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Who’s Who in Orthopedics

George Frederic STILL

1868–1941

George Frederic Still was born in a working-class suburb of London, of Cornish stock. He was edu- cated at Cambridge, where he took a first in the classics. After his medical training at Guy’s Hospital, he became a house physician at the Hospital for Sick Children, Great Ormond Street.

He remained on the staff of this hospital for over 30 years. Still was the first physician in England Harvard Medical Schools. The traction theory was explained in the section that Codman entitled

“Dr. Stevens’ Theory of Mechanism of Produc- tion of Brachial Plexus Injuries.” Although cases of brachial plexus injury due to traction had been reported by Flaubert (1827) and Malgaigne (1847) and the traction theory of injury had been advanced by Gerdy and Horsely, Stevens was the first to analyze carefully the mechanical vectors created by the anatomy and to estimate the actual forces involved.

References

1. Codman EA (1934) The Shoulder. Boston (privately printed)

2. Stevens JH (1924) Compression leverage fractures of the ankle joint. Surg Gynecol Obstet 38:234 3. Stevens JH (1926) Dislocation of the shoulder. Ann

Surg 83:84

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Fritz STEINMANN

1872–1932

Fritz Steinmann of Bern, Switzerland, described a new method for the reduction and the treatment of fractures by the use of a specially designed nail to be inserted through a distal fragment and to be controlled by direct skeletal traction. This was published in 1907 when the fear of introducing infection into bone was a matter of nightmare concern to all surgeons. Its rapid acceptance in spite of the fears the method engendered is a tribute to that decade of surgeons. The Steinmann pin was one of the half dozen important contri- butions to fracture therapy in over 2,000 years of its practice.

James H. STEVENS

1871–1932

James H. Stevens was raised in Rochester, New Hampshire and graduated from Dartmouth College. He attended the New York Homeopathic Medical College, from which he received his medical degree in 1893. Like many idealistic young physicians, he sought adventure and the opportunity to make a political statement. He did this by serving 3 years (1895–1898) on the staff of General Maximo Gomez y Baez (El Chino), one of the leaders of the revolution against the Spanish rule in Cuba. After returning from Cuba, Stevens practiced surgery in and around Boston until his death from coronary thrombosis. From what little I can glean, he must have been a tal- ented eccentric whose ideas were somewhat out of the mainstream of medical practice. His published papers on fractures of the ankle2 and dislocation of the shoulder3 lean toward a mechanical explanation of the phenomena observed.

It was a surprise to find an important contribu- tion on brachial plexus injuries hidden in Ernest A. Codman’s book, The Shoulder.1 Chapter XI, entitled “Brachial Plexus Injuries,” occupies pages 332–381 and is accompanied by an exten- sive bibliography of the literature on the subject.

Stevens prepared the initial manuscript on the basis of more than 100 dissections of the brachial plexus, which he carried out at Tufts and the

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to confine his practice to the diagnosis and treat- ment of diseases of children, and thus he may be considered to be the founder of the specialty of pediatrics in that country. A small, thin, wiry man, Still cultivated some eccentricities and remained a bachelor, devoted to his mother. It was while he was only a registrar that he published his article,

“On a Form of Chronic Joint Disease in Chil- dren.” Later in his career he had an extensive practice that included the children of the British royal family.

College for an essay entitled “Bacteria and Their Influence Upon the Origin and Development of Septic Complications of Wounds.” The following year he performed the first public operation in the United States using Lister’s antiseptic technique.

He was an important influence on the introduc- tion of antiseptic and aseptic technique into oper- ating theaters in the United States.

After the death of his beloved wife in 1876, his work became his life. He made significant contri- butions to the technique of abdominal surgery, popularized the use of plaster of Paris splints for the treatment of fractures, and described a method for the reduction of posterior dislocations of the hip. His book on fractures and dislocations, first published in 1883, was preceded by a translation of a series of lectures, mostly on fractures, given by Gosselin at La Charite.

Stimson was an important and influential figure in the New York surgical community, and he had a significant role in the development of the Cornell University Medical College. His son, Henry L. Stimson, held positions in the cabinets of Presidents Taft, Hoover, and Franklin Roosevelt.

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Who’s Who in Orthopedics

Lewis Atterbury STIMSON

1844–1917

Lewis Atterbury Stimson was born in Paterson, New Jersey. His family was of old colonial stock, and his father was a successful stockbroker who counted Jay Gould and Jim Fisk among his acquaintances. Stimson graduated from Yale in 1863, just in time to see active service in the final period of the Civil War. After the war, he married and went to work as a broker on Wall Street. In the next few years, he became interested in the study of medicine, perhaps because of the chronic illness of his wife, who had become diabetic. In 1871, he took his family to Paris to seek help for his wife and to begin his medical education. At this time, he studied with Pasteur, Nelaton, Gos- selin, and others. Returning to the United States, he obtained his medical degree from Bellevue Hospital Medical College in 1875. At graduation he was awarded the Wood Prize of the Alumni Association of Bellevue Hospital Medical

Frank STINCHFIELD

1910–1992

Dr. Stinchfield had made the most outstanding contributions to the unique 125-year history of the New York Orthopedic Hospital. He combined the qualities of a superb clinician who developed

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