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Dr Adel Quttainah Interview
Gulf News
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11 months ago
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00:00
So my name is Dr. Adel Katena. I'm a consultant plastic and reconstructive surgeon. The question
00:09
is how did I develop an interest in medical antiques? This goes way back, maybe 20 years
00:16
ago when I was a medical student and got interested in a small scarificator. It's like one of
00:26
those really old devices that kind of scratches and makes the skin bleed. In the past, they
00:34
thought that when you sacrifice some blood, the humors or the fluids in the body gets
00:41
balanced and you'll get your health back. So that got me interested in old medicine
00:45
and how medicine actually kind of developed. Ever since, I was just kind of everywhere
00:49
I go, I just go to the antique markets and find all the medical devices or anything to
00:55
do with medicine. And that just got worse, that addiction got worse and worse and worse.
01:00
Developed to having so many pieces and so many items and devices. Got to the point where
01:07
I was just storing them and then the idea came about where why don't I display them
01:11
for my patients and the clients that come visit our centers and hospitals. So which
01:16
I did and that's how the idea of the Katena Medical Museum came about. This museum is
01:22
located in Kuwait, Shab area and that's the whole floor and it's for anybody to come and
01:28
visit and there's no entrance fee. And you know, just come.
01:32
Any plans of bringing the museum here to Dubai?
01:38
In the future, yeah. In the future. I mean, we're just working out the logistics for now
01:41
to see how we can move all these items down here to this hospital and then just kind of
01:47
display them here.
01:48
Could you highlight some of the pieces that you have?
01:51
I mean, the recent purchase was what's called the Iron Lung. The Iron Lung. In the fifties
01:57
there was this polio pandemic where a lot of people were getting, a lot of kids were
02:03
getting paralyzed and they couldn't breathe. So they had to come up with this big huge
02:09
tube cylinder that the patient would go in and basically spend the rest of their lives
02:14
in that tube because that would help them breathe. Without this tube or what they call
02:21
the Iron Lung, these patients would die for sure. So that was a recent purchase that I
02:25
got from London. We also have like the oldest stethoscope, which is, you know, the stethoscope
02:31
to have the auscultations of the heart. It's a French surgeon. The neck around like 200
02:37
years ago, this guy was shy to put his head on female patients because, you know, so he
02:45
created that. He got some cardboard paper and he kind of twisted around, made it into
02:50
a cylinder and he started that way, trying to listen. And he found out not only that
02:56
this kind of distanced him from the patient, but also the heart sounds were amplified and
03:01
they were much better. So he came up with the first stethoscope. He made 20 pieces initially
03:06
and we have one of them in the museum.
03:08
And how do you acquire these stethoscopes?
03:10
I mean, you just go on, nowadays it's so easy because you go on the nets and you search
03:14
and you search and you search. This particular piece I bought from New York, from a collector
03:18
in New York. So I had to travel to New York, meet the guy and get that stethoscope. It's
03:23
made out of wood.
03:24
Are they auctioned?
03:25
No, they're not auctions. Sometimes they're, these things are never auctioned, but they,
03:32
you know, they are in the possession, usually possession of dealers also, antique dealers
03:36
and stuff like that.
03:37
And they must be costing a hell of a lot.
03:39
Yeah, yeah. I mean, some of them...
03:41
What's the kind of range?
03:43
I mean, that stethoscope was around $25,000, you know, but just a stethoscope.
03:47
And what about this iron lung?
03:49
Iron lung was, iron lung, I was very lucky because I've been looking for an iron lung
03:53
for maybe like last five, six years. And there was a company in England, in London, that
04:01
does props like, you know, for movies and stuff like that. And they had two iron lungs.
04:06
But for the longest time, they would not sell them. They would not sell them. And until,
04:10
you know, we kept on nagging and nagging, and then they just gave us one. So it was
04:14
around like £10,000.
04:16
And what is, you know, some of the most expensive items you've bought for the museum?
04:22
I mean, there's a lot of different pieces, yeah. Stethoscope being one of them. We have
04:29
a lot of old books, written 400, 500, 600 years ago. Handwritten, of course, in medicine
04:37
that come out of, you know, Mecca and that area.
04:41
And I understand that you have some devices and tools from World War II?
04:48
Yeah, yeah. We have, I mean, you know, when the, you know, we have the kits that go into
04:54
the fields, you know, where you can set up a whole operating room in the field to try
04:59
and, you know, rescue all these injured soldiers and stuff.
05:04
We have an interesting also display of actually swords, surgical swords. It was in the past,
05:14
the bigger the surgeon, the more high-ranking the surgeon, the more, you know, detail he'd
05:21
have on his sword. And of course, then they found out all this, you know, all the crevices
05:25
up on the sword kind of harboured bacteria and stuff like that. So, yeah, they ended
05:31
up killing more.
05:32
So they were actual swords, not knives?
05:33
Yeah, yeah. Like a sword, yeah. Like a sword, yeah. For amputations and stuff.
05:38
What I get out of it is like, you know, it's like basically CSR, you know, so giving back
05:43
to the community. I mean, we don't actually charge patients for coming in. We also have
05:49
a couple of coordinators there that sit and explain everything to all the guests. So it's
05:55
kind of giving back. So it's a win-win. I like collecting and then I also like sharing
06:01
all these beautiful pieces with our guests.
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