Sex in Relation to Society
CHAPTER X.
28160 words | Chapter 26
SURGICAL ANOMALIES OF THE HEAD AND NECK.
Injuries of such a delicate organ as the eye, in which the slightest
accident can produce such disastrous consequences, naturally elicit the
interest of all. Examples of exophthalmos, or protrusion of the eye
from the orbit from bizarre causes, are of particular interest. Among
the older writers we find Ficker and the Ephemerides giving instances
of exophthalmos from vomiting. Fabricius Hildanus mentions a similar
instance. Salmuth, Verduc, and others mention extrusion of the eyeball
from the socket, due to excessive coughing. Ab Heers and Sennert
mention instances in which after replacement the sight was uninjured.
Tyler relates the case of a man who, after arising in the morning, blew
his nose violently, and to his horror his left eye extruded from the
orbit. With the assistance of his wife it was immediately replaced and
a bandage placed over it. When Tyler saw him the upper lid was slightly
swollen and discolored, but there was no hemorrhage.
Hutchinson describes extrusion of the eyeball from the orbit caused by
a thrust with a stick. There was paraphymotic strangulation of the
globe, entirely preventing replacement and necessitating excision.
Reyssie speaks of a patient who, during a fire, was struck in the right
eye by a stream of water from a hose, violently thrusting the eye
backward. Contracting under the double influence of shock and cold, the
surrounding tissues forced the eyeball from the orbit, and an hour
later Reyssie saw the patient with the eye hanging by the optic nerve
and muscles. Its reduction was easy, and after some minor treatment
vision was perfectly restored in the injured organ. Thirty months after
the accident the patient had perfect vision, and the eye had never in
the slightest way discommoded him.
Bodkin mentions the case of a woman of sixty who fell on the key in a
door and completely avulsed her eye. In von Graefe's Archiv there is a
record of a man of seventy-five who suffered complete avulsion of the
eye by a cart-wheel passing over his head. Verhaeghe records complete
avulsion of the eye caused by a man falling against the ring of a
sharp-worn key. Hamill describes the case of a young girl whose
conjunctiva was pierced by one of the rests of an ordinary gas-bracket.
Being hooked at one of its extremities the iron became entangled in
either the inferior oblique or external rectus muscles, and completely
avulsed the eyeball upon the cheek. The real damage could not be
estimated, as the patient never returned after the muscle was clipped
off close to its conjunctival insertion. Calhoun mentions an instance
of a little Esquimaux dog whose head was seized between the jaws of a
large Newfoundland with such force as to press the left eyeball from
the socket. The ball rested on the cheek, held by the taut optic nerve;
the cornea was opaque. The ball was carefully and gently replaced, and
sight soon returned to the eye.
In former days there was an old-fashioned manner of fighting called
"gouging." In this brutal contest the combatant was successful who
could, with his thumb, press his opponent's eyeball out. Strange to
say, little serious or permanently bad results followed such inhuman
treatment of the eye. Von Langenbeck of Berlin mentions an instance of
fracture of the superior maxilla, in which the eyeball was so much
displaced as to lodge in the antrum of Highmore. Von Becker of
Heidelberg reports the history of a case in which a blow from the horn
of a cow dislocated the eye so far back in the orbit as to present the
appearance of enucleation. The conjunctiva hid the organ from view, but
when it was pulled aside the eyeball was exposed, and in its remote
position still possessed the power of vision. In some cases in which
exophthalmos has been seemingly spontaneous, extreme laxity of the lids
may serve as an explanation. There is an instance on record in which a
Polish dew appeared in a Continental hospital, saying that while
turning in bed, without any apparent cause, his eyeball was completely
extruded. There have been people who prided themselves on their ability
to produce partial exophthalmos.
Rupture of the Eyeball.--Jessop mentions the case of a child of eight
who suffered a blow on the eye from a fall against a bedpost, followed
by compound rupture of the organ. The wound in the sclerotic was three
or four lines in length, and the rent in the conjunctiva was so large
that it required three sutures. The chief interest in this case was the
rapid and complete recovery of vision.
Adler reports a case of fracture of the superior maxillary in which the
dislocated bone-fragment of the lower orbital border, through pressure
on the inferior maxillary and counter pressure on the skull, caused
rupture of the conjunctiva of the left eye.
Serious Sequelae of Orbital Injuries.--In some instances injuries
primarily to the orbit either by extension or implication of the
cerebral contents provoke the most serious issues. Pointed instruments
thrust into the orbital cavity may by this route reach the brain. There
is a record of death caused by a wound of a cavernous sinus through the
orbit by the stem of a tobacco-pipe. Bower saw a woman at the
Gloucester Infirmary who had been stabbed in the eye by the end of an
umbrella. There was profuse hemorrhage from the nostrils and left eye,
but no signs indicative of its origin. Death shortly ensued, and at the
necropsy a fracture through the roof of the orbit was revealed, the
umbrella point having completely severed the optic nerve and divided
the ophthalmic artery. The internal carotid artery was wounded in
one-half of its circumference at its bend, just before it passes up
between the anterior clinoid process and the optic nerve. The cavernous
sinus was also opened. In this rare injury, although there was a
considerable quantity of clotted blood at the base of the brain, there
was no wound to the eyeball nor to the brain itself.
Pepper records a case in which a knife was thrust through the
spheroidal fissure, wounding a large meningeal vein, causing death from
intracranial hemorrhage. Nelaton describes an instance in which the
point of an umbrella wounded the cavernous sinus and internal carotid
artery of the opposite side, causing the formation of an arteriovenous
aneurysm which ultimately burst, and death ensued. Polaillon saw a boy
of eighteen who was found in a state of coma. It was stated that an
umbrella stick had been thrust up through the roof of the orbit and had
been withdrawn with much difficulty. The anterior lobe of the brain was
evidently much wounded; an incision was made in the forehead and a
portion of the frontal bone chiseled away entrance being thus effected,
the aura was incised, and some blood and cerebrospinal fluid escaped.
Five splinters were removed and a portion of the damaged
brain-substance, and a small artery was tied with catgut. The debris
of the eyeball was enucleated and a drain was placed in the frontal
wound, coming out through the orbit. The patient soon regained
consciousness and experienced no bad symptoms afterward. The drains
were gradually withdrawn, the process of healing advanced rapidly, and
recovery soon ensued.
Annandale mentions an instance in which a knitting-needle penetrated
the brain through the orbit. Hewett speaks of perforation of the roof
of the orbit and injury to the brain by a lead-pencil.
Gunshot Injuries of the Orbit.--Barkan recites the case in which a
leaden ball 32/100 inch in diameter was thrown from a sling into the
left orbital cavity, penetrating between the eyeball and osseous wall
of the orbit without rupturing the tunics of the eye or breaking the
bony wall of the cavity. It remained lodged two weeks without causing
any pain or symptoms, and subsequently worked itself forward, contained
in a perfect conjunctival sac, in which it was freely movable.
Buchanan recites the case of a private in the army who was shot at a
distance of three feet away, the ball entering the inner canthus of the
right eye and lodging under the skin of the opposite side. The eye was
not lost, and opacity of the lower part of the cornea alone resulted.
Cold water and purging constituted the treatment.
It is said a that an old soldier of one of Napoleon's armies had a
musket-ball removed from his left orbit after twenty-four years'
lodgment. He was struck in the orbit by a musket-ball, but as at the
same time a companion fell dead at his side he inferred that the bullet
rebounded from his orbit and killed his comrade. For twenty-four years
he had suffered from cephalalgia and pains and partial exophthalmos of
the left eye. After removal of the ball the eye partially atrophied.
Warren reports a case of a man of thirty-five whose eyeball was
destroyed by the explosion of a gun, the breech-pin flying off and
penetrating the head. The orbit was crushed; fourteen months afterward
the man complained of soreness on the hard palate, and the whole
breech-pin, with screw attached, was extracted. The removal of the pin
was followed by fissure of the hard palate, which, however, was
relieved by operation. The following is an extract of a report by
Wenyon of Fatshan, South China:--
"Tang Shan, Chinese farmer, thirty-one years of age, was injured in the
face by the bursting of a shot-gun. After being for upward of two
months under the treatment of native practitioners, he came to me on
December 4, 1891. I observed a cicatrix on the right side of his nose,
and above this a sinus, still unhealed, the orifice of which involved
the inner canthus of the right eye, and extended downward and inward
for about a centimeter. The sight of the right eye was entirely lost,
and the anterior surface of the globe was so uniformly red that the
cornea could hardly be distinguished from the surrounding conjunctiva.
There was no perceptible enlargement or protrusion of the eyeball, and
it did not appear to have sustained any mechanical injury or loss of
tissue. The ophthalmia and keratitis were possibly caused by the
irritating substances applied to the wound by the Chinese doctors. The
sinus on the side of the nose gave exit to a continuous discharge of
slightly putrid pus, and the patient complained of continuous headache
and occasional dizziness, which interfered with his work. The pain was
referred to the right frontal and temporal regions, and the skin on
this part of the head had a slight blush, but there was no superficial
tenderness. The patient had been told by his native doctors, and he
believed it himself, that there was no foreign body in the wound; but
on probing it I easily recognized the lower edge of a hard metallic
substance at a depth of about one inch posteriorly from the orifice of
the sinus. Being unable to obtain any reliable information as to the
probable size or shape of the object, I cautiously made several
attempts to remove it through a slightly enlarged opening, but without
success. I therefore continued the incision along the side of the nose
to the nostril, thus laying open the right nasal cavity; then, seizing
the foreign body with a pair of strong forceps, I with difficulty
removed the complete breech-pin of a Chinese gun. Its size and shape
are accurately represented by the accompanying drawing. The breech-pin
measures a little over three inches in length, and weighs 21 ounces, or
75.6 grams. It had evidently lain at the back of the orbit, inclined
upward and slightly backward from its point of entrance, at an angle of
about 45 degrees. On its removal the headache was at once relieved and
did not return. In ten days the wound was perfectly healed and the
patient went back to his work. A somewhat similar case, but which
terminated fatally, is recorded in the American Journal of the Medical
Sciences of July, 1882."
The extent of permanent injury done by foreign bodies in the orbit is
variable. In some instances the most extensive wound is followed by the
happiest result, while in others vision is entirely destroyed by a
minor injury.
Carter reports a case in which a hat-peg 3 3/10 inches long and about
1/4 inch in diameter (upon one end of which was a knob nearly 1/2 inch
in diameter) was impacted in the orbit for from ten to twenty days, and
during this time the patient was not aware of the fact. Recovery
followed its extraction, the vision and movements of the eye being
unimpaired.
According to the Philosophical Transactions a laborer thrust a long
lath with great violence into the inner canthus of the left eye of his
fellow workman, Edward Roberts. The lath broke off short, leaving a
piece two inches long, 1/2 inch wide, and 1/4 inch thick, in situ.
Roberts rode about a mile to the surgery of Mr. Justinian Morse, who
extracted it with much difficulty; recovery followed, together with
restoration of the sight and muscular action. The lath was supposed to
have passed behind the eyeball. Collette speaks of an instance in which
186 pieces of glass were extracted from the left orbit, the whole mass
weighing 186 Belgian grains. They were blown in by a gust of wind that
broke a pane of glass; after extraction no affection of the brain or
eye occurred. Watson speaks of a case in which a chip of steel 3/8 inch
long was imbedded in cellular tissue of the orbit for four days, and
was removed without injury to the eye. Wordsworth reports a case in
which a foreign body was deeply imbedded in the orbit for six weeks,
and was removed with subsequent recovery. Chisholm has seen a case in
which for five weeks a fly was imbedded in the culdesac between the
lower lid and the eyeball.
Foreign bodies are sometimes contained in the eyeball for many years.
There is an instance on record in which a wooden splinter, five mm.
long and two mm. broad, remained in the eye forty-seven years. It was
extracted, with the lens in which it was lodged, to relieve pain and
other distressing symptoms. Snell reports a case in which a piece of
steel was imbedded and encapsulated in the ciliary process twenty-nine
years without producing sympathetic irritation of its fellow, but
causing such pain as to warrant enucleation of this eye. Gunning speaks
of a piece of thorn 5/8 inch long, imbedded in the left eyeball of an
old man for six years, causing total loss of vision; he adds that,
after its removal, some improvement was noticed.
Williams mentions a stone-cutter whose left eye was put out by a piece
of stone. Shortly after this his right eye was wounded by a knife,
causing traumatic cataract, which was extracted by Sir William Wilde,
giving the man good sight for twelve years, after which iritis attacked
the right eye and produced a false membrane over the pupil so that the
man could not work. It was in this condition that he consulted
Williams, fourteen years after the loss of the left eye. The eye was
atrophied, and on examination a piece of stone was seen projecting from
it directly between the lids. The visible portion was 1/4 inch long,
and the end in the shrunken eye was evidently longer than the end
protruding. The sclera was incised, and, after fourteen years' duration
in the eye, the stone was removed.
Taylor reports the removal of a piece of bone which had remained
quiescent in the eye for fourteen years; after the removal of the eye
the bone was found adherent to the inner tunics. It resembled the lens
in size and shape. Williams mentions continual tolerance of foreign
bodies in the eyeball for fifteen and twenty-two years; and Chisholm
reports the lodgment of a fragment of metal in the iris for
twenty-three years. Liebreich extracted a piece of steel from the
interior of the eye where it had been lodged twenty-two years. Barkar
speaks of a piece of steel which penetrated through the cornea and
lens, and which, five months later, was successfully removed by the
extraction of the cataractous lens. Critchett gives an instance of a
foreign body being loose in the anterior chamber for sixteen years.
Rider speaks of the lodgment of a fragment of a copper percussion cap
in the left eye, back of the inner ciliary margin of the iris, for
thirty-five years; and Bartholinus mentions a thorn in the canthus for
thirty years. Jacob reports a case in which a chip of iron remained in
the eyeball twenty-eight years without giving indications for removal.
It was clearly visible, protruding into the anterior surface of the
iris, and although it was rusted by its long lodgment, sight in the eye
was fairly good, and there was no sign of irritation.
Snell gives an instance in which a piece of steel was imbedded close to
the optic disc with retention of sight. It was plainly visible by the
opthalmoscope eighteen months after the accident, when as yet no
diminution of sight was apparent. Smyly speaks of a portion of a
tobacco pipe which was successfully removed from the anterior chamber
by an incision through the cornea. Clark mentions a case in which
molten lead in the eye caused no permanent injury; and there are
several cases mentioned in confirmation of the statement that the eye
seems to be remarkably free from disastrous effects after this injury.
Williamson mentions eyelashes in the anterior chamber of the eye, the
result of a stab wound of this organ.
Contusion of the eyeball may cause dislocation of the lens into the
anterior chamber, and several instances have been recorded. We regret
our inability to give the reference or authority for a report that we
have seen, stating that by one kick of a horse the lenses of both eyes
of a man were synchronously knocked through the eyeballs by the calkins
of the horseshoe. Oliver mentions extraction of a lens by a thrust of a
cow's horn.
Lowe speaks of rupture of the anterior capsule of the lens from violent
sneezing, with subsequent absorption of the lenticular substance and
restoration of vision. Trioen mentions a curious case of expulsion of
the crystalline lens from the eye in ophthalmia, through the formation
of a corneal fissure. The authors have personal knowledge of a case of
spontaneous extrusion of the lens through a corneal ulcer, in a case of
ophthalmia of the new-born.
Injury of the Eyeball by Birds.--There are several instances in which
birds have pierced the eyeball with their bills, completely destroying
vision. Not long since a prominent taxidermist winged a crane, picked
it up, and started to examine it, when it made one thrust with its bill
and totally destroyed his eyeball. In another instance a man was going
from the railroad station to his hotel in a gale of wind, when, as he
turned the corner of the street, an English sparrow was blown into his
face. Its bill penetrated his eyeball and completely ruined his sight.
There are several instances on record in which game fowls have
destroyed the eyes of their owners. In one case a game cock almost
completed the enucleation of the eye of his handler by striking him
with his gaff while preparing in a cock-pit.
Moorehead explains a rare accident to an eye as follows:--
"Mr. S. B. A., while attending to his bees, was stung by one upon the
right upper eyelid near its center. An employee, who was assisting in
the work, immediately discovered the sting driven in the lid and
cautiously extracted it, stating that he made sufficient traction to
lift the lid well away from the globe. In a few hours the lid became
much swollen, but the pain experienced at first had disappeared. Before
retiring for the night he began gentle massage of the lid, stroking it
horizontally with his finger. The edematous condition was by this means
much reduced in a short time. While thus engaged in stroking the lid he
suddenly experienced intense pain in the eye as if it had been pierced
by a sharp instrument. The suffering was very severe, and he passed a
wretched night, constantly feeling 'something in his eye.'
"The next morning, the trouble continuing, he came to me for relief.
Upon examination of the lid, no opening could be made out where the
sting had penetrated, and a minute inspection of the conjunctival
surface with a good glass failed to reveal any foreign substance.
Cleansing the lid thoroughly, and carefully inspecting with a lens
under strong light, a minute dark point was made out about the center
of the lid. Feeling that this might be the point of the sting, I had
recourse to several expedients for its removal, but without success.
Finally, with a fine knife, I succeeded in cutting down by the side of
the body and tilting it out. Examination with a 1/5 inch objective
confirmed my opinion that it was the point of the bee-sting.
"The barbed formation of the point explains how, under the stroking
with the finger, it was forced through the dense tarsal cartilage and
against the cornea of the eye."
There is a story told in La Medecine Moderne of a seamstress of Berlin
who was in the habit of allowing her dog to lick her face. She was
attacked with a severe inflammation of the right eye, which had to be
enucleated, and was found full of tenia echinococcus, evidently derived
from the dog's tongue.
Gabb mentions a case of epistaxis in which the blood welled up through
the lacrimal ducts and suffused into the eye so that it was constantly
necessary to wipe the lower eyelid, and the discharge ceased only when
the nose stopped bleeding. A brief editorial note on epistaxis through
the eyes, referring to a case in the Medical News of November 30, 1895,
provoked further reports from numerous correspondents. Among others,
the following:--
"Dr. T. L. Wilson of Bellwood, Pa., relates the case of an old lady of
seventy-eight whom he found with the blood gushing from the nostrils.
After plugging the nares thoroughly with absorbent cotton dusted with
tannic acid he was surprised to see the blood ooze out around the
eyelids and trickle down the cheeks. This oozing continued for the
greater part of an hour, being controlled by applications of ice to
both sides of the nose."
"Dr. F. L. Donlon of New York City reports the case of a married woman,
about fifty years old, in whom epistaxis set in suddenly at 11 P.M.,
and had continued for several hours, when the anterior nares were
plugged. In a short time the woman complained that she could scarcely
see, owing to the welling up of blood in the eyes and trickling down
her face. The bleeding only ceased when the posterior nares also were
plugged."
"Dr. T. G. Wright of Plainville, Conn., narrates the case of a young
man whom he found in the night, bleeding profusely, and having already
lost a large amount of blood. Shortly after plugging both anterior and
posterior nares the blood found its way through the lacrimal ducts to
the eyes and trickled down the cheeks."
"Dr. Charles W. Crumb cites the case of a man, sixty-five years old,
with chronic nephritis, in whom a slight bruise of the nose was
followed by epistaxis lasting twenty-four hours. When the nares were
plugged blood escaped freely from the eyes. A cone-shaped bit of
sponge, saturated with ferrous sulphate, was passed into each anterior
naris, and another piece of sponge, similarly medicated, into either
posterior naris. The patient had been taking various preparations of
potassium, and it was thought that his blood contained a deficiency of
fibrin. Upon removal of the nasal plugs a catarrhal inflammation
developed which lasted a long time and was attended with considerable
purulent discharge."
Late Restoration of Sight.--There are some marvelous cases on record in
which, after many years of blindness, the surgeon has been able, by
operation, to restore the sight. McKeown gives the history of a blind
fiddler of sixty-three, who, when one and a half years old, had lost
the sight of both eyes after an attack of small-pox. Iridectomy was
performed, and after over sixty years of total blindness his sight was
restored; color-perception was good. Berncastle mentions a case of
extraction of double cataract and double iridectomy for occluded
pupils, which, after thirty years of blindness, resulted in the
recovery of good sight. The patient was a blind beggar of Sydney.
To those interested in this subject, Jauffret has a most interesting
description of a man by the name of Garin, who was born blind, who
talked at eight or nine months, showed great intelligence, and who was
educated at a blind asylum. At the age of twenty-four he entered the
hospital of Forlenze, to be operated upon by that famous oculist. Garin
had never seen, but could distinguish night or darkness by one eye
only, and recognized orange and red when placed close to that eye. He
could tell at once the sex and age of a person approximately by the
voice and tread, and formed his conclusions more rapidly in regard to
females than males. Forlenze diagnosed cataract, and, in the presence
of a distinguished gathering, operated with the happiest result. The
description that follows, which is quoted by Fournier and is readily
accessible to any one, is well worth reading, as it contains an account
of the first sensations of light, objects, distance, etc., and minor
analogous thoughts, of an educated and matured mind experiencing its
first sensations of sight.
Hansell and Clark say that the perplexities of learning to see after
twenty-six years of blindness from congenital disease, as described by
a patient of Franke, remind one of the experience of Shelley's
Frankenstein. Franke's patient was successfully operated on for
congenital double cataract, at twenty-six years of age. The author
describes the difficulties the patient had of recognizing by means of
vision the objects he had hitherto known through his other senses, and
his slowness in learning to estimate distances and the comparative size
of objects.
Sight is popularly supposed to be occasionally restored without the aid
of art, after long years of blindness. Benjamin Rush saw a man of
forty-five who, twelve years before, became blind without ascertainable
cause, and recovered his sight equally without reason. St. Clair
mentions Marshal Vivian, who at the age of one hundred regained sight
that for nearly forty years had gradually been failing almost to
blindness, and preserved this new sight to the time of his death.
There are many superstitions prevalent among uneducated people as to
"second sight," recovery of vision, etc., which render their reports of
such things untrustworthy. The real explanations of such cases are too
varied for discussion here.
Nyctalopia etymologically means night blindness, but the general usage,
making the term mean night-vision, is so strongly intrenched that it is
useless and confusing to attempt any reinstatement of the old
significance. The condition in which one sees better by night,
relatively speaking, than by day is due to some lesion of the macular
region, rendering it blind. At night the pupil dilates more than in the
day-time, and hence vision with the extramacular or peripheral portions
of the retina is correspondingly better. It is, therefore, a symptom of
serious retinal disease. All night-prowling animals have widely
dilatable pupils, and in addition to this they have in the retina a
special organ called the tapetum lucidum, the function of which is to
reflect to a focus in front of them the relatively few rays of light
that enter the widely-dilated pupil and thus enable them the better to
see their way. Hence the luminous appearance of the eyes of such
animals in the dark.
Hemeralopia (etymologically day-blindness, but by common usage meaning
day-vision or night-blindness) is a symptom of a peculiar degenerative
disease of the retina, called retinitis pigmentosa. It also occurs in
some cases of extreme denutrition, numerous cases having been reported
among those who make the prolonged fasts customary in the Russian
church. In retinitis pigmentosa the peripheral or extramacular portions
of the retina are subject to a pigmentary degeneration that renders
them insensitive to light, and patients so afflicted are consequently
incapable of seeing at night as well as others. They stumble and run
against objects easily seen by the normal eye.
Snow-blindness occurs from prolonged exposure of the eyes to snow upon
which the sun is shining. Some years ago, some seventy laborers, who
were clearing away snow-drifts in the Caucasus, were seized, and thirty
of them could not find their way home, so great was the photophobia,
conjunctivitis, and lacrimation. Graddy reports six cases, and many
others are constantly occurring.
Other forms of retinal injury from too great or too prolonged exposure
to light are "moon-blindness," due to sleeping with the eyes exposed to
bright moonlight, and that due to lightning--a case, e.g., being
reported by Knies. Silex also reports such a case and reviews the
reported cases, 25 in number, in ten of which cataract ensued. In the
Annual of the Universal Medical Sciences, 1888, there is a report of
seven cases of retinal injury with central scotoma, amblyopia, etc., in
Japanese medical students, caused by observation of the sun in eclipse.
In discussing the question of electric-light injuries of the eyes Gould
reviews the literature of the subject and epitomizes the cases reported
up to that time. They numbered 23. No patient was seriously or
permanently injured, and none was in a person who used the electric
light in a proper manner as an illuminant. All were in scientific
investigators or workmen about the light, who approached it too closely
or gazed at it too long and without the colored protecting spectacles
now found necessary by such workers.
Injuries to the Ear.--The folly of the practice of boxing children's
ears, and the possible disastrous results subsequent to this
punishment, are well exemplified throughout medical literature. Stewart
quotes four cases of rupture of the tympanum from boxing the ears, and
there is an instance of a boy of eight, who was boxed on the ear at
school, in whom subsequent brain-disease developed early, and death
followed. Roosa of New York mentions the loss of hearing following a
kiss on the ear.
Dalby, in a paper citing many different causes of rupture of the
tympanic membrane, mentions the following: A blow in sparring; violent
sneezing; blowing the nose; forcible dilatation of the Eustachian
canal; a thorn or twig of a tree accidentally thrust into the head;
picking the ear with a toothpick. In time of battle soldiers sometimes
have their tympanums ruptured by the concussion caused by the firing of
cannon. Dalby mentions an instance of an officer who was discharged for
deafness acquired in this manner during the Crimean War. He was
standing beside a mortar which, unexpectedly to him, was fired, causing
rupture of the tympanic membrane, followed by hemorrhage from the ear.
Similar cases were reported in the recent naval engagements between the
Chinese and Japanese. Wilson reports two cases of rupture of the
membrane tympani caused by diving. Roosa divides the causes into
traumatic, hemorrhagic, and inflammatory, and primary lesions of the
labyrinth, exemplifying each by numerous instances. Under traumatic
causes he mentions severe falls, blows about the head or face, constant
listening to a telegraphic instrument, cannonading, and finally eight
cases of boiler-makers' deafness. Roosa cites a curious case of sudden
and profound deafness in a young man in perfect health, while calling
upon the parents of his lady-love to ask her hand in marriage. Strange
to say that after he had had a favorable reply he gradually recovered
his hearing! In the same paper there is an instance of a case of
deafness due to the sudden cessation of perspiration, and an instance
of tinnitus due to the excessive use of tobacco; Roosa also mentions a
case of deafness due to excessive mental employment.
Perforation of the Tympanum.--Kealy relates an instance in which a pin
was introduced into the left ear to relieve an intolerable itching. It
perforated the tympanum, and before the expiration of twenty-four hours
was coughed up from the throat with a small quantity of blood. The pin
was bent at an angle of about 120 degrees. Another similar case was
that of a girl of twenty-two who, while pricking her ear with a
hair-pin, was jerked or struck on the arm by a child, and the pin
forced into the ear; great pain and deafness followed, together with
the loss of taste on the same side of the tongue; after treatment both
of the disturbed senses were restored. A man of twenty was pricked in
the ear by a needle entering the meatus. He uttered a cry, fell
senseless, and so continued until the fourth day when he died. The
whole auditory meatus was destroyed by suppuration. Gamgee tells of a
constable who was stabbed in the left ear, severing the middle
meningeal artery, death ensuing. In this instance, after digital
compression, ligature of the common carotid was practiced as a last
resort. There is an account of a provision-dealer's agent who fell
asleep at a public house at Tottenham. In sport an attendant tickled
his ear with a wooden article used as a pipe light. A quick,
unconscious movement forced the wooden point through the tympanum,
causing cerebral inflammation and subsequent death. There is a record
of death, in a child of nine, caused by the passage of a
knitting-needle into the auditory meatus.
Kauffmann reports a case of what he calls objective tinnitus aurium, in
which the noise originating in the patient's ears was distinctly
audible by others. The patient was a boy of fourteen, who had fallen on
the back of his head and had remained unconscious for nearly two weeks.
The noises were bilateral, but more distinct on the left than on the
right side. The sounds were described as crackling, and seemed to
depend on movements of the arch of the palate. Kauffmann expresses the
opinion that the noises were due to clonic spasm of the tensor velum
palati, and states that under appropriate treatment the tinnitus
gradually subsided.
The introduction of foreign bodies in the ear is usually accidental,
although in children we often find it as a result of sport or
curiosity. There is an instance on record of a man who was accustomed
to catch flies and put them in his ear, deriving from them a
pleasurable sensation from the tickling which ensued. There have been
cases in which children, and even adults, have held grasshoppers,
crickets, or lady-birds to their ears in order to more attentively
listen to the noise, and while in this position the insects have
escaped and penetrated the auditory canal. Insects often enter the ears
of persons reposing in the fields with the ear to the ground. Fabricius
Hildanus speaks of a cricket penetrating the ear during sleep. Calhoun
mentions an instance of disease of the ear which he found was due to
the presence of several living maggots in the interior of the ear. The
patient had been sleeping in a horse stall in which were found maggots
similar to those extracted from his ear. An analogous instance was seen
in a negro in the Emergency Hospital, Washington, D.C., in the summer
of 1894; and many others are recorded. The insects are frequently
removed only after a prolonged lodgment.
D'Aguanno gives an account of two instances of living larvae of the
musca sarcophaga in the ears of children. In one of the cases the
larvae entered the drum-cavity through a rupture in the tympanic
membrane. In both cases the maggots were removed by forceps. Haug has
observed a tic (ixodes ricinus) in the ear of a lad of seventeen. The
creature was killed by a mercuric-chlorid solution, and removed with a
probe.
There is a common superstition that centipedes have the faculty of
entering the ear and penetrating the brain, causing death. The authors
have knowledge of an instance in which three small centipedes were
taken from the ear of a policeman after remaining there three days;
during this time they caused excruciating pain, but there was no
permanent injury. The Ephemerides contains instances in which, while
yet living, worms, crickets, ants, and beetles have all been taken from
the ear. In one case the entrance of a cricket in the auditory canal
was the cause of death. Martin gives an instance in which larvae were
deposited in the ear. Stalpart van der Wiel relates an instance of the
lodgment of a living spider in the ear.
Far more common than insects are inanimate objects as foreign bodies in
the ear, and numerous examples are to be found in literature. Fabricius
Hildanus tells of a glass ball introduced into the auditory canal of a
girl of ten, followed by headache, numbness on the left side, and after
four or five years epileptic seizures, and atrophy of the arm. He
extracted it and the symptoms immediately ceased. Sabatier speaks of an
abscess of the brain caused by a ball of paper in the ear; and it is
quite common for persons in the habit of using a tampon of cotton in
the meatus to mistake the deep entrance of this substance for
functional derangement, and many cases of temporary deafness are simply
due to forgetfulness of the cause. A strange case is reported in a girl
of fourteen, who lost her tympanum from a profuse otorrhea, and who
substituted an artificial tympanum which was, in its turn, lost by deep
penetration, causing augmentation of the symptoms, of the cause of
which the patient herself seemed unaware. Sometimes artificial otoliths
are produced by the insufflation of various powders which become
agglutinated, and are veritable foreign bodies. Holman tells of a
negro, aged thirty-five, whose wife poured molten pewter in his ear
while asleep. It was removed, but total deafness was the result.
Alley mentions a New Orleans wharf laborer, in whose ear was poured
some molten lead; seventeen months afterward the lead was still
occupying the external auditory meatus. It is quite remarkable that the
lead should have remained such a length of time without causing
meningeal inflammation. There was deafness and palsy of that side of
the face. A fungous growth occupied the external portion of the ear;
the man suffered pain and discharge from the ear, and had also great
difficulty in closing his right eyelid. Morrison mentions an alcoholic
patient of forty who, on June 6, 1833, had nitric acid poured in her
right ear. There were no headache, febrile symptoms, stupor, or
vertigo. Debility alone was present. Two weeks after the injury
paralysis began on the right side, and six weeks from the injury the
patient died. This case is interesting from the novel mode of death,
the perfect paralysis of the arm, paralysis agitans of the body
(occurring as hemorrhage from the ear came on, and subsiding with it),
and extensive caries of the petrous bone, without sensation of pain or
any indicative symptoms.
There is an instance in a young girl in which a piece of pencil
remained in the right ear for seven years. Haug speaks of two beads
lying in the auditory canal for twenty-eight years without causing any
harm.
A boy of six introduced a carob-nut kernel into each ear. On the next
day incompetent persons attempted to extract the kernel from the left
side, but only caused pain and hemorrhage. The nut issued spontaneously
from the right side. In the afternoon the auditory canal was found
excoriated and red, and deep in the meatus the kernel was found,
covered with blood. The patient had been so excited and pained by the
bungling attempts at extraction that the employment of instruments was
impossible; prolonged employment of injections was substituted.
Discharge from the ear commenced, intense fever and delirium ensued,
and the patient had to be chloroformed to facilitate the operation of
extraction. The nut, when taken out, was found to have a consistency
much larger than originally, caused by the agglutination of wax and
blood. Unfortunately the symptoms of meningitis increased; three days
after the operation coma followed, and on the next day death ensued. In
75 cases collected by Mayer, and cited by Poulet (whose work on
"Foreign Bodies" is the most extensive in existence), death as a
consequence of meningitis was found in three.
Fleury de Clermont mentions a woman of twenty-five who consulted him
for removal of a pin which was in her right ear. Vain attempts by some
of her lay-friends to extract the pin had only made matters worse. The
pin was directed transversely, and its middle part touched the membrane
tympanum. The mere touching of the pin caused the woman intense pain;
even after etherization it was necessary to construct a special
instrument to extract it. She suffered intense cephalalgia and other
signs of meningitis; despite vigorous treatment she lost consciousness
and died shortly after the operation.
Winterbotham reports an instance in which a cherry-stone was removed
from the meatus auditorius after lodgment of upward of sixty years.
Marchal de Calvi mentions intermittent deafness for forty years, caused
by the lodgment of a small foreign body in the auditory canal. There is
an instance in which a carious molar tooth has been tolerated in the
same location for forty years.
Albucasius, Fabricius Hildanus, Pare, and others, have mentioned the
fact that seeds and beans have been frequently seen to increase in
volume while lodged in the auditory canal. Tulpius speaks of an infant,
playing with his comrades, who put a cherry-seed in his ear which he
was not able to extract. The seed increased in volume to such an extent
that it was only by surgical interference that it could be extracted,
and then such serious consequences followed that death resulted. Albers
reports an instance in which a pin introduced into the ear issued from
the pharynx.
Confusion of diagnosis is occasionally noticed in terrified or hysteric
persons. Lowenberg was called to see a child of five who had introduced
a button into his left ear. When he saw the child it complained of all
the pain in the right ear, and he naturally examined this ear first but
found nothing to indicate the presence of a foreign body. He examined
the ear supposed to be healthy and there found the button lying against
the tympanum. This was explained by the fact that the child was so
pained and terrified by the previous explorations of the affected ear
that rather than undergo them again he presented the well ear for
examination. In the British Medical Journal for 1877 is an account of
an unjustified exploration of an ear for a foreign body by an
incompetent physician, who spent a half hour in exploration and
manipulation, and whose efforts resulted in the extraction of several
pieces of bone. The child died in one and a half hours afterward from
extreme hemorrhage, and the medical bungler was compelled to appear
before a coroner's jury in explanation of his ignorance.
In the external ear of a child Tansley observed a diamond which he
removed under chloroform. The mother of the child had pushed the body
further inward in her endeavors to remove it and had wounded the canal.
Schmiegelow reports a foreign body forced into the drum-cavity,
followed by rough extraction, great irritation, tetanus, and death; and
there are on record several cases of fatal meningitis, induced by rough
endeavors to extract a body from the external ear.
In the Therapeutic Gazette, August 15, 1896, there is a translation of
the report of a case by Voss, in which a child of five pushed a dry pea
in his ear. Four doctors spent several days endeavoring to extract it,
but only succeeded in pushing it in further. It was removed by
operation on the fifth day, but suppuration of the tympanic cavity
caused death on the ninth day.
Barclay reports a rare case of ensnared aural foreign body in a lady,
aged about forty years, who, while "picking" her left ear with a
so-called "invisible hair-pin" several hours before the consultation,
had heard a sudden "twang" in the ear, as if the hair-pin had broken.
And so, indeed, it had; for on the instant she had attempted to jerk it
quickly from the ear the sharp extremity of the inner portion of its
lower prong sprang away from its fellow, penetrated the soft tissues of
the floor of the external auditory canal, and remained imbedded there,
the separated end of this prong only coming away in her grasp. Every
attempt on her part to remove the hair-pin by traction on its
projecting prong--she durst not force it INWARD for fear of wounding
the drumhead--had served but to bury the point of the broken prong more
deeply into the flesh of the canal, thereby increasing her suffering.
Advised by her family physician not to delay, she forthwith sought
advice and aid. On examination, it was found that the lower prong of
the "invisible hair-pin" had broken at the outer end of its wavy
portion, and seemed firmly imbedded in the floor of the auditory canal,
now quite inflamed, at a point about one-third of its depth from the
outlet of the canal. The loop or turn of the hair-pin was about 1/2
inch from the flaccid portion of the drumhead, and, together with the
unbroken prong, it lay closely against the roof of the canal.
Projecting from the meatus there was enough of this prong to be easily
grasped between one's thumb and finger. Removal of the hair-pin was
effected by first inserting within the meatus a Gruber speculum,
encircling the unbroken projecting prong, and then raising the end of
the broken one with a long-shanked aural hook, when the hair-pin was
readily withdrawn. The wound of the canal-floor promptly healed.
In the severest forms of scalp-injuries, such as avulsion of the scalp
from the entangling of the hair in machinery, skin-grafting or
replantation is of particular value. Ashhurst reports a case which he
considers the severest case of scalp-wound that he had ever seen,
followed by recovery. The patient was a girl of fifteen, an operative
in a cotton-mill, who was caught by her hair between two rollers which
were revolving in opposite directions; her scalp being thus, as it
were, squeezed off from her head, forming a large horseshoe flap. The
linear extent of the wound was 14 inches, the distance between the two
extremities being but four inches. This large flap was thrown backward,
like the lid of a box, the skull being denuded of its pericranium for
the space of 2 1/2 by one inch in extent. The anterior temporal artery
was divided and bled profusely, and when admitted to the hospital the
patient was extremely depressed by shock and hemorrhage. A ligature was
applied to the bleeding vessel, and after it had been gently but
carefully cleansed the flap was replaced and held in place with gauze
and collodion dressing. A large compress soaked in warm olive oil was
then placed over the scalp, covered with oiled silk and with a
recurrent bandage. A considerable portion of the wound healed by
adhesions, and the patient was discharged, cured, in fifty-four days.
No exfoliation of bone occurred. Reverdin, a relative of the discoverer
of transplantation of skin, reported the case of a girl of twenty-one
whose entire scalp was detached by her hair being caught in machinery,
leaving a wound measuring 35 cm. from the root of the nose to the nape
of the neck, 28 cm. from one ear to the other, and 57 cm. in
circumference. Grafts from the rabbit and dog failed, and the skin from
the amputated stump of a boy was employed, and the patient was able to
leave the hospital in seven months. Cowley speaks of a girl of fourteen
whose hair was caught in the revolving shaft of a steam-engine, which
resulted in the tearing off of her whole scalp. A triangular portion of
the skin was hanging over her face, the apex of the triangle containing
short hair, from which the long hair had been detached. Both ears were
hanging down the neck, having been detached above. The right pinna was
entire, and the upper half of the left pinna had disappeared. The whole
of the head and back of the neck was denuded of skin. One of the
temporal arteries was ligated, and the scalp cleansed and reapplied.
The hanging ears and the skin of the forehead were successfully
restored to their proper position. The patient had no bad symptoms and
little pain, and the shock was slight. Where the periosteum had
sloughed the bone was granulating, and at the time of the report
skin-grafting was shortly to be tried.
Schaeffer has presented quite an extensive article on scalp-injuries in
which grafting and transplantation has been used, and besides reporting
his own he mentions several other cases. One was that of a young lady
of twenty-four. While at work under a revolving shaft in a laundry the
wind blew her hair and it was caught in the shaft. The entire skull was
laid bare from the margin of the eyelids to the neck. The nasal bones
were uncovered and broken, exposing the superior nasal meatus. The skin
of the eyelids was removed from within three mm. of their edges. The
lower margin of the wound was traceable from the lower portion of the
left external process of the frontal bone, downward and backward below
the left ear (which was entirely removed), thence across the neck, five
cm. below the superior curved line of the occipital bone, and forward
through the lower one-third of the right auricle to the right external
angular process of the frontal bone and margin of the right upper
eyelid, across the lid, nose, and left eyelid, to the point of
commencement. Every vessel and nerve supplying the scalp was destroyed,
and the pericranium was torn off in three places, one of the denuded
spots measuring five by seven cm. and another five by six cm. The neck
flap of the wound fell away from the muscular structures beneath it,
exposing the trapezius muscle almost one-half the distance to the
shoulder blade. The right ear was torn across in its lower third, and
hung by the side of the neck by a piece of skin less than five mm.
wide. The exposed surface of the wound measured 40 cm. from before
back, and 34 cm. in width near the temporal portion. The cranial
sutures were distinctly seen in several places, and only a few muscular
fibers of the temporal were left on each side. Hemorrhage was profuse
from the temporal, occipital, and posterior auricular arteries, which
were tied. The patient was seen three-quarters of an hour after the
injury, and the mangled scalp was thoroughly washed in warm carbolized
water, and stitched back in position, after the hair was cut from the
outer surface. Six weeks after the injury suppuration was still free,
and skin-grafting was commenced. In all, 4800 grafts were used, the
patient supplying at different times 1800 small grafts. Her own skin
invariably did better than foreign grafts. In ten months she had almost
completely recovered, and sight and hearing had returned. Figure 191
shows the extent of the injury, and the ultimate results of the
treatment.
Schaeffer also reports the case of a woman working in a button factory
at Union City, Conn., in 1871, who placed her head under a swiftly
turning shaft to pick up a button, when her hair caught in the shaft,
taking off her scalp from the nape of the neck to the eyebrows. The
scalp was cleansed by her physician, Dr. Bartlett, and placed on her
head about two hours after the accident, but it did not stay in
position. Then the head was covered twice by skin-grafts, but each time
the grafts were lost; but the third time a successful grafting was
performed and she was enabled to work after a period of two years. The
same authority also quotes Wilson and Way of Bristol, Conn., in an
account of a complete avulsion of the scalp, together with tearing of
the eyelid and ear. The result of the skin-grafting was not given.
Powell of Chicago gives an account of a girl of nineteen who lost her
scalp while working in the Elgin Watch Factory at Elgin, Illinois. The
wound extended across the forehead above the eyebrows, but the ears
were untouched. Skin-grafting was tried in this case but with no
result, and the woman afterward lost an eye by exposure, from
retraction of the eyelid.
In some cases extensive wounds of the scalp heal without artificial aid
by simply cicatrizing over. Gross mentions such a case in a young lady,
who, in 1869, lost her scalp in a factory. There is reported an
account of a conductor on the Union Pacific Railroad, who, near
Cheyenne, in 1869, was scalped by Sioux Indians. He suffered an
elliptic wound, ten by eight cm., a portion of the outer table of the
cranium being removed, yet the wound healed over.
Cerebral Injuries.--The recent advances in brain-surgery have, in a
measure, diminished the interest and wonder of some of the older
instances of major injuries of the cerebral contents with unimportant
after-results, and in reviewing the older cases we must remember that
the recoveries were made under the most unfavorable conditions, and
without the slightest knowledge of all important asepsis and antisepsis.
Penetration or even complete transfixion of the brain is not always
attended with serious symptoms. Dubrisay is accredited with the
description of a man of forty-four, who, with suicidal intent, drove a
dagger ten cm. long and one cm. wide into his brain. He had
deliberately held the dagger in his left hand, and with a mallet in his
right hand struck the steel several blows. When seen two hours later
he claimed that he experienced no pain, and the dagger was sticking out
of his head. For half an hour efforts at extraction were made, but with
no avail. He was placed on the ground and held by two persons while
traction was made with carpenter's pliers. This failing, he was taken
to a coppersmith's, where he was fastened by rings to the ground, and
strong pinchers were placed over the dagger and attached to a chain
which was fastened to a cylinder revolved by steam force. At the
second turn of the cylinder the dagger came out. During all the efforts
at extraction the patient remained perfectly cool and complained of no
pain. A few drops of blood escaped from the wound after the removal of
the dagger, and in a few minutes the man walked to a hospital where he
remained a few days without fever or pain. The wound healed, and he
soon returned to work. By experiments on the cadaver Dubrisay found
that the difficulty in extraction was due to rust on the steel, and by
the serrated edges of the wound in the bone.
Warren describes a case of epilepsy of seven months' standing, from
depression of the skull caused by a red hot poker thrown at the
subject's head. Striking the frontal bone just above the orbit, it
entered three inches into the cerebral substance. Kesteven reports the
history of a boy of thirteen who, while holding a fork in his hand,
fell from the top of a load of straw. One of the prongs entered the
head one inch behind and on a line with the lobe of the left ear and
passed upward and slightly backward to almost its entire length. With
some difficulty it was withdrawn by a fellow workman; the point was
bent on itself to the extent of two inches. The patient lived nine
days. Abel and Colman have reported a case of puncture of the brain
with loss of memory, of which the following extract is an epitome: "A
railway-fireman, thirty-six years old, while carrying an oil-feeder in
his hand, slipped and fell forward, the spout of the can being driven
forcibly into his face. There was transitory loss of consciousness,
followed by twitching and jerking movements of the limbs, most marked
on the left side, the legs being drawn up and the body bent forward.
There was no hemorrhage from mouth, nose, or ears. The metallic spout
of the oil-can was firmly fixed in the base of the skull, and was only
removed from the grasp of the bone by firm traction with forceps. It
had passed upward and toward the middle line, with its concavity
directed from the middle line. Its end was firmly plugged by bone from
the base of the skull. No hemorrhage followed its removal. The wound
was cleansed and a simple iodoform-dressing applied. The violent
jerking movements were replaced by a few occasional twitchings. It was
now found that the left side of the face and the left arm were
paralyzed, with inability to close the left eye completely. The man
became drowsy and confused, and was unable to give replies to any but
the simplest questions. The temperature rose to 102 degrees; the pupils
became contracted, the right in a greater degree than the left; both
reacted to light. The left leg began to lose power. There was complete
anesthesia of the right eyebrow and of both eyelids and of the right
cheek for an uncertain distance below the lower eyelid. The conjunctiva
of the right eye became congested, and a small ulcer formed on the
right cornea, which healed without much trouble. In the course of a few
days power began to return, first in the left leg and afterward, though
to a much less extent, in the left arm. For two weeks there was
drowsiness, and the man slept considerably. He was apathetic, and for
many days passed urine in bed. He could not recognize his wife or old
comrades, and had also difficulty in recognizing common objects and
their uses. The most remarkable feature was the loss of all memory of
his life for twenty years before the accident. As time went on, the
period included in this loss of memory was reduced to five years
preceding the accident. The hemiplegia persisted, although the man was
able to get about. Sensibility was lost to all forms of stimuli in the
right upper eyelid, forehead, and anterior part of the scalp,
corresponding with the distribution of the supraorbital and nasal
nerves. The cornea was completely anesthetic, and the right cheek, an
inch and a half external to the angle of the nose, presented a small
patch of anesthesia. There was undue emotional mobility, the patient
laughing or crying on slight provocation. The condition of
mind-blindness remained. It is believed that the spout of the oil-can
must have passed under the zygoma to the base of the skull, perforating
the great wing of the spheroid bone and penetrating the centrum ovale,
injuring the anterior fibers of the motor tract in the internal capsule
near the genu."
Figures 192 and 193 show the outline and probable course of the spout.
Beaumont reports the history of an injury in a man of forty-five, who,
standing but 12 yards away, was struck in the orbit by a rocket, which
penetrated through the spheroidal fissure into the middle and posterior
lobes of the left hemisphere. He did not fall at the time he was
struck, and fifteen minutes after the stick was removed he arose
without help and walked away. Apparently no extensive cerebral lesion
had been caused, and the man suffered no subsequent cerebral symptoms
except, three years afterward, impairment of memory.
There is an account given by Chelius of an extraordinary wound caused
by a ramrod. The rod was accidentally discharged while being employed
in loading, and struck a person a few paces away. It entered the head
near the root of the zygomatic arch, about a finger's breadth from the
outer corner of the right eye, passed through the head, emerging at the
posterior superior angle of the parietal bone, a finger's breadth from
the sagittal suture, and about the same distance above the superior
angle of the occipital bone. The wounded man attempted to pull the
ramrod out, but all his efforts were ineffectual. After the tolerance
of this foreign body for some time, one of his companions managed to
extract it, and when it was brought out it was as straight as the day
it left the maker's shop. Little blood was lost, and the wound healed
rapidly and completely; in spite of this major injury the patient
recovered.
Carpenter reports the curious case of an insane man who deliberately
bored holes through his skull, and at different times, at a point above
the ear, he inserted into his brain five pieces of No. 20 broom wire
from 2 1/16 to 6 3/4 inches in length, a fourpenny nail 2 1/4 inches
long, and a needle 1 5/8 inches long. Despite these desperate attempts
at suicide he lived several months, finally accomplishing his purpose
by taking an overdose of morphin. MacQueen has given the history of a
man of thirty-five, who drove one three-inch nail into his forehead,
another close to his occiput, and a third into his vertex an inch in
front and 1/4 inch to the left of the middle line. He had used a hammer
to effect complete penetration, hoping that death would result from his
injuries. He failed in this, as about five weeks later he was
discharged from the Princess Alice Hospital at Eastbourne, perfectly
recovered. There is a record of a man by the name of Bulkley who was
found, by a police officer in Philadelphia, staggering along the
streets, and was taken to the inebriate ward of the Blockley Hospital,
where he subsequently sank and died, after having been transferred from
ward to ward, his symptoms appearing inexplicable. A postmortem
examination revealed the fact that an ordinary knife-blade had been
driven into his brain on the right side, just above the ear, and was
completely hidden by the skin. It had evidently become loosened from
the handle when the patient was stabbed, and had remained in the brain
several days. No clue to the assailant was found.
Thudicum mentions the case of a man who walked from Strafford to
Newcastle, and from Newcastle to London, where he died, and in his
brain was found the breech-pin of a gun. Neiman describes a severe
gunshot wound of the frontal region, in which the iron breech-block of
an old-fashioned muzzle-loading gun was driven into the substance of
the brain, requiring great force for its extraction. The patient, a
young man of twenty-eight, was unconscious but a short time, and
happily made a good recovery. A few pieces of bone came away, and the
wound healed with only a slight depression of the forehead. Wilson
speaks of a child who fell on an upright copper paper-file, which
penetrated the right side of the occipital bone, below the external
orifice of the ear, and entered the brain for more than three inches;
and yet the child made a speedy recovery.
Baron Larrey knew of a man whose head was completely transfixed by a
ramrod, which extended from the middle of the forehead to the left side
of the nape of the neck; despite this serious injury the man lived two
days.
Jewett records the case of an Irish drayman who, without treatment,
worked for forty-seven days after receiving a penetrating wound of the
skull 1/4 inch in diameter and four inches deep. Recovery ensued in
spite of the delay in treatment.
Gunshot Injuries.--Swain mentions a patient who stood before a looking
glass, and, turning his head far around to the left, fired a pistol
shot into his brain behind the right ear. The bullet passed into his
mouth, and he spat it out. Some bleeding occurred from both the
internal and external wounds; the man soon began to suffer with a
troublesome cough, with bloody expectoration; his tongue was coated and
drawn to the right; he became slightly deaf in his right ear and
dragged his left leg in walking. These symptoms, together with those of
congestion of the lung, continued for about a week, when he died,
apparently from his pulmonary trouble.
Ford quotes the case of a lad of fifteen who was shot in the head, 3/4
inch anterior to the summit of the right ear, the ball escaping through
the left os frontis, 1 1/4 inch above the center of the brow. Recovery
ensued, with a cicatrix on the forehead, through which the pulsations
of the brain could be distinctly seen. The senses were not at all
deteriorated.
Richardson tells of a soldier who was struck by a Minie ball on the
left temporal bone; the missile passed out through the left frontal
bone 1/2 inch to the left of the middle of the forehead. He was only
stunned, and twenty-four hours later his intellect was undisturbed.
There was no operation; free suppuration with discharges of fragments
of skull and broken-down substance ensued for four weeks, when the
wounds closed kindly, and recovery followed.
Angle records the case of a cowboy who was shot by a comrade in
mistake. The ball entered the skull beneath the left mastoid process
and passed out of the right eye. The man recovered.
Rice describes the case of a boy of fourteen who was shot in the head,
the ball directly traversing the brain substance, some of which
protruded from the wound. The boy recovered. The ball entered one inch
above and in front of the right ear and made its exit through the
lambdoidal suture posteriorly.
Hall of Denver, Col., in an interesting study of gunshot wounds of the
brain, writes as follows:--
"It is in regard to injuries involving the brain that the question of
the production of immediate unconsciousness assumes the greatest
interest. We may state broadly that if the medulla or the great centers
at the base of the brain are wounded by a bullet, instant
unconsciousness must result; with any other wounds involving the
brain-substance it will, with very great probability, result. But there
is a very broad area of uncertainty. Many instances have been recorded
in which the entrance of a small bullet into the anterior part of the
brain has not prevented the firing of a second shot on the part of the
suicide. Personally, I have not observed such a case, however. But,
aside from the injuries by the smallest missiles in the anterior parts
of the brain, we may speak with almost absolute certainty with regard
to the production of unconsciousness, for the jar to the brain from the
blow of the bullet upon the skull would produce such a result even if
the damage to the brain were not sufficient to do so.
"Many injuries to the brain from bullets of moderate size and low
velocity do not cause more than a temporary loss of consciousness, and
the subjects are seen by the surgeon, after the lapse of half an hour
or more, apparently sound of mind. These are the cases in which the
ball has lost its momentum in passing through the skull, and has
consequently done little damage to the brain-substance, excepting to
make a passage for itself for a short distance into the brain. It is
apparently well established that, in the case of the rifle-bullet of
high velocity, and especially if fired from the modern military weapons
using nitro-powders, and giving an enormous initial velocity to the
bullet, the transmission of the force from the displaced particles of
brain (and this rule applies to any other of the soft organs as well)
to the adjacent parts is such as to disorganize much of the tissue
surrounding the original track of the missile. Under these
circumstances a much slighter wound would be necessary to produce
unconsciousness or death than in the case of a bullet of low velocity,
especially if it were light in weight. Thus I have recorded elsewhere
an instance of instant death in a grizzly bear, an animal certainly as
tenacious of life as any we have, from a mere furrow, less than a
quarter of an inch in depth, through the cortex of the brain, without
injury of the skull excepting the removal of the bone necessary for the
production of this furrow. The jar to the brain from a bullet of great
velocity, as in this case, was alone sufficient to injure the organ
irreparably. In a similar manner I have known a deer to be killed by
the impact of a heavy rifle-ball against one horn, although there was
no evidence of fracture of the skull. On the other hand, game animals
often escape after such injuries not directly involving the brain,
although temporarily rendered unconscious, as I have observed in
several instances, the diagnosis undoubtedly being concussion of the
brain.
"Slight injury to the brain, and especially if it be unilateral, then,
may not produce unconsciousness. It is not very uncommon for a missile
from a heavy weapon to strike the skull, and be deflected without the
production of such a state. Near the town in which I formerly
practiced, the town-marshal shot at a negro, who resisted arrest, at a
distance of only a few feet, with a 44-caliber revolver, striking the
culprit on the side of the head. The wound showed that the ball struck
the skull and plowed along under the scalp for several inches before
emerging, but it did not even knock the negro down, and no
unconsciousness followed later. I once examined an express-messenger
who had been shot in the occipital region by a weapon of similar size,
while seated at his desk in the car. The blow was a very glancing one
and did not produce unconsciousness, and probably, as in the case of
the negro, because it did not strike with sufficient directness."
Head Injuries with Loss of Cerebral Substance.--The brain and its
membranes may be severely wounded, portions of the cranium or cerebral
substance destroyed or lost, and yet recovery ensue. Possibly the most
noted injury of this class was that reported by Harlow and commonly
known as "Bigelow's Case" or the "American Crow-bar Case." Phineas P.
Gage, aged twenty-five, a foreman on the Rutland and Burlington
Railroad, was employed September 13, 1847, in charging a hole with
powder preparatory to blasting. A premature explosion drove a
tamping-iron, three feet seven inches long, 1 1/4 inches in diameter,
weighing 13 1/4 pounds, completely through the man's head. The iron was
round and comparatively smooth; the pointed end entered first. The iron
struck against the left side of the face, immediately anterior to the
inferior maxillary and passed under the zygomatic arch, fracturing
portions of the spheroid bone and the floor of the left orbit; it then
passed through the left anterior lobe of the cerebrum, and, in the
median line, made its exit at the junction of the coronal and sagittal
sutures, lacerating the longitudinal sinus, fracturing the parietal and
frontal bones, and breaking up considerable of the brain; the globe of
the left eye protruded nearly one-half of its diameter. The patient was
thrown backward and gave a few convulsive movements of the extremities.
He was taken to a hotel 3/4 mile distant, and during the transportation
seemed slightly dazed, but not at all unconscious. Upon arriving at the
hotel he dismounted from the conveyance, and without assistance walked
up a long flight of stairs to the hall where his wound was to be
dressed. Harlow saw him at about six o'clock in the evening, and from
his condition could hardly credit the story of his injury, although his
person and his bed were drenched with blood. His scalp was shaved, the
coagula and debris removed, and among other portions of bone was a
piece of the anterior superior angle of each parietal bone and a
semicircular piece of the frontal bone, leaving an opening 3 1/2 inches
in diameter. At 10 P.M. on the day of the injury Gage was perfectly
rational and asked about his work and after his friends. After a while
delirium set in for a few days, and on the eleventh day he lost the
vision in the left eye. His convalescence was rapid and uneventful. It
was said that he discharged pieces of bone and cerebral substance from
his mouth for a few days. The iron when found was smeared with blood
and cerebral substance.
As was most natural such a wonderful case of cerebral injury attracted
much notice. Not only was the case remarkable in the apparent innocuous
loss of cerebral substance, but in the singular chance which exempted
the brain from either concussion or compression, and subsequent
inflammation. Professor Bigelow examined the patient in January, 1850,
and made a most excellent report of the case, and it is due to his
efforts that the case attained world-wide notoriety. Bigelow found the
patient quite recovered in his faculties of body and mind, except that
he had lost the sight of the injured eye. He exhibited a linear
cicatrix one inch long near the angle of the ramus of the left lower
jaw. His left eyelid was involuntarily closed and he had no power to
overcome his ptosis. Upon the head, well covered by the hair, was a
large unequal depression and elevation. In order to ascertain how far
it might be possible for a bar of the size causing the injury to
traverse the skull in the track assigned to it, Bigelow procured a
common skull in which the zygomatic arches were barely visible from
above, and having entered a drill near the left angle of the inferior
maxilla, he passed it obliquely upward to the median line of the
cranium just in front of the junction of the sagittal and coronal
sutures. This aperture was then enlarged until it allowed the passage
of the bar in question, and the loss of substance strikingly
corresponded with the lesion said to have been received by the patient.
From the coronoid process of the inferior maxilla there was removed a
fragment measuring about 3/4 inch in length. This fragment, in the
patient's case, might have been fractured and subsequently reunited.
The iron bar, together with a cast of the patient's head, was placed in
the Museum of the Massachusetts Medical College.
Bigelow appends an engraving to his paper. In the illustration the
parts are as follows:--
(1) Lateral view of a prepared cranium representing the iron bar
traversing its cavity.
(2) Front view of same.
(3) Plan of the base seen from within. In these three figures the optic
foramina are seen to be intact and are occupied by small white rods.
(4) Cast taken from the shaved head of the patient representing the
appearance of the fracture in 1850, the anterior fragment being
considerably elevated in the profile view.
(5) The iron bar with length and diameter in proportion to the size of
the other figures.
Heaton reports a case in which, by an explosion, a tamping-iron was
driven through the chin of a man into the cerebrum. Although there was
loss of brain-substance, the man recovered with his mental faculties
unimpaired. A second case was that of a man who, during an explosion,
was wounded in the skull. There was visible a triangular depression,
from which, possibly, an ounce of brain-substance issued. This man also
recovered.
Jewett mentions a case in which an injury somewhat similar to that in
Bigelow's case was produced by a gas-pipe.
Among older writers, speaking of loss of brain-substance with
subsequent recovery, Brasavolus saw as much brain evacuated as would
fill an egg shell; the patient afterward had an impediment of speech
and grew stupid. Franciscus Arcaeus gives the narrative of a workman
who was struck on the head by a stone weighing 24 pounds falling from a
height. The skull was fractured; fragments of bone were driven into the
brain. For three days the patient was unconscious and almost lifeless.
After the eighth day a cranial abscess spontaneously opened, from the
sinciput to the occiput, and a large quantity of "corruption" was
evacuated. Speech returned soon after, the eyes opened, and in twenty
days the man could distinguish objects. In four months recovery was
entire. Bontius relates a singular accident to a sailor, whose head was
crushed between a ship and a small boat; the greater part of the
occipital bone was taken away in fragments, the injury extending almost
to the foremen magnum. Bontius asserts that the patient was perfectly
cured by another surgeon and himself. Galen mentions an injury to a
youth in Smyrna, in whom the brain was so seriously wounded that the
anterior ventricles were opened; and vet the patient recovered.
Glandorp mentions a case of fracture of the skull out of which his
father took large portions of brain and some fragments of bone. He adds
that the man was afterward paralyzed an the opposite side and became
singularly irritable. In his "Chirurgical Observations," Job van
Meek'ren tells the story of a Russian nobleman who lost part of his
skull, and a dog's skull was supplied in its place. The bigoted divines
of the country excommunicated the man, and would not annul his sentence
until he submitted to have the bit of foreign bone removed.
Mendenhall reports the history of an injury to a laborer nineteen years
old. While sitting on a log a few feet from a comrade who was chopping
wood, the axe glanced and, slipping from the woodman's grasp, struck
him just above the ear, burying the "bit" of the axe in his skull. Two
hours afterward he was seen almost pulseless, and his clothing drenched
with blood which was still oozing from the wound with mixed
brain-substance and fragments of bone. The cut was horizontal on a
level with the orbit, 5 1/2 inches long externally, and, owing to the
convex shape of the axe, a little less internally. Small spicules of
bone were removed, and a cloth was placed on the battered skull to
receive the discharges for the inspection of the surgeon, who on his
arrival saw at least two tablespoonfuls of cerebral substance on this
cloth. Contrary to all expectation this man recovered, but, strangely,
he had a marked and peculiar change of voice, and this was permanent.
From the time of the reception of the injury his whole mental and moral
nature had undergone a pronounced change. Before the injury, the
patient was considered a quiet, unassuming, and stupid boy, but
universally regarded as honest. Afterward he became noisy,
self-asserting, sharp, and seemingly devoid of moral sense or honesty.
These new traits developed immediately, and more strikingly so soon as
convalescence was established.
Bergtold quotes a case reported in 1857 of extreme injury to the
cranium and its contents. While sleeping on the deck of a canal boat, a
man at Highspire was seriously injured by striking his head against a
bridge. When seen by the surgeon his hair was matted and his clothes
saturated with blood. There was a terrible gap in the scalp from the
superciliary ridge to the occipital bone, and, though full of clots,
the wound was still oozing. In a cloth on a bench opposite were rolled
up a portion of the malar bone, some fragments of the os frontis, one
entire right parietal bone, detached from its fellow along the sagittel
suture, and from the occipital along the lambdoidal suture, perhaps
taking with it some of the occipital bone together with some of the
squamous portion of the temporal bone. This bone was as clean of soft
parts as if it had been removed from a dead subject with a scalpel and
saw. No sight of the membranes or of the substance of the brain was
obtained. The piece of cranium removed was 6 3/4 inches in the
longitudinal diameter, and 5 3/4 inches in the short oval diameter. The
dressing occupied an hour, at the end of which the patient arose to his
feet and changed his clothes as though nothing had happened. Twenty-six
years after the accident there was slight unsteadiness of gait, and
gradual paralysis of the left leg and arm and the opposite side of the
face, but otherwise the man was in good condition. In place of the
parietal bone the head presented a marked deficiency as though a slice
of the skull were cut out. The depressed area measured five by six
inches. In 1887 the man left the hospital in Buffalo with the paralysis
improved, but his mental equilibrium could be easily disturbed. He
became hysteric and sobbed when scolded.
Buchanan mentions the history of a case in a woman of twenty-one, who,
while working in a mill, was struck by a bolt. Her skull was fractured
and driven into the brain comminuted. Hanging from the wound was a bit
of brain-substance, the size of a finger, composed of convolution as
well as white matter. The wound healed, there was no hernia, and at the
time of report the girl was conscious of no disturbance, not even a
headache. There was nothing indicative of the reception of the injury
except a scar near the edge of the hair on the upper part of the right
side of the forehead. Steele, in a school-boy of eight, mentions a case
of very severe injury to the bones of the face and head, with escape of
cerebral substance, and recovery. The injury was caused by falling into
machinery.
There was a seaman aboard of the U.S.S. "Constellation," who fell
through a hatchway from the masthead, landing on the vertex of the
head. There was copious bleeding from the ears, 50 to 60 fluid-ounces
of blood oozing in a few hours, mingled with small fragments of
brain-tissue. The next day the discharge became watery, and in it were
found small pieces of true brain-substance. In five weeks the man
returned to duty complaining only of giddiness and of a "stuffed-up"
head. In 1846 there is a record of a man of forty who fell from a
scaffold, erected at a height of 20 feet, striking on his head. He was
at first stunned, but on admission to the hospital recovered
consciousness. A small wound was found over the right eyebrow,
protruding from which was a portion of brain-substance. There was
slight hemorrhage from the right nostril, and some pain in the head,
but the pulse and respiration were undisturbed. On the following day a
fragment of the cerebral substance, about the size of a hazel-nut,
together with some brood-clots, escaped from the right nostril. In this
case the inner wall of the frontal sinus was broken, affording exit for
the lacerated brain.
Cooke and Laycock mention a case of intracranial injury with extensive
destruction of brain-substance around the Rolandic area; there was
recovery but with loss of the so called muscular sense. The patient, a
workman of twenty-nine, while cutting down a gum-tree, was struck by a
branch as thick as a man's arm, which fell from 100 feet overhead,
inflicting a compound comminuted fracture of the cranium. The right eye
was contused but the pupils equal; the vertex-wound was full of
brain-substance and pieces of bone, ten of which were removed, leaving
an oval opening four by three inches. The base of the skull was
fractured behind the orbits; a fissure 1/4 inch wide was discernible,
and the right frontal bone could be easily moved. The lacerated and
contused brain-substance was removed. Consciousness returned six days
after the operation. The accompanying illustrations (Figs. 196 and
197) show the extent of the injury. The lower half of the ascending
frontal convolution, the greater half of the sigmoid gyrus, the
posterior third of the lower and middle frontal convolutions, the base
and posterior end of the upper convolution, and the base of the
corresponding portion of the falciform lobe were involved. The sensory
and motor functions of the arm were retained in a relative degree.
There was power of simple movements, but complex movements were
awkward. The tactile localization was almost lost.
Morton mentions a patient of forty-seven, who was injured in a railroad
accident near Phoenixville, Pa.; there was a compound comminuted
fracture of the skull involving the left temporal, spheroid, and
superior maxillary bones. The side of the head and the ear were
considerably lacerated; several teeth were broken, and besides this
there was injury to the aura and cerebral substance. There was profound
coma for ten days and paralysis of the 1st, 2d, 3d, 4th, 6th, and 7th
cranial nerves, particularly affecting the left side of the face. There
was scarcely enough blood-supply left to the orbit to maintain life in
the globe. The man primarily recovered, but ninety-one days from the
injury he died of cerebral abscess.
There is the record of a curious brain-injury in a man of twenty-two,
who was struck on the skull by a circular saw. The saw cut directly
down into the brain, severing the superior longitudinal sinus, besides
tearing a branch of the meningeal artery. The wound was filled with
sawdust left by the saw while it was tearing through the parts. After
ordinary treatment the man recovered.
Bird reports a compound comminuted fracture of the left temporal
region, with loss of bone, together with six drams of brain-substance,
which, however, was followed by recovery. Tagert gives an instance of
compound depressed fracture of the skull, with loss of brain-substance,
in which recovery was effected without operative interference. Ballou,
Bartlett, Buckner, Capon, Carmichael, Corban, Maunder and many others,
cite instances of cranial fracture and loss of brain-substance, with
subsequent recovery. Halsted reports the history of a boy of seventeen,
who, while out fowling, had the breech-pin of a shot-gun blown out, the
sharp point striking the forehead in the frontal suture, crushing the
os frontis, destroying 1 3/4 inches of the longitudinal sinus, and
causing severe hemorrhage from both the longitudinal and frontal
sinuses. The pin was pulled out by the boy, who washed his own face,
and lay down; he soon became semi-comatose, in which condition he
remained for some days; but, after operation, he made complete recovery.
Loss of Brain-substance from Cerebral Tumor.--Koser is accredited with
reporting results of a postmortem held on a young man of twenty who
suffered from a cerebral tumor of considerable duration. It was stated
that, although there was a cavity in the brain at least five inches in
length, the patient, almost up to the time of death, was possessed of
the senses of touch, taste, hearing, and smell, showed considerable
control over his locomotor muscles, and could talk. In fact, he was
practically discommoded in no other way than by loss of vision, caused
by pressure on the optic centers. It was also stated that the retention
of memory was remarkable, and, up to within two weeks of his death, the
patient was able to memorize poems. The amount of involvement
discovered postmortem in cases similar to the preceding is astonishing.
At a recent pathologic display in London several remarkable specimens
were shown.
Extensive Fractures of the Skull. Jennings mentions an instance of
extensive fracture of the skull, 14 pieces of the cranium being found.
The patient lived five weeks and two days after the injury, the
immediate cause of death being edema of the lungs. His language was
incoherent and full of oaths. Belloste, in his "Hospital Surgeon,"
states that he had under has care a most dreadful case of a girl of
eleven or twelve years, who received 18 or 19 cutlass wounds of the
head, each so violent as to chip out pieces of bone; but,
notwithstanding her severe injuries, she made recovery. At the
Emergency Hospital in Washington, D.C., there was received a negress
with at least six gaping wounds of the head, in some cases denuding the
periosteum and cutting the cranium. During a debauch the night before
she had been engaged in a quarrel with a negro with whom she lived, and
was struck by him several times on the head with an axe. She lay all
night unconscious, and was discovered the next morning with her hair
and clothes and the floor on which she lay drenched with blood. The
ambulance was summoned to take her to the morgue, but on the arrival of
the police it was seen that feeble signs of life still existed. On
admission to the hospital she was semi-comatose, almost pulseless,
cold, and exhibiting all the signs of extreme hemorrhage and shock. Her
head was cleaned up, but her condition would not permit of any other
treatment than a corrosive-sublimate compress and a bandage of
Scultetus. She was taken to the hospital ward, where warmth and
stimulants were applied, after which she completely reacted. She
progressed so well that it was not deemed advisable to remove the
head-bandage until the fourth day, when it was seen that the wounds had
almost entirely healed and suppuration was virtually absent. The
patient rapidly and completely recovered, and her neighbors, on her
return home, could hardly believe that she was the same woman whom, a
few days before, they were preparing to take to the morgue.
A serious injury, which is not at all infrequent, is that caused by
diving into shallow water, or into a bath from which water has been
withdrawn. Curran mentions a British officer in India who, being
overheated, stopped at a station bath in which the previous night he
had had a plunge, and without examining, took a violent "header" into
the tank, confidently expecting to strike from eight to ten feet of
water. He dashed his head against the concrete bottom 12 feet below
(the water two hours previously having been withdrawn) and crushed his
brain and skull into an indistinguishable mass.
There are many cases on record in which an injury, particularly a
gunshot wound of the skull, though showing no external wound, has
caused death by producing a fracture of the internal table of the
cranium. Pare gives details of the case of a nobleman whose head was
guarded by a helmet and who was struck by a ball, leaving no external
sign of injury, but it was subsequently found that there was an
internal fracture of the cranium. Tulpius and Scultetus are among the
older writers reporting somewhat similar instances, and there are
several analogous cases reported as having occurred during the War of
the Rebellion. Boling reports a case in which the internal table was
splintered to a much greater extent than the external.
Fracture of the base of the skull is ordinarily spoken of as a fatal
injury, reported instances of recovery being extremely rare, but
Battle, in a paper on this subject, has collected numerous statistics
of nonfatal fracture of the base of the brain, viz.:--
Male. Female.
Anterior fossa, . . . . . . . . . . . 16 5
Middle fossa, . . . . . . . . . . . . 50 6
Posterior fossa,. . . . . . . . . . . 10 1
Middle and anterior fossae, . . . . . 15 5
Middle and posterior fossae,. . . . . 4 1
Anterior, middle, and posterior fossae, 1 0
------ ------
96 18 Total, 114.
In a paper on nonmortal fractures of the base of the skull, Lidell
gives an account of 135 cases. MacCormac reports a case of a boy of
nine who was run over by a carriage drawn by a pair of horses. He
suffered fracture of the base of the skull, of the bones of the face,
and of the left ulna, and although suppuration at the points of
fracture ensued, followed by an optic neuritis, an ultimate recovery
was effected. Ball, an Irish surgeon, has collected several instances
in which the base of the skull has been driven in and the condyle of
the jaw impacted in the opening by force transmitted through the lower
maxilla.
The tolerance of foreign bodies in the brain is most marvelous. In the
ancient chronicles of Koenigsberg there is recorded the history of a
man who for fourteen years carried in his head a piece of iron as large
as his finger. After its long lodgment, during which the subject was
little discommoded, it finally came out by the palatine arch. There is
also an old record of a ball lodging near the sella turcica for over a
year, the patient dying suddenly of an entirely different accident.
Fabricius Hildanus relates the history of an injury, in which, without
causing any uncomfortable symptoms, a ball rested between the skull and
dura for six months.
Amatus Lusitanus speaks of a drunken courtesan who was wounded in a
fray with a long, sharp-pointed knife which was driven into the head.
No apparent injury resulted, and death from fever took place eight
years after the reception of the injury. On opening the head a large
piece of knife was found between the skull and dura. It is said that
Benedictus mentions a Greek who was wounded, at the siege of Colchis,
in the right temple by a dart and taken captive by the Turks; he lived
for twenty years in slavery, the wound having completely healed.
Obtaining his liberty, he came to Sidon, and five years after, as he
was washing his face, he was seized by a violent fit of sneezing, and
discharged from one of his nostrils a piece of the dart having an iron
point of considerable length.
In about 1884 there died in the Vienna Hospital a bookbinder of
forty-five, who had always passed as an intelligent man, but who had at
irregular intervals suffered from epileptic convulsions. An iron nail
covered with rust was discovered in his brain; from the history of his
life and from the appearances of the nail it had evidently been lodged
in the cerebrum since childhood.
Slee mentions a case in which, after the death of a man from septic
peritonitis following a bullet-wound of the intestines, he found
postmortem a knife-blade 5/16 inch in width projecting into the brain
to the depth of one inch. The blade was ensheathed in a strong fibrous
capsule 1/2 inch thick, and the adjacent brain-structure was apparently
normal. The blade was black and corroded, and had evidently passed
between the sutures during boyhood as there was no depression or
displacement of the cranial bones. The weapon had broken off just on a
level with the skull, and had remained in situ until the time of death
without causing any indicative symptoms. Slee does not state the man's
age, but remarks that he was a married man and a father at the time of
his death, and had enjoyed the best of health up to the time he was
shot in the abdomen. Callaghan, quoted in Erichsen's "Surgery," remarks
that he knew of an officer who lived seven years with a portion of a
gun-breech weighing three ounces lodged in his brain.
Lawson mentions the impaction of a portion of a breech of a gun in the
forehead of a man for twelve years, with subsequent removal and
recovery. Waldon speaks of a similar case in which a fragment of the
breech weighing three ounces penetrated the cranium, and was lodged in
the brain for two months previous to the death of the patient.
Huppert tells of the lodgment of a slate-pencil three inches long in
the brain during lifetime, death ultimately being caused by a slight
head-injury. Larry mentions a person who for some time carried a six
ounce ball in the brain and ultimately recovered. Peter removed a
musket-ball from the frontal sinus after six years' lodgment, with
successful issue. Mastin has given an instance in which the blade of a
pen-knife remained in the brain six months, recovery following its
removal. Camden reports a case in which a ball received in a gunshot
wound of the brain remained in situ for thirteen years; Cronyn mentions
a similar case in which a bullet rested in the brain for eight years.
Doyle successfully removed an ounce Minie ball from the brain after a
fifteen years' lodgment.
Pipe-stems, wires, shot, and other foreign bodies, are from time to
time recorded as remaining in the brain for some time. Wharton has
compiled elaborate statistics on this subject, commenting on 316 cases
in which foreign bodies were lodged in the brain, and furnishing all
the necessary information to persons interested in this subject.
Injuries of the nose, with marked deformity, are in a measure combated
by devices invented for restoring the missing portions of the injured
member. Taliacotius, the distinguished Italian surgeon of the sixteenth
century, devised an operation which now bears his name, and consists in
fashioning a nose from the fleshy tissues of the arm. The arm is
approximated to the head and held in this position by an apparatus or
system of bandages for about ten days, at which time it is supposed
that it can be severed, and further trimming and paring of the nose is
then practiced. A column is subsequently made from the upper lip. In
the olden days there was a timorous legend representing Taliacotius
making noses for his patients from the gluteal regions of other
persons, which statement, needless to say, is not founded on fact.
Various modifications and improvements on the a Talicotian method have
been made; but in recent years the Indian method, introduced by Carpue
into England in 1816, is generally preferred. Syme of Edinburgh, Wood,
and Ollier have devised methods of restoring the nose, which bear their
names.
Ohmann-Dumesnil reports a case of rhinophyma in a man of seventy-two,
an alcoholic, who was originally affected with acne rosacea, on whom he
performed a most successful operation for restoration. The accompanying
illustration shows the original deformity--a growth weighing two
pounds--and also pictures the appearance shortly after the operation.
This case is illustrative of the possibilities of plastic surgery in
the hands of a skilful and ingenious operator.
About 1892 Dr. J. P. Parker then of Kansas City, Mo., restored the
missing bridge of a patient's nose by laying the sunken part open in
two long flaps, denuding the distal extremity of the little finger of
the patient's right hand of nail, flesh, tendons, etc., and binding it
into the wound of the nose until firm union had taken place. The finger
was then amputated at the second joint and the plastic operation
completed, with a result pleasing both to patient and operator.
There is a case quoted of a young man who, when first seen by his
medical attendant, had all the soft parts of the nose gone, except
one-third of the left ala and a thin flap of the septum which was lying
on the upper lip. The missing member was ferreted out and cleansed, and
after an hour's separation sutured on. The nostrils were daily syringed
with a corrosive sublimate solution, and on the tenth day the dressing
was removed; the nose was found active and well, with the single
exception of a triangular notch on the right side, which was too
greatly bruised by the violence of the blow to recover. When we
consider the varicosity of this organ we can readily believe the
possibility of the foregoing facts, and there is little doubt that more
precaution in suturing severed portions of the nose would render the
operation of nose making a very rare one.
Maxwell mentions a curious case of attempted suicide in which the ball,
passing through the palatine process of the superior maxillary bone,
crushing the vomer to the extent of its own diameter, fell back through
the right nostril into the pharynx, was swallowed, and discharged from
the anus.
Deformities of the nose causing enormous development, or the condition
called "double-nose" by Bartholinus, Borellus, Bidault, and others, are
ordinarily results of a pathologic development of the sebaceous glands.
In some cases tumors develop from the root of the nose, forming what
appears to be a second nose. In other cases monstrous vegetations
divide the nose into many tumors. In the early portion of this century
much was heard about a man who was a daily habitue of the Palais-Royal
Gardens. His nose was divided into unequally sized tumors, covering
nearly his entire face. Similar instances have been observed in recent
years. Hey mentions a case in which the tumor extended to the lower
part of the under lip, which compressed the patient's mouth and
nostrils to such an extent that while sleeping, in order to insure
sufficient respiration, he had to insert a tin-tube into one of his
nostrils. Imbert de Lannes is quoted as operating on a former Mayor of
Angouleme. This gentleman's nose was divided into five lobes by
sarcomatous tumors weighing two pounds, occupying the external surface
of the face, adherent to the buccinator muscles to which they extended,
and covering the chin. In the upright position the tumors sealed the
nostrils and mouth, and the man had to bend his head before and after
respiration. In eating, this unfortunate: person had to lift his tumors
away from his mouth, and during sleep the monstrous growths were
supported in a sling attached to his night cap. He presented such a
hideous aspect that he was virtually ostracized from society The growth
had been in progress for twelve years, but during twenty-two months'
confinement in Revolutionary prisons the enlargement had been very
rapid. Fournier says that the most beautiful result followed the
operation which was considered quite hazardous.
Foreign bodies in the nose present phenomena as interesting as wounds
of this organ. Among the living objects which have been found in the
nose may be mentioned flies, maggots, worms, leeches, centipedes, and
even lizards. Zacutus Lusitanus tells of a person who died in two days
from the effects of a leech which was inadvertently introduced into the
nasal fossa, and there is a somewhat similar case of a military
pharmacist, a member of the French army in Spain, who drank some water
from a pitcher and exhibited, about a half hour afterward, a persistent
hemorrhage from the nose. Emaciation progressively continued, although
his appetite was normal. Three doctors, called in consultation,
prescribed bleeding, which, however, proved of no avail. Three weeks
afterward he carried in his nostril a tampon of lint, wet with an
astringent solution, and, on the next day, on blowing his nose, there
fell from the right nostril a body which he recognized as a leech.
Healey gives the history of four cases in which medicinal leeches were
removed from the mouth and posterior nares of persons who had, for some
days previously, been drinking turbid water. Sinclair mentions the
removal of a leech from the posterior nares.
In some regions, more particularly tropical ones, there are certain
flies that crawl into the nostrils of the inhabitants and deposit eggs,
in the cavities. The larvae develop and multiply with great rapidity,
and sometimes gain admission into the frontal sinus, causing intense
cephalalgia, and even death.
Dempster reports an instance of the lodgment of numerous live maggots
within the cavity of the nose, causing sloughing of the palate and
other complications. Nicholson mentions a case of ulceration and
abscess of the nostrils and face from which maggots were discharged.
Jarvis gives the history of a strange and repeated hemorrhage from the
nose and adjacent parts that was found to be due to maggots from the
ova of a fly, which had been deposited in the nose while the patient
was asleep. Tomlinson gives a case in which maggots traversed the
Eustachian tube, some being picked out of the nostrils, while others
were coughed up. Packard records the accidental entrance of a
centipede into the nostril. There is an account of a native who was
admitted to the Madras General Hospital, saying that a small lizard had
crawled up his nose. The urine of these animals is very irritating,
blistering any surface it touches. Despite vigorous treatment the
patient died in consequence of the entrance of this little creature.
There have been instances among the older writers in which a pea has
remained in the nose for such a length of time as to present evidences
of sprouting. The Ephemerides renders an instance of this kind, and
Breschet cites the history of a young boy, who, in 1718, introduced a
pea into his nostril; in three days it had swollen to such an extent as
to fill the whole passage. It could not be extracted by an instrument,
so tobacco snuff was used, which excited sneezing, and the pea was
ejected.
Vidal and the Ephemerides report several instances of tolerance of
foreign bodies in the nasal cavities for from twenty to twenty-five
years. Wiesman, in 1893, reported a rhinolith, which was composed of a
cherry-stone enveloped in chalk, that had been removed after a sojourn
of sixty years, with intense ozena as a consequence of its lodgment.
Waring mentions the case of a housemaid who carried a rhinolith, with a
cherry-stone for a nucleus, which had been introduced twenty-seven
years before, and which for twenty-five years had caused no symptoms.
Grove describes a necrosed inferior turbinated bone, to which was
attached a coffee-grain which had been retained in the nostril for
twenty years., Hickman gives an instance of a steel ring which for
thirteen and a half years had been impacted in the nasopharyngeal fossa
of a child. It was detected by the rhinoscope and was removed. Parker
speaks of a gunbreech bolt which was removed from the nose after five
years' lodgment. Major mentions the removal of a foreign body from the
nose seven years after its introduction.
Howard removed a large thimble from the posterior nares, although it
had remained in its position for some time undetected. Eve reports a
case in which a thimble was impacted in the right posterior nares.
Gazdar speaks, of a case of persistent neuralgia of one-half of the
face, caused by a foreign body in the nose. The obstruction was
removed after seven years' lodgment and the neuralgia disappeared.
Molinier has an observation on the extraction of a fragment of a
knife-blade which had rested four years in the nasal fossae, where the
blade had broken off during a quarrel.
A peculiar habit, sometimes seen in nervous individuals, is that of
"swallowing the tongue." Cohen claims that in some cases of supposed
laryngeal spasm the tongue is swallowed, occluding the larynx, and
sometimes with fatal consequences. There are possibly a half score of
cases recorded, but this anomaly is very rare, and Major is possibly
the only one who has to a certainty demonstrated the fact by a
laryngoscopic examination. By the laryngoscope he was enabled to
observe a paroxysm in a woman, in which the tongue retracted and
impinged on the epiglottis, but quickly recovered its position. Pettit
mentions suffocation from "tongue swallowing," both with and without
section of the frenum. Schobinger cites a similar instance, due to
loosening of the frenum.
Analogous to the foregoing phenomenon is the habit of "tongue sucking."
Morris mentions a young lady of fifteen who spontaneously dislocated
her jaw, owing indirectly to this habit. Morris says that from infancy
the patient was addicted to this habit, which was so audible as to be
heard in all parts of the room. The continued action of the pterygoid
muscles had so preternaturally loosened the ligaments and muscular
structures supporting the joint as to render them unable to resist the
violent action of "tongue sucking" even during sleep.
Injuries to the Tongue.--Hobbs describes a man of twenty-three who,
while working, had a habit of protruding his tongue. One day he was hit
under the chin by the chain of a crane on a pier, his upper teeth
inflicting a wound two inches deep, three inches from the tip, and
dividing the entire structure of the tongue except the arteries. The
edges of the wound were brought into apposition by sutures, and after
the removal of the latter perfect union and complete restoration of the
sensation of taste ensued. Franck mentions regeneration of a severed
tongue; and Van Wy has seen union of almost entirely severed parts of
the tongue. De Fuisseaux reports reunion of the tongue by suture after
almost complete transverse division.
There is an account of a German soldier who, May 2, 1813, was wounded
at the battle of Gross-Gorschen by a musket ball which penetrated the
left cheek, carrying away the last four molars of the upper jaw and
passing through the tongue, making exit on the left side, and forcing
out several teeth of the left lower jaw. To his surprise, thirty years
afterward, one of the teeth was removed from an abscess of the tongue.
Baker speaks of a boy of thirteen who was shot at three yards distance.
The bullet knocked out two teeth and passed through the tongue,
although it produced no wound of the pharynx, and was passed from the
anus on the sixth day. Stevenson mentions a case of an organist who
fell forward when stooping with a pipe in his mouth, driving its stem
into the roof of the pharynx. He complained of a sore throat for
several days, and, after explanation, Stevenson removed from the soft
palate a piece of clay pipe nearly 1 1/4 inches long. Herbert tells of
a case resembling carcinoma of the tongue, which was really due to the
lodgment of a piece of tooth in that organ.
Articulation Without the Tongue.--Total or partial destruction of the
tongue does not necessarily make articulation impossible. Banon
mentions a man who had nothing in his mouth representing a tongue. When
he was young, he was attacked by an ulceration destroying every vestige
of this member. The epiglottis, larynx, and pharynx, in fact the
surrounding structures were normal, and articulation, which was at
first lost, became fairly distinct, and deglutition was never
interfered with. Pare gives a description of a man whose tongue was
completely severed, in consequence of which he lost speech for three
years, but was afterward able to make himself understood by an
ingenious bit of mechanism. He inserted under the stump of the tongue a
small piece of wood, in a most marvelous way replacing the missing
member. Articulation with the absence of some constituent of the vocal
apparatus has been spoken of on page 254.
Hypertrophy of the Tongue.--It sometimes happens that the tongue is so
large that it is rendered not only useless but a decided hindrance to
the performance of the ordinary functions into which it always enters.
Ehrlich, Ficker, Klein, Rodforffer, and the Ephemerides, all record
instances in which a large tongue was removed either by ligation or
amputation. Von Siebold records an instance in which death was caused
by the ligature of an abnormally sized tongue. There is a modern record
of three cases of enormous tongues, the result of simple hypertrophy.
In one case the tongue measured 6 1/4 inches from the angle of the
mouth about the sides and tip to the opposite angle, necessitating
amputation of the protruding portion.
Carnochan reports a case in which hypertrophy of the tongue was reduced
to nearly the normal size by first tying the external carotid, and six
weeks later the common carotid artery. Chalk mentions partial
dislocation of the lower jaw from an enlarged tongue. Lyford speaks of
enlargement of the tongue causing death.
The above conditions are known as macroglossia, which is a congenital
hypertrophy of the tongue analogous to elephantiasis. It is of slow
growth, and as the organ enlarges it interferes with deglutition and
speech. It may protrude over the chin and reach even as far down as the
sternum.
The great enlargement may cause deformities of the teeth and lower jaw,
and even present itself as an enormous tumor in the neck. The
protruding tongue itself may ulcerate, possibly bleed, and there is
constant dribbling of saliva. The disease is probably due to congenital
defect aggravated by frequent attacks of glossitis, and the treatment
consists in the removal of the protruding portions by the knife,
ligation, the cautery, or ecraseur.
Living Fish in the Pharynx.--Probably the most interesting cases of
foreign bodies are those in which living fish enter the pharynx and
esophagus. Chevers has collected five cases in which death was caused
by living fish entering the mouth and occluding the air-passages. He
has mentioned a case in which a large catfish jumped into the mouth of
a Madras bheestie. An operation on the esophagus was immediately
commenced, but abandoned, and an attempt made to push the fish down
with a probang, which was, in a measure, successful. However, the
patient gave a convulsive struggle, and, to all appearances, died. The
trachea was immediately opened, and respiration was restored. During
the course of the night the man vomited up pieces of fish bone softened
by decomposition. In 1863 White mentions that the foregoing accident is
not uncommon among the natives of India, who are in the habit of
swimming with their mouths open in tanks abounding with fish. There is
a case in which a fisherman, having both hands engaged in drawing a
net, and seeing a sole-fish about eight inches long trying to escape
through the meshes of the net, seized it with his teeth. A sudden
convulsive effort of the fish enabled it to enter the fisherman's
throat, and he was asphyxiated before his boat reached the shore. After
death the fish was found in the cardiac end of the stomach. There is
another case of a man named Durand, who held a mullet between his teeth
while rebaiting his hook. The fish, in the convulsive struggles of
death, slipped down the throat, and because of the arrangement of its
scales it could be pushed down but not up; asphyxiation, however,
ensued. Stewart has extensively described the case of a native
"Puckally" of Ceylon who was the victim of the most distressing
symptoms from the impaction of a living fish in his throat. The native
had caught the fish, and in order to extract it placed its head between
his teeth, holding the body with the left hand and the hook with the
right. He had hardly extracted the hook, when the fish pricked his palm
with his long and sharp dorsal fin, causing him suddenly to release his
grasp on the fish and voluntarily open his mouth at the same time. The
fish quickly bolted into his mouth, and, although he grasped the tail
with his right hand, and squeezed his pharynx with his left, besides
coughing violently, the fish found its way into the esophagus. Further
attempts at extraction were dangerous and quite likely to fail; his
symptoms were distressing, he could not hold his head erect without the
most agonizing pain and he was almost prostrated from fright and
asphyxia; it was thought advisable to push the fish into the stomach,
and after an impaction of sixteen hours the symptoms were relieved. The
fish in this instance was the Anabas scandens or "walking perch" of
Ceylon, which derives its name from its power of locomotion on land and
its ability to live out of water for some time. It is from four to five
inches long and has a dorsal fin as sharp as a knife and directed
toward the tail, and pectoral fins following the same direction; these
would admit of entrance, but would interfere with extraction. MacLauren
reports the history of a young man who, after catching a fish, placed
it between his teeth. The fish, three inches long, by a sudden
movement, entered the pharynx. Immediately ensued suffocation, nausea,
vomiting, together with the expectoration of blood and mucus. There was
emphysema of the face, neck, and chest. The fish could be easily felt
impacted in the tissues, but, after swallowing much water and vinegar,
together with other efforts at extraction, the fins were
loosened--about twenty-four hours after the accident. By this time the
emphysema had extended to the scrotum. There was much expectoration of
muco-purulent fluid, and on the third day complete aphonia, but the
symptoms gradually disappeared, and recovery was complete in eight
days. Dantra is accredited with describing asphyxiation, accompanied by
great agony, in a man who, while swimming, had partially swallowed a
live fish. The fish was about three inches in length and one in
breadth, and was found lying on the dorsum of his tongue and, together
with numerous clots of blood, filled his mouth. Futile attempts to
extract the fish by forceps were made. Examination showed that the fish
had firmly grasped the patient's uvula, which it was induced to
relinquish when its head was seized by the forceps and pressed from
side to side. After this it was easily extracted and lived for some
time. There was little hemorrhage after the removal of the offending
object, and the blood had evidently come from the injuries to the sides
of the mouth, caused by the fins. The uvula was bitten, not torn.
There is an interesting account of a native of India, who, while
fishing in a stream, caught a flat eel-like fish from fifteen to
sixteen inches long. After the fashion of his fellows he attempted to
kill the eel by biting off its head; in the attempt the fish slipped
into his gullet, and owing to its sharp fins could not be withdrawn.
The man died one hour later in the greatest agony; so firmly was the
eel impacted that even after death it could not be extracted, and the
man was buried with it protruding from his mouth.
A Leech in the Pharynx.--Granger, a surgeon in Her Majesty's Indian
Service, writes:--"Several days ago I received a note from the
political sirdar, asking me if I would see a man who said he had a
leech in his throat which he was unable to get rid of. I was somewhat
sceptical, and thought that possibly the man might be laboring under a
delusion. On going outside the fort to see the case, I found an old
Pathan graybeard waiting for me. On seeing me, he at once spat out a
large quantity of dark, half-clotted blood to assure me of the serious
nature of his complaint. His history--mostly made out with the aid of
interpreters--was that eleven days ago he was drinking from a
rain-water tank and felt something stick in his throat, which he could
not reject. He felt this thing moving, and it caused difficulty in
swallowing, and occasionally vomiting. On the following day he began to
spit up blood, and this continued until he saw me. He stated that he
once vomited blood, and that he frequently felt that he was going to
choke.
"On examining his throat, a large clot of blood was found to be
adherent to the posterior wall of the pharynx. On removing this clot of
blood, no signs of the presence of a leech could be detected. However,
on account of the symptoms complained of by the patient I introduced a
polypus forceps into the lower part of the pharynx and toward the
esophagus, where a body, distinctly moving, was felt. This body I
seized with the forceps, and with considerable force managed to remove
it. It was a leech between 2 1/2 and three inches in length, and with a
body of the size of a Lee-Metford bullet. No doubt during the eleven
days it had remained in the man's throat the leech had increased in
size. Nevertheless it must have been an animal of considerable size
when the man attempted to swallow it. I send this case as a typical
example of the carelessness of natives of the class from which we
enlist our Sepoys, as to the nature of the water they drink. This man
had drunk the pea-soup like water of a tank dug in the side of the
hill, rather than go a few hundred yards to a spring where the water is
perfectly clear and pure. Though I have not met with another case of
leeches being taken with drinking water, I am assured that such cases
are occasionally met with about Agra and other towns in the North-West
Provinces. This great carelessness as to the purity or impurity of
their drinking water shows the difficulty medical officers must
experience in their endeavors to prevent the Sepoys of a regiment from
drinking water from condemned or doubtful sources during a cholera or
typhoid epidemic."
Foreign Bodies in the Pharynx and Esophagus.--Aylesbury mentions a boy
who swallowed a fish-hook while eating gooseberries. He tried to pull
it up, but it was firmly fastened, and a surgeon was called. By
ingeniously passing a leaden bullet along the line, the weight of the
lead loosened the hook, and both bullet and hook were easily drawn up.
Babbit and Battle report an ingenious method of removing a piece of
meat occluding the esophagus--the application of trypsin. Henry speaks
of a German officer who accidentally swallowed a piece of beer bottle,
3/8 x 1/8 inch, which subsequently penetrated the esophagus, and in its
course irritated the recurrent laryngeal and vagi, giving rise to the
most serious phlegmonous inflammation and distressing respiratory
symptoms. A peculiar case is that of the man who died after a fire at
the Eddystone Lighthouse. He was endeavoring to extinguish the flames
which were at a considerable distance above his head, and was looking
up with his mouth open, when the lead of a melting lantern dropped down
in such quantities as not only to cover his face and enter his mouth,
but run over his clothes. The esophagus and tunica in the lower part
of the stomach were burned, and a great piece of lead, weighing over 7
1/2 ounces, was taken from the stomach after death.
Evans relates the history of a girl of twenty-one who swallowed four
artificial teeth, together with their gold plate; two years and eight
days afterward she ejected them after a violent attack of retching.
Gauthier speaks of a young girl who, while eating soup, swallowed a
fragment of bone. For a long time she had symptoms simulating phthisis,
but fourteen years afterward the bone was dislodged, and, although the
young woman was considered in the last stages of phthisis, she
completely recovered in six weeks. Gastellier has reported the case of
a young man of sixteen who swallowed a crown piece, which became lodged
in the middle portion of the esophagus and could not be removed. For
ten months the piece of money remained in this position, during which
the young man was never without acute pain and often had convulsions.
He vomited material, sometimes alimentary, sometimes mucus, pus, or
blood, and went into the last stage of marasmus. At last, after this
long-continued suffering, following a strong convulsion and syncope,
the coin descended to the stomach, and the young man expectorated great
quantities of pus. After thirty-five years, the coin had not been
passed by the rectum.
Instances of migration of foreign bodies from the esophagus are
repeatedly recorded. There is an instance of a needle which was
swallowed and lodged in the esophagus, but twenty-one months afterward
was extracted by an incision at a point behind the right ear. Kerckring
speaks of a girl who swallowed a needle which was ultimately extracted
from the muscles of her neck. Poulet remarks that Vigla has collected
the most interesting of these cases of migration of foreign bodies.
Hevin mentions several cases of grains of wheat abstracted from
abscesses of the thoracic parietes, from thirteen to fifteen days after
ingestion. Bonnet and Helmontius have reported similar facts.
Volgnarius has seen a grain of wheat make its exit from the axilla, and
Polisius mentions an abscess of the back from which was extracted a
grain of wheat three months after ingestion. Bally reports a somewhat
similar instance, in which, three months after ingestion, during an
attack of peripneumonia, a foreign body was extracted from an abscess
of the thorax, between the 2d and 3d ribs. Ambrose found a needle
encysted in the heart of a negress. She distinctly stated that she had
swallowed it at a time calculated to have been nine years before her
death. Planque speaks of a small bone perforating the esophagus and
extracted through the skin.
Abscess or ulceration, consequent upon periesophagitis, caused by the
lodgment of foreign bodies in the esophagus, often leads to the most
serious results. There is an instance of a soldier who swallowed a bone
while eating soup, who died on the thirty-first day from the rupture
internally of an esophageal abscess. Grellois has reported the history
of a case of a child twenty-two months old, who suffered for some time
with impaction of a small bone in the esophagus. Less than three months
afterward the patient died with all the symptoms of marasmus, due to
difficult deglutition, and at the autopsy an abscess was seen in the
posterior wall of the pharynx, opposite the 3d cervical vertebra;
extensive caries was also noticed in the bodies of the 2d, 3d, and 4th
cervical vertebrae. Guattani mentions a curious instance in which a man
playing with a chestnut threw it in the air, catching it in his mouth.
The chestnut became lodged in the throat and caused death on the
nineteenth day. At the autopsy it was found that an abscess
communicating with the trachea had been formed in the pharynx and
esophagus.
A peculiarly fatal accident in this connection is that in which a
foreign body in the esophagus ulcerates, and penetrates one of the
neighboring major vessels. Colles mentions a man of fifty-six who,
while eating, perceived a sensation as of a rent in the chest. The pain
was augmented during deglutition, and almost immediately afterward he
commenced to expectorate great quantities of blood. On the following
day he vomited a bone about an inch long and died on the same day. At
the autopsy it was found that there was a rent in the posterior wall of
the esophagus, about 1/2 inch long, and a corresponding wound of the
aorta. There was blood in the pleura, pericardium, stomach, and
intestines. There is one case in which a man of forty-seven suddenly
died, after vomiting blood, and at the autopsy it was demonstrated that
a needle had perforated the posterior wall of the esophagus and wounded
the aorta. Poulet has collected 31 cases in which ulceration caused by
foreign bodies in the esophagus has resulted in perforation of the
walls of some of the neighboring vessels. The order of frequency was as
follows: aorta, 17; carotids, four; vena cava, two; and one case each
of perforation of the inferior thyroid artery, right coronary vein,
demi-azygos vein, the right subclavicular artery (abnormal), and the
esophageal artery. In three of the cases collected there was no autopsy
and the vessel affected was not known.
In a child of three years that had swallowed a half-penny, Atkins
reports rupture of the innominate artery. No symptoms developed, but
six weeks later, the child had an attack of ulcerative stomatitis, from
which it seemed to be recovering nicely, when suddenly it ejected two
ounces of bright red blood in clots, and became collapsed out of
proportion to the loss of blood. Under treatment, it rallied somewhat,
but soon afterward it ejected four ounces more of blood and died in a
few minutes. At the autopsy 3/4 pint of blood was found in the stomach,
and a perforation was discovered on the right side of the esophagus,
leading into a cavity, in which a blackened half-penny was found. A
probe passed along the aorta into the innominate protruded into the
same cavity about the bifurcation of the vessel.
Denonvilliers has described a perforation of the esophagus and aorta by
a five-franc piece. A preserved preparation of this case, showing the
coin in situ, is in the Musee Dupuytren. Blaxland relates the instance
of a woman of forty-five who swallowed a fish bone, was seized with
violent hematemesis, and died in eight hours. The necropsy revealed a
penetration of the aorta through the thoracic portion of the esophagus.
There is also in the Musee Dupuytren a preparation described by
Bousquet, in which the aorta and the esophagus were perforated by a
very irregular piece of bone. Mackenzie mentions an instance of death
from perforation of the aorta by a fish-bone.
In some cases penetration of the esophagus allows the further
penetration of some neighboring membrane or organ in the same manner as
the foregoing cases. Dudley mentions a case in which fatal hemorrhage
was caused by penetration of the esophagus and lung by a chicken-bone.
Buist speaks of a patient who swallowed two artificial teeth. On the
following day there was pain in the epigastrium, and by the fourth day
the pain extended to the vertebrae, with vomiting, delirium, and death
on the fifth day. At the autopsy it was found that a foreign body,
seven cm. long had perforated the pericardium, causing a suppurative
pericarditis. Dagron reports a unique instance of death by purulent
infection arising from perforation of the esophagus by a pin. The
patient was a man of forty-two, and, some six weeks before he presented
himself for treatment, before swallowing had experienced a severe pain
low down in the neck. Five days before admission he had had a severe
chill, followed by sweating and delirium. He died of a supraclavicular
abscess on the fifth day; a black steel pin was found against the
esophagus and trachea.
In connection with foreign bodies in the esophagus, it might be
interesting to remark that Ashhurst has collected 129 cases of
esophagotomy for the removal of foreign bodies, resulting in 95
recoveries and 34 deaths. Gaudolphe collected 142 cases with 110
recoveries.
Injuries of the neck are usually inflicted with suicidal intent or in
battle. Cornelius Nepos says that while fighting against the
Lacedemonians, Epaminondas was sensible of having received a mortal
wound, and apprehending that the lance was stopping a wound in an
important vessel, remarked that he would die when it was withdrawn.
When he was told that the Boeotians had conquered, exclaiming "I die
unconquered," he drew out the lance and perished. Petrus de Largenta
speaks of a man with an arrow in one of his carotids, who was but
slightly affected before its extraction, but who died immediately after
the removal of the arrow. Among the remarkable recoveries from injuries
of the neck is that mentioned by Boerhaave, of a young man who lived
nine or ten days after receiving a sword-thrust through the neck
between the 4th and 5th vertebrae, dividing the vertebral artery.
Benedictus, Bonacursius, and Monroe, all mention recovery after cases
of cut-throat in which the esophagus as well as the trachea was
wounded, and food protruded from the external cut. Warren relates the
history of a case in which the vertebral artery was wounded by the
discharge of a pistol loaded with pebbles. The hemorrhage was checked
by compression and packing, and after the discharge of a pebble and a
piece of bone from the wound, the man was seen a month afterward in
perfect health. Corson of Norristown, Pa., has reported the case of a
quarryman who was stabbed in the neck with a shoemaker's knife,
severing the left carotid one inch below its division. He was seen
thirty minutes later in an apparently lifeless condition, but efforts
at resuscitation were successfully made. The hemorrhage ceased
spontaneously, and at the time of report, the man presented the
symptoms of one who had had his carotid ligated (facial atrophy on one
side, no pulse, etc.). Baron Larrey mentions a case of gunshot wound in
which the carotid artery was open at its division into internal and
external branches, and says that the wound was plugged by an
artilleryman until ligation, and in this primitive manner the patient
was saved. Sale reports the case of a girl of nineteen, who fell on a
china bowl that she had shattered, and wounded both the right common
carotid artery and internal jugular vein. There was profuse and
continuous hemorrhage for a time, and subsequently a false aneurysm
developed, which ruptured in about three months, giving rise to
enormous momentary hemorrhage; notwithstanding the severity of the
injury and the extent of the hemorrhage, complete recovery ensued. Amos
relates the instance of a woman named Mary Green who, after complete
division of all the vessels of the neck, walked 23 yards and climbed
over an ordinary bar-gate nearly four feet high.
Cholmeley reports the instance of a Captain of the First Madras
Fusileers, who was wounded at Pegu by a musket-ball penetrating his
neck. The common carotid was divided and for five minutes there was
profuse hemorrhage which, however, strange to say, spontaneously
ceased. The patient died in thirty-eight hours, supposedly from spinal
concussion or shock.
Relative to ligature of the common carotid artery, Ashhurst mentions
the fact that the artery has been ligated in 228 instances, with 94
recoveries. Ellis mentions ligature of both carotids in four and a half
days, as a treatment for a gunshot wound, with subsequent recovery.
Lewtas reports a case of ligation of the innominate and carotid
arteries for traumatic aneurysm (likely a hematoma due to a gunshot
injury of the subclavian artery). The patient was in profound collapse,
but steadily reacted and was discharged cured on the forty-fifth day,
with no perceptible pulse at the wrist and only a feeble beat in the
pulmonary artery.
Garengeot, Wirth, Fine, and Evers, all mention perforating wounds of
the trachea and esophagus with recoveries. Van Swieten and Hiester
mention cases in which part of the trachea was carried away by a ball,
with recovery. Monro, Tulpius, Bartholinus, and Pare report severance
of the trachea with the absence of oral breathing, in which the divided
portions were sutured, with successful results. In his "Theatro
Naturae," Bodinus says that William, Prince of Orange, lost the sense
of taste after receiving a wound of the larynx; according to an old
authority, a French soldier became mute after a similar accident.
Davies-Colley mentions a boy of eighteen who fell on a stick about the
thickness of the index finger, transfixing his neck from right to left;
he walked to a doctor's house, 250 yards away, with the stick in situ.
In about two weeks he was discharged completely well. During treatment
he had no hemorrhage of any importance, and his voice was not affected,
but for a while he had slight dysphagia.
Barker gives a full account of a barber who was admitted to a hospital
two and a half hours after cutting his throat. He had a deep wound
running transversely across the neck, from one angle of the jaw to the
other, cutting open the floor of the mouth and extending from the inner
border of the sternocleido-mastoid to the other, leaving the large
vessels of the neck untouched. The razor had passed through the
glosso-epiglottidean fold, a tip of the epiglottis, and through the
pharynx down to the spinal column. There was little hemorrhage, but the
man could neither swallow nor speak. The wound was sutured, tracheotomy
done, and the head kept fixed on the chest by a copper splint. He was
ingeniously fed by esophageal tubes and rectal enemata; in three weeks
speech and deglutition were restored. Shortly afterward the esophageal
tube was removed and recovery was virtually complete. Little mentions
an extraordinary case of a woman of thirty-six who was discharged from
Garland's asylum, where she had been an inmate for three months. This
unfortunate woman had attempted suicide by self-decapitation from
behind forward. She was found, knife in hand, with a huge wound in the
back of the neck and her head bobbing about in a ghastly manner. The
incision had severed the skin, subcutaneous tissues and muscles, the
ligaments and bone, opening the spinal canal, but not cutting the cord.
The instrument used to effect this major injury was a blunt
potato-peeling knife. Despite this terrible wound the patient lived to
the sixth day.
Hislop records a case of cut-throat in a man of seventy-four. He had a
huge gaping wound of the neck, extending to within a half inch of the
carotids on each side. The trachea was almost completely severed, the
band left was not more than 1/4 inch wide. Hislop tied four arteries,
brought the ends of the trachea together with four strong silk sutures,
and, as the operation was in the country, he washed the big cavity of
the wound out with cold spring-water. He brought the superficial
surfaces together with ten interrupted sutures, and, notwithstanding
the patient's age, the man speedily recovered. This emphasizes the fact
that the old theory of leaving wounds of this nature open was
erroneous. Solly reports the case of a tailor of twenty-two who
attempted suicide by cutting through the larynx, entirely severing the
epiglottis and three-fourths of the pharynx. No bleeding point was
found, and recovery ensued.
Cowles describes the case of a soldier of thirty-five who, while
escaping from the patrols, was shot by the Officer of the Day with a
small bullet from a pistol. The ball entered the right shoulder,
immediately over the suprascapular notch, passed superficially upward
and forward into the neck, wounding the esophagus posteriorly at a
point opposite the thyroid cartilage, and lodged in the left side of
the neck. The patient had little hemorrhage, but had expectorated and
swallowed much blood. He had a constant desire to swallow, which
continued several days. The treatment was expectant; and in less than
three weeks the soldier was returned to duty. From the same authority
there is a condensation of five reports of gunshot wounds of the neck,
from all of which the patients recovered and returned to duty.
Braman describes the case of a man on whom several injuries were
inflicted by a drunken companion. The first wound was slight; the
second a deep flesh-wound over the trapezius muscle; the third extended
from the right sterno-cleido-mastoid midway upward to the middle of the
jaw and down to the rapine of the trachea. The external jugular, the
external thyroid, and the facial arteries were severed. Braman did not
find it necessary to ligate, but was able to check the hemorrhage with
lint and persulphate of iron, in powder, with pressure. After fourteen
hours the wound was closed; the patient recovered, and was returned to
duty in a short time.
Thomas has reported the case of a man sixty-five years old who in an
attempt at suicide with a penknife, had made a deep wound in the left
side of the neck. The sternohyoid and omohyoid muscles were divided;
the internal jugular vein was cut through, and its cut ends were
collapsed and 3/4 inch apart; the common carotid artery was cut into,
but not divided; the thyroid cartilage was notched, and the external
and anterior jugular veins were severed. Clamp-forceps were immediately
applied to the cut vessels and one on each side the aperture in the
common carotid from which a small spurt of blood, certainly not half a
teaspoonful, came out. The left median basilic vein was exposed by an
incision, and 20 ounces of warm saline solution were slowly perfused,
an ordinary glass syringe with a capacity of five ounces, with an
India-rubber tubing attached to a canula in the vein being employed.
After seven ounces of fluid had been injected, the man made a short,
distinct inspiration; at ten ounces a deeper one (the radial pulse
could now be felt beating feebly); at 15 ounces the breathing became
regular and deep; at 18 ounces the man opened his eyes, but did not
appear to be conscious. The clamped vessels were now tied with catgut
and the wound cleansed with phenol lotion and dressed with
cyanid-gauze. The man was surrounded by hot-water bottles and the foot
of the bed elevated 18 inches. In the course of an hour the patient had
recovered sufficiently to answer in a squeaky voice to his name when
called loudly. Improvement proceeded rapidly until the twenty-second
day, when violent hemorrhage occurred, preceded a few hours previously
by a small trickle, easily controlled by pressure. The wound was at
once opened and blood found oozing from the distal extremities of the
carotid artery and jugular vein, which were promptly clamped. The
common carotid artery was not sound, so that ligatures were applied to
the internal and external carotids and to the internal jugular with a
small branch entering into it. The patient was in great collapse, but
quickly rallied, only to suffer renewed hemorrhage from the internal
carotid nine days later. This was controlled by pressure with sponges,
and a quart of hot water was injected into the rectum. From this time
on the patient made a slow recovery, a small sinus in the lower part of
the neck disappearing on the removal of the catgut ligature.
Adams describes the case of a woman who attempted suicide with a common
table-knife, severing the thyroid, cricoid, and first three rings of
the trachea, and lacerating the sternohyoid and thyroid arteries; she
finally recovered.
There is a curious case of suicide of a woman who, while under the
effects of opium, forced the handle of a mirror into her mouth. From
all appearances, the handle had broken off near the junction and she
had evidently fallen forward with the remaining part in her mouth,
driving it forcibly against the spine, and causing the point of the
handle to run downward in front of the cervical vertebrae. On
postmortem examination, a sharp piece of wood about two inches long,
corresponding to the missing portion of the broken mirror handle, was
found lying between the posterior wall of the esophagus and the spine.
Hennig mentions a case of gunshot wound of the neck in which the musket
ball was lodged in the posterior portion of the neck and was
subsequently discharged by the anus.
Injuries of the cervical vertebrae, while extremely grave, and declared
by some authors to be inevitably fatal, are, however, not always
followed by death or permanently bad results. Barwell mentions a man of
sixty-three who, in a fit of despondency, threw himself from a window,
having fastened a rope to his neck and to the window-sill. He fell 11
or 12 feet, and in doing so suffered a subluxation of the 4th cervical
vertebra. It slowly resumed the normal position by the elasticity of
the intervertebral fibrocartilage, and there was complete recovery in
ten days. Lazzaretto reports the history of the case of a seaman whose
atlas was dislocated by a blow from a falling sail-yard. The
dislocation was reduced and held by adhesive strips, and the man made a
good recovery. Vanderpool of Bellevue Hospital, N.Y., describes a
fracture of the odontoid process caused by a fall on the back of the
head; death, however, did not ensue until six months later. According
to Ashhurst, Philips, the elder Cline, Willard Parker, Bayard, Stephen
Smith, May, and several other surgeons, have recorded complete recovery
after fracture of the atlas and axis. The same author also adds that
statistic investigation shows that as large a proportion as 18 per cent
of injuries of the cervical vertebrae occurring in civil practice,
recover. However, the chances of a fatal issue in injuries of the
vertebrae vary inversely with the distance of the point of injury from
the brain. Keen has recorded a case in which a conoidal ball lodged in
the body of the third cervical vertebra, from which it was extracted
six weeks later. The paralysis, which, up to the time of extraction,
had affected all four limbs, rapidly diminished. In about five weeks
after the removal of the bullet nearly the entire body of the 3d
cervical vertebra, including the anterior half of the transverse
process and vertebral foremen, was spontaneously discharged. Nearly
eight years afterward Keen saw the man still living, but with his right
shoulder and arm diminished in size and partly paralyzed.
Doyle reports a case of dislocated neck with recovery. During a runaway
the patient was thrown from his wagon, and was soon after found on the
roadside apparently dead. Physicians who were quickly summoned from the
immediate neighborhood detected faint signs of life; they also found a
deformity of the neck, which led them to suspect dislocation. An
ambulance was called, and without any effort being made to relieve the
deformity the man was placed in it and driven to his home about a mile
distant. The jolting over the rough roads greatly aggravated his
condition. When Doyle saw the patient, his general appearance presented
a hopeless condition, but being satisfied that a dislocation existed,
Doyle immediately prepared to reduce it. Two men were told to grasp the
feet and two more the head, and were directed to make careful but
strong extension. At the same time the physician placed his right hand
against the neck just over the pomum Adami, and his left against the
occiput, and, while extension was being made, he flexed the head
forward until the chin nearly touched the breast, after which the head
was returned to its normal position. The manipulation was accompanied
by a clicking sensation, caused by the replacement of the dislocated
vertebra. The patient immediately showed signs of relief and improved
rapidly. Perceptible but feeble movements were made by all the limbs
except the right arm. The patient remained in a comatose condition for
eight or nine days, during which he had enuresis and intestinal torpor.
He suffered from severe concussion of the brain, which accounted for
his prolonged coma. Delirium was present, but he was carefully watched
and not allowed to injure himself. His recovery was tedious and was
delayed by several relapses. His first complaint after consciousness
returned (on the tenth day) was of a sense of constriction about the
neck, us if he were being choked. This gradually passed off, and his
improvement went on without development of any serious symptoms. At
the time of report he appeared in the best of health and was quite able
to attend to his daily avocations. Doyle appends to his report the
statement that among 394 cases embraced in Ashhurst's statistics, in
treatment of dislocations in the cervical region, the mortality has
been nearly four times greater when constitutional or general treatment
has been relied on exclusively than when attempts had been made to
reduce the dislocation by extension, rotation, etc. Doyle strongly
advocates attempts at reduction in such cases.
Figure 205 represents a photograph of Barney Baldwin, a switchman of
the Louisville and Nashville Railroad, who, after recovery from
cervical dislocation, exhibited himself about the country, never
appearing without his suspensory apparatus.
Acheson records a case of luxation of the cervical spine with recovery
after the use of a jury-mast. The patient was a man of fifty-five, by
trade a train-conductor. On July 10, 1889, he fell backward in front of
a train, his head striking between the ties; the brake-body caught his
body, pushing it forward on his head, and turned him completely over.
Three trucks passed over him. When dragged from beneath the train, his
upper extremities were paralyzed. At noon the next day, nineteen hours
after the accident, examination revealed bruises over the body, and he
suffered intense pain at the back of the neck and base of the skull.
Posteriorly, the neck presented a natural appearance; but anteriorly,
to use the author's description, his neck resembled a combined case of
mumps and goiter. The sternomastoid muscle bulged at the angle of the
jaw, and was flaccid, and his "Adam's apple" was on a level with the
chin. Sensation in the upper extremities was partially restored, and,
although numb, he now had power of movement in the arms and hands, but
could not rotate his neck. A diagnosis of cervical dislocation was
made, and violent extension, with oscillation forward and backward, was
practiced, and the abnormal appearance subsided at once. No crepitus
was noticed. On the fourth day there was slight hemorrhage from the
mouth, which was more severe on the fifth and sixth days. The lower jaw
had been forced past the upper, until the first molar had penetrated
the tissues beneath the tongue. A plaster-of-Paris apparatus was
applied, and in two months was exchanged for one of sole-leather. In
rising from the recumbent position the man had to lift his head with
his hands. Fifty days after the accident he suffered excruciating pain
at the change of the weather, and at the approach of a storm the
joints, as well as the neck, were involved. It was believed (one
hundred and seven days after the accident) that both fracture and
luxation existed. His voice had become guttural, but examination of the
fauces was negative. The only evidence of paralysis was in the fingers,
which, when applied to anything, experienced the sensation of touching
gravel. The mottling of the tissues of the neck, which appeared about
the fiftieth day, had entirely disappeared.
According to Thorburn, Hilton had a patient who lived fourteen years
with paraplegia due to fracture of the 5th, 6th, and 7th cervical
vertebrae. Shaw is accredited with a case in which the patient lived
fifteen months, the fracture being above the 4th cervical vertebra.
In speaking of foreign bodies in the larynx and trachea, the first to
be considered will be liquids. There is a case on record of an infant
who was eating some coal, and being discovered by its mother was forced
to rapidly swallow some water. In the excitement, part of the fluid
swallowed fell into the trachea, and death rapidly ensued. It is hardly
necessary to mention the instances in which pus or blood from ruptured
abscesses entered the trachea and caused subsequent asphyxiation. A
curious instance is reported by Gaujot of Val-de-Grace of a soldier who
was wounded in the Franco-Prussian war, and into whose wound an
injection of the tincture of iodin was made. The wound was of such an
extent as to communicate with a bronchus, and by this means the iodin
entered the respiratory tract, causing suffocation. According to
Poulet, Vidal de Cassis mentions an inmate of the Charite Hospital, in
Paris, who, full of wine, had started to vomit; he perceived Corvisart,
and knew he would be questioned, therefore he quickly closed his mouth
to hide the proofs of his forbidden ingestion. The materials in his
mouth were forced into the larynx, and he was immediately asphyxiated.
Laennec, Merat, and many other writers have mentioned death caused by
the entrance of vomited materials into the air-passages. Parrot has
observed a child who died by the penetration of chyme into the
air-passages. The bronchial mucous and underlying membrane were already
in a process of digestion. Behrend, Piegu, and others cite analogous
instances.
The presence of a foreign body in the larynx is at all times the cause
of distressing symptoms, and, sometimes, a substance of the smallest
size will cause death. There is a curious accident recorded that
happened to a young man of twenty-three, who was anesthetized in order
to extract a tooth. A cork had been placed between the teeth to keep
the mouth open. The tooth was extracted but slipped from the forceps,
and, together with the cork, fell into the pharynx. The tooth was
ejected in an effort at vomiting, but the cork entered the larynx, and,
after violent struggles, asphyxiation caused death in an hour. The
autopsy demonstrated the presence of the cork in the larynx. A somewhat
analogous case, though not ending fatally, was reported by Hertz of a
woman of twenty-six, who was anesthetized for the extraction of the
right second inferior molar. The crown broke off during the operation,
and immediately after the extraction she had a fit of coughing. About
fifteen days later she experienced pain in the lungs. Her symptoms
increased to the fifth week, when she became so feeble as to be
confined to her bed. A body seemed to be moving in the trachea,
synchronously with respiration. At the end of the fifth week the
missing crown of the tooth was expelled after a violent fit of
coughing; the symptoms immediately ameliorated, and recovery was rapid
thereafter. Aronsohn speaks of a child who was playing with a toy
wind-instrument, and in his efforts to forcibly aspirate air through
it, the child drew the detached reed into the respiratory passages,
causing asphyxiation. At the autopsy the foreign body was found at the
superior portion of the left bronchus. There are other cases in which,
while sucking oranges or lemons, seeds have been aspirated; and there
is a case in which, in a like manner, the claw of a crab was drawn into
the air-passages. There are two cases mentioned in which children
playing with toy balloons, which they inflated with their breath, have,
by inspiration, reversed them and drawn the rubber of the balloon into
the opening of the glottis, causing death. Aronsohn, who has already
been quoted, and whose collection of instances of this nature is
probably the most extensive, speaks of a child in the street who was
eating an almond; a carriage threw the child down and he suddenly
inspired the nut into the air-passages, causing immediate asphyxia The
same author also mentions a soldier walking in the street eating a
plum, who, on being struck by a horse, suddenly started and swallowed
the seed of the fruit. After the accident he had little pain or
oppression, and no coughing, but twelve hours afterward he rejected the
seed in coughing.
A curious accident is that in which a foreign body thrown into the air
and caught in the mouth has caused immediate asphyxiation. Suetonius
transmits the history of a young man, a son of the Emperor Claudius,
who, in sport, threw a small pear into the air and caught it in his
mouth, and, as a consequence, was suffocated. Guattani cites a similar
instance of a man who threw up a chestnut, which, on being received in
the mouth, lodged in the air-passages; the man died on the nineteenth
day. Brodie reported the classic observation of the celebrated
engineer, Brunel, who swallowed a piece of money thrown into the air
and caught in his mouth. It fell into the open larynx, was inspired,
causing asphyxiation, but was removed by inversion of the man's body.
Sennert says that Pope Adrian IV died from the entrance of a fly into
his respiratory passages; and Remy and Gautier record instances of the
penetration of small fish into the trachea. There are, again,
instances of leeches in this location.
Occasionally the impaction of artificial teeth in the neighborhood of
the larynx has been unrecognized for many years. Lennox Browne reports
the history of a woman who was supposed to have either laryngeal
carcinoma or phthisis, but in whom he found, impacted in the larynx, a
plate with artificial teeth attached, which had remained in this
position twenty-two months unrecognized and unknown. The patient, when
questioned, remembered having been awakened in the night by a violent
attack of vomiting, and finding her teeth were missing assumed they
were thrown away with the ejections. From that time on she had suffered
pain and distress in breathing and swallowing, and became the subject
of progressive emaciation. After the removal of the impacted plate and
teeth she soon regained her health. Paget speaks of a gentleman who
for three months, unconsciously, carried at the base of the tongue and
epiglottis, very closely fitted to all the surface on which it rested,
a full set of lost teeth and gold palate-plate. From the symptoms and
history it was suspected that he had swallowed his set of false teeth,
but, in order to prevent his worrying, he was never informed of this
suspicion, and he never once suspected the causes of his symptoms.
Wrench mentions a case illustrative of the extent to which imagination
may produce symptoms simulating those ordinarily caused by the
swallowing of false teeth. This man awoke one morning with his nose and
throat full of blood, and noticed that his false teeth, which he seldom
removed at night, were missing. He rapidly developed great pain and
tumor in the larynx, together with difficulty in deglutition and
speech. After a fruitless search, with instrumental and laryngoscopic
aid, the missing teeth were found--in a chest of drawers; the symptoms
immediately subsided when the mental illusion was relieved.
There is a curious case of a man drowned near Portsmouth. After the
recovery of his body it was seen that his false teeth were impacted at
the anterior opening of the glottis, and it was presumed that the shock
caused by the plunge into the cold water had induced a violent and deep
inspiration which carried the teeth to the place of impaction.
Perrin reports a case of an old man of eighty-two who lost his life
from the impaction of a small piece of meat in the trachea and glottis.
In the Musee Valde-Grace is a prepared specimen of this case showing
the foreign body in situ. In the same museum Perrin has also deposited
a preparation from the body of a man of sixty-two, who died from the
entrance of a morsel of beef into the respiratory passages. At the
postmortem a mobile mass of food about the size of a hazel-nut was
found at the base of the larynx at the glossoepiglottic fossa. About
the 5th ring of the trachea the caliber of this organ was obstructed by
a cylindric alimentary bolus about six inches long, extending almost to
the bronchial division. Ashhurst shows a fibrinous cast, similar to
that found in croup, caused by a foreign body removed by Wharton,
together with a shawl-pin, from a patient at the Children's Hospital
seven hours after the performance of tracheotomy. Search for the
foreign body at the time of the operation was prevented by profuse
hemorrhage.
The ordinary instances of foreign bodies in the larynx and trachea are
so common that they will not be mentioned here. Their variety is
innumerable and it is quite possible for more than two to be in the
same location simultaneously. In his treatise on this subject Gross
says that he has seen two, three, and even four substances
simultaneously or successively penetrate the same location. Berard
presented a stick of wood extracted from the vocal cords of a child of
ten, and a few other similar instances are recorded.
The Medical Press and Circular finds in an Indian contemporary some
curious instances of misapplied ingenuity on the part of certain
habitual criminals in that country. The discovery on a prisoner of a
heavy leaden bullet about 3/4 inch in diameter led to an inquiry as to
the object to which it was applied. It was ascertained that it served
to aid in the formation of a pouch-like recess at the base of the
epiglottis. The ball is allowed to slide down to the desired position,
and it is retained there for about half an hour at a time. This
operation is repeated many times daily until a pouch the desired size
results, in which criminals contrive to secrete jewels, money, etc., in
such a way as to defy the most careful search, and without interfering
in any way with speech or respiration. Upward of 20 prisoners at
Calcutta were found to be provided with this pouch-formation. The
resources of the professional malingerer are exceedingly varied, and
testify to no small amount of cunning. The taking of internal
irritants is very common, but would-be in-patients very frequently
overshoot the mark and render recovery impossible. Castor-oil seeds,
croton beans, and sundry other agents are employed with this object in
view, and the medical officers of Indian prisons have to be continually
on the lookout for artificially induced diseases that baffle diagnosis
and resist treatment. Army surgeons are not altogether unfamiliar with
these tricks, but compared with the artful Hindoos the British soldier
is a mere child in such matters.
Excision of the larynx has found its chief indication in carcinoma, but
has been employed in sarcoma, polyps, tuberculosis, enchondroma,
stenosis, and necrosis. Whatever the procedure chosen for the
operation, preliminary tracheotomy is a prerequisite. It should be made
well below the isthmus of the thyroid gland, and from three to fifteen
days before the laryngectomy. This affords time for the lungs to become
accustomed to the new manner of breathing, and the trachea becomes
fixed to the anterior wall of the neck.
Powers and White have gathered 69 cases of either total or partial
extirpation of the larynx, to which the 240 cases collected and
analyzed by Eugene Kraus, in 1890, have been added. The histories of
six new cases are given. Of the 309 operations, 101, or 32 per cent of
the patients, died within the first eight weeks from shock, hemorrhage,
pneumonia, septic infection, or exhaustion. The cases collected by
these authors show a decrease in the death ratio in the total
excision,--29 per cent as against 36 per cent in the Kraus tables. The
mortality in the partial operation is increased, being 38 per cent as
opposed to 25 per cent. Cases reported as free from the disease before
the lapse of three years are of little value, except in that they
diminish, by so much, the operative death-rate. Of 180 laryngectomies
for carcinoma prior to January 1, 1892, 72, or 40 per cent, died as a
result of the operation; 51 of the remaining 108 had recurrence during
the first year, and 11, or ten per cent of the survivors, were free
from relapse three or more years after operation. In 77 cases of
partial laryngectomy for cancer, 26, or 33 per cent, died during the
first two months; of the remaining 51, seven cases, or 13 per cent, are
reported as free from the disease three or more years after the
operation.
Injuries destroying great portions of the face or jaw, but not causing
death, are seldom seen, except on the battle-field, and it is to
military surgery that we must look for the most striking instances of
this kind. Ribes mentions a man of thirty-three who, in the Spanish
campaign in 1811, received an injury which carried away the entire body
of the lower jaw, half of each ramus, and also mangled in a great
degree the neighboring soft parts. He was transported from the field of
battle, and, despite enormous hemorrhage and suppuration, in two months
recovered. At the time of report the wounded man presented no trace of
the inferior maxillary bone, but by carrying the finger along the side
of the pharynx in the direction of the superior dental arch the
coronoid apophyses could be recognized, and about six lines nearer the
temporal extremity the ramus could be discovered. The tongue was
missing for about one-third its length, and was thicker than natural
and retracted on the hyoid bone. The sublingual glands were adherent to
the under part of the tongue and were red and over-developed. The
inferior parts of the cheeks were cicatrized with the lateral and
superior regions of the neck, and with the base of the tongue and the
hyoid bone. The tongue was free under and in front of the larynx. The
patient used a gilded silver plate to fix the tongue so that
deglutition could be carried on. He was not able to articulate sounds,
but made himself understood through the intervention of this plate,
which was fixed to a silver chin. The chin he used to maintain the
tongue-plate, to diminish the deformity, and to retain the saliva,
which was constantly dribbling on the neck. The same author quotes the
instance of a man of fifty, who, during the siege of Alexandria in
1801, was struck in the middle of his face, obliquely, by a cannonball,
from below upward and from right to left. A part of the right malar
bone, the two superior maxillary bones, the nasal bones, the cartilage,
the vomer, the middle lamina of the ethmoid, the left maxillary bone, a
portion of the left zygomatic arch, and a great portion of the inferior
maxilla were carried away, or comminuted, and all the soft parts
correspondingly lacerated. Several hours afterward this soldier was
counted among the number of dead, but Larrey, the surgeon-in-chief of
the army, with his typical vigilance and humanity, remarked that the
patient gave signs of life, and that, despite the magnitude of his
wound, he did not despair of his recovery. Those portions in which
attrition was very great were removed, and the splinters of bone taken
out, showing an enormous wound. Three months were necessary for
cicatrization, but it was not until the capitulation of Marabou, at
which place he was wounded, that the patient was returned to France. At
this time he presented a hideous aspect. There were no signs of nose,
nor cartilage separating the entrance of the nostrils, and the vault of
the nasal fossa could be easily seen. There was a part of the posterior
region of the right superior maxilla, but the left was entirely
gone--in fact, the man presented an enormous triangular opening in the
center of the face, as shown by the accompanying illustration. The
tongue and larynx were severely involved, and the sight in the left eye
was lost. This patient continually wore a gilded silver mask, which
covered his deformity and rendered articulation a little less
difficult. The saliva continually dribbled from the mouth and from the
inferior internal portion of his mask, compelling him to carry some
substance to receive the dribblings. Whymper mentions an analogous
instance of a gunner who had his whole lower jaw torn away by a shell,
but who recovered and used an ingenious contrivance in the shape of a
silver mask for remedying the loss of the parts. Steiner mentions a
wound from a cannon-ball, which carried away the left half of the
inferior maxilla, stripping the soft parts as high as the malar, and on
the left side of the neck to within 1 1/2 inches of the clavicle,
laying bare the transverse processes of the 2d and 3d vertebrae, end
exposing the external carotid and most of its branches.
It sometimes happens that a foreign body, such as the breech of a gun,
may be imbedded for some time in the face, with subsequent safe
removal. Keith mentions an instance of the successful removal of the
breech of a fowling-piece from the face, at the root of the nose, after
a lodgment of four months; and Fraser cites an analogous instance in
which the breech was imbedded in the bones of the face for eight years
Smith records an instance in which a broken piece of tobacco-pipe
penetrated the cheek, remained there for seven months, but was
successfully extracted.
Before leaving accidents to the head and neck, a most curious case,
cited by O'Neill, will be briefly reviewed. A boy of twelve was
entrusted to carry a new iron pot to the destination of its purchaser.
Probably to facilitate transportation, the boy removed his hat and
placed the pot obliquely on the back part of his head, but a sudden
movement caused it to slip forward and downward over the head.
Unavailing efforts were made at the time and after he reached home, to
remove the pot from his head, but in vain, and he continued all the
night greatly prostrated by fright, hunger, and thirst, together with
the efforts at removal. The next morning he was taken to a neighboring
blacksmith, who, by greasing one of his fingers, managed to insinuate
it between the head and pot. Placing the other side of the pot against
an anvil he struck over the location of his finger a quick, heavy tap
with a hammer, and the pot fell to pieces. The little patient was much
exhausted by all his treatment and want of sleep, and, in fact, could
hardly have endured his situation much longer.
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