A day in the 17th century in England, a woman had problems with one of its upper canines. As a result, that she had extracted – the treatment go – to for a bad tooth at the time. But out of the tooth of the problem did not help, and soon she noticed (brace yourself) pus coming from the hole where his teeth used to be. It was deeply gross, but it got worse from there. Understand Congestion Sinus Trying to find the source of the problem, the enterprising woman turned to foreign objects – a pencil and a pen – to find out where his teeth had been. Shortly after, she was rushing to a doctor, insisting that she had stabbed just his own brain. Fortunately for her, especially doctor who happened to know exactly what was going on. Not many doctors of the 17th century have been clued in anatomical structures that allow someone insert something long and thin in a cell and surprisingly far up in the skull. But Nathaniel Highmore was so knowledgeable about what the anatomy in question was n...
To Make the World more Wonderful