Bartolomeo Eustachio | |
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Born | c. 1500–1510 |
Died | 27 August 1574 |
Nationality | Italian |
Other names | Bartholom(a)eus Eustachius |
Known for | Eustachian tubeEustachian valve |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Anatomy |
Notable students | Volcher Coiter |
Bartolomeo Eustachi (c. 1500–1510 – 27 August 1574), also known asEustachio or by hisLatin name ofBartholomaeus Eustachius (/juːˈsteɪʃəs/), was anItaliananatomist and one of the founders of the science ofhuman anatomy.
Bartolomeo was born in San Severino in the province of Ancona, where his father, Marinao Eustachius, was a wealthy and prominent physician. Bartolomeo received the required broad humanistic education typical of that time, and then studied medicine at the Archiginnasio della Sapienza in Rome. He was also well versed in Hebrew, Arabic, and Greek, which gave him access to original medical treatises written in those languages. As a physician, Eustachius enjoyed great prestige among the upper classes, having among his patients the Duke of Urbino, the Cardinal della Rovero, and the Duke of Terranova. He became a member of the Medical College of Rome and in 1549 was appointed Professor of Anatomy at the Papal College, the Archiginnasio dellSapienza. He soon obtained papal dispensation to dissect cadavers from patients from the Santo Spirito Hospital.[1]
During 1562 and 1563 Bartolomeo Eustachio (writing under the Latin surname Eustacius) wrote a remarkable series of scientific works on the anatomy of the kidney, the hearing apparatus, the teeth and their structure, and the circulatory system, including the lower vena cava and its valves (now known as the Eustachian valve). These works were organized and published (illustrated with eight plates) asOpscula Anatomica in 1564.[2]
Eustachius was deeply interested in understanding the anatomical structures of the human body through direct observation, instead of accepting the manya priori theories current among other physicians. His anatomical investigations into the vena caval Eustachian valve, led him to conclude that its function was to avoid reflux of blood. He also discovered the thoracic canal. Trying to understand how diseases affected body structures, Eustachius made comparative anatomical analysis of healthy and disease-altered organs (pathological anatomy). Working with Pier Matteo Pini, he produced a series of 47 detailed drawings of the studied organs. This series of illustrations,Tabulae Anatomicae Clariviri, was published in 1714.
Eustachio extended knowledge of theinternal ear by rediscovering and describing correctly theEustachian tube that bears his name. He was the first to describe the internal and anterior muscles of themalleus and thestapedius, and the complicated figure of thecochlea. He was the first to study accurately the anatomy of the teeth, and the phenomena of the first and second dentitions. Eustachius also discovered theadrenal glands (reported in 1563). His greatest work, which he was unable to publish, was hisAnatomical Engravings. These were completed in 1552, nine years afterVesalius had published his magnum opus,De Humani Corporis Fabrica Libri Septem in Basel.
Published in 1714 byGiovanni Maria Lancisi at the expense ofPope Clement XI, and again in 1744 byCajetan Petrioli, and again in 1744 byBernhard Siegfried Albinus, and subsequently atBonn in 1790, the engravings show that Eustachius had dissected with the greatest care and diligence, and had taken the utmost pains to give accurate views of the shape, size, and relative position of the organs of the human body.
The first seven plates illustrate the history of the kidneys and some of the facts relating to the structure of the ear. The eighth represents the heart, the ramifications of thevena azygos, and the valve of thevena cava, named after the author. The seven subsequent plates offer different views of the viscera of the chest and abdomen. The seventeenth contains the brain and spinal cord; and the eighteenth more accurate views of the origin, course, and distribution of the nerves than had been given before. Fourteen plates are devoted to the muscles.
Eustachius did not confine his researches to the study of comparative anatomy. He attempted to derive the physiology of organs on the basis of their anatomy. He did not restrict himself to gross anatomy: what was too minute for unassisted vision he inspected by means of glasses (earlymicroscopes). Structure that could not be understood in their pristine state he unfolded by maceration in different fluids, or rendered more distinct by injection and exsiccation.
He was known as a supporter of the 2nd century AD Roman anatomistGalen,[3][4] entering into a public dispute with the eminent contemporary anatomist,Vesalius. However, both made their anatomic observations from dissection of human cadavers.
Eustachius died in Umbria in 1574, during a trip to meet Cardinal della Rovere.