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  • Ah yes, the stethoscope.

  • A universal symbol of medicine.

  • But you must be wondering, what in the world are these pieces of rubber doing next to high

  • tech equipment like MRI scanners and robotic surgery?

  • Surely these are obsolete relics from the 19th century!

  • Well the answer lies at the intersection of history, the human body and technology.

  • The Stethoscope was invented in 1816 by a French Physician called René Laennec.

  • René invented it because he was a gentleman and he felt uncomfortable putting his ear

  • on women's chests to hear their heart sounds.

  • And no I'm not making that up!

  • But why would you want to listen to the heart sounds in the first place?

  • A key challenge for a doctor is to find out what's happening inside the human body,

  • without resorting to opening it up.

  • As technology has progressed, we have found different ways of peering inside a living

  • person without harming them, things like X-rays, ultrasound and MRI.

  • But the first X-ray wasn't taken until 1895 and an X-ray can only provide you with a still

  • image.

  • It can't tell you about what's happening inside the body in real time.

  • As a physician in the early 1800s, René knew that listening to the heart sounds can provide

  • a clue to whether the heart valves are working properly.

  • In our hearts, there are 4 valves that help push blood only in one direction.

  • When the valves shut, they make a sound and the normal heartbeat has 2 clearly distinguishable sounds.

  • When the heart valves don't function properly, you can hear this whooshing sound as blood

  • passes through them.

  • For example, this is the sound of a common heart valve condition called Aortic Stenosis.

  • You can hear this sound even if you put your ear to someone's chest.

  • Of course, modern stethoscopes make this much less awkward, but also amplify the sound.

  • Stethoscopes are not just useful for the heart.

  • You can also listen to the lungs to check if air is passing freely in and out, the intestines

  • to check whether the gut is working after having an operation and stethoscopes also

  • help you when taking someone's blood pressure.

  • Technology has advanced dramatically since the 1800s.

  • We now have automatic blood pressure machines that require little human input, ultrasound

  • Echocardiography that helps us see the heart valves in real time and CT scanning which

  • can provide detailed images of the lung.

  • This doesn't mean that stethoscopes have become obsolete.

  • These humble pieces of rubber are still an important screening tool.

  • If we hear something odd, then we may follow up with a more sophisticated test like an

  • Echocardiogram.

  • In countries where healthcare resources are scarce, basic tools like the stethoscope become

  • even more important because sometimes, critical decisions may need to be made without having

  • access scanning equipment like CT scans.

  • Just like a fancy self-driving electric car still needs wheels, Doctors and Nurses will

  • continue to use a stethoscope as an important part of the medical toolkit.

  • As always if you have any questions let me know in the comments.

  • Thanks for watching and I'll see you in the next one.

Ah yes, the stethoscope.

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