Ibn al-Nafis (d. 1288)
in full
'ALA' AD-DIN ABU AL-'ALA' 'ALI IBN ABI AL-HARAM
AL-QURAYSHI AD-DIMASHQI IBN AN-NAFIS, Arab physician who first described the
pulmonary circulation of the blood. In finding that the wall between the right
and left ventricles of the heart is solid and without pores, he disputed Galen's
view that the blood passes directly from the right to the left side of the
heart. Ibn an-Nafis correctly stated that the blood must pass from the right
ventricle to the left ventricle by way of the lungs. But the significance of his
statement remained unheeded, and, in fact, was probably unknown by physicians in
western countries. It was only in the 20th century that his work was brought to
light. Ibn an-Nafis studied in Damascus under the physician ad-Dakhwar and went
to Egypt to take charge of the Nasiri Hospital in Cairo. He wrote
treatises on eye diseases and diet and commentaries on medical writings of
Hippocrates, Avicenna, and Hunayn ibn Ishaq.