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Tongue cancer historical perspective

Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]; Associate Editor(s)-in-Chief: Simrat Sarai, M.D. [2] Mohammed Abdelwahed M.D[3]

Overview

Hayes Martin was the first to focus on improving cure rates by treating the primary tumor with X-rays. By 1928, V. P. Blair of St Louis was the first to advocate surgery as the best management for oral cancers. A major initiative of the 1970s and 1980s was cytotoxic chemotherapy for patients unfit for surgery.

Tongue cancer historical perspective

  • In 1928, V. P. Blair of St Louis was the first to advocate surgery as the best management for oral cancers.
  • Billroth appreciated the importance of good access and took the procedure a stage further, removing a section of the mandibular body to reach the tongue and oropharynx.
  • In 1875, Bernard von Langenbeck resected the ramus of the mandible in continuity with the primary tumor.[1]
  • In 1917, Esser was the first to describe an axial pattern flap based on the temporal artery.[2]
  • By 1923, radiotherapy was used to treat neck metastases.
  • By 1930s, Hayes Martin was the first to focus on improving cure rates by treating the primary tumor with X-rays by the Coutard method supplemented with gold radium seeds.
  • By 1950, development of bleeding control techniques, antibiotics, and blood transfusion made it possible to do advanced surgeries for cancers.
  • A major initiative of the 1970s and 1980s was cytotoxic chemotherapy for patients unfit for surgeries.

References

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