Guiseppe Baronio and the Sheep
Baronio, G., Degli
Innesti Animali, Stamperia e Fonderia del Genio, Milan, 1804.
In the McDowell Zeis Index it
says: "The book also contains some the
author's own experiments in transposing two pieces of skin in
a ram, which healed after they had been separated for 18
minutes or even one hour, while skin grafts exchanged between
a cow and a mare were unsuccessful."
In Plastic Surgery Research
Council - Thirty-five Year History (full text now available
online) Peter Randall writes about the 10th Annual Meeting at
the University of Kansas and says: "At this
meeting, we formally accepted Dick Stark's rendition of
Baronio's sheep as the official emblem."
From Bruce Klitzman, PhD
(7/28/99): I noticed your request for information on
"Baronio's Sheep". In 1986, I had a Duke medical student, Jack
Gelman, who did his research project with me and wrote up most
of the following bit of history regarding the famous "sheep".
In Italy, a charlatan called
Gambacurta, showed publicly how she could cut pieces of skin
off of herself, replace them and they would live; this was
reported by D.A. Sancassani in 1731. Italian physiologist,
Giuseppe Baronio (1759-1811), was inspired by knowledge of
this demonstration and carried out a series of successful
autografts of sheep skin in 1804 (Degli innesti animali).
Baronio removed pieces of sheep skin 12.5 by 7.5 cm, replaced
them 80 minutes after excision, and found that the skin
survived. Baronio's work pre-dated a reported success in man
by thirteen years (1817).
The Royal College of Surgeons of
England possesses a manuscript belonging to Astley Cooper with
the following notes concerning a young man. [He was] admitted
to Guy's hospital on 9th April, 1817, with a diseased thumb
which Mr. Cooper amputated between phalanges. He then cut off
a healthy piece of integument from the amputated part and
applied it to the base of the stump where he secured it by
means of adhesive slips. The graft was completely successful,
and this was the first recorded certain success of human
autografts.
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