Journal of the National Cancer Institute Advance Access originally published online on August 28, 2007
JNCI Journal of the National Cancer Institute 2007 99(17):1280-1281; doi:10.1093/jnci/djm131
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© The Author 2007. Published by Oxford University Press.
EDITORIALS |
The Mind Prepared: Hypnosis in Surgery
Correspondence to: David Spiegel, MD, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, 401 Quarry Rd, Ste 2325, Stanford, CA 94305-5718 (e-mail: dspiegel@stanford.edu).
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In 1846, a Scottish surgeon named James Esdaile reported 80% surgical anesthesia using hypnosis as the sole anesthetic for amputations in India. His work caused sufficient stir that when ether anesthesia was demonstrated in what is now called the Ether Dome at the Massachusetts General Hospital on October 16 of that same year, a surgeon strode to the front of the amphitheater and said, "Gentlemen, this is no humbug," to distinguish his surgical team's demonstration from Esdaile's report. It has taken us a century and a half to rediscover the fact that the mind has something to do with pain and can be a powerful tool in controlling it: the strain in
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J Natl Cancer Inst 2007 99: 1304-1312.
J Natl Cancer Inst 2007 99: 1277.
J Natl Cancer Inst 2007 99: 1277.
J Natl Cancer Inst 2007 99: 1277.
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