मोतियाबिंद के अपरेशन आचार्य सुश्रुत जी के पद्धति से
अत्याधुनिक हो कर भी फिर आचार्य सुश्रुत जी के शरण में पंहुचे आधुनिक नेत्र चिकित्सा।
''डक्टर ने अपने श्वास के भाप से एक कपड़ा द्वारा आंखो को गर्म किया। फिर उन्होने अपने वृद्धांगुली (thumb) से आंखो को गोल घुमाकर मसाज किया।
उन्होंने मरीज के मुंह और आंख उपर की तरफ रखे और मरिज को गुटनो की तरफ देखने को कहा ताकी दृष्टि नीचे की तरफ होने से लेंस भी नीचे आ जाये।
अपने मध्यमा और वृद्धांगुली से आंखो के उपर और नीचे की तरफ पकड़े और दोनो कोने में हल्के से दबाये और थोड़ा सा पानी निकला।
अब उन्होंने मरीज को साहस देने के प्रयास में हल्की बात चित शुरु की और आंखो को गौ दुग्ध से भर दिये। सफेद दुग्ध के मध्य नेत्र के कृष्णमंडल( लेंस) चमक उठा उन्होंने एक चिकित्सा औजार से उस सफेद आस्तरण को निकाल दिया।
न तो रक्त वहा न ही दर्द हुया ।
ये वांये आंख था इसलिए डक्टर ने दाहिना हाथ से इसे किया। फिर एक विशिष्ट आयुर्वेदिक तरल और दुध का उपयोग बताकर छोड़ दिया''
हां यही पद्धति था महर्षि सुश्रुत जी के मोतियाबिंद सर्जरी का।
आधुनिक शल्य चिकित्सा में पहले काट चीरकर खुन बहाकर तरह तरह के ड्रपस देकर दर्द की दवा खिलाकर ये अपरेशन होता था परंतु आज फिर वही पद्धति पर वापस आये है विज्ञान जो सदियो पहले हमारे पुर्बज ने हमे सिखाया था।
यहा पड़े
https://readerblogs.navbharattimes.indiatimes.com/ManKahee/eyes1/
Cataract operation as per #Sushruta_Samhita
“The doctor warmed the patient’s eye with the breath of his mouth. He rubbed the closed eye of the patient with his thumb and then asked the patient to look at his knees. The patient’s head was held firmly. The doctor held the lancet between his fore-finger, middle-finger and thumb and introduced it into the patient’s eye towards the pupil, half a finger’s breadth from the black of the eye and a quarter of a finger’s breadth from the outer corner of the eye. He moved the lancet gracefully back and forth and upward. There was a small sound and a drop of water came out. The doctor spoke a few words to comfort the patient and moistened the eye with milk. He scratched the pupil with the tip of the lancet, without hurting, and then drove the ‘slime’ towards the nose. The patient got rid of the ‘slime’ by drawing it into his nose. It was a matter of joy for the patient that he could see objects through his operated eye and the doctor drew the lancet out slowly. He then laid cotton soaked in fat on the wound and the patient lay still with the operated eye bandaged. It was the patient’s left eye and the doctor used his right hand for the operation.”
This is the description of an operation that was performed by Sushruta, India’s greatest surgeon of the pre-medieval ।
Sushruta’s time has long been a controversial subject due to a lack of direct evidence . The original copy of Sushruta Samhita, the monumental treatise on surgery written by Sushruta, is not traceable. However, a version of this textbook was discovered in 1890 in Kuchar, Chinese Turkestan, and was named after the man to whom it was sold, Hamilton Bower. The Bower manuscript is currently housed in the Bodlean Library in Oxford [4]. Hoernle edited and critically evaluated it and placed its origin around fifth century BC. As Sushruta’s name was found in this document, it is presumed that he must have existed in the fifth century BC or earlier।
Yes the actual procedure of cataract operation without bleeding.
Morden Surgeon now following this procedure to cure cataract without bleeding.
https://www.eyenews.uk.com/features/ophthalmology/post/ophthalmology-in-ancient-india-sushruta-s-time-and-the-modern-era
#Krishnapriya
''डक्टर ने अपने श्वास के भाप से एक कपड़ा द्वारा आंखो को गर्म किया। फिर उन्होने अपने वृद्धांगुली (thumb) से आंखो को गोल घुमाकर मसाज किया।
उन्होंने मरीज के मुंह और आंख उपर की तरफ रखे और मरिज को गुटनो की तरफ देखने को कहा ताकी दृष्टि नीचे की तरफ होने से लेंस भी नीचे आ जाये।
अपने मध्यमा और वृद्धांगुली से आंखो के उपर और नीचे की तरफ पकड़े और दोनो कोने में हल्के से दबाये और थोड़ा सा पानी निकला।
अब उन्होंने मरीज को साहस देने के प्रयास में हल्की बात चित शुरु की और आंखो को गौ दुग्ध से भर दिये। सफेद दुग्ध के मध्य नेत्र के कृष्णमंडल( लेंस) चमक उठा उन्होंने एक चिकित्सा औजार से उस सफेद आस्तरण को निकाल दिया।
न तो रक्त वहा न ही दर्द हुया ।
ये वांये आंख था इसलिए डक्टर ने दाहिना हाथ से इसे किया। फिर एक विशिष्ट आयुर्वेदिक तरल और दुध का उपयोग बताकर छोड़ दिया''
हां यही पद्धति था महर्षि सुश्रुत जी के मोतियाबिंद सर्जरी का।
आधुनिक शल्य चिकित्सा में पहले काट चीरकर खुन बहाकर तरह तरह के ड्रपस देकर दर्द की दवा खिलाकर ये अपरेशन होता था परंतु आज फिर वही पद्धति पर वापस आये है विज्ञान जो सदियो पहले हमारे पुर्बज ने हमे सिखाया था।
यहा पड़े
https://readerblogs.navbharattimes.indiatimes.com/ManKahee/eyes1/
Cataract operation as per #Sushruta_Samhita
“The doctor warmed the patient’s eye with the breath of his mouth. He rubbed the closed eye of the patient with his thumb and then asked the patient to look at his knees. The patient’s head was held firmly. The doctor held the lancet between his fore-finger, middle-finger and thumb and introduced it into the patient’s eye towards the pupil, half a finger’s breadth from the black of the eye and a quarter of a finger’s breadth from the outer corner of the eye. He moved the lancet gracefully back and forth and upward. There was a small sound and a drop of water came out. The doctor spoke a few words to comfort the patient and moistened the eye with milk. He scratched the pupil with the tip of the lancet, without hurting, and then drove the ‘slime’ towards the nose. The patient got rid of the ‘slime’ by drawing it into his nose. It was a matter of joy for the patient that he could see objects through his operated eye and the doctor drew the lancet out slowly. He then laid cotton soaked in fat on the wound and the patient lay still with the operated eye bandaged. It was the patient’s left eye and the doctor used his right hand for the operation.”
This is the description of an operation that was performed by Sushruta, India’s greatest surgeon of the pre-medieval ।
Sushruta’s time has long been a controversial subject due to a lack of direct evidence . The original copy of Sushruta Samhita, the monumental treatise on surgery written by Sushruta, is not traceable. However, a version of this textbook was discovered in 1890 in Kuchar, Chinese Turkestan, and was named after the man to whom it was sold, Hamilton Bower. The Bower manuscript is currently housed in the Bodlean Library in Oxford [4]. Hoernle edited and critically evaluated it and placed its origin around fifth century BC. As Sushruta’s name was found in this document, it is presumed that he must have existed in the fifth century BC or earlier।
Yes the actual procedure of cataract operation without bleeding.
Morden Surgeon now following this procedure to cure cataract without bleeding.
https://www.eyenews.uk.com/features/ophthalmology/post/ophthalmology-in-ancient-india-sushruta-s-time-and-the-modern-era
#Krishnapriya
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