Arthur Henry Cheatle

Arthur Henry Cheatle
Born (1866-12-04)4 December 1866
Died 11 May 1929(1929-05-11) (aged 62)
London
Nationality British
Occupation Surgeon
Known for Mastoid region specimens and description

Arthur Henry Cheatle CBE (4 December 1866 11 May 1929) was an English surgeon who made important contributions to understanding of the anatomy and diseases of the mastoid region.[1]

Birth and education

Arthur Henry Cheatle was born on 4 December 1866. He was a descendant of the parliamentarian William Lenthall. His family had settled in Burford, Oxfordshire in 1819. His father, George Cheatle, was a solicitor. His elder brother was Sir George Lenthal Cheatle, who also became a surgeon. Arthur Henry attended Merchant Taylor's School from 1876 to 1882, then studied at King's College Hospital and in Vienna.[1] He suffered from a hearing defect that gradually became more acute, although it was not particularly noticeable to others.[2] In 1888 he passed the examinations for Membership of the Royal College of Surgeons (MRCS).[3]

Career

Cheatle was House Surgeon at King's College Hospital under Sir Joseph Lister and then House Accoucher. In 1892 he became a Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons. He went to Vienna for further studies on aural surgery, and on return to England was appointed assistant aural surgeon to Kings College Hospital. He became Aural Surgeon at the hospital when Dr Urban Pritchard retired.[3] He taught otology at the Royal Army Medical College, and served as Surgeon at the Royal Free Hospital. In 1906 he became Hunterian Professor of Surgery and Pathology at the Royal College of Surgeons, lecturing on the Surgical Anatomy of the Temporal Bone. During World War I (1914-1918) he was an officer in the Royal Air Force's medical branch and was Aural Surgeon to the King Edward VII's Hospital for Officers and King George V Hospital.[1] He died on 11 May 1929 in London from a vascular lesion.[4] He was buried in Burford.[1]

Awards and achievements

Cheatle won the Adam Politzer Prize at the ninth Otological International Congress. He was mentioned in dispatches and was made a Commander of the Order of the British Empire for his war service. He made various discoveries in aural surgery for which he let others be credited, since he shunned publicity.[3] He built an important collection of more than 700 specimens of the anatomy of the mastoid region, with a descriptive catalog, that he donated to the Royal College of Surgeons Museum in 1911 but continued to expand and update. The collection and catalog showed how variations in the temporal bone due to factors such as age and sex affected middle-ear infections. This work is the basis for modern understanding of the anatomy of the mastoid region.[1]

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