Toxic plant on Ming dynasty-era surgical tools may be world’s oldest chemical evidence of topical anesthetic

A 600-year-old set of surgical instruments found in a grave China The world’s first chemical evidence of a topical anesthetic has emerged. The anesthetic drug used to numb the skin in surgical procedures was made from the highly poisonous plant Chinese wolfsbane. However, among other things, the poisonous plant was first detoxified with urine.

“Six centuries ago, a surgeon in the Ming Dynasty performed an operation with a pair of iron scissors and tweezers, and today we have read the traces of anesthetic drug left on those instruments using a beam of laser light,” said study co-author Kangkang ZhaoAn archaeologist at Northwest University Chinasaid in a statement.

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