In November 1960, Time magazine ran a splashy medical news report with the rather futuristic title “Spines of Steel.” The article featured the work of the orthopedic surgeon Paul H. Harrington (1911–80), who had devised a method of straightening scoliotic spines using a series of implantable metal rods and hooks embedded in the vertebral column. So as to visualize the sleekness of Harrington's instrumentation, Time included a black-and-white photograph of the physically imposing surgeon, his large hands gracefully clutching one of his metal rods, slender as a soda straw. Although Harrington did not have a definitive cure—or a method to prevent the occurrence of spinal curvatures caused by scoliosis—his rods promised a new era in scoliosis treatment, with traditional and seemingly more cumbersome modes of medical intervention left behind (figs. 5.1–5.2).
To many surgeons today, Harrington's innovation is seen as a pivotal moment in the surgical management of severe scoliosis. From the 1960s onward, Harrington's instrumentation would become the standard method of scoliosis correction and fusion throughout the world for more than a quarter of the century. In the words of two orthopedic surgeons writing in 1999, Harrington's “instrumentation was a clear milestone in scoliosis surgery providing for the first time, a reliable means of obtaining and maintaining maximal deformity correction.” The advantages of Harrington's system, they write, “were obvious.”
Whereas the success of Harrington's surgery may seem obvious to orthopedists practicing now, the advantage of metal implantation was not at all clear to his contemporaries. In the mid-twentieth century, leading practitioners in the field endorsed various forms of scoliosis treatment. According to a 1941 study of sixteen US orthopedic clinics in prominent university research centers, postural exercise was one of the most commonly prescribed modalities of treatment, even though many orthopedists doubted its efficacy. Other popular forms of treatment included body casts, bone fusions, or a combination of the two. Of the sixteen clinics surveyed, thirteen used the Risser turnbuckle cast, named after the inventor-orthopedist Joseph C. Risser (1892–1982).