Sex in Relation to Society
Chapter 1
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Title: Anomalies and Curiosities of Medicine
Author: George M. Gould
Walter L. Pyle
Release date: December 1, 1996 [eBook #747]
Most recently updated: January 1, 2021
Language: English
Other information and formats: www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/747
Credits: Produced by Charles Keller. HTML version by Al Haines.
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ANOMALIES AND CURIOSITIES OF MEDICINE ***
Produced by Charles Keller. HTML version by Al Haines.
ANOMALIES and CURIOSITIES of MEDICINE
Being an encyclopedic collection of rare and extraordinary cases, and
of the most striking instances of abnormality in all branches of
medicine and surgery, derived from an exhaustive research of medical
literature from its origin to the present day, abstracted, classified,
annotated, and indexed.
by GEORGE M. GOULD, A.M., M.D. and WALTER L. PYLE, A.M., M.D.
PREFATORY AND INTRODUCTORY.
----
Since the time when man's mind first busied itself with subjects beyond
his own self-preservation and the satisfaction of his bodily appetites,
the anomalous and curious have been of exceptional and persistent
fascination to him; and especially is this true of the construction and
functions of the human body. Possibly, indeed, it was the anomalous
that was largely instrumental in arousing in the savage the attention,
thought, and investigation that were finally to develop into the body
of organized truth which we now call Science. As by the aid of
collected experience and careful inference we to-day endeavor to pass
our vision into the dim twilight whence has emerged our civilization,
we find abundant hint and even evidence of this truth. To the highest
type of philosophic minds it is the usual and the ordinary that demand
investigation and explanation. But even to such, no less than to the
most naive-minded, the strange and exceptional is of absorbing
interest, and it is often through the extraordinary that the
philosopher gets the most searching glimpses into the heart of the
mystery of the ordinary. Truly it has been said, facts are stranger
than fiction. In monstrosities and dermoid cysts, for example, we seem
to catch forbidden sight of the secret work-room of Nature, and drag
out into the light the evidences of her clumsiness, and proofs of her
lapses of skill,--evidences and proofs, moreover, that tell us much of
the methods and means used by the vital artisan of Life,--the loom, and
even the silent weaver at work upon the mysterious garment of
corporeality.
"La premiere chose qui s'offre a l' Homme quand il se regarde, c'est
son corps," says Pascal, and looking at the matter more closely we find
that it was the strange and mysterious things of his body that occupied
man's earliest as well as much of his later attention. In the
beginning, the organs and functions of generation, the mysteries of
sex, not the routine of digestion or of locomotion, stimulated his
curiosity, and in them he recognized, as it were, an unseen hand
reaching down into the world of matter and the workings of bodily
organization, and reining them to impersonal service and far-off ends.
All ethnologists and students of primitive religion well know the role
that has been played in primitive society by the genetic instincts.
Among the older naturalists, such as Pliny and Aristotle, and even in
the older historians, whose scope included natural as well as civil and
political history, the atypic and bizarre, and especially the
aberrations of form or function of the generative organs, caught the
eye most quickly. Judging from the records of early writers, when
Medicine began to struggle toward self-consciousness, it was again the
same order of facts that was singled out by the attention. The very
names applied by the early anatomists to many structures so widely
separated from the organs of generation as were those of the brain,
give testimony of the state of mind that led to and dominated the
practice of dissection.
In the literature of the past centuries the predominance of the
interest in the curious is exemplified in the almost ludicrously
monotonous iteration of titles, in which the conspicuous words are
curiosa, rara, monstruosa, memorabilia, prodigiosa, selecta, exotica,
miraculi, lusibus naturae, occultis naturae, etc., etc. Even when
medical science became more strict, it was largely the curious and rare
that were thought worthy of chronicling, and not the establishment or
illustration of the common, or of general principles. With all his
sovereign sound sense, Ambrose Pare has loaded his book with references
to impossibly strange, and even mythologic cases.
In our day the taste seems to be insatiable, and hardly any medical
journal is without its rare or "unique" case, or one noteworthy chiefly
by reason of its anomalous features. A curious case is invariably
reported, and the insertion of such a report is generally productive of
correspondence and discussion with the object of finding a parallel for
it.
In view of all this it seems itself a curious fact that there has never
been any systematic gathering of medical curiosities. It would have
been most natural that numerous encyclopedias should spring into
existence in response to such a persistently dominant interest. The
forelying volume appears to be the first thorough attempt to classify
and epitomize the literature of this nature. It has been our purpose
to briefly summarize and to arrange in order the records of the most
curious, bizarre, and abnormal cases that are found in medical
literature of all ages and all languages--a thaumatographia medica. It
will be readily seen that such a collection must have a function far
beyond the satisfaction of mere curiosity, even if that be stigmatized
with the word "idle." If, as we believe, reference may here be found to
all such cases in the literature of Medicine (including Anatomy,
Physiology, Surgery, Obstetrics, etc.) as show the most extreme and
exceptional departures from the ordinary, it follows that the future
clinician and investigator must have use for a handbook that decides
whether his own strange case has already been paralleled or excelled.
He will thus be aided in determining the truth of his statements and
the accuracy of his diagnoses. Moreover, to know extremes gives
directly some knowledge of means, and by implication and inference it
frequently does more. Remarkable injuries illustrate to what extent
tissues and organs may be damaged without resultant death, and thus the
surgeon is encouraged to proceed to his operation with greater
confidence and more definite knowledge as to the issue. If a mad cow
may blindly play the part of a successful obstetrician with her horns,
certainly a skilled surgeon may hazard entering the womb with his
knife. If large portions of an organ,--the lung, a kidney, parts of the
liver, or the brain itself,--may be lost by accident, and the patient
still live, the physician is taught the lesson of nil desperandum, and
that if possible to arrest disease of these organs before their total
destruction, the prognosis and treatment thereby acquire new and more
hopeful phases.
Directly or indirectly many similar examples have also clear
medicolegal bearings or suggestions; in fact, it must be acknowledged
that much of the importance of medical jurisprudence lies in a thorough
comprehension of the anomalous and rare cases in Medicine. Expert
medical testimony has its chief value in showing the possibilities of
the occurrence of alleged extreme cases, and extraordinary deviations
from the natural. Every expert witness should be able to maintain his
argument by a full citation of parallels to any remarkable theory or
hypothesis advanced by his clients; and it is only by an exhaustive
knowledge of extremes and anomalies that an authority on medical
jurisprudence can hope to substantiate his testimony beyond question.
In every poisoning case he is closely questioned as to the largest dose
of the drug in question that has been taken with impunity, and the
smallest dose that has killed, and he is expected to have the cases of
reported idiosyncrasies and tolerance at his immediate command. A widow
with a child of ten months' gestation may be saved the loss of
reputation by mention of the authentic cases in which pregnancy has
exceeded nine months' duration; the proof of the viability of a seven
months' child may alter the disposition of an estate; the proof of
death by a blow on the epigastrium without external marks of violence
may convict a murderer; and so it is with many other cases of a
medicolegal nature.
It is noteworthy that in old-time medical literature--sadly and
unjustly neglected in our rage for the new--should so often be found
parallels of our most wonderful and peculiar modern cases. We wish,
also, to enter a mild protest against the modern egotism that would set
aside with a sneer as myth and fancy the testimonies and reports of
philosophers and physicians, only because they lived hundreds of years
ago. We are keenly appreciative of the power exercised by the
myth-making faculty in the past, but as applied to early physicians, we
suggest that the suspicion may easily be too active. When Pare, for
example, pictures a monster, we may distrust his art, his artist, or
his engraver, and make all due allowance for his primitive knowledge of
teratology, coupled with the exaggerations and inventions of the
wonder-lover; but when he describes in his own writing what he or his
confreres have seen on the battle-field or in the dissecting room, we
think, within moderate limits, we owe him credence. For the rest, we
doubt not that the modern reporter is, to be mild, quite as much of a
myth-maker as his elder brother, especially if we find modern instances
that are essentially like the older cases reported in reputable
journals or books, and by men presumably honest. In our collection we
have endeavored, so far as possible, to cite similar cases from the
older and from the more recent literature.
This connection suggests the question of credibility in general. It
need hardly be said that the lay-journalist and newspaper reporter have
usually been ignored by us, simply because experience and investigation
have many times proved that a scientific fact, by presentation in most
lay-journals, becomes in some mysterious manner, ipso facto, a
scientific caricature (or worse!), and if it is so with facts, what
must be the effect upon reports based upon no fact whatsoever? It is
manifestly impossible for us to guarantee the credibility of chronicles
given. If we have been reasonably certain of unreliability, we may not
even have mentioned the marvelous statement. Obviously, we could do no
more with apparently credible cases, reported by reputable medical men,
than to cite author and source and leave the matter there, where our
responsibility must end.
But where our proper responsibility seemed likely never to end was in
carrying out the enormous labor requisite for a reasonable certainty
that we had omitted no searching that might lead to undiscovered facts,
ancient or modern. Choice in selection is always, of course, an affair
de gustibus, and especially when, like the present, there is
considerable embarrassment of riches, coupled with the purpose of
compressing our results in one handy volume. In brief, it may be said
that several years of exhaustive research have been spent by us in the
great medical libraries of the United States and Europe in collecting
the material herewith presented. If, despite of this, omissions and
errors are to be found, we shall be grateful to have them pointed out.
It must be remembered that limits of space have forbidden satisfactory
discussion of the cases, and the prime object of the whole work has
been to carefully collect and group the anomalies and curiosities, and
allow the reader to form his own conclusions and make his own
deductions.
As the entire labor in the preparation of the forelying volume, from
the inception of the idea to the completion of the index, has been
exclusively the personal work of the authors, it is with full
confidence of the authenticity of the reports quoted that the material
is presented.
Complete references are given to those facts that are comparatively
unknown or unique, or that are worthy of particular interest or further
investigation. To prevent unnecessary loading of the book with
foot-notes, in those instances in which there are a number of cases of
the same nature, and a description has not been thought necessary, mere
citation being sufficient, references are but briefly given or omitted
altogether. For the same reason a bibliographic index has been added at
the end of the text. This contains the most important sources of
information used, and each journal or book therein has its own number,
which is used in its stead all through the book (thus, 476 signifies
The Lancet, London; 597, the New York Medical Journal; etc.). These
bibliographic numbers begin at 100.
Notwithstanding that every effort has been made to conveniently and
satisfactorily group the thousands of cases contained in the book (a
labor of no small proportions in itself), a complete general index is a
practical necessity for the full success of what is essentially a
reference-volume, and consequently one has been added, in which may be
found not only the subjects under consideration and numerous
cross-references, but also the names of the authors of the most
important reports. A table of contents follows this preface.
We assume the responsibility for innovations in orthography, certain
abbreviations, and the occasional substitution of figures for large
numerals, fractions, and decimals, made necessary by limited space, and
in some cases to more lucidly show tables and statistics. From the
variety of the reports, uniformity of nomenclature and numeration is
almost impossible.
As we contemplate constantly increasing our data, we shall be glad to
receive information of any unpublished anomalous or curious cases,
either of the past or in the future.
For many courtesies most generously extended in aiding our
research-work we wish, among others, to acknowledge our especial
gratitude and indebtedness to the officers and assistants of the
Surgeon-General's Library at Washington, D.C., the Library of the Royal
College of Surgeons of London, the Library of the British Museum, the
Library of the British Medical Association, the Bibliotheque de Faculte
de Medecine de Paris, the Bibliotheque Nationale, and the Library of
the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.
GEORGE M. GOULD.
PHILADELPHIA, October, 1896. WALTER L. PYLE.
TABLE OF CONTENTS.
CHAPTER PAGES
I. GENETIC ANOMALIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17-49
II. PRENATAL ANOMALIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50-112
III. OBSTETRIC ANOMALIES . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 113-143
IV. PROLIFICITY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 144-160
V. MAJOR TERATA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 161-212
VI. MINOR TERATA . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 213-323
VII. ANOMALIES OF STATURE, SIZE, AND DEVELOPMENT . . . 324-364
VIII. LONGEVITY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 365-382
IX. PHYSIOLOGIC AND FUNCTIONAL ANOMALIES . . . . . . . 383-526
X. SURGICAL ANOMALIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK . . . . . . 527-587
XI. SURGICAL ANOMALIES OF THE EXTREMITIES . . . . . . 588-605
XII. SURGICAL ANOMALIES OF THE THORAX AND ABDOMEN . . 606-666
XIII. SURGICAL ANOMALIES OF THE GENITOURINARY SYSTEM . 667-696
XIV. MISCELLANEOUS SURGICAL ANOMALIES . . . . . . . . 697-758
XV. ANOMALOUS TYPES AND INSTANCES OF DISEASE . . . . . 759-822
XVI. ANOMALOUS SKIN-DISEASES . . . . . . . . . . . . . 823-851
XVII. ANOMALOUS NERVOUS AND MENTAL DISEASES . . . . . 852-890
XVIII. HISTORIC EPIDEMICS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 891-914
ANOMALIES AND CURIOSITIES OF MEDICINE.
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