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- Blundell’s Gravitator from The Lancet, 1829
Blundell’s Gravitator from The Lancet, June 13, 1829
Courtesy National Library of Medicine
The medical journal The Lancet recorded the dramatic success of blood transfusion. Reporting on a woman who received her husband’s blood, the journal noted, ”Life seemed to be immediately reanimated as by an electric spark.”
- Cross section of Blundell’s Gravitator, 1824
Cross section of Blundell’s Gravitator from Researches Physiological and Pathological, 1824
Author: James Blundell (1790–1878)
Courtesy National Library of Medicine
James Blundell developed a copper cup with a metal handle to collect blood and funnel it from the donor to the recipient. After a woman received a few ounces of her husband’s blood, the medical journal, The Lancet, noted in 1834, “Life seemed to be immediately reanimated as by an electric spark.”
- Diagram of Blundell’s Gravitator from The Lancet, 1829
Diagram of Blundell’s Gravitator from The Lancet, June 13, 1829
Courtesy National Library of Medicine
The “gravitator” could be used to transfer blood in a “regulated stream” from one individual to another. James Blundell, who believed that blood had the power to restore life itself, invented the device.
![Funnel-like instrument connects left arm of woman lying in bed to right arm of man standing nearby. <a href='carousel41.html'>1. Blundell’s Gravitator from <em>The Lancet</em>, 1829</a><h4>Blundell’s Gravitator from <em>The Lancet</em>, June 13, 1829</h4>
<h5>Courtesy National Library of Medicine</h5>
<p>The medical journal <em>The Lancet</em> recorded the dramatic success of blood transfusion. Reporting on a woman who received her husband’s blood, the journal noted, ”Life seemed to be immediately reanimated as by an electric spark.”</p>](img/ex-carousel-4a_OB8020.jpg)
![Labeled blueprint of funnel-shaped transfusion instrument. <a href='carousel43.html'>3. Cross section of Blundell’s Gravitator, 1824</a><h4>Cross section of Blundell’s Gravitator from <em>Researches Physiological and Pathological</em>, 1824</h4>
<h5>Author: James Blundell (1790–1878)</h5>
<h5>Courtesy National Library of Medicine</h5><p>James Blundell developed a copper cup with a metal handle to collect blood and funnel it from the donor to the recipient. After a woman received a few ounces of her husband’s blood, the medical journal, <em>The Lancet</em>, noted in 1834, “Life seemed to be immediately reanimated as by an electric spark.”</p>](img/ex-carousel-4c_OB10923.jpg)
![Labeled blueprint of various components of transfusion instrument, including part resembling a funnel. <a href='carousel42.html'>2. Diagram of Blundell’s Gravitator from <em>The Lancet</em>, 1829</a><h4>Diagram of Blundell’s Gravitator from <em>The Lancet</em>, June 13, 1829</h4>
<h5>Courtesy National Library of Medicine</h5><p>The “gravitator” could be used to transfer blood in a “regulated stream” from one individual to another. James Blundell, who believed that blood had the power to restore life itself, invented the device.</p>](img/ex-carousel-4b_OB10922.jpg)