Medicine:Pegleg
From HandWiki
Short description: Leg prosthesis
A pegleg is a prosthesis, or artificial limb, fitted to the remaining stump of a human leg. Its use dates to antiquity.[1]
History
By the late 19th century, prosthetics vendors would offer peglegs as cheaper alternatives to more intricate, lifelike artificial legs.[2] Even as vendors touted advantages of more complicated prostheses over simple peglegs,[2] according to a contemporary surgeon, many patients found a pegleg more comfortable for walking.[3] According to medical reports, some amputees were able to adjust to the use of a pegleg so well that they could walk 10, or even 30, miles in one day.[4]
Nowadays, wooden peglegs have been replaced by more modern materials, though some sports prostheses do have the same form.[5]
Notable pegleg wearers
- François Leclerc (~1554), privateer
- Cornelis Jol, (1597–1641), privateer and Dutch West India Company admiral
- Peter Stuyvesant (1612–1672), Dutch Director-General of New Amsterdam[6]
- Blas de Lezo (1687–1741), Spanish admiral
- Gouverneur Morris (1752–1816), American politician
- Brook Watson (1735 -1807), Lord Mayor of London
- Pierre Daumesnil (1776 – 1832), French general
- Józef Sowiński (1777–1831), Polish General
- Billy Waters (1778–1823), aka Black Billy, former African American slave, then sailor in the British Navy until he became an amputee. Also a busker of prolific merit.
- Vuk Karadžić (1787–1864), Serbian linguist
- Thomas L. Smith (1801–1866), American mountain man
- Albert Chmielowski (1845–1916), Polish artist, founder of the Albertine Brothers and Sisters, saint of the Catholic Church
- Robert McAlpin Williamson (1804?–1859), nicknamed "Three-legged Willie", Republic of Texas Supreme Court Justice, state lawmaker, and Texas Ranger
- Kushibiki Yumindo (1859?-1924), Japanese impresario
- Peg Leg Bates (1907–1998), dancer
- Peg Leg Sam (Arthur Jackson) (1911–1977) American blues musician
- Joe "Pegleg" Morgan (1929–1993), first non-Hispanic member of the Mexican Mafia, an American criminal organization
References
- ↑ Cantos, Mae (2005) "Pirates & Peg Legs: a Historical Look at Amputation and Prosthetics" In: Whitelaw, William A. (2005) (editor) Proceedings of the 14h Annual History of Medicine Days Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, pp. 16–20, OCLC 225558769, page 16
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Marks, George Edwin (1888), A Treatise on Marks' patent artificial limbs with rubber hands and feet, A. A. Marks, p. 47, https://books.google.com/books?id=nh0x_03RfgwC&pg=PA47
- ↑ Tillmanns, Hermann (1895), Stimson, Lewis Atterbury, ed., itle The principles of surgery and surgical pathology: general rules governing operations and the application of dressings, D. Appleton and company, p. 128, https://books.google.com/books?id=BP41AQAAIAAJ&pg=PA128
- ↑ Teale, Thomas Pridgin (1858), On amputation by a long and a short rectangular flap, pp. 29, 31, https://books.google.com/books?id=fB4DAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA31
- ↑ Clarke, Carl D. (1965) Prosthetics Standard Arts Press, Butler, Maryland, OCLC 5083790, page 182
- ↑ ""...he lost his leg at Saint Martin.."". http://www.let.rug.nl/usa/B/stuyvesant/stuyvesant.htm.
Further reading
Books
- Murdoch, George and Wilson, A. Bennett (1998) A primer on amputations and artificial limbs C. Thomas, Springfield, Illinois, ISBN:0-398-06800-3
- Pitkin, Mark R. (2009) Biomechanics of Lower Limb Prosthetics Springer verlag, New York, ISBN:978-3-642-03015-4
- Seymour, Ron (2002) Prosthetics and orthotics: lower limb and spinal Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, ISBN:0-7817-2854-1
- Warren, D. W. (2001) James Gillingham: surgical mechanist & manufacturer of artificial limbs Somerset Industrial Archaeology Society, Taunton, England, ISBN:0-9533539-5-8
Articles
- Bliquez, Lawrence J. (1996). "Prosthetics in Classical Antiquity: Greek, Etruscan, and Roman Prosthetics". in Haase, Wolfgang. Philosophie, Wissenschaften, Technik. Wissenschaften (Medizin und Biologie [Forts.]). doi:10.1515/9783110809008-009. ISBN 9783110809008.
- Cantos, Mae (2005) "Pirates & Peg Legs: a Historical Look at Amputation and Prosthetics" In: Whitelaw, William A. (2005) (editor) Proceedings of the 14h Annual History of Medicine Days Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, pp. 16–20, OCLC 225558769
- Finch, Jacqueline (2011). "The ancient origins of prosthetic medicine". The Lancet 377 (9765): 548–549. doi:10.1016/S0140-6736(11)60190-6. PMID 21341402.
- Padula, Patricia A.; Friedmann, Lawrence W. (1987). "Acquired Amputation and Prostheses Before the Sixteenth Century". Angiology 38 (2): 133–141. doi:10.1177/000331978703800207. PMID 3548491.
- Reeves, Nicholas (1999) "New lights on ancient Egyptian prosthetic medicine" In: Davies, W. V. (editor) (1999) Studies in Egyptian Antiquities. A Tribute to T.G.H. James British Museum Press, London, pp. 73–77, ISBN:0-86159-123-2
- Thurston, Alan J. (2007). "Paré and Prosthetics: The Early History of Artificial Limbs". ANZ Journal of Surgery 77 (12): 1114–1119. doi:10.1111/j.1445-2197.2007.04330.x. PMID 17973673.
- Wilson, Philip D. (1922) "Early weight-bearing in the treatment of amputations of the lower limbs" The Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery 4: pp. 224–247