A HISTORY OF PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY

1991 Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery 319 citations

Abstract

The origins of light as a therapy in medicine and surgery are traced from antiquity to the modem day. Phototherapy began in ancient Greece, Egypt and India but disappeared for many centuries, only being rediscovered by Western civilization at the beginning of the twentieth century through the Dane, Niels Finsen, and the Germans Oscar Raab and Herman von Tappeiner. The discovery of the tumour‐localizing ability of haematoporphyrin, together with its phototoxic effect on tumour cells led to the development of photodynamic therapy, a promising tool in modem cancer treatment.

Keywords

MedicinePhotodynamic therapyPhototoxicityCivilizationAncient historyTraditional medicineClassicsArchaeologyHistory

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Year
1991
Type
article
Volume
61
Issue
5
Pages
340-348
Citations
319
Access
Closed

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Mark Daniell (1991). A HISTORY OF PHOTODYNAMIC THERAPY. Australian and New Zealand Journal of Surgery , 61 (5) , 340-348. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1445-2197.1991.tb00230.x

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DOI
10.1111/j.1445-2197.1991.tb00230.x