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The Scientification of Gastroenterology During the 20th Century *
Science contributes to medicine in three ways: It provides a body
of relatively secure knowl edge. Some of that knowledge has been
applied to develop technologies which have had a major impact upon
the practice and effectiveness of medicine. Last, science offers to
medicine a way of thinking. - 1. McCormick [(1993) The Contribution
of Science to Medicine. Perspect. Bioi. Med. 16,315.] Awareness of
the digestive system began with the dawn of civilization, when man,
observing the feeding habits of animals in the surrounding
environment, experimented with foods, edible and inedible. Identity
came with discoveries of the digestive organs during the 16th and
17th centuries. Function was revealed by physiologic studies of
digestion, absorp tion and secretion, metabolism, and motility
during the 18th and 19th centuries. Diagnostic access improved with
the technological advances of the 20th century. Understanding of
gas trointestinal (GI) disease followed the growth of the basic
sciences and gastroenterology's involvement in scientific research
during the latter half of the 20th century. Early in the 20th
century, gastroenterology was yet an undefined activity without
clinical or scientific guidelines. Diagnostic approach to the
digestive tract was minimal. Valid con cepts of disease were
lacking. Visceroptosis, sitophobia, and "colonic autointoxication"
were common "diagnoses." Therapeutic resources were scarce.
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