How Stone-Age blades are still cutting it in modern surgery

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Interesting article.

http://edition.cnn.com/2015/04/02/health/surgery-scalpels-obsidian/index.html


By Peter Shadbolt for CNN
Updated 1126 GMT (1826 HKT) April 2, 2015




(CNN)Ever had a headache so big, you felt like drilling a hole in your head to let the pain out?


In Neolithic times trepanation -- or drilling a hole into the skull -- was thought to be a cure for everything from epilepsy to migraines.


It could even have been a form of emergency surgery for battle wounds.


But while there is still conjecture about the real reasons behind the mysterious procedure, what is known is that the implement often used to carry out the primitive surgery was made from one of the sharpest substances found in nature -- obsidian.


Obsidian -- a type of volcanic glass -- can produce cutting edges many times finer than even the best steel scalpels.


At 30 angstroms -- a unit of measurement equal to one hundred millionth of a centimeter -- an obsidian scalpel can rival diamond in the fineness of its edge.


When you consider that most household razor blades are 300-600 angstroms, obsidian can still cut it with the sharpest materials nano-technology can produce.


Even today, a small number of surgeons are using an ancient technology to carry out fine incisions that they say heal with minimal scarring.


Dr. Lee Green, professor and chair of the Department of Family Medicine at the University of Alberta, says he routinely uses obsidian blades.


"The biggest advantage with obsidian is that it is the sharpest edge there is, it causes very little trauma to tissue, it heals faster and more importantly it heals with less scarring," he said.


"It makes for the best cosmetic outcome."


He explained that steel scalpels at a microscopic level have a rough cutting edge that tears into tissue, a function of the crystals that make up the metal. Obsidian, meanwhile, cleaves into a fine and continuous edge when properly cut.


Dr. Green said he once helped documentary makers produce a program on surgical technology in ancient Egyptian, setting up a blind test on the cutting power of obsidian.


Using cultured-skin burn dressing, a substance composed of skin cells, he made an incision with a modern scalpel and a parallel incision with an obsidian scalpel.


The host of the program was then invited to look at the cuts under a video microscope and tell the difference.


"It wasn't hard to tell the difference at all -- as soon as he turned around everyone in the studio was like 'Ohhh'," Dr. Green said. "Under the microscope you could see the obsidian scalpel had divided individual cells in half, and next to it the steel scalpel incision looked like it had been made by a chainsaw."


Modern obsidian scalpels look nothing like the decorative flint-knapped knives of Neolithic man, often resembling their modern counterparts in everything except for the blade edge, but Dr. Green said they are a very different animal.


"The feel is very different because obsidian has no 'bite,'" he said. "If you look under the microscope at a steel scalpel edge it looks almost like a saw, it has teeth, whereas obsidian is smooth even microscopically.


"It's a very different feel to work with and you have to practice before you start using it in surgery.


"You also have to be careful not to nick yourself with it because you don't even feel it!"


And Dr. Green believes incisions made with these blades heal faster. He said a colleague who needed a mole removed agreed to undergo an experiment where half the procedure was carried out with an obsidian scalpel and the other half was removed with steel.


"What's really fun is seeing it heal," he said. "Four weeks later the difference was quite remarkable -- there was very much a difference in scarring."


In Germany, the manufacturer Fine Science Tools produces obsidian scalpels which can be used in situations where the patient may have an allergy to steel or metal.


"For studies where trace metals from ordinary scalpel blades cannot be tolerated, these very special obsidian scalpels may provide the answer," the company says.


At €99 per scalpel ($107.40), they represent a considerable saving on their diamond cousins which the company prices at €712.50 ($772.60).


But there has been little academic research into the efficacy of obsidian blades compared to steel scalpels, and they do have disadvantages: Obsidian scalpels are not Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approved, and they are extremely brittle and prone to breaking if lateral forces are applied -- meaning they are unlikely to ever be in widespread use.


Dr. Green, whose scalpels were manufactured for him by an expert flint-knapper and archaeologist Errett Callahan, concedes the Stone Age scalpels are not for everyone.


"If it was let loose on the market there'd be far too many injuries from it," he said. "It's very fragile and it's very easy to break pieces off."
 
About 20 years ago now, I was at Mesa Verde National Park, in Colorado. I was lucky to catch a demonstration by a park ranger on the tools the old Anastazi used in the cliff dwellings. He had a haunch off a road killed antelope, and he showed how easy it was while using a flake off a chunk of obsidian to skin and slice the meat. He used a percussion method to flake off a piece of the obsidian about a little finger size, and it was like using a very sharp knife. It went right through the hide and meat like a hot knife through butter. Very very impressive.

And Otsi the iceman was in a heck of a fight before his death. Using a flint knife, he had the blood DNA of at least two other people on him after his escape into the mountains with an arrow in his back. His knife was a small dagger in white flint. It must have worked well.
 
You know, this is fascinating!

Crazy that the obsidian scalpel was able to cut skin cells in half...

When you look at SEM images, it's really obvious which blade is sharper:

Obsidianandscalpelcomparison.png

obsidian+razor.png


Synthetic Diamond blades are similarly sharp (as noted in the OP's article), with a cutting edge of only 2 nanometers!
However, they cost anywhere between $300 - $1,700 each...
 
Being glass-like, it is probably just as or more sterile than a stainless scalpel.

In a series of books I've read recently, obsidian is used in several weapons, daggers and axe blades mostly. I may have to get myself an obsidian knife.
 
Met a guy at a.primitive technology.gathering that had talked his surgeon into using flint scalpels that he made to remove a brain tumor... you couldn't even find the scar and.the doctor reported he had a record fast recovery time... too bad it will probably never be.common practice.
 
Obsidion is a natural occurring glass .You should be able to find it easily online. You can knapp it like flint.
The definition of sharpness is what is the smallest radius you can get with that material ? Obsidion and flint do very well in sharpness !!
Recent work in Israel showed that stone tools were used for butchering 500,000 years ago IIRC to butcher mammoths ! Animal tissue was identified on the cutting edge of such tools !
 
Not much matches obsidian for HRC or refined edge. Just don't baton it. I'm sure some Clovis dullard was trying to put a Tapir skull bead on some tactical sinew and went about conducting cut tests in 10 cubits of rawhide rope.
 
Back in the day, I took a class in flintknapping at the local University. It's surprisingly easy, although it requires quite an artistic skill to do very well. I made a few knives and arrowheads like this out of modern materials:

image010.jpg


You can successfully knap any homologous material. Obsidian, flint, jasper, glass, ceramics - including pieces of toilets :)...

Quick story that relates to the OP:

One day, when I was really into it, I was knocking some blades off of a chunk of aquarium glass. There are several different methods of working you material, and in the one I was using, knocking off a "blade" is the first step in making a more purposed-shaped tool, like a knife. The blades were often used as is though, perhaps for shaving or other cutting purposes as they have a straight, smooth, very thin edge.

Now, aquarium glass comes in nice, big chunks that one would think would be absolutely ideal for knapping the way you would a nice piece of obsidian, but it is not recommended that you do, because they often get banged about in transit, and thus can break in unexpected ways.

It's cheap though, and I was poor, so there I was. And it did break unexpectedly. When I hit it with the hammer stone, a second blade broke off at an angle behind the first and sliced off the skin of the whole top of my index finger between the fingernail and second joint.

It didn't hurt, although I knew something was wrong. It didn't even look like much, and didn't bleed until I poked it and dislodged the flap of skin. Then it started to bleed pretty good, and I could see something white that I think was bone or tendon. But when I re-aligned the flap and bandaged it, the bleeding stopped immediately. It healed quickly and completely without a scar.
 
I doubt that those knives are stone age knives. What they are is made from materials that are so effective at their purpose that modern technology still cannot find a better material for the present but manufacturing is anything but stone age.
 
so mother nature slices through mans best effort to create a steel that can be extremely sharp.( beat again!) The comment that caught my attention was when he said it sliced cleanly through a cell compared to the scalpel cut which looked like a chainsaw ...and a surgeons scalpels are sharp!
 
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