Patient held down, limb tied with a tourniquet, deep cut to the bone, limb removed swiftly, cauterization or ligatures used, stump wrapped with bandages
Her Majesty: 'Most definitely supports the use of chloroform in the relief of pain during childbirth<|>Partook of chloroform during the birth of both Prince Leopold in 1853 and Princess Beatrice in 1857 with most agreeable effects'
Anesthetized with chloroform, sterilized tools with carbolic acid, surgeon qualified and professional but not wearing specialized or sterilized clothes, used carbonic spray to sterilize air and hands, patient no longer needed to be held down, deeper and more ambitious procedures performed, wound carefully stitched up with sterilized stitches or ligatures
Discovery of germ Theory by Louis Pasteur in 1861 suggested that bacteria and germs cause disease, leading to further progress in surgery with Joseph Lister's antiseptics in 1867
Robert [__] identifying diseases based upon specific bacteria in 1882, leading to the development of vaccines and better understanding of how people were getting sick from specific bacteria during operations
Progress in 19th-century surgery solved many dangers: pain relieved through anesthetics, infection risk reduced with understanding of germs, blood loss helped by anesthetics keeping patients calm, and shock reduced with less pain and blood loss