Islamic
Medicine: 1,000 Years Ahead of its Time
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Arabic pharmacy |
Within
a century after the death of Prophet Muhammad, peace and blessings
be upon him, the Muslims not only conquered new lands, but also
became scientific innovators with originality and productivity. They
hit the source ball of knowledge over the fence to Europe. By the
ninth century, Islamic medical practice had advanced from talisman
and theology to hospitals with wards, doctors who had to pass tests,
and the use of technical terminology. The then Baghdad General
Hospital incorporated innovations which sound amazingly modern. The
fountains cooled the air near the wards of those afflicted with
fever; the insane were treated with gentleness; and at night the
pain of the restless was soothed by soft music and storytelling. The
prince and pauper received identical attention; the destitute upon
discharge received five gold pieces to sustain them during
convalescence. While Paris and London were places of mud streets and
hovels, Baghdad, Cairo and Cordova had hospitals open to both male
and female patients; staffed by attendants of both sexes. These
medical centers contained libraries, pharmacies, the system of
interns, externs, and nurses. There were mobile clinics to reach the
totally disabled, the disadvantaged and those in remote areas. There
were regulations to maintain quality control on drugs. Pharmacists
became licensed professionals and were pledged to follow the
physician’s prescriptions. Legal measures were taken to prevent
doctors from owning or holding stock in a pharmacy. The extent to
which Islamic medicine advanced in the fields of medical education,
hospitals, bacteriology, medicine, anesthesia, surgery, pharmacy,
ophthalmology, psychotherapy and psychosomatic diseases are
presented briefly.
INTRODUCTION
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Complex of Mansur Qalaun |
Prophet
Muhammad, peace and blessings be upon him, who is ranked number one
by Michael Hart, a Jewish scholar, in his book The 100: The Most
Influential Persons in History, was able to unite the Arab tribes
who had been torn by revenge, rivalry, and internal fights, and
produced a strong nation acquired and ruled simultaneously, the two
known empires at that time, namely the Persian and Byzantine
Empires. The Islamic Empire extended from the Atlantic Ocean on the
West to the borders of China on the East. Only 80 years after the
death of their Prophet, the Muslims crossed to Europe to rule Spain
for more than 700 years. The Muslims preserved the cultures of the
conquered lands. However, when the Islamic Empire became weak, most
of the Islamic contributions in science were destroyed. The Mongols
burnt Baghdad (1258 A.D.) out of barbarism, and the Spaniards
demolished most of the Islamic heritage in Spain out of hatred.
The
Islamic Empire for more than 1,000 years remained the most advanced
and civilized nation in the world. This is because Islam stressed
the importance and respect of learning, forbade destruction,
developed in Muslims the respect for authority, discipline and
tolerance for other religions. The Muslims recognized excellence,
and hungering intellectually were avid for the wisdom of the world
of Galen, Hippocrates, Rufus of Ephesus, Oribasius, Discorides and
Paul of Aegina. By the tenth century their zeal and enthusiasm for
learning resulted in all essential Greek medical writings being
translated into Arabic in Damascus, Cairo and Baghdad. Arabic became
the International Language of learning and diplomacy. The center of
scientific knowledge and activity shifted eastward, and Baghdad
emerged as the capital of the scientific world. The Muslims became
scientific innovators with originality and productivity. Islamic
medicine is one of the most famous and best known facets of Islamic
civilization, and in which the Muslims most excelled. The Muslims
were the great torchbearers of international scientific research.
They hit the source ball of knowledge over the fence to Europe. In
the words of Campbell, “The European medical system is Arabian not
only in origin but also in its structure. The Arabs are the
intellectual forebears of the Europeans.”
The
aim of this paper is to prove that Islamic Medicine was 1,000 years
ahead of its time. The paper covers areas such as medical education,
hospitals, bacteriology, medicine, anesthesia, surgery,
ophthalmology, pharmacy, and psychotherapy.
MEDICAL
EDUCATION
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Islamic doctor administering medicine |
In
636 A.D., the Persian City of Jundi-Shapur, which originally meant
beautiful garden, was conquered by the Muslims with its great
university and hospital intact. Later the Islamic medical schools
developed on the Jundi-Shapur pattern. Medical education was serious
and systematic. Lectures and clinical sessions included in teaching
were based on the apprentice system. The advice given by `Ali
Ibnul-`Abbas (Haly Abbas: -994 -A.D.) to medical students is as
timely today as it was then. “And of those things which were
incumbent on the student of this art (medicine) are that he should
constantly attend the hospitals and sick houses; pay unremitting
attention to the conditions and circumstances of their intimates in
company with the most astute professors of medicine; and inquire
frequently as to the state of the patients and symptoms apparent in
them, bearing in mind what he has read about these variations, and
what they indicate of good or evil.”
Razi
(Rhazes: 841-926 A.D.) advised medical students while they were
seeing a patient to bear in mind the classic symptoms of a disease
as given in text books and to compare them with what they found.
The
ablest physicians such as Razi (Al-Rhazes), Ibn-Sina (Avicenna:
980-1037 A.D.) and Ibn Zuhr (Avenzoar: 116 A.D.) performed the
duties of both hospital directors and deans of medical schools at
the same time. They studied patients and prepared them for student
presentation. Clinical reports of cases were written and preserved
for teaching. Registers were maintained.
Training
in Basic Sciences:
Only
Jundi-Shapur or Baghdad had separate schools for studying basic
sciences. Candidates for medical study received basic preparation
from private tutors through private lectures and self-study. In
Baghdad, anatomy was taught by dissecting apes, skeletal studies and
didactics. Other medical schools taught anatomy through lectures and
illustrations. Alchemy was once of the prerequisites for admission
to medical school. The study of medicinal herbs and pharmacognosy
rounded out the basic training. A number of hospitals maintained
barbell gardens as a source of drugs for the patients and a means of
instruction for the students.
Once
the basic training was completed the candidate was admitted as an
apprentice to a hospital where, at the beginning, he was assigned in
a large group to a young physician for indoctrination, preliminary
lectures, and familiarization with library procedures and uses.
During this pre-clinical period, most of the lectures were on
pharmacology and toxicology and the use of antidotes.
Clinical
training:
The
next step was to give the student full clinical training. During
this period students were assigned in small groups to famous
physicians and experienced instructors for ward rounds, discussions,
lectures and reviews. Early in this period therapeutics and
pathology were taught. There was a strong emphasis on clinical
instruction and some Muslim physicians contributed brilliant
observations that have withstood the test of time. As the students
progressed in their studies they were exposed more and more to the
subjects of diagnosis and judgment. Clinical observation and
physical examination were stressed. Students (clinical clerks) were
asked to examine a patient and make a diagnosis of the ailment. Only
after a student had failed would the professor make the diagnosis
himself. While performing physical examination, the students were
asked to examine and report six major factors: the patients’
actions, excreta, the nature and location of pain, and swelling.
Also noted was color and feel of the skin- whether hot, cool, moist,
dry or flabby. Yellowness in the whites of the eye (jaundice) and
whether or not the patient could bend his back (lung disease) was
also considered important.
After
a period of ward instructions, students, were assigned to outpatient
areas. After examining the patients they reported their findings to
the instructors. After discussion, treatment was decided on and
prescribed. Patients who were too ill were admitted as inpatients.
The keeping of records for every patient was the responsibility of
the students.
Curriculum:
There
was a difference in the clinical curriculum of different medical
schools in their courses; however the mainstay was usually internal
medicine. Emphasis was placed on clarity and brevity in describing a
disease and the separation of each entity. Until the time of Ibn
Sina the description of meningitis was confused with acute infection
accompanied by delirium. Ibn Sina described the symptoms of
meningitis with such clarity and brevity that there is very little
that can be added after 1,000 years. Surgery was also included in
the curriculum. After completing courses, some students specialized
under famous specialists. Some others specialized while in clinical
training. According to Elgood, many surgical procedures such as
amputation, excision of varicose veins and hemorrhoids were required
knowledge. Orthopedics was widely taught, and the use of plaster of
Paris for casts after reduction of fractures was routinely shown to
students. This method of treating fractures was rediscovered in the
West in 1852. Although ophthalmology was practiced widely, it was
not taught regularly in medical schools. Apprenticeship to an eye
doctor was the preferred way of specializing in ophthalmology.
Surgical treatment of cataract was very common. Obstetrics was left
to midwives. Medical practitioners consulted among themselves and
with specialists. Ibn Sina and Razi both widely practiced and taught
psychotherapy. After completing the training, the medical graduate
was not ready to enter practice until he passed the licensure
examination. It is important to note that there existed a Scientific
Association which had been formed in the hospital of Mayyafariqin to
discuss the conditions and diseases of the patients.
Licensing
of Physicians:
In
Baghdad in 931 A.D., Caliph Al-Muqtadir learned that a patient had
died as the result of a physician’s error. Thereupon he ordered
his chief physician, Sinan Ibn Thabit Ibn Qurrah to examine all
those who practiced the art of healing. In the first year of the
decree more than 860 were examined in Baghdad alone. From that time
on, licensing examinations were required and administered in various
places. Licensing Boards were set up under a government official
called Muhtasib, or inspector general. The Muhtasib also inspected
weights and measures of traders and pharmacists. Pharmacists were
employed as inspectors to inspect drugs and maintain quality control
of drugs sold in a pharmacy or apothecary. What the present Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) is doing in America today was done in
Islamic medicine 1,000 years ago. The chief physician gave oral and
practical examinations, and if the young physician was successful,
the Muhtasib administered the Hippocratic oath and issued a license.
After 1,000 years, licensing of physicians has been implemented in
the West, particularly in America by the State Licensing Board in
Medicine. For specialists we have the American Board of Medical
Specialties including medicine, surgery, radiology, etc. European
medical schools followed the pattern set by the Islamic medical
schools and even in the early nineteenth century, students at the
Sorbonne could not graduate without reading Ibn Sina’s Qanun
(Cannon). According to Razi, a physician had to satisfy two
conditions for selection: firstly, he was to be fully conversant
with the new and the old medical literature and secondly, he must
have worked in a hospital as house physician.
HOSPITALS
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Sultan Al-Mu'ayyad's Maristan in
Cairo - Egypt |
The
development of efficient hospitals was an outstanding contribution
of Islamic medicine. Hospitals served all citizens free without any
regard to their color, religion, sex, age or social status. The
hospitals were run by the government and the directors of hospitals
were physicians.
Hospitals
had separate wards for male patients and female patients. Each ward
was furnished with a nursing staff and porters of the sex of the
patients to be treated therein. Different diseases such as fever,
wounds, infections, mania, eye conditions, cold diseases, diarrhea
and female disorders were allocated different wards. Convalescents
had separate sections within them. Hospitals provided patients with
unlimited water supply and with bathing facilities. Only qualified
and licensed physicians were allowed by law to practice medicine.
The hospitals were teaching hospitals educating medical students.
They had housing for students and house-staff. They contained
pharmacies dispensing free drugs to patients.
Hospitals
had their own conference room and expensive libraries containing the
most up-to-date books. According to Haddad, the library of the Tulun
Hospital which was founded in Cairo in 872 A.D. (1100 years ago) had
100,000 books. Universities, cities and hospitals acquired large
libraries (Mustansiriyya University in Baghdad contained 80,000
volumes; the library of Cordova 600,000 volumes; that of Cairo
2,000,000 and that of Tripoli 3,000,000 books) and physicians had
their own extensive personal book collections at a time when
printing was unknown and book editing was done by skilled and
specialized scribes putting in long hours of manual labor.
For
the first time in history, these hospitals kept records of patients
and their medical care.
From
the point of view of treatment, the hospital was divided into an
outpatient department and an inpatient department. The system of the
inpatient department differed only slightly from that of today. On
admission at Tulun hospital, patients were given special apparel
while their clothes, money, and valuables were stored until the time
of their discharge. On discharge, each patient received five gold
pieces to support himself until he could return to work.
The
hospital and medical school at Damascus had elegant rooms and an
extensive library. Healthy people are said to have feigned illness
in order to enjoy its cuisine. There was a separate hospital in
Damascus for lepers, while in Europe even six centuries later,
condemned lepers were burned to death by royal decree.
The
Qayrawan Hospital (built in 830 A.D. in Tunisia) was characterized
by spacious separate wards, waiting rooms for visitors and patients,
and female nurses from Sudan, an event representing the first use of
nursing in Arab history. The hospital also provided facilities for
performing prayers.
The
Al-Adudi hospital (built in 981 A.D. in Baghdad) was furnished with
the best equipment and supplies known at the time. It had interns,
residents and 24 consultants attending its professional activities.
An Abbasid minister, `Ali Ibn `Isa, requested the court physician,
Sinan Ibn Thabit, to organize regular visiting of prisons by medical
officers. At a time when Paris and London were places of mud streets
and hovels, Baghdad, Cairo, and Cordova had hospitals which
incorporated innovations which sound amazingly modern. It was
chiefly in the humaneness of patient care, however, that the
hospitals of Islam excelled. Near the wards of those afflicted with
fever, fountains cooled the air; the insane were treated with
gentleness; and at night music and storytelling soothed the
patients.
The
Bimaristans (hospitals) were of two types - the fixed and the
mobile. The mobile hospitals were transported upon beasts of burden
and were erected from time to time as required. The physicians in
the mobile clinics were of the same standing as those who served the
fixed hospitals. Similar moving hospitals accompanied armies in the
field. Field hospitals were well equipped with medicaments,
instruments, tents and a staff of doctors, nurses, and orderlies.
The traveling clinics served the totally disabled, the disadvantaged
and those in remote areas. These hospitals were also used by
prisoners, and by the general public, particularly in times of
epidemics.
BACTERIOLOGY
Al-Razi
was asked to choose a site for a new hospital when he came to
Baghdad. First he deduced which was the most hygienic area by
observing where the fresh pieces of meat he had hung in various
parts of the city decomposed least quickly.
Ibn
Sina stated explicitly that bodily secretion is contaminated by foul
foreign earthly body before getting the infection. Ibn Khatima
stated that man is surrounded by minute bodies which enter the human
system and cause disease.
In
the middle of the fourteenth century, “black death” (the plague)
was ravaging Europe and before which Christians stood helpless,
considering it an act of God.
At
that time Ibn Al-Khatib of Granada composed a treatise in the
defense of the theory of infection in the following way:
To
those who say, “How can we admit the possibility of infection
while the religious law denies it?” We reply that the existence of
contagion is established by experience, investigation, the evidence
of the senses and trustworthy reports. These facts constitute a
sound argument. The fact of infection becomes clear to the
investigator who notices how he who establishes contact with the
afflicted gets the disease, whereas he who is not in contact remains
safe, and how transmission is effected through garments, vessels and
earrings.
Al-Razi
wrote the first medical description of smallpox and measles - two
important infectious diseases. He described the clinical difference
between the two diseases so vividly that nothing since then has been
added. Ibn Sina suggested the communicable nature of tuberculosis.
He is said to have been the first to describe the preparation and
properties of sulfuric acid and alcohol. His recommendation of wine
as the best dressing for wounds was very popular in medieval
practice. Razi, however, was the first to use silk sutures and
alcohol for hemostatis. He was the first to use alcohol as an
antiseptic.
ANESTHESIA
Ibn
Sina originated the idea of the use of oral anesthetics. He
recognized opium as the most powerful mukhadir (anesthetic). Less
powerful anesthetics known were mandragora, poppy, hemlock,
hyoscyamus, deadly nightshade (belladonna), lettuce seed, and snow
or ice cold water. The Arabs invented the soporific sponge which was
the precursor of modern anesthesia. It was a sponge soaked with
aromatics and narcotics and held to the patient’s nostrils.
The
use of anesthesia was one of the reasons for the rise of surgery in
the Islamic world to the level of an honorable specialty, while in
Europe, surgery was belittled and practiced by barbers and quacks.
The Council of Tours in 1163 A.D. declared that surgery was to be
abandoned by the schools of medicine and by all decent physicians.
Burton stated that “anesthetics have been used in surgery
throughout the East for centuries before ether and chloroform became
the fashion in civilized West.”
SURGERY
Al-Razi
is attributed to be the first to use the seton in surgery and animal
gut for sutures.
Abu
Al-Qasim Khalaf Ibn `Abbas Al-Zahrawi (930-1013 A.D.) known to the
West as Abulcasis, Bucasis or Alzahravius is considered to be the
most famous surgeon in Islamic medicine. In his book Al-Tasrif, he
described hemophilia for the first time in medical history. The book
contains the description and illustration of about 200 surgical
instruments, many of which were devised by Zahrawi himself. In it
Zahrawi stresses the importance of the study of anatomy as a
fundamental prerequisite to surgery. He advocates the
re-implantation of a fallen tooth and the use of dental prosthesis
carved from a cow’s bone, an improvement over the wooden dentures
worn by the first President of America, George Washington, seven
centuries later. Zahrawi appears to be the first surgeon in history
to use cotton (a word of Arabic origin) in surgical dressings in the
control of hemorrhage, as padding in the splinting of fractures, as
a vaginal padding in fractures of the pubis and in dentistry. He
introduced the method for the removal of kidney stones by cutting
into the urinary bladder. He was the first to teach the lithotomy
position for vaginal operations. He described tracheotomy,
distinguished between goiter and cancer of the thyroid, and
explained his invention of a cauterizing iron which he also used to
control bleeding. His description of varicose veins stripping, even
after ten centuries, is almost like modern surgery. In orthopedic
surgery he introduced what is called today Kocher’s method of
reduction of shoulder dislocation and patelectomy, 1,000 years
before Brooke reintroduced it in 1937.
Ibn
Sina’s description of the surgical treatment of cancer holds true
even today after 1,000 years. He says the excision must be wide and
bold; all veins running to the tumor must be included in the
amputation. Even if this is not sufficient, then the area affected
should be cauterized.
The
surgeons of Islam practiced three types of surgery: vascular,
general and orthopedic. Ophthalmic surgery was a specialty which was
quite distinct both from medicine and surgery. They freely opened
the abdomen and drained the peritoneal cavity in the approved modern
style. To an unnamed surgeon of Shiraz is attributed the first
colostomy operation. Liver abscesses were treated by puncture and
exploration.
Surgeons
all over the world practice today unknowingly several surgical
procedures that Zahrawi introduced 1,000 years ago.
MEDICINE
The
most brilliant contribution was made by Al-Razi who differentiated
between smallpox and measles, two diseases that were hitherto
thought to be one single disease. He is credited with many
contributions, which include being the first to describe true
distillation, glass retorts and luting, corrosive sublimate,
arsenic, copper sulfate, iron sulphate, saltpeter, and borax in the
treatment of disease. He introduced mercury compounds as purgatives
(after testing them on monkeys); mercurial ointments and lead
ointment. His interest in urology focused on problems involving
urination, venereal disease, renal abscess, and renal and vesical
calculi. He also described hay-fever or allergic rhinitis.
Some
of the Arab contributions include the discovery of itch mite of
scabies (Ibn Zuhr), anthrax, ankylostoma and the guinea worm by Ibn
Sina and sleeping sickness by Qalqashandy. They described abscess of
the mediastinum. They understood tuberculosis and pericarditis.
Al-Ash`ath
demonstrated gastric physiology by pouring water into the mouth of
an anesthetized lion and showed the movements of the stomach,
preceding Beaumont by about 1,000 years. Abu Shal Al-Masihi
explained that the absorption of food takes place more through the
intestines than the stomach. Ibn Zuhr introduced artificial feeding
either by gastric tube or by nutrient enema. Using the stomach tube
the Arab physicians performed gastric lavage in case of poisoning.
Ibn Al-Nafis was the first to discover pulmonary circulation.
Ibn
Sina in his masterpiece Al-Quanun (Canon), containing over a million
words, described complete studies of physiology, pathology and
hygiene. He specifically discoursed on breast cancer, poisons,
diseases of the skin, rabies, insomnia, childbirth and the use of
obstetrical forceps, meningitis, amnesia, stomach ulcers,
tuberculosis as a contagious disease, facial tics, phlebotomy,
tumors, kidney diseases and geriatric care.
OPHTHALMOLOGY
The
doctors of Islam exhibited a high degree of proficiency and
certainly were foremost in the treatment of eye diseases. Words such
as retina and cataract are of Arabic origin. In ophthalmology and
optics, Ibn Al-Haytham (965-1039 A.D.) known to the West as Alhazen,
wrote the Optical Thesaurus from which such worthies as Roger Bacon,
Leonardo da Vinci and Johannes Kepler drew theories for their own
writings. In his Thesaurus he showed that light falls on the retina
in the same manner as it falls on a surface in a darkened room
through a small aperture, thus conclusively proving that vision
happens when light rays pass from objects towards the eye and not
from the eye towards the objects as thought by the Greeks. He
presented experiments for testing the angles of incidence and
reflection, and a theoretical proposal for a magnifying lens (made
in Italy three centuries later). He also taught that the image made
on the retina is conveyed along the optic nerve to the brain. Razi
was the first to recognize the reaction of the pupil to light and
Ibn Sina was the first to describe the exact number of extrinsic
muscles of the eyeball, namely six. The greatest contribution of
Islamic medicine in practical ophthalmology was in the matter of
cataract. The most significant development in the extraction of
cataract was developed by Ammar Ibn Ali of Mosul, who introduced a
hollow metallic needle through the sclerotic and extracted the lens
by suction. Europe rediscovered this in the nineteenth century.
PHARMACOLOGY
Pharmacology
took roots in Islam during the 9th century. Yuhanna Ibn Masawayh
(777-857 A.D.) started scientific and systematic applications of
therapeutics at the Abbasids capital. His students Hunayn Ibn Ishaq
Al-Ibadi (809-874 A.D.) and his associates established solid
foundations of Arabic medicine and therapeutics in the ninth
century. In his book Al-Masail, Hunayn outlined methods for
confirming the pharmacological effectiveness of drugs by
experimenting with them on humans. He also explained the importance
of prognosis and diagnosis of diseases for better and more effective
treatment.
Pharmacy
became an independent and separate profession from medicine and
alchemy. With the wild sprouting of apothecary shops, regulations
became necessary and imposed to maintain quality control. The
Arabian apothecary shops were regularly inspected by a syndic (Muhtasib)
who threatened the merchants with humiliating corporal punishments
if they adulterated drugs. As early as the days of Al-Ma’mun and
Al-Mu`tasim, pharmacists had to pass examinations to become licensed
professionals and were pledged to follow the physician’s
prescriptions. Also by this decree, restrictive measures were
legally placed upon doctors, preventing them from owning or holding
stock in a pharmacy.
Methods
of extracting and preparing medicines were brought to a high art,
and their techniques of distillation, crystallization, solution,
sublimation, reduction and calcination became the essential
processes of pharmacy and chemistry. With the help of these
techniques, the Saydalanis (pharmacists) introduced new drugs such
as camphor, senna, sandalwood, rhubarb, musk, myrrh, cassia,
tamarind, nutmeg, alum, aloes, cloves, coconut, nuxvomica, cubebs,
aconite, ambergris and mercury. The important role of the Muslims in
developing modern pharmacy and chemistry is memorialized in the
significant number of current pharmaceutical and chemical terms
derived from Arabic: drug, alkali, alcohol, aldehydes, alembic, and
elixir among others, not to mention syrups and juleps. They invented
flavor extracts made of rose water, orange blossom water, orange and
lemon peel, tragacanth and other attractive ingredients. Space does
not permit me to list the contributions to pharmacology and
therapeutics made by Razi, Zahrawi, Biruni, Ibn Butlan, and Tamimi.
PSYCHOTHERAPY
From
freckle lotion to psychotherapy- such was the range of treatment
practiced by the physicians of Islam. Though freckles continue to
sprinkle the skin of 20th century man, in the realm of psychosomatic
disorders both Al-Razi and Ibn Sina achieved dramatic results,
antedating Freud and Jung by a thousand years. When Razi was
appointed physician-in-chief to the Baghdad Hospital, he made it the
first hospital to have a ward exclusively devoted to the mentally
ill.
Razi
combined psychological methods and physiological explanations, and
he used psychotherapy in a dynamic fashion. He was once called in to
treat a famous caliph who had severe arthritis. He advised a hot
bath, and while the caliph was bathing, Razi threatened him with a
knife, proclaiming he was going to kill him. This deliberate
provocation increased the natural caloric which thus gained
sufficient strength to dissolve the already softened humors, and as
a result the caliph got up from his knees in the bath and ran after
Razi. One woman who suffered from such severe cramps in her joints
that she was unable to rise was cured by a physician who lifted her
skirt, thus putting her to shame. “A flush of heat was produced
within her which dissolved the rheumatic humor.”
The
Arabs brought a refreshing spirit of dispassionate clarity into
psychiatry. They were free from the demonological theories which
swept over the Christian world and were therefore able to make
clear-cut clinical observations on the mentally ill.
Najab
ud din Muhammad, a contemporary of Razi, left many excellent
descriptions of various mental diseases. His carefully compiled
observation on actual patients made up the most complete
classification of mental diseases theretofore known. Najab described
agitated depression, obsessional types of neurosis, Nafkhae
Malikholia (combined priapism and sexual impotence). Kutrib (a form
of persecutory psychosis), Dual-Kulb (a form of mania).
Ibn
Sina recognized ‘physiological psychology’ in treating illnesses
involving emotions. From the clinical perspective, Ibn Sina
developed a system for associating changes in the pulse rate with
inner feelings, which has been viewed as anticipating the word
association test of Jung. He is said to have treated a terribly ill
patient by feeling the patient’s pulse and reciting aloud to him
the names of provinces, districts, towns, streets and people. By
noticing how the patient’s pulse quickened when names were
mentioned, Ibn Sina deduced that the patient was in love with a girl
whose home Ibn Sina was able to locate by the digital examination.
The man took Ibn Sina’s advice, married the girl, and recovered
from his illness.
It
is not surprising to know that at Fez, Morocco, an asylum for the
mentally ill had been built early in the 8th century, and
insane-asylums were built by the Arabs also in Baghdad in 705 A.D.,
in Cairo in 800 A.D., and in Damascus and Aleppo in 1270 A.D. In
addition to baths, drugs, kind and benevolent treatment given to the
mentally ill, musico-therapy and occupational therapy were also
employed. These therapies were highly developed. Special choirs and
live music bands were brought daily to entertain the patients by
providing singing and musical performances and comic performers as
well.
CONCLUSION
1,000
years ago Islamic medicine was the most advanced in the world at
that time. Even after ten centuries, the achievements of Islamic
medicine look amazingly modern. 1,000 years ago the Muslims were the
great torchbearers of international scientific research. Every
student and professional from each country outside the Islamic
Empire, aspired, yearned, and dreamed to go to the Islamic
universities to learn, work, live and lead a comfortable life in an
affluent and most advanced and civilized society. Today, in this
twentieth century, the United States of America has achieved such a
position. The pendulum can swing back. Fortunately, Allah the
Almighty has given a bounty to many Islamic countries - an income
over 100 billion dollars per year. Hence Islamic countries have the
opportunity and resources to make Islamic science and medicine
number one in the world, once again.
Shahid
Athar M.D. is Clinical Associate Professor of Internal Medicine and
Endocrinology, Indiana University School of Medicine Indianapolis,
Indiana, and a writer on Islam. http://islamfortoday.com/athar04.htm
Ibrahim B. Syed
is a Clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of Louisville
School of Medicine and a writer on Islamic affairs.
*Ibrahim B. Syed
is a Clinical Professor of Medicine at the University of
Louisville School of Medicine and a writer on Islamic affairs.
**Mohammad
El-Sayed Selim is a Professor
of Political Science, Director of the Center for Asian
studies, Faculty of Economics and Political Science, Cairo
University, Giza, Egypt.
E-mail: mohammedselim@hotmail.com