Did you know that the “gold standard” for modern reconstructive surgery was actually perfected in ancient India? 🤯
In 1793, two British medical officers watched a humble Indian potter perform what looked like a miracle: reconstructing the mutilated nose of a soldier. But this wasn’t a new trick—it was the ancient Sushruta method, documented over 6,500 years ago!
Long before modern operating rooms, the ancient surgeon Sushruta realized that a flap of skin could be taken from the forehead or cheek and rotated onto the nose. The genius part? He knew the skin had to remain attached by a “pedicle” to keep the blood supply flowing while the new nose healed.
Today, this exact technique is still known globally as the “Indian Flap” and remains a cornerstone of plastic surgery.
Dive deeper into the untold history of ancient Indian science! This video is based on the book Zero to Gravity: The Ancient Indian Roots of Modern Science by Sri Narasimha Patrudu. Visuals synthetically reconstructed using AI to bring ​a​ncient indian science to life. Research based on ​my book Zero To Gravity.
📚 Learn more and explore the roots of global science at: https://www.BharatWisdom.com
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