, explaining the technique of
epidural anesthesia visiting an injured man at the Docker Hospital in
Melilla, Spain during the
Second Melillan campaign in 1909. The Docker Hospital was renamed after Pagés in 1926. Romanian surgeon
Nicolae Racoviceanu-Pitești (1860–1942) was the first to use
opioids for intrathecal analgesia; he presented his experience in Paris in 1901. which was popularized in the 1930s by Italian surgery professor (18971966). Dogliotti is known for describing a "loss-of-resistance" technique, involving constant application of pressure to the plunger of a syringe to identify the epidural space whilst advancing the Tuohy needle – a technique sometimes referred to as
Dogliotti's principle.
Eugen Bogdan Aburel (18991975) was a Romanian surgeon and obstetrician who in 1931 was the first to describe blocking the
lumbar plexus during early labor, followed by a caudal epidural injection for the
expulsion phase. Beginning in October 1941,
Robert Andrew Hingson (19131996), Waldo B. Edwards and James L. Southworth, working at the
United States Marine Hospital at Stapleton, on Staten Island in New York, developed the technique of continuous caudal anesthesia. Hingson and Southworth first used this technique in an operation to remove the
varicose veins of a Scottish merchant seaman. Rather than removing the caudal needle after the injection as was customary, the two surgeons experimented with a continuous caudal infusion of local anesthetic. Hingson then collaborated with Edwards, the chief
obstetrician at the Marine Hospital, to study the use of continuous caudal anesthesia for analgesia during childbirth. Hingson and Edwards studied the caudal region to determine where a needle could be placed to deliver anesthetic agents safely to the spinal nerves without injecting them into the cerebrospinal fluid. The first described placement of a lumbar epidural catheter was performed by
Manuel Martínez Curbelo (5 June 19061 May 1962) on January 13, 1947. Curbelo, a Cuban anesthesiologist, introduced a 16 gauge Tuohy needle into the left flank of a 40-year-old woman with a large
ovarian cyst. Through this needle, he introduced a 3.5
French ureteral catheter made of elastic
silk into the lumbar epidural space. He then removed the needle, leaving the catheter in place and repeatedly injected 0.5% percaine (
cinchocaine, also known as dibucaine) to achieve anesthesia. Curbelo presented his work on September 9, 1947, at the 22nd Joint Congress of the
International Anesthesia Research Society and the International College of Anesthetists, in New York City. ==See also==