During the early twentieth century, thoracic surgery procedures were frequently attempted through local anesthesia, although the pneumothorax created after opening of the chest wall was deemed invariably fatal. During the ensuing decades, some surgeons started performing awake thoracic surgery procedures taking into account the experience matured during the World War I, which suggested that soldiers with severe open thoracic traumas could eventually survive. In the 1940s, a multi-step analgesia protocol entailing multiple local blocks with Novocaine was developed in Russia. Using this technique, hundreds of major thoracic surgery procedures including major lung resections and esophagectomies, were carried out. Subsequently, Buckingham first...