the bladder. By inventing a new instrument, an early form of the
lithotrite which he called
michaab, he was able to crush the stone inside the bladder without the need for a surgical incision. His technique was important for the development of
lithotomy, and an improvement over the existing techniques in Europe which caused severe pain for the patient, and came with high death rates. In
dentistry and
periodontics, al-Zahrawi had the most significant contribution out of all Muslim physicians, and his book contained the earliest illustrations of dental instruments. He was known to use gold and silver wires to ligate loosened teeth, and has been credited as the first to use replantation in the
history of
dentistry. He also invented instruments to
scale the
calculus from the teeth, a procedure he recommended as a prevention from
periodontal disease. Al-Zahrawi introduced over 200
surgical instruments, which include, among others, different kinds of
scalpels,
retractors,
curettes,
pincers,
specula, and also instruments designed for his favoured techniques of
cauterization and
ligature. He also invented hooks with a double tip for use in surgery. Many of these instruments were never used before by any previous surgeons.
Tone Throughout the text, Al-Zahrawi assumes an authoritative tone. In "On
cauterization for
numbness", he declares the procedure "should not be attempted except by one who has a good knowledge of the anatomy of the limbs and of the exits of the
nerves that move the body". He warns that another procedure should not be attempted by any surgeon lacking "long training and practice in the use of cautery". He is not afraid to depart from old practice, disparaging the opinions that
cauterization should only be used in the spring or that
gold is the best material for cauterization: "cauterization is swifter and more successful with
iron". In "On cauterization for
pleurisy", he notes that the introduction of a red-hot probe into the
intercostal space to evacuate
pus from an
abscess could result in the creation of "an incurable
fistula" or even the immediate death of the patient. == Pharmacology and cosmetics ==