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Nelson, The Earl Of Uxbridge, And Long John Silver.

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sandyRoe | 20:00 Sat 07th Nov 2015 | Health & Fitness
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In the days before antiseptics what were the chances of someone surviving an amputation following a battle field wound?
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Pretty slim, I'd say.
I seem to remember reading 50/50 somewhere - may have been during guided tour of HMS Victory.
hearing, not reading.
and or before antibiotics.....?
This refers to the 19th century but the figures for a century or two earlier might well have been similar as there weren't many (any?) major advances in surgery during the intervening period:
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1281639/table/tbl3/
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There couldn't have been antibiotics during WW1. A slight wound might have killed some combatants
\\http://www.sciencescribe.net/articles/Surgery_in_the_1700s.pdf\\

There you go sandy........speed of the surgeons,the development of the tourniquet, leaving the wounds open, debridement of dead tissue by maggots, it all amounted to a 50/50 chance of survival.
Survival rates are notoriously inaccurate when given by surgeons;-)
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Nelson must have doubly lucky surviving two serious wounds.

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