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Historical Bibliography Updated: February 16, 2020

Traumatic shock.

Publication Details

New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1923 CE.

"In the fall of 1916, before the United States entered World War I, the National Research Council named Cannon a member of a committee on traumatic shock. Later he joined the Harvard University Hospital Unit. On his way to France in May 1917, he stopped in London and arranged with Fletcher, first secretary of the Medical Research Committee, to join the group of physicians and surgeons of the British Expeditionary Forces who were dealing with shock cases at the Casualty Clearing Station at Béthune. . . . Initially Cannon and his associates in the field concentrated their therapeutic efforts on treating the acidosis that accompanies shock. Later they recognized that the acidosis was merely a secondary phenomenon, the result of the inadequacy of tissue perfusion. In 1923 Cannon summarized his wartime experience in Traumatic Shock" (Dictionary of Scientific Biography).

Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#11567
Permanent Linkhttps://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/13766
Author Bio LinkWikipedia ↗
External URLtraumatic-shock

Geographic Context

Publication place: New York

Mentioned in annotation: London