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  1. In their best-known experiment, Wren fastened the legs of Boyle’s dog to the corners of a table (left), cut into its limb to isolate a vein, and infused opium (lower right) and wine through a goose quill connected to a pig bladder that contained the elixir.

  2. Wren began intravenous (IV) anesthesia in 1656, using a goose quill and a bladder to inject wine and ale into a dog’s vein. Invention of the hollow needle in 1843 and the hypodermic syringe in 1853 allowed IV administration of drugs.

  3. Sir Christopher Wren used a syringe made of animal bladder fixed to a goose quill to inject wine and opium into the veins of dogs. J.D. Major from Kiel and J.S. Elsholtz from Berlin probably were the first to deliberately administer intravenous injections to people in the 1660s.

  4. Wren and Boyle, along with Wilkins, Willis, Wallis, Bathurst, and others, had been meeting regularly at Oxford for at least 5 yr before that gathering on November 28, 1660. Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile, Santiago, Chile.

  5. 1 de ene. de 2016 · It seems that, at Oxford, Willis was present at the experiment performed in 1656 by Sir Christopher Wren (1632-1723; architect, physicist, astronomer, and, later, the Savilian Professor of Astronomy, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK) at which Wren used an animal bladder and a goose quill to inject opium in sherry into a dog and ...

  6. 9 de mar. de 2021 · In experiments with dogs in 1656, Britain's Sir Christopher Wren - better known as an architect - administered drugs using an animal bladder attached to a hollow goose quill.

  7. 15 de nov. de 2012 · The constraint for the earliest date would appear to be Boyle's move to Oxford leading soon to his conversation with John Wilkins and Christopher Wren at which Wren explained that ‘he thought he could easily contrive a way to convey any liquid poison immediately into the mass of blood’. 8 Frank suggests a date of ‘about March ...