Background
Sherren was born in 1872 in Weymouth, Dorset. His father was a printer and publisher.
Sherren was born in 1872 in Weymouth, Dorset. His father was a printer and publisher.
Sherren attended Weymouth College.
Two medical terms related to appendicitis - a diagnostic sign and a conservative treatment regimen - bear his name. He went to sea and became a Master Mariner before continuing his education at London Hospital Medical College. He trained and worked as a surgeon at The London Hospital.
In 1901, Sherren agreed to surgically divide two nerves in the arm of colleague Henry Head so that they could study the evolution of Head"s recovery.
Sherren and Head published three books together, one of them also co-authored by West. H. R. Rivers. Sherren served with the War Office during World War I and rose to the rank of colonel.
He was awarded the Commander of the Order of the British Empire designation in 1919. In London, his notable patients included author Florence Dugdale, the wife of Thomas Hardy.
Sherren operated on Dugdale for a mass in her neck.
In the mid-1920s, Sherren quit his hospital practice to become a ship"s surgeon. He died in 1945 after an extended illness. A diagnostic sign in appendicitis (known as Sherren"s triangle) is named for him.
Sherren"s triangle represents the area bounded by the anterior superior iliac spine, the pubic symphysis and the navel.
Hyperesthesia (increased sensitivity to touch) in this area is a potential sign of appendicitis. Ochsner-Sherren treatment, which is the conservative (non-surgical) management of appendicitis, is also named after him.