The Italian physicianSantorio Santorio practiced medicine and was professor of medical theory at the University of Padua. His writings demonstrate the transition taking place in medicine as Hippocratic and Galenic theories were seriously questioned. Santorio helped foster the importance of physiology and became part of the Iatrophysical School that emphasized the use of math and physics to gain an understanding of physiological processes.
Santorio made more than theoretical contributions to science and medicine. He is credited with inventing a wind gauge, a water current meter, the “pulsilogium” to measure the pulse rate, an instrument to remove bladder stones, and a trocar to drain fluid from cavities. Both he and his friend Galileo mentioned the thermoscope, a precursor to the thermometer. There is debate over the actual inventor, but it is known that Santorio was the first to add a numerical scale to the instrument.
In 1614 Santorio publishedMedicina statica, the first systematic study of basal metabolism. Praised by his contemporaries, this well-received work was printed in many editions and translations over the next century and a half. Our 1737 edition is an English translation byDr. John Quincy with additions byDr. James Keil and Dr. Quincy.
This is Quincy’s translation of Santorio’s fifth aphorism:
Insensible Perspiration is either made by the Pores of the Body, which is all over perspirable, and cover’d with a Skin like a Net; or it is performed by Respiration through the Mouth, which usually, in the Space of one Day, amounts to about the Quantity of half a Pound, as may plainly be made appear by breathing upon a Glass.