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Discoverer
of Pulmonary Circulation : IBN
AL-NAFIS
Ala-al-Din Abu al-Hasan Ali
Ibn Abi al-Hazm al-Qarshi al-Dimashqi (known as Ibn Al-Nafis) was born in 1213
A.D. in Damascus. He was educated at the Medical College Hospital (Bimaristan
Al-Noori) founded by Noor al-Din Al-Zanki. Apart from medicine, Ibn al-Nafis
learned jurisprudence, literature and theology. He thus became a renowned expert
on the Shafi'i School of Jurisprudence as well as a reputed physician.
In 1236 Ibn Nafis moved to
Egypt and worked in Al-Nassri Hospital then in Al-Mansouri Hospital where he
became chief of physicians and the Sultan’s personal physician. When he died in
1288 A.D. he donated his house, library and clinic to the Mansuriya Hospital .
The most voluminous of his
books is Al-Shamil fi al-Tibb, which was designed to be an encyclopedia
comprising 300 volumes, but was not completed as a result of his death. The
manuscript is available in Damascus.
His book on ophthalmology is largely an original contribution and is also
extant. His book that became most famous, however, was Mujaz al-Qanun (The
Summary of Law) and a number of commentaries that were written on this same
topic. His commentaries include one on Hippocrates' book, and several volumes on
Ibn Sina's Qanun, which are still extant. Likewise he wrote a commentary on
Hunayn Ibn Ishaq's book. Another famous book embodying his original contribution
was on the effects of diet on health entitled Kitab al-Mukhtar fi al-Aghdhiya.
His major original
contribution of great significance was his discovery of the pulmonary
circulation, which was re-discovered by modern science after a lapse of three
centuries. He was the first to correctly describe the constitution of the lungs
and gave a description of the bronchi and the interaction between the human
body's vessels for air and blood. He also elaborated on the function of the
coronary arteries as suppliers of blood to the cardiac musculature.
Arab Discovery of the
Pulmonary Circulation
It was commonly believed that the Discovery of Pulmonary Circulation that is,
the movement of blood from the right to the left ventricles of the heart via the
lungs,had its inception in Europe
in the sixteenth century by Servetus, Vesalius, Colombo, and finally Harvey.
However later it was found that 300 years before Servetus,Vesalius or Harvey
(who was credited for correct explanation of pulmonary circulation) were born, an
eminent physician of the thirteenth century: Ibn Al-Nafis explained correctly
the Pulmonary Circulation (Encarta encyclopedia ,keyword=ibn nafis) .This
fact has been now recognized by many of the historians but some black sheep's
still try to argue the fact.
In 1924 an Egyptian
physician, Dr. Muhyo Al-Deen Altawi, discovered a script titled, "Commentary on
the Anatomy of Canon of Avicenna" in the Prussian state library in Berlin while
studying the history of Arab Medicine at the medical faculty of Albert Ludwig’s
University in Germany . This script is considered one of the best scientific
books in which Ibn Al-Nafis covers in detail the topics of anatomy, pathology
and physiology. This discovery revealed an important scientific fact, which up
to then had been ignored: the first description of the pulmonary circulation.
The theory that was accepted
prior to Ibn Al-Nafis was placed by Galen in the second century, who had
theorized that the blood reaching the right side of the heart went through
invisible pores in the cardiac septum to the left side of the heart where it
mixed with air to create spirit and was then consequently distributed to the
body. According to Galen's views, the venous system was quite separate from the
arterial system, except when they came in contact through the unseen pores .
However, Ibn Al-Nafis, based
on his knowledge in anatomy and scientific thinking stated that,
"...The blood from the right
chamber of the heart must arrive at the left chamber but there is no direct
pathway between them. The thick septum of the heart is not perforated and does
not have visible pores as some people thought or invisible pores as Galen
thought. The blood from the right chamber must flow through the vena arteriosa
(pulmonary artery) to the lungs, spread through its substances, be mingled there
with air, pass through the arteria venosa (pulmonary vein) to reach the left
chamber of the heart and there form the vital spirit...”
Elsewhere in his book he
said,
"The heart has only two
ventricles ...and between these two there is absolutely no opening. Also
dissection gives this lie to what they said, as the septum between these two
cavities is much thicker than elsewhere. The benefit of this blood (that is in
the right cavity) is to go up to the lungs, mix with what is in the lungs of
air, then pass through the arteria venosa to the left cavity of the two cavities
of the heart...”
In describing the anatomy of
the lungs, Ibn Nafis stated,
"The lungs are composed of
parts, one of which is the bronchi, the second the branches of the arteria
venosa and the third the branches of the vena arteriosa, all of them connected
by loose porous flesh."
He then added,
"... The need of the lungs
for the vena arteriosa is to transport to it the blood that has been thinned and
warmed in the heart, so that what seeps through the pores of the branches of
this vessel into the alveoli of the lungs may mix with what there is of air
therein and combine with it, the resultant composite becoming fit to be spirit
when this mixing takes place in the left cavity of the heart. The mixture is
carried to the left cavity by the arteria venosa."
Another important
contribution of Ibn Nafis that is rarely mentioned is his postulation that the
nutrition of the heart is extracted from the small vessels passing through its
wall, when he said
"... Again his (Avicenna's)
statement that the blood that is in the right side is to nourish the heart is
not true at all, for the nourishment to the heart is from the blood that goes
through the vessels that permeate the body of the heart..."
Ibn Al-Nafis was thus the
first to put forward the concept of the coronary circulation.
Europe’s Late Awakening
These important observations
were not known in Europe until 300 years later when Andrea Alpago of Belluno
translated some of Ibn Al-Nafis’ writings into Latin in 1547 . Later, Michael Servetus described the pulmonary
circulation in his theological book, "Christianismi Restitutio", in 1553 and
wrote, "...air mixed with blood is sent from the lungs to the heart through the
arterial vein; therefore, the mixture is made in the lungs. The bright color is
given to the sanguine spirit by the lungs, not by the heart." . It is worth mentioning that the Church accused
Servetus of heresy for opposing the teachings of Galen, and was consequently
-with his book -burnt at the stake. Andreas Vesalius described the pulmonary
circulation in his book "De Fabrica", in a manner similar to Ibn Nafis'
description. An interesting observation is that in the first edition of the book
(1543), Vesalius agreed with Galen that the blood "... soaks plentifully through
the septum from the right ventricle into the left...” Then in the second edition
(1555) he omitted the above statement and wrote instead..."I still do not see
how even the smallest quantity of blood can be transfused through the substance
of the septum from the right ventricle to the left..." . Another similar description was given by Realdus
Colombo in 1559 in his book "De re Anatomica" .
Then it was William Harvey
who, in 1628, demonstrated by direct anatomic observation in laboratory animals
the movement of blood from the right ventricle to the lung and then observed the
blood returning to the left side of the heart via the pulmonary vein and again
he stated that he could not find any pores in the interventricular septum. He
wrote in his monograph, "Exercitatio anatomica de motu cordis et sanguinis in
animalibus": "I began to think there was a sort of motion as in a circle. I
afterwards found true, that the blood is pushed by the beat of the left
ventricle and distributed through the arteries to the whole body and back
through the veins to the vena cava and then returned to the right auricle, just
as it is sent to the lungs through the pulmonary artery from the right ventricle
and returned from the lungs through the pulmonary vein to the left ventricle, as
previously described." However, he did not understand the physiology of the
pulmonary circulation (dissipation of carbon dioxide and replacement with
oxygen), which was fully elucidated by Lavoisier in the 18th century .
Views of Some Modern
Historians
It may be useful to mention the views of a few modern historians who reviewed
the works of Ibn Nafis;
Max Meyrholf, a
distinguished scholar of Arabic historical medicine, stated:
“... We have seen that Ibn
Nafis, three centuries before Colombo, had already noticed visible passages
between the two types of pulmonary vessels."
In the William Osler Medal
Essay on the discovery of the pulmonary circulation, Edward Coppola said,
"...The theory of pulmonary
circulation propounded by Ibn Nafis in the 13th century was not
forgotten and that centuries after his death it may have influenced the
direction of the anatomical investigations of Colombo and Valverde, who finally
announced it to the Western world as a physiological fact susceptible to
experimental proof."
"Ibn al-Nafis is best known for his writings on
physiology and medicine. His book Sharh Tashrīh al-Qānūn described pulmonary
circulation centuries before noted English physician William Harvey described
the circulation of blood in 1628", (Encarta Encyclopedia 2003)
.
Sami Haddad from Lebanon published an article in the Annals of
Surgery in 1936 about Ibn Nafis and other articles were published also by Ayman
et al and Dr. Abdul Kareem Shahadah from Syria showing clearly that Ibn Al-Nafis should be given the
credit for the discovery of the pulmonary circulation 300 years before William
Harvey was even born!
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