diff options
| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 01:38:21 -0700 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 01:38:21 -0700 |
| commit | da53002206f9bfdf1b9f72a7eb1a8d15cf3e25fe (patch) | |
| tree | 3df91f4dee9958c101bec1ffdb2a814dcb6c547c | |
| -rw-r--r-- | .gitattributes | 3 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-8.txt | 19451 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-8.zip | bin | 0 -> 348692 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h.zip | bin | 0 -> 6896742 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/21280-h.htm | 19978 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig1.jpg | bin | 0 -> 67833 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig10.jpg | bin | 0 -> 46075 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig11.jpg | bin | 0 -> 56745 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig12.jpg | bin | 0 -> 38042 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig13.jpg | bin | 0 -> 56293 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig14.jpg | bin | 0 -> 64457 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig15.jpg | bin | 0 -> 26839 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig16.jpg | bin | 0 -> 48385 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig17.jpg | bin | 0 -> 51838 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig18.jpg | bin | 0 -> 31359 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig19.jpg | bin | 0 -> 26003 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig2.jpg | bin | 0 -> 52896 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig20.jpg | bin | 0 -> 25338 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig21.jpg | bin | 0 -> 26689 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig22.jpg | bin | 0 -> 25096 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig23.jpg | bin | 0 -> 27275 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig24.jpg | bin | 0 -> 46664 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig25.jpg | bin | 0 -> 60566 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig25a.jpg | bin | 0 -> 39804 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig25b.jpg | bin | 0 -> 57066 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig26.jpg | bin | 0 -> 29412 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig27.jpg | bin | 0 -> 23741 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig28.jpg | bin | 0 -> 33590 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig29.jpg | bin | 0 -> 37316 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig3.jpg | bin | 0 -> 29370 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig30.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43877 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig31.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41239 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig32.jpg | bin | 0 -> 32959 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig33.jpg | bin | 0 -> 25089 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig34.jpg | bin | 0 -> 26995 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig35.jpg | bin | 0 -> 45114 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig36.jpg | bin | 0 -> 38256 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig37.jpg | bin | 0 -> 49136 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig38.jpg | bin | 0 -> 51061 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig39.jpg | bin | 0 -> 31213 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig4.jpg | bin | 0 -> 53079 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig40.jpg | bin | 0 -> 23832 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig41.jpg | bin | 0 -> 51158 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig42.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42888 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig43.jpg | bin | 0 -> 48358 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig44.jpg | bin | 0 -> 61380 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig45.jpg | bin | 0 -> 91021 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig46.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43177 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig47.jpg | bin | 0 -> 52516 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig48.jpg | bin | 0 -> 53703 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig49.jpg | bin | 0 -> 60411 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig5.jpg | bin | 0 -> 55212 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig50.jpg | bin | 0 -> 34006 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig51.jpg | bin | 0 -> 33104 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig52.jpg | bin | 0 -> 48375 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig53.jpg | bin | 0 -> 24871 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig53a.jpg | bin | 0 -> 22289 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig54.jpg | bin | 0 -> 34396 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig55.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43116 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig55a.jpg | bin | 0 -> 20873 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig56.jpg | bin | 0 -> 49348 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig57.jpg | bin | 0 -> 27731 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig58.jpg | bin | 0 -> 59714 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig59.jpg | bin | 0 -> 39715 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig6.jpg | bin | 0 -> 46861 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig60.jpg | bin | 0 -> 63465 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig61.jpg | bin | 0 -> 12320 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig62.jpg | bin | 0 -> 39761 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig63.jpg | bin | 0 -> 24954 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig64.jpg | bin | 0 -> 33861 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig65.jpg | bin | 0 -> 47295 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig66.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41886 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig67.jpg | bin | 0 -> 54082 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig68.jpg | bin | 0 -> 36338 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig69.jpg | bin | 0 -> 25458 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig7.jpg | bin | 0 -> 58999 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig70.jpg | bin | 0 -> 19328 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig71.jpg | bin | 0 -> 33614 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig72.jpg | bin | 0 -> 37567 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig73.jpg | bin | 0 -> 76301 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig74.jpg | bin | 0 -> 75418 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig75.jpg | bin | 0 -> 70270 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig76.jpg | bin | 0 -> 65085 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig77.jpg | bin | 0 -> 61898 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig78.jpg | bin | 0 -> 63603 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig79.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43112 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig8.jpg | bin | 0 -> 55798 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig80.jpg | bin | 0 -> 59256 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig81.jpg | bin | 0 -> 47937 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig82.jpg | bin | 0 -> 17770 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig83.jpg | bin | 0 -> 65078 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig84.jpg | bin | 0 -> 61824 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig85.jpg | bin | 0 -> 51679 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig86.jpg | bin | 0 -> 71011 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig87.jpg | bin | 0 -> 46989 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig88.jpg | bin | 0 -> 69478 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig89.jpg | bin | 0 -> 56983 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig9.jpg | bin | 0 -> 74613 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig90.jpg | bin | 0 -> 59942 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig91.jpg | bin | 0 -> 79511 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig92.jpg | bin | 0 -> 30358 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig93.jpg | bin | 0 -> 65346 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig94.jpg | bin | 0 -> 22157 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig95.jpg | bin | 0 -> 60832 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/fig96.jpg | bin | 0 -> 54013 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/frontispiece.jpg | bin | 0 -> 85534 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate1.jpg | bin | 0 -> 116518 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate10.jpg | bin | 0 -> 53393 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate11.jpg | bin | 0 -> 62870 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate12.jpg | bin | 0 -> 84221 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate13.jpg | bin | 0 -> 82455 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate14.jpg | bin | 0 -> 45418 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate15.jpg | bin | 0 -> 51808 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate16.jpg | bin | 0 -> 49238 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate17.jpg | bin | 0 -> 66749 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate18.jpg | bin | 0 -> 46737 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate19.jpg | bin | 0 -> 44717 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate2.jpg | bin | 0 -> 157645 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate20.jpg | bin | 0 -> 49987 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate21.jpg | bin | 0 -> 48354 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate22.jpg | bin | 0 -> 48196 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate23.jpg | bin | 0 -> 54786 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate24.jpg | bin | 0 -> 59161 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate25.jpg | bin | 0 -> 50917 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate3.jpg | bin | 0 -> 57448 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate4.jpg | bin | 0 -> 49441 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate5.jpg | bin | 0 -> 87343 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate6.jpg | bin | 0 -> 49648 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate7.jpg | bin | 0 -> 57476 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate8.jpg | bin | 0 -> 37736 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/plate9.jpg | bin | 0 -> 47905 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/tempchart1.jpg | bin | 0 -> 56798 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/tempchart2.jpg | bin | 0 -> 48591 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/tempchart3.jpg | bin | 0 -> 45020 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/tempchart4.jpg | bin | 0 -> 44290 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/tempchart5.jpg | bin | 0 -> 68448 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-h/images/tempchart6.jpg | bin | 0 -> 69652 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f001.png | bin | 0 -> 2128920 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f002.png | bin | 0 -> 50819 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f003.png | bin | 0 -> 41321 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f004.png | bin | 0 -> 81371 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f005.png | bin | 0 -> 69289 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f006.png | bin | 0 -> 56451 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f007.png | bin | 0 -> 47746 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f008.png | bin | 0 -> 58755 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f009.png | bin | 0 -> 22360 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f010.png | bin | 0 -> 70600 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f011.png | bin | 0 -> 49856 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f012.png | bin | 0 -> 90407 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/f013.png | bin | 0 -> 47600 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p001.png | bin | 0 -> 59536 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p002.png | bin | 0 -> 80105 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p003.png | bin | 0 -> 100180 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p004-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 186680 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p004.png | bin | 0 -> 105043 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p005-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 74605 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p005.png | bin | 0 -> 90084 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p006-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 100868 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p006.png | bin | 0 -> 80872 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p007-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 106120 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p007.png | bin | 0 -> 79001 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p008.png | bin | 0 -> 79131 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p009.png | bin | 0 -> 94121 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p010.png | bin | 0 -> 72455 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p011.png | bin | 0 -> 97227 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p012.png | bin | 0 -> 53076 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p013.png | bin | 0 -> 74669 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p014.png | bin | 0 -> 72455 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p015.png | bin | 0 -> 85703 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p016.png | bin | 0 -> 72326 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p017.png | bin | 0 -> 101595 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p018.png | bin | 0 -> 78042 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p019-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 285348 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p019.png | bin | 0 -> 101909 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p020-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 101251 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p020.png | bin | 0 -> 54020 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p021-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 152600 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p021.png | bin | 0 -> 106330 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p022-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 157591 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p022.png | bin | 0 -> 52694 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p023.png | bin | 0 -> 91610 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p024-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 184816 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p024.png | bin | 0 -> 100391 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p025-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 128641 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p025.png | bin | 0 -> 91488 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p026.png | bin | 0 -> 70761 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p027.png | bin | 0 -> 84454 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p028.png | bin | 0 -> 76622 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p029.png | bin | 0 -> 88796 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p030.png | bin | 0 -> 76591 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p031.png | bin | 0 -> 88778 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p032-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 136749 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p032.png | bin | 0 -> 53470 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p033-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 115450 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p033.png | bin | 0 -> 71161 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p034.png | bin | 0 -> 79243 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p035-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 145740 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p035.png | bin | 0 -> 120324 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p036.png | bin | 0 -> 78471 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p037.png | bin | 0 -> 87337 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p038.png | bin | 0 -> 75077 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p039.png | bin | 0 -> 67126 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p040.png | bin | 0 -> 58881 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p041.png | bin | 0 -> 77820 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p042.png | bin | 0 -> 79437 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p043.png | bin | 0 -> 71936 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p044.png | bin | 0 -> 77875 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p045.png | bin | 0 -> 78666 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p046.png | bin | 0 -> 79883 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p047-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 186782 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p047.png | bin | 0 -> 90838 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p048.png | bin | 0 -> 47737 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p049.png | bin | 0 -> 68292 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p050.png | bin | 0 -> 72695 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p051-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 123724 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p051.png | bin | 0 -> 63592 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p052.png | bin | 0 -> 76424 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p053.png | bin | 0 -> 76522 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p054.png | bin | 0 -> 73122 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p055.png | bin | 0 -> 56917 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p056.png | bin | 0 -> 88451 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p056a-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 92072 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p056b-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 114674 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p057-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 53093 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p057.png | bin | 0 -> 74319 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p058-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 60984 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p058.png | bin | 0 -> 67172 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p059.png | bin | 0 -> 60736 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p059a-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 56907 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p059b-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 60340 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p060.png | bin | 0 -> 76344 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p061-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 188699 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p061.png | bin | 0 -> 90535 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p062-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 110419 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p062.png | bin | 0 -> 71108 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p063.png | bin | 0 -> 78676 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p064-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 130330 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p064.png | bin | 0 -> 86871 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p065-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 169152 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p065.png | bin | 0 -> 59968 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p066.png | bin | 0 -> 81001 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p067.png | bin | 0 -> 78601 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p068.png | bin | 0 -> 80868 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p069.png | bin | 0 -> 77893 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p070.png | bin | 0 -> 78991 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p071.png | bin | 0 -> 77032 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p072-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 248471 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p072.png | bin | 0 -> 78913 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p073.png | bin | 0 -> 40255 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p074-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 85404 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p074.png | bin | 0 -> 68748 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p075.png | bin | 0 -> 78036 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p076-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 288167 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p076.png | bin | 0 -> 33406 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p077-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 143901 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p077.png | bin | 0 -> 77245 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p078.png | bin | 0 -> 79890 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p079.png | bin | 0 -> 75813 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p080.png | bin | 0 -> 77061 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p081.png | bin | 0 -> 72770 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p082-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 131832 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p082.png | bin | 0 -> 67837 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p083-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 27507 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p083.png | bin | 0 -> 74268 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p084-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 139852 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p084.png | bin | 0 -> 88665 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p085-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 94844 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p085.png | bin | 0 -> 74931 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p086.png | bin | 0 -> 73187 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p086a-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 44721 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p086b-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 82737 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p087-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 75456 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p087.png | bin | 0 -> 65996 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p088-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 47917 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p088.png | bin | 0 -> 75021 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p089-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 29228 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p089.png | bin | 0 -> 83057 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p090-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 67715 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p090.png | bin | 0 -> 64467 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p091-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 65453 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p091.png | bin | 0 -> 60943 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p092.png | bin | 0 -> 109551 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p092a-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 68207 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p092b-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 77705 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p093-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 44876 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p093.png | bin | 0 -> 75606 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p094.png | bin | 0 -> 94564 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p094a-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 41990 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p094b-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 69324 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p095-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 90694 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p095.png | bin | 0 -> 69080 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p096.png | bin | 0 -> 78549 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p097.png | bin | 0 -> 72924 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p098.jpg | bin | 0 -> 328031 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p099.png | bin | 0 -> 76033 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p100-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 150377 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p100.png | bin | 0 -> 78529 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p101.png | bin | 0 -> 77903 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p102-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 167488 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p102.png | bin | 0 -> 62420 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p103.png | bin | 0 -> 74479 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p104.png | bin | 0 -> 76139 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p105-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 85241 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p105.png | bin | 0 -> 69649 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p106.png | bin | 0 -> 78472 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p107.png | bin | 0 -> 75825 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p108.png | bin | 0 -> 80946 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p109.png | bin | 0 -> 75658 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p110.png | bin | 0 -> 77107 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p111.png | bin | 0 -> 35881 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p112.png | bin | 0 -> 59984 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p113.png | bin | 0 -> 76090 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p114.png | bin | 0 -> 75420 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p115.png | bin | 0 -> 78432 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p116.png | bin | 0 -> 78644 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p117.png | bin | 0 -> 77797 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p118.png | bin | 0 -> 78304 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p119-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 129380 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p119.png | bin | 0 -> 57648 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p120.png | bin | 0 -> 72477 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p121.png | bin | 0 -> 78067 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p122.png | bin | 0 -> 71039 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p123.png | bin | 0 -> 78453 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p124.png | bin | 0 -> 81587 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p125.png | bin | 0 -> 75330 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p126.png | bin | 0 -> 74869 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p127.png | bin | 0 -> 81804 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p128.png | bin | 0 -> 79643 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p129.png | bin | 0 -> 83243 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p130.png | bin | 0 -> 76903 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p131.png | bin | 0 -> 75583 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p132.png | bin | 0 -> 76856 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p133.png | bin | 0 -> 73730 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p134.png | bin | 0 -> 70039 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p135.png | bin | 0 -> 75017 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p136.png | bin | 0 -> 80133 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p137.png | bin | 0 -> 77464 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p138.png | bin | 0 -> 77790 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p139.png | bin | 0 -> 78087 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p140.png | bin | 0 -> 75951 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p141.png | bin | 0 -> 76540 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p142.png | bin | 0 -> 73030 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p143.png | bin | 0 -> 77733 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p144.png | bin | 0 -> 69396 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p145.png | bin | 0 -> 85619 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p146.png | bin | 0 -> 76354 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p147.png | bin | 0 -> 76511 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p148.png | bin | 0 -> 72998 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p149.png | bin | 0 -> 76642 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p150.png | bin | 0 -> 72518 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p151.png | bin | 0 -> 72986 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p152.png | bin | 0 -> 69994 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p153.png | bin | 0 -> 25823 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p154.png | bin | 0 -> 59309 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p155.png | bin | 0 -> 76675 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p156.jpg | bin | 0 -> 230666 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p157.png | bin | 0 -> 76006 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p158.jpg | bin | 0 -> 320669 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p159-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 181838 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p159.png | bin | 0 -> 71604 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p160.png | bin | 0 -> 77696 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p161-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 126272 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p161.png | bin | 0 -> 69883 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p162-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 301108 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p162.png | bin | 0 -> 17015 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p163.png | bin | 0 -> 82678 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p164-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 74241 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p164.png | bin | 0 -> 70234 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p165.png | bin | 0 -> 76829 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p166.png | bin | 0 -> 82087 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p167.png | bin | 0 -> 75623 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p168.png | bin | 0 -> 71830 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p169-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 78084 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p169.png | bin | 0 -> 84134 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p170.png | bin | 0 -> 77947 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p171.png | bin | 0 -> 78809 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p172.png | bin | 0 -> 79856 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p173.png | bin | 0 -> 77417 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p174.png | bin | 0 -> 82487 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p175.png | bin | 0 -> 79388 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p176.png | bin | 0 -> 79821 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p177.png | bin | 0 -> 75496 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p178-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 65360 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p178.png | bin | 0 -> 70049 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p179.png | bin | 0 -> 74977 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p180-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 36273 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p180-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 291192 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p180.png | bin | 0 -> 25410 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p181.png | bin | 0 -> 75418 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p182-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 230343 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p182.png | bin | 0 -> 26801 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p183.png | bin | 0 -> 77944 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p184-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 237202 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p184.png | bin | 0 -> 20105 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p185.png | bin | 0 -> 74064 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p186-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 276088 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p186.png | bin | 0 -> 14102 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p187-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 131544 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p187.png | bin | 0 -> 113407 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p188-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 294627 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p188.png | bin | 0 -> 18249 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p189.png | bin | 0 -> 76150 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p190-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 289328 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p190.png | bin | 0 -> 29927 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p191-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 178673 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p191.png | bin | 0 -> 71138 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p192-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 246606 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p192.png | bin | 0 -> 18916 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p193.png | bin | 0 -> 82690 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p194-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 300414 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p194.png | bin | 0 -> 16695 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p195.png | bin | 0 -> 79622 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p196-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 233256 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p196.png | bin | 0 -> 33759 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p197.png | bin | 0 -> 78769 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p198-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 227804 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p198.png | bin | 0 -> 19394 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p199.png | bin | 0 -> 87940 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p200-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 37952 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p200-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 285752 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p200.png | bin | 0 -> 14968 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p201.png | bin | 0 -> 77824 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p202-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 329412 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p202.png | bin | 0 -> 23922 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p203.png | bin | 0 -> 80520 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p204-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 250478 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p204.png | bin | 0 -> 34391 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p205.png | bin | 0 -> 76867 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p206-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 312992 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p206.png | bin | 0 -> 7477 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p207.png | bin | 0 -> 77344 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p208-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 283220 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p208.png | bin | 0 -> 10475 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p209-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 172849 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p209.png | bin | 0 -> 53894 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p210-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 267634 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p210.png | bin | 0 -> 18622 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p211.png | bin | 0 -> 78503 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p212-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 225059 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p212.png | bin | 0 -> 18572 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p213.png | bin | 0 -> 80175 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p214-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 239383 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p214.png | bin | 0 -> 27513 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p215.png | bin | 0 -> 73776 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p216-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 250353 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p216.png | bin | 0 -> 11171 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p217.png | bin | 0 -> 84071 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p218-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 264721 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p218.png | bin | 0 -> 16227 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p219-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 52093 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p219.png | bin | 0 -> 77176 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p220-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 251005 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p220.png | bin | 0 -> 10549 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p221.png | bin | 0 -> 75707 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p222-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 138871 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p222.png | bin | 0 -> 57680 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p223.png | bin | 0 -> 97666 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p224.png | bin | 0 -> 55119 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p225.png | bin | 0 -> 74260 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p226.png | bin | 0 -> 75155 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p227.png | bin | 0 -> 74639 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p228.png | bin | 0 -> 75086 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p229.png | bin | 0 -> 67165 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p230.png | bin | 0 -> 74627 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p231.png | bin | 0 -> 78799 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p232.png | bin | 0 -> 74195 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p233.png | bin | 0 -> 78472 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p234.png | bin | 0 -> 80987 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p235.png | bin | 0 -> 85311 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p236.png | bin | 0 -> 72979 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p237-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 98172 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p237.png | bin | 0 -> 94426 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p238.png | bin | 0 -> 78663 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p239.png | bin | 0 -> 83386 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p240.png | bin | 0 -> 26073 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p241.png | bin | 0 -> 67502 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p242.png | bin | 0 -> 76937 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p243.png | bin | 0 -> 78572 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p244-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 184274 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p244.png | bin | 0 -> 69422 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p245-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43720 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p245.png | bin | 0 -> 71271 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p246.png | bin | 0 -> 74233 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p247.png | bin | 0 -> 74792 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p248.png | bin | 0 -> 74205 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p249.png | bin | 0 -> 76476 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p250.png | bin | 0 -> 71472 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p251.png | bin | 0 -> 77267 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p252-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 43030 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p252.png | bin | 0 -> 87125 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p253-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 26721 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p253.png | bin | 0 -> 78326 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p254.png | bin | 0 -> 77051 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p255-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 105126 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p255.png | bin | 0 -> 74673 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p256-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 66061 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p256.png | bin | 0 -> 55467 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p257-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 115170 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p257.png | bin | 0 -> 82101 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p258-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 117158 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p258.png | bin | 0 -> 54085 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p259-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 90764 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p259.png | bin | 0 -> 83695 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p260.png | bin | 0 -> 65447 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p260a-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 52960 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p260b-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 34970 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p261.png | bin | 0 -> 79914 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p261a-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 37673 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p261b-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 40250 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p262.png | bin | 0 -> 77594 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p263.png | bin | 0 -> 86368 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p264.png | bin | 0 -> 87361 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p265.png | bin | 0 -> 75840 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p266.png | bin | 0 -> 75810 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p267.png | bin | 0 -> 83596 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p268.png | bin | 0 -> 73085 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p269.png | bin | 0 -> 80370 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p270.png | bin | 0 -> 77150 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p271.png | bin | 0 -> 83984 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p272.png | bin | 0 -> 78810 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p273.png | bin | 0 -> 85941 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p274.png | bin | 0 -> 84602 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p275.png | bin | 0 -> 91961 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p276.png | bin | 0 -> 72294 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p277.png | bin | 0 -> 84200 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p278.png | bin | 0 -> 76035 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p279.jpg | bin | 0 -> 272989 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p280.png | bin | 0 -> 76695 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p281.jpg | bin | 0 -> 284028 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p282.png | bin | 0 -> 75261 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p283.jpg | bin | 0 -> 271929 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p284.png | bin | 0 -> 76961 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p285.png | bin | 0 -> 79626 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p286.png | bin | 0 -> 71875 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p287.png | bin | 0 -> 85407 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p288.png | bin | 0 -> 78849 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p289.png | bin | 0 -> 83127 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p290.png | bin | 0 -> 77598 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p291.png | bin | 0 -> 81387 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p292.png | bin | 0 -> 79586 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p293.png | bin | 0 -> 82371 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p294.png | bin | 0 -> 75264 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p295.png | bin | 0 -> 81076 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p296.png | bin | 0 -> 78142 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p297.png | bin | 0 -> 81981 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p298.png | bin | 0 -> 73620 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p299.png | bin | 0 -> 73839 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p300.png | bin | 0 -> 71599 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p301.png | bin | 0 -> 77916 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p302.png | bin | 0 -> 74740 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p303.png | bin | 0 -> 76400 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p304.png | bin | 0 -> 75022 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p305.png | bin | 0 -> 77765 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p306.png | bin | 0 -> 79507 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p307.png | bin | 0 -> 77996 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p308.png | bin | 0 -> 71128 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p309.png | bin | 0 -> 77305 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p310.png | bin | 0 -> 75691 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p311.png | bin | 0 -> 76691 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p312.png | bin | 0 -> 71453 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p313.png | bin | 0 -> 48371 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p314.png | bin | 0 -> 59991 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p315.png | bin | 0 -> 84191 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p316.png | bin | 0 -> 74874 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p317.png | bin | 0 -> 79578 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p318.png | bin | 0 -> 78553 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p319.png | bin | 0 -> 78423 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p320.png | bin | 0 -> 73850 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p321.png | bin | 0 -> 83884 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p322.png | bin | 0 -> 75521 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p323.png | bin | 0 -> 82423 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p324.png | bin | 0 -> 78380 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p325.png | bin | 0 -> 79585 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p326.png | bin | 0 -> 82212 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p327.png | bin | 0 -> 80396 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p328.png | bin | 0 -> 79634 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p329.png | bin | 0 -> 77622 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p330.png | bin | 0 -> 82077 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p331.png | bin | 0 -> 79869 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p332.png | bin | 0 -> 80587 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p333-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 92624 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p333.png | bin | 0 -> 76895 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p334-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 132239 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p334.png | bin | 0 -> 86629 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p335.png | bin | 0 -> 81111 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p336.png | bin | 0 -> 84835 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p337.png | bin | 0 -> 79740 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p338.png | bin | 0 -> 80933 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p339.png | bin | 0 -> 77588 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p340.png | bin | 0 -> 74282 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p341.png | bin | 0 -> 66139 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p342.png | bin | 0 -> 78222 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p343.png | bin | 0 -> 80403 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p344.png | bin | 0 -> 82026 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p345.png | bin | 0 -> 78094 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p346.png | bin | 0 -> 80888 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p347.png | bin | 0 -> 76438 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p348.png | bin | 0 -> 78408 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p349.png | bin | 0 -> 71954 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p350.png | bin | 0 -> 79617 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p351.png | bin | 0 -> 82210 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p352.png | bin | 0 -> 75973 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p353.png | bin | 0 -> 81604 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p354.png | bin | 0 -> 77408 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p355.png | bin | 0 -> 81416 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p356.png | bin | 0 -> 76130 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p357.png | bin | 0 -> 76228 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p358.png | bin | 0 -> 75901 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p359.png | bin | 0 -> 83746 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p360.png | bin | 0 -> 76657 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p361.png | bin | 0 -> 81735 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p362.png | bin | 0 -> 73915 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p363.png | bin | 0 -> 83428 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p364.png | bin | 0 -> 87881 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p365.png | bin | 0 -> 78106 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p366.png | bin | 0 -> 79704 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p367.png | bin | 0 -> 83941 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p368.png | bin | 0 -> 81391 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p369.png | bin | 0 -> 86970 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p370.png | bin | 0 -> 85896 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p371.png | bin | 0 -> 74030 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p372.png | bin | 0 -> 77200 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p373.png | bin | 0 -> 30211 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p374.png | bin | 0 -> 62442 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p375.png | bin | 0 -> 80971 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p376.png | bin | 0 -> 74937 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p377-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 101399 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p377.png | bin | 0 -> 89004 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p378.png | bin | 0 -> 76176 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p379.png | bin | 0 -> 81449 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p380.png | bin | 0 -> 85854 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p381-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 31969 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p381.png | bin | 0 -> 72015 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p382.png | bin | 0 -> 80354 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p383.png | bin | 0 -> 84383 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p384.png | bin | 0 -> 79498 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p385.png | bin | 0 -> 80266 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p386.png | bin | 0 -> 74806 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p387.png | bin | 0 -> 83505 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p388.png | bin | 0 -> 77629 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p389.png | bin | 0 -> 82471 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p390.png | bin | 0 -> 82393 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p391.png | bin | 0 -> 84406 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p392-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 177523 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p392.png | bin | 0 -> 118362 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p393.png | bin | 0 -> 81420 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p394.png | bin | 0 -> 77546 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p395-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 104895 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p395.png | bin | 0 -> 72721 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p396.png | bin | 0 -> 72542 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p397.png | bin | 0 -> 81942 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p398.png | bin | 0 -> 76340 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p399.png | bin | 0 -> 79022 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p400.png | bin | 0 -> 69802 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p401.png | bin | 0 -> 81843 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p402-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 157213 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p402.png | bin | 0 -> 66298 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p403-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 124352 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p403.png | bin | 0 -> 72332 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p404-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 133663 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p404.png | bin | 0 -> 66716 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p405-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 128156 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p405.png | bin | 0 -> 69120 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p406.png | bin | 0 -> 32391 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p407.png | bin | 0 -> 64163 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p408.png | bin | 0 -> 81455 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p409-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 187047 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p409.png | bin | 0 -> 68861 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p410.png | bin | 0 -> 79025 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p411.png | bin | 0 -> 78445 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p412.png | bin | 0 -> 79608 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p413.png | bin | 0 -> 74761 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p414.png | bin | 0 -> 79011 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p415.png | bin | 0 -> 75928 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p416-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 116613 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p416.png | bin | 0 -> 63634 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p417-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 110869 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p417.png | bin | 0 -> 64781 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p418-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 221786 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p418.png | bin | 0 -> 61628 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p419-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 154987 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p419.png | bin | 0 -> 63740 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p420.png | bin | 0 -> 75327 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p421-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 250193 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p421.png | bin | 0 -> 68858 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p422.png | bin | 0 -> 77270 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p423.png | bin | 0 -> 76358 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p424.png | bin | 0 -> 71831 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p425.png | bin | 0 -> 76779 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p426.png | bin | 0 -> 82464 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p427.png | bin | 0 -> 72309 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p428.png | bin | 0 -> 74258 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p429.png | bin | 0 -> 77944 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p430.png | bin | 0 -> 78760 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p431.png | bin | 0 -> 79810 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p432.png | bin | 0 -> 78572 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p433.png | bin | 0 -> 79724 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p434.png | bin | 0 -> 78574 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p435.png | bin | 0 -> 82569 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p436.png | bin | 0 -> 76683 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p437.png | bin | 0 -> 74123 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p438.png | bin | 0 -> 79894 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p439.png | bin | 0 -> 83405 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p440.png | bin | 0 -> 80328 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p441.png | bin | 0 -> 81803 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p442.png | bin | 0 -> 80328 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p443.png | bin | 0 -> 84794 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p444.png | bin | 0 -> 75537 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p445.png | bin | 0 -> 79792 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p446.png | bin | 0 -> 81023 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p447.png | bin | 0 -> 58825 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p448.png | bin | 0 -> 74539 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p449.png | bin | 0 -> 73614 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p450.png | bin | 0 -> 76692 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p451.png | bin | 0 -> 79766 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p452.png | bin | 0 -> 76005 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p453.png | bin | 0 -> 79097 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p454.png | bin | 0 -> 78033 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p455.png | bin | 0 -> 77076 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p456.png | bin | 0 -> 75381 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p457.png | bin | 0 -> 79376 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p458.png | bin | 0 -> 77182 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p459.png | bin | 0 -> 81696 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p460.png | bin | 0 -> 80413 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p461.png | bin | 0 -> 73592 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p462.png | bin | 0 -> 78039 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p463.png | bin | 0 -> 82924 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p464.png | bin | 0 -> 83038 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p465.png | bin | 0 -> 77479 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p466.png | bin | 0 -> 75920 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p467.png | bin | 0 -> 71008 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p468.png | bin | 0 -> 77268 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p469.png | bin | 0 -> 77283 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p470.png | bin | 0 -> 73528 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p471.png | bin | 0 -> 73993 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p472.png | bin | 0 -> 68575 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p473.png | bin | 0 -> 33982 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p474.png | bin | 0 -> 55446 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p475-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 500748 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p475.png | bin | 0 -> 101640 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p476.png | bin | 0 -> 77843 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p477-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 317261 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p477.png | bin | 0 -> 78284 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p478.png | bin | 0 -> 77540 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p479-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 159263 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p479.png | bin | 0 -> 60955 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p480-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 287618 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p480.png | bin | 0 -> 87431 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p481-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 42444 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p481.png | bin | 0 -> 70652 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p482-insert.jpg | bin | 0 -> 250009 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p482.png | bin | 0 -> 7721 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p483-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 126000 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p483.png | bin | 0 -> 76900 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p484.png | bin | 0 -> 75887 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p485-image.jpg | bin | 0 -> 114705 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p485.png | bin | 0 -> 68233 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p486.png | bin | 0 -> 35712 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p487.png | bin | 0 -> 42486 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p488.png | bin | 0 -> 66174 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p489.png | bin | 0 -> 57644 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p490.png | bin | 0 -> 63595 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p491.png | bin | 0 -> 59813 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p492.png | bin | 0 -> 65517 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280-page-images/p493.png | bin | 0 -> 24350 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280.txt | 19451 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | 21280.zip | bin | 0 -> 348660 bytes | |||
| -rw-r--r-- | LICENSE.txt | 11 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | README.md | 2 |
769 files changed, 58896 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/21280-8.txt b/21280-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..57cfcde --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,19451 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Surgical Experiences in South Africa, +1899-1900, by George Henry Makins + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Surgical Experiences in South Africa, 1899-1900 + Being Mainly a Clinical Study of the Nature and Effects + of Injuries Produced by Bullets of Small Calibre + +Author: George Henry Makins + +Release Date: May 3, 2007 [EBook #21280] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SURGICAL EXPERIENCES *** + + + + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Josephine Paolucci and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + +[Illustration: FRONTISPIECE. + +Photo, H. KISCH Ladysmith. Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, +Ltd.] + + + + +SURGICAL EXPERIENCES + +IN + +SOUTH AFRICA + +1899-1900 + +BEING MAINLY A CLINICAL STUDY OF THE NATURE AND EFFECTS OF INJURIES +PRODUCED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE + + +BY + +GEORGE HENRY MAKINS, F.R.C.S. + +SURGEON TO ST. THOMAS'S HOSPITAL, LONDON +JOINT LECTURER ON SURGERY IN THE MEDICAL SCHOOL OF ST. THOMAS'S HOSPITAL +MEMBER OF THE COURT OF EXAMINERS OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF +SURGEONS OF ENGLAND, AND LATE ONE OF THE CONSULTING SURGEONS +TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN FIELD FORCE + + +LONDON +SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 WATERLOO PLACE +1901 + + + + +TO + +SURGEON-GENERAL W. D. WILSON + +PRINCIPAL MEDICAL OFFICER TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN FIELD FORCE + +THE MEMBERS OF THE ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS +EMPLOYED IN SOUTH AFRICA + +AND TO THE + +CIVIL SURGEONS TEMPORARILY ATTACHED TO THAT CORPS + +These Experiences are Dedicated + +AS AN EXPRESSION OF APPRECIATION +OF THE INVARIABLE KINDNESS AND SYMPATHY EXTENDED +TO THE AUTHOR +WITHOUT WHICH THE BOOK COULD NOT +HAVE BEEN WRITTEN + + + + +PREFACE + + +A word of explanation is perhaps necessary as to the form in which these +experiences have been put together. The matter was originally collected +with the object of sending a series of articles to the _British Medical +Journal_. Various circumstances, however, of which the chief was the +feeling that extending experience altered in many cases the views +adopted at first sight, prevented the original intention from being +carried into execution, and the articles, considerably expanded, are now +published together. + +As to the illustrative cases introduced in support of various statements +made in the text, only those have been chosen from my notes which were +under my own observation for a considerable time, and many of these have +been brought up to date since my return to England. I have, as a rule, +avoided the inclusion of cases seen cursorily, and few simple ones have +been quoted since their character is sufficiently indicated in the text. +These remarks seem necessary since the mode of selection has resulted in +the inclusion of a number of cases of exceptional severity, and any +attempt to draw statistical conclusions from them would be most +misleading. + +The first two chapters have been added with a view to affording some +information, first, as to the conditions under which a great part of the +surgical work was done, and, secondly, as to the mechanism and causation +of the injuries, which would not readily be at hand in the case of the +general surgical reader. For much of the information contained in +Chapter II. I must express my indebtedness to the work of MM. Nimier and +Laval, so frequently quoted. + +The only other object of this Preface is to express my thanks to the +many who have aided me in the task of amplifying the observations on +which the articles are founded, and I think no writer ever received more +sympathetic and kindly help in such particulars than the author. + +My first thanks, those due to the Members of the Royal Army Medical +Corps, I endeavour to express by the dedication of this volume. Any +attempt to make individual acknowledgment to either the Members of the +Service, or to the Civil Surgeons temporarily attached, would be +impossible. I have, however, tried to associate the names of many of +those in charge of cases in the recital of histories and treatment +throughout. + +My thanks are not less due to the Military Heads of Departments at the +War Office, who have helped me in the collection of details as to the +subsequent course of many of the cases described, and in the acquisition +of information regarding the weapons and ammunition treated of. I should +particularly express my gratitude to Colonel Robb, of the +Adjutant-General's Department, and Colonel Montgomery, of the Ordnance +Department. + +I am greatly indebted to my former colleague Mr. Cheatle for two of the +illustrations of wounds, and for permission to quote some of his other +experience, and to Mr. Henry Catling, to whose skill I owe the majority +of the skiagrams of the fractures under my observation at Wynberg and +elsewhere. + +I must also express my thanks to Mr. Danielsson and his artist, Mr. +Ford, for the trouble they have taken in converting my rough sketches +into the illustrations contained in the volume. + +Lastly, my warmest gratitude is due to my friends, Mr. Cuthbert Wallace, +who has read some of my chapters, and to Mr. F. C. Abbott, who has read +the whole book for the press and suggested many improvements and +modifications. + +47 CHARLES STREET, BERKELEY SQUARE, W. + +_February_ 1901. + + + + +CONTENTS + + + PAGE +CHAPTER I + +INTRODUCTORY + +Itinerary--Surgical outfit--Personal transport--General health of the +troops--Climate--Consideration of the number of men killed and +wounded--Transport of the wounded--Vehicles--Trains--Ships--Hospitals 1 + + +CHAPTER II + +MODERN MILITARY RIFLES AND THEIR ACTION + +General type--Calibre, length, and weight of +bullet--Velocity--Trajectory--Revolution--Varieties of rifle in common +use by the Boers--Penetration--Comparison of bullets--Use of +wax--Comparative efficiency of different types 40 + + +CHAPTER III + +GENERAL CHARACTERS OF WOUNDS INFLICTED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE + +Type wounds--Nature of external apertures--Direct course of wound +track--Multiple wounds--Small bore and sharp localisation of +tracks--Clinical course--Mode of healing--Suppuration--Wounds of irregular +type--Ricochet--Mauser bullet--Lee-Metford bullet--Expanding bullets--Altered +bullets--Large sporting bullets--Symptoms--Psychical disturbance and +shock--Local shock--Pain--Hæmorrhage--Diagnosis--Prognosis--Treatment 55 + +CHAPTER IV + +INJURIES TO THE BLOOD VESSELS + +Nature of lesions; contusion, laceration, perforation--Results of +injuries--Primary hæmorrhage--Recurrent hæmorrhage--Secondary +hæmorrhage--Treatment of hæmorrhage--Traumatic aneurisms--Arterial +hæmatoma--True traumatic aneurism--Aneurismal varix and varicose +aneurism--Conditions affecting development--Effects of aneurismal varix +or varicose aneurism on the general circulation--Prognosis and treatment +of aneurismal varix--Prognosis and treatment of varicose +aneurism--Gangrene after ligation of arteries 112 + + +CHAPTER V + +INJURIES TO THE BONES OF THE LIMBS + +Nature of wounds--Explosive wounds--Types of fracture of shafts +of long bones--Stellate, wedge, notch, oblique, transverse, +perforating--Fractures by old types of bullet--Lesions of the short and +flat bones--Special character of the symptoms in gunshot fracture, and +of the course of healing--Prognosis--Treatment--Special fractures--Upper +extremity--Pelvis--Lower extremity 154 + + +CHAPTER VI + +INJURIES TO THE JOINTS + +General character--Vibration synovitis--Wounds of +joints--Classification--Course and symptoms--General treatment--Special +joints 225 + + +CHAPTER VII + +INJURIES TO THE HEAD AND NECK + +Anatomical lesions--Scalp wounds--Fracture of the skull without evidence +of gross lesion of the brain--Fractures with concurrent brain +injury--Classification--General injuries--Effect of ricochet--Vertical +or coronal wounds in frontal region--Glancing or oblique wounds of any +region--Gutter fractures--Superficial perforating fractures--Fractures +of the base--Symptoms of fracture of the skull, with concurrent injury +to the brain--Concussion--Compression--Irritation--Frontal +injuries--Fronto-parietal and parietal injuries--Occipital +injuries--Forms of hemianopsia--Abscess of the brain--General +diagnosis--General prognosis--Traumatic epilepsy--General +treatment--Wounds of the head not involving the brain--Mastoid +process--Orbit--Globe of the eye--Nose--Malar bone--Upper +jaw--Mandible--Wounds of the neck--Wounds of the pharynx, larynx, and +trachea 241 + + +CHAPTER VIII + +INJURIES TO THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN AND SPINAL CORD + +Fractures in their relation to nerve injury--Transverse +processes--Spinous processes--Centra--Signs of fracture of +the vertebra--Injuries to the spinal cord--Effects of high +velocity--Concussion, slight, severe--Contusion--Hæmorrhage, +extra-medullary, hæmatomyelia--Symptoms of injury to the spinal +cord--Concussion--Hæmorrhage--Total transverse lesion--Diagnosis of form +of lesion--Prognosis--Treatment 314 + + +CHAPTER IX + +INJURIES TO THE PERIPHERAL NERVES + +Anatomical lesions--Concussion--Contusion--Division or +laceration--Secondary implication of the nerve--Symptoms of nerve +injury--Traumatic neuritis--Scar implication--Ascending +neuritis--Traumatic neurosis--Injuries to special nerves--Cranial +nerves--Cervical, brachial, lumbar, and sacral plexuses--Cases of nerve +injury--General prognosis and treatment 341 + + +CHAPTER X + +INJURIES TO THE CHEST + +Non-penetrating wounds of the chest wall--Penetrating wounds, special +characters of entrance and exit apertures--Fracture of the ribs, +symptoms, treatment--Wounds of the diaphragm--Wounds of the +heart--Wounds of the lung, symptoms--Pneumothorax--Hæmothorax-- +Empyema--Diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of hæmothorax--Cases +of hæmothorax 374 + + +CHAPTER XI + +INJURIES TO THE ABDOMEN + +Introductory remarks--Wounds of the abdominal wall--Penetration of +the intestinal area without definite evidence of visceral injury--Wounds +of explosive character--Anatomical characters of intestinal wounds--Wounds +of the mesentery---Wounds of the omentum--Results of intestinal +wounds, fæcal extravasation, peritoneal infection, septicæmia--Reasons +for the escape of severe injury in wounds traversing the +abdomen--Wounds of the stomach--Wounds of the small intestine--Wounds +of the large intestine--Prognosis in intestinal injuries--Treatment +of intestinal injuries--Wounds of the urinary bladder--Wounds +of the kidney--Wounds of the liver--Wounds of the spleen--General +remarks on the prognosis in abdominal injuries--Wounds of +the external genital organs--Wounds of the urethra 407 + + +CHAPTER XII + +ON SHELL WOUNDS + +Varieties of shells employed--Large shells--Wounds produced by different +varieties--Pom-Pom shells--Wounds produced by fragments and +fuses--Shrapnel--Boer segment shells--Leaden shrapnel bullets--Treatment +of shell wounds 474 + + +INDEX OF CONTENTS 487 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + +_PLATES_ + +VARIETIES OF AMMUNITION COLLECTED AT LADYSMITH _Frontispiece_ + + 1. SECTION OF MAUSER APERTURE OF ENTRY _To face p._ 73 + + 2. SECTION OF MAUSER APERTURE OF EXIT 76 + + 3. PUNCTURED FRACTURE OF CLAVICLE 162 + + 4. COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF SHAFT OF HUMERUS 180 + + 5. COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF HUMERUS ACCOMPANIED BY AN + EXPLOSIVE EXIT 182 + + 6. COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF HUMERUS DUE TO OBLIQUE IMPACT 184 + + 7. SAME FRACTURE HEALED 186 + + 8. LOW VELOCITY FRACTURE OF HUMERUS WITH RETAINED + BULLET 188 + + 9. LOCALISED FRACTURE OF HUMERUS SHOWING FRAGMENTATION OF + THE BULLET 190 + +10. WEDGE-SHAPED FRACTURE OF THE RADIUS 192 + +11. FRACTURE OF THE METACARPUS, SHOWING FRAGMENTATION OF + THE BULLET 194 + +12. FINELY COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR 196 + +13. THE SAME FRACTURE HEALED 198 + +14. STELLATE 'BUTTERFLY' FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR 200 + +15. LATERAL IMPACT OF BULLET, WITH COMMINUTION OF + THE FEMUR 202 + +16. RECTANGULAR IMPACT OF BULLET, WITH HIGHLY OBLIQUE + LINE OF FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR 204 + +17. PUNCTURED FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR WITH EXIT + BONE-FLAP 206 + +18. FRACTURED PATELLA 208 + +19. OBLIQUE COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA 210 + +20. TRANSVERSE FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA 212 + +21. PUNCTURE OF THE TIBIA, WITH AN OBLIQUE FISSURE 214 + +22. NOTCHED FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA 216 + +23. PUNCTURED FRACTURE OF THE FIBULA 218 + +24. THE SAME FRACTURE, LATERAL VIEW 220 + +25. VICKERS-MAXIM FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS 482 + + +_IN THE TEXT_ + +FIG. PAGE + 1. LINEN HOLD-ALL WITH INSTRUMENTS 4 + + 2. INSTRUMENT HOLD-ALL ROLLED FOR PACKING 5 + + 3. TIN WATER-BOTTLE FOR EMERGENCY OPERATIONS 6 + + 4. BUGGY ON THE VELDT 7 + + 5. MCCORMACK-BROOK WHEELED STRETCHER CARRIAGE 19 + + 6. INDIAN TONGA 20 + + 7. SERVICE AMBULANCE WAGON 21 + + 8. BUCK-WAGON LOADED WITH WOUNDED MEN 22 + + 9. INTERIOR OF A WAGON OF NO. 2 HOSPITAL TRAIN 24 + +10. P. & O. HOSPITAL SHIP 'SIMLA' 25 + +11. TYPE OF GENERAL HOSPITAL 32 + +12. TYPE OF TORTOISE TENT HOSPITAL 33 + +13. SINGLE TORTOISE HOSPITAL TENT 35 + +14. FIVE TYPES OF CARTRIDGE IN COMMON USE DURING THE WAR 47 + +15. SECTIONS OF FOUR BULLETS TO SHOW RELATIVE THICKNESS + OF MANTLES 51 + +16. ENTRY AND EXIT MAUSER WOUNDS 56 + +17. GUTTER WOUND OF SHOULDER 56 + +18. OBLIQUE GUTTER EXIT WOUND 57 + +19. OVAL ENTRY, STARRED EXIT WOUNDS 58 + +20. CIRCULAR ENTRY, SLIT EXIT WOUNDS 59 + +21. CIRCULAR ENTRY, STARRED EXIT WOUNDS 59 + +22. ENTRY AND EXIT WOUNDS IN SIX SUCCESSIVE SPOTS MADE + BY SAME BULLET 61 + +23. FOUR SUCCESSIVE ENTRY AND EXIT WOUNDS OF SAME + BULLET 62 + +24. SUPERFICIAL ABDOMINO-THORACIC TRACK 64 + +25. SUPERFICIAL LINEAR ECCHYMOSIS OF THIGH 65 + +25_a_. SECTIONS OF MAUSER ENTRY AND EXIT WOUNDS 74 + +25_b_. PROLAPSED OMENTUM 77 + +26. SECTIONS OF FOUR BULLETS 82 + +27. NORMAL MAUSER BULLET 83 + +28. FOUR MAUSER RICOCHETS 84 + +29. MAUSER RICOCHET, DISC FORM 85 + +30. FISSURED MAUSER MANTLE 86 + +31. MAUSERS DEFORMED BY IMPACT ON FEMUR 86 + +32. APICAL MAUSER RICOCHET 87 + +33. SPIRAL RICOCHET 88 + +34. NORMAL LEE-METFORD BULLET 89 + +35. APICAL LEE-METFORD RICOCHETS 90 + +36. " " " 91 + +37. FOUR TYPES OF SOFT-NOSED BULLETS 92 + +38. 'SET-UP' SOFT-NOSED LEE-METFORD BULLETS 92 + +39. FLATTENED, SOLID-BASED MANTLE FROM RICOCHET 93 + +40. MAUSER BULLET, JEFFREYS-TWEEDIE MODIFICATION 94 + +41. SECTION OF MARK IV. AND SOFT-NOSED MAUSER 94 + +42. TAMPERED BULLETS 95 + +43. LARGE LEADEN SPORTING BULLETS 98 + +44. EXPLOSIVE WOUND OF BACK 100 + +45. DEAD MEN ON FIELD OF BATTLE 102 + +46. FLATTENED LEADEN CORES FROM MANTLED BULLETS 105 + +47. EXPLOSIVE EXIT WOUND OVER FRACTURED ULNA 156 + +48. EXPLOSIVE EXIT WOUND OVER FRACTURED HUMERUS 158 + +49. EXPLOSIVE EXIT AND ENTRY WOUNDS OF LEGS 159 + +50. TYPES OF GUNSHOT FRACTURE 161 + +51. LOWER END OF FRACTURED FEMUR 164 + +52. OBLIQUE PERFORATION OF FEMUR, SEPARATION OF FRAGMENT + AT EXIT APERTURE IN BONE 169 + +53. GUTTER FRACTURE OF HEAD OF HUMERUS 178 + +53_a._ DIAGRAM OF 'BUTTERFLY' TYPE 180 + +54. WIRE GAUZE SPLINT 187 + +55. GUTTER FRACTURE OF PELVIS 191 + +55_a_. DIAGRAM OF 'BUTTERFLY' TYPE 200 + +56. CANE FIELD SPLINT FOR LOWER EXTREMITY 209 + +57. TUNNEL FRACTURE AT SURFACE OF TIBIA 219 + +58. CANE FIELD SPLINT FOR LEG 222 + +59. SKIAGRAM OF INJURY TO INTERPHALANGEAL JOINT 237 + +60. SKIAGRAM OF BULLET IN NASAL FOSSA 244 + +61. DIAGRAM OF APERTURE OF ENTRY INTO CRANIUM 245 + +62. APERTURE OF ENTRY INTO FRONTAL BONE 252 + +63. FRAGMENT OF INNER TABLE DISPLACED FROM OPENING SEEN + IN FIG. 62 253 + +64. GUTTER FRACTURE OF FIRST DEGREE IN PARIETAL BONE 255 + +65. DIAGRAM OF GUTTER FRACTURES 256 + +66. GUTTER FRACTURE OF SECOND DEGREE IN PARIETAL BONE 257 + +67. DIAGRAMS OF GUTTER FRACTURES 258 + +68. SUPERFICIAL PERFORATING FRACTURE OF PARIETAL REGION 259 + +69. DIAGRAM OF SUPERFICIAL PERFORATING FRACTURE 260 + +70. FRAGMENT FORMING FLOOR OF TEMPORAL GUTTER FRACTURE 260 + +71. SCALE OF EXTERNAL TABLE IN LOW VELOCITY INJURY OF + FRONTAL BONE 261 + +72. FRONTAL PERFORATION, APERTURE OF EXIT 261 + +73. VISUAL FIELD IN OCCIPITAL INJURY 279 + +74. " " " 279 + +75. " " " 281 + +76. " " " 281 + +77. " " " 283 + +78. " " " 283 + +79. CONTUSED SPINAL CORD 333 + +80. DIVIDED SPINAL CORD 334 + +81. SUPERFICIAL TRACK IN ANTERIOR BODY-WALL 377 + +82. SPIRALLY GROOVED BULLET 381 + +83. ECCHYMOSIS IN FRACTURED RIBS WITH HÆMOTHORAX 392 + +84. SUBCUTANEOUS DIVISION OF ABDOMINAL MUSCLES 409 + +85. LATERAL INCOMPLETE WOUND OF SMALL INTESTINE. SLIT + FORM 416 + +86. LATERAL PERFORATION OF SMALL INTESTINE. GUTTER FORM 417 + +87. ENTRY AND EXIT WOUNDS IN A TRANSVERSE PERFORATION OF + INTESTINE 418 + +88. INNER ASPECT OF PIECE OF INTESTINE SHOWN IN FIG. 87 419 + +89. IMPACTION OF OMENTUM IN EXIT WOUND OF ABDOMINAL WALL 421 + +90. FRAGMENTS OF LARGE SHELLS 475 + +91. FRAGMENTS OF PERCUSSION AND TIME FUSES 477 + +92. COMPLETE 1-LB. POM-POM SHELL 479 + +93. FRAGMENTS OF EXPLODED POM-POM SHELLS 480 + +94. PERCUSSION FUSE FROM 1-LB. POM-POM SHELL 481 + +95. FRAGMENTS OF BOER SEGMENT SHELLS 483 + +96. NORMAL AND DEFORMED LEADEN SHRAPNEL BULLETS 485 + + +_TEMPERATURE CHARTS_ + +1. CASE OF AXILLARY HÆMATOMA, BLOOD TEMPERATURE 119 + +2. CASE OF HÆMOTHORAX WITH RECURRENT HÆMORRHAGES 395 + +3. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY RISES OF TEMPERATURE IN HÆMOTHORAX, + RECOVERING SPONTANEOUSLY 402 + +4. SECONDARY RISE OF TEMPERATURE IN HÆMOTHORAX 403 + +5. FALLS OF TEMPERATURE IN HÆMOTHORAX FOLLOWING PARACENTESIS 404 + +6. SECONDARY HÆMOTHORAX, SPONTANEOUS FALL OF TEMPERATURE 405 + + + + +SURGICAL EXPERIENCES + +IN + +SOUTH AFRICA + + + + +CHAPTER I + +INTRODUCTORY + + +The following pages are intended to give an account of personal +experience of the gunshot wounds observed during the South African +campaign in 1899 and 1900. For this reason few cases are quoted beyond +those coming under my own immediate observation, and in the few +instances where others are made use of the source of quotation is +indicated. It will be noted that my experience was almost entirely +confined to bullet wounds, and in this respect it no doubt differs from +that of surgeons employed in Natal, where shell injuries were more +numerous. This is, however, of the less moment for my purpose as there +is probably little to add regarding shell injuries to what is already +known, while, on the other hand, the opportunity of observing large +numbers of injuries from rifle bullets of small calibre has not +previously been afforded to British surgeons. + +I think the general trend of the observations goes to show that the +employment of bullets of small calibre is all to the advantage of the +men wounded, except in so far as the increased possibilities of the +range of fire may augment the number of individuals hit; also that such +variations as exist between wounds inflicted by bullets of the +Martini-Henry and Mauser types respectively, depend rather on the form +and bulk of the projectile than on any inherent difference in the nature +of the injuries. Thus in the chapter devoted to the general characters +of the wounds, it will be seen that most of the older types of entry +and exit aperture are produced in miniature by the small modern bullet, +and that the main peculiarity of the deeper injuries is the frequent +strict localisation of the direct damage to an area of no greater width +than that crossed by narrow structures of importance such as arteries or +nerves. + +It is to be regretted that I am unable to furnish any important +statistical details, but incomplete numbers, such as are at my disposal, +would be of little value. In view, however, of the considerable interval +which must elapse before the Royal Army Medical Corps is able to arrange +and publish the large material which will have accumulated, it has +seemed unwise to defer publication until the completion of a report +which will deal with such matters thoroughly. + +It may be of interest to premise the opportunities which I enjoyed of +gaining experience during the campaign. I arrived in South Africa on +November 19, 1899; two days later I proceeded to Orange River with +Surgeon-General Wilson, and on the day three weeks after leaving home +performed some operations in the field hospitals on patients from the +battle of Belmont. I remained at Orange River during the three next +engagements, Graspan, Enslin, and Modder River, and on the day of +Magersfontein I went forward to the Field hospitals at Modder River, +arriving during the bringing in of the patients from the field of +battle. I returned to Orange River with the patients and remained there +a further period of three weeks, during which time the patients were +gradually transferred to the Base hospitals at Wynberg. At Christmas I +followed the patients down to the base, and thus was able to observe the +course of the cases from their commencement to convalescence. I remained +at Wynberg six weeks, during which time a number of cases from the +neighbourhood of Rensburg and some from Natal were received. On February +7, I left Wynberg, following Lord Roberts up to my old quarters at +Modder River, where I saw a few wounded men brought in from the +engagements at Koodoosberg Drift. On Lord Roberts's departure for +Bloemfontein he requested me to return to Wynberg to await the wounded +who might be sent down from the fighting which might occur during his +advance. I therefore had the disappointment of seeing the start of the +army, and then returning to Wynberg, where I remained for another six +weeks in attendance at Nos. 1 and 2 General Hospitals. + +During this period a very large number of the wounded from Paardeberg +Drift and other battles were sent down and treated, after which surgical +work began to flag. + +On April 14, I was recalled to the front and journeyed to Bloemfontein, +where I stayed three weeks, making one journey out to the Bearer Company +of the IX. Division at the Waterworks. + +On May 4, I left Bloemfontein with Lord Roberts's army, and shortly +after joined the IX. Division, with which I journeyed until the +commencement of June, seeing a good deal of scattered work in the field +and Field hospitals, and in the small temporary improvised hospitals in +the towns of Winberg, Lindley, and Heilbron. Early in June I left +Heilbron with Lord Methuen's division, and spent the next four weeks +with this division in the field. Thence I journeyed to Pretoria and +Johannesburg, seeing a small number of wounded in each town, and on July +10, with Lord Roberts's consent, I started for home, visiting a number +of the hospitals in the Orange River Colony and Natal on my way down to +Cape Town. During the movements briefly recorded above, which absorbed a +period of nine months, my time was fairly evenly divided between Field, +Stationary, and Base hospitals; hence I had opportunities of observing +the patients in every stage of their illnesses, and in all some +thousands of men came under my notice. + +[Illustration: FIG. 1.--Linen Holdall with surgical instruments] + +My departure for the seat of war was rather hurried, hence my surgical +equipment was not of an extensive nature. It may be of interest, +however, to shortly recount what it consisted in, since it proved an +ample one, and yet was carried in a small satchel. The plan of selection +adopted consisted in carefully going through the equipment of the +British Field Hospital, and then adding such other instruments as seemed +to me likely to be useful. With few exceptions, therefore, designed to +meet emergencies, my set of instruments formed a supplement to the +actual necessities carried by the Service hospitals, and was as +follows:--4 trephines, Horsley's elevator, brain knife and seeker. 2 +pairs of Hoffman's and 1 pair of Lane's fulcrum gouge forceps, 3 bone +gouges, 1 pair straight 1 curved necrosis forceps, 1 pair bone forceps. +1 Wood's 1 Horsley's skull saws, 18 Gigli's saws with an extra handle, +and two Podrez' directors for the same. 1 set Lane's bone drills, +broaches, screw-drivers, and counter-sink with eight ounces of screws: +silver patella wire, and 1 pair Peter's bone forceps. 2 aneurism +needles, 1 bullet probe, 1 pair Egyptian Army pattern bullet forceps. 4 +Lane's and 3 pairs Makins's bowel clamps, Nos. 3 4 and 5 Laplace's +bowel forceps, 6 Murphy's buttons, 1 pair Morris's retractors, 6 dozen +intestine needles, 2 Macphail's needle-holders, Nos. 4 5 6 Thomas's +slot-eyed needles, 1 mouth gag, 1 Durham's double raspatory, 3 strong +plated raspatories, 1 pair tongue forceps, 1 tracheal dilator, 1 pair +hernia needles, 1 hernia and 1 ordinary steel director, 1 transfusion +set with metal funnel, and a stock of Messrs. Burroughes and Wellcome's +compound saline infusion soloids. 1 antitoxin syringe. 6 scalpels, 2 +blunt-pointed curved bistouries, 6 forcipressure forceps, 1 pair Jordan +Lloyd's retractors, 1 pair ordinary retractors, 2 pairs of forceps, 3 +pairs of Scissors, 1 skin-grafting razor and roll of perforated tin +foil, 1 metal pocket case, and 1 hypodermic syringe with tabloids. A +stock of silkworm gut, horsehair and silk ligatures, the latter prepared +and sterilised for me by Miss Taylor, the Theatre Sister at St. Thomas's +Hospital. Some pairs of McBurney's india-rubber, and cotton-thread +operating gloves. + +[Illustration: FIG. 2.--Instrument Holdall rolled] + +The instruments were packed in sets in small linen holdalls suggested +and made by Messrs. Down Bros., who also devised my satchel. In the +light of the experience gained I should have preferred a tin case to the +satchel, as it never needed to be carried on horseback. + +For dressings I trusted entirely to the Royal Army Medical Corps, and at +my request Colonel Gubbins, R.A.M.C., sent out to the Cape a quantity +of sterilised sponges and pads made by Messrs. Robinson & Co. Ltd. of +Chesterfield, which fully met all requirements in this direction. + +[Illustration: FIG. 3.--Tin Water-bottle for the march (Military +Equipment Company)] + +This equipment was superfluous at the Base hospitals, but when in the +field with the troops proved very useful. In the early part of the +campaign I was able to do all my travelling by train, but later I +travelled by road only. I received the greatest kindness and help in +this particular. General Sir William Nicholson, Chief Director of +Transport, provided me with a buggy, a pair of horses, and a driver, and +Prince Francis of Teck, the Chief Remount Officer, selected a pony +suitable to my equestrian powers. The buggy proved a very great success; +the box seat carried my instruments and dressings, the front a 4-gallon +tin water-bottle for emergency operations, and the rear shelf my +personal belongings. The water-bottle was lent to me by the Portland +Hospital. (Fig. 3.) + +The cart was able to cross any drifts or dongas, and when an engagement +was in progress was able to accompany the Ambulance wagons, so that I +had all my necessaries on the spot, even at the first dressing station. +In point of fact when with the Highland Brigade, on some occasions, we +did all necessary operations on the spot during the progress of +fighting; a most useful performance, since fighting on several days did +not cease till dark, and the evenings were much too cold to allow of +operations being done with safety to the patients. The great advantage +of the buggy was its lightness and smallness. On one occasion it +accompanied me between 500 and 600 miles without a single accident, +beyond the fact that one night I was relieved of both my horses by some +troopers whose own were worn out. + +[Illustration: FIG. 4.--My Buggy on the veldt at Bloemfontein. (Photo by +Mr. Bowlby)] + +With regard to the general health of the troops as subjects of surgical +wounds, I suppose a better class of patient could scarcely be found. The +men were young, sound, well set and nourished, and hard and fit from +exercise in the open air. Beyond this, in spite of the scarcity of +vegetables, a certain amount of fruit, rations of jam, and lime juice +made any sign of scurvy a rare occurrence--I never saw a case during the +whole of my wanderings. The meat was good, especially in the early part +of the campaign, when it was for the most part brought from Australia +and New Zealand, and we enjoyed the two collateral advantages of getting +plenty of the ice which had been used for the preservation of the meat, +in the camps, and the still greater one of having no butchers' offal to +need destruction or prove a source of danger. When bread was to be got +it was fairly good, and the biscuit was at all times excellent. Except +on the advance from Modder River to Bloemfontein, as far as I could +judge, no large bodies of the men ever really suffered from shortness of +food, and then only for a few days. Drink was a more serious problem: in +the early days beer was to be got at the canteens, but with the increase +of numbers and difficulties of transport this ceased to be the case, and +water was the sole fluid available. This was often muddy, and the +soldiers would take very little care what they drank unless under +constant supervision; hence a great quantity of very undesirable water +was drunk. None the less I think the water was more often the cause of +sand diarrhoea than of enteric fever. A large quantity of fluid was by +no means a necessity if the men would only have exercised some +self-control. During the first week I spent at Orange River, I drank +lime juice and water all day, but after that time, by a very slight +amount of determination, I thoroughly broke myself of the habit, and +drank at meal-times only. Most of the men however emptied their +water-bottles during the first hour of the march, and the rest of the +day endured agony, seizing the first opportunity of drinking any filthy +water they met with. When, for instance, we camped near a vlei, and the +General took the greatest care that the mules and horses should be +watered at one spot only, in order to preserve the cleanliness of the +rest of the pool, the men would often go and fill their water-bottles +amongst the animals' feet rather than take the trouble to walk the few +necessary yards round. In such particulars they needed constant +supervision. + +The climate on the western side was a great element no doubt both in the +general healthiness of the men and in the general good results seen in +the healing of wounds. The days were often hot; thus even in November at +Orange River the thermometer registered 115°F. in the single bell tents, +but on the other hand the nights were cool and refreshing. The air was +very pure and exceedingly dry, while the constant sunshine not only kept +up the spirits, but also proved the most efficient disinfector of any +ground fouled to less than a serious extent. Dust was our principal +bugbear; and when a camp had been settled for a few days, flies; both of +these evils increasing rapidly as the stay on any one spot was +prolonged. My personal experience of rain was small, but I was twice in +camp, once at Orange River and once at Bloemfontein, when very heavy +rain fell, and this was sufficient to make the camps terribly +uncomfortable for a few days. + +Under these conditions, as might be expected, until the outbreak of +enteric fever the health of the men was remarkably good, minor ailments +alone prevailing. One of the most troublesome of these was diarrhoea, +which gained the appellation of 'the Modders,' already a classical name +as far as South Africa is concerned. This most frequently, I think, +depended on errors of diet, combined with the swallowing of a large +amount of sand with the food as dust, and in the water drunk. Cases of +severe dysentery, however, were also not very uncommon. Rheumatic pains +were a common ailment, which, considering the dryness of the atmosphere, +would hardly have been expected. Continued fever of a somewhat special +type was not uncommon, and was sometimes spoken of under the name of the +district, sometimes as veldt fever--of this I will say nothing, as +others better fitted to point out its peculiarities will no doubt deal +with it. Enteric fever, our chief scourge, I will pass over for the same +reason. I might, however, remark from the point of view of one not very +experienced in this disease, that in a large number of the fatal cases I +happened to see, the actual cause of death seemed to me to be septicæmia +from absorption from the mouth. The mouths were unusually bad, even +allowing for the often insufficient cleansing that was able to be +carried out, and I was inclined to attribute these in some degree to the +dryness of the atmosphere, which very quickly and effectively dried up +the mucous membrane of the mouth in patients not breathing through the +nose, and encouraged the formation of large cracks. Pneumonia was rare, +and this was rendered the more striking from the comparatively large +number of men who contracted the disease on board ship on the voyage out +from England. + +As will be gathered from the above, medical disease seldom called for +the aid of the surgeon. Abdominal section was occasionally considered in +cases of perforation in enteric fever, and was, I believe, a few times +performed, but as far as I know without success. It was also proposed to +treat some of the severe dysentery cases by colotomy, but I never saw +the method tried. As far as I was concerned I never met with a case of +either disease I thought suitable for the treatment. I saw one case in +which an abscess of the liver had followed an attack of enteric, which +had been successfully treated by incision, and a few cases of tropical +abscess which probably came into the country were also subjected to +operation. Some cases of appendicitis, as would be expected, also needed +surgical treatment. In a few instances empyema followed influenza, and a +few cases of mastoid suppuration had to be dealt with. + +Of surgical diseases the one most special to the campaign, although not +of great importance, was the veldt sore. This was a small localised +suppuration most common on the hands and neck, but sometimes invading +the whole trunk, more particularly the lower extremities however, when +the covered parts of the body were attacked. The sores were no doubt the +result of local infections; they reminded me most of the sores seen on +the hands of plasterers, and I think there is no doubt the dust was +responsible for them. I think piles were somewhat more prevalent than +they should have been among the men, but this was probably dependent on +the strain involved in defæcation in the squatting position, since the +soldiers were for the most part regularly attentive to the calls of +nature. + +I saw a good many cases of lightning stroke, and some were fatal. +Sunstroke was not common, and, considering the heat, it was very +remarkable how little the men suffered from this condition. This was no +doubt in part attributable to the absence of the possibility of getting +alcoholic drinks, but it is not common for any one in South Africa to +suffer in this way, probably as a result of the continuous nature of the +sunshine. + +In spite of the labours of hospital surgeons at home, it was rather +instructive to see the number of men who suffered with hernia, +varicocele, and varicose veins to a sufficient degree to necessitate +going to the base. The experience quite sufficed to explain the trouble +which is taken to prevent men with these complaints entering the +service. + + +GENERAL CONSIDERATION OF THE NUMBER OF MEN KILLED AND WOUNDED + +I will now pass to the question of the proportionate frequency with +which the men were killed or wounded during the present campaign. I +propose to take only one series of battles, with which I was personally +acquainted throughout, to illustrate this point. This seems the more +satisfactory course to follow, since the number of casualties is still +undergoing continuous gradual increase, and besides this the warfare has +assumed a peculiar and irregular form, statistics from which scarcely +possess general application. + +The battles included, those of the first Kimberley Relief Force, were +fought under fair average conditions as to the nature of the ground. In +the first two the defending enemy occupied heights, in the two following +the ground advanced over by our men was comparatively even; thus at +Modder River there was only a gradual slope upwards, and at +Magersfontein the advanced trenches of the Boers were only slightly +above the level of the ground over which the advance was made. At the +same time, at the latter battle a great number of the Boers engaged were +on the sides of the hill well above the advanced trenches. In no case +were the Boers in such a position as to have to fire upwards, to them a +considerable advantage. It must also be noted that throughout the Boers +were able to rest their rifles; hence the fire should have been at any +rate of an average degree of accuracy. In the advances of our own men, +anthills and stones were practically the only cover to be obtained, and +little or no help was given by variations in the general surface. All +these points seem to favour a large proportional number of hits on the +part of the riflemen. I very much regret that I am unable to say what +was the proportional number of shell wounds among the men hit, but I can +say with some confidence that among the wounded it was not as great as +ten per cent. I should be inclined to place it as low as five per cent. +Again, I cannot fix the proportionate occurrence of wounds from bullets +of large calibre such as the Martini-Henry, but this was certainly not +large. I think if ten per cent. is deducted to represent the number of +hits from either of these forms of projectile, that we may fairly assume +the remaining 90 per cent. of the wounds to have been produced by +bullets of small calibre. The numbers of the opposing forces were +probably fairly even. + +Taking all these circumstances together, and bearing in mind that our +army was always in the position of having to make frontal attacks on men +well protected in strong positions, I think it must be allowed that a +fair idea should be possible of the effectiveness of the modern weapons. +Only one circumstance, one inseparable from any fighting with the Boers, +seems to affect the numbers in an important manner. This consists in the +fact that the Boer rarely fights to the bitter end, hence the greater +proportion of his hits are obtained at long distances. + + +TABLE I + ++---------------------+--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| | Number | | | | |Percentage of| +| | of | | | | | killed and | +| | troops |Killed|Wounded|Missing|Total| wounded to | +| | engaged| | | | |number of men| +| | | | | | | engaged | ++---------------------+--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +|_Belmont:_ | | | | | | | +| Officers | 297 | 3 | 23 | 0 | 26 | 8.75 | +| Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | +| and men | 8,396 | 55 | 206 | 4 | 265 | 3.15 | +| +--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| Total | 8,693 | 58 | 229 | 4 | 291 | 3.34 | +| | | | | | | | +|_Graspan:_ | | | | | | | +| Officers | 326 | 3 | 7 | 0 | 10 | 3.06 | +| Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | +| and men | 8,213 | 18 | 163 | 7 | 188 | 2.29 | +| +--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| Total | 8,539 | 21 | 170 | 7 | 198 | 2.31 | +| | | | | | | | +|_Modder River:_ | | | | | | | +| Officers | 335 | 3 | 19 | 0 | 22 | 6.56 | +| Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | +| and men | 9,856 | 67 | 377 | 18 | 462 | 4.68 | +| +--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| Total | 10,191 | 70 | 396 | 18 | 484 | 4.74 | +| | | | | | | | +|_Magersfontein:_ | | | | | | | +| Officers | 379 | 18 | 48 | 2 | 68 | 17.94 | +| Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | +| and men | 11,068 | 148 | 669 | 101 | 918 | 8.29 | +| +--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| Total[1] | 11,447 | 166 | 717 | 103 | 986 | 8.43 | ++---------------------+--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ + +Table I. gives the number of men engaged, and also that of the killed +and wounded at each of four battles. Table III. shows for comparison the +relative number of killed and wounded in some former campaigns while +older forms of weapon were in use. + +With regard to the numbers in Tables I. and II. it should be at once +said that they are only to be regarded as approximate, since they do not +exactly tally with those officially reported in the 'Times' at a later +date. Sources of error may, however, have crept into both, and as there +is little difference in the gross numbers, I have preferred to retain +the series compiled by Major Burtchaell, R.A.M.C., as Table II. contains +interesting information as to the proportionate number of men who died +during the first 48 hours, after being wounded. + + +TABLE II + +SHOWING PROPORTION OF MORTALITY AMONGST MEN HIT, (_a_) ON THE FIELD, +(_b_) DURING THE FIRST FORTY-EIGHT HOURS + +---------------------+-------+------+------+------+-------+---------------- + |Number |Total | | Died | | Percentage + | of |number| |within| | mortality + -- |troops |of men|Killed|forty-| Total +-------+-------- + |engaged| hit | |eight | |To men |To force + | | | |hours | | hit |employed +---------------------+-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- +_Belmont_: | | | | | | | + Officers | 297 | 26 | 3 | 3 | 6 | 23 | 2.02 + Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | + and men | 8,396 | 265 | 55 | 8 | 63 | 23.77 | 0.75 + +-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + Total | 8,693 | 291 | 58 | 11 | 69 | 23.71 | 0.79 + | | | | | | | +_Graspan_: | | | | | | | + Officers | 326 | 10 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 40[2] | 1.22 + Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | + and men | 8,213 | 188 | 18 | 3 | 21 | 11.17 | 0.25 + +-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + Total | 8,539 | 198 | 21 | 4 | 25 | 12.62 | 0.29 + | | | | | | | +_Modder River_: | | | | | | | + Officers | 335 | 22 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 18.18 | 1.19 + Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | + and men | 9,856 | 462 | 67 | 9 | 76 | 16.45 | 0.77 + +-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + Total |10,191 | 484 | 70 | 10 | 80 | 16.53 | 0.78 + | | | | | | | +_Magersfontein_: | | | | | | | + Officers | 379 | 68 | 18 | 4 | 22 | 32.35 | 5.80 + Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | + and men |11,068 | 918 | 148 | 20 | 168 | 18.30 | 1.51 + +-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + Total |11,447 | 986 | 166 | 24 | 190 | 19.26 | 1.66 +---------------------+-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + +The high death rate among the officers will at once arrest attention, +but this has been noticed in other campaigns, particularly in the +Franco-German war. It is mainly attributable to the circumstance that +the officers, as leading, are always in the front and most exposed +position. I much doubt whether at the end of the campaign the entire +abandonment of distinctive badges will be found to have had any very +important result in decreasing the relative number of casualties as +between officers and men. At close quarters distinctive uniform is no +doubt a danger, but at the common ranges of 1,000 yards and upwards the +enemy's fire is rather directed to cover a zone than to pick out +individuals. + +The especially high mortality among the officers at the battle of +Graspan was attributable to the casualties among the naval officers, and +the men of the brigade suffered most severely also. + +It will be noted that the most expensive battles were those of Belmont +and Magersfontein. + +If the numbers of the men actually taking part in the fighting in these +battles as given in Table I. are massed, we get an approximate total of +12,420.[3] + +Of this number, 1,959 or 15.06 per cent. were reported as killed, +wounded, or missing. Thus: killed, 315 or 2.53 per cent.; wounded, 1,512 +or 12.17 per cent.; missing, 132 or 1.06 per cent. Reference to Table +III. shows that these percentages almost exactly correspond with those +obtaining in the entire Crimean campaign, and are greater than those +observed in the German army during the entire Franco-German campaign. + +The mortality statistics given in Table II. are of great interest, +since to those dying on the field are added all men dying within the +first 48 hours in the Field hospitals. From the surgical point of view +these men all received mortal injury, and are therefore properly +included among the fatalities. Their inclusion, moreover, makes an +appreciable difference in the percentage proportion of mortal injuries +to wounds. Thus, if the numbers are massed (omitting the 'missing'), we +find that in the four battles 1,827 men were hit, of whom 315, or 17.24 +per cent., were killed. Among the wounded carried off the field, +however, 49 received mortal injuries, and if these are added to the 315, +we find that the proportion of mortal injuries reaches 19.92 per cent. + + +TABLE III[4] + ++-----------------------+---------+---------+--------+---------+----------+ +| | | | 1871. | 1877. | 1899. | +| | 1815. | 1854. | Franco-| Russo- | Kimberley| +| | Waterloo| Crimean | German | Turkish | Relief | +| | (English| War | War | War | Force | +| | troops) | (English| (German| (Russian| (English | +| | | troops) | troops)| troops) | troops) | ++-----------------------+---------+---------+--------+---------+----------+ +| Number of troops | | | | | | +| engaged | 36,240 | 97,864 | 887,876| 300,000 | 15,748 | +| | | | | | | +| Number of killed | 1,759 | 2,775 | 17,570| 32,780 | 315 | +| Percentage | 4.85 | 2.81 | 1.97| 10.92 | 2 | +| | | | | | | +| Number of wounded | 5,892 | 12,094 | 96,189| 71,268 | 1,512 | +| Percentage | 16.25 | 12.35 | 10.83| 23.75 | 9.60 | +| | | | | | | +| Number of missing | 807 | -- | 4,009| -- | 132 | +| Percentage | 2.19 | -- | 0.45| -- | .83 | ++-----------------------+---------+---------+--------+---------+----------+ +| Total killed, | | | | | | +| wounded, and missing | 8,458 | 14,849 | 117,768| 104,050 | 1,959 | +| Percentage | 23.31 | 15.17 | 13.26| 34.68 | 12.43 | ++-----------------------+---------+---------+--------+---------+----------+ + +The proportion of men killed to those wounded was as follows: killed +315, wounded 1,512, or 1 to 4.8. If we add to the men killed on the +field of battle the 49 dying in the next 48 hours, the proportion of +fatalities is increased to 1 to 4.15. The higher of these proportions is +certainly the surgically correct one. + +With regard to the general accuracy of the numbers given above, a +comparison of those published for the campaign up to September 15, 1900, +is of value, as the two series substantially tally. Thus, up to that +date, 17,072 men were hit, and of these 2,998 were killed. The +proportion killed to wounded was therefore 1 to 4.69. + +If it be borne in mind that of the wounded men included in Table I., 1.5 +per cent. died later in the Base hospitals, the percentages are almost +identical. + +Table III. is inserted with a view to instituting a comparison between +the number of casualties in the present and earlier campaigns. + +For the purposes of this table it is necessary to take the approximate +number of men at Lord Methuen's disposal, irrespective of their active +participation in the fighting. + +The result of this addition to the total is to show that the percentage +of men killed and wounded was slightly lower than in the Crimean war, +and nearly corresponded with that observed in the Franco-German +campaign. + +As it has been shown that our numbers correspond in general with those +of the whole war up to September 15, 1900, there can be little doubt +that the same ratios will be maintained to the close of the campaign. + +On the face of the numbers, therefore, there is little ground for +assuming that the change in the nature of the weapons has materially +influenced the deadliness of warfare at all. This is capable of +explanation on the ground that in the Crimea the battles were fought at +much closer quarters, and hence the weapons of the time were as +effective, or more so, than the present ones. That this increased +distance between the combatants will always counterbalance the increased +deadliness of the weapons in the future is more than probable, since the +range of effectiveness has been increased both in rifle and in artillery +fire. In the present campaign the effect of the latter was very +noticeable, since the Boers were, as a rule, quickly displaced by shell +fire, unless they were in especially favourable positions, and this +although no great number of men was hit by the projectiles. Under these +circumstances, except on some occasions, neither side derived all the +advantage from the increased shooting powers of their rifles which might +have been expected. To a lesser degree this will probably always be the +case in the future. + +In connection with these remarks, however, I would point to column 4 of +Table III., as showing how difficult it is to draw definite deductions +from any particular set of numbers alone. This column shows that in the +Russo-Turkish War of 1877 all the percentages were practically doubled +or more, and in the case of the number of men killed on the field of +battle, the number was nearly five times as great as either in the +Crimea or the present campaign. The explanation here depends on the race +of men and their tenacity in resistance alone. In the case of either +nation death in battle is little feared, and slight inclination to avoid +it exists. When the theory of war held by the Boer--_i.e._ going out to +shoot an enemy without incurring risk of being yourself shot--is borne +in mind, the special circumstances attending the present campaign are +sufficiently obvious to need little further remark. A future campaign in +which the combatants are as equally well armed, but each side stands to +the last, will probably give very different results. + +It is unfortunate that no details can be given as to the influence of +range in altering the relative numbers of killed to wounded. It may be +stated, however, that in no instance did the percentage of killed to +wounded reach 25 per cent. At the battle of Magersfontein it amounted to +19.26 per cent., at Colenso to 17.97 per cent., and at both these +engagements there is little doubt that a considerable number of the men +were hit within a distance of 1,000 yards. When the distances were very +short the injuries were frequently multiple; and this character was a +more common source of danger than increase of severity in the individual +wounds received at a short range. + +A short consideration of the circumstances especially influencing the +ultimate mortality amongst the wounded subsequent to the reception of +the injury is here necessary, although I shall be obliged to make my +remarks as short as possible. The subject is best treated of under the +two headings of Transport and Hospital Accommodation. + +_Transport._--The importance of transport is felt from the moment of the +injury till the time of arrival of the patient in the mother country. To +the surgeon it is of the same vital importance as the carrying of food +for the troops is to the combatant general. + +(_a_) Removal of the wounded from the field of battle. My experience was +opposed to hurried action in this matter, although it is necessary to +gather up the wounded before nightfall if possible. As a rule wounded +men should not be removed from the field of battle under fire, at any +rate when the troops are in open order at a range of 1,000 yards or +more. I saw several instances in which mortal wounds were incurred by +previously wounded men or their bearers during the process of removal, +while it was astonishing how many scattered wounded men could lie out +under a heavy fire and escape by the doctrine of chances. The erect +position and small group necessary to bear off a wounded man at once +draws a concentrated fire, if fighting is still proceeding. + +As to the best and quickest method of removing the patients to the first +dressing station, there were few occasions when this was not more +satisfactorily done by bearers with stretchers than by wagons. The +movement was more easy to the wounded men, and, as a rule, time was +saved. Over rough ground the wagons travel slowly, and patients with +only provisional splints were shaken undesirably. A stretcher party in +my experience easily outstripped the wagon unless a road or very smooth +veldt existed. A larger number of men is of course required, but I take +it that on the occasion of a great war men are both more easily obtained +and fed than are transport animals. From what I have been able to learn, +both the Indian dhoolie-bearers and the hastily recruited Colonial +bearer companies were most successful in the removal of the large number +of wounded men from the field of Colenso. I had several opportunities of +comparing the two methods on a smaller scale during the fighting in +Orange River Colony, and felt very strongly in favour of the stretcher +parties. + +For removal of patients from one part of a hospital to another, or +sometimes in loading trains, &c., great economy of men, and increased +comfort to the patients, may be attained by the use of some form of +ambulance trolly. + +I append an illustration of what seemed to me the simplest and best I +came across among several in use in South Africa. The description +beneath is by Major McCormack, R.A.M.C., its inventor (fig. 5). + +When wagons were necessary or preferable, the Indian Tongas (fig. 6), +presented by Mr. Dhanjibhoy, were most useful; they carried two men +lying down, the same number as the big service wagon, and were drawn by +two ponies only. Although somewhat highly springed, the vehicle is so +well arranged and padded, that the occupants are seldom hurt by striking +against the sides with rough jolting, unless quite helpless. I +occasionally made long journeys in this vehicle with much comfort. + +[Illustration: FIG. 5.--The McCormack-Brook Wheeled Stretcher Carriage. +It consists of an under-carriage built up of two light wheels with steel +spokes and rims with rubber tyres and ball bearings; on the axle are two +light elliptic springs, to which is attached a transverse seat for the +stretcher-carrier proper. This is securely bolted on to the seat, and +consists of two pieces of hard wood, suitably worked, and forming an +angle frame. On the bottom side the stretcher poles rest, and the sides +of the L formed by the carrier proper prevent most effectually any +jerking or turning of the stretcher when once it has been laid in the +carrier. The carrier is about thirty inches long, but can be increased +to any length desired. It has been found that this length is admirably +suited for all purposes. To prevent the stretcher from any lateral or +upward movement, two buttons with tightening screws are attached to the +top of the carrier on each side. When the stretcher is laid on the +carrier the screws are tightened and the stretcher is held rigid. + +Two iron supports are provided, one at each end and on opposite sides of +the carrier. These are lowered when it is desired either to place the +stretcher on the carriage or remove it therefrom, which can be effected +in a second. The carriage meanwhile remains perfectly still. When the +carriage is in motion the iron supports are turned up, and lie along the +respective sides of the carrier, where each rests in a small clip. The +great object of this stretcher carriage has been to obtain mobility, +strength, and lightness combined with efficiency and a ready and easy +means of transport for sick and wounded, no matter where a patient has +to be transported from. The loaded stretcher and wheeled carriage can be +readily handled by one man on good roads, and by two men in rough +country. The springs prevent any jar being felt by the patient on the +stretcher.] + +(_b_) For the longer journeys to the Field or Stationary hospitals, the +service wagon and other transport vehicles came into use, particularly +the South African ox-wagon. + +[Illustration: FIG. 6--Indian Tonga on the march. (Photo by Mr. Bowlby)] + +The service wagon (fig. 7) is a heavy four-wheeled vehicle, drawn by ten +mules. The good construction of the wagon was amply proved by the manner +in which it stood the hard wear and tear of the present campaign. It is, +however, very heavy, and in comparison with its size affords very small +accommodation. Two lying-down patients and six sitting is its entire +capacity. Some modified patterns were in use, notably those with the +Irish and Imperial Yeomanry Field Hospitals, capable of carrying four +lying-down cases, the men being arranged in two tiers. Major Hale, +R.A.M.C., made a very successful trek from Rhenoster to Kroonstadt with +some of these, carrying twice the regulation number of lying-down cases +in his wagons. Some modification in the mode of fixation is, however, +necessary to increase the security of the stretchers of the upper +series. + +A really satisfactory wagon, combining both strength and comfort, still +remains to be devised. + +[Illustration: FIG. 7.--Service Ambulance Wagon, the six front mules +removed. + +(Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +During the later stages of the campaign, a very large number of patients +were transported by the South African ox- or mule- (buck) wagons. +Although not of prepossessing appearance, and unprovided with any sort +of springs, these vehicles were far from unsatisfactory. The ox-wagon +consists of a long simple platform, 19 ft. 2 in. in length, 4 ft. 6 in. +in width, from the sides of which a slanting board rises over the wheels +for the posterior two-thirds. These bulwarks increase the actual width +to 6 ft. 6 in., which corresponds with the gross width occupied by the +wheels. One third is covered by a small hood 5 ft. 6 in. in height +erected on wooden stave hoops. The latter was often absent in transport +wagons. The two hind wheels are large, the fore somewhat smaller. They +are attached to very heavy wooden cross-beams bearing the axles, and the +two beams are connected by a longitudinal bar, continuous with the +düssel boom or pole. This latter bar is in two sections, the connection +of which allows considerable play in the long axis and serves to break +the jolts occurring when either pair of wheels passes over uneven spots +on the ground. When some sacks of oats or hay were spread over the +floor the wounded men travelled comparatively comfortably in these +wagons, the great distance between the fore and hind wheels tending to +minimise the jolting. The principal objection to them was the slow pace +of the oxen, and the fact that to obtain the greatest amount of work +from these animals a major part of the journey must be performed during +the night. The ox-wagon carries, with comfort, four lying-down cases on +stretchers, or six without stretchers; or twenty sitting-up cases. + +[Illustration: FIG. 8.--South African Wagon, loaded with patients, and +mule transport. (Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +The mule- or buck-wagon, which is of the same class but smaller, can +only accommodate two stretchers, four lying-down men without stretchers, +or 12-14 sitting-up cases. As a rule, the wagons were loaded with +recumbent cases in the centre, while more slightly wounded men sat +around, and were able to give help to those lying down when needed. The +wagons can be covered with canvas throughout. + +The steady even pace of the oxen is a great advantage, and I was often +surprised to see how well men bore transport in these wagons, who seemed +utterly unfit to be moved had it not been an absolute necessity. A very +large number of the wounded from Paardeberg Drift were transported to +Modder River in them. + +One other advantage of these wagons, the possibility of converting them +into an excellent laager, is not to be underrated. Any one who saw the +comfortable encampment which a naval contingent on the march made by +massing the wagons with intervals covered by macintosh sheets, could at +once appreciate their capabilities for a long trek. + +Traction engines were, as far as I know, never employed as a means of +transporting the sick. The tendency of these heavy machines to stick in +the mud and to break down bridges is so well known that it hardly needs +mention. Putting these disadvantages on one side, with a supply of fuel +ensured, and such roads as are afforded by a civilised country, a great +future is probably before this means of transport for the wounded. A +large number of patients might be carried at an even pace, and the camps +would be saved all the trouble and worry of the transport animals. + +_Trains._--In many cases in Natal, and in a few instances on the western +side, the wounded men were able to be transferred from the first +dressing station directly into the trains. Space will not allow me to +describe any of those in use, but the accompanying illustration shows +the general arrangement of the beds in Nos. 2 and 3 trains (fig. 9). The +carriages were converted from ordinary bogie wagons of the Cape +Government Railway stock under the supervision of Colonel Supple, +R.A.M.C., P.M.O. of the Base at Cape Town. Each train was provided with +accommodation for two medical officers, two nursing Sisters, orderlies, +a kitchen, and a dispensary, and each carried some 120 patients. The +trains were under the charge of Major Russell, R.A.M.C., and Dr. Boswell +(and later other civilian medical officers) and of Captain Fleming, +R.A.M.C., D.S.O., and Mr. Waters, and carried many thousand patients +from all parts of the country to the Base and Station hospitals. They +were most admirably worked, and seemed to offer little scope for +improvement except in minor details. To them much of the success in the +treatment of the wounded who had to traverse the immense distances +incident to South Africa must be attributed. I made many pleasant +journeys in each of them. Later, two additional trains, Nos. 4 and 5, of +a similar nature, were added. Two trains, No. 1, and the Princess +Christian train, which I was not fortunate enough to see, performed +similar duties for Natal. + +[Illustration: FIG. 9.--Interior of one of the Wagons of No. 2 Hospital +Train] + +_Hospital Ships._--These were numerous and some especially well +arranged. Fig. 10 is of the 'Simla,' a P. & O. vessel which was +admirably adapted to the requirements of a hospital ship. On her main +deck some 250 patients were accommodated in a series of wards all on the +same level, which much lightened the difficulties of service usually +experienced. During the present campaign the abundance of transport +vessels rendered the transhipment of patients to England a matter of +comparative ease, and good vessels were always available. Considering +the constant transhipment of invalids from India and our other colonial +possessions, it would seem advisable that, in place of having to +hurriedly improvise hospital ships, the Government should possess two or +three hospital ships of the 'Simla' type. It is true this would deprive +our naval transport officers of a duty which in this war was performed +with extraordinary celerity and success; thus the 'Simla' was fitted in +seven days, and sailed with a cargo of invalids ten days after her +arrival at Durban; but on the other hand it would ensure that really +suitable vessels were always provided. + +[Illustration: FIG. 10.--P. & O. Hospital Ship 'Simla' in Durban +Harbour] + +To give some idea of the amount of work contingent on the transport of +wounded men from an army of some 15,000, fighting its way against +continued opposition, I will quote the approximate number of men moved +during Lord Methuen's advance from Orange River to Magersfontein. (The +number of men actually present at each battle is shown in Table I., p. +12.) + +Belmont, the first battle, was fought on November 23. + +_November 24._--No. 2 hospital train removed 152 cases to the Stationary +Field hospitals at Orange River, then returned and loaded up with 130 +more. Some of the most severe cases in the latter were detrained at +Orange River, and the remainder were taken direct to Wynberg (591-1/2 +miles). + +The division marched, and the battle of Graspan was fought during the +day. + +_November 26._--A train of specially constructed trucks brought 90 of +the less severe cases, including 20 Boers, to Orange River. + +_November 27._--The division marched, and in the morning No. 3 hospital +train removed 80 severe cases from the Field hospitals direct to +Wynberg. + +_November 28._--Battle of Modder River. + +_November 29._--339 patients, including a few sick, and some wounded +Boers, were sent down to Orange River in open trucks with impromptu +shelters made with rifles and blankets. + +Later, 97 severe cases were sent down in ordinary carriages, of which +some had doors sawn out to admit lying-down patients. + +_December 10._--The division marched, and on the next day the battle of +Magersfontein was fought. + +_December 11._--Nos. 2 and 3 trains were loaded up during the night and +early morning of the 12th, in part from the Field hospitals, in part +directly from the Ambulance wagons. During the day of the 12th, No. 3 +train made three journeys to Orange River, and No. 2 was sent direct to +Wynberg. + +In all some 800 patients needed transport; they were picked up by 10 +ambulance wagons and 5 buck wagons for slighter cases and the two bearer +companies sent out from Modder River. On the 12th Lord Methuen sent out +a number of bearers with stretchers, and at 12 noon all the wounded were +collected, but many had lain out through the night. The bearers had to +retire under a shell fire kept up by the Boers as long as our army was +within range of their position. + +Four Field hospitals were present, but only that of the IX. Brigade at +Modder River was so situated as to be of general use. This hospital, +under the command of Major Harris, R.A.M.C., did an immense amount of +work most expeditiously and with great success. + +The nature of the advance on Kimberley necessitated the evacuation of +the Field hospitals with extreme promptitude, as the troops were in +constant action, and the arrangements for this were carried out with +great success by Colonel Townsend, the P.M.O. of the First Division. + +The amount of fighting far exceeded anything that had been expected, and +the Stationary hospitals on the lines of communication at Orange River +and De Aar were unable to cope with the number of severe cases thrown on +their hands, with the constant possibility of new arrivals. Hence a +number of severe cases had to be sent direct to Wynberg. + +This experience strongly illustrated the necessity of possessing +Stationary hospitals of greater mobility and a higher degree of +equipment than the service at present possesses. In these a large number +of severe cases could have been retained, and only the slighter ones +exposed to the fatigue and general disadvantage of transport. In South +Africa very special difficulties existed in the length of the line of +communication, the single line of rails, and the absence of any source +of supply within 500 to 600 miles; but in any other country mobile +Stationary hospitals, although more easily equipped, would be equally +valuable. + +The difficulties of transport experienced in the advance of the +Kimberley Relief Force were many times multiplied in that upon +Bloemfontein, since the whole of the severely wounded men had to be sent +back thirty to forty miles to the railway. The ambulance accommodation +on the occasion of this march, although, if untouched, proportionately +smaller than that possessed by Lord Methuen, was reduced to one-fifth to +meet the exigencies of warfare. Beyond this the equipment transport of +the Field hospitals was reduced from four ox-wagons to two, and the +Scotch cart was cut off, only two ox-wagons and the two water-carts +being allowed. This greatly hampered the Field hospitals on the march, +and when they arrived at Bloemfontein and had to undertake the work of +Stationary hospitals, their efficiency was seriously impaired. Again, on +the advance from Bloemfontein to Kroonstadt many of the Field hospitals +were unable to accompany their respective divisions, not alone on +account of the number of patients remaining in them, but also because +the mule transport had been otherwise employed for military purposes. + +The transport of the ambulances and hospitals stands in a very special +position. As far as my experience went, neither ambulances nor hospitals +were ever taken or retained by the Boers, and consequently the transport +animals originally devoted to this purpose should have been held sacred +to it. + +_Hospitals._--Accommodation for the wounded was provided under canvas in +the Field hospitals, also in the large General hospitals. Beyond this +iron huts were erected in many of the Base and Station hospitals. At +Capetown, Maritzburg, and Ladysmith barrack huts were modified and +equipped as hospitals, and in towns such as Bloemfontein, Kimberley, and +Johannesburg large civil hospitals were at our disposal. Beyond these +sources of accommodation, churches, schools, public institutions, and +private houses were made use of in the smaller towns. + +As to the broad question of canvas _v._ buildings, experience amply +showed that in a climate such as is possessed by South Africa, canvas +affords the greater advantages. The hospitals are more mobile, more +readily extended, and the more healthy. Except under unusual conditions +of rain and dust, the patients did excellently in the tents. + +Rain and dust were occasionally most troublesome, especially when +combined with wind. I once saw a whole hospital, fortunately unoccupied, +levelled to the ground in the course of some twenty minutes. Under such +circumstances iron huts present advantages, and were on many occasions +utilised with much success. They are readily erected, and it would have +been a considerable improvement if a number of them had been ready for +use at the earliest part of the campaign. Except in the matter of +weight, they possess in a considerable degree the advantage of mobility +possessed by canvas, and in addition they offer much more protection +from the weather. On the other hand, they are more liable to become +unhealthy from prolonged use. + +Churches and public institutions were mainly troublesome from the +necessity of having to improvise sanitary arrangements, and sometimes +the disadvantage of the collection of a large number of men in one +chamber could not be avoided. None the less I cannot look back without +admiration on the temporary hospitals established in the Raadzaal at +Bloemfontein, and the Irish hospital in the Palace of Justice in +Pretoria. + +The State schools in the smaller towns of the Orange River Colony also +afforded excellent accommodation as small temporary hospitals. + +Private houses, possessing the disadvantages of ill-adapted construction +and the necessity of a considerably increased staff to work them, were +on the whole little used as hospitals. The scattered farmhouses +occasionally afforded shelter to very severely wounded men. In most of +the country I traversed, however, the farms were so wide apart as to be +of little use in this respect; and again, under the special +circumstances, patients left in them might have to be abandoned to the +enemy. + +The chief interest during the campaign centred in the working of the +Field and General hospitals. + +Two types of Field hospital were employed, one the Home, the other the +Indian. The latter differs from the Home in that in it the bearer +company is attached and consists of Indian natives, and that the +hospital is separable into four sections in place of two only. + +The amalgamation of the Field hospital and bearer company into one unit +is much to be desired in the Home service, both for economy of working +and the more equal distribution of duties to the medical officers +engaged. Again the divisibility of the hospital into four sections is +also an advantage. It allows of the advance or the leaving of sections, +in the case of either small expeditions or the presence of a number of +severely wounded men unfit to travel. As far as I could judge, it +necessitates very small addition to the present equipment, and is in +every way desirable. + +As to the working of the Field hospitals in the present campaign, it +was universally acknowledged to possess a very high degree of +excellence. The equipment, with small exceptions, proved equal to the +demands made upon it. The mobility of the camps was proved again and +again, and the rules governing their administration evidenced by their +effectiveness the care and experience which have been bestowed on the +organisation of the hospitals. + +It is difficult for any one who has not had an opportunity of observing +the actual amount of work performed in the Field hospitals either to +appreciate the storm and stress following an important engagement when +the wounded men are first brought in, or the demands that are made on +the powers of the medical officers in charge. To a civilian the first +feeling is one of impotence, followed by an attempt to see no further +than the case under immediate observation, and to nurture the conviction +that the work is to be got through if it is only stuck to. I gathered +that this first impression was absent in the minds of the officers in +charge of the Field hospitals, as work commenced at once, and was +carried on without intermission during the persistence of daylight, in +the winter often by the aid of lanterns, and eventually the huge task +was accomplished. In early days at Orange River work commenced at 4 +A.M., and was steadily continued until 6 P.M. or later, and this state +of things persisted sometimes for many days together. + +The officers of the Field hospitals, the bearer companies, and those +doing regimental duty carried out their duties with a calmness and +efficiency which not only impressed observers like myself, but also +excited the admiration of our German colleagues sent by their government +to observe the working of the British system. + +I saw on several occasions the German and Dutch ambulances, and was much +struck by the excellence of their equipment. In some details there was +much to be learned from them, especially in the matter of appliances, +dressings, and instruments. The Dutch ambulance I saw at Brandfort had a +complete installation of acetylene gas, which was carried, gasometer and +all, in one Scotch cart. They were, however, really designed to fill the +combined position of our Field, Stationary, and General hospitals, and +when it became necessary for them to move about frequently, the inferior +mobility they possessed in comparison with our own Field hospitals was +at once demonstrated. + +The large General hospitals of 500 beds were a great feature in the +campaign. Although designed and organised some time since, the present +was the first occasion on which they have come into general use, and +they may be said to have actually been on trial. The organisation of +these hospitals proved itself excellent, and in the case of the best of +them left little to be desired. + +In some cases the accommodation was temporarily strained enormously, and +the number of patients was extended beyond more than three times the +regulation limit. The additional patients were then accommodated in +marquees and bell tents, according to the nature of their diseases. +Under these circumstances the working of the hospitals was difficult, +and the officers both of the R.A.M.C. and the civilian surgeons were +placed at a great disadvantage. + +My space does not allow me to give any description of the general +arrangement of these hospitals, but I would suggest that a certain +number of them should be so modified as to increase their mobility and +allow of their being more readily utilised as Stationary hospitals. + +During the whole campaign it seemed to me that the Stationary hospitals +(that is to say, the hospitals necessary to receive patients when the +Field hospitals were rapidly evacuated), were those in which some +increased uniformity of organisation was most needed. + +It scarcely needs to be pointed out that this is the most difficult link +of the whole hospital chain to be uniformly well organised and equipped. +It is needed at short notice, and often for a short period, and it is +difficult to maintain a regular staff of officers ready for any +emergency without keeping a certain number of men idle. + +The conversion of Field hospitals to Stationary purposes is undesirable, +as the troops move with only a regulation number of the former, which +under ordinary circumstances is the minimum that may be necessary. + +Stationary hospitals as individual units are undesirable for the reasons +above given. + +[Illustration: FIG. 11.--Type of a General Hospital (No. VIII. +Bloemfontein) extended by use of bell tents in the distance. (Photo by +Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +The difficulty might be met by increasing the mobility of a certain +number of the General hospitals, by making them divisible into five +sections, each of which should be able to move independently, and to the +last of which should be attached the heavy part of the equipment, such +as the iron huts for operating and X-ray rooms, kitchens, store sheds, +&c. The tents might also be lightened by the substitution of the +tortoise tent for the service marquee. The tortoise tent is lighter (360 +as against 500 lbs.), easily pitched and moved, and holds at least two +more patients with ease. The capabilities of this tent were amply proven +during its use by the Portland, Irish, and other civil hospitals +attached to the army. It withstood wind and weather, the former better +than the service marquee. Figs. 11 and 12 show the appearance of camps +composed of the two varieties. I must admit a warm preference for the +appearance of the service pattern, but I think it is indubitable that +the other is the more useful. + +Given the possibility of division of a General hospital in this manner, +single sections could readily be sent up the lines of communication to +serve as Stationary hospitals at various points behind the advance of +the troops, and on the cessation of active need, the sections could be +reunited at any point to form an advanced Base hospital. The sections +could be kept in touch throughout by visits from the officer of the +lines of communication. This would appear a ready means of providing +well-organised Stationary hospitals at short notice, and would save the +disadvantage of a definitely separate series. + +[Illustration: FIG. 12.--Type of Tortoise Tent Hospital. Portland +Hospital, Bloemfontein. (Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +Such hospitals might have been used on many occasions when the transport +of an entire General hospital was an impossibility. The service, +moreover, has some experience in this direction, since at one time No. 3 +General Hospital was divided into two definite sections. + +Bearing in mind the extreme readiness and promptitude with which the +officers during the present campaign extended the accommodation of +either Field or General hospitals, one of such sections as are proposed +might readily be made far more capacious than its regulation number +would suggest. + +My duties being entirely in connection with the service hospitals, I did +not become intimately acquainted with any of the volunteer hospitals +which did such excellent service, except the Portland, to the staff of +which I was indebted for much hospitality and kindness. This hospital +was practically of about the capacity proposed for the above-mentioned +sections, and the report of its work will no doubt furnish many points +of detail as to equipment, &c., which may be useful. + +The general results of the surgical work done during the campaign were +excellent, and taken as a whole the occurrence of any severe form of +septic disease was unusual. + +Pure septicæmia, especially in connection with abdominal injuries, +severe head injuries and secondary to acute traumatic osteo-myelitis, +was the form most commonly seen. Pyæmia with secondary deposits was +uncommon, and often of a somewhat subacute form; thus I saw several +patients recover after secondary abscesses had been opened, or the +primary focus of infection removed. The only really acute case of joint +pyæmia I heard of, developed in connection with a blistered toe followed +by cellulitis of the foot. + +Cutaneous erysipelas I never happened to see, and really acute +phlegmonous inflammation was rare. + +I may mention the occurrence of acute traumatic gangrene in two cases. +This developed in each instance with gunshot fracture of the femur; in +one amputation was performed, and the process extended upwards on to the +abdomen. The cases occurred with the army in the field in the +neighbourhood of Thaba-nchu and not in a stationary hospital. + +Acute traumatic tetanus occurred only in one instance to my knowledge. +In this case the primary injury was a shell wound of the thigh, and the +patient developed the disease and died within ten days. + +To the civil surgeon the performance of operations, and the dressing of +severe wounds at the front, proved on occasions a somewhat trying +ordeal. + +When operations were necessary in the field, during the daytime, it was +often possible to perform them in the open air, provided tolerable +protection could be obtained from the sun. A number of cases were so +operated upon during the march of the Highland Brigade from Wynberg to +Heilbron, and gave excellent results, the patients deriving considerable +benefit from the early cleansing and closure of the wounds. + +[Illustration: FIG. 13.--Tortoise Hospital Tent. Portland Hospital. +(Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +In camp, in the Field, or Stationary hospitals, the difficulties were +often much greater. The operations were necessarily performed under +shelter for reasons of privacy. In the tents the draught carrying the +dust from the camp was one of the commonest troubles. The exclusion of +dust was impossible, and it not only found its way into open wounds, but +permeated bandages with ease. Often when a bandage was removed, an even +layer of dust moistened by perspiration covered the whole area included +with a coating of mud. Again, in dust storms a similar layer of mud +sometimes covered the whole of the exposed parts of the bodies of +patients lying on the ground in the tents. + +It is of some interest to remark with regard to this dust, that Dr. L. +L. Jenner lately kindly examined a specimen collected at Modder River +after the camp had been more than two months established, and discovered +no pathogenic organisms in it. As a period of seven months had elapsed +since this dust was collected, the fact is of no practical import, +beyond showing that, if such organisms had existed, at any rate they +were not of a resistent nature. + +Insects, particularly common house-flies, were an intolerable pest at +times. In a fresh camp they were sometimes not abundant, but after two +or three days they multiplied enormously. Not only hospital tents, but +living and mess tents, swarmed with them, the canvas appearing +positively black at night. Even when dressing a wound, without unceasing +passage of the hand across the part, it was impossible to keep them from +settling, and during operations the nuisance was much greater. + +Storms of rain were occasionally as troublesome as, though perhaps less +harmful than, those of dust. On one occasion a whole Field hospital was +flooded only a few hours after a number of important operations had been +performed, and the patients were practically washed out of the tents. It +was somewhat remarkable that none of the men suffered any serious ill as +a result. + +At times the temperature was sufficiently high to make either dressing +or operating a most exhausting process to the surgeon. The heat of the +day was not on the whole so disadvantageous from the point of view of +the operator, as the cold of the nights during the winter in Orange +River Colony. On one or two occasions serious operations had to be left +undone, as it was only possible to consider them in camp, where, as we +arrived at night only, the temperature was too low to justify the +necessary exposure. + +Water for use at operations was often a great difficulty. Even at Orange +River, where, though muddy, the water was wholesome, it was impossible +to get water suitable for operations unless it had previously gone +through the complicated processes of precipitation by alum, boiling, and +filtration. At Orange River a small room in the house of one of the +railway servants was obtained and fitted as a rough operating room by +the Royal Engineers. The necessary utensils were provided by Colonel +Young, Commissioner of the Red Cross Societies. Here a stock of prepared +water was kept for emergencies. + +The remaining difficulties mainly consisted in those we are familiar +with in civil practice, such as the securing of suitable assistance in +the handling of instruments and dressing, when the rush of work was very +great. + +At the Base hospitals accommodation for operating in properly equipped +rooms obviated many of the difficulties above referred to. + +In concluding this introduction I should sum up in a few words my +experience of the general working of the hospital system during my stay +in South Africa. + +The excellence of the Field hospitals for their purpose has been already +alluded to, and, as far as I could ascertain, won the confidence and +approval of patients, military commanders, and civilians such as myself. + +The Stationary hospitals (by which I intend to indicate those receiving +the patients directly from the Field hospitals before the establishment +of advanced Base hospitals), as already indicated, were not in my +opinion so perfectly conceived or organised. The requirements of these +are, however, far greater than those of the Field hospitals, and they of +all others are dependent on the possession of facilities for rapid +transport. In South Africa the difficulties of supplying them were +enormous, and no doubt the conditions of the campaign in this, as so +many other particulars, were novel and unusual. None the less the +experience gained will no doubt be utilised in the future. With regard +to the extravagant criticisms levelled at the Field hospitals serving as +Stationary hospitals at the time of the early period of the occupation +of Bloemfontein, it may be pointed out that the only proper ground for +comparison was not between the patients at Bloemfontein and those in +hospital at the base, but between the men in hospital and those in the +field at that time, since the conditions were equally adverse to both. +Besides, it must not be forgotten that a large proportion of the +patients, at that time, were really comfortably housed in the Raadzaal +and other buildings, the preparation of which entailed a very great +amount of both labour and resource. + +The difficulties experienced at that time will, it is hoped, go far +towards securing greater facilities and rights of transport to the Royal +Army Medical Corps in the future. As a civilian, one cannot but +recognise that the conditions of modern warfare are much altered from +those of the past. Prisoners are well cared for and kindly treated, the +sick and wounded are respected by both sides, and except in the actual +horrors of fighting the condition of the soldier is a happier one. Under +these circumstances the limitation of the transport facilities of a +department so closely concerned with the well-being of all, and which +has been organised on a most moderate scale, must soon become a +tradition of the past in civilised armies. + +As to the efficiency of the organisation of the General hospitals, +either at the advanced or actual base, I have already testified. +Naturally the working of these hospitals varied with the personal +equation of the officer in charge of them, but as a whole the service +has every reason to be proud of their success. As far as surgical +results are concerned, and with these I had special acquaintance, the +success of the hospitals was amply demonstrated. + +Adverse criticism was not however wanting, and often expressed in the +strongest terms by persons totally unacquainted with hospital methods, +and apparently unconscious that such excellence as is exhibited in a +London hospital is the result of continuous work and development for +some centuries, and that such institutions are worked by committees and +staffs of permanent constitution. + +The proportion of female nurses employed in these hospitals underwent +steady increase from the commencement of the campaign, and the immense +value of the nursing reserve was fully proved. There is no doubt that in +Base hospitals the actual nursing should always be entrusted to women. + +The demands of the campaign necessitated the employment of a large +number of civil surgeons in the various hospitals. These gentlemen +accommodated themselves with true British aptitude to the conditions +under which they were placed, and in all positions their sterling work +contributed in no small degree to the success that was attained. + +One class of hospital still remains for mention. I refer to the +improvised hospitals prepared in the Boer towns prior to the British +occupation. They were met with in all the smaller towns, and also in the +larger ones such as Johannesburg and Pretoria. + +The Burke hospital in Pretoria, started by a private citizen and his +daughter, and the Victoria hospital in Johannesburg, presided over by +Dr. and Mrs. Murray, were two of the largest, but each and all deserve +due recognition. + +I am sure that many of our wounded officers and men who were cared for +in these hospitals while prisoners in the hands of the Boers, will never +lose their sense of gratitude to those inhabitants who spared no effort +to render their position as happy as possible under the circumstances; +and the existence of these hospitals was no small boon to the service +when called upon to take charge of the sick and wounded therein +contained. + +I cannot close this chapter without recognition of the immensity of the +task which has fallen on the Royal Army Medical Corps in the treatment +of the sick and wounded during the course of the campaign and full +appreciation of the manner in which that task has been met. The strain +thrown upon this department of the service, originally organised for the +needs of an army less than half the magnitude of that eventually taking +the field, was incalculably great, and the medical profession may well +be proud of the efforts made by its military representatives to do the +best possible work under the circumstances. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] 3,328 men of the IX. Brigade present are not included, as they never +came into action. + +[2] The high mortality was due to deaths amongst the officers of the +Naval Brigade. + +[3] To obtain this total the numbers of killed, wounded, and missing, +after the three earlier battles, have been massed, and added to the +total number of men known to have taken part in the battle of +Magersfontein. The inaccuracy dependent on the fact that some of the men +reported as wounded or missing in the earlier battles had already +returned to their regiments, and are included in the total of 11,447, +must be disregarded. + +[4] Numbers quoted from Fischer, _Handbuch der Kriegschirurgie_, vol. i. +p. 22, 1882. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +MODERN MILITARY RIFLES AND THEIR PROJECTILES IN RELATION TO INJURIES +PRODUCED BY THEM ON THE HUMAN BODY + + +Before proceeding to the actual description of the wounds inflicted by +modern military rifles, it is necessary to prefix a few remarks on the +mechanism and mode of production of these injuries. + +Recent tendency in the construction of military rifles has been in the +direction of reduction of bore, and a corresponding one in the calibre +of the bullet, the resulting loss of weight in the latter as an element +in striking power being compensated for by the attainment of an +augmentation of velocity in the flight of the projectile, and a +comparatively flat trajectory. + +Changes in this direction have endowed the weapons with increase both in +range and accuracy of fire; while the greater rapidity with which +magazine rifles can be discharged and, in consequence of reduction in +weight, the greater number of cartridges which can be carried by each +man, also form important factors in the possible deadliness of warfare +at the present day. None the less the experience of the present campaign +has scarcely justified the early prognostications expressed as to a +great increase in the number and severity of wounds amongst the +combatants.[5] This comparative immunity is to be explained mainly on +two grounds. The increased distance which for the most part separated +the two bodies of men, a feature no doubt accentuated by the mode of +warfare adopted by the Boer, and his strong sense of the folly of close +combat on equal terms, tended to efface one of the chief characters, +velocity of flight, on the part of the projectile. The want of +effectiveness of the small-calibre bullet as an instrument of serious +mischief also kept down the mortality. + +Since the year 1889 the calibre of the bullet in our own army has been +reduced from that of the Martini-Henry (.450 in.) to one of .309 in. in +the Lee-Metford, and a consequent reduction in weight from 480 to 215 +grains. To allow of the satisfactory assumption of the more complicated +rifling by the more rapidly projected bullet, the lead core has been +ensheathed in a mantle of denser metal. The bullet itself is of an +original calibre (.309 in.) somewhat exceeding the bore of the rifle +barrel (.303 in.), in which way a species of 'choke' is obtained and +deep rifling of the surface ensured. Beyond this the comparative +transverse and longitudinal measurements and shape have been altered in +order to maintain weight, preserve a proper balance during flight, and +increase the power of penetration. These alterations with slight +differences in detail embody the general principles that underlie the +construction of each of the weapons adopted by European nations. It will +be well here to consider the influence of each alteration from the point +of view of the surgeon. + +_Calibre._--The effect of the diminution of calibre is (_a_) to reduce +the area of impact of the bullet on the part impinged upon, and hence to +lower the degree of resistance offered by the tissues; this to a certain +extent tends to neutralise the augmented striking force resulting from +the increased velocity of flight. (_b_) To limit considerably the +destructive powers of the bullet, as a smaller area of tissue is exposed +to its action. (_c_) To allow of the production of very 'neat' injuries +and the frequent escape of important structures, also the production of +remarkably prolonged subcutaneous tracks in positions where such would +be regarded as scarcely possible, and in point of fact were impossible +with the older and larger projectiles. + +_Length._--The comparative increase in length of the bullet is, from the +surgical point of view, only of material importance in increasing the +weight and therefore the striking power, and in so far as it is a +mechanical necessity for the flight of the projectile on an axis +parallel to its long diameter, and so tends to ensure impact on the +body by the tip of the bullet. This latter is, however, surgically +favourable as ensuring a smaller wound. + +_Weight._--The decrease in weight must be regarded on the whole as +altogether to the advantage of the wounded individual, since it cannot +be considered to be entirely compensated for by the resulting increased +velocity of flight, unless the range of fire is moderately close. + +_Shape._--The ogival tip and general wedge-like outline, while +decreasing the aerial resistance to and increasing the power of +penetration possessed by the bullet, at the same time allow the escape +of some structures by displacement, while others are saved from complete +destruction by undergoing perforation. Beyond this the sharper the tip, +the smaller is the area of the body primarily impinged upon, the less +the resistance offered to perforation, and to some degree the less the +destruction of surrounding tissues. + +_Increased velocity of flight._--This multiplies the striking force, and +compensates in part for decrease in volume and weight of the bullet. It +is customary to speak of the velocity as 'initial' and 'remaining.' +Initial velocity is the term employed to express the velocity at the +time of the escape of the bullet from the barrel; this is also +designated as 'muzzle velocity.' 'Remaining velocity' expresses that +obtaining during any subsequent portion of the flight of the projectile. + +The greatest initial velocity is obtained with the use of bullets of the +smallest calibre, but this is not of the practical importance which +might be assumed, since the remaining velocity of flight of such +projectiles falls more rapidly than that of those of slightly greater +mass. Thus, although there may be a difference of a hundred metres per +second in initial velocity between two rifles of calibres varying from +6.5 to 8 millimetres (.303-.314 in.), at the end of 1,000 metres the +discrepancy is greatly reduced, while at 2,000 metres it hardly exists. +Under such circumstances the projectile of greater weight and volume, as +possessing the greater striking force, is considerably the more +formidable of the two. This is the more important if it be allowed, as I +believe to be the case, that velocity _per se_ is of no practical import +in the case of wounds of the soft parts of the body, which after all +form the preponderating number of all gunshot injuries. The effect of +the higher degrees of velocity differs, however, with the amount of +resistance met with on the part of the body; hence its serious import is +well exemplified when parts of the osseous skeleton are implicated, +although even here considerable variations exist, dependent upon the +structure of that part of the bone actually involved. The most obvious +ill effect of injuries from bullets travelling at high rates is seen in +the case of the various parts of the nervous system, and here it is +undeniable. High velocity and striking force are also responsible for +the prolonged course sometimes taken by bullets through the body. + +The actual degree of velocity, as judged by the range of fire at which +an injury is received and the resulting injury, is very hard to estimate +on account of the many and varying factors which enter into its +determination. The mere recital of some of these will suffice to make +this evident. + +1. Quality of the individual cartridge employed, as to loading, the +materials employed, and their condition. + +2. The condition of the rifle as to cleanliness, heating, and the state +of the grooves of the barrel. + +3. The angle of impact of the bullet with the part injured. + +4. Resistance dependent on the weight of the whole body of the man +struck, or of an isolated limb. + +5. Special peculiarities of build in the individual struck, such as +thickness and density of the integument and fasciæ, strength and +thickness of the bones, &c. + +6. State of tension of the muscles, fasciæ, and ligaments at the moment +of impact, and fixity or otherwise of the part of the body struck. + +7. The degree of wind, temperature, and hygroscopic conditions of the +atmosphere. + +These form some of the more important points which have to be taken into +consideration, in addition to a mere calculation of the actual distance +from which a wound has been received from a particular rifle, and taken +with the unsatisfactory nature of the evidence as to the latter, which +is usually alone obtainable, it is clear that definite assumptions are +scarcely possible. In a great number of cases I came to the conclusion +that the only indisputable evidence of low velocity was the lodgment of +an undeformed bullet. There is little doubt, moreover, that the general +tendency of wounded men was to minimise the range of fire at which they +were struck, and again that in the majority of cases in this campaign it +was quite impossible to determine whence any particular bullet had come, +since the enemy was seldom arranged in one line, but rather in several. +Again, smokeless powder was generally employed. Beyond this, in some +cases where there was no doubt of the short distance from which the +bullet was fired, the wounds were due to 'ricochet' of portions of +broken-up bullets. The following instance well illustrates this. A +sentry fired five times at two men within a distance of six paces, +knocking both down. One man received a severe direct fracture of the +ilium, the bullet entering between the anterior superior and inferior +iliac spines and emerging at the upper part of the buttock. The entry +and exit apertures were large but hardly 'explosive,' as a subcutaneous +track four to five inches long separated them. Besides this both men had +other lesser injuries; thus in the second two perforating wounds of the +arm existed. The latter were not unlike type Lee-Metford wounds, and +were regarded as such until a few days afterwards when a hard body was +felt in the distal portion of one track and removed. This proved to be a +part of the leaden core only, and the similar wound had no doubt been +produced by a like fragment, the bullet having broken up on striking the +stony ground. + +_Trajectory._--The comparative flatness of this depends on the +construction of the rifle and the propulsive force employed, and varies +as does velocity with the nature, excellence, and amount of the +explosive, the correctness of the principles upon which the bullet is +devised, and the mechanical perfection of its manufacture. Its +importance naturally consists in the manner in which it affects the +possibility of covering objects on a wide area of ground and thus +creating a broad 'dangerous zone.' A bullet fired on level ground from +any one of three of the rifles referred to later (Lee-Metford, Mauser, +Krag-Jörgensen), sighted to 500 yards and fired from the shoulder in +the standing position, will cover some part of an erect man of average +height during the whole extent of its flight. A body of men within that +distance is therefore in a position of extreme peril in the face of a +good shooting enemy. + +The importance of a flat trajectory is progressively lost, however, with +any rifle, as the weapon is gradually sighted to greater distances. Thus +when sighted to 2,000 yards the bullet from the Lee-Metford rifle rises +174 feet, and a whole army might comfortably be situated over a +considerable area within that distance. The importance of flatness of +trajectory is also influenced by the nature of the ground occupied by +the combatants. Thus when the area to be covered consists in ground +first rising then falling from the rifleman, the trajectory will become +more or less parallel to the surface crossed, and the 'dangerous zone' +will be correspondingly increased in extent. On the other hand, when the +ground slopes away from the rifleman the rise of the projectile is +exaggerated, and reaches its most limited capacity of covering an +intervening space when the flight crosses a hollow. + +_Revolution of the bullet._--It only remains in this place to say a few +words concerning the revolution imparted to the bullet by the rifling of +the barrel. This ensures the flight of the projectile on a line parallel +to its long axis, and notably increases its power of penetration. + +Both these properties of the flight are to the advantage of the wounded, +since, as already mentioned, the more exactly the impact corresponds to +a right angle with the skin, the more limited will be the area of +contusion, even if it be of the most severe character, while to the +twist of the bullet must be ascribed a not inconsiderable part in the +explanation of the ready and neat perforations of narrow structures +which are frequently produced. + +It has been pointed out that the Lee-Metford bullet turns on its own +axis once in a distance of ten inches, while the Mauser revolves once in +a distance of eight and eleven-sixteenths inches; hence not more than at +most two revolutions are made in tracks crossing the trunk, and not more +than half a full revolution in the perforation of a limb. None the +less, no one can deny the influence of the one half turn of supination +in entering a perforating tool of any description, both as preventing +splintering, and in preserving the surrounding parts from damage. + +Beyond this, the spiral turn of the bullet, by diverting a part of the +transmitted vibrations into a second direction, must, in the case of +wounds of the body, help to throw off contiguous structures, and while +those that are in actual contact are more severely contused, the +surrounding ones suffer somewhat less direct injury. It must be borne in +mind, also, that rapidity of revolution does not fall _pari passu_ with +that of velocity of flight, but that the former undergoes a +comparatively slighter diminution until the bullet is actually spent. +Hence, the influence of revolution is felt, however low the velocity may +be, provided sufficient striking force is retained to enter the body. A +word must be added here as to the surface of a discharged bullet; this, +in taking the rifling of the barrel, becomes permanently grooved. The +depth of the groove differs with the variety of rifle. In the +Lee-Metford the grooves are deep (.009), in the Mauser slightly less so +(.007), but the surface of both bullets is comparatively roughened when +revolving in the body, and this circumstance, since the projectile +exactly fits its track, may influence the degree of the surface +destruction of tissue, and somewhat aid in the clean perforation of +bone, since a little bone dust is always found at the entrance aperture +of a canal in cancellous bone. + +During the campaign many varieties of rifle projecting bullets of widely +differing calibre were employed by the Boers, many of whom as sportsmen +preferred the rifle to which they were accustomed to a regulation +weapon, and an illustration of a large variety of bullets from +cartridges which I collected from arsenals and camps is given below (p. +96). The great majority of the men, however, were armed with +small-calibre weapons of some sort, and as the wounds produced by these +are of chief interest at the present day, I shall say little of any +others, beyond an occasional reference to Martini-Henry rifle wounds +which may be considered to represent approximately those made by large +leaden sporting bullets. + +[Illustration: FIG. 14.--Type Cartridges in common use during the war. +From left to right: Martini-Henry, Guedes, Lee-Metford, (Spanish) +Mauser, Krag-Jörgensen] + +The most important, as the most frequently employed, rifles projecting +small-calibre bullets were the Krag-Jörgensen, Mauser, Lee-Metford, and +Guedes, given in the order of increase of calibre (from 6.5 to 8 +millimetres, or .254-.314 in.) in the bullets. As to the seriousness of +wounds produced by these there is little to choose, differences in +character being only those of degree. Such differences depended on the +area of tissue implicated, corresponding with the calibre of the +particular bullet, the comparative weight of the bullet, and the degree +of velocity of flight maintained at the moment of impact. When, however, +any of these bullets have been exposed in their flight to influences +capable of causing deformity of their outline and symmetry, +peculiarities of construction and in the composition of the metals +employed in their manufacture may materially alter the character of the +wounds produced and revolutionise a classification founded purely on the +relative weight, calibre, and degree of velocity with which each is +endowed. + + +TABLE I + +[Transcriber's note: table split to fit on page.] + ++-------------------+----------------+------------------+----------------+ +| | Martini-Henry | Guedes | Lee-Metford | ++-------------------+----------------+------------------+----------------+ +|Calibre of rifle | .45 in. | .314 in. | .303 in. | +|Number of grooves | 7 | 4 | 7 | +|One twist in | 22 in. to right|9.85 in. to right | 10 in. to left | +|Muzzle velocity | 1,300 f.s. | 1,988 f.s. | 2,000 f.s. | +|Sighted to | 1,450 yds. | 2,600 paces | 2,800 yds. | +|Weight of cartridge| 758 grains |464.05 grains[6] | 416-1/2 grains | +|Weight of bullet | 480 grains | 244 grains | 215 grains | +|Length of bullet | 1.250 in. | 1.250 in. | 1.250 in. | +|Calibre of bullet | .450 in. | .315 in. | .309 in. | +|Charge of powder | 85 grains | 20-23 grains | 31-1/2 grains | +| | (black powder) | (nitro- | (cordite) | +| | | smokeless) | | +|Nature of alloy | -- | Mantle: Mild | Cupro-nickel | +| used for mantle | | steel, greased | | +| of bullet | | | | +|Thickness of | -- | -- | Mark II. bullet| +| mantle | | | | +|Tip | -- | .031 | .036 | +|Sides .984 from tip| -- | .011 | .015 | ++-------------------+----------------+------------------+----------------+ + ++-------------------+---------------+--------------------+---------------+ +| | Lee-Enfield | Mauser | Krag- | +| | | | Jörgensen| ++-------------------+---------------+--------------------+---------------+ +|Calibre of rifle | .303 in. | .276 in. | .254 in. | +|Number of grooves | 5 | 4 | 4 | +|One twist in |10 in. to left |8-11/16 in. to right| 8 in. to left | +|Muzzle velocity | 2,000 f.s. | 2,262 f.s. | 2,309 f.s. | +|Sighted to | 2,800 yds. | 2,187 yds. | 2,406 yds. | +|Weight of cartridge| 416-1/2 grains| 384.5 grains | 372.1 grains | +|Weight of bullet | 215 grains | 173.3 grains | 156.4 grains | +|Length of bullet | 1.250 in. | 1 in. | 1.250 in. | +|Calibre of bullet | .309 in. | .280 in. | .260 in. | +|Charge of powder | 31-1/2 grains | 38.0 grains | 36 grains | +| | (cordite) | (smokeless) |(nitro | +| | | | -smokeless) | +|Nature of alloy | Cupro-nickel | Mantle: Steel |Mantle: Mild | +| used for mantle | | with alloy of | steel coated | +| of bullet | | copper on | with copper | +| | | surface | nickel, the | +| | | | composition of| +| | | | the latter | +| | | | being that of | +| | | | the cupro- | +| | | | nickel of the | +| | | | Lee-Enfield | +| | | | bullet | +|Thickness of |Mark II. bullet| -- | -- | +| mantle | | | | +|Tip | .036 | .031 | .022 | +|Sides .984 from tip| .015 | .015 | .015 | ++-------------------+---------------+--------------------+---------------+ + +Some particulars of the four rifles and their projectiles are collated +in Table I., to which is added the corresponding information regarding +the Martini-Henry for the purposes of comparison. + + +TABLE II.--PENETRATION + +The penetration of the Martini-Henry and the Lee-Metford or Lee-Enfield +rifle with Mark II. bullet is as follows: + + +Martini-Henry 15-1/2 in. of 1 in. deal boards 19 in. of sand + 1 in. apart containing 15 per + cent. of moisture + +Lee-Metford {Mark II.} 42 in. of 1 in. deal boards 60 in. of sand +Lee-Enfield {bullet } 1 in. apart containing 15 per + cent. of moisture + +The penetration of bullets of .314 calibre differs little from that +possessed by the Lee-Metford or Lee-Enfield, of which the muzzle +velocities are very little lower, with Mark II. bullet. The Belgian +Mauser perforates 55 inches of fir-wood at 12 metres distance. With +regard to the penetration of bullets of smaller calibre that of the +Roumanian Mannlicher (.256) may be taken as typical. When fired into a +sand butt at 25 yards the bullet enters 9 inches and then breaks up. + +The comparative size of the different cartridges is shown in fig. 14. + +The general remarks already made as to the effect of weight, calibre, +and velocity sufficiently explain the importance of the particulars +given in this table, but it will be noted that the Lee-Metford rifle is +inferior to both the Krag-Jörgensen and Mauser rifles in the initial +velocity transmitted to its bullet. The tendency to equalisation, in +this particular, when the remaining velocity is considered, has been +mentioned; but it may be of interest if I quote from Nimier and Laval[7] +the scale on which the decrease in velocity takes place in the case of +the three weapons. + + +METRES PER SECOND + ++---------------------+-------------+--------+----------------+ +| | Lee-Metford | Mauser | Krag-Jörgensen | ++---------------------+-------------+--------+----------------+ +| | | | | +| Initial velocity | 630 | 718 | 720 | +| Remaining velocity: | | | | +| At 100 metres | 574 | 699 | 718 | +| At 1,000 metres | 249 | 264 | 269 | +| At 2,000 metres | 159 | 165 | 165.9 | +| | | | | ++---------------------+-------------+--------+----------------+ + +Giving full importance to the effects of velocity as a factor in the +severity of the injuries produced, when the large proportion of wounds +received at distances above 1,000 yards is borne in mind, we see how +rapidly the superiority of the smaller projectiles is lost. This loss, +even in the early stages, is probably more than made up for in the case +of the Lee-Metford, when the superiority in weight, calibre, and +bluntness of extremity as contributing to striking force is taken into +consideration. + +The striking force (kinetic energy) of a bullet is indicated by the +following formula: F = 1/2 mv.^{2}; that is to say, the striking force +is equal to half the weight of the bullet multiplied by the square of +the velocity. + +In point of fact, with unaltered regulation bullets I was never able to +determine any very material difference between the wounds produced, +further than that the wounds of entry and exit in the soft parts tended +to correspond with the calibre of the particular bullet concerned. +Although the immense majority of the wounds which came under my notice +were caused by the Mauser bullet, yet I saw some hundreds of wounded +Boers and a good many of our own men wounded by Lee-Metford bullets, in +the latter case no doubt by some of the sporting varieties. The only +cases that I can call to mind or have noted as exhibiting a superior +wounding power in the Lee-Metford bullet are some injuries to bone. Thus +I saw a considerable number of clean perforations of the patella +produced by Mauser bullets, while the only two Boers whom I saw with +injured patellæ had suffered transverse fractures. Again, I have a +lively recollection of an old Boer who had suffered a fracture of the +middle third of the femur, in the thigh of whom, with small apertures of +entry and exit, a cavity of destroyed tissue, five inches across, was +found beneath the fascia lata at the distal side of the fracture. I +cannot however say that I did not observe many equally severe injuries +to the femur produced by Mauser bullets in our own men, and as far as +fractures of the skull went, a somewhat crucial test, among the men +brought off the battlefield alive, I never saw any difference in +severity whatever. + +[Illustration: FIG. 15.--Sections of four Bullets to show relative shape +and thickness of mantles. + +From left to right: 1. Guedes; regular dome-shaped tip; mild steel +mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; at sides of body 0.3 mm. 2. +Lee-Metford; ogival tip; cupro-nickel mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; +gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 3. Mauser; pointed dome tip, steel +mantle plated with copper alloy; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; gradual +decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 4. Krag-Jörgensen; ogival tip as in +Lee-Metford; steel mantle plated with cupro-nickel; thickness at tip 0.6 +mm.; gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. The measurements of the sides +are taken 2.5 cm. from the tip. Note the more gradual thinning in the +Lee-Metford mantle.] + +These points of comparison having been made, it only remains to consider +one other point, that of the relative stability of the bullets. This is +a matter of the greatest importance as regards the regularity or +otherwise of the wounding power of the projectile, and, as far as my +experience went, I believe the Mauser to far exceed the Lee-Metford in +instability of structure. + +The core of all four bullets is composed of lead hardened by a certain +admixture of tin or antimony, but the mantle differs in composition, +thickness both general and in different parts of the bullet, mode of +fixation, and consequently in its power of resistance to violence. + +Fig. 15 gives an exact representation of the relative thickness of the +mantles, and shows the general tendency to a thickening of the mantle at +its upper extremity, designed to increase both the stability and +striking power of the projectile. It will be noted that in general +stoutness the Lee-Metford stands first, as the case increases gradually +in thickness from base to apex. + +Beyond this it must be noted that the Lee-Metford is the only one of the +four that is ensheathed with a mantle composed of a definite alloy, this +consisting of 80 parts of nickel and 20 of copper. Two of the remaining +bullets, the Mauser and Krag-Jörgensen, are ensheathed with steel +covered with a thin coating of an alloy of copper or cupro-nickel, to +take the rifling of the barrel, while the third has a plain steel mantle +which is covered with a layer of wax to take the place of the nickel +used in the manufacture of the two others. It is interesting to mention +here that the Boers evidently found the copper alloy coating +insufficient for its purpose, or at any rate not satisfactory in +preserving the weapon from the ill-effects consequent on the friction +between the steel case and the rifling of the barrel, as at about the +middle of the campaign they began to use their bullets waxed, as in the +case of the Austrian Mannlicher; hence the legend of the poisoned +bullets which caused such a sensation for a short period amongst the +uninitiated. It is possible also that the additional layer of wax was +necessitated by the wearing of the barrel. + +The wax employed for the Mauser bullets was not originally green. Mr. +Leslie B. Taylor informs me that it is probably paraffin wax, the green +colour depending on the formation of verdigris from the copper alloy +with which the steel envelopes are plated. This completely corresponds +with my own experience, since on the bullets in my possession the green +colour, originally pale, has steadily increased in depth. Many old +leaden bullets I found in the Boer arsenals were also waxed, but in this +case no alteration in colour had taken place. The Guedes bullets, which +are cased in mild steel, become somewhat brown with exposure from a +similar oxidation or rusting of the surface. + +As far as my experience went, however, the steel casing has an important +surgical bearing beyond the mere question of wear and tear on the rifle +barrel. That it possesses elasticity and capability of bending is +obvious, and in a later chapter, devoted to irregular wounds, several +illustrations of such deformities are given; but when it strikes stone I +believe it splits and tears with very much greater freedom than the +cupro-nickel mantle of the Lee-Metford. At any rate, I never came across +Lee-Metford bullets deformed to the same degree as Mauser bullets, +either when removed from the body, or as ricochet projectiles on the +field of battle. For this reason, therefore, provided the fighting takes +place on stony ground, I believe the Mauser bullet and others ensheathed +in steel to be much more dangerous surgically than those encased in +cupro-nickel. I fancy this would be equally the case even if the mantles +were of exactly the same thickness. + +The layer of copper alloy on the steel mantles is also a physical +characteristic worthy of mention. This very readily chips off in a +manner similar to that we are accustomed to see with nickel-plated +instruments. This may be due to the compression into the grooving of the +rifle, or as the result of passing impact of the bullet with an obstacle +previous to entering the body or contact with a bone within it. Small +scales of metal set free in one of these ways are seen in a very large +proportion of Mauser wounds, and although they are so small as usually +to be of little importance, the presence of such in, for instance, the +substance of one of the peripheral nerves which has been perforated +cannot be considered a desirable complication. + +To recapitulate, it would appear that at mean ranges, both in striking +force and as regards the area of the tissues affected, the Lee-Metford +is a superior projectile to the Mauser, in spite of the greater initial +velocity possessed by the latter. On the other hand the comparative ease +with which the Mauser bullet undergoes deformation either without or +within the body, so ensuring more extensive injury and laceration, +renders it the less desirable bullet to receive a wound from when not in +its normal shape and condition. + +I can say little about the remaining two rifles. The Krag-Jörgensen was +little used, and beyond pointing out its capacity to inflict very neat +individual injuries, in which it must surpass even the Mauser, I can +only add that I had no opportunity of forming an opinion as to the +danger dependent on the great initial velocity imparted to the bullet. +The Guedes rifle has been included in the table because it approximates +in bore to the other three. Its bullet is of the same calibre as the +Austrian Mannlicher, one of the most powerful military rifles in use, +and it was used to a considerable extent during the war by the Boers.[8] +As to its capabilities, it appeared an inferior weapon, since want of +velocity and striking power of the bullets was indicated by the number +of these which were retained in the body, and by the fact that I never +saw one extracted that had undergone any more serious deformation than +some flattening on one side of the tip. On the other hand wounds of the +soft parts occasioned by it were only to be distinguished from Mauser +wounds by their slightly greater size, and at a short range of fire the +weight and volume of the bullet made it a dangerous projectile. + +The question of deformed bullets will be again referred to at length in +the section on wounds of irregular type, and a number of type specimens +are there figured and described (p. 76). In the same chapter will be +found illustrations of a number of sporting bullets of small calibre, as +well as of large calibres in lead, found in the Boer arsenals and camps. +I have placed them in that position as mainly of interest in connection +with the occurrence of large and irregular wounds (see figs. 42 and 43, +pp. 95 and 98). + +The small sporting bullets were mostly of the Mauser (.276), Lee-Metford +(.303), or Mannlicher (.315) calibre. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[5] See tables, pp. 12, 13, 15, Chapter I. + +[6] The weights are from cartridges brought home. The charge of powder +was small and variable. + +[7] H. Nimier and E. Laval, _Les Projectiles des Armes de Guerre_, p. +20. F. Alcan. 1899. + +[8] Mr. Leslie B. Taylor informs me that this rifle is a discarded +Portuguese regulation pattern, with which a copper-ensheathed soft-nosed +bullet was originally employed. For the purposes of the present campaign +a modified cartridge was constructed. Examination of some specimens in +my possession showed the charge of powder to be very small. (Table I. p. +48.) + + + + +CHAPTER III + +GENERAL CHARACTERS OF WOUNDS PRODUCED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE + + +The effects of injuries inflicted by bullets of small calibre may be +divided into two classes: + +1. Direct or immediate destruction of tissue. + +2. Remote changes induced by the transmission of vibratory force from +the passing projectile to neighbouring tissues or organs. + +Those of the first class will be mainly considered in this chapter; the +remote effects will be dealt with under the headings devoted to special +regions. + +In dealing with the wounds as a whole I shall first describe those of +uncomplicated character as type injuries, and deal with those possessing +special or irregular characters separately. + + +TYPE WOUNDS + +1. _Nature of the external apertures._--The apertures of entry and exit +in uncomplicated cases are very insignificant, but the size naturally +varies slightly with that of the special form of bullet concerned. As +will be shown moreover, the difference in size is the only real +distinguishing characteristic in many cases between wounds produced by +the modern bullet of small calibre and those resulting from the use of +the older and larger projectiles of conical form. I have been very much +struck on looking over my diagrams of entry, and especially exit, wounds +to find that they reproduce in miniature most of those figured in the +History of the War of the Rebellion; some of these diagrams are +reproduced in this chapter. + +_Aperture of entry._--The typical wound of entry with a normal +undeformed bullet varies in appearance according to whether the +projectile has impinged at a right angle or at increasing degrees of +obliquity, or again, to whether the skin is supported by soft tissues +alone, or on those of a more resistent nature such as bone or cartilage. + +[Illustration: FIG. 16.--Mauser Entry and Exit Wounds. A, entry in +buttock; circular opening filled with clot and crossed by a tag of +tissue. B, exit in epigastrium near mid-line; irregular slit form, with +well-marked prominence. Specimens hardened in formalin immediately after +death; the resulting contraction has slightly exaggerated the +irregularity of outline of the entry wound] + +[Illustration: FIG. 17.--Gutter Wound of outer aspect of shoulder, +caused by a normal Mauser, which subsequently perforated a man's leg. At +the central part the gutter was 3/4 in. deep a few days after the +injury] + +When the bullet impinges at a right angle the wound is circular, with +more or less depressed margins, and of a diameter, corresponding to the +size of the bullet occasioning it, from a quarter to a third of an inch. +The description 'punched out' has been sometimes applied to it, but it +would be more correct to reverse the term to 'punched in,' since the +appearance is really most nearly simulated by a hole resulting from the +driving of a solid punch into a soft structure enveloped in a denser +covering. The loss of substance, moreover, in the primary stage is not +actually so great as appears to be the case, fragments of contused +tissue from the margin being turned into the opening of the wound track. +The true margin therefore is not sharp cut, and the nature of the line +differs somewhat according to the structure of the skin in the locality +impinged upon. Thus the granular scalp and the comparatively homogeneous +skin of the anterior abdominal wall will furnish good examples of the +nature of the slight difference in appearance. From the first the margin +is also often somewhat discoloured by a metallic stain, similar to that +seen when a bullet is fired through a paper book. This ring is, however, +narrow, and not likely to be noticeable when the bullet has passed +through the clothing. In any case it is subsequently obscured by the +development of a narrow ring of discoloration due to the contusion. This +latter varies in width, and still later a halo of ecchymosis half an +inch or more in diameter surrounds the original wound. + +[Illustration: FIG. 18.--Oblique Exit Gutter. Diagram enlarged to actual +size from case shown in fig. 24, p. 64.] + +With increasing degrees of obliquity of impact more and more pronounced +oval openings of entry result, culminating in an actual gutter such as +is seen in fig. 17. + +In all oval openings the loss of substance is more pronounced at the +proximal margin, while the wound is liable to undergo secondary +enlargement at the distal margin, since in the former the epidermis is +mainly affected, while in the latter the epidermis is spared as an +ill-nourished bridge, the deeper layers of the skin suffering the more +severely. When the wound occurs in regions, such as the chest-wall or +over the sacrum, where the skin is firmly supported, the oval openings +are often very considerable in size, reaching a diameter at least double +that of the circular ones. In the case of the oval openings the +depression of the margins is not such a well-marked feature as in wounds +resulting from rectangular impact of the bullet, since the distal margin +is really lifted. + +[Illustration: FIG. 19.--Oval Entry Wound over third sacral vertebra. +Exit wound, anterior abdominal wall. Slightly starred variety. Diagram +made on second day] + +_Aperture of exit._--The wound of exit in normal cases offers far more +variation in appearance than that of entry, this variation depending on +several circumstances: first, the want of support to the skin from +without, and such other factors as the degree of velocity retained by +the travelling bullet, the locality of the opening, and the density, +tension, and resistance offered by the particular area of skin +implicated. + +When the range has been short and the velocity high, it is often +difficult to discriminate between the two apertures. Both may be +circular and of approximately the same size, and the only distinguishing +characteristic, the slight depression of the margin of the wound of +entrance, may be absent if any time has elapsed between the infliction +of the injury and examination by the surgeon. One very strong +characteristic if present is the general tendency of the margins, and +even the area surrounding the exit wound itself, to be somewhat +prominent. Fig. 16 shows this point, although the wound from which it +was drawn had been produced thirty-six hours before death. The specimen +was then hardened in formalin and still preserves its original aspect. +This character is, however, more frequently displayed in wounds received +at mean, or longer, ranges. In wounds produced by bullets travelling at +the highest degrees of velocity it is often absent. + +[Illustration: FIG. 20.--Circular Entry back of arm; exit (bird-like) in +anterior elbow crease] + +[Illustration: FIG. 21.--Circular Entry over patella. Starred exit of +elongated form in popliteal crease] + +When the range of fire has been greater and the velocity retained by the +bullet lower, slit wounds are common, or some of the slighter degrees of +starring. Actual starring I never saw, but reference to figs. 20 and 21 +will show a tendency in this direction, also a close resemblance to the +starred wounds resulting from perforations by large leaden bullets. +Such wounds, I believe, are usually the result of a somewhat low degree +of velocity. + +Slit exit wounds may be vertical or transverse (fig. 20) in direction, +and the production of these is dependent on the locality in which they +are situated, the thickness, density, and tension of the skin, and the +nature of the connection of the latter with the subcutaneous fascia in +the locality. Thus in wounds of different parts of the hairy scalp, so +little variation exists in the relative density and structure of the +skin, that, in spite of the want of external support at the aperture of +exit, it is often difficult to discriminate offhand the two apertures, +if neither bone nor brain débris occupies that of exit. + +If, however, a wound crosses from side to side a region such as the +thigh where well-marked differences exist in the subjacent support, +thickness, and elasticity of the skin implicated in the apertures, the +wound of entry, if in the thick skin of the outer aspect, was usually +circular, while the exit in the thin elastic skin of the inner aspect +was either slit-like or starred. The difficulty in laying down any +general rule as to the occurrence of circular or slit apertures of exit +in any definite region is, however, great, as may be seen by reference +to the accompanying diagrams taken from two patients wounded at +Paardeberg (figs. 22 and 23). + +In fig. 22 the bullet entered the outer and posterior aspect of the left +buttock, crossed the limb behind the femur, and emerged at the inner +aspect by a vertical slit: the bullet then entered the scrotum by a +vertical slit, and emerged by a typical circular aperture; re-entered +the right thigh by a transverse slit aperture, and, striking the femur +in its further course, underwent deformation, and finally escaped by an +irregular aperture 3/4 of an inch in diameter. The occurrence of exit +slits in the adductor region is common, and to be explained by the +tendency of the comparatively thin elastic skin to be carried before the +bullet; the slit entry in this position must, I suppose, be explained by +the comparatively slight support afforded by the underlying structures, +which are often in a condition of hollow tension. The scrotal wounds are +perhaps more difficult to account for, but in this case the fact of the +distal aperture being directly supported by the right thigh is a ready +explanation of the circular exit, while the skin corresponding to the +slit entry was no doubt carried before the bullet, and finally gave way +in the line of a normal crease. + +[Illustration: FIG. 22.--Entry and Exit Wounds in both thighs and +scrotum. From right to left: 1. Circular entry in left buttock behind +trochanter. 2. Vertical slit exit in adductor region. 3. Slit entry in +scrotum (probably inverted before bullet broke the surface, and then a +slit occurred in a normal crease). 4. Circular exit in scrotum (here +supported by surface of right thigh). 5. Transverse slit entry in right +adductor region. 6. Irregular 'explosive' exit, the bullet having set up +on contact with the front surface of the femur, but without having +caused solution of continuity of the bone.] + +In fig. 23 all the wounds are circular except the final exit, which was +irregular as a result of the bullet in this case also having struck the +femur in the second thigh. Considerable variation also exists in the +size of the circular apertures; this illustrates the secondary +enlargement often occurring in such wounds, and most marked at the +apertures of entry, as the more contused. Both diagrams were made from +patients eight days after the reception of the wounds. + +[Illustration: FIG. 23.--Wound of both Thighs. First and second entry +typical circular wounds. First exit a small circular wound; the bullet +'set up' on contact with the femur without causing solution of +continuity of the bone, and second exit is irregular and large. + +This diagram is of considerable interest when compared with fig. 22. I +believe the comparative regularity in the wounds to have been due to a +higher degree of velocity of flight on the part of the bullet] + +Lastly, vertical or transverse slits may be looked for with considerable +confidence in situations in which transverse oblique or vertical folds +or creases normally exist in the skin, and depend on the lines of +tension maintained by the connection of the skin in these situations to +the underlying fascia. Thus I saw well-marked transverse and vertical +slits in the forehead corresponding with the creases normally found +there, and in this situation I noted some slit entries. Transverse +slits were common in the folds of the neck, the flexures of the joints +(fig. 20), and the anterior abdominal wall either in the mid line or in +creases like those stretching across from the anterior superior iliac +spines. Again they were seen in the palms and soles, but here more +readily tended to assume the stellate forms. Vertical slits are less +common; they occurred with the greatest frequency in the posterior +axillary folds. + +Oval apertures of exit are far less common than those of entry, since +the most common factor for the production of an oval opening, bony +support, is never present. In long subcutaneous tracks, or very +superficial wounds, they are however sometimes met with and may +terminate in a pointed gutter (see figs. 18 and 24). + +The greatest modifications in the appearance and nature of the apertures +of entry are dependent on previous deformation of the bullet, when all +special characteristics are lost, and it becomes impossible to form any +opinion as to the type of bullet concerned. These modifications are +naturally far more common in the aperture of exit, since the bullet so +often acquires deformity in the body as the result of impact with the +bones. Further remarks on this subject will be found with the +description and comparison of the various bullets on p. 81. + +[Illustration: FIG. 24. Superficial Thoracico-abdominal Track. Small +entry: discoloration of surface over costal margin from deep injury to +skin; well-marked 'flame' gutter exit (see fig. 18)] + +2. _Direct course taken by the wound track._--This character primarily +depends on the velocity with which bullets of small calibre are made to +travel, and on the small area of the tissues upon which they operate. In +this relation the degree of velocity retained by the bullet is often of +minor importance, provided it be sufficient to penetrate the body. Fired +within a distance of 2,500 yards there is little doubt that a bullet of +the Lee-Metford, Mauser, or Krag-Jörgensen types, passes straight +between the apertures of entry and exit when these are of the type +outline, even when the bones are implicated. By reason of the small size +of the projectiles, their shape, and the spin and velocity transmitted +to them, there is no reason why at a sufficiently short range they +should not traverse the body from the crown of the head to the sole of +the foot. The necessary conditions of position and distance for such an +injury are obviously not often obtained, but it may be pointed out that +the Belgian Mauser rifle at a distance of five yards is capable of +driving a bullet 55 inches or nearly five feet into a log of pine-wood. +Many examples of long tracks will be referred to later, but the +following instances may be of interest in this relation. A bullet +entering at the occipital protuberance traversed the muscles of the +neck, passed through the thoracic cavity, fractured the bodies of the +third and fourth and grooved the seventh and eighth dorsal vertebræ, +grooved the seventh and eighth and fractured the ninth and tenth ribs, +traversed the muscles of the back and finally lodged against the ilium; +the whole length of this track measured some 25 inches. Again, at the +battle of Belmont a Mauser bullet entered the pelvis of a horse just +below the anus, and traversed the entire trunk before emerging from the +front of the chest: it may be of interest to mention that this animal +was alive and moving about the next day, but I am sorry I can give no +further information regarding his fate. + +[Illustration: FIG. 25.--Superficial Track on external surface of Thigh. +Local discoloration of skin five weeks after reception of injury] + +The possibility of contour tracks travelling around the walls of the +chest or abdomen has therefore rarely to be considered, except in +occasional instances where the bullet fired from a long range has +impinged against a bone and is retained in the body. The small volume of +the bullets, however, allows the production of very prolonged direct +subcutaneous tracks in the body wall, in positions where they would be +manifestly impossible with projectiles of larger calibre. + +Figs. 24 and 25 illustrate wounds of this nature. In the case figured in +fig. 24 the bullet entered over the third rib in a vertical line above +the right nipple; it then coursed obliquely down, crossing the seventh +costal cartilage, and finally emerged 3 inches above the umbilicus. +Where the track crossed the prominence of the thoracic margin the skin +was so thinned as to undergo subsequent discoloration, while a distinct +groove was evident there on palpation. In some similar cases I have seen +the central part of the track secondarily laid open as a result of the +thinning of the skin and consequent sloughing due to the interference +with its vitality. + +Short of sloughing, the skin may show signs of alteration of vitality +for a long period after the injury; thus fig. 25 depicts the condition +seen in a superficial wound of the thigh five weeks after the injury. +The line of passage of the bullet between the two openings was still +clearly visible as a dark red coloured streak. Grooves in such cases are +generally readily palpable in the early stages, while later the want of +resistance is replaced by the readily felt firm cord representing the +cicatrix. These points are of much importance in discriminating between +perforating and non-perforating wounds of the abdomen, and are again +referred to in that connection. + +The direction of the tracks obviously depends on the attitude assumed by +the patient at the moment of impact of the bullet and the direction +whence the firing has proceeded. The frequent assumption of the prone +position during the campaign led to the occurrence of a large proportion +of longitudinal tracks in the trunk, or trunk and head, which will be +referred to later. Certain battles were in fact strongly characterised +by the nature of the wounds sustained by the men. Thus at Belmont and +Graspan, where some rapid advances were made in the erect attitude, +fractured thighs were proportionately numerous, while at Modder River, +where many of the men lay for a great part of the day in the prone +position, glancing wounds of the uplifted head, of the occipital region, +or longitudinal tracks in the trunk and limbs were particularly +frequent. I very much regret that the material at my disposal does not +allow me to add some remarks as to variation in the nature of the +wounds according to whether they were received from an enemy firing from +a height or from below, but it is possible that some information on this +subject may be forthcoming when the returns of the Service are made up, +since it is naturally of great importance as to the effect of trajectory +in the proportionate occurrence of hits. + +3. _Multiple character of the wounds._--The same conditions responsible +for the length and directness of the tracks, account for the frequently +multiple character of the wounds implicating either the limbs or +viscera--thus, lung, stomach, liver; neck, thorax, abdomen; abdomen, +pelvis, thigh. Also for the frequent infliction of two or more separate +tracks by the same bullet--thus, arm and forearm with the elbow in the +flexed position; both lower extremities; both lower extremities, penis +or scrotum; leg, thigh, and abdomen, with a flexed knee; upper extremity +and trunk, and more rarely one upper and one lower extremity. Again, it +was remarkable how often the same bullet would inflict injuries on two +or more separate men, not unfrequently dealing lightly with the first +and inflicting a fatal injury on the second, or vice versâ. The small +calibre of the bullet, moreover, allows of the neatest and most exact +multiple injuries. Thus in a patient who was crawling up a kopje on all +fours, the flexed middle digit of the hand was struck. The bullet +entered at the base of the nail, first emerged at the distal +interphalangeal flexor fold, re-entered the metacarpo-phalangeal fold, +and finally emerged from the back of the hand between the third and +fourth metacarpal bones. + +4. _Small 'bore' of the tracks, and tendency of the injury to be +localised to individual structures of importance._--Here we meet with +the most striking characteristic of the injuries, and evidence that +reduction of calibre affects more strongly the nature of the lesion than +does any other element in the structure of the modern rifle. The +diameter of the track slightly exceeds that of the external apertures, +probably as a result of the more ready separability of the elements of +the structures perforated than exists in the skin. The calibre, +moreover, tends to be fairly even throughout when soft structures only +are implicated, though local enlargements result wherever increased +resistance is met with. Thus a strong fascia may offer such resistance +as to increase locally the bore of the track, and in this particular the +state of tension of the fascia when struck will affect the degree of the +enlargement. The most striking instances of local enlargement of the +track are of course seen when a bone lies in the course of the bullet, +but we must here bear in mind the introduction of a new element--the +propulsion of comminuted fragments together with the bullet itself. In +cases of fracture the distal portion of the track is in consequence many +times larger than the proximal. The most striking examples of small even +tracks are seen, on the other hand, in punctures of the elastic and +practically homogeneous lung tissue, where the wounds are extremely +small. + +On transverse section of the track the gross amount of actual tissue +destruction occupies a lesser area than that corresponding to the +diameter of the bullet. The destructive action of the projectile is in +fact exerted mainly on the tissues directly lying in its course, the +track being opened up during the rush of the passage of the bullet, +partly as a result of its wedge-like shape and partly as a result of the +throwing off of the tissues forming the walls of the track by a +diversion of a portion of the force in the form of spiral vibrations +dependent on the revolution of the bullet. Again, the opening out of the +tissues may be aided by the direction taken by the first and strongest +as well as the simplest series of vibrations transmitted, which would +assume the shape of a cone of which the point of impact forms the apex. + +The escape from actual destruction by structures lying in the immediate +neighbourhood of the track is indeed often surprising, but not perhaps +so astonishing as the perforation of long narrow structures such as the +peripheral nerves and vessels, without irreparable damage to the parts +remaining, and this although the structures themselves may be of a +diameter not exceeding that of the bullet itself. The capacity of these +projectiles to split such structures as tendons was already well known +before our experience in this campaign, but the injuries to the nerves +and vessels of the same character came as a surprise to most of us. The +lateral displacement of tissues seems to bear a strong resemblance to +what is seen on the passage of an express train, when solid bodies of +considerable weight are displaced by the draught created without ever +coming into contact with the train itself. The tendency to lateral +displacement is still more strongly exhibited when dense hard structures +such as bone are implicated. Here the fragments at the actual points of +impact on the proximal and distal surfaces of a shaft are driven +forwards, while the lateral walls of the track in the bone are simply +comminuted and pushed on one side without loss of continuity with their +covering periosteum. + +The extension of this form of displacement to a degree amounting to a +so-called explosive character in the case of the soft tissues, even when +the bullet passed at the highest degrees of velocity, was, however, +never witnessed by me, and I very much doubt the existence of a +so-called 'explosive zone' so far as wounds of the soft parts are +concerned. On the contrary, I am inclined to believe that the highest +degrees of velocity are favourable to clean-cut neat injuries of the +soft tissues. I saw a large number of type wounds of entry and exit +inflicted at a range of under fifty yards. + +5. _Clinical course of the wounds._--The tendency of simple wounds such +as are above described to run an aseptic course was very marked, and, +given satisfactory conditions, deep suppuration and cellulitis were +distinctly rare. It may also be confidently affirmed that when +suppuration did occur, with apertures of entry and exit of the normal +small type, this was always the result of infection from the skin, or +infection subsequent to the actual infliction of the wound. The +infrequency of suppuration depended on the aseptic nature of the injury, +the smallness of the openings, the small tendency of the track to weep +and furnish serous discharge in any abundance, the comparative rarity of +the inclusion of fragments of clothing or other foreign bodies, and +possibly in some degree on the purity and dryness of the atmosphere, +which favoured a firm dry clotting of the blood in the apertures of +entry and exit, and consequent safe 'sealing of the wound.' + +As to the aseptic nature of the injury, it will be well to first +consider the question of the sterility of the bullet. Putting laboratory +experiments on one side, the large experience of this campaign seems to +prove to absolute demonstration that, bearing in mind the very large +proportion of instances of primary union in simple tracks, the surgeon +has nothing to fear on the part of the bullet itself. This is the more +striking when we remember that these bullets shortly before their +employment were carried in a dirty bandolier, and freely handled by men +whose opportunities of rendering either their hands or implements +aseptic were as bad as it is possible to conceive. + +Several explanations are to hand, but none of them conclusive. Two must, +however, be shortly considered. First, the surface of the bullet, except +its tip and base, is practically renewed by passage through the barrel. +Secondly, there is the question of the heat to which it is subjected. As +far as cauterisation of the tissues is concerned, this question has been +practically settled in the negative, since actual determinations of the +heat immediately after the moment of impact have been made, and again it +has been shown that butter is not melted, and that neither gunpowder nor +dynamite is exploded, by firing bullets through small quantities of +those materials. Again, the absence of any sign of scorching of the +clothes of the wounded is strong evidence against the possibility of any +considerable heat being applied to the tissues of the body; while +another observation, although of less importance as affecting spent +bullets only, that bullets, which have perforated the body but lie +between the skin and the clothing, leave no sign of cauterising action +on either, may be mentioned. None the less, the sources of heating while +the bullet is passing from the barrel are many and obvious. Thus there +is the heat consequent on explosion of the powder, the warm state of the +barrel itself when the rifle has been fired a few times consecutively, +and the heat resulting from the force and friction essential to the +propulsion of the bullet through the barrel. Again, bullets covered with +wax before their introduction into the barrel retain no trace of this +when they have been fired, although at any rate the portion covering +the tip is not exposed to friction on the part of the rifle, and lastly +the base of the bullet has no other explicable reason for its +innocuousness than subjection to a certain degree of heat. While not +claiming any cauterising action on the tissues by the bullet, I should +therefore still be inclined to allow the probability of the heat to +which the surface of the bullet is exposed exerting a cleansing action +on the projectile. In regard to this point it is interesting to bear in +mind that shots from an ordinary gun seldom or never give rise to +infection. + +Foreign bodies were rarely carried into the wounds with the bullet. I +saw several instances in which portions of the metal of cigarette cases +and of cartridge cases when the bullet had perforated cartridges in the +wounded man's bandolier, and in one instance small pieces of glass from +a pocket mirror, must have been carried in without any obvious ill +effect. Fragments of clothing, on the other hand, in every case caused +suppuration: clothing was not often carried in, the khaki linen was +perforated with a clean aperture, most commonly a slit; but the thick +woollen kilts of the Highlanders, and thick flannel shirts, occasionally +furnished fragments. The introduction of large pieces of clothing is a +sure proof of irregularity of impact on the part of the bullet. The +frequency with which portions of cloth were introduced from the kilt was +one of the strongest surgical objections to its retention as a part of +the uniform on active service. + +Retained bullets themselves remained as foreign bodies in a certain +number of cases. I cannot say that suppuration never followed the +retention of a bullet, since in two of the instances where I saw such +removed they lay in a small cavity containing at any rate a 'purulent +fluid.' In one of these the bullet was a Martini-Henry, and in both the +bullet had been imbedded for some weeks, and had certainly not +occasioned a primary suppuration of the wound. + +The favourable influence of the pure and dry nature of the atmosphere in +this campaign must certainly not be underrated, and in support of this +influence I think I may say, from the experience of cases that I saw +coming from Natal where the climate and surroundings were not so +favourable as on the western side, that suppuration was more common and +more severe in the moister atmosphere. + +Putting aside all the above remarks, however, I am inclined to think +that a general tendency to primary union and the absence of suppuration +will always be a feature of wounds from bullets of small calibre, and +that this favourable tendency is attributable to certain inherent +characters of the injuries. Of these the nature and small size of the +openings, the dry character of the lining of the track due to +superficial destruction and condensation of the tissue forming its wall, +the small disposition to prolonged primary hæmorrhage, and the absence +of any great amount of serous exudation during the early stages of +healing are the most important. + +A mechanical factor of great importance also exists in the spontaneous +collapse and automatic apposition of the walls of the track. This +closure is rendered additionally effective in many cases by the +interruption of the continuous line in the wounded tissues consequent on +alteration in the position of the parts traversed when an attitude of +rest is assumed by the injured part. The indisposition to suppuration +and the apparent unsuitability of the tissue lining the track for the +development and spread of infecting organisms are well illustrated by +several observations. Thus, even if the bullet be thoroughly aseptic, +the fragments of destroyed skin driven into the track by the bullet can +scarcely be free from organisms; yet these seldom give rise to trouble. +Again, if for any reason a deep portion of a track becomes infected and +suppurates, there is no tendency for the spread of infection along the +line of wounded tissue, but rather for the development of a local +abscess, pointing in the ordinary direction of least resistance, +irrespective of the course originally taken by the bullet. + +[Illustration: PLATE I. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +G. L. CHEATLE. + +Mauser Wound of Entrance, a little more than 48 hours after infliction. +About 12/1. + +Section of the entry segment of an aseptic Mauser wound removed a little +over forty-eight hours after its infliction. Magnified twelve diameters. + +The margins of the opening are still sloping and depressed, indicating +the originally 'punched-in' nature of the aperture. A thin stratified +layer of epidermis completely closes it. No scab remains. + +The wound track is occluded by an effusion of lymph, commencing +organisation of which is shown under a higher magnifying power by the +presence of leucocytes near the margin of the bounding tissue, and some +giant cells. The effusion of lymph occupies a slightly wider area +immediately beneath the papillary layer of the skin, then narrows, and +broadens again as the subcutaneous fascia is reached, indicating the +effect of resistance in widening the area of damage. + +The subcutaneous connective tissue bounding the track shows little sign +of alteration beyond a general slight tendency of the lines of structure +to deviate in the direction of the passage of the bullet. + +No hæmorrhage is apparent beyond a small collection of blood situated +immediately beneath the new layer of epidermis at the left-hand corner +of the opening. + +Range probably within 800 yards. Seat of wound, abdominal wall a highest +point of iliac crest.] + +Fig. 25 (_a_), A (plate I.) represents a section carried across an +aseptic aperture of entry. The specimen was removed by Mr. Cheatle from +a patient who died forty-eight hours after reception of the injury. It +shows well the small amount of gross destruction suffered by the +subcutaneous tissue, and the rapid repair which follows, since +macroscopically the track is scarcely discernible. Reference to plate I. +shows the remarkable fact that even at this early date considerable +progress towards definite healing has occurred, and a thin layer of +stratified epidermis covers the original opening. The question may be +raised whether the origin of this epidermal layer is not in part a +floating up of the margins of the main aperture. + +During the course of healing some variation takes place in the +appearance of the apertures, especially that of entry. This, at first +contracted, later becomes somewhat relaxed, while in many cases a small +halo of ecchymosis develops around it. The blood-clot occupying its +centre now contracts, the margins rapidly become approximated +centripetally, and a small circular dark spot only remains, which is +later replaced by a small red cicatrix. The dark central spot under +these circumstances consists of the contused margin of the wound in the +skin, and a small proportion of blood-clot which finally comes away as a +small dry scab. When slight local infection occurs in place of simple +contraction and dry scabbing, the process is prolonged, the contused +margin separates by granulation, the clot in the opening breaks down, +and a small ulcer of somewhat larger proportions than the original wound +remains and takes some days to heal. + +[Illustration: FIG. 25 (_a_).--_A._ Wound of entry 48 hours after +reception. _B._ Wound of exit, 7-1/2 days after reception. 1. Skin. 2. +Subcutaneous fat carried into the lips of the wound by the bullet. 3. +Infected blood extravasation in subcutaneous tissue. Exact size. (See +plates I. and II.)] + +The aperture of exit in simple wounds of the soft parts sometimes heals +even more rapidly than that of entry, and if of the slit form may be +almost invisible at the end of ten days or a fortnight, actual primary +union having taken place as after a simple small incision. Larger or +irregular exit apertures, however, take a longer period to close than +entry wounds, and this is most often observed when the bullet has +undergone deformation within the body, or bone fragments have been +driven out with the bullet. + +Fig. 25 (_a_), B (plate II.) represents a section of an infected exit +aperture from a patient who died seven and a half days after its +infliction. Two main points of interest are at once apparent: 1. The +carrying forwards of the subcutaneous fat into the lips of the skin +wound by the bullet. This illustrates the manner in which lightly +supported structures are carried forward by the bullet, and throws some +light on the mode by which vessels and nerves may escape by a process of +displacement. This figure may be compared with fig. 25 (_b_) which shows +a tag of omentum similarly carried forward by a bullet crossing the +abdominal cavity and plugging the exit wound. 2. The second feature of +interest is the amount of hæmorrhage into the subcutaneous tissue. In +this respect the contrast between the exit and entry apertures is +marked, since in the latter hæmorrhage is scarcely apparent. The +presence of such hæmorrhages is explained by the same dragging action as +the extrusion of the fat, and is of course dependent on consequent +rupture of small vessels. It is of importance as predisposing the exit +wound to more easy infection, and it accounts for the persisting +subcutaneous induration more often detected beneath healed exit than +entry apertures. Again, it suggests that the presence of blood in the +deeper parts of the tracks may be the determining cause of the indurated +cords often replacing them. + +[Illustration: PLATE II. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +G. L. CHEATLE. + +Mauser Wound of Exit, 7-1/2 days after infliction. Healing delayed by +Infection. About 12/1. + +Section of the exit segment of a Mauser wound, removed seven and a half +days after infliction. Magnified twelve diameters. + +The healing process has been delayed by infection. + +There is no attempt at closure by a layer of epidermis, and the margins +are not depressed. + +The wound track is narrower than that seen in the entry wound plate I., +and completely occluded by a plug of the subcutaneous fat which has been +carried forward by the bullet in its passage. A small wedge-shaped plug +of lymph indicates the position of the actual track at its termination. + +Dragging on the surrounding tissue consequent on the extrusion of the +plug of fat has ruptured some capillaries, and given rise to +considerable extravasation of blood, which is seen as a darker layer in +the deepest portion of the wound. + +Comparison of this plate with the exit wound depicted in fig. 16, p. 56, +explains the nature of the tags of tissue there seen to protrude from +the convex opening. + +Range 800 yards. Seat of wound, abdominal wall below 9th costal +cartilage.] + +_Pari passu_ with the closure of the external openings, healing of the +track takes place, but this is not always so rapid a process as is +apparently the case. In many instances the closure, and even definite +healing, of the external wounds is complete long before the track has +actually healed, even though it be contracted up to complete closure as +far as any cavity is concerned. This is well seen in many cases in which +the exit opening is large as a result of deformation of the bullet, or +the passage of bone splinters in conjunction with it; here, in spite of +absence of all suppuration, the track may remain patent for many weeks. +This may point to infection, but the tardiness in actual consolidation +corresponds with what we are well acquainted with in the case of all +aseptic wounds when a slough has to separate or become absorbed, and it +is therefore only what might be reasonably expected when we remember +that every such bullet track is lined by a thin layer of damaged tissue. + +[Illustration: FIG. 25 (_b_).--Great Omentum carried by the bullet into +an exit track leading from the abdominal cavity. A. Outline of opening +in the peritoneum] + +When fully healed, the points of entry and exit are so insignificant as +to be less obvious than ordinary acne scars, and later are often hardly +visible, but for a considerable period they are often more palpable than +apparent. This depends upon the induration of the line of cicatrix +corresponding to the course of the original track which is adherent to +the two points. The induration is indeed so marked as to occasionally +give rise to the suspicion that a foreign body such as a fragment of +lead or of the mantle of the bullet has been enclosed during the healing +of the wound. + +In the deeper portions of the tracks the extreme density of the cicatrix +is a factor of great prognostic importance, since if it implicates +muscles, tendons, vessels, or nerves, impairment of movement, +circulatory disturbance, or signs of neuritis or nerve pressure are +often witnessed. Thus, for instance, a track traversing the calf, will +more or less tie the whole thickness of the structures perforated at one +spot, and the apertures of entry and exit may be visibly retracted when +the muscles are put in action with consequent pain and stiffness to the +patient. Such pain and stiffness form some of the most troublesome +after-consequences of many simple wounds. It is remarkable for how long +a period after the healing of the wound and resumption of active duty +the patients suffer from pain in and radiating from the locality of the +wound, when fatigued or suffering from stiffness from the prolonged +retention of one attitude or exposure to cold. The cords, however, +eventually completely disappear, and the cicatrices become moveable. The +effects of secondary pressure on the vessels and nerves are considered +under the headings devoted to those structures. + +_Suppuration._--While the occurrence of deep suppuration or septic +phlegmon was rare, local suppuration of the apertures of entry and exit +was seen in a considerable proportion of the wounds. This was referable +to infection from the skin itself, or to infection from without +subsequent to the infliction of the injury. Infection from the skin, +difficult to obviate at all times, is especially likely to occur in +wounds the first dressing of which is often delayed, and which happen to +men sweating freely into clothes the condition of which is at least +undesirable for contact with a recent wound. Beyond this, the first +dressing materials, removed from a soiled tunic by possibly a comrade or +a stretcher-bearer, are scarcely above reproach of the probability of +containing septic organisms themselves. Again, once applied, the +exigencies of the situation often necessitate an amount of movement +fatal to the retention of the dressing over the wound, and a second +opportunity of infection arises before the patient comes into the hands +of the surgeon in the Field hospital. + +The general tendency of such suppurations when they occurred in +uncomplicated flesh wounds was to remain superficial, either involving +the contused margin of the cutaneous opening and the plug of blood-clot +occupying it, and resulting in a slight enlargement of the wound only, +or at most involving the subcutaneous tissue and not extending into the +deep planes of the trunk or limbs. In either case a slight delay in +healing was the most serious result, while constitutional signs of +infection were either absent or of the slightest nature. The same +indisposition to spread by the track was equally noted when a deep +portion became infected from, for instance, the intestine in a belly +wound. + +Wounds of irregular type, however, such as those caused by ricochet +bullets, or accompanying severe fractures, or those caused by fragments +of larger projectiles, often suppurated freely in spite of exposure to +no more unsatisfactory surrounding conditions than the wounds of small +bore. This appears to show conclusively that the first element in the +general slight consequences of small-bore wounds is their calibre, and, +secondly, that increase of velocity on the part of the bullet, while it +in some measure compensates for the loss of volume in the projectile, on +the other hand reacts in favour of the wounded in so far as the injuries +it effects on the soft tissues are ill suited to the development of +septic organisms in the parts. + +_Retained bullets._--These were met with more frequently than might have +been expected, but I can give no idea as to their proportional +occurrence, since so many of the slighter injuries never came under my +observation. Experience, however, showed that the bullets of large +calibre and low velocity employed during the campaign were far more +commonly lodged in proportion to the frequency of their use. Thus I saw +a considerable number of Martini-Henry, Snider, large leaden sporting +bullets, and shrapnel retained. Again, among the bullets of smaller +calibre, the Guedes 8-mm. bullet, which travels at a comparatively low +rate of velocity and with moderate spin, was far more frequently lodged +than the Lee-Metford or Mauser in comparison with the number of Guedes +rifles in use. + +Bullets of small calibre were, however, also retained with some degree +of frequency, either as the result of striking at a long range, or in +such a direction as to need to traverse a large segment of the body +before escaping, or as striking large or several bones, or making some +irregular form of impact: the last was a not infrequent explanation of +lodgment, especially when a bone lay in the course of the track. +Ricochet bullets naturally were especially likely to be retained, both +on account of the low velocity with which they often travel and the +irregularity of their surface with consequent loss of penetrating power. + + +WOUNDS OF IRREGULAR TYPE + +Many of the wounds met with deviated so greatly in appearance and +general characters from what has been described above as to afford +little or no evidence of having been inflicted by small-calibre bullets, +and before describing these it is necessary to give a short account of +the circumstances which are responsible for such departures from the +common type. In the case of the wound of entry, the simplest +explanations are lateral impact on the part of the cylindro-conoidal +projectile, due to the position of the part struck or the direction in +which the bullet has been fired, wobbling on the part of the bullet due +simply to loss of velocity and force in flight, or to turning of the +bullet by impact with an obstacle to its course (ricochet) which may +amount to actual reversal of the striking end. As a rule, in such cases +the size of the aperture of entry exceeds that of exit, and in a large +proportion the bullet is retained within the body. + +Of these explanations that of the 'wobble' needs some passing notice. In +its simplest form it depends merely on loss of velocity of flight on the +part of the bullet, the centre of gravity of which lies behind its +middle; hence a tendency to turn over and over is acquired. As a result +of this, either the side of the tip, the side of the bullet, the side of +the base, or the base itself may form the portion of the projectile +which comes into contact with the body. The tendency to wobble is +naturally greatly increased in ricochet bullets, since the contact, if +lateral, serves to check the spin on which the bullet depends for its +flight on an axis parallel to its long diameter. The first effect of +wobbling is to increase the size and interfere with the regularity of +outline of the wound of entry; but it also acts in a more serious +manner, since the increase of the area of impact augments the resistance +offered by the body; therefore the degree of damage to the tissues is +accentuated and becomes greater than it would be from a bullet +travelling at the same rate on its normal axis. Hence the wounds are +both large and severe, or if the velocity is very low, the projectile is +especially likely to be retained. + +Actual reversal of the bullet usually only slightly enlarges the +aperture of entry, but injuries to cancellous bone are apt to be more +severe when the bullet enters in this manner, or again it is often +retained. I saw several such cases during the campaign. + +Another form of wobble is suggested by Nimier and Laval,[9] of which I +can offer no experience. They suggest that, as rotation slows, the +bullet may on impact wobble like a top before it ceases to spin. +Probably the power of penetration possessed by a bullet wobbling in this +manner would not be very great, but its effect would mainly be altered +in the direction of an abnormal increase in the size of the aperture of +entry, or possibly in the degree of comminution in fractures. + +It is probable that some of the more serious wounds observed were merely +the result of unusual forms of impact with normal flight on the part of +the bullet. The majority, however, depended, in the case of the wound of +exit, on deformation of the bullet within the body, or the propulsion of +bone fragments with it, and, when both apertures were affected, to +previous ricochet on the part of the projectile. + +It is here necessary to give a short account of the more common +deformities met with, and to refer to the special characters possessed +by different types of bullet of small calibre which may affect the ease +with which deformity is produced, and the degree to which it is commonly +carried. The effect of ricochet is to lower the velocity of flight, and +at the same time to effect certain alterations of form in the bullet. +These with rectangular impact in the case of bullets travelling at a low +degree of velocity consist in a bending and deformation of the tip; in +the higher degrees, of bending, shortening, extensive destruction, or +complete fragmentation. If the bullet makes lateral impact, only +widening and flattening result, often with the escape of the lead core +from the mantle. That a ricochet bullet may travel a considerable +distance is shown by the following observations quoted from Nimier and +Laval.[10] + +[Illustration: FIG. 26.--Sections of four Bullets to show relative shape +and thickness of mantles. + +From left to right: 1. Guedes; regular dome-shaped tip; mild steel +mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; at sides of body 0.3 mm. 2. +Lee-Metford; ogival tip; cupro-nickel mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; +gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 3. Mauser; pointed dome tip, steel +mantle plated with copper alloy; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; gradual +decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 4. Krag-Jörgensen; ogival tip as in +Lee-Metford; steel mantle plated with cupro-nickel; thickness at tip 0.6 +mm.; gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. The measurements of the sides +are taken 2.5 cm. from the tip. Note the more gradual thinning in the +Lee-Metford mantle.] + +Up to a distance of 1,700 to 1,800 metres the bullet may make several +ricochet bounds. When the bullet strikes first at short distances (as +600 metres), it may make several bounds of from 300 to 400 metres: at +moderate distances (as from 600 to 1,200 metres), bounds of 200 to 300 +metres; and at distances above 1,200 metres, bounds of 100 to 200 +metres. The length of the ricochet bounds depends on the angle of impact +of the bullet with the ground, the nature of the slope of the latter, +and the velocity of the bullet. + +Putting aside the question of calibre and volume of the bullets we are +concerned with, I believe the most important variations as serious +effects of ricochet depend on the relative thickness and the composition +of the mantles. Fig. 26 illustrates the relative thickness of the +mantles in the Krag-Jörgensen, Mauser, Lee-Metford, and Guedes bullets. +Given an equal degree of force and velocity on the part of the bullet at +the moment of impact, the assumption is justifiable that the thinner +mantles would tear or burst more readily in direct ratio to their +relative thinness. I believe this assumption to be borne out by my own +experience of the common deformities that occurred; but the great +relative frequency with which Mauser bullets came under my observation, +and the difficulty of forming any estimate of the velocity and force +retained by any particular bullet at the moment of impact, make it +impossible for me to express myself with the confidence which I should +wish. + +[Illustration: FIG. 27.--Normal Mauser Bullet] + +The second condition which influences the nature and degree of the +deformities depends on the relative tenacity or brittleness peculiar to +the metal employed in the manufacture of the mantles. In the case of the +Lee-Metford this consists of an alloy of 80 parts of nickel with 20 of +copper. The Krag-Jörgensen and Mauser are ensheathed in steel plated +with cupro-nickel, and the Guedes has a plain steel envelope coated with +wax. + +Both as a result of experience in the field gained from ricochet +bullets, and in the hospitals from bullets which had undergone +deformation within the body, I am under the firm impression that the +thin nickel-plated steel envelope of the Mauser bullet splits more +readily than the thicker and more tenacious cupro-nickel envelope of the +Lee-Metford, that the direction of the ruptures is more purely +longitudinal, and the fissuring itself more extensive and complete. + +I append below a series of deformities observed in Mauser bullets, some +of which were collected on the field of battle, but all of which were +familiar to me in bullets removed from the bodies of patients, except +the complete disc shape shown in fig. 29. They correspond with specimens +of which I made sketches at the time of removal from the body, but which +I had not the heart to retain in view of the natural wish of the +patients to keep them as mementoes of their wounds. + +[Illustration: FIG. 28.--Four common types of lateral Mauser Ricochet +Bullets. + +From left to right: 1. Slipper form; slight broadening and turning of +tip. 2. More pronounced degree of form 1, with laceration of the mantle +opposite the shoulder of the bullet. This is the weakest spot, for two +reasons: the alteration in curve at this position, and the junction of +the thickened point of the mantle with the thinner sides. 3. Lateral +ricochet involving nearly whole length of bullet. Rupture of mantle from +broadening of core opposite shoulder. 4. Similar lateral ricochet with +extensive longitudinal rupture of mantle, the latter being turned out +and forming a cutting 'flange.'] + +Slight indentations and deviations from strict symmetry of form of such +degree as not seriously to influence the outline and nature of the +apertures were very common. Beyond these one of the most frequent +primary deformities was that we familiarly spoke of as the 'slipper +form' (No. 1, fig. 28). This results from light glancing contact of the +tip with a hard body: in it the mantle of the bullet is rarely +fractured, and the deformity itself is of slight importance, except in +so far as it may influence the direction of the wound track, which +acquires a tendency to be curved. The tip of the bullet is slightly +flattened and turned up, down, or to one side, according to the point +struck. I saw this deformity frequently, both with Lee-Metford and +Mauser bullets. Nos. 2, 3, and 4 are more pronounced degrees of the same +type of deformity, accompanied by more or less extensive fissuring of +the mantle. No. 4 illustrates the turning out of the longitudinally +fissured mantle in such a way as to make a cutting flange. I have seen +such bullets removed, and the variety is of some importance as +materially increasing the cutting capabilities of the bullet, and +augmenting its area of destructive action. No. 5, fig. 29, is the only +form I have not seen removed, but such a bullet would account for some +of the long irregular gutter wounds observed, if it retained sufficient +velocity to strike with any force. + +[Illustration: FIG. 29.--'Disc'-shaped Lateral Ricochet. This form is of +little practical importance, as the velocity retained by the bullet is +low, and no perforating power would be retained. It is inserted +separately in order to complete the series, shown in fig. 28.] + +Fig. 30 illustrates complete longitudinal fissuring of the mantle. Such +mantles are common, and still more so are the opened-out sheets such as +is shown still attached in fig. 29. Free mantles are often very numerous +on stony ground, but are of little importance, since I never saw +fragments of them removed or impacted. They probably travel a very short +distance after their formation, and if they did strike would possess +little power of penetration. The freed leaden cores do, however, +sometimes enter the body, and some of the specimens removed have been +referred to the use of expanding bullets. In all the Mauser specimens +the longitudinal direction of the fissuring of the mantle is striking. + +[Illustration: FIG. 30.--Ruptured Mauser Mantle, to illustrate the +tendency to complete longitudinal fissuring] + +Fig. 31 represents bullets removed from the body and illustrates types +of deformity due to impact with the bones. The deformity resembles in +some degree that of the mushroomed lead cores, and also indicates that +the shoulder of the cased bullet is its weakest point. Each specimen +exhibits shortening and widening without fracture of the mantle, the +latter being simply thrown into folds; both bullets were lodged in the +thigh after fracturing the femur. The localisation of injury to the fore +part of the bullet, and the fact of expansion, allow us to infer that +the degree of velocity retained on impact with the bone was +comparatively low, and that neither bullet had been exposed to very +severe strain. + +[Illustration: FIG. 31.--Two retained Mauser Bullets which had produced +comminuted fractures of the femur of moderate severity. Each has given +way at the shoulder, but the mantle has developed creases without +rupture, and the bullets are correspondingly bent. Both bullets were +travelling at a moderate if not low degree of velocity] + +Fig. 32 is also of a retained bullet in which the fore part of the +mantle is very extensively fissured and the core set free. In this the +mantle has suffered severely and the leaden core to a less extent. As an +apical ricochet it corresponds with the Lee-Metford shown in fig. 36. + +[Illustration: FIG. 32.--Apical Ricochet Mauser Bullet (see text). The +'mushrooming' of the core is moderate, but the destruction of the +anterior part of the mantle very considerable] + +The deformity found in fig. 32 I met with both in retained bullets and +also in those which had been fired into sand or anthills. The particular +specimen figured was removed from the thigh of a patient wounded at the +battle of Belmont. An irregular entry wound was situated over the +internal tuberosity of the tibia, while a large fluctuating hæmatoma +existed in the lower third of the thigh, at the upper part of which a +hard elongated body was palpable. As was so often the case with internal +hæmorrhages, the patient's temperature rose high, and on the third day +the hæmatoma was incised by Major Coutts, R.A.M.C. The core of the +bullet was then found in the blood cavity near the surface, but on +introduction of the finger a second body was discovered entangled in the +quadriceps muscle, and this proved to be the tattered mantle. I saw +similar deformity produced within the body by a bullet, which, entering +by a small type aperture in the left ala of the nose, struck the margin +of the right malar bone, and lodged beneath the latter. The similarity +of this bullet to that seen in the ricochet in fig. 32 was exact. The +form is of great importance both on account of the degree of laceration +it effects in the track, the presence of two foreign bodies in the +wound, and from the fact that it can be produced by making the bullet +travel through sand or antheaps, since both the former in the shape of +sandbags and the latter in their natural state so often formed the cover +to men during the campaign. Bullets of 6.5 mm., such as the +Krag-Jörgensen, with steel envelopes apparently break up with great ease +in sand. + +Fig. 33 shows a form not uncommon when the bullet comes into contact +with the ribs. It is produced in bullets travelling at a low rate of +velocity and striking by their side. I several times met with it when +the bullet was retained, and also without fracture of the rib. In some +variety it might occur after impact with any narrow margin of bone, and +some importance attaches to the form, since it affords evidence as to +the ease with which alterations in symmetry can be produced in Mauser +bullets. Again its bent outline favours deviation in the further course +of the bullet subsequent to impact with the bone, a result which I +observed on more than one occasion. + +[Illustration: FIG. 33.--Grooved Mauser removed from anterior abdominal +wall after crossing the ribs. I saw several such removed from the +thoracic wall, and am inclined to attribute the grooving to impact with +the margin of the ribs] + +Lastly, the question of actual spluttering or breaking up of the bullets +must be considered. It is extraordinary into how many fragments either a +Lee-Metford or a Mauser bullet may break up if it strike a hard body +while travelling at a high rate of velocity. Fragmentation is exhibited +in the skiagram forming the subject of plate XI. p. 194. It is somewhat +remarkable how often this occurred when the short hard bones of the +metacarpus were struck. With regard to the casing, the separation of +small scales of the nickel plating has already been referred to; +reference to the skiagrams, plates IX. and XVI., shows how readily the +whole thickness of the mantle breaks up into small fragments, even when +the bullet is travelling at moderately low degrees of velocity, and +this I believe to be a special characteristic of the thin +cupro-nickel-plated steel mantles. + +Any variety of cased bullet, however, when it strikes against a stone, +hard ground, or a bone, may be broken into innumerable fragments. The +leaden fragments occasionally show a simple fractured surface, such as +is illustrated on a larger scale by the broken shrapnel bullets shown in +fig. 96, p. 485. More commonly, however, the fragments, if of any size, +appear torn, and if small, are mere spicules. These if of lancet shape +often bury themselves in the skin only, while larger ones may penetrate +deeply or even perforate. Thus, of a group of three officers standing +near a stone on which a bullet struck, all were spattered about the +face; most of the fragments lodged in the skin, but one perforated the +concha of the ear and bruised the mastoid area, while others caused +small jagged cuts. In another instance, both thighs of the patient were +spattered after perforation of the clothes, and a large fragment lodged +beneath the skin of the penis. A case in which larger fragments +perforated and simulated type wounds has already been referred to on p. +44. + +[Illustration: FIG. 34.--Normal Lee-Metford Bullet] + +The above remarks apply, for the most part, to Mauser bullets only, +because my experience of that projectile was far wider than of the +Lee-Metford. The only deformed Lee-Metford bullets that I saw removed +from the body were of the 'slipper' variety, exactly corresponding to +the similarly altered Mausers, and with no fissuring of the mantle. I +saw none so freely deformed as the Mausers depicted in figs. 28, 29, 31, +and 32. + +In spite of diligent search on several battlefields, I was unable to +collect many forms of Lee-Metford ricochet, although I found many +undeformed bullets. I insert here, therefore, some illustrations I +obtained through the kindness of Colonel Hopton, Director of the School +of Musketry at Hythe, which are of interest, and in some degree +substantiate the impression I formed in South Africa as to the greater +stability of the Mark II. Lee-Metford bullet (fig. 34). I am aware that, +as meeting a smooth target at right angles, some of these are not +strictly comparable to the Mauser bullets forming the subjects of the +preceding illustrations, which struck stones, and these mainly by their +sides (if we except figs. 31 and 32), but they sufficiently exhibit the +characters on which I wish to insist. That they support my opinion is +the more probable as, with the exception of the type included above, I +am under the impression that the large majority, if not all, of the +Mauser bullets which struck stones fairly with their tips were broken to +pieces, otherwise I must have met with some among the immense number +which I saw. On the top of Tabanyama, for instance, the whole ground was +littered at the time of my visit with shattered mantles and leaden +cores, deformed almost past recognition. + +[Illustration: FIG. 35.--Apical Lee-Metford Ricochets. From Hythe +targets. Tendency of cupro-nickel envelope to tear in transverse +direction] + +The specimens depicted in figs. 35 and 36 indicate--(1) a greater +malleability on the part of the mantle; thus in fig. 35 the cupro-nickel +is obviously hammered and flattened out, while the fissures are neither +numerous nor extensive. (2) Both bullets exhibit transverse tearing of +the mantle, a common feature in Lee-Metford ricochets, of which I could +offer other examples, but which I less often observed in Mauser +bullets. (3) Tear is the term best expressing the nature of the +fissures, while fracture more nearly expresses the nature of the +fissures in the Mauser mantles. (4) Fig. 36 shows a mushroomed core and +split mantle, which may be compared with the similarly deformed Mauser +depicted in fig. 31. I think the variation in appearance is +characteristic, the fissuring of the mantle being much less extreme, +while the leaden core is normal at its base in consequence of the +support afforded by the more tenacious cupro-nickel mantle. With regard +to complete splitting of the mantles, however, I must add that free +Lee-Metford mantles are often found from bullets fired at the target or +elsewhere, and Nimier and Laval figure numerous forms.[11] + +[Illustration: FIG. 36.--Apical Lee-Metford Target Ricochet. Well-marked +'mushrooming' of core. 'Torn' nature of the fissures in the mantle and +limited extent. Compare with fig. 32] + +_Expanding bullets._--The wounds resulting from perforation with +deformed regulation bullets, such as are described above, differ for the +most part by deviation from the type appearances, and a tendency to take +a less favourable course on account of their increased size and of the +greater degree of laceration of the tissues accompanying them. I must +now pass on to the consideration of the forms of bullet especially +likely to occasion those wounds spoken of as 'explosive' in character, +and my remarks on these must be prefaced by a short description of the +varieties which were in use during the campaign. + +[Illustration: FIG. 37.--Four Soft-nosed Bullets from Boer trenches. + +From left to right: 1. Mauser (.275); small amount of core exposed. 2. +Lee-Metford (.303). 3. Lee-Metford, with larger amount of exposed core, +also cupped apex. This is probably the most effective of these forms. 4. +Mannlicher (.315)] + +These consisted in soft-nosed bullets of the Mauser and Lee-Metford +patterns, Tweedie and Jeffreys modifications of the Lee-Metford and +Mauser, several soft-nosed bullets of a slightly larger calibre, mostly +old Mauser or Mannlicher types, and a large variety of sporting leaden +bullets of larger calibre and volume. Figs. 37 and 43. + +With regard to the various soft-nosed bullets of small calibre, I will +first advert to a feature common to all, which consists in a solid base +to the mantle. In the regulation whole-cased bullets the leaden core is +inserted from the base, and the edge of the mantle is then so turned +over for fixation purposes as to leave the central portion of the lead +exposed. The position of the exposed portion of the core is therefore +reversed in the two varieties. The small experience I had the +opportunity of obtaining was all to the effect that the solid base +considerably increases the stability of the mantle, and I never saw the +latter seriously torn in any specimen either collected on the field or +removed from the body. + +[Illustration: FIG. 38.--Two Soft-nosed Lee-Metford Bullets (see text). +1. Removed from forearm. 2. Removed from beneath skin of back after it +had perforated the scapula. In both the velocity retained was no doubt +low, and neither encountered great resistance] + +Fig. 38, 1, represents a soft-nosed Lee-Metford removed from just below +the lesser sigmoid cavity of the ulna, after it had perforated the +elbow-joint. The soft nose appears to have been torn, and separated by +impact with the bone, but the mantle is little altered. There can be +little doubt, however, that the bullet was travelling at a comparatively +low rate of velocity, since it was retained in the forearm, whence its +various parts were removed by Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C. I picked up a +number of similarly deformed bullets on the field. No. 2 represents a +soft-nosed Lee-Metford which perforated the scapula from the front; the +bullet was retained, hence again velocity cannot have been very high, +and the comminution was slight. If it had passed out, a large exit wound +would, however, have resulted. + +[Illustration: FIG. 39. Soft-nosed Lee-Metford Mantle. Lateral ricochet. +Illustrating effect of solid base in maintaining the stability of the +mantle] + +Fig. 39 represents a type of ricochet sometimes found on the field. In +spite of a considerable amount of violence which has caused the escape +of the core, the fissuring of the mantle is comparatively slight. In +point of fact, the casing is, as a rule, preserved from the severe +violence it suffers when complete, by the flattening and turning over of +the soft nose. I am sorry I cannot append an illustration of a damaged +soft-nosed Mauser, but I am of opinion that those used during the +campaign were not of a very dangerous nature on account of the small +amount of lead exposed. To gain the full advantage of the soft nose at +least a third of the core should be exposed. No. 3, fig. 37, of a +Lee-Metford, probably represents the most effective form of such +bullets. I am inclined to think these bullets as a class, however, are +not more dangerous to the wounded man than the regulation Mauser fired +at short range, if the latter either comes into contact with bone or +suffers ricochet. + +The Tweedie and Jeffreys bullets come under a somewhat different +category. In the Tweedie the top of the bullet is sawn off in such a +manner as to flatten the tip and widen the surface of direct impact, and +to expose the leaden core over a small area. The general principle of +the flat tip resembles that of the French Lebel bullet. In the Jeffreys +modification the mantle is sawn down for about half the length of the +whole mantle, the slits neither reaching tip nor base. I seldom saw +these bullets removed, but they were used to a considerable extent. Fig. +40 illustrates one of Mauser calibre in the possession of Mr. Cuthbert +S. Wallace. It perforated the abdomen, producing fatal injuries, but the +only alteration in outline consists in slight bulging and shortening. +This specimen, however, manifestly suffered but slight resistance. A +somewhat general impression existed that a number of severe injuries had +been produced by the Jeffreys bullets, but it was a matter of +conjecture, as few of them were removed. A weekly illustration appears +in the advertisement sheet of the 'Field,' showing the deformity of some +of them shot into animals, which bear a strong resemblance to the Mauser +figured earlier (fig. 31), and which we have seen can be produced in the +human body by contact of a regulation fully cased bullet with a bone +like the malar. A tendency on the part of the longitudinal slits to +become caught in the rifling of the barrel militates against the use of +this bullet. + +[Illustration: FIG. 40.--Jeffreys modification of Mauser. The bullet is +in the possession of Mr. C. S. Wallace. It perforated the abdomen and +caused death. The bullet is only slightly shortened by bulging at the +shoulder] + +[Illustration: FIG. 41.--1. Section of Mark IV. Lee-Metford. Note +thickness of mantle and exposed core at base. 2. Soft-nosed Mauser. Note +solid base. Short pattern] + +Fig. 41 represents sections of the soft-nosed Mauser, and the British +Mark IV. bullet, and shows the different method of closure of the base. +If the former remarks on the influence of the closed base in maintaining +the stability of the bullet be correct, Mark IV. should be a very +destructive bullet. I have no experience of its use, but I am inclined +to think that here, as elsewhere, the thickness and resistance of the +cupro-nickel mantle would endow it with considerable stability, unless +it met with very great resistance. + +[Illustration: FIG. 42.--Types of Bullets tampered with by the Boers in +the trenches. 1 and 3. Cross-cut tips, Martini-Henry and Lee-Metford. 2. +Groove cut at base of exposed tip of Lee-Metford. Another modification +of the Martini-Henry consisted in boring it longitudinally and inserting +a wooden plug] + +In connection with the subject of soft-nosed bullets, I should mention +that the Boers occasionally extemporised various modifications of them, +such as are shown in fig. 42, with intent to increase the wounding power +of the projectiles. I am unable, however, to give any information as to +the effects produced by these, and I do not think they were often +employed. The illustrations are from cartridges found in trenches which +had been occupied for some time by the Boers, who had no doubt used +their spare time in exercising their ingenuity on the bullets. + +'Explosive' bullets of small calibre were also said to have been +employed; with regard to these I can only say that I never met with any +example of a hollow bullet containing explosive material. + +One officer in a Colonial corps who spoke freely about them, told me he +had 'sawn' them in half and found the cavities, but the method of +investigation he had employed seemed against the presence of any +fulminant in the body of the bullets. Others based their statements on +the fact that they had frequently heard the bullets burst in the air; +but this is probably to be explained by the breaking up of regulation +bullets on impact with stones, which makes a smart crack like a small +explosion. + +A clip of soft-nosed Mauser cartridges, in which a copper centre to the +bullet suggested a percussion-cap, was sent home to the War Office. +Colonel Montgomery has kindly furnished me with the following report on +the bullet: + +'The bullet contains no explosive matter, it is fitted with a hollow +copper tube in the nose, similar to the ordinary "Express" bullet. The +envelope is made with a solid base, which is possible in this bullet +owing to the core being inserted from the front.' + +One cannot help feeling some astonishment at the strong feeling that has +been exhibited regarding the use of expanding bullets of small calibre, +both at the Hague Conference and during this campaign, when the +Martini-Henry, a far more dangerous and destructive missile in its +effects at moderate ranges, is allowed to pass muster without notice. + +Lastly, we come to bullets of large calibre unprovided with a mantle. +The Martini-Henry is practically representative of all these, but I +append a photograph of some twenty out of thirty varieties which came +into my possession during searches amongst captured ammunition. Some of +these were provided with a copper core to facilitate 'setting up,' +others were cupped at the top, and others flattened, to increase the +resistance on impact. I can say little about them except that I believe +some of the forms were responsible for a considerable proportion of the +most severe injuries we met with, in some of which a large and regular +entry made their use certain, while a considerable proportion of them +were retained. In the case of the viscera their power of doing serious +damage was very striking compared with that of the bullets of small +calibre. As with the small sporting bullets I think their use was often +due to the fact that the sporting Boer preferred to use the weapon he +was accustomed to rather than his military weapon. + +A considerable number of the Boers were armed with Martini-Henry rifles, +and this was particularly the case with small bodies of men, rather than +with the larger commandos fighting regular engagements. The Transvaal +Government, moreover, had Martini-Henry rifles made as late as 1898. The +Martini-Henry bullet was responsible for some of the worst fractures +that came under my notice, but it is of interest to remark that its +capability to do damage did not satisfy some of the Boers, who cut them +as is shown in fig. 43. I cannot say what the effect of this manoeuvre +was, although it may have accounted for some of the wounds of the calf +such as are mentioned below. + +Some odd missiles were met with during the campaign; thus, at Ladysmith, +I was told ball bicycle bearings were at one time in use amongst the +Boers. + +_Anatomical characters of wounds of irregular type._--It will be seen +from the above that in dealing with wounds of irregular type we have to +consider those due to irregular impact of normal regulation bullets, to +bullets deformed by contact with bone, to ricochet bullets, and lastly +to bullets of the expanding type. + +No further mention of those due to irregular impact is needful beyond +what has already been said under the heading of wobbling, except to +point out that, given a fair degree of velocity, these injuries may +assume an actual explosive character, especially in the case of skull +fractures. The description of extensive wounds accompanying comminuted +fractures finds its most appropriate place under the heading of injuries +to the bones, and will be there considered (Chapter V. p. 155). + +'Explosive' exit apertures are, however, described as occasionally +occurring in injuries involving the soft parts only. I saw no cases +substantiating this belief, but several were described to me as having +been met with in abdominal injuries, which terminated fatally at an +early date. + +[Illustration: FIG. 43.--Four Soft-nosed Bullets of small calibre shown +in fig. 37. Twenty large-calibre leaden carbine and rifle bullets from +cartridges found in Boer arsenals. These were not very extensively used, +but specimens of most varieties were at times removed from our wounded +men. It will be noted that some are of great weight, and a large +proportion either cupped or flattened at the apex to increase area of +impact and consequent resistance. The 'express' bullet with a copper +core is included in this series. It is worth remarking that all the +bullets of this nature in the Pretoria Arsenal were waxed, and that the +wax retained its white colour on the lead.] + +I still, however, incline to the opinion that the bullet in these cases +had come into contact with some bone, or was one of the larger varieties +of projectile. A few cases of wound of the calf did, however, come under +my observation which presented fairly typical 'explosive' characters +without evidence of solution of continuity of the bones. I will shortly +recount two of them. In the first the exit opening was very large and on +the outer aspect of the limb in the upper third. The bullet had +apparently passed between the bones. Secondary hæmorrhage from the +anterior tibial artery necessitated exploration of the wound and +ligature of the vessel (Mr. Carré). When the wound was thus laid open no +injury to the bones could be detected, but I do not consider that it +could be actually excluded. In the second case a wound traversed the +calf transversely, just above the centre; the exit aperture was large +and ragged. Deep suppuration occurred, and the wound had to be laid +open, when a fracture of the tibia without solution of continuity was +discovered. I also saw one or two wounds of the buttock in which very +large exit apertures were present with small entry openings; in these +again it was impossible to exclude passing contact of the bullet with a +part of the pelvic wall. Unfortunately in all these cases it is +impossible to obtain the bullet responsible for the injury. In this +relation I append a diagrammatic illustration of a peculiar wound shown +to me by Mr. Hanwell. In this case a typical small entry wound was +situated at the outer margin of the left erector spinæ muscle in the +loin. The bullet had taken a subcutaneous course of not more than +three-quarters of an inch, while the exit opening was a long shallow +wound measuring 4-1/2 in. in length by 1-1/2 in. width. (Fig. 44.) + +The wound was stated to have been received at a distance of from fifty +to a hundred yards. I think we can scarcely assume that impact with the +margin of the erector spinæ could have resulted in 'setting up' of the +bullet, while an irregular tongue of skin at the point where the wound +crossed the spines of the lumbar vertebræ did suggest possible bony +contact. That the latter must have been of the slightest nature is +evident, as no signs of concussion of the spinal cord were noted. I +should rather be inclined to compare this case to one of gutter wound +quoted on p. 56, and to assume that the bullet passed so closely +beneath the surface as either to entirely sever the skin, or at any rate +to allow it to give way on flexion of the back on movement. + +[Illustration: FIG. 44.--Small Circular Entry, large 'explosive' skin +wound of back. Track only an inch or less in length (see text)] + +On the ground of the observations made in the foregoing pages it will be +gathered that the opinion I formed was against either the very free use +or the great wounding power of so-called expanding bullets of small +calibre. I believe that a great number of the injuries which were +attributed to the employment of these missiles were produced either by +ricochet regulation bullets of small calibre, or by large leaden bullets +of the Martini-Henry type. + +_Symptoms._--I very much doubt whether the general symptoms observed as +the result of wounds from bullets of small calibre differ in more than +slight degree from those described when larger bullets were regularly +employed. Great variation was met with, but I do not think a diminution +in serious results in this direction corresponding to the comparatively +limited nature of the direct injury to the organs or tissues can be +affirmed. It is true that the immediate symptoms in many patients were +amazingly slight, but after all, this has always been a feature of +gunshot injuries on the field of battle and cannot be assigned a +position of distinctive importance. + +1. _Psychical disturbance and shock._--Some remarkable instances of +psychical disturbance were observed, and although perhaps in no way +influenced by the calibre of the projectile, they seem worthy of note in +this place. Thus a patient wounded over the cervical spine and who +suffered later with a slight degree of spinal concussion emitted an +involuntary shriek like that of a wounded hare on being struck; another +(Martini wound), after receiving a wound of the chest, lost all sense of +his surroundings for a considerable period, and occupied himself in +attempts to write on a white stone lying near him on the veldt; then +suddenly realising his position he was greatly bewildered in trying to +account for his own action. A similar instance of preoccupation is +probably offered by the dead man in the accompanying photograph (fig. +45), whose arms, forearms, and hands had evidently been in play until +the actual moment of death. Again the influence of the psychical state +on the actual occurrence of shock was often illustrated by the mental +condition of the wounded after a battle; thus after the battles of +Belmont and Graspan the patients came into hospital in excellent +spirits, and minimised their injuries in the wish of rapidly regaining +the front; while after the battle of Magersfontein the men were +depressed and miserable, shock was more pronounced, and their sufferings +were undoubtedly greater. + +On the whole, however, shock was by no means a prominent symptom in the +small-bore injuries of soft parts, and was possibly less than when +larger bullets were the rule, and again it was often remarkably slight +after the infliction of serious visceral injury. Still shock was +observed in a considerable proportion of the patients, and its +occurrence appeared to vary under very much the same conditions as +obtain in civil practice. Grades of severity depended on individual +idiosyncrasy, on the degree of excitement or preoccupation at the moment +of injury, and to a certain degree on the range of fire at which the +injury was received. + +[Illustration: FIG. 45.--Note position of head, neck, and forearms in +upper figure] + +The last is the only special factor, and as far as my observation went +it was one of considerable importance. When the soft parts only were +affected, even high velocity did not produce much effect; but when to a +flesh wound a severe bone fracture or injury to any part of the nervous +system was added, shock might be severe or profound. The question of +shock dependent on visceral injury will be considered in succeeding +chapters, but it may be well to state here that the most severe shock +appeared to follow injuries to the central nervous system especially to +the spinal cord, fracture of the larger bones, and wounds of the +abdominal and thoracic viscera, the latter especially when the cardiac +neighbourhood was encroached upon: hence the severity depended almost +solely on the importance of the part injured and the degree of damage +inflicted. I never observed instances of entire absence of shock in +visceral injuries, unless the range of fire had been an especially long +one. + +To these remarks on constitutional shock I should add a few on the +'local shock' exhibited by the actual part of the body struck. The +phenomena were of a severity I was quite unacquainted with in civil +practice, and apparently were attributable to the local vibration +transmitted to the whole structure of a limb or part of the trunk. In +many fractures, and in some wounds of the soft parts alone, without the +direct implication of any large nerve trunk, the loss of functional +capacity of the limb was complete, and this condition persisted for +hours or even days. + +2. _Pain._--As an initial symptom the occurrence of pain varied greatly +with the idiosyncrasy of the patient, and according to the circumstances +under which the wound was received. Some individuals are remarkably +insensitive, and in these the fact of a wound being a gunshot injury in +no way altered their habitual insensibility, but in persons of what may +be termed the normal type in this particular great differences were +observed. + +When a wound was received in the full excitement of battle during a +rapid advance, pain was often slight, or so trifling in degree that it +was almost unnoticed; many patients did not realise that they had been +struck until a second wound, possibly implicating a bone or some +specially sensitive structure, was superadded. In such instances the +pain was often described as 'burning' in character, or even likened to a +'sting from an insect.' Occasionally the pain was referred to a distant +part; thus a man struck in the head first felt pain in the great toe, +and another struck in the abdomen also felt pain in his foot only. Again +in some multiple injuries, pain was only felt in the more sensitive of +the regions implicated; thus a patient in whom a bullet (Martini) +traversed the arm and chest emerging in the neck to again enter the chin +and comminute the mandible, only felt pain in the chin and first +realised that he had been wounded elsewhere when he undressed. A +striking instance of the entire absence of initial pain was afforded by +a man shot through the buttock, the bullet then traversing the abdomen: +this patient remained unaware that he had been hit until on undressing +he found blood in his trousers and exclaimed: 'Why I have got this +bloody dysentery!' None the less his internal injuries were sufficiently +severe to lead to death during the next thirty-six hours. + +Although initial pain might be slight or absent, practically all the +patients complained of some of varying severity at the end of an hour +after reception of the wound. + +In a large proportion of the wounded, however, pain was more or less +severe from the first, and this was especially the case when the men had +been exposed to fire for some hours behind inadequate 'cover.' The most +common descriptions under these circumstances were that they felt as if +they had been struck by 'a brick,' 'a ton of lead,' or 'a +sledge-hammer.' + +3. _Hæmorrhage._--This question is fully treated under the heading of +injuries to the blood-vessels. It will suffice here to say that +hæmorrhage was rarely of a dangerous nature so far as life was +concerned, unless the large visceral vessels or those in the walls of +serous cavities were concerned, when death was often rapid. From limb +wounds, even when the largest trunks were implicated, the general +tendency was to spontaneous cessation of the hæmorrhage. Consequently, +except these patients were seen on the field, one seldom had to deal +with serious bleeding. None the less, the condition of the patients' +clothes bore testimony to a free rush immediately after the injury, and +pools of blood were occasionally found where patients had lain. In +nearly all cases the rush of the bullet determined the initial flow of +the blood from the exit wound, and this aperture usually furnished any +hæmorrhage of importance. + +_Diagnosis._--The only diagnostic point which it is necessary to +consider in this chapter is the determination of the nature of the +bullet which has caused the particular injury under observation, and +this is more a matter of interest than importance. + +The primary indication lies in the size of the aperture of entry, which +naturally varies with the calibre of the bullet employed, and the +difference, except in the case of large projectiles, is not always +easily determined, unless we can be sure that the impact of the bullet +was at right angles. In the latter case it is possible to distinguish +even between, for instance, a Lee-Metford and a Mauser wound, if the +resistance likely to be offered by the part struck is kept in mind. A +ricochet bullet, on the other hand, may upset all our calculations, if +size alone be taken as an indication; but here the irregularity of the +wound often serves to exclude one of the larger varieties as the cause. +The appearances of the exit wound are less useful in determining the +nature of the bullet employed, as irregularities of outline are so much +more common whatever projectile may have emerged; but examination of +this wound often gives us useful information as to the existence of an +injury to the bones not involving loss of continuity. + +[Illustration: FIG. 46.--Two flattened Leaden Cores to illustrate means +of determination of nature of bullet. Note ring at base. The right-hand +bullet is probably a 'man-stopping' revolver bullet; it flattened +against bone] + +Other information beyond that furnished by the external wounds may be +gleaned from the presence of fragments of lead in the wound; these, if +unaccompanied by portions of casing, afford some presumptive evidence of +the use of an unsheathen bullet, especially if found on the fractured +surface of the bones; but it must be borne in mind that in the case of +ricochet bullets the leaden core often perforates when entirely freed +from its mantle. Pieces of the mantle again may give useful information +both from examination of their thickness and composition. Lastly a naked +core nearly always retains the marking on its base corresponding to the +turning over of the mantle, this not being likely to suffer impact +calculated to efface the groove. When this groove existed the employment +of any of the soft-nosed bullets used in this campaign might be safely +excluded (fig. 46). + +_Prognosis._--The question of general mortality amongst the wounded has +already been considered (Chapter I. p. 11), and it has been shown, +putting aside those dying at once on the field, or during the first +twenty-four hours, that the mortality was a low one. Some other points +specially dependent on the nature of the injury are, however, worthy of +mention in this place. First, it has been shown, with a slight +reservation as to when a wound can be considered definitely sound, that +if suppuration did not occur, healing was rapid, and that many men with +slight wounds were back with their regiments in the course of a very few +days. Again, that suppuration when it did occur tended to be local in +character; none the less, if it was at all extensive, it often proved +very prolonged and difficult of treatment, while residual abscesses +after apparent healing were not uncommon. In connection with this +subject I may quote from Colonel Stevenson[12] an observation that limbs +the subject of marked local shock are especially liable to furnish +septic discharges. Parts the subject of local shock when infected show a +lesser degree of vitality and power of resistance to the spread of +infection than do normal ones, and if infected do badly. I think I +convinced myself of this on many occasions, and also of the fact that +cases of fracture in which this condition was marked were slow in +consolidating. Again I am inclined to think that the bad results which +sometimes followed the tying of the limb arteries were also consequent +on lowered vitality, and possibly vaso-motor disturbance due to the +effects of the exquisite vibratory force to which the nerves had been +subjected. On this account I was never anxious to hurry operations in +such cases, unless obviously necessary at the moment. + +The larger question of general nervous breakdown as the result of +injuries from bullets of small calibre is at present hardly capable of +an answer, and is so complicated by the co-existence of concurrent +mental anxiety, exposure, &c., that a definite answer will always be +difficult. I think there is already sufficient evidence, however, to +suggest that the remote effects of many of these injuries may be far +more serious than we expected at the moment, especially in the direction +of sclerotic changes in the nervous system. + +_Treatment_.--In view of the remarks on the treatment of special +injuries contained in succeeding chapters, I shall confine myself here +to the question of the treatment of wounds of the soft parts alone. + +This consisted during the campaign in the primary application of the +regulation first field dressing by one of the wounded man's comrades, an +orderly, or less commonly an officer or a medical man. This dressing is +composed of a piece of gauze, a pad of flax charpie between layers of +gauze, a gauze bandage 4-1/2 yards long, a piece of mackintosh +water-proof, and two safety pins, enclosed in an air-tight cover. Mr. +Cheatle,[13] in insisting on the importance of an immediate antiseptic +dressing in the field, recommends the following. A paste contained in a +collapsible tube, made up in the following proportions: Mercury and zinc +cyanide grs. 400, tragacanth in powder gr. 1, carbolic acid grs. 40, +sterilised water grs. 800; sufficient bicyanide gauze and wool for the +dressing of two wounds, a bandage, and four safety pins; the whole +enclosed in a mackintosh bag. The paste possesses the advantage over any +liquid or powder, that it can be applied in any position of the body to +severe wounds, and its application in the open air is not interfered +with by draughts of wind. Mr. Cheatle used a similar preparation with +success during the campaign. + +On arrival at the Field hospital, or in some cases at the station of the +bearer company, the wounds were then commonly dressed as follows: The +parts around the wound were cleansed with an antiseptic lotion, either +solution of perchloride of mercury 1 in 1,000, or 2-1/2 per cent. +solution of carbolic acid. The wound itself was then cleansed, and a +dressing of double cyanide of mercury and zinc applied. This was covered +with a pad of wool and secured with a bandage. The gauze was usually +wrung out in the lotion before application as a precaution against +previous contamination, and the moistening was also useful as helping to +ensure the dressing from subsequent displacement. It was early +recognised that the drier the dressing the better, and hence anything +like a mackintosh layer was carefully avoided. In some instances, +antiseptic powders were employed, but they did not find much favour, and +because they tended to favour slipping of the dressing, and to prevent +the adhesion of the gauze dressing to the wound, they were certainly not +desirable when there was any necessity for the patient to travel. In the +absence of reliable water the use of antiseptic lotions was obligatory, +and such is likely to be the case in most campaigns; in the present one, +filtration of the thick muddy water was impossible, without a +considerable expenditure of time, which could only be obtained when the +hospitals were fairly stationary. I very much preferred carbolic acid +lotions. + +The wound having been once cleansed, or rather the surroundings of the +wound, the drier the surface was kept the better; hence a too heavy or +impervious dressing was not satisfactory; in point of fact, I think some +of the slighter wounds in which all the dressings slipped off, and in +which there was less consequent chance of the dressing being moistened +with the sweat of the patient, did as well as any. + +I do not think the bicyanide gauze, absorbent wool, and common open-wove +bandages, together with a good supply of nail brushes, soap, and +carbolic acid for the primary disinfection of the skin and the external +wound, are to be greatly bettered at the present day as materials for +the first permanent dressing of cases in the field. The wound itself +should be carefully shielded during the preliminary cleansing of the +skin by a firmly applied antiseptic pad, and then the dressing applied +as above described. The one desirable improvement is some mode of +ensuring the dressing being kept in good position, and for this some +form of adhesive covering for the gauze and wool should be devised. When +the atmosphere is such as to allow of rapid drying, thin moistened +book-muslin bandages would be preferable to the plain open-wove ones. +The one period of danger is that of transport, and when that is over, +the dressing in Stationary or Base hospitals should give no trouble. + +As a rule the wounds themselves need no interference, but in some +instances either the exit or entrance wounds may be in undesirable +positions for purposes of asepsis, when a large opening may seem safer +closed and actually sealed. I saw this method tried in a few cases, but +without much success. It is one which might be of much use in Base +hospitals if the patients were brought directly into them, but in the +Field hospitals, in face of the rush with which the first dressings have +to be done, I think it is seldom applicable, and consider the +interference with the wound as rather likely to increase the danger of +infection than to decrease it. + +Dressings should not be too frequent; two should suffice for simple +wounds with type forms of entry and exit; there is little discharge and +usually no bleeding: hence the more the dry scab form of healing can be +simulated the better. When a dressing needs changing from fouling of its +outer parts, it is preferable to cut round the adherent part of the deep +layers and apply some fresh gauze over the central scab rather than to +remove it. One point should be kept in mind: the first dressing in the +Field hospital seals the fate of the wound as to the chances of primary +union, and hence too much care is impossible with it. + +Operations in the Field hospitals were proportionately not numerous, and +they should be kept down in number, as far as possible. At the same time +such operations as are necessary are mostly of capital importance, such +as the treatment of fractures of the skull, abdominal section, the +ligature of arteries, and amputations. Of these only the first and last +classes occur with any degree of frequency. In order to be prepared for +these a stock of filtered water which has been boiled, and some special +sterilised sponges, should be at hand if possible, also some small +towels which can be wrung out in antiseptic lotion. If sterilised +sponges are not to be had, wool pads wrung out in carbolic lotion must +be substituted. + +Primary amputations bore transport badly. I saw few sent down from the +front within a few days of their performance in which the flaps did not +slough, or worse consequences ensue. On the other hand, if the first +fortnight could be tided over at the front, they did well enough. The +head cases on the other hand bore movement fairly well, provided only +that asepsis was ensured. + +Retained bullets are rarely suitable for removal in the rush of the +first work of a Field hospital after an engagement. A short delay is of +no importance, and ensures their being removed safely if necessary. With +regard to the broad question of the advisability of removing them at +all, it may be laid down that they should not be interfered with unless +some obvious reason exists. Those most commonly calling for removal are +as follows: 1. Bullets lying immediately beneath the skin or quite +superficially in any region, or those which, although they have produced +an exit opening, yet lie within the body. 2. Those which lie at the +bottom of an infected track, or cause secondary suppuration. 3. Those +causing pressure on important structures, particularly nerves. 4. Those +which interfere with the movements of joints when lodged in the bones or +soft tissues in close proximity, or those which lie within the articular +cavity itself. Bullets sunk in the great body cavities or in positions +difficult of access should never be interfered with. Retained bullets +sometimes give rise to unexpected surprises; thus in a man with a +retained bullet in the pelvis no steps for its removal were taken. +During the man's voyage home on a transport he had an attack of +retention of urine. As a catheter would not pass, he was placed in a +warm bath, and shortly after passed a Mauser bullet per urethram, and +thus saved himself a cystotomy. + +One word may be added as to the treatment of shock when severe. Quiet in +the supine position, and the administration of a small amount of +stimulant, was usually all that was required. Hypodermic injections of +strychnine sulph. grs. 1/30 to 1/10 were useful, and in some severe +cases, especially where operations were needed, saline infusions with a +small amount of stimulant were made into the veins, either at the elbow, +or in amputation cases into one of the large veins exposed. + +The treatment of hæmorrhage is dealt with in Chapter IV. + +The after treatment of simple wounds needs little comment, but bearing +in mind what has been said as to the definite healing of the internal +portion of the tracks, it will be obvious that in parts such as the +thigh or calf, care was needed as to not commencing active work at too +early a date. On the other hand, a too long period of absolute rest is +also to be deprecated. The best results were obtained by careful +movement and massage, commenced after the first week or ten days, +according to the appearance presented by the external wound, followed by +a gradual resumption of active movement. It was a striking fact that +some of the patients suffering from such wounds took longer to become +apparently well than many of those who had suffered visceral injuries. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[9] _Loc. cit._ p. 31. + +[10] _Loc. cit._ p. 100. + +[11] _Loc. cit._ pp. 54, 55. + +[12] _Wounds in War_, p. 83. Longmans & Co. 1897. + +[13] A First Field Dressing, _Brit. Med. Jour._ 1900, vol. ii. p. 668. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +INJURIES TO THE BLOOD VESSELS + + +The small calibre of the modern bullet, and its tendency to take a +direct course, naturally favour the occurrence of more or less +uncomplicated wounds of the large vascular trunks, and both the nature +of these wounds and the results which follow them are in some respects +most characteristic. + + +NATURE OF THE LESIONS + +1. _Contusion or laceration without perforation._--(_a_)The vessel may +be struck laterally, the injured portion then forming a part of the +bounding wall of the wound track, or (_b_) one or more layers of the +vessel wall may be destroyed over a limited area. Given primary union, +these conditions are only of importance in so far as subsequent +contraction of the lumen of the vessel may result from implication in +the neighbouring cicatrix. One of the most striking features of the +wounds as a whole was seen in the hair-breadth escapes of the large limb +vessels with no subsequent ill effects, and such injuries were seen in +every situation. + +In a certain proportion of wounds in close proximity to large vessels, +however, a diminution of the normal calibre of the arteries was +observed, either shortly after the injury or later in the advanced +stages of cicatrisation. As an example of early obstruction, the +following may be related. A Mauser bullet passed from the inner side of +the thigh across the neck and great trochanter of the femur beneath the +femoral vessels, and probably struck and grooved the bone, since the +aperture of exit was large and irregular, some 3/4 of an inch in +diameter. One week later no pulse was palpable in either anterior or +posterior tibial arteries at the ankle, and pulsation which was strong +in the common femoral artery was very weak in the superficial femoral. +Slight fulness existed in the hollow of Scarpa's triangle, but not +sufficient to make any serious difference in the contour of the two +limbs. No thrill or abnormal murmur was discoverable. There was no +oedema of the limb, which was also normal in temperature. The patient +was kept at rest in the supine position for three weeks, during which +time the tibial pulses gradually returned. Three weeks later he was +invalided home, the pulses, however, still remaining considerably +smaller than normal. + +In the advanced stages of cicatrisation narrowing of the lumen of the +trunk vessels was far from uncommon, especially in cases of wounds of +the arm crossing the course of the brachial artery; in many of these the +radial pulse was diminished almost to imperceptibility. How far this +condition may prove permanent there has been little opportunity of +judging; nor as to the possible ultimate weakening of the vessel wall +and the development of a secondary aneurism has time allowed the +acquisition of experience. In the light of the observation of so many +cases in which large vessels were wounded without the occurrence of +severe hæmorrhage, either primary or secondary, it is impossible to be +certain whether some of the cases of arterial obstruction were not +secondary to perforating lesions of the vessels. + +Pressure on, or minor lesion of the vessel was sometimes evidenced by +the development of a murmur, as in the following case. A Mauser bullet +entered immediately within and below the left coracoid process, and +emerged at the back of the arm at its inner margin, 2-1/2 inches above +the junction of the right posterior axillary fold. During the first week +dysphagia and some pain and soreness in the episternal notch, with pain +and difficulty of respiration, were noticed. Eight weeks later no +trouble with the pharynx or oesophagus remained, but a short sharp +systolic murmur was audible over the first part of the left axillary +artery, which could be extinguished by pressure on the subclavian; the +radial pulse was normal.[14] + +When primary union failed or was prevented by infection and +suppuration, lesions, although incomplete, of the vessel coat naturally +frequently gave rise to secondary hæmorrhage. + +2. _Perforation of the vessels._--(_a_) This may be oblique or +transverse to the long axis of a trunk; when the vessel is impinged upon +laterally, an oval or circular notch, as the case may be, is produced; +or (_b_) the bullet may strike more or less in the centre of the vessel, +perforating both in front and behind, while lateral continuity is +maintained; (_c_) beyond these degrees a vessel may, of course, be +completely divided. Cases of notching of the vessel will be referred to +under the heading of traumatic aneurism; those of perforation under that +of aneurismal varix and varicose aneurism, the perforations in these +cases affecting a parallel artery and vein. + + +RESULTS OF INJURY TO THE VESSELS + +1. _Hæmorrhage._--The fact that hæmorrhage was not a prominent feature +in the wounds received during this campaign can scarcely be regarded as +an experience confined to injuries caused by bullets of small calibre. +The same observation was often made in the case of larger bullets in old +days, and the absence of severe hæmorrhage has previously been regarded +as a special characteristic of gunshot wounds. None the less, as high a +proportion as 50 per cent. of deaths occurring on the field in earlier +days has been ascribed to this cause. + +Unfortunately no new facts can be furnished on this point, although a +few cases of rapid death from primary hæmorrhage will be found recounted +under the heading of visceral injuries. Beyond these the general +evidence offered by observations on men brought in from the field with +vascular injuries, was opposed to the frequent occurrence of death from +hæmorrhage, at any rate of an external nature. This subject will be +dealt with under the classical three headings of primary, recurrent, and +secondary hæmorrhage. + +_Primary hæmorrhage._--A marked distinction needs to be drawn between +external and internal hæmorrhage. External hæmorrhage from the great +vessels of the limbs, or even of the neck, proved responsible for a +remarkably small proportion of the deaths on the battlefield. This +statement may be made with confidence, since it is not only my own +experience, but coincides with what I was able to glean from many +medical officers with the Field bearer companies. It is, moreover, +supported by the facts that cases in which primary ligature had been +resorted to were extremely rare at the Base hospitals, while, on the +other hand, traumatic aneurisms and aneurismal varices of any one of the +great trunks of the neck and limbs were comparatively common. Again, +primary amputation for small-calibre bullet wounds, except when +complicated by severe injury to the bones, was so rare as to render more +than doubtful the frequent occurrence of severe primary hæmorrhage on +the field. Only one case of rapid death due to bleeding from a limb +artery was recounted to me. In this a wound of the first part of the +axillary artery proved fatal in the twenty minutes occupied by the +removal of the patient to the dressing station. The amount of hæmorrhage +in many instances was no doubt checked by the application of pressure at +the time of the first field dressing; but it can scarcely be argued that +such dressings as were applied were of sufficient firmness to control +bleeding from such trunks as the brachial, femoral, or carotid arteries. + +The spontaneous cessation of hæmorrhage is rather to be ascribed to the +special method of production and the consequent nature of the wound. The +lesions were the result of immense force strictly localised in its +application, which might well induce very complete and rapid contraction +of the vessel wall; while the track in the soft parts was not only +narrow, but also lined by a thin layer of tissue possibly so devitalised +superficially as to specially favour rapid coagulation of the blood. +Beyond this the tracks were often sinuous when the position of the limb +at the time of reception of the injury was replaced by one of rest. The +influence of mere narrowness of the track is illustrated by classical +experience in the development of aneurismal varices after stabs by +knives or bayonets; and in the injuries under consideration the frequent +development of large interstitial hæmorrhages into the tissues of the +limbs indicated that blood does not readily travel along the wound +track. It was noteworthy that when hæmorrhage did occur it was most free +from, or often limited to, the wound of exit. This is due to the +direction of the active current set up by the rush of the bullet through +the tissues. The mechanical factor is, no doubt, the most important. + +Control of primary hæmorrhage from a wounded vessel by the impaction of +a foreign body was of much less frequent occurrence than appears to have +been the case with the older bullets. I saw a case in which, on removal +of a fragment of shell (Mr. S. W. F. Richardson), very free hæmorrhage +occurred from a wound of one of the circumflex arteries of the thigh, +but not a single one in which a similar result followed the extraction +of a bullet of small calibre. The comparative infrequency of retention +of modern bullets is probably one of the main elements in this relation. +A very curious instance of provisional plugging of a wound in the upper +part of the brachial artery by an inserted loop of the musculo-spiral +nerve was related to me by Mr. Clinton Dent. This instance must, I +think, be regarded as an accident definitely dependent on the size and +outline of the bullet and on the nature of the force transmitted by it +to neighbouring structures. + +While, however, deaths from external primary hæmorrhage were rare, a +considerable number resulted from primary internal hæmorrhage. In some +of these, injury to the largest trunks in the thorax or abdomen led to +an immediately fatal issue; in others wounds of the large visceral +arteries, as of the lungs, liver, or mesentery, were scarcely less rapid +in their results. In such cases the potential space offered by the +peritoneal or pleural cavities favours the ready escape of blood from +the wounded vessel, while the tendency of the blood effused into serous +cavities to rapid coagulation is notably slight. Beyond this the +comparative deficiency in direct support afforded by surrounding +structures to vessels running in the large body cavities is also an +important element in their behaviour when wounded. + +These remarks receive support from the observation that few, if any, +patients survived an injury to the external iliac vessels within the +abdomen, while the remarkable instances of escape from fatal hæmorrhage +from large vessels recorded below (cases 1-19) indicate that the mere +size of a wounded vessel is not to be regarded as the sole factor in +prognosis. + +_Recurrent hæmorrhage_ was occasionally met with both in the case of the +limb and trunk vessels. In the limbs it often necessitated ligature of +the artery. I saw several cases in the lower extremity where recurrent +hæmorrhage on the second or third day was treated by ligature of the +femoral or popliteal artery, and it also occurred during the course of +development of one of the carotid aneurisms recounted below. On two +occasions I saw rapid death follow recurrent abdominal hæmorrhage; in +one I was standing in a tent when a man who had been wounded the day +before suddenly exclaimed: 'Why, I am going to die after all.' The +appearance of the man was ghastly, and on examining the abdomen it was +found greatly distended, and with dulness in the flanks; the patient +expired a few minutes later. Another example of recurrent abdominal +hæmorrhage is related in case 169, p. 432. + +_Secondary hæmorrhage._--In simple wounds of the soft parts by +_small-calibre bullets_ this was decidedly rare. In wounds complicated +by fractures of the bones, especially when they exhibited the so-called +'explosive' character, secondary hæmorrhage was not uncommon, and this +not necessarily in conjunction with infection and suppuration. + +In the chapter on fracture some remarks will be found on the +prolongation of healing often observed in the exit portion of the wound +track, which is explained by the well-known fact that, given an aseptic +condition of the wound, sloughs of tissue separate very slowly. +Secondary hæmorrhage in these cases is due to lesions of the vessel +short of perforation, but severe enough to so lower the vitality that +local gangrene of the wall occurs. In such instances hæmorrhage most +usually occurred on the tenth to the fourteenth day, but occasionally +still later. In one instance of ligature of the anterior tibial artery +for such hæmorrhage three-quarters of the whole lumen of the vessel had +been devitalised. The resemblance of some cases of secondary hæmorrhage +of this class to those occasionally observed after amputation, and due +to accidental non-perforative injury of the artery at the time of +operation above the point of ligature, was very striking. + +In other cases secondary hæmorrhage was the result of perforation of the +vessel by a sharp spicule of bone, but in the large majority sepsis and +suppuration were the cause. Naturally therefore the accident was +commoner in the more severe kinds of wound, and in those caused by +_large_ bullets or fragments of shell. The symptoms in nearly all cases +were the classical ones of repeated small hæmorrhages followed by a +sudden copious gush. + +The forms of secondary hæmorrhage, however, which afforded most interest +were the interstitial and the internal, mainly on account of the scope +they allowed for diagnosis. + +Characteristic examples of internal secondary hæmorrhage are furnished +by cases of chest injury accompanied by hæmothorax and fully dealt with +under that heading (Chapter X.). Cases of interstitial secondary +hæmorrhage are also described under the heading of traumatic aneurism +and abdominal injuries (No. 194, p. 445). It therefore suffices here +merely to remark on the diagnostic difficulties the condition gave rise +to. These mainly depended upon the elevation of general bodily +temperature by which the hæmorrhage was often accompanied. Further +evidence of the condition was furnished by the development of local +swellings, or physical signs indicative of the collection of fluid in a +serous cavity. These signs developed rapidly, and the rise of +temperature was sudden and decided enough to suggest commencing +suppuration. In several cases incisions were made under the supposition +that this had already occurred. + +The fever accompanying blood effusions was generally a somewhat special +feature in the wounds of the campaign. At first bearing in mind that in +every case a track, even if closed, led from the surface to the effused +blood, one was disposed to suspect an infection of the clot of a +somewhat innocuous nature. The absence of subsequent suppuration, +however, was definitely opposed to this view, and suggested that the +fever resulted from absorption of some element of the blood, possibly +the fibrin ferment, or some form of albumose. A pronounced illustration +was in fact afforded of the evanescent rise of temperature usually the +accompaniment of simple fractures in the case of the limbs, and of the +more marked rise not uncommon in cases of traumatic blood effusion into +the peritoneal cavity, or when the pleuræ or joints were the seats of +the mischief. In the case of interstitial hæmorrhages I only remember to +have seen fever of such marked continued type in the subjects of +hæmophilia with recent effusions, although one is of course acquainted +with it in a less pronounced form as a result of hæmorrhage into +operation wounds. + +In primary interstitial hæmorrhages a similar continued rise of +temperature was also common, and I cannot perhaps better illustrate its +character than by the brief relation of two instances. + +In a patient wounded at Kamelfontein the bullet entered four inches +below the acromion, pierced the deltoid, splintered the humerus, and +crossed the axilla. A large blood extravasation developed in the axilla, +accompanied by cutaneous ecchymosis extending halfway down the arm. +There was no perceptible pulsation in either the brachial or radial +artery, but the limb was warm. There was partial paralysis of the parts +supplied by the ulnar and musculo-spiral nerves and complete loss of +power and sensation in the area of distribution of the median nerve. Six +months later the radial pulse was still absent in this patient, but +there was no sign of the development of an aneurism. + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 1.--Axillary Hæmatoma. Shows range of +temperature during process of absorption and consolidation without +suppuration] + +The accompanying temperature chart is characteristic. The blood +effusion gradually gained in consistency and underwent steady diminution +in size. No suppuration occurred. + +The median paralysis was found to be accompanied by the inclusion of the +nerve in a sort of foramen of callus, when the patient was explored at a +later date by Mr. Ballance. + +In a patient wounded at Paardeberg, a Mauser bullet entered by the left +buttock, pierced the venter ilii, traversed the pelvis, and emerging at +the brim of the latter, crossed the back, fractured the spine of the +fourth lumbar vertebra, and escaped below the twelfth right rib. The +track suppurated where it crossed the back, but the man did well until +the twentieth day, when a swelling developed in the left iliac fossa and +the general temperature rose to 102°. An abscess was at once suspected +and the swelling incised by Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C. A large +subperitoneal hæmatoma only was discovered, and evacuated. The +temperature at once fell and the after progress was uneventful, the +wound healing by primary union. + + +TREATMENT OF HÆMORRHAGE + +_Primary._--No deviation from the ordinary rules of surgery should be +necessary in the majority of cases, but in a certain number the +conditions are so unusual that the special considerations must be taken +into account. The natural tendency to spontaneous cessation of primary +hæmorrhage in small-calibre wounds is the first of these. Experience has +shown that often mere dressing, or at any rate slight pressure, suffices +to efficiently stanch immediate bleeding. Although, however, immediate +control is to be obtained by such means, the cases of traumatic aneurism +of every variety related in the next section show that the ultimate +result is in many such cases by no means satisfactory. + +Under these circumstances it may be said that the classical rule of +ligation at the point of injury should never be disregarded. Against +this, however, certain objections may be at once raised; thus in many +cases both artery and vein need ligature, a consideration of much +importance in the case of such vessels as the carotid and femoral +arteries. Again in many of the injuries to the popliteal artery the +wound directly communicated with the knee joint, a complication which, +while it may be disregarded in civil practice, must take a much more +important place in the circumstances under which many operations in +military surgery are performed. + +On the whole, it seems clear that the military surgeon must be guided by +circumstances, since it may be far better to risk the chances of +recurrent hæmorrhage, or the development of an aneurism or varix, all of +which are amenable to successful treatment later, than those of gangrene +of a limb or softening of the brain. As a general rule, therefore, on +the field or in a Field hospital, primary ligature of the great vessels +is best reserved for those cases only in which hæmorrhage persists, +while in those in which spontaneous cessation has occurred, or in which +bleeding is readily controlled by pressure, rest and an expectant +attitude are to be preferred. + +A word must be added as to the objections to distant proximal ligature +for primary or recurrent hæmorrhage. In some situations this may be +unavoidable, and it is sometimes successful, but none the less it is +opposed to all rules of good surgery and a most uncertain procedure. It +leaves the patient exposed to all the risks attendant on the employment +of simple pressure. In one case which I saw, the third part of the +subclavian artery had been ligatured for axillary bleeding; secondary +hæmorrhage, as might have been expected, occurred, and that as late as +five weeks after the operation. In another case ligature of the femoral +artery for popliteal hæmorrhage was followed by the development of a +traumatic aneurism in the ham. + +_Secondary._--In secondary hæmorrhage the treatment to be adopted +depends upon the nature of the case. When the wound is aseptic, and +bleeding the result of the separation of sloughs, local ligature is the +proper treatment, and this was often successfully adopted, especially in +the case of such arteries as the tibials. In septic cases, on the other +hand, it is usually far better if possible to amputate, unless the +general state of the patient and the local conditions are especially +favourable. + +When neither amputation nor direct local ligature is practicable, +proximal ligature may be of use. Sometimes this may be obligatory in +consequence of the difficulties attendant on direct local treatment. I +saw a few cases successfully treated in this manner: in one the common +carotid was tied (Mr. Jameson) for hæmorrhage from an arterial hæmatoma +in connection with the internal maxillary artery. Although ligature of +the external carotid would perhaps have been preferable, the result was +excellent. When even this expedient is impracticable, local pressure is +the only resort. + +Lastly, as to the treatment of secondary interstitial blood effusions, I +believe the best initial treatment is the expectant. If interference is +needed, it is much more likely to be satisfactory the more chronic the +condition has become, since the source of the bleeding may be impossible +to discover. I never saw a patient's life endangered by the amount of +such hæmorrhage, but if this should seem to be likely, local treatment +is of course unavoidable. In several cases quoted below, incision and +evacuation were followed by excellent results; in any such operation too +much care to ensure asepsis is impossible. + + +TRAUMATIC ANEURISMS + +The experience of the campaign fully bears out that of the past as to +the steady increase of the number of aneurisms from gunshot wounds in +direct ratio to diminution in the size of the projectiles employed. +Every variety of traumatic aneurism was met with, and most frequently of +all, perhaps, aneurismal varices and varicose aneurisms. While so +experienced a military surgeon as Pirogoff could say, in 1864, that he +had never seen a case of aneurismal varix, every young surgeon lately in +South Africa has met with a series. Again, although the condition is a +well-known one, it has been rather in connection with civil life; for +the great majority of recorded cases were the result of stabs or +punctured wounds such as are liable to be received in street brawls, or +as a result of accidents with the tools of mechanics. Thus of ninety +cases collected by K. Bardeleben in 1871, only 12 or 13.33 per cent. +were the result of gunshot wound. + +_False traumatic aneurism or arterial hæmatoma._--This condition was met +with comparatively frequently, and bears a very close relation to that +already described under the heading of interstitial hæmorrhages. The +latter might almost have been included here, since the difference +between the two conditions depended merely on the size of the vessels +implicated. The exact correspondence in the period of development of +some of the arterial hæmatomata, and of the occurrence of the aseptic +form of secondary hæmorrhage, also explains the pathology of the two +conditions as identical; except that in the former the effused blood is +retained in the tissues, while in the latter it escapes externally. The +history of these cases was uniform and characteristic. A wound of the +soft parts, or sometimes a fracture, was accompanied by a certain degree +of primary interstitial hæmorrhage, which might or might not have been +associated with external bleeding. A hæmatoma resulted in connection +with the wounded vessel, the general tendency in the effusion being to +coagulation at the margins and subsequent contraction. Meanwhile the +opening in the artery became more or less securely closed by the +development of thrombus, and possibly by retraction of the inner and +middle coats of the vessel. With the return of full circulatory force as +shock passed off, or with the resumption of activity and consequent +freer movement of the limb, the temporary thrombus became washed away. +The newly formed wall of soft clot bounding the effusion proved +insufficient to withstand the full force of the blood pressure, and +extension of the cavity resulted. In the more rapidly developing +hæmatomata, temporary pressure by the effused blood on the bleeding +vessels was also, no doubt, a common explanation of temporary cessation +of increase in size. + +A diffuse soft fluctuating swelling, sometimes accompanied by pulsation, +but oftener without, developed, and not uncommonly diffusion was +accompanied by some discoloration of the surface and elevation of the +general temperature. Such arterial hæmatomata commonly developed from +ten days to three weeks after the original wound. A few examples will +suffice. + + (1) A patient wounded at Elandslaagte was sent down to Wynberg. + The antero-posterior wound in the upper third of the arm was + healed, but a month after the injury a large fluctuating + arterial hæmatoma developed in the axilla and upper third of + the arm. This was incised (Colonel Stevenson) and a wound of + the axillary artery in its third part discovered, and the + vessel ligatured. The patient made an excellent recovery. + + (2) A patient received a wound at Doornkop which traversed the + calf in an obliquely antero-posterior longitudinal direction. + Three weeks later a soft fluctuating swelling developed at the + inner margin of the tendo Achillis occupying the lower third of + the leg. Neither pulsation nor murmur was detected. There was + anæsthesia in the area of distribution of the posterior tibial + nerve. No tendency to further increase was observed, and + operation was postponed. The temperature was normal. + + (3) An Imperial Yeoman was struck at Zwartskopfontein at a + range of one hundred yards. The man rode four miles on his + horse after being hit, but the horse then fell and rolled over + him twice. The man was treated successively in the Van Alen, + Boshof, and Kimberley Hospitals, and from the last he was sent + to Wynberg which place he reached on the twenty-third day. When + admitted into No. 2 General Hospital the wounds of type form + and size (_entry_, in posterior fold of axilla; _exit_, 1-1/2 + inch below junction of anterior fold with arm) were healed. The + whole upper arm was swollen and discoloured, while an indurated + mass extended along the line of the vessels into the axilla. + This was considered a blood effusion; it was not obviously + distensile, and pulsation was very slight. The brachial radial + and ulnar pulses were absent. A fluctuating swelling was + present along the anterior border of the deltoid. There were + some signs of nerve contusion, but no paralysis, beyond tactile + anæsthesia in the area of distribution of the median nerve. + + Four days later little alteration had been noticed beyond a + tendency to variation in firmness of the different parts of the + swelling. On the thirty-first day considerable enlargement was + observed. This enlargement, together with continued rise of + temperature, aroused the suspicion of suppuration, and an + exploratory puncture with a von Graefe's knife was made by + Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C., after consultation with Professor + Chiene. Blood clot first escaped, followed by free arterial + hæmorrhage. The incision was enlarged while compression of the + third part of the subclavian was maintained; a large quantity + of clot was turned out, and an obliquely oval wound half an + inch in long diameter was found in the axillary artery. + Ligatures were applied above and below the opening between the + converging heads of the median nerve. The veins were not + damaged. The wound healed by first intention. On the twelfth + day a feeble radial pulse was perceptible, and shortly + afterwards the man left for England, diminished median tactile + sensation being the only remnant of the original symptoms. + + (4) A private of the 2nd Rifle Brigade was struck while + doubling at Geluk, at a range of one hundred yards. The Mauser + bullet entered four inches above the upper border of the left + patella, internal to the mid line of the limb, and escaped in + the centre of the popliteal space. The man lay in a farmhouse + during the night and bled considerably from both wounds. He did + not fall when struck, but could not walk. He was sent to No. 2 + General Hospital in Pretoria. On arrival there the external + wounds were scabbed over, and a large tumour existed beneath + the entrance wound. There was much discoloration from + ecchymosis, but no pulsation could be detected. The posterior + tibial pulse was good. At the end of ten days pulsation became + marked both in the front of the limb and in the popliteal + space. There were no symptoms of nerve injury. On the + thirteenth day an Esmarch's bandage was applied and Major + Lougheed laid the tumour open opposite the opening in the + adductor magnus. Much clot was removed, and both artery and + vein, which were found divided in the adductor canal, were + ligatured. + + The foot remained very cold for the first twenty-four hours, + but otherwise progress was satisfactory, the wound healing by + first intention. No pulsation was palpable in the tibials at + the end of a month. + +For the last two cases I am very much indebted to Major Lougheed. I am +glad to include them, as they illustrate one or two points of special +importance. No. 3 shows the tendency to variation in the tension and +firmness of the tumours, the tendency to primary contraction of the sac, +followed by diffusion, and the rise of temperature often accompanying +the latter occurrence. This is of great interest in relation to the +similar rise of temperature seen with the increase of hæmorrhage in +cases of hæmothorax. For purposes of comparison, the progress may well +be considered alongside of that in the case related on p. 119, in which +the wounded vessel was probably also the main trunk itself. + +No. 4 differs from any of the others in depending on a complete division +of a large artery and vein. The development of the hæmatoma was +consequently more rapid and continuous. Another point of interest was +the maintenance of pulsation in the tibial vessels, in spite of complete +solution of continuity in the parent trunk. That this was independent of +the collateral circulation seems evident from its complete disappearance +and slowness of return after ligation of the wounded vessels. + +_Prognosis and treatment._--The treatment in these cases is sufficiently +obvious, and consists in direct incision and ligature of the wounded +vessels. The cases related show the success with which this procedure +was attended, since uniformly good results were obtained. When possible, +an Esmarch's tourniquet should be applied in the case of the lower limb. +In the upper, compression of the subclavian is necessary during +interference with axillary hæmatomata, combined with direct pressure on +the bleeding spot after the clot has been removed. In the case of the +arm, digital compression is always to be preferred, in view of the +well-known danger of damage to the brachial nerves from the tourniquet. + +Proximal ligature is always to be avoided. It is inadequate, and proved +more dangerous as far as the vitality of the limb was concerned, the +latter point probably depending on the interference with the collateral +circulation by pressure from the extravasated blood, which is unrelieved +by the operation. I know of at least two cases of gangrene which +occurred consecutively to proximal ligature of the femoral artery for +this condition. + +_True traumatic aneurisms._--The cases met with differed so little from +those seen in ordinary civil practice, that but slight notice of them is +necessary. They differed from the last variety mainly in the more +localised nature of the tumour, the greater firmness of its walls, and +the more pronounced expansile pulsation. The development of this form of +aneurism was probably influenced by several circumstances, such as the +more complete rest secured for the patient, the locality in the limb as +affecting movement of the spot in the vessel actually wounded, the size +of the opening in the vessel, and the degree of support afforded by +surrounding structures. (Examples are furnished by cases 6-9.) + +Under the influence of rest, all that I saw tended to contract and +become firmer, and they so far resembled spontaneous aneurisms as to be +readily cured by proximal ligature of the artery. The ideal treatment no +doubt consists in local incision and ligature on either side of the +wounded spot, with or without ablation of the sac. The choice of direct +or proximal ligature in any case depends on the position of the +aneurism, and the ease with which the former operation can be carried +out. In all these cases a very great advantage in the localisation and +diminution of the tumours was gained by postponing interference until +they became stationary. I need scarcely add that any evidence of +diffusion indicated immediate operation. The preference of direct or +proximal ligation will probably, to a certain extent, always depend on +the personal predilection of the surgeon, but while proximal ligature +has often given good immediate results during this campaign, it cannot +be with certainty decided whether the patients are definitely protected +from the dangers of recurrence. + +Reference to cases 7 and 9 as illustrating the possible spontaneous cure +of traumatic aneurisms is of great interest. + +I saw a number of cases successfully treated by proximal ligature; also +a number where continuous improvement followed rest, and which were sent +home for further treatment. None of these demand any special mention. + +One case of a very special nature, which terminated fatally, is of great +interest:-- + + (5) In a man wounded at Belmont the bullet entered the second + left intercostal space and was retained in the thorax. He was + sent directly to the Base and came under the care of Mr. + Thornton at No. 1 General Hospital, Wynberg. Signs of wound of + the lung developed in the form of hæmoptysis and left + hæmothorax. The left radial pulse was almost imperceptible. + + The entry wound did not close by primary union, and three weeks + later an incision was made into the chest in consequence of the + presence of fever, progressive emaciation, and weakness. + Breaking down blood clot was evacuated: general improvement + followed, and the radial pulse increased considerably in + volume. + + A fortnight later sudden severe hæmorrhage occurred from the + external wound, and the man rapidly collapsed and died. At the + post-mortem a traumatic aneurism the size of an orange was + found in connection with an oval wound in the first portion of + the left subclavian artery which admitted the tip of the + forefinger. + +This case is noteworthy as an illustration of the magnitude of an artery +which can be wounded without leading to rapid death from primary +hæmorrhage, even when in communication with a serous sac, and still more +as emphasising the importance of weakening of the radial pulse as a sign +in connection with a wound of the upper part of the chest on the left +side. It is somewhat surprising that this sign was not marked in two +cases (Nos. 13 and 14, p. 140) recorded below, in which the innominate +and right carotid arteries respectively were probably perforated. + + (6) _Traumatic popliteal aneurism._--Wounded at Modder River. + _Entry_ (Mauser), over centre of tibia 1 inch above the + tubercle. _Exit_, about centre of popliteal space. No + hæmorrhage of any importance occurred from the wound, but there + was a typical hæmarthrosis, which subsided slowly. Twelve days + after the injury a pulsating swelling the size of a hen's egg, + to which attention was drawn on account of pain, was noted in + popliteal space. The pulsation extended upwards in the line of + the artery some 3 inches. The limb was placed on a splint and + treated by rest, and a month later the aneurism had decreased + to one half its former size, the wall having greatly increased + in firmness. Pulsation was easily controlled by pressure above + the tumour; there was no thrill present, but a high-pitched + bellows murmur. The patient was sent home on February 1. + +When admitted at Netley the patient came under the care of Major Dick, +R.A.M.C., who ligatured the popliteal artery on the proximal side by an +incision in the line of the tendon of the adductor magnus. The aneurism +then consolidated. + + (7) _Traumatic popliteal aneurism._--Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_ (Mauser), centre of patella. _Exit_, centre of + popliteal space; the knee was bent at the time it was struck. + There was considerable primary external hæmorrhage, and so much + blood collected in the knee-joint that it was aspirated. On the + eighth day secondary hæmorrhage occurred from the exit wound + and the femoral artery was tied in Hunter's canal. No further + hæmorrhage occurred, but at the end of three weeks feeble + pulsation was palpable in the popliteal space, suggesting an + aneurism; the latter decreased and the patient was sent home + apparently well. + + (8) _Traumatic axillary aneurism._--Wounded at Karree. The + bullet entered 2-1/2 inches below the acromial end of the right + clavicle and emerged over the 9th rib in the posterior axillary + line. The Mauser bullet was found in the patient's haversack. + Both apertures were of the slit form, and healed per primam. + Three weeks later at Wynberg a large arterial hæmatoma which + pulsated was noted in the axilla. Signs of injury to the + musculo-spiral nerve were also observed. The tumour altered + little, but a fortnight later Major Burton, R.A.M.C., cut down + upon it through the pectorals. The aneurism was of the third + part of the axillary artery, and a ligature was applied at the + lower margin of the pectoralis minor. The wound healed by + primary union and the aneurism rapidly shrank. The patient left + for England a month later; the musculo-spiral paralysis was + improving. I am indebted to Major Burton for the notes of this + case. + + (9) _Traumatic popliteal aneurism._--Wounded in Natal. _Entry_ + (Mauser), immediately above head of fibula. _Exit_, immediately + inside semi-tendinosus tendon at level of central popliteal + crease. Fulness but no pulsation was noted at end of three + weeks; seven days later pulsation was evident, and an aneurism + the size of a pigeon's egg, with firm walls, became localised + and palpable. It gave rise to no symptoms, and patient refused + operation during the three weeks he remained in hospital. The + aneurism continued to contract, and the patient was sent home. + The aneurism has since spontaneously consolidated. + +_Aneurismal varix and varicose (arterio-venous) +aneurism._--Uncomplicated cases of aneurismal varix, as might be +expected, were less common than those in which the arterio-venous +communication was accompanied by the formation of a traumatic sac. The +initial lesion accountable for each condition was, however, probably +identical, and dependent on the passage of a bullet of small calibre +across the line of large parallel arteries and veins. Thus, obliquely +coursing antero-posterior wounds of the neck produced carotid and +jugular varices; vertically coursing tracks laid the subclavian vessels +in communication; antero-posterior tracks the brachial, popliteal, and +lower part of the femoral; and transverse tracks, the vessels of the +calf and forearm. Given an arterial wound, the mode of development of +the aneurismal sac in no way differs from that of the ordinary +traumatic variety; the main point of interest, therefore, is to seek an +explanation of the causes which may restrict the ultimate result to the +formation of a pure aneurismal varix. The explanation is possibly to be +found in some of the following circumstances. + +_Size, position, and symmetry of the vascular wound._--It seems scarcely +necessary to insist on the calibre of the projectile, since this alone +determined the frequency of these conditions, but it must be borne in +mind that in the diameter of the bullets, classed as of small calibre +during this war, a range of from 6.5-8 mm. existed. In the case of both +the Krag-Jörgensen and Mauser, the shape of the bullet also was better +adapted to pure perforation of the vessels. I saw no case of +arterio-venous communication in which a larger bullet than one of the +four types chosen had been responsible for the primary injury, but a +difference of 1-1/2 mm. in calibre in the small projectile might well +determine the division, the pure and symmetrical perforation of the two +vessels, or the giving way of one side, so that they were deeply notched +instead of perforated. + +Such positive evidence as was afforded by operation as to the exact +condition of the vessels in two cases of femoral arterio-venous aneurism +was, that in either case a clean perforation existed. + +It is improbable that notching of the two vessels can primarily produce +a pure varix, although it may result in the formation of an +arterio-venous aneurism, especially if the bullet should have passed +between the two vessels in such a way as to notch the contiguous sides. +It is impossible to say, in any given case, what the result of secondary +contraction of a sac produced in this manner may be in the determination +of the ultimate relation of the vessels. In many of the cases clinically +designated pure varix, the remains of such a sac may still actually +persist. In the case also of pure perforation of the vessels, it is +difficult to believe that a localised blood cavity has not originally +existed. Given complete division of the vessels, as far as my experience +went, arterial hæmatoma was the uniform result. + +Under these circumstances I am inclined to believe that a symmetrical +perforation of both vessels is the most common precursor of either +condition; that the pure varix is the rarer and less likely result, and +that its formation is dependent mainly on certain anatomical conditions. +The most important of these conditions are the proximity and degree of +cohesion of the two vessels, the comparative spaciousness or the +opposite of the vascular cleft, and the degree of support afforded by +surrounding structures. + +Thus, the close proximity of the popliteal artery and vein, together +with the particularly firm adhesion which exists between the vessels, +probably favours the formation of a varix; again, a varix more readily +forms if the femoral artery and vein are wounded in Hunter's canal than +if the injury is situated high in Scarpa's triangle, where the vessels +lie in a large areolar space. The passage of a bullet between an artery +and vein may perhaps produce either condition, but wide separation of +the two vessels, as for instance of the subclavian artery and vein, +renders an aneurismal sac almost a certainty. These suggestions seem +borne out by the cases recounted below, since the pure varices are one +femoral, one popliteal, and one axillary. I cannot include the calf and +forearm cases, as the existence of a small sac could not be disproved. + +To these anatomical factors certain others must be added. In most cases +a false sac exists at first, which tends to undergo contraction and +spontaneous cure, as is observed in some of the ordinary traumatic sacs. +This history of development is moreover supported by the observation +that proximal ligature of the artery usually converts an arterio-venous +aneurism into an aneurismal varix. The process is no doubt favoured by +cleanness and small size of the perforation, moderation in the amount of +primary hæmorrhage, the tone and resistance of the surrounding tissues, +special points in the circulatory force and condition of the blood, and +the possibility of maintaining the part at rest after the injury. + +Aneurismal varix, when pure, was evidenced by the presence of purring +thrill and machinery murmur alone. In none of the cases I saw was pain +or swelling of the limb present. In one popliteal varix, slight +varicosity of the superficial veins of the leg was present, but it was +not certain that the development of this was not antecedent to the +injury, as the patient did not notice it until his attention was drawn +to its existence. In none of the cases under observation in South Africa +had enough time elapsed for sufficient dilatation of the artery above +the point of communication to give rise to any confusion from this cause +as to the presence of a sac. + +When an arterio-venous sac has once formed, clinical observation shows +that the general tendency is towards extension in the direction of least +resistance. This direction of course varies with the situation of the +aneurism, and also with the nature of the wound track. + +Speaking generally the direction of least resistance in a typically pure +perforation is towards the vein. Initial flow of blood from the wounded +artery is naturally favoured towards the potential space afforded by a +canal occupied by blood flowing at a lower degree of pressure. The +partial collapse of the vein dependent on the wound in its wall also +probably helps in determining the initial flow in its direction. +Examples are afforded by the carotid aneurisms (cases 10, 11, and 14), +and here it must be borne in mind that the outer limits of the cervical +vascular cleft are those least likely to offer resistance to extension +of the sac. In each the aneurisms mainly occupied the exit segment of +the track; this is the general rule, as in the case of external +hæmorrhage, and is determined by the same cause. + +The latter rule however finds exceptions when the entry segment is so +situated as to cross a region of lesser resistance, and case 12 +illustrates this point with regard to the cervical vascular cleft. +Examples of the tendency to spread in the anatomical direction of least +resistance are also offered by the cases of aneurism at the root of the +neck, where extension was into the posterior triangle. + +The further clinical history and signs are as follows. A local swelling +is found, usually at first diffuse, often commencing to develop with +cessation of the external hæmorrhage. It increases, for the first few +days maintaining its diffuse character. If near the surface, it may be +superficially ecchymosed. At the end of this time a tendency to +localisation, as evidenced by increasing firmness and more definite +margination, takes place, and this is followed by general contraction +and rounding off of the tumour. The latter process may be continuous, +and eventually the sac may become small and stationary or ultimately +disappear and a pure varix be the result. The latter is only likely to +be the case under the most satisfactory of the conditions enumerated +above. Occasionally an opposite course may be followed, and fresh +extension take place, as evidenced by enlargement of the tumour, +disappearance of sharp definition, softening, and pain. The natural +termination of such cases in the absence of interference would no doubt +be rupture, and possibly death in some positions, loss of the limb in +others. The former I never saw. + +_Purring thrill._--This, the pathognomonic sign of either condition, was +always present in the fully developed stage, and is probably present +from the first unless a temporary thrombosis obstructs the vascular +openings. It was noted as early as the third day in case 13. In many of +the other patients it was palpable only with the subsidence of the +primary swelling attendant on the injury. In some of the forearm and +calf aneurisms, and in some of the popliteal, it was only discovered by +accident some weeks even after the injury, but this often because no +serious vascular lesion had been suspected. The thrill was widely +conducted, often apparently superficial on palpation, and much more +pronounced with light than with forcible digital pressure. + +In case 10 the _visible_ vibration in consonance with the thrill when +the vein was exposed during the operation of ligature of the carotid was +a novel experience to me. + +_Murmur._--The typical 'bee in the bag,' or 'machinery' murmur was +present in every case, and was often very widely distributed, especially +over the thorax. (Cases 13, 14, and 20.) + +In all three carotid cases the murmur was troublesome, being audible to +the patient at night when the head was rested on the side corresponding +to the aneurism. + +_Expansile pulsation._--Pulsation in combination with the existence of a +tumour is the main feature in the diagnosis between the conditions of +pure varix and varicose aneurism. It was not always existent or +prominent in the earliest stages, probably from temporary blocking of +the artery, or from the diffuse and irregular nature of the cavity +offering conditions unsuitable to the satisfactory transmission of the +wave. When localisation had occurred it was always present. + + +EFFECTS OF ANEURISMAL VARIX OR VARICOSE ANEURISM ON THE CIRCULATION + +(_a_) _General._--The most striking feature in these injuries is the +remarkable effect of the disturbance to the even flow of the circulation +on the heart. This first struck me in two of the cases of carotid +arterio-venous aneurism recorded below (Nos. 10 and 11). In these I was +inclined at first to attribute the rapid and irritable character of the +pulse solely to injury to the vagus, as in each laryngeal paralysis +pointed to concussion or contusion of the nerve. The pulse reached a +rate of 120-140 to the minute. This disturbance was not of a transitory +nature, for in the two cases referred to the rapid pulse persists, in +spite of entire recovery of the laryngeal muscles, and the fact that in +one case the aneurismal sac has been absolutely cured, and in the second +only a small sac remains, in each as a result of proximal ligature of +the carotid artery. In the former a varix still exists, and at the end +of seven months the pulse is still over 100. In the latter, in which a +sac is still present, the pulse rate varies from 110 to 130. In each +case the condition has now existed twelve months. My attention once +directed to this point, I noted a similar acceleration of the pulse in +the case of these aneurisms elsewhere; thus in a femoral aneurism the +rate was 120, and in an axillary varix of twenty years' standing which +came under my observation the pulse rate varied from 110 to 120, +according to the position of the patient. Unfortunately I had not +directed my attention to this point in the early series of cases which +came under observation. + +It will be remarked in cases 13 and 14 that at the expiration of a year +the pulse rate was still high, but these again are cervical aneurisms +each in contact with or near the vagus. + +In a case of aneurismal varix of the femoral artery of three years' +standing, which was under the charge of Mr. Mackellar, the pulse rate +was normal. In this instance great dilatation of the vessels had +occurred. + +These observations raise the interesting question whether the irritable +circulation which has been classically considered one of the +predisposing causes of spontaneous aneurism should not rather be +regarded as a result of the condition. + +(_b_) _Local._--In none of the cases of varix was the period of +observation long enough to allow me to determine the development of +dilatation of the arterial trunk above the point of obstruction. This, +however, is the common sequence, and no doubt will occur in those +patients who resume active occupation without operation. + +The effects of either condition on the distal circulation were +remarkably slight. The distal pulses were little, if at all, modified in +strength or volume, and signs of venous obstruction, if present at +first, disappeared with much rapidity. In one case (No. 15) of a large +arterio-venous popliteal aneurism there was considerable swelling of the +leg, but in this case the sac was large and situated at the apex of the +space, and no doubt exercised external pressure on the vein. + +In the case of the carotid aneurisms, especially that probably on the +internal carotid, transient faintness was a symptom in the early stages +of the case. All three of the cases recorded here, however, had been the +subjects of very free hæmorrhage, either primary or recurrent. + + (10) _Carotid arterio-venous aneurism._--Wounded at Paardeberg. + _Entry_ (Mauser) to the right side of the Pomum Adami, _exit_ + at anterior margin of left trapezius, two inches below the + angle of the jaw. There was some hæmorrhage at the time from + the exit wound, but no hæmoptysis; about four hours later, + however, in the Field hospital bleeding was so free that an + incision was made with the object of tying the common carotid. + During the preliminary stages of the operation bleeding ceased + and the wound was closed without exposing the vessel. The + patient remained a week in the Field hospital, and then made a + three day and night's journey in a bullock waggon to Modder + River (40 miles), and fourteen days later he was transferred to + the Base hospital at Wynberg, when the condition was as + follows. Operation and bullet wounds healed. Considerable + extravasation of blood in the posterior triangle. Beneath the + sterno-mastoid in the course of the bullet track, swelling, + thrill and pulsation over an area 1-1/2 inch wide in diameter. + Loud machinery murmur audible to the patient when the left side + of the head is placed on the pillow, and widely distributed on + auscultation. The left eye appears prominent, but the pupils + are normal and equal in size. Voice weak and husky, and there + is cough. Laryngoscopic examination showed the cords to be + untouched, but some swelling still persisted. No headache, but + giddiness is troublesome at times. Pulse 100, regular but + somewhat irritable. + + The patient was kept quiet in the supine position for a month, + and during this time the condition in many ways improved. The + voice improved in strength, the pulse steadied, falling to 80, + the prominence of the left eye disappeared, and all the blood + effusion in the posterior triangle became absorbed. Meanwhile + the aneurism contracted at first, until it became oval in + outline, with a long axis of 2 inches by 1-1/2 broad extending + in the line of the wound track, but mainly situated in the exit + half. During the last fortnight, however, it remained quite + stationary in size, and as it showed no further signs of + diminution in spite of the favourable conditions under which + the patient had been placed, it was considered best to try to + ensure its consolidation by a proximal ligature. Thrill had + become slightly less pronounced, and was less evident to the + patient himself, but was otherwise unchanged. The probabilities + in this case seemed rather in favour of wound of the internal + carotid artery, and it was decided to bare the upper part of + the common carotid, follow up the main trunk, and if possible + apply the ligature to the internal branch. On April 12, 61 days + after the injury, the classical incision for securing the + common carotid was made, and the sterno-mastoid slightly + retracted. It was found that the sac of the aneurism extended + over the bifurcation of the artery, reaching to the wall of the + larynx. The omo-hyoid muscle was therefore divided, and the + artery ligatured beneath, in order to ensure against any + interference with the sac. Some difficulty was met with, for on + opening the vascular cleft the vein was exposed and found to + completely overlie the artery: although it was on the left side + of the neck, the position of the vein was so completely + superficial that there seemed no doubt that it had been + displaced by the development of the aneurismal sac. A striking + appearance was noted on exposure of the vein, the coats of + which vibrated visibly, quivering in exact consonance with the + palpable thrill. On tightening the silk ligature all pulsation + ceased in the aneurism, and the vibratory thrill in the vein + became much lessened. + + The patient made a good recovery, only disturbed by a slight + attack of vomiting, and at the end of a week the wound had + healed, and pulsation in the aneurism had completely ceased. + The thrill persisted as before. + +Six months later, a small sac still exists beneath the sterno-mastoid. +The pulse still reaches 110-120 in pace. The purring thrill is very +slight. The condition gives rise to little or no trouble. Pulsation is +strong in the external carotid artery, there is little in the common +carotid. The voice is strong and good. This aneurism is either at the +bifurcation of the common carotid, or on the immediate commencement of +the internal carotid. Ligature of the external carotid will probably +cure it. + + (11) _Arterio-venous aneurism, probably affecting both + carotids._ Wounded at Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), at dimple + of chin immediately below mandibular symphysis. _Exit_, at + margin of right trapezius, the track crossing the carotids + about the level of normal bifurcation. The patient was lying on + his back with the head down when struck. Some hæmorrhage from + the exit wound occurred at the time, and later on the way to + Jacobsdal this was so profuse as to be nearly fatal. A + considerable hæmorrhage also occurred on the tenth day. The + patient made the journey to Modder River safely, and was then + under the charge of Mr. Cheatle. A large diffuse pulsating + swelling developed on the right side of the neck, with + well-marked thrill and machinery murmur. During the next three + weeks the swelling steadily contracted, and the patient was + sent down to the Base one month after receiving the wound, when + the condition was as follows. There is no evidence of any + fracture of the jaw. On the right side of the neck a large + aneurism fills the carotid triangle, extending from the + mid-line backwards to the margin of the trapezius, and from the + level of the top of the larynx upwards to the margin of the + mandible. The wall is fairly firm, pulsation is both visible + and palpable, and a well-marked thrill and machinery murmur are + present. The latter annoys him by its buzzing when the head + rests on the right side. The pupils are equal. Pulse somewhat + irritable, about 100. The voice is weak and husky, and there is + difficulty in swallowing solids. The actual swelling is + somewhat remarkable in outline, on the one hand following up + the course of the external carotid and facial arteries, and on + the other extending backwards in the line of the wound track + towards the exit. The patient was kept on his back with + sandbags around the head during the next fortnight. For the + first eight days such change as occurred was in the direction + of localisation and contraction, but during the last six, + evident extension occurred both backwards and downwards; this + extension was accompanied by severe pain in the cutaneous + cervical nerve area of the neck. The larynx became pushed over + 3/4 of an inch to the left of the median line, and the + extension beneath the sterno-mastoid downwards raised a doubt + as to whether the common carotid could be exposed without + encroaching on the walls of the sac. Owing to indisposition I + had not been able to see the patient for some days, but now, + after consultation with Major Simpson and Mr. Watson, it was + decided that the best plan would be to expose and tie the + common carotid as high as could be safely done. The operation + was performed six weeks after the injury, and somewhat to our + surprise offered little difficulty. The carotid was exposed at + the upper border of the omo-hyoid, only a small amount of + infiltration having occurred in the vascular cleft. No + dilatation of the jugular was noticeable, and when a silk + ligature was applied to the artery all pulsation was + controlled, and the thrill in the vein disappeared completely. + The after progress was satisfactory, but four days later the + wound was dressed, as the patient's temperature had risen above + 100°. The tumour was consolidated: no pulsation could be felt, + but there was little apparent diminution in its size. A loud + blowing murmur was audible, especially at the posterior part of + the swelling. + + On the morning of the fifth day the patient mentioned that he + again heard the whirr during the night. There had been no sign + of any cerebral disturbance and the pupils had remained equal + throughout. + + A week after the operation the stitches were removed, there was + evidence of some blood clot in the lower part of the wound, and + this later liquefied and was let out on the eleventh day. At + that time a slight bubbling thrill could be felt at the upper + part of the tumour, also slight pulsation in the line of the + external carotid and at the most posterior part of the sac. The + latter was much contracted, diminished in size and apparently + solid, so that it was hoped that such pulsation as existed was + communicated. Ten months later, no trace of the aneurismal sac + exists. Neck normal, except for purring thrill. Voice strong + and good. Pulse 100. Following his usual work. + + (12) _Carotid arterio-venous aneurism_.--Wounded at Paardeberg. + Aperture of _entry_ (Mauser), at the posterior border of the + left sterno-mastoid, 1 inch above the clavicle; _exit_, near + the posterior border of the right sterno-mastoid, 2 inches from + the sterno-clavicular joint. The injury was followed by very + free hæmorrhage, mainly from the wound of entry, some 'quarts' + of blood escaping; at any rate his clothes were saturated. The + voice was hoarse and weak, and there was much difficulty in + swallowing; for the first twenty-four hours he could swallow + nothing, but gradual improvement took place. The patient was + carried two miles to the Field hospital, and three days later + travelled 36-40 miles in a bullock waggon to Modder River. + Thence he travelled to Orange River 55 miles by train on the + next day. A swelling was first noted when the wound was dressed + some seven days after the injury. No evidence was ever existent + of gross damage to either trachea or oesophagus beyond the + initial dysphagia. The hoarseness of voice due to left + laryngeal paralysis slowly improved, and was probably the + effect of concussion or contusion of the left recurrent + laryngeal nerve. During the patient's stay at Orange River a + large pulsating swelling with a strong thrill developed. This + was at first diffuse, but under the influence of rest it + steadily contracted and localised. During this period the + patient was seen several times by Mr. Cheatle, who noted + considerable temporary enlargement of the thyroid gland. + + At the end of eight weeks he had been allowed up some days, and + travelled 570 miles to Wynberg. The aneurism was about 1-1/2 + inch in diameter, smooth and rounded, extending just beneath + the left clavicle and nearly the whole width of the + sterno-mastoid, but well defined in all directions. There was + well-marked expansile pulsation, purring thrill along the + jugular vein and over the tumour, and loud machinery murmur + widely diffused along the whole neck and into the thorax. The + voice was still weak and husky, but there was no dysphagia or + dyspnoea. The left pupil was larger than the right. + + The patient acquired enteric fever at Wynberg and when + convalescent was sent to Netley, whence he returned home. The + aneurism caused little discomfort. It may possibly have been of + the inferior thyroid artery. + + (13) _Innominate arterio-venous varix_.--Wounded at Modder + River. _Entry_ (Mauser) posterior margin of left + sterno-mastoid, close above the clavicle. _Exit_ in anterior + axillary line one inch below the right anterior axillary fold. + Soon after the injury a considerable amount of blood was + coughed up, and occasional hæmoptysis persisted for the next + four days. The patient was moved from the Field hospital by + train to Orange River, a journey of 55 miles and some four + hours' duration, on the fourth day. When examined there was + slight fulness over an area roughly circular and about 2-1/2 + inches in extent, of which the sterno-clavicular joint lay just + within the centre. Over this area there was faint pulsation + with a strongly marked thrill and loud systolic bruit. The + radial pulses were even, the right pupil larger than the left. + No pain, and no dyspnoea. The right eye was partially closed, + but could be opened by the levator palpebræ superioris. The + patient was shortly afterwards sent to the Base, and when seen + there twenty-five days after the injury, there was little + change in the condition except that the fulness had + disappeared, the thrill was more marked, and a typical + machinery murmur transmitted along both carotid and subclavian + arteries had developed. There was no headache and the man + himself did not notice the bruit. Evidence of mediastinal + hæmorrhage existed in the presence of subcutaneous + discoloration of the abdominal wall, below the ensiform + cartilage and extending slightly over the costal margin of the + thorax. In the absence of an aneurismal swelling, or of the + development of any further symptoms, the patient was sent home + to Netley in January. + +I saw this patient in Glasgow a year later. He was employed as a +lamplighter, and was able to do his work well, only complaining of +attacks of shortness of breath on exertion. He said these were apt to +come on each evening about 6 P.M. The pulse was 100 when the erect +position was maintained, and 84 to 88 in the sitting posture. The right +pupil was still dilated, reacting for accommodation but little to light. +The palpebral fissure was normal in size and there was little, if any, +diminution in strength of the right radial pulse. + +On inspection no pulsation was visible; in fact, the pulsation of the +normal left subclavian was more apparent in the posterior triangle of +that side. The sterno-mastoid was prominent, also the sternal third of +the clavicle. On firm pressure some pulsation was palpable beneath the +sterno-mastoid, but no definite evidence of the presence of a sac could +be detected. Purring thrill and machinery murmur were still present, but +the former was slight, and palpable only with the lightest pressure. The +machinery murmur had ceased to be audible to himself, and was by no +means loud or very widely distributed. + +The condition had, in fact, steadily improved, and become far less +obvious. The prominence of the sterno-mastoid and clavicle still present +was difficult of explanation, except on the theory of an injury to the +bone, or that an aneurismal sac had consolidated spontaneously. + + (14) _Arterio-venous aneurism, root of right carotid._--Wounded + at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), centre of right + infra-spinous fossa. _Exit_, 3/4 of an inch above clavicle, + through point of junction of the heads of the right + sterno-mastoid muscle. Range 200-300 yards. When wounded the + man ran two hundred yards to seek cover. There was no serious + external hæmorrhage, but the injury was followed by some + difficulty in swallowing, and hæmoptysis, which lasted for the + first two days. The right radial pulse was noted to be smaller + than the left, and weakness in flexion of the fingers, with + hyperæsthesia in the ulnar nerve distribution, was observed. + The right pupil was also noted to be larger than the left. + + The patient was sent down to the Base, and on the twenty-fourth + day the condition was as follows. A pulsating swelling existed + extending 1-1/4 inch upwards beneath the right sterno-mastoid, + from the mid line of the neck backwards to the centre of the + posterior triangle, and downwards over 2 inches of the first + intercostal space, which latter was dull on percussion. There + was some evidence of a bounding wall, but it was thin and the + tumour was soft and yielding. A loud machinery murmur was + audible over the tumour, over nearly the whole extent of the + thorax, and in the distal vessels as far as the temporal + upwards, and the brachial as far down as the bend of the elbow. + The murmur was audible to the patient with his ears closed. + Over the swelling a strong thrill was palpable; this extended + some little distance into the distal vessels and felt + remarkably superficial. It was particularly evident in the line + and course of the anterior jugular vein, and appeared to be + extinguished by local pressure. Although readily felt in the + posterior triangle, it was impalpable on deep pressure in the + suprasternal notch, a fact which seemed in favour of localising + the aneurismal varix to the subclavian artery and vein. The + right pulse was good, although smaller than the left, and was + said to have improved in volume. The right pupil was slightly + larger than the left, but reacted normally. There was no pain + or difficulty in swallowing. Weakness in power of flexion of + the fingers persisted, and there was some impairment of + sensation in the area of distribution of the ulnar nerve. + + Three weeks later no material change had occurred, except that + the swelling was perhaps softer and the thrill more + superficial, and at the end of two months the patient was sent + to England. + +I saw this patient a year later in Glasgow, when the condition was as +follows. He was living at home, and out of employment. He complained of +shortness of breath on exertion, and said that when he mounted stairs he +felt 'as if his heart were going to leave him.' The heart's apex beat in +the sixth interspace in the nipple line, and the precordial dulness was +somewhat increased. The pulse numbered 80 to 84. The muscles supplied by +the ulnar nerve were very weak, but not much wasted, and ulnar sensation +was imperfect. + +The aneurism had considerably altered in form and outline; its walls +were dense and firm; it extended 2-1/2 inches upwards in the line of the +carotid artery, beneath the sterno-mastoid, but projected beyond the +posterior border of that muscle. The larynx was displaced 1/2 an inch to +the left of the median line; the voice was still husky, although much +stronger than it was; the anterior jugular vein was dilated. The purring +thrill was very superficial, and chiefly palpable over the subclavian +vessels. The machinery murmur was still loud, but much less widely +distributed than before; it was still audible to the patient when he lay +on his right side. + +This case was of much interest from the diagnostic point of view. When I +first saw the patient I considered the injury to have implicated the +innominate vessels. Later, from the facts that the thrill was +imperceptible in the episternal notch, and that the main part of the +tumour was situated in the posterior triangle, that the wound was of the +root of the right subclavian vessels. + +It now appears that, at any rate, the root of the right carotid is the +artery implicated. + +In spite of the continued existence of a large aneurism, the +localisation of the sac, which had taken place, was very striking, +considering that the man had been walking about freely, and living an +ordinary life, except that he had undertaken no work. + + (15) _Popliteal arterio-venous aneurism_.--Wounded at + Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), at lower margin of patella. + _Exit_, at centre of back of thigh. Perforation of lower end of + femur. The patient was lying down with crossed knees when the + injury was received. Much oedema of the foot and leg followed + the injury, and on the third day a thrill was discovered. Three + weeks later there was still some swelling of the calf, the + posterior tibial pulse was imperceptible, the anterior very + small. An aneurism was palpable at the inner part of the top of + the popliteal space, about the size of a pigeon's egg; a strong + thrill was to be felt, especially when the knee was flexed, and + with this expansile pulsation and a loud machinery murmur. The + entry wound was firmly healed; the exit still furnished + blood-stained serous discharge. The synovial cavity of the knee + was distended and doughy on palpation. During the next three + weeks the aneurism contracted considerably and the patient was + sent home. + + When admitted to the Herbert Hospital the patient complained + chiefly of pains in the foot and leg. The aneurism was cured by + ligation of the vein above and below the communication and + proximal ligature of the popliteal artery.[15] + + (16) '_Femoral arterio-venous aneurism._--A private of the West + Yorkshire Regiment was hit on February 11, 1900, at Monte + Christo by a bullet which passed through the inner border of + his right thigh above its middle. On arrival at Woolwich the + patient was found to have a varicose aneurism at the upper end + of Hunter's canal. On May 31 the femoral artery was ligatured + just above its communication with the vein, and as this stopped + all pulsation in the vein, it was decided to postpone ligature + of the latter to a subsequent occasion, if it should ever be + necessary; such a procedure would, it was thought, interfere + less with the circulation of the limb, and would therefore be + less likely to be followed by gangrene, which is so frequent a + result of high ligature of the femoral. But a few days after + the operation the foot became cold and mummified, and there + was no alternative but to amputate the limb through the + condyles of the femur. From this operation the patient made a + good recovery, and when discharged there was no sign of an + aneurism of the vein.' + +Case 16 is quoted from a paper in the _Lancet_ by Lieut.-Colonel Lewtas, +I.M.S. It illustrates a result with which I became acquainted in three +other instances not under my own observation. + + +ANEURISMAL VARICES + + (17) _Axillary._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ (Mauser), at + inner margin of front of left arm, just below level of junction + of axillary fold. _Exit_, at about centre of hollow of axilla. + A month later when the wound was healed a typical thrill and + machinery murmur were noticed. The latter was audible down to + the elbow and upwards into the neck. The radial pulse appeared + normal. No swelling or pulsation existed. At the end of three + months the condition was unaltered; the patient said he noticed + nothing abnormal in his arm, except that it was sometimes 'sort + of numb' at night. + + (18) _Popliteal._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), + in centre of popliteal space. _Exit_, about centre of patella, + which latter was cleanly perforated. Three weeks later the + typical thickening of the knee-joint following hæmarthrosis was + present, also a well-marked thrill and machinery murmur in the + popliteal vessels with no evidence of a tumour. The leg was + normal except for slight enlargement of the internal saphenous + vein and its branches, probably independent of the arterial + lesion. + + (19) _Femoral._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 7 + inches below left anterior superior iliac spine. _Exit_, at + inner aspect of thigh. One month later slight fulness without + pulsation was discovered on the inner side of the femoral + vessels just above the level of the wound track. Some + blood-staining still remained in the fold between the scrotum + and thigh. Machinery murmur and a well-marked thrill, most + palpable to the inner side of the superficial femoral artery, + were noted. No further symptoms developed and the patient was + sent home. + +_Prognosis and treatment._--No one can help being struck with the +disinclination shown by the older surgeons to interference in cases of +either aneurismal varix or varicose aneurism, even after the time that +ligation of the vessels had become a favourite and successful operation. +The objections lay in the technical difficulties of local treatment, and +the danger of gangrene after proximal ligature. Modern surgery has +lightened the difficulties under which our predecessors approached these +operations, but none the less the experience in this campaign fully +supports the objections to indiscriminate and ill-timed surgical +interference, as accidents have followed both direct local and proximal +ligature. + +In _pure varix_ no doubt can exist as to the advisability of +non-interference in the early stage, in the absence of symptoms. This is +the more evident when we bear in mind that a stage in which an +aneurismal sac exists can seldom be absent. In many cases an expectant +attitude may lead to the conviction that no interference is necessary, +especially in certain situations where the danger of gangrene has been +fully demonstrated. In connection with this subject I cannot help +recalling the first case of femoral varix that ever came under my own +observation. I discovered the condition accidentally in a man admitted +into the hospital for other reasons. The patient remarked: 'For heaven's +sake, sir, do not say anything about that. I have had it many years, and +it has never given any trouble. If it is known, I shall be worried to +death by people examining it.' + +None the less it must be borne in mind that beyond enlargement of the +vein dilatation of the artery above the seat of obstruction does occur, +and gives trouble in some situations. Again the disturbance of the +general circulation already adverted to shows that the existence of this +condition is sometimes of importance in its influence on the cardiac +action. + +Under these circumstances the treatment varies with regard to the +vessels affected, and the degree of disturbance the condition gives rise +to. + +With regard to locality, experience appears to have shown clearly that +communications between the carotid arteries and jugular veins usually +give rise to so little serious trouble that, in view of the grave nature +of the operation and its possible after consequences on the brain, +interference is as a rule better avoided. I should, however, be +inclined to draw a distinction between operations on the common and +internal carotid arteries in this particular, and should regard varix of +the latter vessel and the internal jugular vein as especially +undesirable for interference. + +The vessels at the root of the neck are probably to be regarded from the +same point of view, as to surgical interference. + +The arteries of the upper extremity are the most suitable for operation, +and the axillary may perhaps be the vessel in which interference is most +likely to be useful. In this relation it may be of interest to include +here a case of a man who took part in the campaign when already the +subject of an aneurismal varix of the axillary artery. + + (20) Twenty years previously the patient suffered a punctured + wound of the left axilla from a pencil. A varix developed, but + was only discovered by accident ten years later. The patient + was seen by several surgeons, and treatment was discussed; the + balance of opinion was, however, in favour of non-interference, + and nothing was done beyond giving injunctions as to care in + the use of the limb. Up to the time of discovery of the varix + no inconvenience had been felt, although the patient was of + athletic habits. Subsequently, the patient himself was positive + that a swelling existed, but he pursued his usual work. In + 1899-1900 he took part in the operations in South Africa as a + combatant, and during this time was subjected to very hard + manual work. During this he was seized with sudden pain in the + left side of the head and neck, and in consequence invalided. + No restriction in the movements of the upper extremity, and no + subcutaneous ecchymosis developed, but the patient was positive + as to the tumour having greatly enlarged. + + Four months later the condition was little altered. A pulsating + swelling 1-1/2 inch broad existed along the line of the upper + two-thirds of the axillary artery, and along the subclavian in + the neck, rising some 1-1/2 inch into the posterior triangle. + Pulsation was visible; the murmur was audible when sitting + beside the patient, and widely distributed over the whole + chest, the neck, and upper extremity on auscultation. The pulse + rate varied with the mental condition of the patient, which was + excitable, between 96 and 120. There was neuralgic pain in the + neck and scalp, and down the distribution of the brachial + plexus. The pupils were equal, but flushing of the face and + profuse sweating followed any exertion. I concluded the tumour + in this case to be mainly due to dilatation of the trunk above + the point of obstruction on account of its outline, the absence + of any restriction of movement in the upper extremity, and the + non-occurrence of subcutaneous ecchymosis at the time of the + attack of severe pain. Difficulties arose as to undertaking any + active form of treatment for this patient, which, to be + satisfactory, needed an antecedent period of absolute rest, and + he passed from my observation. I think, however, operation by + ligature above and below the communication would have been + possible. The case affords a good example of the course the + condition may sometimes take if precaution is neglected. + +The vessels of the arm or forearm may in almost all cases be interfered +with, but in many instances an absence of any serious symptom renders +operation unnecessary. + +With regard to the femoral varices, I would refer to the remarks below, +and those on the treatment of varicose aneurism as indicating that a +certain amount of caution should be exercised in interfering with them. + +The same remarks in a lesser degree apply to the popliteal vessels. In +the leg the tibials may readily and safely be attacked, but it may be +mentioned that the widespread and diffused nature of the thrill may in +some cases give rise to considerable difficulty in sharp localisation of +the varix to either of the vessels, or to any particular spot in their +course. In one case in my experience the posterior tibial was cut down +upon, when the varix was probably peroneal in situation. + +The operation most in favour consists in ligation of the artery above +and below the varix, the vein remaining untouched. Even this operation, +however, in two cases of femoral varix failed to effect more than a +temporary cessation of the symptoms, although the ligatures were placed +but a short distance from the communication. Failure is due to the +presence of collateral branches, which are not easy of detection. Even +when the vessels lie exposed, the even distribution of the thrill +renders determination of the exact point of communication difficult, and +the difficulty is augmented by the temporary arrest of the thrill +following the application of a proximal ligature to the artery. A +successful case is reported by Deputy Inspector-General H. T. Cox, R.N., +in which the ligatures were placed 1/2 an inch from the point of +communication.[16] Single ligation, or proximal ligature, is useless. + +If the vein cannot be spared, excision of a limited part of both vessels +may be preferable, particularly in those of the upper extremity. + +Proximal ligation of the artery combined with double ligature of the +vein, as adopted in case 15 by Colonel Lewtas for a varicose aneurism, +might offer advantages in some situations. + +Given suitable surroundings and certain diagnosis, the ideal treatment +of this condition, as of the next, is preventive--_i.e._ primary +ligation of the wounded artery. Many difficulties, however, lie in the +way of this beyond mere unsatisfactory surroundings. It suffices to +mention the two chief: uncertainty as to the vessel wounded, and the +necessity of always ligaturing the vein as well as the artery in a limb +often more or less dissected up by extravasated blood, to show that this +will never be resorted to as routine treatment. + +_Arterio-venous aneurism._--Many of the remarks in the last section find +equal application here, but in the presence of an aneurismal sac +non-intervention is rarely possible or advisable. In the early stages +the proper treatment in any case consists in placing the patient in as +complete a condition of rest as possible, and affording local support to +the limb by a splint, preferably a removable plaster-of-Paris case. +Should no further extension, or, what is more likely, should contraction +and diminution occur, it will be well to continue this treatment for +some weeks at least. + +When the aneurism has reached a quiescent stage the question of further +treatment arises, and whether this should consist in local interference +or proximal ligature. The answer to this mainly depends on the size and +situation of the vessels concerned. To take of the cases above described +the five instances in which the cervical vessels were the seat of the +aneurism. In No. 13 the symptoms appeared fairly conclusive of the +injury being to the innominate artery and vein, or possibly innominate +artery and jugular vein. Fortunately the aneurismal sac in this case was +small and showed a tendency to decrease, but in any case no interference +would have been justifiable. I think a similar opinion was unavoidable +in No. 14, probably affecting the root of the right carotid. Here under +any circumstances interference would have been most hazardous. The +position of large aneurism made the route of approach to the wounded +spot necessarily through the sac, exposing the patient to the double +danger of immediate hæmorrhage and of entrance of air into the great +veins. Nos. 10, 11, and 12 fall into the same category, except that in +No. 11 the immediate indication for interference was extension. In each, +ligature of the artery above and below the point of communication would +have necessitated so near an approach to the sac which must remain in +communication with the vein as to have entailed injury to the latter, +when both artery and vein must have been ligatured, probably risking +serious cerebral trouble. In No. 11 I believe both the external and +internal carotids were implicated; in No. 10 I believe the internal +alone, close to its origin. The operation of proximal ligature ensured +primary consolidation of the sac in both cases 10 and 11, but left the +thrill unaltered, except in so far as it was temporarily weakened. It, +in fact, converted these cases from arterio-venous aneurisms into pure +aneurismal varices. In No. 10 a sac subsequently redeveloped. No. 12 +stood on a different basis. No operation was done for him in South +Africa, but the first portion of the carotid might have been ligatured +in the episternal notch, or by aid of removal of a part of the sternum, +and a second ligature placed above the sac. Here a ligature above and +below the communication would have been comparatively easy. + +As a general rule proximal ligature is to be reserved for those cases +alone in which double ligature is either impracticable or inadvisable, +and it can only be expected to convert a varicose aneurism into the less +dangerous condition of aneurismal varix. + +In the case of arterio-venous aneurisms in the limbs the possibilities +of treatment are enlarged, and here the alternatives of (_a_) local +interference with the sac and direct ligature of the wounded point, +(_b_) simple ligature above and below the sac, (_c_) proximal ligature +(Hunterian operation), come into consideration. + +Direct incision of the sac is suitable, and the best method of treatment +for aneurisms in the calf, forearm, and probably arm. Several cases in +the two former situations were successfully treated by this method. On +the other hand, the only case I saw in which a proximal ligature had +been applied for an arterio-venous aneurism of the leg resulted most +unsatisfactorily. The sac in the calf suppurated at a later date, and +for many weeks the escape of small quantities of blood from the +remaining sinus kept up the fear of a severe attack of secondary +hæmorrhage until the sinus closed. + +In the case of femoral and popliteal aneurisms the method of Antyllus is +often unsuitable. A case of arterio-venous aneurism of the femoral +artery quoted in the _Lancet_[17] will illustrate the difficulty which +may be met with in determining the actual bleeding point in the +irregular cavity laid open. In any case the necessary ligature of both +artery and vein is a serious objection to the direct method either in +the thigh or ham, and more particularly if adopted before the damage +dependent on the dissection of the limb by extravasated blood has been +repaired. + +Proximal ligature (Hunterian) even, offers dangers under these +circumstances. In one case with which I became acquainted, it was +followed by gangrene, necessitating amputation. The lesion in this +instance was a perforating one of the femoral artery and vein. + +For either femoral or popliteal arterio-venous aneurisms ligature of the +artery above and below the aneurism is the best and safest treatment. In +view of the healthy state of the vascular wall in most of these cases, +the advantage of placing the ligatures as near to the wounded spot as +can be managed without interference with the sac is afforded. A number +of popliteal cases treated in this way did perfectly. In the femoral +cases a considerable period of rest to allow of consolidation of the +sac, and readjustment of the circulation, should always be allowed to +elapse. + +In the case of popliteal arterio-venous aneurisms a number were +successfully treated by proximal (Hunterian) ligature, and by single +ligature immediately above the sac. In a considerable proportion of the +latter both artery and vein were tied. This was apparently the result of +the difficulty of isolating the vessels in the tangled mass of clot and +cicatricial tissue surrounding them, and is a strong argument against +too early interference. The late Sir William Stokes expressed himself as +in favour of ligature of the artery in Hunter's canal, combined with +that of the great anastomotic branch, and quoted some successful cases +to me. I have grave doubts, however, whether the varix can often be +permanently cured by this operation. + +I can give no useful statistics on this subject, but with regard to the +popliteal aneurisms I may state that in three instances gangrene of the +leg followed early operative interference in the popliteal space. + +My own opinion on this subject is strong, and to the effect that none of +these operations should be undertaken before a period of from two to +three months after the injury, unless there is evidence of progressive +enlargement. In every case which came under my own observation +progressive contraction and consolidation took place up to a certain +point under the influence of rest. When this process has become +stationary, and the surrounding tissues have regained to a great extent +their normal condition, the operations are far easier, and beyond this +more likely to be followed by success. + +It appears to me that one argument only can be raised against the above +opinion, viz. the possibility of healing of the recent wound in the +vessels when the force of the circulation is lowered by proximal +ligature. Such experience as that quoted from Sir W. Stokes and two of +Mr. Ker's cases, mentioned below, support this possibility, but in all +the reported results were recent. Against them I can only advance my +knowledge of several mishaps following early operation. + +In concluding these observations on injuries to the arteries and +aneurisms, a few general remarks as to the occurrence of gangrene after +operation must be added. This was not uncommon, and in the main was no +doubt attributable--(1) to the lowering of the vitality of the +surrounding tissues by creeping blood extravasation, and sometimes to +actual pressure by the extravasation on the vessels necessary for the +establishment of the collateral circulation. (2) To the frequency with +which both artery and vein required to be ligatured. + +Beyond these common causes, however, others must be advanced, dependent +on the general and local condition of the nervous system in these cases. +In general mental state many of the patients were much shaken, and in +others the condition spoken of as local shock in a former chapter had +been marked. In a third series obvious individual nerve lesions were +co-existent with those to the vessels. Beyond this a fourth nervous +element of unknown quantity, the effect of the form of injury on the +vaso-motor nerves accompanying the great vessels, must be taken into +consideration. + +I believe all these factors were of importance, since it appeared to me +that gangrene occurred more often than I should have expected. In one +case which I have heard of, gangrene followed a very slight injury to +the foot in a patient who had apparently made an excellent recovery +after ligature of the femoral artery. + +The nervous factor seems another element in favour of reasonable delay +in active interference with traumatic aneurisms of the above varieties +in the absence of threatening symptoms. + +It is worthy of remark that no case of gangrene due to aneurism came +under my notice, except subsequently to operation. + +Since the above chapter was written, my friend, Mr. J. E. Ker, has sent +me his experience in the treatment of four aneurisms, which is of such +interest that I insert it as an addendum. + +_Arterial hæmatomata._--(1) Popliteal, treated by local incision. Both +artery and vein completely divided. Ligature of the four ends. Cure. +(2) Traumatic aneurism of upper third of forearm. Treated by rest and +pressure by bandage. On the eighth day pulsation and bruit ceased +spontaneously, and the remains of the sac steadily consolidated until +the man's discharge on the twenty-sixth day. + +_Arterio-venous aneurisms._--(1) At junction of brachial and axillary +arteries. Proximal ligature. Cure. (2) Arterio-venous aneurism at the +bend of the elbow. Ligature of the brachial at the junction of the +middle and lower thirds of the arm. Cure. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[14] The murmur is still present at the expiration of one year, but no +other change. + +[15] Lieut.-Colonel Lewtas, I.M.S. See _Lancet_, 1900, vol. ii. p. 1073. + +[16] _Lancet_, 1900, vol. ii. p. 1074. + +[17] Sir W. MacCormac, _Lancet_, vol. i. 1900, p. 876. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +INJURIES TO THE BONES OF THE LIMBS + + +Injuries to the bones of the limbs formed a very large proportion of the +accidents we were called upon to treat, and afforded as much interest as +any class, since they possessed many special features. I shall hope to +show, however, as in some of the other injuries, that these features +differed only in degree from those exhibited by injuries from the old +leaden bullets of larger calibre, although with few exceptions they were +of a distinctly more favourable character. + +It is of considerable interest to note that, taking the fractures as a +whole, there was a somewhat striking change in their nature during the +earlier and later portions of the campaign. In the earlier stages I +think there is no doubt that punctured fractures were proportionately +more common than in the later, when comminuted fractures were much more +often seen. There was, I believe, a source of error in this opinion, as +far as I myself was concerned, in that the first cases I saw were at +Capetown and had come from Natal. There is no doubt that the punctured +fractures were earlier fit to travel, and hence a larger number of them +found their way to the Base hospitals at a period when the comminuted +fractures were still in the Field or Stationary hospitals. I do not, +however, rely on the cases seen at Capetown alone for my opinion, as +while at the front I saw the same large proportion of clean punctures in +the early engagements of the Kimberley relief force. + +I am inclined to attribute the change to two reasons: first, I believe +that the use of regulation weapons was more universal in the earlier +part of the war, while later, as more men were engaged, the +Martini-Henry came more into evidence, and the Boers took more freely +to the use of sporting rifles and ammunition. Another element also in +the less clean punctures of the short and cancellous bones was probably +the less accurate and hard shooting of the Mauser rifles as they became +worn; the bullets seemed to evidence this by the comparative shallowness +of their rifle grooves, which, I take it, would mean less velocity and +accuracy in flight. This would be of importance, since the clean +puncture of cancellous bone was no doubt favoured by a high rate of +velocity. + +The special features of the fractures caused by the small-calibre +bullets were: (1) The nature of the exit wound, which in a certain +proportion of the cases exhibited the so-called 'explosive' character. +(2) The presence, in a marked degree in the severe cases, of the +condition spoken of in Chapter III. as 'local shock.' (3) The striking +contrast of clean perforation and extreme comminution in different +cases. (4) The occasional occurrence of fractures of a very high degree +of longitudinal obliquity. (5) The rarity of any that could be termed +transverse fractures. (6) The general tendency of longitudinal fissuring +when it occurred to stop short of the articular extremities of the +bones. + +It will perhaps be most convenient to consider first the explanation of +the development of the so-called explosive apertures, and then to pass +on to a general consideration of the types of fracture commonly met +with, before proceeding to the description of the injuries to the +separate bones. + +_Explosive wounds in connection with fractures._--The aperture of entry +in these injuries presented little or no deviation from the normal, +unless it was due to the passage of ricochet bullets, when it might be +very irregular, but usually not of great size. + +[Illustration: FIG. 47--(21) 'Explosive' Exit Wound of Forearm over +margin of ulna. Note creased tongue of skin originally covering whole +wound. The entry wound was a small typical circular one] + +The aperture of exit offered special features beyond simple increase in +size. First of all, as in the small type wounds, the actual extent of +destruction of the skin was small, this having been projected outwards +by the passing bullet and then either burst or torn by the bullet and +accompanying bony fragments. Fig. 47 well illustrates this feature. A +triangular tongue of skin was lifted by the passing bullet and probably +by the lower end of the upper fragment of the fractured ulna; through +the resulting opening a mass of soft tissues and bone fragments, bound +together by an infiltration of coagulated blood, was extruded, +separating the lateral lips of the aperture, while the original tongue +has shortened and retracted up to the top of the wound. + +The small extent of skin actually destroyed is an important element in +the rapid contraction often seen in these wounds when they progress +favourably. Thus the large wound portrayed in fig. 48 contracted to +one-fourth its original size ten days after the diagram and measurements +were made. The large mass of protruded tissue was often most striking +when a muscle such as the biceps in fig. 48 had been divided; but the +herniæ were more persistent when the mass projected in regions where +tendons formed a large integral constituent, as at the wrist or lower +third of the forearm. The protruding tissues naturally consisted of many +varieties, according to what lay in the track of any particular wound. + +It should be added that for 'explosive' features to reach their +strongest development, it is necessary that the bone affected should lie +near the surface of the body; hence the most characteristic explosive +wounds were met with in the forearm or leg, over the metacarpus or +metatarsus, or in the arm. In the thigh, on the other hand, where the +femur in a great part of its course not only lies deeply, but is also +protected by particularly strong and resistent skin and fascia, another +type of wound was met with. The explosive exit aperture, although large, +was still only moderate in extent, sometimes, as in the front of the +lower third, exposing a somewhat angular large track walled by the +divided quadriceps extensor cruris. In other cases, on introducing the +finger through a moderate exit opening on the inner aspect of the thigh, +a large cavity, sometimes 4 or 5 inches in diameter, was discovered, +full of clot and shreds of destroyed tissue and lined by a layer of +similar material. In either of these latter cases the fractured bone +ends were situated too deeply to take part in the actual laceration of +the skin, while the force transmitted to the bone fragments, although +sufficient to cause them to widely destroy the first soft tissues met +with, did not suffice to cause them to burst or lacerate the skin +widely. + +[Illustration: FIG. 48.--(22) 'Explosive' Exit Wound of front of Arm. +Wound actual size eight days after its infliction. The prominences in +the upper and lower parts correspond with the lacerated biceps. The dark +crater led down to the fracture. In another week the wound had +contracted to half the size. The entry aperture was a normal circular +one. The arm a year later was used in the patient's employment as a +hammer-man.] + +With regard to the theories of the production of these phenomena, that +of the transmission of a part of the force of the bullet to the +comminuted fragments, which thus themselves acquire the characters of +secondary projectiles, seems quite adequate.[18] Examination of any of +the skiagrams in which considerable comminution has taken place, shows +that the fragments are carried forward and perforate the tissues distal +to the fracture. + +[Illustration: FIG. 49.--'Explosive' Wounds of Legs. Large irregular +entry (1 × 3/4 in.). First exit (2 in.) roughly circular. Second entry +wound, produced by bone fragments driven out of left leg, very large and +irregular (5 × 3-1/2 in.). The measurements were taken eight days after +infliction of the wounds. The right limb was amputated later for +secondary hæmorrhage] + +Fig. 49, although a poor delineation of the actual condition, shows well +the possible action of projected fragments, even after they have been +driven from the wound. In this case either a large or a ricochet bullet +entered on the outer aspect of the upper third of the left tibia; it +produced a severe comminuted fracture, the fragments from which, +together with the deformed bullet, then struck and perforated the upper +third of the right tibia. A large irregular entry wound 5 inches in +transverse diameter was produced in the second limb together with a +comminuted fracture of the bone. The right limb had eventually to be +amputated for secondary hæmorrhage, but I am unacquainted with the later +history of the patient. + +The mode of displacement of the lateral fragments when a wide shaft such +as that of the femur is struck, throws some light on that of the +displacement of soft tissues such as the component parts of a perforated +nerve or artery. The bullet, passing through, expends the chief part of +its energy in driving before it the fragments produced in its direct +course, while a minor part of the energy is expended on displacing the +lateral fragments, which are pushed to either side without becoming +separated from their periosteal attachment. The appearance, in fact, +somewhat suggests what might be expected were a small charge of dynamite +introduced into the centre of a small tunnel made across the shaft of +the bone. Examination of some of the skiagrams also illustrates another +point of interest, viz. that a certain degree of recoil on the part of +the bone results from the blow, since in many of them portions of the +mantle of the bullet and bone fragments are seen in that portion of the +track proximal to the fractured bone. + +The importance of 'setting up' of the bullet is at once evident in +relation to the production of wounds of an explosive type in connection +with fractures of the bones. There can be no doubt that a considerable +number of the most severe injuries we saw were produced by the various +soft-nosed or expanding forms of bullet, also that others of an equally +serious nature were produced by Martini-Henry or large leaden sporting +bullets. Allowing for this, however, I think a considerable proportion +were the result of deformation from bony impact, or ricochet deformities +external to the body acquired by regulation Mauser bullets, and I think +these bullets can be quite as formidable as any of the sporting +varieties met with. The soft-nose varieties of small calibre may not set +up enough to cause severe injury, while the large leaden bullets often +flatten out so completely as to lose all penetrating power. As far as +my impressions went, the small soft-nosed bullets needed to be +travelling at a very considerable rate of velocity to be dangerous. In +the form of soft-nose Mauser employed, the soft-nose was too short to +allow of as successful a mushrooming of the bullet as often occurred +with the regulation projectile, because, as already explained, the +mantle acquires increased stability from its closed base. + + +FRACTURES OF THE SHAFTS OF THE LONG BONES + +_Types of fracture._--The common types of fracture of shafts of the long +bones are illustrated diagrammatically in fig. 50. Of the whole series +comminuted fractures were by far the most frequently met with, while the +various wedge-shaped forms were the most strongly characteristic of the +special form of injury in which we are interested. + +[Illustration: FIG. 50.--Five Types of Fracture: A. Primary lines of +stellate fracture; wedges driven out laterally and pointed extremities +left to main fragments. B. Development of same lines by a bullet +travelling at a low degree of velocity; suppression of two left-hand +limbs and substitution of a transverse line of fracture; a spurious form +of perforation. See plate XXIII. C. Typical complete wedge. See plate +VII. D. Incomplete wedge; impact of bullet, lateral or oblique, and two +left-hand lines seen in A are suppressed. E. Oblique single line, one +right and one left hand line seen in A, suppressed. The influence of +leverage from weight of the body probably acts here. Compare plates XVI. +and XXI.] + +[Illustration: PLATE III. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(23) SPURIOUS PERFORATION OF CLAVICLE + +Range unknown, probably either mean or long. + +The bullet entered from the front, grooved the under surface of the +acromial end of the clavicle with increasing depth, and eventually +perforated the posterior margin of the bone, raising the compact tissue +in an angular manner. + +The commencement of an incomplete groove extending from the anterior +margin is seen, resembling the groove of the humerus, fig. 58.] + +1. _Stellate comminuted fractures._--A shows the primary nature of the +lesion in all comminuted fractures of compact bone, consisting in the +production of a number of radiating fissures, which assume a stellate +form of which the point of impact corresponds to the centre. B shows an +incomplete development of this form, the fragments being simply +displaced laterally with slight loss of substance, so as to simulate a +real punctured fracture. An illustration of this fracture produced by a +bullet travelling at a low degree of velocity is seen in plate XXIII., +which also shows the unaltered bullet lying in close proximity to the +injured fibula. + +The degree of comminution in these fractures depends first on the range +of fire and consequent striking force retained by the bullet, a high +degree of velocity producing extreme comminution of compact bone. The +severity of the latter again may be influenced by the measure of +resistance dependent on the density and brittleness of any individual +bone, or on the possession of the same characters as a special property +by the tissues of the man struck. Thus plate IV. shows a fracture of the +humerus produced by a bullet shot from a short range, and the fragments +are comparatively large and of even dimensions, while plate XIV. shows +extreme comminution of the portion of the femur exposed to direct +impact, with elongated large fragments at the sides of the track. Plate +XIX. shows less extreme comminution and less separation of the +fragments, and was probably produced by a bullet from a longer range of +fire. + +The separation of elongated lateral fragments is a special feature, and +best marked when the portion of bone struck is considerably wider than +the bullet, as in the case of the shaft of the femur. These fragments +correspond in the method of their production to those seen in the wedge +fractures described below, while their separation leaves a pointed +extremity to either segment of the shaft. This fracture in its purest +type is, I believe, spoken of as the 'butterfly fracture.' + +With regard to the spread of the fissures in the long axis of the bone +into neighbouring articulations I think fractures produced by bullets of +small calibre differ considerably from those produced by larger +projectiles, in that their general tendency is not to extend beyond the +commencement of the cancellous bone forming the joint end. This is +perhaps capable of explanation on several grounds: first, the smaller +area of impact results in the assumption of a strongly marked stellate +figure, the radiating fissures of which rapidly reach the lateral limits +of the shaft, producing a solution of continuity in the bone which +interrupts the continuance of the action of the wedge represented by the +bullet. Secondly, the small size of the wedge itself is opposed to the +wide separation of the parts directly implicated, which is necessary for +the continued progress of the process of fissuring, and again the +rapidity of passage minimises the period during which the force is +exerted. It is in these points that I believe the chief differences +between the modern and old gunshot fractures find their explanation, +since with the larger bullets fractures extending from some distance +into the joints were a somewhat special feature. In addition it is +probable that the alteration in structure at the junction of the shafts +with the cancellous ends also tends to check the regular extension of +the fissures, as a similar limitation is illustrated even in some +fractures by Snider bullets. Fig. 51 of the lower end of the femur +illustrates a not uncommon lower limit to a comminuted injury in this +region. + +[Illustration: FIG. 51.--Lower end of Femur. From Case needing +amputation. It shows the usual tendency of the fissures to stop short of +the articular ends of the long bones] + +The degree and nature of the comminution also vary with the directness +of impact on the part of the bullet. The more nearly this approaches at +a right angle, the more severe is the local comminution, but probably a +lesser area of the shaft is implicated. Plate V. shows an example of +this: all trace of continuity is lost, a wide gap separates the bone +ends, while the fragments themselves have been for the most part driven +altogether out of the wound. Oblique impact, on the other hand, may +widen the comminuted area at the point of impact, while, if the bullet +retains sufficient force and regularity of outline, it may then travel +'cutting its way' through the remainder of the bone in an oblique +direction. It will be of course recognised that the exact impact of the +bullet depends not alone on the direction of the projectile, but also +on the nature of the slope offered by the surface of bone struck. + +2. _Wedge fractures._--This form (C and D, fig. 50) is equally +characteristic of gunshot injury with pure perforation; it is met with +in two varieties. C illustrates the more strongly marked type; in it the +bullet makes passing lateral impact with the shaft, and from the point +struck radiating fissures extend to the opposite margin, so that a +wedge-shaped piece of bone often secondarily comminuted is separated +from the remainder of the shaft; see plate X. of the radius. + +The second variety, D, is an incomplete development of the stellate +fracture in which the fissures pass to one margin of the bone only. The +explanation of this variation is probably to be sought in the direction +of impact on the part of the bullet, since the main fissure is often +accompanied by secondary lines which run a somewhat parallel course to +the main one, and suggest the dispersion of the force in the form of +concentric waves. Such fractures were most strongly marked in the tibia, +the breadth of the surfaces of this bone presenting especially +favourable conditions for their production. + +3. _Notched fractures._--These may be a slight degree of the form of +wedge fracture last described; such a one is depicted in plate XXII. +where a portion of the spine of the tibia has been carried away by a +passing bullet. Other notched fractures approximate themselves more +nearly to perforations, the notch being a groove secondary to the +opening up of such a track as is shown in the illustration of a +perforation of the lower third of the shaft of the tibia (fig. 57 on p. +219). Notching or grooving is naturally much more common in the +cancellous portions of bones. + +4. _Oblique fractures._--These also occur in two varieties: the first +has been already alluded to; in it the bullet actually cuts an oblique +track in the bone; the main line of fracture is often considerably +comminuted, usually at the proximal end of the track (see plates XV. and +XIX.). + +The second variety (E, fig. 50) is less common; in it two of the main +limbs of the simple stellate figure are suppressed, while the remaining +two form a continuous line from one margin of the shaft to the other, +the point of impact lying approximately in the centre of the line of +fracture. Such a fracture is illustrated by the skiagram of a femur in +plate XVI. in which the bullet traversed the soft parts transversely at +the level of the centre of the fracture, which was 9 inches in length. +In another case the line of fracture occupied the lower third of the +femur, passing from the inner border of the shaft, the lower end of the +upper fragment was formed by the compact tissue forming the outer wall +of the external condyle. This latter perforated the vastus externus and +lay beneath the skin; as it could not be disentangled, an incision was +made over it, and the fragments when reduced were screwed together by +Mr. S. W. F. Richardson. In neither fracture was there any comminution. +Such fractures most nearly resemble the oblique or spiral ones met with +in civil practice as the results of falls. In all the instances I +observed the patients were supported on the lower extremities at the +time of the accident, and one can only assume that a twist of the trunk +consequent on the fall of the body diverts the most forcible vibrations +resulting from the impact of the bullet into one line, and thus produces +a solution of continuity of a simple oblique nature. In both the cases +mentioned above the bullet was probably travelling at a low degree of +velocity; in the first it was a ricochet and was retained. I never saw +one of these fractures in the upper extremity. + +Plate XXI. affords an excellent example of this mechanism. The patient +was standing when struck, and then fell backwards. An incomplete fissure +7 inches in length is seen to extend from an otherwise pure perforation +of the shaft of the tibia. + +5. _Transverse fractures._--Throughout these were of very rare +occurrence. Plate XX. illustrates a pure transverse fracture produced by +passing contact of a bullet probably fired at a distance not exceeding +400 yards, and which subsequently struck the fibula plumb and produced +considerable comminution. No fissure extended into the ankle-joint. +Comminutions such as that illustrated by plate V. more or less simulated +transverse fractures, but I saw no examples of transverse tracks +comparable to the oblique ones described above 'cut through' the shaft +of a bone. + +6. _Perforations._--Although these were common in cancellous bone, they +were comparatively rare in the compact shafts. I saw, however, complete +pure perforations of the shafts of the tibia, femur, clavicle, and other +bones. These perforations were, I believe, always the result of low +degrees of velocity, and they took the place of simple transverse +fractures of the 'cut' variety. The apertures of entry and exit in the +bones resembled in character those seen in the soft parts, or in the +bones of the skull in low-velocity injuries (see figs. 71 and 72, p. +261). The entry was more or less cleanly cut, while at the exit a plate +of bone was raised, and either separated or turned back on a hinge by +the bullet (fig. 52), (plate XVII.) Such a projecting hinged fragment +was sometimes a source of some trouble; thus in a case of +postero-anterior perforation of the lower third of the shaft of the +femur, the long exit fragment projected into the substance of the +quadriceps extensor muscle, and interfered with flexion of the +knee-joint. Fig. 57 of a superficial tunnel of the lower third of the +tibia is especially interesting as bringing such injuries of the long +bones into line with fractures of the flat bones of the skull, such as +are illustrated in fig. 68, p. 259. + +Plate XXI. affords an excellent example of perforation of the shaft of +the tibia, although complicated by the secondary fissure. + +Plates XXIII., VIII., and III., of the fibula, humerus, and clavicle, +exhibit examples of what may be called spurious perforations of the +shafts of bones, since comminution or loss of continuity accompanies all +three. + +Subsequently to writing the above paragraphs, I took the opportunity of +re-examining the magnificent series of gunshot fractures collected +during the Franco-German campaign by Sir William MacCormac, and +afterwards presented by him to the museum of St. Thomas's Hospital. + +The close approximation in type between the main features in these and +those in the fractures produced by the modern bullet is very striking. +In the case of the shafts of the long bones, the same stellate, oblique, +wedge-shaped, and even perforating injuries are illustrated on a coarser +scale. In a specimen of a patella, a perforation of the lower half, +implicating also the tendon of the quadriceps muscle is, though large, +almost as pure as a Mauser perforation. + +The difference in the nature of the lesions of the bones is seen to be, +firstly, one of pure magnitude, corresponding to the size of the large +Snider bullet by which they were produced. Thus the fragments generally +are larger, and occupy a wider area of the shafts, the first character +depending on the lesser degree of velocity of the bullet, the latter on +its volume and weight. Fine comminution, however, the most striking +feature of the modern injury, is throughout absent. + +The effect of the larger size of the wedge provided by the bullet in +increasing the length of secondary longitudinal fissures is well marked, +and for the same reason the perforations are usually accompanied by +fissures of considerable extent. It is interesting to note, however, +that even in the case of the large bullets, and the special tendency +shown by them to cause the extension of fissures into the joints, one or +two specimens still show that these fissures incline to stop short when +the point of junction between the portion of the shaft occupied by the +medullary canal and that built on a foundation of cancellous tissue is +reached. + + +LESIONS OF THE SHORT AND FLAT BONES + +The above types of fracture are those common to the shafts of the long +bones, but the difference in structure of the articular ends and the +short and flat bones endows lesions of these with somewhat different +characters, the nature of which varies between grooving, perforation, +and great comminution. + +The most typical injury consists in the production of a clean +perforation of the cancellous bone; this was common both in the +articular ends and in the short bones. The tunnel differed little in +character from those already described, a tendency always existing to +the lifting of a lid of compact tissue at the exit end of the track. + +For the production of the cleanest forms of injury I believe high rates +of velocity were distinctly favourable, although I am unable to maintain +this statement by proof in the case of injuries received at the shortest +ranges of fire. When the velocity was lower, yet with force still +sufficient to produce a perforating injury, the separation of an +extensive scale of bone at the exit aperture was a marked feature not +seen in perforations produced by higher degrees of velocity. Fig. 52, of +a perforation of the lower end of the femur, well exhibits this feature; +but it must be borne in mind in this case that the illustration is not a +pure one, both shaft and epiphysis taking part in the walls of the +track, and the exit opening is in the former, where a thicker layer of +compact bone exists than would cover any epiphysis, and hence the +fragment is larger. I use the example, however, because it so forcibly +illustrates the effect of increased resistance on the part of the bone +struck in widening the area of the lesion. When the track was entirely +limited to the articular ends the small amount of damage at either +aperture was shown by clinical evidence in the rarity of subsequent +limitation of joint movements due to bony deformity. + +[Illustration: FIG. 52.--Oblique perforation, implicating both epiphysis +and diaphysis. Large fragment detached at exit aperture. Caused by a +bullet travelling at a low rate of velocity. Compare with figs. 71 and +72 of a skull fracture. The dotted lines indicate the course of the +track] + +Again, it was rare for fissuring to extend from these tunnels to the +articular surfaces; thus many instances could be given of perforation of +the head of the humerus, the olecranon, or the femoral condyles, in +which no evidence of joint fissure was discoverable. The slight amount +of resistance offered by the cancellous ends was also clinically +illustrated by the absence of severe synovial effusions when they were +struck. When the joint cavity was not crossed, slight effusion only +resulted, while in the case of fractures of the femoral shaft great +effusion into the knee-joint, resulting from the forcible vibration +transmitted to the limb, was a common feature, even when the point +fractured was situated above the centre of the bone. Again, when the +joint cavity was crossed a moderate degree only of hæmarthrosis was the +most common result. + +With regard to the implication of joints, either primary or secondary, +in connection with fractures of the articular ends, I am inclined to +place the lesions of the upper end of the tibia in a more important +position than those of any other bone. Evidence of this implication was +in my experience more frequent here than in any other situation. This +may in part be attributable to the complexity of structure of this +epiphysis, and perhaps more correctly to the influence of its irregular +outline in favouring lateral forms of impact on the part of the bullet +and consequent increase in the area of damage. + +Next to tunnelling, grooving was the most common form of injury to the +short bones. In the case of superficial tracks the compact tissue might +be considerably comminuted, but not, as a rule, over a width greatly +exceeding the calibre of the bullet. + +Comminution and crushing of a single or several bones were rare in +proportion to the occurrence of similar injuries produced by +Martini-Henry or large leaden bullets. When the condition was produced +by bullets of small calibre, I believe it was in the majority of cases +the result of irregular impact on the part of the projectile. In support +of this view it may be added that such injuries were most common in the +bones of the tarsus, bones especially liable to be struck by ricochet +bullets. + +It was generally believed that bullets travelling at a very high degree +of velocity were liable to cause severe comminution of the short bones, +but I never saw any cases supporting this opinion; in point of fact, all +the short-range lesions of this nature that I saw were of the clean +perforating variety. I believe that this is capable of satisfactory +explanation on the ground of the thin character of the layer of compact +tissue which for the most part ensheaths the short bones; this decreases +the resistance offered to the bullet and so tends to localise the +lesion. This statement may be supported by two observations with regard +to the long and flat bones. First, if the shaft of a long bone be hit +above the junction of diaphysis and epiphysis, the cancellous tissue in +and extending from the medullary cavity is pulverised, and examination +of fragments from such fractures gives the impression of the inner +aspect having been scraped clean. Secondly, I saw one fracture of the +ilium produced by a bullet taking a course between its compact layers +for 3 inches from the notch between the anterior superior and anterior +inferior spines; the bone to the extent of 2-1/2 square inches was +pulverised, the cancellous tissue blown away as dust, and the compact +tissue only represented by scales still adhering by their periosteum to +the muscles attached to the two surfaces of the bone. This injury was +produced from a rifle fired at five yards distance, and was an extreme +example; but, on the other hand, it illustrates only what we are +thoroughly well acquainted with in the case of flat bones, such as those +of the cranium, where the compact element is abundant in comparison with +the cancellous, and the resistance offered to the bullet is consequently +great. + +Some remarks on transverse fractures of the patella will be found under +the heading devoted to that bone. + +Lesions of the flat bones are considered at some length in Chapter VII., +which deals with injuries to the head, and their special features are +there described; some further remarks on these injuries will be found +under the headings of the individual bones. + +_Special characters of the symptoms observed, and of the course of +healing of the fractures._--Peculiarities in the initial signs may be +rapidly passed over. The first depended on the large number of lesions +of the bone which were unaccompanied by loss of continuity. In the case +of perforations attention to the course of the track, external +palpation, and possibly the detection of bone dust in the aperture of +exit, were usually sufficient to indicate injury to the bones. When +these did not suffice the introduction of a probe would usually set the +question at rest; but this is always to be avoided if possible, as +adding a fresh item of risk to the wound. The X rays were not always to +hand, and are not always capable of giving reliable information in the +matter of perforations, although very useful in detecting grooves or +notching. The latter injuries are those in which information as to the +condition of the bones is often of most interest in view of the +characters of the external wounds. + +Fractures with solution of continuity were, as a rule, easy of +detection, but the relative prominence of the classical signs varied +somewhat from what we are accustomed to see in civil practice. + +The first striking peculiarity noted in comminuted fractures of the long +bones was the degree of local shock; the limbs were often quite +powerless, the muscles flaccid, and common sensation lowered. This was +of importance in two ways; firstly, shortening of the limb was often +absent as a sign, and, secondly, pain was sometimes not at all +pronounced even when the patient was moved. The primary absence of +shortening, even persisting for the first two or three days, was a +phenomenon always important to bear in mind, as it affected the degree +of extension needed in the treatment of the fracture, which, if +sufficient at the moment, often proved quite inadequate with the return +of tone in the muscles. Secondly, abnormal mobility was usually strongly +marked, and this sometimes without very definite crepitus, as a result +of the fine nature of the comminution and the displacement of the small +fragments. + +During the course of healing some other peculiarities are worthy of +mention. First of all, union was tardy and often not strong. On the +other hand, an abundance of provisional callus was common, which formed +large swellings apt to implicate neighbouring nerves, and sometimes to +interfere with the movements of joints. The slowness of healing was +particularly noticeable in those cases where the degree of local shock +had been marked, and was probably to some extent dependent on +disturbance of the general nutrition of the tissues of the affected +limb. Beyond this, however, it was in many cases a direct result of the +degree of comminution and displacement of the fragments, which +necessitated the formation of a large amount of provisional callus, and +time for the proper consolidation and contraction of the same. In many +cases a large ball-like mass of callus surrounding the fragments was +developed, into which the actual ends of the broken bone only dipped, +and hence union was weak and insecure. As to those cases in which the +wounds closed by primary union, we must bear in mind in this relation +the tardy union often observed in civil practice, when the irritation of +suppuration and consequent inflammation are absent. + +Another peculiarity of a similar nature was the occasional late necrosis +of fragments; the wounds apparently healed well, only to break down +weeks or months later for the discharge of a sequestrum. Such cases were +quite distinct from those in which primary suppuration had occurred. I +saw one or two instances in fractures of the humerus, the trouble +arising with commencing use of the limb, and I suppose that fragments +which suffered death at the time of the injury had been enclosed, and +only caused irritation as foreign bodies when the muscles again came +into action. In the absence both of evident necrosis and suppuration, +however, in some cases the exit portion of the track in the soft parts +was extremely slow in healing. Although no discharge beyond a small +quantity of blood-tinged serum escaped, the wounds remained open for +many weeks, even when the fracture consolidated well. I ascribed this to +slow separation of aseptic sloughs, a point which has already been +mentioned under the heading of wounds in general. + +Superabundance of callus, as far as I had an opportunity of judging, +comparatively seldom gave rise to permanent mechanical trouble. This was +no doubt due to the infrequency of extension of the comminuted fractures +beyond the junction of diaphysis and epiphysis. + +Lastly, with regard to suppuration, only a small proportion of the +fractures, accompanied by the presence of large wounds, escaped +infection. When infection did occur, the results offered some special +features dependent on the small relative amount of damage to the soft +tissues, compared with that suffered by the bone. In an ordinary +compound fracture, such as we meet with in civil practice, whether the +result of direct or indirect violence, a considerable amount of +contusion or laceration, as the case may be, accompanies the injury to +the bone. The result of this is a widespread effusion of blood into the +limb, which tears and strips up the various layers of soft parts, and +opens up the way to the spread of infection, often into the whole +length of the segment of the limb affected. In fractures produced by +bullets of small calibre, even when the exit portion of the track is +large, the injury to the soft parts is far more localised, except in +extreme cases, while the bone itself is the tissue which has suffered +the most severe violence and contusion. When infection occurred, its +spread corresponded with this anatomical feature of the lesion, and the +bone itself and its immediate neighbourhood suffered the most severely. + +At the present day one is naturally not very familiar with a large +series of suppurating compound fractures, but during my whole experience +I have never seen so many cases of what might be regarded as fairly pure +instances of acute osteo-myelitis. The symptoms corresponded with the +main seat of the suppuration; only moderate swelling of the limbs +occurred, this mainly consisting in soft superficial oedema; often +there was no redness, and fluctuation was difficult to determine. At the +same time symptoms of constitutional infection, such as continued fever, +rapid pulse, restlessness, loss of strength, progressive anæmia, and +emaciation, were marked. Pyæmia, as evidenced by secondary deposits, +was, however, rare; I only saw two cases, both in fractures of the +femur; in both recovery followed secondary amputation. + +_Prognosis._--This depended almost entirely on the nature of the injury +to the soft parts; given moderate injury to these, and the preservation +of the wound from infection, scarcely any degree of injury of the bones +precluded recovery, even if this were slow and prolonged. The existence +of perforations scarcely increased to an important extent the gravity of +a wound of the soft parts alone; in fact, this injury could not be +regarded as more severe than an ordinary surgical osteotomy, putting the +risks of infection of the wound under the special circumstances on one +side. + +With regard to the functional results, these depended on the degree of +comminution; when this was extreme, union was slow and for a time weak, +and shortening was often considerable, but a fair result was as a rule +obtained. + +Suppuration and osteo-myelitis were the dangerous features when they +occurred; still, even in the presence of these, I never saw a fatal +result in an upper extremity fracture, although in the lower extremity +a considerable mortality followed fractures both of the leg and thigh, +the deaths being most commonly from septicæmia, or from a combination of +this with secondary hæmorrhage. + +_Treatment._--The general treatment was of a simple character. The +perforations may be at once dismissed, since nothing more was needed +than what has been already described under the heading of wounds of the +soft parts. Again, with regard to the co-existence of vascular injury, +or injury to the soft parts generally, the ordinary rules guiding us in +civil practice were followed. + +The first point of importance, and needing consideration in the +treatment of severely comminuted fractures, was as to whether in these +it was better simply to try to obtain union of the wound with as little +disturbance as possible, or to anæsthetise the patient and explore the +wound, removing such fragments as were free or widely displaced. I think +the answer to this question depends entirely on the nature of the +external wounds. If these be of the small type forms, or if the exit +aperture is, at any rate, of only moderate size, a strictly conservative +attitude is the better when the risk of making an exploration under the +circumstances is borne in mind, the more so as an exploration, to be +safe and useful, ought to be done at once. If the exit wound is of the +large or explosive type, on the other hand, there is no doubt that the +best results are to be obtained by early exploration and the removal of +all loose fragments. I saw several excellent results obtained in this +way, even when the patients had to undergo the risk of transport +shortly, in some cases the very next day, after the operation. The loose +fragments are an immediate source of danger, and later may interfere +with the healing of the fracture, even if suppuration does not occur. In +all the cases that I saw the exit wound was dressed, but left freely +open, and I do not think any attempt to close it should ever be made. + +The question of operative fixation rarely needs consideration; it +occasionally happens, however, that oblique fractures, such as one +mentioned on p. 166, are met with, in which screwing or wiring of the +bone ends is advisable. What has been said above as to fractures, +accompanied by loss of continuity, applies equally to cases of severe +wedge-fracture, where many loose fragments exist. + +As to the disinfection of the limb, primary cleansing, mainly by soap +and water, of course precedes the exploration, and when the latter has +been carried out a second cleansing and disinfection, preferably with +spirit and carbolic acid lotion, are imperative. + +Immobilisation is a more difficult problem. In practised hands +plaster-of-Paris splints answer most requirements except in the case of +the thigh; but the splints take time to apply and also to set firmly, +and, as sometimes needing frequent removal, are not altogether suitable +for Field hospital work. Of all the splints I saw in use, I think the +best were wire splints, and the Dutch cane folding splints for the thigh +and leg (figs. 56, 58); wire-gauze splints with steel at the margins +(fig. 54), or strips of ordinary cardboard applied with some variety of +adhesive bandage for the arm and forearm; and plain wooden of various +lengths for any situation. + +A question of constant difficulty was that of frequency of dressing; in +a Stationary or Base hospital this is not difficult, as the same surgeon +has the patient continuously under his charge, and can readily decide as +to the proper moment for the renewal of the dressing. When the patient +is, however, being moved from the Field to the Stationary hospital, and +thence to the Base, a constant succession of surgeons has the case in +hand for short periods, the movements during transport disturb the +fixity of the dressing, and, in consequence, dressings are apt to be far +more frequent than is advisable. This question raises the larger one of +the advisability of _any_ transport beyond what may be an actual +necessity. There is only one answer to this. No fractures of the thigh +or leg, and few of the arm, can be transported for any distance without +material disadvantage. The risks attendant on disturbance of the +fracture and tissue injury, septic infection as a result of slipping of +the dressing and the impracticability of efficiently renewing it, far +more than counterbalance any advantage to be gained from the superior +comforts available at a Base hospital. For these reasons, if possible, +all fractures of the arm, thigh, or leg should be kept at a Stationary +hospital for a period of three or more weeks, and, as far as splints and +appliances are concerned, these should be as numerous and complete as at +a Base hospital. I have had a useful set made of aluminium. A word will +be added later as to the splints suitable for different regions of the +body. + +The necessity for _primary amputation_ chiefly depends on the nature of +the injury to the soft parts, less commonly on the extent of the injury +to the bones, and should be decided on exactly the same lines as in +civil practice. So-called intermediate amputations are always to be +avoided if possible; the results were consistently bad, and the +operation should only be undertaken in cases of severe sepsis where +little can be hoped from it, or for secondary hæmorrhage. When the +operation could be tided over until the septic process had settled down +and localised itself, secondary amputation gave very fair results. In +either intermediate or secondary amputation for suppurating fractures, +it was necessary to bear in mind the special likelihood of the existence +of extensive osteo-myelitis. If this condition affected the upper +fragment, an amputation was of little use unless the whole bone was +removed, as septic infection continued and brought about a fatal issue, +or a fresh amputation was required in order to obtain a stump that would +heal. + + +SPECIAL FRACTURES + +_Upper Extremity._--Fractures of the _scapula_ were not uncommon, but +were mostly of the perforative variety; thus perforations both of the +spine in longitudinal wounds of the back, and of the ala in perforating +wounds of the thorax, were tolerably frequent. They possessed little +practical interest; as a rule, the openings were not large, and the most +unexpected feature was the small interference with the movements of the +bone on the chest wall that resulted. It might be assumed that +comminuted fragments would project into the muscles and cause both pain +and interference with movement; but neither was the case. I saw grooving +of the crest of the spine, but never happened to meet with a fracture +of the acromion process. Many axillary tracks passed in the closest +proximity to the coracoid, but this again I never saw separated. One +practical point of importance with regard to the scapula was the +frequency with which bullets lodged in the venter, or the firmly +bound-down muscles of the supra- and infra-spinous fossæ. These retained +bullets often gave rise to remarkably little trouble in this situation; +thus I have a skiagram of a shrapnel bullet lying in the deepest part of +the subscapular fossa, which did not inconvenience its possessor. + +[Illustration: FIG. 53. Head of Humerus, showing broken perforation. The +roof forms a hinged covering to a groove.] + +Every variety of _fracture of the clavicle_ was met with, even +perforation of the most compact portion of the shaft; comminuted, wedge, +or notched fractures were, however, the more common, and were +accompanied by the development of very large masses of provisional +callus during the process of healing. An interesting skiagram is +reproduced in plate III., which shows a compound form of injury to the +clavicle. The bullet has passed obliquely beneath the acromial end, +rising to perforate the posterior compact margin, and producing one of +the diamond-shaped openings sometimes occurring in compact bone with the +passage of bullets at a low rate of velocity. No case of perforation of +the subclavian vein by comminuted fragments of the clavicle came under +my notice. + +_Fractures of the humerus_ of every variety were common, and I think +when the statistics of the campaign are published, it will be shown that +the humerus was the most frequently injured individual bone in the whole +body. I remember to have seen thirteen fractures of the shaft of the +humerus in one pavilion alone at Wynberg after the battle of Paardeberg. + +Perforations of the upper articular extremity were common, and as a rule +gave rise to wonderfully little trouble in the shoulder-joint. The outer +aspect of the head of the humerus is a common situation for the +production of a special form of broken canal or groove (fig. 53). The +slope from the greater tuberosity to the shaft naturally favours the +production of the injury in this position. + +I saw only one case in which a vertical fissure extended from a fracture +of the shaft into the shoulder-joint; in this case the transverse +solution of continuity was at the upper part of the middle third of the +bone. Skiagram, plate IV., illustrates a well-marked stellate +comminution of the shaft with large fragments. Plate V. shows extreme +comminution with fragments blown out of the wound. Two plates, Nos. VI. +and VIII., illustrate well the difference resulting from the oblique +passage of a bullet at high and low rates of velocity respectively. In +both cases good results were obtained; in the more severe the resultant +mass of ensheathing callus was very large, temporarily interfered with +flexion of the elbow-joint, and consolidation was very slow (see plate +VII.). The patient was wounded at Belmont in November 1899, but he was +able to row at the end of the summer of 1900, although very prolonged +suppuration occurred, and the elbow movements became practically normal. +Plate IX. illustrates a transverse track, the bullet having undergone +considerable injury during its passage through the bone, as evidenced by +the presence of fragments both of mantle and lead in the limb. This +might be called an example of transverse fracture, and illustrates the +nearest approach to one seen when the bone is struck fairly plumb. + +[Illustration: PLATE IV. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(24) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS + +Range about '300 yards.' + +The wound track took a directly antero-posterior course. Impact +rectangular. The musculo-spiral nerve was completely divided. + +The plate affords a good example of the so-called 'butterfly' fracture. +Two long doubly wedge-shaped lateral fragments, and pointed extremities +to both main fragments, are shown. + +The fracture healed well, with the deposition of a large mass of +provisional callus. The musculo-spiral nerve was united by suture some +three months later.] + +Plate VIII. exhibits an oblique fracture of the lower part of the shaft +produced by a bullet passing at a low rate of velocity. It does not +widely differ from a perforation, and the illustration possesses some +further interest as showing the deviation of a bullet likely to occur +when a bone lies in its course. Although the velocity with which this +bullet was travelling must have been very low, when the bone had been +traversed the deviation in its course was slight. A few bony fragments +from the compact tissue of the posterior surface of the humerus have +been carried into the distal portion of the track. + +Fractures of the various prominences of the lower articular extremity +were not uncommon, but deviated little from the types with which we are +familiar in civil practice; the after results were good, both as to +union and movement of the elbow. + +Explosive wounds of the soft parts were not infrequent in the arm, and +fig. 48, p. 158, exhibits an extreme example. The humerus in respect of +depth of covering, however, comes between the femur and the bones of the +leg and forearm; hence such injuries were not so easily produced as in +the latter segments of the limbs. + +In connection with the subject of fractures of this bone, one word must +be added as to the occurrence of the most characteristic of its +complications, musculo-spiral paralysis. This was frequent in every +position of the fracture, and came on either immediately, or, at a +subsequent period, as a result of callus irritation or pressure. Its +frequency is only what would be expected when the nature of the fracture +is considered, but the chief interest of the condition lay in the +difficulty of certainly detecting it in the initial stages of the cases; +this depended on the fact that in many of them the local shock to the +limb was so severe that the function of the whole of the muscles was +lowered, or in some cases, although the musculo-spiral was the nerve +chiefly affected, the other large trunks had also suffered concussion or +contusion. In consequence of this difficulty the actual localised +paralysis often only became evident at the end of a week, or even more, +when there was difficulty in deciding as to whether the paralysis was +primary or due to secondary trouble. In the fracture illustrated by +skiagram, plate IV., the nerve suffered complete division, and was +united some three months later, improvement in the symptoms being very +slow. The latter was a common experience, and although not unusual in +civil practice, I think it is more marked in these injuries as a result +of the more widespread character of the nerve lesion. + +[Illustration: PLATE V. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(25) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS + +Range '50 yards.' Velocity extreme. + +Impact somewhat oblique. The bullet entered anteriorly about 3 inches +above the elbow crease. The wound of exit was on the inner aspect of the +arm and explosive in character; it still measured 4 inches by 2 inches +three weeks after the injury was received. + +The wounds suppurated locally, but at the end of six weeks fair union of +the bone had taken place and the wound of exit had contracted to a +sinus. The musculo-spiral nerve was concussed, but not divided. + +The skiagram was taken three weeks after the reception of the injury. + +Comparison with plate IV. demonstrates the effect of high velocity in +free comminution of the bone, the sharper radiation of the stellate +lines of fracture, and the propulsion of bone fragments.] + +The _bones of the forearm_ were also often fractured. The principal +peculiarity of these fractures was the common localisation of the injury +to one bone, which is readily seen to be probable. + +Each bone offered some special features dependent on its structural +character and anatomical position. In the case of the _ulna_, pure +perforation of the olecranon process, without obvious evidence of +implication of the elbow, was seen on several occasions. The other +important feature with regard to this bone depends on its subcutaneous +position, which accounted for the frequency with which highly developed +explosive exit wounds were met with. One is figured in the general +section (fig. 47, p. 156). This, however, is a very slight instance +compared with what was often seen in the upper and middle thirds of the +bone, where the lateral soft parts often protruded as a much larger +tumour, the particular illustration being mainly designed to show the +nature of the injury to the skin. The _radius_, as more deeply placed in +the upper part of its course, was less often the seat of such +well-marked explosive injuries; but when the lower end was struck this +character was sometimes very striking: thus in a track passing +antero-posteriorly through this bone, the whole lower end appeared +shattered, all the tendons at the back of the wrist being implicated in +the protruding mass, while the bone itself seemed shortened, so that the +hand took up the position common in Colles's fracture. It was found +impossible to place the bone in good position; nevertheless the patient +retained his hand, which is still of use in writing. + +Plate X. is a good example of a high-velocity injury in which lateral +contact with the radius has produced local comminution, some slight +injury to the casing of the bullet, and the separation of a large wedge. +The case from which this was taken also illustrated well one of the +chief troubles of such fractures of the forearm; the degree of +splintering resulted in the formation of a large mass of callus, which +for a time rendered any degree of pronation and supination impossible. + +[Illustration: PLATE VI. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(26) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS + +Range '250 yards.' + +Impact oblique. Wound of entry 1 inch below the insertion of the +deltoid; exit, on inner aspect of arm at a slightly lower level. The +bullet probably struck the bone laterally, and drove out the central +fragment. + +Prolonged suppuration resulted, but the humerus healed well, and good +movement of the elbow was preserved. + +The effect of oblique impact together with high velocity is well +illustrated. Had the resistance been greater, as in the case of the +femur, a nearer resemblance to the effect seen in plate XV. would have +been the result.] + +Of _fractures of the hand_ I have little to say. In the case of the +_carpus_, the slight degree of resistance offered by the bones rendered +injuries of an explosive character rare. I never saw one. Fractures of +the _metacarpus_, on the other hand, presented exactly the opposite +features. The density of these small bones was well illustrated by the +frequency with which the bullet suffered injury, even amounting to +fragmentation, and the great comminution they themselves suffered. The +breaking up of the bullet in these fractures was a curious feature, +which may perhaps be explained by the tendency of the distal part of the +limb to be driven in the course of the bullet, with the result of +somewhat lengthening the period of contact of the projectile, or more +probably by somewhat frequently occurring irregular impact. Plate XI. is +a good example of an injury of this nature of moderate severity. The +soft parts suffered much in these injuries, the tendons were torn and +lacerated at the moment, and were very apt to acquire more or less +permanent adhesion. This latter condition was sometimes to be improved +by the removal of bone fragments, and I have freed tendons from actual +clefts in the bones where they had been carried in by the bullet. In +some cases very great deformity of the digits, due to shortening, +developed, even when no fragments were removed beyond those blown away +by the bullet. + +One form of injury of some interest was multiple fracture of the +phalanges produced by a bullet travelling in a course parallel to the +length of the rifle when pointed by the patient. Occasionally several +digits were lost. + +_Treatment of fractures of the upper extremity._--The general lines of +this have already been foreshadowed in the general section, the remarks +as to transport being applicable to all serious fractures of the shaft +of the humerus, and this is the only one of the bones of the upper +extremity on which anything special need be said, as the treatment of +all the other fractures exactly coincides with that of ordinary civil +practice. + +[Illustration: PLATE VII. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(26_a_) CONDITION OF THE SAME FRACTURE SHOWN IN PLATE VI., A YEAR AFTER +ITS PRODUCTION + +The ensheathing callus is still very abundant, but less so than at an +earlier date. No trouble with the musculo-spiral nerve was noted, but +residual abscesses occurred from time to time in connection with the +fracture.] + +[Illustration: FIG. 54.--German Wire Gauze Splint on steel wire +foundation. + +(German Ambulance, Heilbron)] + +The treatment of wounds should be on the lines already laid down: +thorough cleansing, and then an attempt to seal. In severely comminuted +fractures, however, the exit wound may be of very large size, and then +frequent dressings are necessary. Loose fragments, by which those freed +from their periosteal connections are meant, need removal. The question +which most interested me was the best method of fixation. This needs to +be sufficient to effect immobility, but on the other hand in many cases +the weight of the arm as a means of extension is very valuable. Some of +the most successfully treated cases that I saw were fixed by means of +simple strips of pasteboard, applied moist, and fixed with an adhesive +bandage. Ordinary book-muslin bandages are as good as anything for this +purpose, as they can be reinforced by a stronger form outside them. +Where necessary, an angular piece of cardboard can be applied on the +inner aspect, or a wooden angular splint may be substituted, if it is at +hand; but in this case most of the advantage of the weight of the arm as +a means of extension is lost. The cardboard cases possess the great +advantage of being readily cut off and reapplied much as is done with +plaster of Paris. During the period in which dressing may be necessary I +believe this form of splint is as good as can be got for use in Field +hospitals, the only point needing care being to ensure that the +bandaging is not too tight. It is much more reliable than are ordinary +splints if transport is unavoidable, and is much lighter and less +irksome to the patient. With such strips of cardboard, a few of the +gauze splints (fig. 54), and a few angular and wooden splints, I believe +a Field hospital is fully equipped for the treatment of any fractures of +the upper extremity. + +[Illustration: PLATE VIII. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(27) OBLIQUE FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS OF THE NATURE OF A PERFORATION + +Range more than '1,000 yards.' + +The distance was probably much greater, as the bullet was retained and +undeformed, and the comminution of the bone was very slight. The wound +of entry was just below the elbow. + +The bullet has cut its way through the inner half of the humerus, +producing little comminution and mere solution of continuity of the bone +without displacement] + +_Fractures of the pelvis._--These, as a rule, were of so slight a nature +as to form a very insignificant part of the entire injury with which +they were associated, or when uncomplicated they were of little more +importance than simple wounds of the soft parts. The very great majority +were of the simple perforating type. I had the opportunity of examining +three at the brim of the pelvis, these all passing in a downward +direction. The openings were of about the same calibre as the bullet, +and at their entrance was a small amount of bone dust such as would be +found at the entry hole of a gimlet. It was these that made me consider +the possibility of the rifle grooves having some part in the ease with +which certain perforations are made. Of a large number of cases in which +bullets traversed the ilium, the openings in the bone, as a rule, were +with difficulty palpated. I must say that I was astonished that I never +met with an instance of an extensive stellate fracture in the case of +the ilium. Such may have occurred in some of the cases fatal on the +field or shortly afterwards, but I never came across one in the +hospital. It says much for the combined density and toughness of the +human pelvis. + +Comminuted fractures were, however, occasionally met with when the +bullet passed in a track parallel to the plane of the bone. One such of +an unusual character has already been mentioned on p. 171. A still more +interesting form, and one highly characteristic of flat bone injuries, +is shown in fig. 55. The patient, a man wounded at Modder River, was +struck at a range of 300 to 400 yards. The bullet entered over about the +centre of the ilium and emerged in the anterior abdominal wall about 2 +inches above the anterior-superior spine. As there was some doubt as to +penetration of the abdomen, and as the exit wound was of considerable +size, the wound was explored, an anæsthetic having been given. A +clean-cut track in the bone was discovered which allowed the middle +finger to be placed in it. There was little splintering of either inner +or outer table of the bone beyond the width of the track, but plates of +each table adhered on the one side to the origin of the gluteus medius, +and on the other to the iliacus, the latter muscle being somewhat widely +separated from the venter ilii by effused blood. There was no +perforation of the abdominal cavity. + +[Illustration: PLATE IX. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(28) LOCALISED COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS + +Range '100 yards.' + +The entry and exit wounds were on the front and back aspects of the arm, +about 3 inches above the elbow. + +Fragmentation of the mantle of the bullet has occurred. It will be noted +that the fragments are lodged in both the proximal and distal segments +of the track. This may indicate that the bullet was damaged prior to +entry, or the recoil of fragments. I incline to the latter view. The +skiagram was taken a fortnight after the injury. + +The large median fragment carried forwards, and the small degree of +comminution, suggest the decrease of resistance and prolongation of +impact by carriage back of the arm when struck. + +The fracture is one of the nearest approaches to a transverse cleft that +I met with. + +The plate may well be compared with No. XII., where the effect of +increased resistance in augmenting the degree of comminution is seen.] + +Lesser degrees of the same kind of injury amounting to grooving of the +surface or notching of the crest of the ilium were not uncommon, and the +occasional large character of exit openings in buttock wounds pointed to +contact of travelling bullets with other parts of the external pelvic +wall. + +[Illustration: FIG. 55.--Clean Gutter Fracture of the Ilium (range +placed by patient at 300 yards. Highland Brigade, Magersfontein). The +gutter was clean cut, and admitted the forefinger. The inner and outer +tables of the bone were in part blown out of a large irregularly +circular exit opening about 1-1/2 in. above the crest of the ilium. The +cancellous tissue was probably entirely blown out. Plates of the outer +and inner tables still remained connected by their periosteum to the +deep aspects of the iliacus and gluteus medius muscles. The peritoneal +cavity was not opened. The patient did well. Compare with the gutter +fractures of the skull shown in figs. 64, 66.] + +Certain portions of the pelvis were subject to more severe comminution; +thus in one case in which the bladder was wounded, a very much +comminuted fracture of the horizontal ramus of the pubes was produced by +a bullet which subsequently lodged in the thigh behind the femoral +vessels. In this case the track was so oblique as to have necessitated +almost pure lateral impact on the part of the bullet; hence the form of +injury was nearly allied to the comminutions of the ilium already +described. + +[Illustration: PLATE X. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd + +(29) Wedge-shaped Fracture of the Radius + +Range 'a few yards.' + +The officer shot the man, his assailant, with a revolver. The entry +wound was on the posterior aspect of the forearm at the junction of the +middle and lower thirds. The exit wound was on the anterior aspect of +the forearm, 1 inch below the elbow crease, and of moderate size. + +Some fine fragmentation of the mantle of the bullet is indicated, and +very fine comminution of the bone. The fracture healed well, but the +resulting mass of callus at the end of three months prevented any +movements of pronation or supination.] + +I never observed a fracture of the floor of the acetabulum by a bullet +which had entered from the back of the pelvis, although tracks entering +by the great sciatic notch were not infrequent. I saw one case in which +a bullet which traversed the upper part of the shoulder and emerged at +the axilla entered a second time an inch behind and above the anterior +superior spine, and split off a layer of the outer table of the ilium of +the extent of two square inches, which involved the upper portion of the +rim of the acetabulum. No displacement upwards of the femur resulted; +but external rotation was accompanied by crepitus. The wound suppurated, +and some general infection resulted, but six weeks later there was no +evidence of fluid in the hip-joint, the limb was adducted and slightly +rotated outwards, and some movement in each direction could be made +without causing any great amount of pain. I can say nothing of the +further course of this case, as I neglected to take the patient's name. + +I saw one or two instances of perforation of the sacrum. One is +mentioned in the chapter on injuries to the abdomen, in which a central +puncture at the level of the fourth vertebra was accompanied by +temporary incontinence of fæces. + +Fractures of the _femur_ were fairly numerous and formed one of the most +serious classes of case we had to treat, as well as one of the most +fertile sources of mortality in the Base hospitals. In spite of the last +observation, however, it is probable that the results in this campaign +will be far better than in any previous war, both as to the smaller +proportion in which amputation was needed and as to recovery. + +[Illustration: PLATE XI. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(30) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE SECOND METACARPAL BONE + +Large fragments of the mantle of the bullet. + +Fragmentation of the bullet was comparatively common when the metacarpal +bones were struck, also free comminution of a somewhat coarser variety +than that seen when bones offering greater resistance were struck. + +This may be a result of the more frequent lateral impact of the bullet +on these small bones.] + +In spite of a considerable experience, I never saw a case of perforation +of either the head or neck of the thigh bone. I saw numerous tracks +emerging at the side of the femoral vessels and entering at the buttock +or vice versa, but never one accompanied either by effusion into the +hip-joint or impairment of movement. Considering the regularity with +which hæmarthrosis occurred when the other joints were crossed, and also +the nature of the compact tissue of the neck of the femur, which must +have ensured some splintering, I do not think I can have overlooked an +injury of this nature. No doubt also the escape of the neck of the bone +was explained in some of the cases by the fact that the injuries were +received while the hip-joint was in a position of flexion, the bullet +passing over the neck of the femur. In two cases of extensive +comminution of the upper third of the femur that I saw, the fissures +stopped short at the inter-trochanteric line anteriorly, but in one of +them a large angular fragment was torn out of the posterior surface of +the neck. + +Excepting transverse fracture every form was met with in the shaft, +although I saw only two instances of perforation. One has been already +alluded to and was situated in the broadening portion of the lower +third, the bullet taking an antero-posterior course. The second is seen +in plate XVII. + +Plate XII. shows an instance of extreme comminution of the upper third +accompanied by the presence of two typical elongated fragments. The +course taken by the bullet was almost directly antero-posterior, and the +wounds were of moderate size even in the case of the exit one. This +seems to preclude the possibility of the injury having been produced by +a ricochet bullet, while the fact of perforation and escape of the +bullet in spite of the serious damage suffered by the mantle points to +the injury having been produced at a short range of fire. The patient +himself owns to being quite unable to give any estimate of the distance. +Although no suppuration occurred, this fracture was very slow in +consolidating, and the free comminution with consequent inaccurate +apposition led to the development of four inches shortening of the limb. +The skiagram was taken about six weeks after the occurrence of the +injury, a few days after I first saw the patient; I have, however, had +the opportunity of seeing a second skiagram taken some four months +later. This is of considerable interest, as throwing light on the mode +of union of such fractures. The two elongated fragments in the later +skiagram are widened to three times their original breadth, and form +buttresses on either side of the point of union, while the irregular +ends of the shaft are rounded off, and the mass of fine fragments behind +is consolidated. Beyond this the second skiagram shows that the upper +fragment, apparently intact in the first, was really split +longitudinally, and therefore was far less useful as a point of support +than might have been assumed from the earlier skiagram, plate XIII. The +case illustrates well the chief difficulty in the treatment of such +fractures: that of maintaining the fragments in line, since absolutely +no help is received from the apposition of the two ends, and artificial +traction alone must be relied upon. + +[Illustration: PLATE XII. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(31) HIGHLY COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE UPPER THIRD OF THE SHAFT OF THE +FEMUR + +Range 'short.' + +Impact fairly direct. The wounds were of moderate size and at nearly the +same level. The exit wound near the buttock fold was of moderate size, +and presented no special features. + +Considerable fragmentation of the bullet occurred. The comminution of +the bone is very fine, suggesting high velocity, and great resistance by +the bone. The skiagram was taken five weeks after the injury was +received, and at that time no union had occurred. + +Reference to plate XIII. will explain more fully the difficulty +experienced in maintaining this fracture in position. The upper fragment +is seen to be split into fragments, beyond the separation of the long +splinter on the inner side; hence no aid was to be obtained from the +apposition of the ends. About 2 inches of the shaft were actually +pulverised; the fine fragments seen in a mass to the inner side of the +bone in the exit portion of the back, eventually formed a large mass of +callus, and the fracture united, with considerable shortening.] + +Plate XIV. offers a good contrast; the fracture here presents a typical +stellate form, and a good result without shortening was readily +obtained. I assume that the difference in character of these two +fractures depended mainly on the rate of velocity with which the bullet +was travelling, since it passed fairly directly across the limb in each. +I think it is clear, however, that the bullet struck the femur rather +nearer the centre of the width of the shaft and therefore more directly, +in the more severe injury. + +This brings me to the question of explosive exit wounds in the thigh. In +spite of the great tendency to comminution of the shaft, these were rare +in a severe form. This depended simply on the depth and thickness of the +coverings of the bone, and, as already mentioned, although the skin +openings were often comparatively small, a large cavity or area of +destroyed soft tissues may be contained within the limb. I do not think +I ever saw an exit wound in the thigh exceeding 1-1/2 inch in diameter. + +The oblique fracture illustrated by plate XVI. has been already referred +to, and the influence of the weight and movement of the trunk on its +production has been considered. + +Plate XV. illustrates an obliquely comminuted fracture of another +character. The bullet has here been stripped of its mantle, which has +undergone fragmentation, but the leaden core is little altered in shape. +This is of much interest, since it shows that the bullet struck the bone +by its side. The effect of such lateral impact on the part of the +projectile is well shown: there is great bone comminution of a less +regular character than usual, and the bullet is retained. Retention in +this case was probably not a result of low velocity of flight, but of +the increased resistance offered by the broad area of bone struck, and +the check exerted on the axial rotation of the bullet by the lateral +contact. + +[Illustration: PLATE XIII. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(31_a_) THE FRACTURE SHOWN IN PLATE XII., SIX MONTHS AFTER RECEPTION OF +THE INJURY + +The amount of callus furnished around the loose fragments is very +striking. + +The upper end of the bone is shown to have been divided into at least +two fragments, hence one of the difficulties of maintaining the ends in +apposition. The stoppage of the fissuring short of the epiphysis is +characteristic.] + +Slighter injuries to the femur in which the shaft was chipped or grooved +without loss of continuity were not uncommon, and showed well the +capacity of the bone to withstand the lateral shock transmitted by small +bullets. Two figures inserted in the chapter on wounds in general (figs. +22, 23, pp. 61, 62) are of cases in which, from the appearance of the +wound of exit, the bullet probably underwent deformation, or was so +deflected as to escape on a considerably altered axis. Beyond the nature +of the exit wound in the case depicted in fig. 22, some thickening +beneath the femoral vessels denoted bone injury, but unfortunately no +skiagram was taken. + +I saw no case in which a transverse fracture of the shaft accompanied +such injuries, but am under the impression that, if they had been +produced by bullets of greater volume and weight, transverse solution of +continuity would have been more common. In point of fact, no case of +pure transverse fracture of the femur ever came under my notice. + +The diagram depicted in fig. 51, p. 164, is from a sketch made of the +lower end of a femur in which a severely comminuted fracture followed by +suppuration necessitated an amputation of the thigh, performed by Major +Lougheed, R.A.M.C. It is inserted as an illustration of the tendency of +the fissures to stop short above the actual articular extremities of the +bones. In this case the comminution was extreme and accompanied by the +usual long lateral fragments, one of which measured five inches in +length and might well have extended into the knee-joint had that been an +ordinary occurrence. + +Perforations of the lower extremity of the bone were very common. These +were sometimes transverse and limited to the articular extremity itself, +or the same limitation occurred to the antero-posterior tracks. These +were the slightest forms of injury, putting on one side incomplete +tunnels and grooves on the surface of the bone. With regard to the +latter, however, when they invaded the joint cavity the injury was +liable to be more severe than a complete perforation, in consequence of +the projection of comminuted fragments into the joint cavity near the +line of reflection of the synovial capsule and ulterior interference +with freedom of movement. + +[Illustration: FIG. 55_a_.--Diagram of 'Butterfly' type.] + +[Illustration: PLATE XIV. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(32) TYPICAL STELLATE (BUTTERFLY) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR + +Range 'short.' + +Wounds small, impact direct, very little fine comminution. The bone +united without shortening of the limb.] + +Other tracks took a direction of longitudinal obliquity, and then +implicated both epiphysis and diaphysis. Fig. 52, p. 169, shows an +example, and also the peculiarity likely to be assumed by the exit +aperture in the bone, especially if the bullet was travelling at a low +rate of velocity, a considerable plate of the compact bone being driven +out. In some cases these oblique tracks involved both femur and tibia. +They will be referred to again under the heading of injuries to the +joints, and some remarks will also be found there regarding the synovial +effusion so often occurring into the knee-joint in cases of fracture of +the shaft of the bone. + +It may be of interest to insert here a few remarks as to the clinical +characteristics of fractures of the femur. First with regard to the +primary signs and symptoms. A very considerable degree of general or +constitutional shock usually accompanied them, and this was perhaps more +constant than in the case of any other injury in the body. This was, +moreover, no doubt increased by the unfavourable conditions in which +patients on the field of battle are situated in regard to transport. +When the patients were brought into hospital some delay in the primary +treatment was often necessary until reaction took place. Local shock to +the part was also a prominent feature. Abnormal mobility was very free +in the badly comminuted cases. Crepitus was often loose, and of 'the bag +of bone' variety. The result of local shock and consequent flaccidity of +the muscles was to reduce the development of primary shortening; in some +cases of severe comminution this was practically nil during the first +day or two, when, with return of tone in the muscles, it sometimes +became very considerable. Swelling of the limb was often very great, and +vascular injury definitely far more common than in the fractures of +civil practice, in consequence, no doubt, not only of the number and +sharpness of the fragments, but also of the force with which they were +driven into the surrounding tissues. The exit segment of the track was +out of all proportion in size to the entry, as a result of the +propulsion of bone fragments through it. This often made the closure of +the exit wound a very protracted event, the track continuing to +discharge a small quantity of bloody serum and fragments of necrosed +tissue for many weeks. + +[Illustration: PLATE XV. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(33) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR + +Range 'short.' + +Normal entry wound of slightly oval form. + +Oblique lateral impact on the part of the bullet, the mantle of which +burst into numerous fragments. The bullet is seen to the inner side of +the shaft, almost devoid of its mantle, and little deformed at the tip. +The comminution of the upper portion of the fracture is very fine; the +bullet has merely cut its way down the lower portion, and one or two +long fragments are separated. The skiagram shows well the result of +lateral impact by the side of the bullet. + +Compare this plate with No. VI. as illustrating lesser resistance, and +No. VIII. as illustrating the effect of lower velocity.] + +In a large proportion of the cases which were transported for any +distance suppuration occurred; this must have been the case in at least +60 per cent. of the fractures. Suppuration was of the character already +described in the general section, affecting particularly the bone +itself, and accompanied by very marked signs of general infection. + +_Prognosis in fractures of the femur._--As regards mortality fractures +in the upper third of the bone proved one of the most formidable +injuries which came under treatment. Suppuration was common, at least 60 +per cent. of the wounds becoming infected. This depended on several +reasons, often inseparable from the injuries, or from their treatment in +Field hospitals: such as (1) the exit wound being situated in the +dangerous region of the thigh; (2) ineffective dressing and fixation; +(3) the impossibility of ensuring primary cleansing and removal of +detached fragments of bone; (4) the necessity of the early transport of +patients to the Stationary or Base hospitals, often for great distances; +(5) the comparatively long period that often had to elapse before the +opportunity of doing the first efficient dressing arrived. + +Fractures in the middle and lower thirds of the bone were more easy to +treat successfully, but these also added to the list both of amputations +and fatalities. + +Punctured fractures of the lower articular extremity were usually of +little importance, as they progressed without exception, as far as my +experience went, favourably. + +I can give no idea of the general results obtained during the whole +campaign, but I am able to state the results of the fractures of the +shaft treated at No. 1 General Hospital during my stay in South Africa. +Thirty-two cases of fracture of the shaft of the bone came under +treatment, and of these 6 or 18.7 per cent. needed amputation, and of +the whole number 5 or 15.6 per cent. died. To emphasise the satisfactory +nature of these figures I need only quote the results attained in the +American War of the Rebellion; mortality in upper third, 46 per cent.; +middle third, 40.6 per cent.; lower third, 38.2 per cent. + +[Illustration: PLATE XVI. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(34) OBLIQUE FRACTURE OF THE SHAFT OF THE FEMUR + +Range '300 to 400 yards.' + +Aperture of entry just above the centre of the outer aspect of the +thigh. Exit, about 2 inches lower, at the junction of the inner and +posterior aspects. The bullet was retained just within the wound, and +when removed the mantle fell off in two parts. The leaden core was +mushroomed. The bullet had passed through another soldier previous to +entering the patient's thigh. Only two small fragments of the mantle +were retained, as seen in the skiagram. These were in the substance of +the great sciatic nerve, and were subsequently removed by Sir Thomas +Smith. + +It is difficult to determine how the bone was struck; reference to plate +XXI. would suggest that the shaft may have been perforated, but no +evidence of this remains in the skiagram taken, which was five months +later. + +The patient was standing at the moment of reception of the injury, and +the obliquity of the fracture no doubt depended on his fall and the +resulting influence of the weight of the body. The length of the +fracture cleft was 9 inches.] + +I need hardly dwell upon the difference between the nature of the +injuries received in the American War of the Rebellion and in the +present campaign, as in the former the old large bullets were employed, +and shell injuries are possibly included; but I ought to add in this +relation, that the numbers quoted from No. 1 General Hospital included, +to my knowledge, at least three severe Martini-Henry wounds. + +The first element for a favourable prognosis is a small wound, and +opportunity for an efficient primary treatment of the same; the second +the absence of necessity for transport of the patient. With regard to +the second of these requirements, we were unfortunately situated in +South Africa, and the majority of the cases which did badly were moved +during the first few days and for a distance of between five and six +hundred miles. On the other hand, as a rule, the external wounds were +small. + +As to functional result, the fractures did well. I think an average of +an inch and a half would well cover the shortening, and in many the +length was little altered. Considering the serious nature of many of +these fractures, this was good. + +_Treatment._--In all punctured fractures of the lower extremity, +dressing of the wounds like uncomplicated ones and a short period of +immobilisation were all that was necessary. In oblique fractures, and +those with slight comminution, closure of the wound by dressings, after +it had been carefully cleansed, was all that was necessary prior to +applying the splints for immobilisation. + +[Illustration: PLATE XVII + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. (35) PERFORATION OF +THE SHAFT OF THE FEMUR. FLAP OF BONE RAISED AT THE APERTURE OF EXIT IN +THE POPLITEAL SURFACE OF THE SHAFT. + +Range 'over 1,000 yards.' + +Compare with fig. 52, p. 169.] + +In the highly comminuted fractures a more radical treatment was +indicated, especially if the exit wound was large. In these, after +careful preliminary cleansing of the limb, the wounds, especially the +exit aperture, needed exploration and, if necessary, enlargement, and +all free splinters needed removal. If interference with the entry wound +could be avoided, this was always preferable, as it was rare for this +not to heal by primary union unless free suppuration occurred. Under +Field hospital conditions I think the exit wound should never be +sutured, whatever its situation; and in the present campaign, where +carbolic acid lotion was freely used, this step was manifestly +inadvisable, in view of the abundant serous discharge always to be +expected when this disinfectant has been employed. Except in cases +manifestly infected at the time of exploration, the use of drainage +tubes or plugs is not to be recommended. I would point out also that in +the majority of cases it is quite hopeless to attempt to make the entry +wound the safety-valve for drainage, as its natural tendency, even if +enlarged, is to heal, while the condition of the tissues in the exit +segment of the track usually renders primary union an impossibility. + +The wound having been dealt with, the next indications were for the +reduction of deformity, immobilisation of the limb, and the provision of +a proper degree of extension. As to the reduction of the fracture, this +was always a matter of ease, needing only slight axis traction. The +provision of efficient means of extension and immobilisation was a very +different matter. These questions had to be considered under two sets of +conditions: (1) when it was possible to keep the patient at rest in the +hospital he was first deposited in; (2) when it was necessary for him to +be transported for a considerable distance, probably not less than 500 +miles. + +When transport is a necessity, the best method of immobilisation is the +application of breeches of plaster of Paris, and a long outside splint. +The latter we often had excellently made on emergency by the Ordnance +Department or the Royal Engineers. A perineal band is the only form of +extension possible under these circumstances. The Dutch ambulances were +provided with a very excellent emergency splint for cases of fractured +thigh, which is illustrated in fig. 56. I think something of this kind +should be carried in one of the ambulances going on to every field of +battle, as being far more suitable than a long outside splint for hasty +and inaccurate application. This splint, fixed with some kind of firm +bandage, is an excellent temporary one for use during transport. + +[Illustration: PLATE XVIII. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(36) OBLIQUELY TRANSVERSE FRACTURE OF THE PATELLA + +Range 'short.' + +The entry and exit wounds were small, and a distinct grooving from loss +of substance of the bone was palpable superficial to the actual cleft of +the fracture.] + +[Illustration: FIG. 56.--Dutch Cane Field Emergency Splint for Thigh or +Lower Extremity. (Dutch Ambulance, Winberg)] + +In cases which can be treated at a Stationary hospital near at hand, a +long outside splint supplemented by plaster breeches, and a well-applied +American extension, is a very good method of treatment, the only point +to bear in mind being frequent examination of the position of the limb +to ensure the extension being efficient. As already mentioned, the +shortening in the primary stages is often slight and easily combated, +but in many of these cases if examined in a few days the limbs are found +to have shortened considerably, principally as a result of recovery of +tone by the muscles, and the absence of any help from the resting of the +two fragments end to end. The weight, therefore, has often to be +progressively increased and the fracture readjusted if necessary. +Although this method of treatment is satisfactory in cases with a small +wound, it is very troublesome to carry out, even when a bracket is +inserted opposite the wound, when frequent dressing is necessary, as is +generally at first the case when the wounds are large. For this purpose +a much more satisfactory method is the use of Hodgen's splint. This +allows of automatic adjustment of the degree of extension, and the +dressing of the wound without interference with the position of the +fracture. A continuous many-tailed bag is preferable to the strips +usually employed for the suspension of the limb, as more easily +adjustable and as offering a more even support to the limb. + +[Illustration: PLATE XIX. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(37) OBLIQUE COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA + +Range '600 yards.' + +The entrance wound was large and the exit also. The fracture may have +been caused by a Mannlicher (8 mm.) soft-nosed bullet, or possibly a +ricochet. The fragmentation is somewhat coarse at the periphery, but +very fine in the track of the bullet. Several fragments of the mantle +are visible. + +The fracture affords a good example of obliquity due to cutting by the +bullet, and contrasts well with those due to rectangular impact such as +are shown in plates IV. and XIV.] + +While at Orange River, in conjunction with Major Knaggs, R.A.M.C., and +Mr. Langmore, we treated several cases of fracture of the shaft of the +femur by this method. The splints were made for us by the Ordnance +Department, while the Royal Engineers erected a kind of gallows for us +down the centre of a commissariat marquee in order to avoid the risk of +using the tent poles for suspension. The patients were then ranged on +each side of the tent in two rows so that the pull of the two sets of +limbs opposed each other on the gallows from which they were suspended. +Although these patients had to lie on the ground, they were really +comfortable compared with those treated with long outside splints, and +the results obtained were very good: in three cases which I had the +opportunity of measuring later the bones were in good position and the +shortening was less than one inch. + +I have no doubt whatever that Hodgen's splint is by far the best method +of treating all cases of fractured thigh in the Stationary field +hospitals; and, more than this, I believe it is the only practicable and +efficient one. It can be applied without the use of an anæsthetic +without causing undue suffering to the patient, it allows of ready +change of the dressing, it is comfortable and permits considerable range +of movement on the part of the patient, it is as efficient with patients +lying on the ground as in a bed, it keeps the limb in good position and +allows of constant inspection on this point, and it is the only method +which provides satisfactory extension without constant readjustment. + +[Illustration: PLATE XX. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(38) TRANSVERSE FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA, COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE FIBULA + +Range '300 yards.' + +Wound of soft parts nearly transverse, entry on tibial aspect. The +bullet crossed and grooved the posterior aspect of the tibia, but struck +the fibula full. This is the only instance of a transverse cleft which +came under my notice. + +The wound suppurated, and a number of fragments of the fibula needed +removal; hence the amount of callus present.] + +Cases in which operative fixation is indicated are rare, but a few +oblique fractures may be treated with advantage in this manner if the +conditions surrounding the patient admit of it. Screwing is generally +preferable to wiring. + +Lastly, we come to the cases in which primary amputation is necessary. I +may say at once that I saw no case of wound from a bullet of small +calibre in which this was indicated, and only one shell injury in which +it was performed. I believe with small bullets that injury to the main +blood-vessels is almost the only indication which is likely to be met +with, and this by no means always indicates an amputation. First of all +the question arises as to whether the wound in the vessel is caused by a +bone fragment or by the bullet itself; reference to the chapter on +blood-vessels would seem to prove that a bullet wound is by no means a +necessary indication for amputation. Given favourable conditions, it +might be treated locally by ligature at the time, while if hæmorrhage is +not proceeding, developments should be awaited before proceeding to +amputation. In the case of bone fragment punctures, secondary hæmorrhage +is a more likely indication for amputation than primary. + +Broadly, it may be laid down that very extensive injury to the soft +parts is the only indication for primary amputation beyond primary +hæmorrhage, and it may be added that the condition is rare with wounds +from small-calibre bullets. If a primary amputation is necessary the +observations as to the transport of fractured thighs are equally +applicable. I never saw a primary amputation do well that was moved +during the first week; sloughing of flaps or hæmorrhage followed as a +rule, and often death. + +Intermediate amputations were indicated in cases of septic infection and +those of hæmorrhage; they seldom did well, and should be avoided if +possible. Secondary amputations for sepsis or hæmorrhage were attended +by fair results, but I can give no statistics. Unless extensive +osteo-myelitis is evident, or very widespread cellulitis of the limb +exists, I am strongly of opinion that the amputations when the fractures +are above the middle of the thigh should be through the fracture, and +not at the hip-joint, even if a subsequent secondary operation is +risked. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXI. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(39) PERFORATION OF THE SHAFT OF THE TIBIA, AND INCOMPLETE OBLIQUE +FISSURE EXTENDING FROM THE LOWER PART OF THE OPENING TO THE CREST OF THE +BONE. + +Range medium. Entry and exit wounds at same level. + +The patient was standing when struck, and fell backwards, his rifle +falling at the same time and striking the shin. The fibula is intact. + +The perforation indicated by the well-marked translucent spot is small. + +The forking of the lower extremity of the cleft suggests the starting of +the fissure from above. The fissure comes to the surface at the seat of +election, but its position may possibly have been determined by the blow +from the falling rifle. + +The backward fall of the patient clearly explains the mechanism of +production of the fissure, and throws light on the production of an +oblique fracture such as shown in plate XVI.] + +_Fractures of the patella._--Punctured fractures of the patella were +common with direct impact of the bullet; these were often difficult to +palpate, and were only to be certainly diagnosed by attention to the +direction of the track, and the development of hæmarthrosis. I saw at +least three or four in which the bullet, in addition to traversing the +knee-joint, injured the popliteal vessels. I have notes of one case in +which a bullet traversed the soft parts from above downwards and scored +a vertical groove on the surface of the patella; this was readily +palpable, but produced no solution of continuity. In several cases the +margin of the patella was notched by a passing bullet. + +I never saw a case of stellate fracture, and by this my experience in +the case of the ilium was confirmed. + +On two occasions I saw pure transverse fractures of the bone; in each +the wound was produced by a Lee-Metford bullet. This is of some interest +as denoting that the greater volume and weight, in conjunction with the +blunter tip, of the Lee-Metford may produce more severe injury to the +bones than the Mauser. I believe this to be the case, given an equal +degree of velocity on the part of the bullet at the moment of impact; +but it is probable that the position of the patella with regard to the +condyles of the femur when struck is of far greater importance in +relation to the production of transverse fractures. The skiagram +represented in plate XVIII. shows an obliquely transverse fracture, +which in this instance resulted from a crossing bullet, which grooved +the surface of the bone. + +With regard to the two cases of transverse fracture above referred to, I +may add that one occurred in a youth under twenty, and a good result was +obtained by treatment with splints, and later by massage. In the second +the patient was a man over fifty, who had received other injuries. The +wound over the patella healed and some union had occurred, when the +patient fell and burst both the bone union and the skin cicatrix. +Secondary suppuration of the knee-joint, necessitating an amputation of +the thigh, followed, but the patient made a good recovery. The third +case also did well. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXII. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, +Ltd. + +(40) NOTCH FRACTURE OF THE CREST OF THE TIBIA + +Range 'short.' + +The raising of the margins of the notch suggests a perforation. Compare +with figs. 51 and 57 in the text.] + +The treatment of these injuries differed in no way from that adopted in +civil practice, given satisfactory surroundings. Suture might be +indicated in some cases of transverse fracture, but this would only be +necessary if the fragments were widely separated. The punctured +fractures needed treatment as for simple wounds, combined with a short +period of rest and pressure for the condition of hæmarthrosis. It was +important not to prolong the period of rest beyond a week or ten days if +the effusion was slight, in view of possible ulterior interference with +range of movement in the knee-joint. + +_Fractures of the tibia._--Some remarks have already been made regarding +fractures of the head of the tibia, and the importance of the +overhanging prominent margins in the production of somewhat irregular +injuries (p. 170). Putting these peculiarities on one side, the +cancellous ends are subject to the type forms of injury; thus +perforations either of the head of the bone or the malleolus were common +injuries. The fractures of the shaft also deviated from the type in so +far as the broad flat surfaces in the upper two thirds of the bone +rendered it especially liable to the results of lateral impact, and to +the production of the extreme wedge-shaped types of fracture. Plate +XXII. illustrates the different result of a bullet striking the dense +and strong spine at a low rate of velocity, a notch only resulting. If, +on the other hand, the lateral surfaces were struck, a wedge with the +base corresponding to the posterior surface was the most common injury, +the spine in many cases remaining intact and maintaining the continuity +of the bone. Wedge-shaped fractures of this bone were apt to show +multiple secondary wave fissures concentric with the main line, and +consequently free comminution. I saw several examples, the loose +fragments being remarkably numerous. Plate XIX. is an example of an +oblique fracture produced by a bullet which has ploughed across the +bone, displacing large fragments anteriorly, but finely comminuting the +bone in its course, and leaving small fragments of the mantle on its +way. Plate XX. is an example of the rare condition of transverse +fracture. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXIII + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(41) SPURIOUS PERFORATION OF THE FIBULA + +Moderate range, 'about 1,000 yards.' + +The injury was caused by an 8 mm. bullet, which entered base foremost +and lodged in the calf. The fracture is really an incomplete stellate +form, two well-marked transverse fissures extending from the point +struck. The position of the bullet suggests its entry into the limb base +foremost, and as it is retained low velocity may be assumed.] + +This fracture was produced by a bullet travelling at a high rate of +velocity, which struck the posterior surface of the tibia, and caused a +grooving, accompanied by a horizontal fissure through the whole +thickness of the bone; later it struck the fibula more directly, and +produced an ordinary comminuted fracture two inches above the malleolus. +Perforations of the shaft were far more common than in the case of the +femur, and I saw them in every part of the length of the bone (plate +XXI.). Fig. 57 illustrates a form of peculiar interest as showing the +gradual transition of the tunnel to the groove, and also as bringing +fractures of the long bones into line with such fractures of the flat +bones of the skull as are depicted in fig. 68. + +[Illustration: FIG. 57.--(42) Perforation of lower third of Tibia, +showing lifting and fissuring of the compact roof of the tunnel. Compare +with fig. 68, p. 259, of a fracture of the cranial vault.] + +_Fractures of the fibula_ offered no special features of importance. Any +form might occur. The plate No. XXIII. is of interest as showing a +spurious form of perforation, and also the primary form of displacement +of the fragments in stellate fractures. It was produced by a reversed +ricochet, but undeformed, bullet, still seen in position in the +skiagram; the bullet only possessed sufficient force to perforate the +bone, and then appears to have turned on its transverse axis. The +following plate, No. XXIV., is inserted to show the depth at which the +bullet lay, and its distance from the surface of the tibia, which +appears in the first plate to be nil. It is also of interest as showing +the ease with which a false impression may be obtained from a single +picture, as, beyond a spot of transparency, no obvious injury to the +fibula, and certainly no displacement, is discernible. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXIV. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(41_a_) This skiagram is inserted to show the depth at which the bullet +lay from the surface. It is also interesting to note the insignificance +of the fracture of the fibula from this aspect. Without the second +skiagram the injury might have passed for a simple perforation or a +transverse fracture.] + +Fractures of the bones of the leg possessed an unenviable degree of +importance. First, on account of the very severe injuries to the soft +parts that often accompanied them, without an apparently correspondingly +serious damage to the bone. Secondly, on account of the frequency with +which the vessels were implicated in these injuries to the soft parts, +either by the bullet or bone fragments. Beyond this, fracture of either +articular end of the tibia was certainly more frequently followed by +troublesome joint complications than occurred in the case of any other +bone. + +In the matter of 'explosive' injuries, I think more were seen in the +calf of the leg than in any other part of the body, and this often +without solution of continuity of the bones, and sometimes without +evidence even of contact of the bullet with either tibia or fibula. Some +remarks on this subject have already been made in the chapter on wounds +in general, and some sources of fallacy exposed. I believe that in +practically all these so-called explosive injuries the wound was either +caused by a ricochet, or a bullet which deformed with great ease on bony +contact during its progress through the limb. A considerable number of +the wounds which were referred by the men to the use of expanding +bullets were probably the result of the use of Martini-Henry or large +leaden sporting bullets, and evidence of this was often forthcoming on +examination of the entry wounds. In other cases the irregularity of the +opening plainly pointed to ricochet of a small bullet as the explanation +of the character of the injury. The greater frequency of ricochet +injuries in the leg and foot when the men were standing is readily +understood. + +Concurrent injury to the vessels of the leg was common, but primary +hæmorrhage, as was the case generally, usually ceased spontaneously. The +importance of injury to the vessels was rather in view of secondary +hæmorrhage, which occurred with some frequency, and I think more +commonly from the anterior than the posterior tibial vessels, usually +occurring at the end of a week or ten days, and naturally most +frequently in cases which suppurated. + +_Prognosis and treatment in fractures of the leg._--In fractures of the +leg, except those of extreme severity, almost any form of splint +sufficed to maintain the bones in position, but for field purposes the +Dutch cane splint (fig. 58, p. 222) was certainly very convenient. For +later use in cases that needed frequent dressing, a wooden back splint, +with a foot-piece, or, if obtainable, a Neville's splint with a +suspension cradle, was the best. Where the wounds were small and +frequent dressing was not required, nothing was so good as plaster of +Paris, especially when transport was a necessity. + +[Illustration: FIG. 58.--Dutch Cane Field Emergency Splint for Leg] + +In cases with large wounds suppuration was very frequent, and in +connection with this secondary hæmorrhage, or in the case of fractures +near the articular ends, especially the upper, joint suppuration. The +treatment of these cases varied: in many an amputation was the best or +only treatment advisable; but I several times saw good results follow +ligation of the anterior tibial artery for secondary hæmorrhage, even +when suppuration existed, and occasional good results after incision +and drainage of joints if the infection was not of the most acute form. + +Primary amputation was rarely needed for any case of injury from a +bullet of small calibre, since it was only necessary either in the case +of injury to both main arteries, and this was rare, or in cases of very +extensive injury to the soft parts. I saw many of the latter make fair +results when treated conservatively, even though the condition seemed +almost hopeless at first sight. All the primary amputations that I saw +were either for shell or large bullet injuries. A word may be inserted +here as to the weight that ought to attach to nerve injuries in this +relation. From the experience gained elsewhere it is clear that we +should attach little importance to these unless the divided nerves are +actually in sight, as far as deciding on amputation is concerned. On the +other hand, there is little doubt that the presence of concurrent nerve +injury, be it only concussion or contusion, exerts an important ulterior +influence on the healing of the wound, whether the part be amputated or +not. Amputation flaps in such cases possess a very considerably lowered +degree of vitality. + +Secondary amputations were often needed for sepsis, and on the whole did +very well; both for the same cause and for hæmorrhage intermediate +amputations had occasionally to be performed; the results of these, as +elsewhere, were bad. + +_Fractures of the tarsus._--Wounds of these short bones were as a rule +of slight importance, given fairly direct impact on the part of the +bullet. They then consisted of either simple perforations or surface +grooving. A single bone might be implicated or several might be +tunnelled; in the latter case the implication of the joints very +considerably influenced the prognosis, since the addition of the joint +injury caused much more prolonged weakening of the foot. + +Wounds of the foot were common from the fact that when the men lay out +in the prone position, the foot was often the part least protected by +the cover chosen, and particularly the heel. In these circumstances the +os calcis was the bone most frequently implicated, and that by tracks +taking an oblique course downwards from the leg to the sole. Again the +foot was often struck by ricochet bullets, as a result of its position +when the erect attitude was assumed. The latter fact was of much +importance with regard to the nature of the injury sustained by the +bones, as under these circumstances the mode of impact was irregular, +and consequently comminution was often produced. + +The behaviour of the different bones of the tarsus varied somewhat. On +the whole the prognosis in cases of injury to the os calcis was the +best, since the injury was more often individual and did not implicate +any joint, and also because of the comparatively regular architecture of +the bone. In the smaller bones concurrent injury to a joint was more +frequent. In the astragalus the central hard core extending upwards from +the interosseous groove, as increasing resistance, I think accounted for +the fact that comminution was more marked in this bone than in any +other. The effect of wound of bones of the tarsus in producing a certain +degree of laxity in the mediotarsal joint resulting in a slightly flexed +position of the fore part of the foot and some projection of the head of +the astragalus did not seem to me easy of explanation, but it occurred +with some regularity. + +The injuries to the _metatarsus_ corresponded so nearly to those already +spoken of in the case of the metacarpus that they need no further +mention. They were less common, however, and I am under the impression +that fragmentation of the bullet was not such a marked feature, probably +on account of the lower degree of density of the bones, and their +greater fixity of position. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[18] Col. W. F. Stevenson. _Loc. cit._ p. 69. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +INJURIES TO THE JOINTS + + +Until recent times gunshot injuries of the joints formed a class +entailing the gravest anxiety to the surgeon, both in regard to the +selection of primary measures of treatment and in the conduct of the +after progress of the cases. The external wounds were severe, +comminution of the bones was great, and retention of the bullet within +the articulation was not uncommon. Operative surgery therefore found a +large field in the extraction of bullets, removal of bone fragments, +excision of the joints, or even amputation of the limbs. + +The introduction of bullets of small calibre has robbed these injuries +of much of the importance they possessed in earlier days and during the +present campaign direct clean wounds of the joints were little more to +be dreaded than uncomplicated wounds of the soft parts alone. No more +striking evidence of the aseptic nature of the wounds, and the harmless +character of the projectile as a possible infecting agent, than that +offered by the general course of these injuries in this campaign, is to +be found in the whole range of military surgery. + +The aseptic nature of the wounds, and the slight and localised character +of the bone lesions, have in fact justified the opinion previously +expressed by Von Coler, that these injuries in the future would be less +feared than fractures of the diaphyses of the bones. + +Not less important than the localised character of the bone lesion +itself is the fact that the accompanying wounds of the soft parts retain +the small or type forms. Thus I occasionally observed more troublesome +results from minor shell wounds in the neighbourhood of joints, but not +implicating the synovial cavity, than in actual perforating injuries +produced by bullets of small calibre. + +_Vibration synovitis._--Before proceeding to the consideration of wounds +of the joints, a short account is necessary of a condition of some +importance which is, I believe, more or less special to injuries from +bullets of small calibre travelling at high rates of velocity. This +condition, if not novel, at any rate excited little comment in the +descriptions of the older forms of injury, although this may have +depended on the more serious nature of the primary local lesions +accompanying wounds from the larger bullets, among which it formed a +comparatively unimportant element. + +The condition referred to was the occurrence of considerable synovial +effusion into the joints of limbs in which the articulation itself was +primarily untouched. These effusions sometimes occurred even when the +soft parts alone were perforated, especially when the wounds were +situated above or below the knee-joint. They were apparently the direct +result of vibratory concussion of the entire limb dependent on the blow +received from the bullet. + +The effusions were most strongly marked in cases of fractures of the +diaphyses, although this was more noticeable in some situations than +others. Thus with fractures of the shaft of the femur anywhere below the +junction of the upper and middle thirds of the bone, and in some cases +even higher, effusion into the knee-joint was very common, and sometimes +extreme. On the other hand, similar effusions into the hip-joint were +less marked, since I failed to determine their existence in the majority +of cases. I am inclined to ascribe this to the different anatomical +arrangement of the two joints, particularly to the fact that the head of +the femur is included in a bony cup, into the hollow of which it is +accurately fixed by the resilient cotyloid fibro-cartilage. The latter +by its firm grasp of the head allows of little play in the joint; hence +vibrations are conveyed directly to the acetabulum in continuous waves, +and rocking of the articular surfaces is prevented. Beyond this no doubt +the difficulty of detecting small effusions in this joint is an element +which must be taken into consideration. + +I do not think that wrenches of the knee-joint in the act of falling +can be suggested as an explanation of the frequency of effusions into +that articulation, since the fractures of the femur were not always +received while the erect position was maintained, and effusion was most +marked when the diaphysis was the part affected, the latter point +illustrating the greater resistance offered by compact bone. Again, when +fracture had taken place, the solution of continuity rendered the +directly injured point the most mobile, and tended to prevent lateral +strain from falling on the joints. + +Effusion into the knee or ankle, or sometimes both joints, was common in +fractures of the shaft of the tibia. + +In the articulations of the upper extremity the condition was also +common, but somewhat less marked than in the lower limb. Effusions into +the shoulder or elbow occurred. In the former these were less striking; +again, perhaps, as a result of the difficulty of detecting small +effusions in this situation. The elbow was to a certain extent protected +by the possession of a degree of fixity somewhat resembling that already +mentioned in the case of the hip-joint, although here depending on the +conformation of the bones alone. I think this explained the absence of +free effusion in many cases of fracture of the humeral shaft, but when +the latter affected the lower third effusion into the elbow was usually +abundant. + +The lighter weight and greater mobility of the upper extremity as a +whole, as decreasing the resistance to the bullet, were also probably an +element in the fact that these effusions were less severe than those in +the joints of the lower limb. + +The nature of the effusions was apparently simple, since they were +rapidly reabsorbed, and little thickening of the synovial membrane +remained to suggest either a marked degree of inflammation, or the +deposition of blood-clot on the inner aspect of the same. + +The only treatment indicated was a short period of rest, accompanied in +the early stages by pressure and slight fixation, followed later by +massage and movement if necessary. + +Before dismissing this subject, I should like to particularly emphasise +the fact, that in the cases described there was no reason to suspect the +extension of fissures from the point of fracture in the shafts into the +articular ends of the bones. This was as far as possible excluded by +clinical examination, and in the cases where wounds of the soft parts +only were present, the rapid return of the patients to active duty, with +absence of remaining joint trouble, negatived the possibility of such +fractures. + +I only saw one case in which a longitudinal fracture actually extended +for any considerable distance into a neighbouring joint. In this a +comminuted fracture occurred just above the centre of the shaft of the +humerus. At the time of examination and putting up of the fracture there +was considerable swelling of the whole arm, and nothing special was +noticed about the shoulder-joint. Three weeks later, however, when the +fracture was consolidating, difficulty in abduction of the shoulder was +noted, and the arm could not be placed closely in contact with the +trunk. There was no evident displacement of the head of the humerus +forwards. A skiagram, which I much regret I have not been able to +insert, showed that a longitudinal fissure extended from the seat of +fracture upwards in such a manner as to divide the upper fragment into +two parts, of which the outer bore the greater tuberosity, the inner the +articular surface of the head. The latter fragment had become somewhat +displaced downwards, and had united in such a manner that the head +rested on the lower part of the glenoid cavity. Abduction of the limb +therefore brought the greater tuberosity into contact with the acromion +process, and movement was checked. This case passed out of my +observation shortly afterwards, and I have no knowledge of the final +result as to movement. + +Fractures of the bony processes surrounding the elbow-joint, and of the +malleoli of the tibia and fibula, were not infrequent, but offered no +special features. + +One other form of injury indirectly affecting the joints is perhaps +worthy of mention, but I observed it only once, and that in the case of +the shoulder, the only joint where it is likely to be marked. I refer to +the displacement of the head of the humerus by the force of gravity, +when the circumflex nerve is injured. In the instance I refer to, a +fracture of the surgical neck of the humerus was accompanied by +complete motor paralysis of the deltoid and very rapid wasting of the +muscle. Circumflex sensation was impaired, but not absent at the time +the condition of the muscle was noted--a favourable prognostic sign of +much importance. At the end of five weeks, when the fracture of the bone +was consolidated, the head of the humerus had dropped vertically at +least an inch, but could be replaced with ease. Shortly afterwards an +improvement in the condition of the muscle commenced, and with this the +head of the humerus was gradually raised. This patient later recovered +his power in great part, but not completely. + +In a few cases bullets lodged in the neighbourhood of joints in such +positions as to limit movement by mechanical impact with the bones. Thus +I saw one case in which a bullet lay between the radius and ulna just +below the lesser sigmoid cavity; in another the bullet lay in front of +the ankle-joint, and limited the possibility of flexion; and in a case +related to me by Mr. Bowlby, a bullet was removed by him from the wall +of the acetabulum where it was tightly fixed in the substance of the +bone. In two other cases I saw bullets lying deeply on the anterior +surface of the hip capsule and so limiting flexion. In all such cases +the indication for removal of the bullet was sufficiently strongly +marked. + + +WOUNDS OF THE JOINTS + +These may be divided into several classes, varying much in comparative +severity, and in prognostic importance. + +1. The comparatively rare instances in which a wound implicated a joint +cavity, without accompanying lesion of any bone. + +2. Perforating wounds in which the bullet was retained within the +articular cavity. These were also rare. + +3. Wounds of the joints accompanied by grooving of the articular +extremities of the bones. + +4. Complete perforating tracks through the articular ends of the bones, +crossing the joint cavity in various directions. + +5. Comminuted fractures of the terminal parts of the diaphyses extending +into joints. + +Of these several classes, the first was of the least prognostic +importance. In the absence of bone injury the wounds usually healed +without any obvious ill effect beyond the transient effusion into the +joints of a mixture of blood and synovial fluid. When suppuration of the +wound in the soft parts occurred, however, the remarks made as to the +injuries classed under the third heading also apply here in a lesser +degree. + +With regard to the retention of the bullet, in the case of bullets of +small calibre this was a distinctly rare occurrence. I never happened to +see an instance of retention of either a Mauser or Lee-Metford bullet in +an articulation. It is only possible with bullets practically spent, or +travelling at a very low rate of velocity and making irregular impact. + +The influence of both volume and velocity of flight was well illustrated +by my own small experience of retained bullets. In one case a +Martini-Henry was found impacted between the femoral condyles, having +slipped in beneath the margin of the patella. It caused a semiflexed +position to be assumed by the joint, and was removed by Mr. Brown in No. +1 General Hospital at Wynberg. The second instance I saw in the Portland +Hospital at Bloemfontein in a patient of Mr. Bowlby's. The bullet was a +Guedes, a form which has been already described as possessing low +velocity and deficient power of penetration; beyond this, in the +particular instance irregular impact was evidenced by the presence of a +large irregular contused wound of entry over the tuberosity of the +tibia. + +The presence of the bullet in the knee-joint was later determined by the +X-rays, and Mr. Bowlby removed it successfully. Seven months later the +range of movement was nearly normal. + +I may add that I saw several instances of large leaden bullets lodging +in the popliteal space, and a comparatively insignificant number of +bullets of small calibre in the same situation. This was very striking, +in view of the immense relative frequency of use of the latter forms. +There is no doubt, moreover, that small bullets rarely lodge even in the +neighbourhood of joints, unless at the distal end of a long track. To +take the extreme example of large bullets, those employed as shrapnel, +in comparison with the frequency with which wounds were produced by +them, bullets lying at the bottom of short tracks in the neighbourhood +of joints were not uncommon. Thus I saw one lying over the hip-joint, +and another in close proximity to the shoulder capsule. + +Wounds of the third class, where the bones had been superficially +grooved, were in some respects the most serious. This was especially so +in the knee and ankle joints, and some cases will be quoted later under +the heading of the special joints to illustrate this point. Danger only +arose in the event of suppuration; and here the presence of the long +oblique superficial track in a neighbourhood liable to comparatively +free movement was the important element. Such tracks usually opened the +synovial sac more extensively than direct perforating wounds, and if +suppuration occurred in any portion of the track, the pus was very +liable to be sucked into the joint on any free movement. The presence of +fine splinters of the bone displaced in the production of the groove was +also a special character of wounds of this class. Another point worthy +of mention is that in these cases it was not always easy to be quite +certain whether the joint cavity had been implicated or not, since cases +often occurred in which, although the bones had been grooved, the joint +cavity escaped. The indication, however, was to consider any wound in +the immediate proximity of a joint as perforating until it was healed. +This course was the more easy to take, since a large proportion of such +wounds were accompanied by some degree of synovial effusion, even when +the neighbouring joint had escaped puncture. + +Wounds of the fourth class, although the most highly characteristic of +the form of accident, were in many instances the most favourable in +regard to their course. The tracks might course directly across the +joint in any direction, or they might course obliquely, traversing +either one or both the component bones. In the latter case the exit +might be in the diaphysis, and be accompanied by the separation of an +exit fragment such as is illustrated in fig. 52, p. 169. The +particularly favourable character of the direct transverse and +antero-posterior wounds depended on the slight amount of splintering of +the bones, the limited nature of the opening into the joint, and the +shortness of the tracks in the soft parts, which ensured that, even if +infection did occur, the resulting pus was near the surface, and +generally spread in that direction and escaped. + +Wounds of the fifth class were the most dangerous, but the danger was +entirely a secondary one, dependent on the occurrence of infection. +These injuries were liable to be accompanied by the presence of +extensive irregular wounds of the soft parts, in which suppuration was +frequent, and the suppuration of the joint frequently meant subsequent +amputation, if not a worse result. + +_Course and symptoms of wounds of the joints._--The immediate result of +any perforation of a joint was the development of intra-articular +effusion. This consisted of synovial fluid admixed with a varying +proportion of blood. The degree of synovitis was apt to vary with the +amount of force expended in the production of the injury; for this +reason both high velocity and irregular impact were of importance in +this relation. + +The constant feature, however, depended on the effusion of blood; this +was not rapid, or, as a rule, very abundant, but tended to increase +during the first twenty-four hours. It resulted in a swelling of the +joint, which possessed some peculiar features. At first elastic and +resilient, it slowly decreased in volume with the assumption of a soft +doughy character on palpation. In the case of the knee, where readily +palpated, it very much resembled a tubercular synovial membrane, except +for its extreme regularity of surface; still more closely the condition +noted in a hæmophilic knee of some duration. Absorption took place with +some rapidity, and except for slight thickening, the joints might appear +almost normal, in a period of from two to four weeks. With the +development of the effusion there was local rise in temperature of the +surface, and in a considerable number of the cases a general rise of +temperature. + +This latter was sometimes very marked, as in the case of all the other +traumatic blood effusions, but not quite so regular in occurrence. It +was important, as I have seen it give rise to the suspicion of +suppuration, when tapping resulted in nothing more than the evacuation +of turbid synovia mixed with blood. Pain was rarely a prominent symptom +in consequence of the generally moderate degree of distension. + +As a rule, these injuries were characterised by the small tendency to +the development of adhesions; but this in great part depended on the +care expended on their treatment. If kept too long quiet, either from +necessity when the effusion was followed by much thickening, or when the +external wound was large and so situated as to be harmfully influenced +by movement, or in the ordinary course of treatment, troublesome +stiffness, even amounting to firm anchylosis, sometimes followed. I saw +several such cases, some of the most confirmed being wounds of the +knee-joint complicated by injury to the popliteal vessels or nerves. The +latter complication I saw altogether six times, but only once with a +thoroughly bad knee, and in this case the injury had affected both the +vessels and the internal popliteal nerve. The joint in that case was +straightened out by continuous extension by Major Lougheed, when it came +under his charge some six weeks after the primary injury, but I hear has +again relapsed, and the popliteal paralysis is not much improved. + +The small tendency to formation of adhesions in uncomplicated cases +probably depended on the coagulation of a layer of blood over the whole +internal lining of the joint. This kept the synovial surfaces apart at +the lines of reflection of the membrane, and, given sufficiently active +treatment, mobility was restored before any firm union could take place. + +The primary escape of synovial fluid was rarely observed, as the wounds +of the soft parts were too small and valvular to permit of it. Synovia +in some abundance, mixed with pus, sometimes escaped in considerable +quantity when infection had opened up the tracks. + +Primary suppuration in any joint as a result of small and direct wounds +was very rare. I observed it only on one occasion. On the other hand, a +considerable number of cases in which secondary suppuration occurred +came under my notice. In some of these the suppuration was secondary to +comminuted fractures of the shaft of the tibia, in which the articular +extremity was implicated. These offered no special peculiarity. In +others infection of the joint was secondary to infection and suppuration +in the deep part of long oblique wound tracks, and these were of +sufficient interest to warrant the insertion of two illustrative cases. + + (43) In a man wounded at Paardeberg the bullet entered the leg + to the inner side of the crest of the tibia, about 3 inches + below the tubercle; thence it coursed upwards to emerge about 2 + inches above the cleft of the knee-joint on the outer side. + Regulation dressings were applied, and a week later the man + arrived at the Base, with little apparent mischief in the + knee-joint. He was placed in bed and warned against movement; + on the second day, however, he got up and walked to the + latrine. When bending his knee to sit down he was seized with + agonising pain in the joint, and had to call out for help; he + was then carried back to bed in a more or less collapsed + condition. The knee commenced to swell; there was rise of + temperature and great pain, together with extreme restlessness. + I was asked to see him two days later, and after a + consultation, Major Burton, R.A.M.C., freely incised the + knee-joint bi-laterally. One opening was closed, the second + plugged for drainage, as there was a large quantity of pus. No + improvement followed, and a week later Major Burton amputated + through the thigh. An attack of secondary hæmorrhage a few days + later, combined with the degree of septic infection, ended the + man's life. On examination of the joint, a groove forming + three-fourths of a tunnel was found in the external tuberosity + of the tibia, leading into the knee-joint beneath the external + semilunar cartilage. The bullet had then passed upwards over + the outer border of the cartilage, bruised the margin of the + external condyle of the femur in such a manner as to depress + the outer compact layer, and finally escaped from the joint + near the upper reflection of the synovial membrane. The + synovial membrane was granular in appearance and reddened, but + there was no suppuration outside the confines of the joint, + except in a cavity corresponding to 2 inches of the track + before it actually perforated the tibia. A localised abscess + had evidently formed here and been diffused into the joint by + the movement of flexion already described. + + (44) A man wounded during General Hamilton's advance on + Heilbron was struck on the outer aspect of the heel. An oval + opening of some size led down to a track in the os calcis; the + bullet was retained. The foot was dressed, and put up later in + a plaster-of-Paris splint. On the tenth day the splint was + removed to see to the wound, which looked satisfactory and was + re-dressed. + + A few hours later the man was seized with very severe pain in + the ankle, and a day later I was asked to see him by Mr. + Alexander. The man was anæsthetised, and I examined the wound + with care, and also removed the retained bullet from the inner + margin of the leg. The bullet was reversed, having no doubt + suffered ricochet, hence the large aperture of entry, but it + was in no way deformed. I could not certainly determine the + presence of any fluid in the ankle-joint, and as the pain was + apparently localised to the distribution of the + musculo-cutaneous nerve, I decided not to freely open the + joint. In this, however, I erred, and two days later, after + consultation, the joint was freely incised by Mr. Alexander. It + was then found that the bullet in its passage had just touched + the posterior aspect of the tibia and wounded the ankle-joint. + A localised collection of pus which had formed in the deep part + of the wound had been diffused into the joint by the movements + made when the splint was removed, in a similar manner to that + described in the last case. This joint also did badly, and an + amputation of the leg had to be performed by Mr. Alexander to + save the man's life. + +These two cases are particularly instructive as showing, first, how +quietly a small amount of deep suppuration may sometimes take place; +and, secondly, the importance of keeping the joints quiet on a splint +when there is any reason to suspect their implication by wounds of this +character. + +_The general treatment_ of the wounded joints was simple. The old +difficulties of deciding on partial as against full excision, or +amputation, were never met with by us. We had merely to do our first +dressings with care, fix the joint for a short period, and be careful to +commence passive movement as soon as the wounds were properly healed, to +obtain in the great majority of cases perfect results. Careful light +massage, if available, was used to promote absorption of blood. + +If suppuration occurred, the choice between incision and amputation had +to be considered. In the early stages this choice depended entirely on +the nature of the injury to the bones. If this were slight, incision was +the best plan to adopt. I saw several cases so treated which did well, +although convalescence was often prolonged, and only a small amount of +movement was regained. Amputation was sometimes indicated in cases of +severe bone-splintering, when the shafts were implicated, but was as a +rule only performed after an ineffectual trial to cut short general +infection of the septicæmic type by incision. + +I have dwelt at such length on the subject of suppuration on account of +its importance, but I should add that, on the whole, suppuration of the +joints was uncommon, except in the case of injuries far exceeding the +average in primary severity. + +_Special joints._--Such deviations from the general type of injury as +above described depended entirely on peculiarities of anatomical +arrangement, and peculiarities in the situation of the joint clefts in +the different parts of the body. A few words as to these are perhaps +necessary. + +_Shoulder-joint._--Wounds of this articulation were by no means common. +This depended, I think, on two points in the architecture of the joint: +first, a bullet to enter the front of the cavity and traverse the joint +needed to come with great exactitude from the immediate front; secondly, +wounds received from a purely lateral direction calculated to pierce the +head of the humerus and the glenoid cavity were naturally of very rare +occurrence. Wounds of the prominent tip of the shoulder received while +the men were in the prone position were not uncommon, but it was +remarkable how rarely the shoulder-joint was implicated in these. The +question of the narrow nature of the cleft exposed also comes up in this +position. As far as my experience went, injuries to the lower portion of +the capsule accompanying wounds of the axilla were those most often met +with. The ease and neatness with which pure perforations of the head of +the humerus can be produced was also an important element in the +frequent escape of this joint. No case of fracture of the glenoid cavity +happened to come under my notice. + +I saw few instances in which the joint needed incision, and cannot +recall or find in my notes any case in which serious trouble arose. + +_Elbow-joint._--Injuries to this joint came second in frequency in my +experience to those of the knee. They were, in fact, comparatively +common, especially in conjunction with fractures of the various bony +prominences surrounding the articulation. Fractures of the lower end of +the humerus were of worse prognostic significance than those of the +ulna, on account of the greater tendency to splintering of the bone. I +saw several cases of pure perforation of the olecranon without any signs +of implication of the elbow-joint. In a case which has been utilised for +the illustration of some of the types of aperture (fig. 20, p. 59), at +the end of a week there was no sign of any joint lesion, although the +bullet had obviously perforated the articulation. + +Several cases of suppuration which came under my notice did well. I saw +one of them a few days ago, six months after the injury, with perfect +movement. In another of which I took notes, the bullet entered over the +outer aspect of the head of the radius, to emerge just above the +internal condyle anteriorly. A considerable amount of comminution of the +olecranon resulted, and when the man came into hospital some ten days +later the joint was suppurating. The joint was opened up from behind, +and some fragments of bone removed by Mr. Hanwell. On the 26th day this +joint was doing well, and considerable flexion and extension were +possible without pain. There was a somewhat abundant discharge of bloody +synovia during the first few days after the operation. + +[Illustration: FIG. 59.--Illustrates the very neat and limited injury to +the Phalanges over the dorsal aspect of the first inter-phalangeal joint +of the Middle Finger, accompanying a gutter wound received by the +patient while holding a rifle.] + +I never saw any troublesome results from perforations of the _carpus_. +The joints of the _fingers_ also offered little special interest, +except in so far as they afforded astonishing examples of the extreme +neatness of the injuries which a small-calibre bullet can produce. Fig. +59 is a good example of such an injury. + +_Hip-joint._--I can only repeat with regard to this joint what I have +already said as to the injuries to the head of the femur. I had +practically no experience of small-calibre bullet injuries to the +femoral constituent, and beyond the single case of injury to the +acetabular margin mentioned on p. 193 I saw no obvious wounds of the +joint at all. + +_The knee_, as usual, proved itself _par excellence_ the joint most +commonly injured, no doubt as a result of its size, the extent of its +capsule anteriorly, and its exposed position. In spite, however, of the +frequency with which it suffered injury, and the opportunities it +afforded for observation of the progress of the effusions towards +absorption, the injuries to the joint gave less anxiety and attained a +more favourable prognostic character than is the case in civil practice. +This depended on the very favourable course observed in the frequent +pure perforations following a direct line. These occurred in every +direction, the accompanying hæmarthrosis usually disappearing completely +in an average period of little over a month. The extremes can be fairly +placed at a fortnight and six weeks. Limitation of movement was slight +or non-existent in many cases; in others it was of a very moderate +character, and I only remember to have seen one case in which a really +serious anchylosis developed. In this the man was struck from a distance +of 300 yards, and a considerable amount of bone dust from the femur was +found in the lips of the exit aperture. The wounds healed _per primam_, +but when I saw the man two months later anchylosis in the straight +position was apparently complete. + +The comparatively frequent association of popliteal aneurisms with +wounds of the knee-joint has already been spoken of in relation to +anchylosis. Wounds of the popliteal space from larger bullets sometimes +caused more troublesome after-stiffness than wounds of the articulation +itself. Again I remember a small pom-pom wound at the inner margin of +the ligamentum patellæ without obvious wound of the joint, which was +accompanied by synovitis from contusion, and was followed by very +considerable limitation of movement. This had only been partially +improved when the patient returned home, in spite of prolonged massage +and passive movement. + +The general remarks on the joints cover all that need be said as to +suppuration of the knee-joint. + +_The ankle-joint_ maintained the undesirable character which it has +always held as a subject for gunshot injuries. This is entirely a +question of sepsis, and in great measure depends on the fact that the +foot, as enclosed in a boot, is invested with skin particularly +difficult to thoroughly cleanse; while the socks are an additional +source of infection to the wounds before the patients come under proper +treatment. + +Of seven cases of suppurating ankle-joint, of which I have notes, only +two retained the foot, and one of these after a very dangerous illness. +This case was one of special interest as exemplifying the results +dependent on variations in velocity on the part of the bullet. The +patient was struck at a distance of twenty yards. The bullet entered the +front of the right ankle-joint and emerged through the internal +malleolus, just behind its centre, causing no comminution of the latter. +It then entered the left foot by a type wound one inch behind and below +the tip of the internal malleolus, traversed and comminuted the +astragalus, and emerged one inch below the tip of the external +malleolus. The first joint healed _per primam_. The second produced by +the bullet when passing at a lower rate of velocity was accompanied by +considerable comminution of the bone. It suppurated, and gave rise to +great anxiety both for the fate of the foot and the life of the patient. +It is probable that the more abundant hæmorrhage which took place from +the second wound was in part responsible for the occurrence of +infection. + +The second of the two cases is of some interest in relation to the +doctrine of chances as to the position in which a wound may be received. +The man was wounded in one of the earlier engagements, a bullet passing +transversely through his leg immediately behind the bones and about half +an inch above the level of the ankle-joint. He recovered, and rejoined +his regiment, only to receive at Paardeberg a second wound, about an +inch lower, which traversed the ankle-joint. On his return to Wynberg he +happened to be sent to the same pavilion, and occupied the same bed he +had left on returning to the front. + +The subject of the result of wounds of the joints of the _foot_ has +received sufficient consideration under the heading of wounds of the +tarsus. + +The repetition of the fact that, among the whole series of cases on +which this chapter is founded, not a single instance of primary or +secondary excision of a joint, either partial or complete, is recorded, +forms an apt conclusion to my remarks on this subject. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +INJURIES TO THE HEAD AND NECK + + +Injuries to the head formed one of the most fruitful sources of death, +both upon the battlefield and in the Field hospitals. It has been +suggested that the mere fact of wounds of the head being readily visible +ensured all such being at once distinguished and correctly reported, +while wounds hidden by the clothing often escaped detection. When the +external insignificance of many of the fatal wounds of the trunk is +taken into consideration this is possible; but, on the other hand, it +must be borne in mind that the head is in any attitude the most +advanced, and often the most exposed, part of the body, and even when +the soldier had taken 'cover,' it was frequently raised for purposes of +observation. For the latter reasons I believe injury to the head fully +deserved the comparative importance as a fatal accident with which it +was credited. + +A number of somewhat sensational immediate recoveries from serious +wounds of the head have been placed upon record. Observation, however, +shows that these, with but few exceptions, belonged either to certain +groups of cases the relatively favourable prognosis in which is familiar +to us in civil practice, or that the wounds were received from a very +long range of fire, and hence the injuries were strictly localised in +character. + + +ANATOMICAL LESIONS + +_Wounds of the scalp._--Nothing very special is to be recorded with +regard to these; they either formed the terminals of perforating wounds, +or were the result of superficial glancing shots. The glancing wounds +were of the nature of furrows, varying in depth from mere grazes to +wounds laying bare the bone. Their peculiarity was centred in the fact +that a definite loss of substance accompanied them, the skin being +actually carried away by the bullet; hence gaping was the rule. Every +gradation in depth was met with, but the only situations in which wounds +of considerable length could occur were the frontal region in tranverse +shots, or, when the bullet passed sagitally, the sides of the head, or +the flat area of the vertex. + +The danger of overlooking injuries to the bone was of special importance +in the short subcutaneous tracks occasionally met with at the points at +which the surface of the skull makes sharp bends. In all such wounds it +was a safe rule to assume a fracture of the skull until this was +excluded by direct examination. In some of the gutter wounds and +subcutaneous tracks crossing the forehead and sides of the head, signs +of intracranial disturbance were occasionally observed in the absence of +external fracture, such as transient muscular weakness, unsteadiness in +movements, giddiness, diplopia, or loss of memory and intellectual +clearness. In connection with such symptoms the classical injury of +splintering of the internal table of the skull, the external remaining +intact, had to be borne in mind, but I observed no proven instance of +this accident. I am of opinion, moreover, that its occurrence with small +bullets travelling at a high degree of velocity must be very rare, since +little deflection is probable unless the contact has been sufficiently +decided to fracture the external table; while in the cases of spent +bullets the injury is unlikely, as requiring a considerable degree of +force. + +_Injuries to the cranial bones, without evidence of gross lesion to the +brain._--It may be premised that these were of the rarest occurrence, +and they may be most readily described by shortly recounting the +conditions observed in a few cases I noted at the time. The injuries +resulted from blows with spent bullets, from bullets barely striking the +skull directly, or those striking over the region of the frontal +sinuses. Wounds of the mastoid process will not be considered in this +connection as being of a special nature (see p. 299). + +I saw only one case of escape of the internal, with depressed fracture +of the external, table of the skull. + + (45) In marching on Heilbron a man in the advance guard was + struck by a bullet at right angles just within the margin of + the hairy scalp. The regiment was at the time to all intents + and purposes outside the range of rifle fire, and the patient + was the only individual struck among its number. When brought + into the Highland Brigade Field Hospital, a single typical + entry wound was discovered; examination with the probe gave + evidence of a slight depression in the external table of the + frontal bone just above the temporal ridge. Although no + perforation was detectible by the probe, and this was + positively excluded on the raising of a flap (Major Murray, + R.A.M.C.), it was considered advisable to remove a 1/4-inch + trephine crown, the pin of the instrument being applied to the + margin of the depression. No depression or splintering of the + internal table was discovered, nor any injury to the dura, nor + blood upon the surface of that membrane. The man made an + uninterrupted recovery. + + (46) A case of frontal injury was shown to me at Wynberg, in + which a distinct furrow could be traced across the upper part + of the frontal sinuses. There had been no symptoms beyond + temporary diplopia, and the wound was healed; no surgical + interference had been deemed necessary. + + (47) In a man wounded at Poplar Grove, a single typical wound + of entry was found 3/4 of an inch above the right eyebrow and + the same distance from the median line. No primary symptoms + were observed, but on the evening of the second day the + temperature rose above 100° F., and the man seemed somewhat + heavy and dull. The patient was examined by Major Fiaschi and + Mr. Watson Cheyne, and it was decided to explore the wound. Mr. + Cheyne removed fragments both of external and internal tables, + one of the latter having made a punctiform opening, not + admitting the finest probe, in the dura-mater. The bullet was + traced into the nasal fossæ, where it was subsequently + localised with the aid of the Roentgen rays when the patient + came under my observation at Wynberg some days later (fig. 60). + +_Gunshot fracture of the skull with concurrent brain injury._--This was +the commonest form of head injury, and possessed two main peculiarities; +firstly, the large amount of brain destruction compared with the extent +of the bone lesion; secondly, the fact that any region of the skull was +equally open to damage. In consequence of the second peculiarity, the +position and direction of secondary fissures are not so dependent on +anatomical structure as in the corresponding injuries of civil practice. +Thus, fractures of the base, for instance, were less constant in their +course and position. The cases as a whole are best divided into four +classes. + +[Illustration: FIG. 60.--Mauser Bullet in Nasal Fossa. (Skiagram by H. +Catling.) Case No. 47] + +1. Extensive sagittal tracks passing _deeply_ through the brain, and +vertical wounds passing from base to vertex or _vice versa_, in the +posterior two thirds of the skull. These will be referred to as general +injuries. + +2. Vertical or coronal wounds in the frontal region. + +3. Glancing or obliquely perforating wounds of varying depth in any part +of the head. + +4. Fractures of the base. + +Of these classes the first was nearly uniformly fatal; the second +relatively favourable, and with low degrees of velocity often +accompanied by surprisingly slight immediate effects; while the third +had perhaps the best prognosis of all, but this varied as to the defects +that might be left, and with the region of the head affected. + +1. _General injuries._--Fractures of this class may be treated of almost +apart. For their production the retention of a considerable degree of +velocity on the part of the bullet was always necessary, and the results +were consequently both extensive and severe. + +The aperture of entry was comparatively small, since to take so direct +and lengthy a course through the skull the impact of the bullet needed +to be at nearly an exact right angle to the surface of the bone. Any +disposition to assume the oval form, therefore, depended mainly upon the +degree of slope of the actual area of the skull implicated. In size the +aperture of entry did not greatly exceed the calibre of the bullet; in +outline it was seldom exactly circular, but rather roughly four-sided, +with rounded angles, slightly oval, or pear-shaped. The margin of the +opening consisted of outer table alone, the inner being always +considerably comminuted. Fragments of the latter, together with the +majority of those corresponding to the loss of substance of the outer +table, were driven through the dura mater and embedded in the brain. +These bony fragments were more or less widely distributed over an area +of a square inch or more, and not confined to a narrow track. + +[Illustration: FIG. 61.--Diagram of Aperture of Entry in Occipital Bone, +showing radiating fissures exact length. The exit in the frontal region +was of typical explosive character. Range '100 yards'.] + +The amount of fissuring at the aperture of entry was often not so +extensive as I had been led to expect. Fig. 61 is a diagram illustrating +a fairly typical instance; in some cases no fissuring existed. As a rule +the nearer to the base, the greater was the amount of fissuring +observed. The fissures were sometimes very extensive in this position, +probably as a result of the lesser degree of elasticity in this region +of the skull. Again, when the aperture of entry was near the parts of +the vertex where sudden bends take place, considerable fissuring of the +same nature as that seen in the superficial tracks (fig. 68) was +produced in the flat portion of the skull above the point of entrance. + +Radial fissuring around the aperture of entry in the skull scarcely +corresponds in degree with that seen when the shafts of the long bones +are struck, and is far less marked and regular than when one of these +small bullets strikes a thick sheet of glass set in a frame. I saw +several apertures in the thick glass of the windows of the waterworks +building at Bloemfontein produced by Mauser bullets. They differed +little from the opening seen in an ordinary plate-glass window resulting +from a blow from a stone, except perhaps in the regularity and +multiplicity of the radial fissures. As in the skull, the opening was a +little larger than the calibre of the bullet, and the loss of substance +on the inner aspect considerably exceeded that on the outer. + +The degree of fissuring is probably affected by the resistance offered +by the particular skull, or the special region struck, but as a rule the +elasticity and capacity for alteration in shape possessed by the bony +capsule, is opposed to the production of the extreme radial starring +observed in the long bones or a fixed sheet of glass. Corroborative +evidence of the influence of elasticity in the prevention of starring is +seen in the limited nature of the comminution of the ribs in cases of +perforating wounds of the thorax. + +In the most severe cases we can only speak of the 'aperture' of exit in +a limited sense in so far as the opening in the scalp is concerned; this +was often comparatively small, not exceeding 3/4 of an inch in diameter. +Beneath this limited opening in the soft parts, the bone of the skull +was smashed in a most extensive manner. The portion exactly +corresponding to the point of exit of the bullet was carried altogether +away, but around this point a number of large irregularly shaped +fragments of bone, from 3/4 to 1 inch in diameter, were found loose, and +often so displaced as to expose a considerable area of the dura-mater. +Beyond the area of these loose fragments, fissures extended into the +base and vertex, in the latter case often being limited in their extent +by the nearest suture. + +Over extensive fractures of this nature general oedema and +infiltration of the scalp, due to extravasation of blood, were present. +When the exit was situated in the frontal region ecchymosis often +extended to the eyelids and down the face, while in the occipital region +similar ecchymosis was often seen at the back of the neck. + +The opening in the dura mater at the aperture of entry was either +slitlike, or more often irregular from laceration by the fragments of +bone driven in by the bullet. At the point of exit a similar limited +opening corresponded with the spot at which the bullet had passed, while +separate rents of larger size were often seen at some little distance. +The latter were the result of laceration of the outer surface of the +membrane by the margins of the large loose fragments of bone above +described. + +Injury to the brain more than corresponded in extent to the fractures of +the bone. Pulping of its tissue existed over a wide area both at the +points of entrance and of exit. In the former position the amount of +damage was the less, the gross changes roughly corresponding with the +tissue directly implicated by the bullet itself, and the fragments of +bone carried forward by it. The degree of splintering of the skull +therefore in great part determined the severity of the lesion. At the +exit aperture much more widespread destruction existed, while masses of +brain tissue, small shreds of the membranes, fragments of bone, and +_débris_ from the scalp were found occasionally bound together by +coagulated blood and protruding from an exit opening of some size. The +largest masses of such _débris_ were most often seen in instances in +which the bullet had entered by the base to escape at the vertex of the +skull. + +The brain in the line of injury suffered comparatively slightly, but +small parenchymatous hæmorrhages into its tissue indicated in lesser +degree the same type of injury undergone by the mass of brain pulp and +small blood-clots found at the external limits of the wound. Beyond this +extensive hæmorrhages at the base of the skull were common. + +With regard to the extensive character of the brain destruction in the +region of the aperture of exit, it must be borne in mind that this +lesion corresponds in position with one which would exist even if the +injury were of a non-penetrating degree. A large proportion of the +contusion and destruction is therefore explained by violent impact of +the projected brain with the skull prior to the passage of the bullet, +and not to the direct action of the bullet on the tissues. + +These cases of 'general injury' afford a marked example of the lesions +to which the term 'explosive' has been applied, and as such have an +important bearing on the theories held as to the mode of production of +explosive effect. The increased area of tissue damage at the aperture of +exit favours the theory of direct transmission of a part of the force +with which the bullet is endowed, to the molecules of tissue bounding +the track made by the projectile. Thus the area of destruction +corresponds with the cone-like figure which one would expect to be built +up by the vibrations spreading from the primary point of impact. The +exit region of the skull is subjected not alone to the force of the +travelling bullet, but also to that exerted over a much wider area by +the tissue to which secondary vibrations have been communicated. The +brain itself is, in fact, dashed with such violence against the bone as +to cause a great part of the injury. + +No doubt the brain in its reaction to the bullet forms as near an +approach to a fluid as any solid tissue in the human body, and +experimental observation has shown how greatly its presence or absence +in the skull affects the degree of comminution on the exit side; hence +the fondness for the so-called hydraulic theory that has been always +exhibited in the case of these injuries. The localisation of the injury +in its highest degree to the neighbourhood of the exit aperture, +however, shows that in any case the main wave takes a definite direction +in a course corresponding to that of the bullet. + +The real importance of the presence of the brain within the skull in +increasing the amount of damage at the exit end of the track, is as a +medium for the ready transmission of forcible vibrations. That the +latter are to some extent conveyed as by a fluid is evidenced by the +occasional presence of brain matter and fragments of bone in the +aperture of entry, which suggests recoil or splash such as would be +expected from a fluid wave. + +Experience of the character of the lesions observed after severe +concussion by the ordinarily somewhat coarser forms of violence common +to civil life, fully explains the severity of the damage to the brain +tissue met with in injuries due to bullets of small calibre. Viewing the +elaborate arrangements which exist for the preservation of the central +nervous system from the moderate vibration incidental to ordinary +existence, it is easy to appreciate the harmfulness of such exquisite +vibratory force as that transmitted by a bullet of small calibre +travelling at a high rate of velocity. + +_Effect of ricochet in the production of severe forms of injury._--In +connection with the lesions above described mention must be made of +cases in which the aperture of entry reaches a large size, or a portion +of the skull is actually blown away. + +Examples of the former class were not uncommon; I will briefly relate +one. + + (48) A Highlander while lying in the prone position at + Rooipoort, was struck by a bullet probably at a distance of + about 1,000 yards. A large entry wound in the scalp was + produced, while the defect in the skull was coarsely comminuted + and was capable of admitting three fingers into a mass of + pulped brain. Both brain matter and fragments of bone were + found in the external wound, which was situated just anterior + to the right parietal eminence. The bullet passed onwards + through the base of the skull, crossing the external auditory + meatus, fracturing the zygoma and probably the condyle of the + mandible, and eventually lodged beneath the masseter muscle. + Blood and brain matter escaped from the external auditory + meatus. + + The patient was brought off the field in a semi-conscious + condition, the pupils moderately contracted but equal, the + pulse 66, very small and irregular in beat, the respiration + quiet and easy, and with paralysis of the left side of the + body. The fæces had been passed involuntarily. + + The wound was cleansed and bone fragments removed. The patient + had to travel in a wagon for the next three days until the + column halted. The progress of the case was unsatisfactory, as + the wound became infected, and the man eventually died on the + 14th day of general septicæmia, but with little evidence of + local extension of septic inflammation. + + In this instance the head was no doubt struck by a bullet which + had previously made ricochet contact with the ground. I saw + several such cases. + +Closely connected with such injuries are those in which large portions +of the skull and scalp were actually blown away. I never witnessed one +of these myself, but I recall two instances described to me by officers +who lay near the wounded men on the field. In one the frontal region was +carried away so extensively that, to repeat the familiar description +given by the officer, 'he could see down into the man's stomach through +his head.' In a second case the greater part of the occipital region was +blown away in a similar manner, and this was of especial interest as the +wounded man was seen to sit up on the buttocks and turn rapidly round +three or four times before falling apparently dead. The observation +offers interesting evidence of the result of an extensive gross lesion +of the cerebellum. + +In the absence of exact information, it may well be that such injuries +as the two latter were produced by some special form of bullet, but as +both were produced while the patients were lying on the ground, and +therefore especially liable to blows from ricochet bullets, I am +inclined to attribute both to this cause. + +In considering injuries of the above nature, one cannot help speculating +on the possible influence of a head-over-heels ricochet turn on the part +of the bullet while traversing the long sagittal axis of the skull. It +is not uncommon for apical target ricochets to present evidence of +damage to the apex and base of the mantle alone. This must depend on a +rapid turn on impact, which might well be imitated in the case of the +skull, and would then go far to explain the production of some of the +most severe forms of explosive exit wounds met with. See cases 48, 54, +68. + +Short of ricochet, the influence of simple wobbling must also be +considered in shots from a long range. The entry wound may be large as a +result of this condition, but as the velocity possessed by the bullet is +low, the injuries would probably not be of a very severe nature. + +In connection with the subject of wobbling, reference should be made to +the form suggested by Nimier and Laval, in which the wobble, as the +result of resistance to the apex of the revolving bullet, assumes the +form of movement seen when the spin of a top is failing. This would +explain a peculiarity in some wounds of entry over the skull first +pointed out to me by Mr. J. J. Day. When such wounds were explored, as +well as the presence of brain in the entry aperture, a number of +fragments of the external table of the skull were found everted and +fixed in the tissues of the scalp. As already suggested, this may be +mere evidence of splash, but it may be equally well explained by a +process of wobble around the axis of revolution of the bullet. This +might, no doubt, also be invoked to explain the displacement of some of +the fragments in fractures of the long bones, where considerable +resistance to the passage of the bullet is offered. + +II. _Vertical or coronal wounds in the frontal region._--These injuries +were common, and offered some of the most interesting illustrations of +the variations in symptoms and effects following apparently exactly +identical lesions, judging from the condition of the external soft parts +alone; since the latter sometimes gave little indication of the force +(dependent on the rate of velocity) which had been applied. + +With the lower degrees of velocity simple punctured fractures of the +skull resulted, without extensive lesion of the frontal lobes as +evidenced by immediate symptoms. The nature of the fractures differed in +no way from the punctured fractures we are familiar with in civil +practice. The openings of entry in the bone were irregularly rounded, +corresponding in size to the particular calibre of the bullet concerned. +The margin consisted of outer table alone, while the inner table was +either considerably comminuted, or a large piece was depressed, wounding +the dura-mater and projecting into the brain substance (see fig. 63). +The aperture of exit presented exactly the opposite characters, the +splintering comminution or separation of a large fragment affecting the +outer table, while the inner presented a simple perforation. The latter +condition is represented in figs. 71 and 72, and I will here give short +notes of four illustrative cases, as being the shortest and most +satisfactory method of conveying a correct idea of the nature of such +injuries. + +[Illustration: FIG. 62--Aperture of Entry in Frontal Bone. Case No. 50. +1/2] + + (49) _Vertical perforation of frontal bone._--Wounded at + Belmont, while in the prone position. Aperture of _entry_ + (Mauser), at the anterior margin of the hairy scalp on the left + side; course, through the anterior part of the left frontal + lobe, roof of the left orbit, cutting the optic nerve and + injuring the back of the eyeball, floor of the orbit, the + antrum, the hard palate, and tongue. _Exit_, in mid line of the + submaxillary region. No cerebral symptoms were noted, and on + the fifth day the man was sent to the Base hospital without + operation; the pulse was then 70 and the temperature normal. + The movements of the eyeball were perfect, but blindness was + absolute. At the Base hospital the eye suppurated and was + removed. The patient was then sent home apparently well. He has + since been discharged from the service, and is now employed as + a painter in Portsmouth Dockyard. + + (50) _Vertical perforation of frontal bone._--Wounded at + Paardeberg while in the prone position. Range, 600-700 yards. + Aperture of _entry_ (Mauser), at the fore margin of the hairy + scalp above the centre of the right eyebrow; course, through + the anterior third of the right frontal lobe, roof of orbit, + front of eyeball, margin of floor of orbit making a distinct + palpable notch, and cheek; _exit_ through the red margin of the + upper lip, 1/2 an inch from the right angle of mouth. The + bullet slightly grooved the lower lip. + + The patient rose almost immediately after being struck, and + walked about a mile, although feeling dizzy and tired. The + wounds, which both bled considerably, were then dressed. After + three days' stay in a Field hospital, the patient was sent in a + bullock wagon three days and nights' journey to Modder River + and thence to the Base. + + There was anæsthesia over the area supplied by the outer branch + of the supra-orbital nerve, extending from the supra-orbital + notch backwards into the parietal region, but none over the + area supplied by the second division of the fifth nerve. + + On the tenth day there were no signs of cerebral disturbance + except a pulse of 48. The eyeball was suppurating, and the + temperature rose to 99° at night. The lids were still swollen + and closed. + + A few days later the eyeball was removed and at the same time a + flap was raised and the fracture explored (Major Burton, + R.A.M.C.). An opening somewhat angular, 1/3 of an inch in + diameter, was found with a thin margin in the outer table of + the skull (fig. 62); when this was enlarged with a Hoffman's + forceps, an opening in the dura was discovered, and + cerebro-spinal fluid escaped. A piece of the inner table of the + skull (fig. 63), 3/4 by 1/3 an inch in size, was discovered + projecting downwards vertically into the brain. This latter was + removed and the wound closed. Healing by primary union + followed, and no further symptoms were observed. + + [Illustration: FIG. 63.--Fragment of Inner Table depending + vertically from lower margin of puncture shown in fig. 62. The + centre was perforated. Exact size] + + (51) _Transverse frontal wound._--Wounded at Paardeberg. The + man was sitting down at the time he was struck, in the belief + that he was out of the range of fire. The _entry_ and _exit_ + wounds were almost symmetrical, placed on the two sides of the + forehead at the margin of the hairy scalp, 2-1/4 inches above + the level of the external angular processes of the frontal + bone. The patient lost consciousness for about half an hour, + then rose and walked half a mile to the Field hospital. The + wounds were dressed, and after a stay of three days in + hospital, the man was sent the three days' journey to Modder + River; during the journey he got in and out of the wagon when + he wished. After two days' stay at Modder, a journey was again + made by rail to De Aar (122-1/2 miles). The wounds were healed. + The man stayed at De Aar nearly a month, and then, rejoining + his regiment, made a two days' march of some 22 miles on hot + days. He had to fall out twice on the way by reason of + headache, feeling dizzy, and 'things looking black.' He did not + own to any loss of memory or intellectual trouble, but was + invalided to England. This patient returned to South Africa + later, and is now on active service. + + (52) _Transverse frontal wound._--Within a few days an almost + identical symmetrical wound in the frontal region occurred in + the same district, from a near range. The patient became + immediately unconscious, and remained so until his death some + four days later, his symptoms being in no way alleviated by + operation and the removal of a quantity of bone fragments and + cerebral _débris_. At the _post-mortem_ examination, extensive + destruction of both hemispheres of the brain was revealed, and + large fissures extended into the base of the skull. + +III. _Glancing or oblique perforating wounds of varying depth in any +portion of the cranium._--These injuries were the most common, the most +highly characteristic of small-calibre bullet wounds, the most +interesting from the point of view of diagnosis, prognosis, and +treatment, and beyond this they formed the variety most unlike any that +we meet with in civil practice. + +They were met with in every region of the cranium, and in every degree +of depth and severity. The lesser are best designated as gutter +fractures, the deeper are perforating and gradually approximate +themselves to the type of injury described as class 1. + +When the bullet struck a prominent or angular spot on the skull a +considerable oval-shaped fragment was occasionally carried away, leaving +an exposed surface of the diploë (case 60, p. 274). Under these +circumstances the apparent lesion on raising a flap was slight, but +exploration often showed extensive intra-cranial mischief. Thus in the +case referred to both dura and brain were wounded, and continuing +hæmorrhage led to the development of progressive paralysis, relieved +only by operation. + +From the more deeply passing bullets a more or less oval opening +resulted, in which both tables were freely comminuted and displaced. +These cases differed from the typical gutter fracture only in length and +outline, and the nature of the accompanying intra-cranial lesion was +identical, while in the latter particular they differed much from +fractures in which the impact of the bullet was direct, in spite of a +near resemblance in the appearances in the osseous defect. + +I saw one instance in which a circular fissure about 1-1/2 inch from +the actual opening of entry surrounded the latter, the area of bone +within the circle being somewhat depressed, though radial fissures were +absent. + +In several of these cases fragments of lead were either found on the +fractured surface of the bone or within the cranial cavity, showing that +the bullets had undergone fissuring of the mantle, or had actually +broken up on impact. + +_Gutter fractures._--The nature of the injury to the bones in these is +best illustrated by a series of diagrams of sections such as are shown +below. + +[Illustration: FIG. 64.--Gutter Fracture of first degree. The drawing +does not show well the small fragments of bone usually carried from the +margins of the depression by the bullet.] + +In the most superficial injuries the outer table was grooved and +depressed, usually with loss of substance from small fragments directly +shot away: these latter had either been driven through the wound in the +soft parts, or remained embedded on the deep aspect of the enveloping +scalp (fig. 64). In the less common variety the scalp was slit to a +length corresponding with the injury to the bone, but more often oval +openings in the skin existed at either end of the track. The inner table +was practically never intact, but the amount of comminution naturally +varied with the depth to which the outer table was implicated (fig. 65 +_A_, and _B_). + +The following is an illustrative example of this degree, and also +emphasises the consequences which may follow primary non-interference. + +[Illustration: FIG. 65.--Diagrammatic transverse sections of varying +condition of bones in Gutter Fractures of the first degree. _A._ With no +loss of substance. _B._ With comminution.] + + (53) _Superficial gutter fracture in parietal region. + Convulsive twitchings. Secondary paralysis._--Wounded at Modder + River. Range, 400 yards. A scalp wound 3 inches in length ran + vertically downwards, commencing 1 inch from the median line, + and situated immediately over the upper third of the right + fissure of Rolando. The patient was unconscious for several + hours after the injury, and later suffered with severe + headache, and twitchings in the left shoulder and arm. + + The wound healed, but a well-marked groove was palpable in the + bone beneath, and the twitchings persisted. The latter came on + about every twenty minutes, and loss of power in the left upper + extremity, and to a less degree in the lower, developed. The + memory was defective, and the patient suffered at times with + headache. The pupils were equal but sluggish in action. No + changes were discovered in the fundus beyond a well-developed + myopic crescent at the lower and outer part of the left disc + (Mr. Hanwell). + + The twitchings became more frequent and latterly were + accompanied by somewhat severe muscular contractions in the + upper extremity, while the loss of power in the lower extremity + became more marked. Headache was also more troublesome. + + The patient throughout refused any operation, saying he would + rather go home first, and at the end of a month he left for + England. + +In the deeper injuries more and more of the outer table was cut away, +and the inner became gradually more depressed, fractured, or comminuted +(fig 66). + +[Illustration: FIG. 66.--Gutter Fracture of the second degree. +Perforating the skull in the centre of its course. External table alone +carried away at either end.] + +Bevelling at the expense of the outer table at both entry and exit ends +of the course existed, but in either case a portion of the inner table +was also detached and depressed. Sometimes the depressed portion of the +inner table was mainly composed of one elongated fragment; this was +either when the bullet had not implicated a great thickness of the outer +table, or had passed with great obliquity through especially dense bone +(see fig. 70). When the bullet had passed more deeply the inner table +was comminuted into numberless fragments. I have frequently seen 50 or +60 removed. Where such tracks crossed convex surfaces of the skull, the +two conditions were often combined; thus at one portion of the track, +usually the centre, the comminution was extreme, while at either end a +considerable elongated fragment of inner table was often found, the +latter perhaps more commonly at the distal or exit extremity (fig. 67). + +[Illustration: FIG. 67.--Diagrammatic transverse sections of complete +Gutter Fracture. _A._ External table destroyed, large fragment of +internal table depressed. (Low velocity or dense bone.) _B._ Comminution +and pulverisation of both tables centre of track. _C._ Depression of +inner table (low velocity)] + +The nature of the injury to the bone when the flight of the bullet +actually involved the whole thickness of the calvarium was comparable to +that seen in the case of the long bones when struck by a bullet +travelling at a moderate rate (see plate XIX. of the tibia, or what is +illustrated in the case of the pelvis in fig. 55). In point of fact, a +clean longitudinal track appeared to have been cut out. The length of +these tracks naturally depended upon the region of the skull struck. +When a point corresponding to a sharp convexity, or a sudden bend in +the surface, was implicated, an oval opening of varying length in its +long axis was the result; when a flat area, as exists in the frontal or +lateral portions of the skull, was the seat of injury, a long track was +cut. + +_Superficial perforating fractures._--These formed the next degree; the +chief peculiarity in them was the lifting of nearly the whole thickness +of the skull at the distal margin of the entry, and the proximal edge of +the exit, openings; the flatter the area of skull under which the bullet +travelled the more extensive was the comminution. In some cases nearly +the whole length of the bone superficial to the track would be raised; +in fact, the bullet having once entered, the force is applied from +within in exactly the same way that it operates on the inner table in +the gutter fractures. A corresponding injury is met with in the case of +the bones of the extremities (see fig. 57 of the tibia), and again the +resemblance between these injuries of the skull and such perforations of +the long bones as are illustrated by skiagrams Nos. III. and XXIII. of +the clavicle and fibula is a close one. + +[Illustration: FIG. 68.--Superficial Perforating Fracture. Illustrating +lifting of roof at both entry and exit openings] + +I will add here a case of coexistent gutter fracture and perforating +wound of the skull, the conditions of the bone in which will illustrate +the behaviour of the outer and inner tables respectively, when struck +with moderate force. + +[Illustration: FIG. 69.--Diagrammatic longitudinal section of Fracture +shown in fig. 68] + +[Illustration: FIG. 70.--Fragment forming the main part of the floor of +Gutter Fracture in the squamous portion of the temporal bone. (Low +velocity, hard bone)] + + (54) Wounded at Thaba-nchu. Guedes bullet. _Entry_ behind left + ear, just above posterior root of zygoma; gutter fracture; + bullet retained within skull. Above and corresponding to right + frontal eminence there was a hæmatoma, beneath which a loose + fragment of bone was readily palpable. When brought into the + Field hospital, twenty-four hours after the injury, the man + appeared to understand when spoken to, but made no answers to + questions. The urine was passed unconsciously, the bowels were + confined. + + He was drowsy, the pupils widely dilated, the pulse 68, of good + strength, and the temperature 104°. He slept well the following + night and midday there was little change, except that the + pupils acted to light, and the pulse had risen to 88, becoming + dicrotic and small. The temperature was 103°, the tongue furred + and dry, but he was lying with the mouth wide open. + + At 2 P.M. the wound was explored. The entry led down to a + typical gutter fracture in the squamous portion of the temporal + bone, at the point of junction of the vertical with the + horizontal part; the floor of the gutter had been displaced + inwards as a single fragment (fig. 70). A flap was raised in + the frontal region, where a scale of outer table (fig. 71), + clothed with diploic tissue, was found loose. Beneath this a + puncture on the frontal bone, about corresponding in size to + the bullet, was discovered. This opening was enlarged, and a + bullet detected and removed. The bullet was a Guedes, with no + marks of rifling, and was in no way deformed. At least a square + inch of the right frontal lobe was pulped, so that the bullet + lay in a cavity. + + The patient improved somewhat during the next two days, and on + the third took a 16 hours' journey to Bloemfontein, where Mr. + Bowlby (who was present at the operation) kindly took him into + the Portland Hospital. The pulse gradually rose to 112, the + temperature remained on an average from 102° to 103°, the + respiration rose to 36, the face became somewhat livid, and on + the sixth day death occurred rather suddenly, apparently from + respiratory failure. For two days before his death the patient + sometimes asked for food, &c.; there was occasional twitching + of the left angle of the mouth, and, when the posterior wound + was manipulated, some twitching of the fingers of the left + hand. When the wound was dressed on the fourth day, there were + breaking-down blood-clot and signs of incipient suppuration. + + Mr. Bowlby made a _post-mortem_ examination, and found + considerable pulping of the tip of the right frontal and left + temporo-sphenoidal lobes, and a thick layer of hæmorrhage + extending over the whole base of the brain. + +[Illustration: FIG. 71.--Scale of outer table of Frontal Bone and +Diploë. Exact size, from fracture shown in fig. 72] + +[Illustration: FIG. 72.--Perforating Fracture of Frontal Bone from +within Separation of plate outer table. (Low velocity.) 1/2] + +The injury to the _cranial contents_ varied with the degree of bone +injury. Hæmorrhage on the surface of the dura may in rare instances have +been the sole gross lesion; I never met with such a condition, however. +In all the cases in which comminution had occurred, some laceration of +the dura, even if not more than surface damage or a punctiform opening, +had resulted. In the more serious gutter fractures an elongated rent of +some extent usually existed. In the perforating fractures two more or +less irregular openings were the rule. The amount of hæmorrhage, even if +the venous sinuses were implicated, was on the whole surprisingly small, +when the cases were such as to survive the injury long enough to be +brought to the Field hospital. I never saw a typical case of middle +meningeal hæmorrhage, although many fractures crossing the line of +distribution of the large branches came under observation. Case 60, p. +274, illustrated the fact that the osseous lesions of lesser apparent +degree are sometimes the more to be feared in the matter of hæmorrhage, +as compression is more readily developed. + +The degree of injury to the brain depended on the depth of the track, +the resistance offered by the bones of any individual skull, the weight +of the patient, but chiefly on the degree of velocity retained by the +bullet. It was sometimes slight and local as far as symptoms would guide +us; but in the majority of cases out of all proportion to the apparent +bone lesion, if the range was at all a short one. Cases illustrative of +these injuries are included under the heading of symptoms. + +It will be, of course, appreciated that the coarse brain lesions under +the third heading differed in localisation and in extent alone, and in +no wise in nature, from those observed in the two preceding classes. The +damage consisted in direct superficial laceration and contusion, and +beyond the limits of the area of actual destruction, abundant +parenchymatous hæmorrhages more or less broke up the structure of the +brain, such hæmorrhages decreasing both in size and number as +macroscopically uninjured tissue was reached. No opportunity was ever +afforded of examining a simple wound track in a case in which no obvious +cerebral symptoms had been present. + +IV. _Fractures of the base._--In addition to the above classes, a few +words ought to be added regarding the gunshot fractures of the base of +the skull. These possessed some striking peculiarities; first in the +fact that they might occur in any position, and hence differed from the +typically coursing 'bursting' fractures we are accustomed to in civil +life as the consequence of blows and falls, and consequently were often +present without any of the classical symptoms by which we are accustomed +to locate such fissures. Secondly, the peculiar form was not uncommon in +which extensive mischief was produced from within by direct contact of a +passing bullet. + +As far as could be judged from clinical symptoms, indirect fractures of +the base such as we are accustomed to meet in civil practice in +connection with fractures of the vault were decidedly rare, and, as has +already been mentioned, ocular evidence of extensive fissures extending +from perforating wounds of the vertex was wanting, except in the extreme +cases classed under heading I. For these reasons I am inclined to regard +them as uncommon. + +Direct fractures of the base, on the other hand, were of common +occurrence, especially in the anterior fossa of the skull. These might +be produced either from within, the most characteristic form of gunshot +injury, or from without. The fractures from within were often simple +punctures of the roof of the orbit or nose. + +Punctured fractures of the roof of the orbit caused little trouble as +far as the cranium was concerned, but the orbital structures often +suffered severely. I saw one or two very severe comminutions of the roof +of the orbit caused by bullets which had crossed the interior of the +skull; in one case the whole roof was in small fragments, while the +damage in others was not greater than chipping off some portion of the +lesser wing of the sphenoid. The roof of the orbit again was sometimes +very severely damaged by bullets which first traversed that cavity +itself; thus in one case which recovered, the bullet passed +transversely, smashing both globes, and fracturing the roof of both +orbits and the cribriform plate so severely as to lacerate both +dura-mater and brain, portions of the latter being found in the orbit on +removal of the damaged eyes. + +Fractures of the middle and posterior fossæ were met with far less +frequently, partly I think because vertical wounds passing from the +vertex to the base in these regions were with few exceptions rapidly +fatal, and partly from the fact that the occipital region, being +ordinarily sheltered from the line of fire, was rarely exposed to the +danger of direct fracture from without. As an odd coincidence I may +mention that in my whole experience during the war I only once saw +bleeding from the ear as a sign of fracture of the base, apart from +direct injuries to the tympanum or external auditory meatus. + +_Symptoms of fracture of the skull, with concurrent injury to the +brain._--These consisted in various combinations of the groups of signs +indicative of the conditions of concussion, compression, cerebral +irritation, or destruction. Although the symptoms possessed no inherent +peculiarities, yet certain characteristics exhibited served to +illustrate the fact that, as a result of the special mechanism of +causation of the injuries, the type deviated in many ways from that +accompanying the corresponding injuries of civil practice. + +The characters of the external wounds will be first considered, followed +by some remarks concerning the symptoms attendant on the different +degrees and types of lesion, the symptoms special to injuries to +different regions of the head, and on the subsequent complications +observed. + +In the simplest injuries the type forms of entry and exit wound were +found, and it has already been observed that in these, if symmetrical, +considerable difficulty existed in discriminating between the two +apertures. This is to be explained by the fact that the arrangement and +structure of the scalp are identical in corresponding regions; hence the +only difference in the conditions of production of the entry and exit +wounds exists in the absence of support to the skin in the latter. The +granular structure of the hairy scalp is opposed to the occurrence of +the slit forms of exit, hence the openings were usually irregularly +rounded. Any increase of size in the exit wound in the soft parts due to +the passage of bone fragments with the bullet, was equalised in that of +entry by the fact that the latter, as supported by a hard substratum, +was usually larger than those met with in situations where the skin +covers soft parts alone. + +In some cases of gutter fracture the wounds of entry were large and +irregular, as a result of upward splintering of the bone at the distal +margin of the aperture of entry in the skull, and consequent laceration +of the scalp. Again, on the forehead very pure types of slit exit wound +were often met with in the position of the vertical or horizontal +creases. With higher degrees of velocity on the part of the bullet and +consequent comminution at the aperture of exit in the bone, the scalp +was more extensively lacerated, and large irregular openings in the soft +parts, often occupied by fragments of bone and brain pulp, were met +with. It is well to repeat here, however, that the presence of brain +pulp in a wound by no means necessarily indicated the aperture of exit, +for it was sometimes found in the entry opening also. + +In the most severe cases, such as are included in class I., the exit +wound often possessed in the highest degree the so-called 'explosive' +character. From an opening in the skin with everted margins two or more +inches in diameter a mass of brain débris, bone fragments and particles +of dura-mater, skin, and hair, bound together by coagulated blood, +protruded as a primary hernia cerebri if the patient survived the first +few hours after the injury. In other cases of the same class the actual +opening was smaller, but the whole scalp was swollen and oedematous, +sometimes crackling when touched from the presence of extravasated blood +in the cellular tissue, while firm palpation often gave the impression +that the head consisted of a bag of bones over a considerable area. + +Gutter fractures of the scalp were sometimes situated beneath an open +furrow, gaping from loss of substance, or beneath a bridge of skin; in +the latter case they were usually palpable. Simple punctures were also +usually palpable, but the smallness of the openings sometimes rendered +their detection more difficult than might be assumed. + +I never saw a case in which the skull escaped injury when the bullet +struck the scalp at right angles, but the frequency with which Mauser +bullets were found within the helmets of men would suggest that this +must have sometimes occurred. A case of injury to the external table +alone has been described (p. 243). An illustration of the next degree of +injury is afforded by the following:--A bullet lodged in the centre of +the forehead, the point lying within the cranial cavity, while the base +projected from the surface: this patient suffered but slight immediate +trouble, so little, indeed, that he merely asked his officer to remove +the bullet for him, as it was inconvenient. The bullet was subsequently +removed in the Field hospital. + +In a few cases the bullet entered the skull and was retained, when only +a single wound was found. Such cases are described in Nos. 54 and 68, +where the position of the bullet was determined by palpable fractures +beneath the skin. With regard to the retention of bullets, however, in +small-calibre wounds, it was always necessary to examine the other parts +of the body with great care, and to ascertain, if possible, the +direction from which the wound was received, as an exit was often found +some distance down the neck or trunk. Again the possibility of the +opening having been produced by glancing contact had to be considered. + +In cases which survived the injury on the field, free hæmorrhage, as in +wounds of other regions, was rare, and although general evidence of loss +of blood was often noted in patients brought in, progressive bleeding +was seldom observed. Again, when the wounds were explored, the amount of +blood, although considerable, was usually not more than sufficed to fill +up the space consequent on the loss of brain tissue. This was especially +striking when large venous sinuses, as the superior longitudinal, were +involved in the injury. None the less, hæmorrhage at the base of the +brain was, I believe, responsible for early death in many of the severe +cases, especially when the wounds were near the lower regions of the +skull. + +Escape of cerebro-spinal fluid was not so prominent a feature as might +have been expected, considering how freely the arachnoid space was +opened up in many cases. I think this was usually checked by early +coagulation of the blood, and later by adhesions. It must be remembered +also that extensive wounds were most common on the vertex, or at any +rate over the convex surface of the brain, while fractures of the middle +fossa were usually rapidly fatal. + +_Concussion._--Cases exhibiting symptoms of pure uncomplicated +concussion were distinctly rare, as would be expected from the +mechanism of the injuries. On the other hand, symptoms of concussion +formed the dominant feature of all severe cases. + +The symptoms in many instances consisted in great part in transitory +signs of the so-called 'radiation' type, such as are seen in destructive +lesions where the signs of nervous damage rapidly tend to diminish and +localise themselves. + +As to the causation of the 'radiation' symptoms, it is difficult to +discriminate the effects of neighbouring parenchymatous hæmorrhages from +those of local vibratory concussion of the nervous tissue. The local +character of the signs seems, however, to point to causation by +molecular disturbance, resulting from the conduction of forcible +mechanical vibration to the brain tissue rather than to upset in the +intra-cranial pressure. Again the limited nature of the paralysis +observed, sharply defines it from the general loss of power accompanying +ordinary cases of concussion of the brain. The similarity of the +phenomena to those described in other parts of the body under the +heading of 'local shock' is sufficiently obvious. + +The following instance well exemplifies the condition in question: + + (55) Wounded at Spion Kop. A scalp wound 3 inches in length + crossed the left parietal bone nearly transversely, starting + 1-1/2 and ending 2 inches from the median line: the centre of + the wound corresponded with the position of the fissure of + Rolando. The patient was struck at a distance of fifty yards + while kneeling; he fell and remained unconscious an hour and a + half. Right hemiplegia without aphasia followed. The wound was + cleansed and sutured, and in three days both arm and leg could + be moved, after which time the man improved rapidly. Three weeks + later when I saw him at Wynberg there was still comparative + weakness of the right side, but beyond some neuralgia of the + scalp, the man considered himself well. No groove could be + detected on the bone on palpation. (This case offers a good + example of the ease with which bone injury may be overlooked. + The man came over to England 'well;' but while on furlough, two + pieces of bone came away spontaneously. He is now again on + active service.) + +_Compression._--Equally rare was it for pure symptoms of compression to +be exhibited. This depended on two circumstances: first, the rarity of +injuries giving rise to meningeal hæmorrhage; secondly, the fact that in +nearly every case a more or less extensive destructive lesion was +present, at the margins of which less completely destroyed tissue +remained, capable of giving rise to symptoms of irritation. Again, as we +have seen, free hæmorrhage into, or from the walls of, the cavities +produced in the brain was not a marked feature, and beyond this the +large defect in the cranial parietes was calculated to render a high +degree of compression impossible. + +As the most serious head injuries presented a remarkable similarity in +their symptoms, I will shortly summarise their common features. + +Every degree of mental stupor up to complete unconsciousness was met +with, but in some instances where the pulse, respiration, and general +bodily condition pointed to speedy dissolution, the patients answered +rationally often between moans or cries indicative of pain. + +Widespread paralysis often existed, but this was seldom completely +general; more commonly it was combined with extreme restlessness of the +unparalysed parts, or sometimes, even when the whole of one hemisphere +was tunnelled, and in all probability widely destroyed, restlessness was +the only symptom. In some cases twitching of the features or the limbs +or severe convulsions were superadded. + +The pupils were rarely unequal, and at the stage in which these patients +were first seen were usually moderately contracted. Wide dilatation was +uncommon throughout. + +The pulse was with very few exceptions slow, sometimes irregular. In +some instances, when the wounds had been thought suitable for +exploration, the slow pulse was altered after operation to a rapid one, +and death usually quickly supervened. + +Respiration was irregular, sometimes sighing; in the late stage often of +the Cheyne-Stokes type; actual stertor was exceptional, but the +respiration was often noisy. + +The temperature was often raised from an early stage to 99° or 100°, and +if the patient survived a day or two, it often rose to 103° or 104°. How +far the secondary rise depended on sepsis it was not always easy to +determine. The urine was usually retained. + +Cases presenting the above characters were usually those suffering from +lesions such as are described in class I., and mostly died in +twenty-four to forty-eight hours. The correspondence of the train of +symptoms with those due to combined brain destruction and severe +concussion is at once apparent. + +To illustrate the nature of the symptoms in patients suffering from the +less extensive forms of injury, such as those included in classes II. +and III. under the heading of anatomical lesion, the relation of a short +series of histories will be advisable. I may first premise, however, +that the special characteristics of these were in some instances the +almost entire absence of primary symptoms of gravity; in others general +symptoms of a severity out of apparent proportion to the external +lesion; while in all destructive lesions, very widely distributed +radiation symptoms developed, often disappearing with great rapidity. + +The symptoms consisted in those of concussion, irritation, local +pressure, and actual destruction. + +The symptoms of concussion were either general, and then usually +transient, or local paralysis of the radiation variety, which also +rapidly improved. + +Signs of irritation consisted in irritability of temper, drowsiness, +closure of the eyes and objection to light, contracted pupils sometimes +unequal, a tendency to the assumption of the flexed position at all the +joints, twitchings, and sometimes convulsions. Sometimes these appeared +early as a direct result of mechanical irritation from bone fragments or +blood-clot; sometimes only in the course of a few days, as a result of +irritation of parts recovering from the radiation effects which had +prevented earlier nervous reaction. Possibly in some cases the symptoms +of irritation depended upon an increase in the amount of hæmorrhage, and +in others upon the development of local inflammatory changes. + +Local pressure, or actual destruction of brain tissue, was evidenced by +temporary paralysis in the former, permanent loss of function in the +latter, condition. + +Fractures of the anterior fossa of the skull were attended by very +marked evidence of orbital hæmorrhage, as subconjunctival ecchymosis +(rarely pure), increased tension, and proptosis. + +Injuries to the cranial nerves at the base, with the single exception of +lesion of the optic nerves, which was not rare, were in my experience +uncommon in the hospitals--a fact pointing to the very fatal nature of +direct basal injuries, except in the anterior fossa of the skull. Signs +indicative of injury to the olfactory lobe were occasionally observed. + +I should, perhaps, again insist here on the rarity with which acute +diffuse septic infection occurred in cases of these degrees of severity, +also on the fact that interference with the wounds in the way of +secondary exploration, even when they were manifestly the seat of local +infection, was followed almost without exception by good immediate +results; and, lastly, that when suppuration did occur, it was usually +strictly local in character. The influence of the climate of South +Africa and our surroundings has already been discussed, but whether +climate, condition of the patients, or peculiarity in the nature of +causation of the wounds was responsible, in no series of cases was the +absence of acute inflammatory troubles more striking than in this one of +brain injuries. + +Frontal injuries were those most frequently unaccompanied by primary +symptoms of severity; slowing of the pulse--this often fell to 40--and +occasional irregularity, were almost the only constant signs of cerebral +damage. Some patients temporarily lost consciousness, others rose at +once and walked to the dressing station, and in few cases was any +psychical disturbance noted in the early stages. + +I think, however, it may be affirmed that frontal injuries, accompanied +by trivial signs, resulted without exception from the passage of bullets +travelling at a low rate of velocity. Thus in several of the instances +here related the patients at the time of reception of the wound were +under the impression that they were entirely beyond the range of fire, +and in one, in which well-marked signs of concussion followed, the +bullet, which had traversed the head, retained only sufficient force to +perforate the skin of the neck and bury itself in the posterior +triangle without even fracturing the clavicle, against which it +impinged. In men struck at a shorter range, signs of concussion, often +followed by transient radiation signs of injury to the parietal lobe, +were common. These signs were, I think, not as a rule due to surface +hæmorrhage, since they were of a purely paralytic nature and not +irritative. Several cases with partial or complete hemiplegia, +hemiplegia and aphasia, or facial paralysis are recorded below. + + (56) _Frontal injury_.--Wounded at Magersfontein. In prone + position when struck, distance 700 to 800 yards. _Entry_ + (Mauser), at the margin of the hairy scalp above and to the + left of the frontal eminence; course, through anterior third of + left frontal lobe, roof of orbit, obliquely across line of + optic nerve, inner wall of orbit, nose, right superior maxilla + piercing alveolar process, and passing superficial to inferior + maxilla: _exit_, one inch anterior to angle of jaw. The bullet + again entered the posterior triangle of the neck, struck the + right clavicle, and turned a somersault, so that its base lay + deepest in the wound. + + The patient was unconscious for a short time, suffered with + general headache and giddiness, and was somewhat irritable. On + the third day the pulse was 70, temperature normal, and he was + sent to the Base. There was considerable proptosis, oedema + and discoloration of the eyelid, and subconjunctival + ecchymosis, but the movements of the eyeball could be made and + light could be distinguished. The sense of smell was apparently + absent. A week later the headache was gone, the pulse numbered + 80 to 90, the temperature was normal, he slept well, sat up in + bed and smoked, took his food well, and exhibited no cerebral + symptoms. He could detect the smell of tobacco, but not as a + definite odour. + + No further symptoms were noted, the sense of smell returned, + the swelling of the eyelid and proptosis decreased, but the + upper lid could not be raised. When the lid was drawn up, there + appeared to be vision at the margins of the field with a large + central blind spot. The patient left for England at the end of + a month apparently well. + + (57) _Gutter fracture of frontal bone._--Wounded at Paardeberg. + _Entry_ (Mauser), 3/4 of an inch within the margin of hairy + scalp above outer extremity of right eyebrow; gutter fracture; + _exit_, 2 inches nearer middle line, at the same distance from + the margin of the hairy scalp. The patient was knocked head + over heels, his main feeling being a sense of dulness in the + right great toe. He sat up and got a first field dressing + applied, then lay down, but as he was still under fire, he + retired 1,000 yards to the collecting station; here he dressed + some patients, and later mounted an ambulance wagon and was + driven to the Field hospital. The next day he helped with the + work of the hospital, amongst other things controlling the + artery during an amputation of the arm. He then took a three + days' and nights' journey to Modder River in a bullock wagon, + during which journey he had a fit, which was general, the + thumbs being turned in and a wedge being necessary between the + teeth to prevent him biting his tongue. + + On the sixth day the wound was examined, and between this and + the tenth day he had several fits of the same nature as the + first, accompanied by stertorous breathing and profuse + sweating. On the tenth day Mr. Cheatle opened up the wound and + removed numerous fragments of bone, leaving a clean gutter 2 + inches by 3/4 of an inch. After the operation no further fits + occurred, and eight days later he was conscious, but was + excitable and talked at random. On the twentieth day he arrived + at the Base after 30 hours' railway journey (623 miles). He was + then quite rational, but unable to make any demands on his + memory and very sensitive to noise; at times he wandered in the + evenings and his temperature rose as high as 100°. The wound + was open and granulating, the floor pulsating freely. + + Three weeks later the wound was still open, and the skin dipped + in at the lower margin. The mental condition was much improved, + although attempts at giving a history of his case were + obviously tiresome. + + The wounds in the leather headband of this patient's helmet + were interesting, the round aperture of entry in the exterior + of the helmet being followed by a starred exit aperture in the + leather band, the second entry opening in the leather band + being again circular, and the external opening in the puggaree + a transverse slit. + + (58) _Transverse superficial perforating frontal + injury._--Wounded at Graspan. Aperture of _entry_ + (Lee-Metford), at upper and outer part of left frontal + eminence; _exit_, at margin of hairy scalp over outer third of + right eyebrow. On the second day the patient complained of + giddiness and headache; the pulse was 60. He was then walking + about. The wounds were explored and typical entry and exit + apertures discovered in the frontal bone from which cerebral + matter was protruding. Both openings were enlarged (Mr. S. W. + F. Richardson) with Hoffman's forceps, and a considerable + number of splinters of the inner table were removed from the + aperture of entry. + + The headache gradually passed off, but there was throbbing + about the scar, and pulsation was visible for some three weeks, + after which no further symptoms were observed. + + (59) _Oblique frontal gutter fracture._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1/2 an inch to right of median + line of forehead, 3/4 of an inch from the margin of the hairy + scalp; _exit_, about 3/4 of an inch anterior to the lower + extremity of the right fissure of Rolando. Weakness of left + facial muscles, especially of angle of mouth. No further motor + symptoms. Wounds explored (Mr. Stewart); numerous fragments of + bone and some pulped cerebral matter were removed. Patient + developed no further signs; the paralysis, although improved, + did not completely disappear. The man a year later was still on + active duty, the paralysis almost well, and no further ill + effects of the injury remained. + +In the fronto-parietal or parietal regions, signs of damage to the +cortical motor area were seldom absent, sometimes evanescent, at others +prolonged. In some cases the signs were permanent and followed by +evidence of local sclerosis. + +The motor area on both sides of the brain was sometimes implicated; thus +in a child shot at Kimberley the bullet entered in the right frontal +region, and emerged to the left of the line connecting bregma and inion +a little behind its centre. Paralysis of both lower extremities +resulted, power rapidly returning in the right, while incomplete +paralysis persisted in the left. + +In only one instance (see case 73, p. 292) was any permanent sensory +defect observed, and the mental condition of this patient would have +certainly suggested a functional explanation for its presence, had it +not been for the accompanying inequality in the axillary surface +temperatures. + +In a second case (No. 67) blunting of sensation followed a definite +lesion of the inferior parietal lobule. In this instance an occipital +lesion was associated with the parietal. + + (60) _Parietal gutter fracture._--Wounded at Magersfontein. A + scalp wound 3 inches in length ran transversely across the + right parietal bone at the level of the lower third of the + fissure of Rolando. A second wound of entry was found crossing + the third dorsal spine; the bullet was retained and was + palpable over the right scapula. There was left facial + paralysis, weakness and numbness of both upper extremities, + especially of the left, and some difficulty in swallowing. The + man was sent to the Base, where he arrived on the fourth day. + The symptoms had then become much more marked, consciousness + was incomplete, and articulation slow and imperfect. There was + complete left hemiplegia, and deviation of the tongue to the + right. The pulse was 40. An exploration (Mr. J. J. Day) showed + that an oval plate of the outer table of the parietal bone had + been struck off. A trephine was applied to the exposed diploë + and a crown of bone removed; considerable comminution of the + inner table had occurred, several large fragments having + perforated the dura-mater. The latter did not pulsate; it was + therefore freely incised, and many more fragments of bone and a + large quantity of blood-clot removed. + + The first effect of the operation was slight, but ten days + later rapid improvement commenced, the first sign being + acceleration of the pulse, which rose to 70. On the eighteenth + day the original symptoms still remained to a diminished + extent, but a fortnight later there remained traces of the + facial weakness only, and there was little difference in the + grip of the two hands. The patient was shortly afterwards sent + home. Ten months later he returned to South Africa on active + service. + + (61) _Fronto-parietal gutter fracture._--Wounded at Graspan. + _Entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch within the margin of the hairy scalp, + 1/2 an inch to the left of the median line; _exit_, 3-1/2 + inches posterior in same line. Complete right-sided hemiplegia. + The wounds were explored on the fourth day (Major Moffatt, + R.A.M.C.) and a gutter fracture involving the frontal and + parietal bones exposed. The dura-mater was lacerated and brain + matter from the frontal lobe escaped freely. A large number of + bone fragments were removed. On the fourth day after the + operation, the patient became unconscious with right-sided + twitchings, but rapidly improved, and at the end of three + weeks, except for slight headache, he was well, the power of + the right side being good. Ten months later he rejoined his + regiment in South Africa, no apparent ill effects remaining. + + (62) _Fronto-parietal perforating fracture._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_, within the margin of the hairy scalp; + _exit_, behind and below the left parietal eminence, the track + crossing about the centre of the fissure of Rolando. Right + hemiplegia, the lower half of the face only being involved. The + wounds were explored and a large number of fragments of bone + and a quantity of pulped cerebral matter removed. Six days + later the hemiplegia persisted, speech was slow, headache was + troublesome and the pulse not above 45. After this, gradual + improvement took place, and a month later the lower extremity + and face had regained good power. The upper extremity remained + flaccid and paralysed, except for some slight power of movement + of the shoulder. + + (63) _Fronto-parietal perforating fracture._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 2-1/2 inches from the median + line, 3-1/2 inches from the occipital protuberance; _exit_, 3/4 + of an inch from the median line, 4-1/2 inches from the + glabella; sanious fluid escaped from both ears. There was left + facial paralysis, complete paralysis of the left upper + extremity, and partial paralysis of the left lower extremity. + The patient was deaf, drowsy, and the pulse 45. + + Exploration showed the entry wound to be in the parietal, the + exit to involve both parietal and frontal bones. The openings + were enlarged, and a number of fragments of bone, together with + pulped cerebral matter and blood-clot, were removed. The wound + healed, except at the front part, where a small prominence + suggested a hernia cerebri. + + The patient improved slowly; fourteen days after the operation + he could hear well, and the flow from the ears had ceased. The + facial weakness was slight, the upper extremity was still + powerless, but he could move the lower and draw it up in bed. + At the end of six weeks the wound had healed, and he was got up + and dressed. + + At the end of two months he was well enough to be sent home; + there was only a trace of facial weakness; the right upper + extremity, however, was powerless and slightly rigid, + occasional twitchings occurring in it. Considerable power had + been regained in the lower extremity, so that the patient could + walk with help, but foot-drop persisted; the gait was spastic + in character, the reflexes were much exaggerated, and there was + marked clonus. The patient was sensible, but his manner + suggested some mental weakness. Both the openings in the skull + were closed by very firm material, apparently bony. + + This patient became a Commissionaire some ten months later. His + mental condition is normal, and loss of memory seems confined + to the events immediately following the injury. The lower + extremity has improved, but the upper is useless. + + (64) _Parietal injury: retained bullet._--Wounded at + Paardeberg. Aperture of _entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch diagonally + below and anterior to left parietal eminence. No exit. The + patient was trephined by the surgeons of the German ambulance + at Jacobsdal. + + Sixteen days later he arrived at the Base. A circular pulsating + trephine opening was then to be felt beneath the flap, but no + information was forthcoming as to the bullet. The patient + could speak, but lost words and the gist of sentences; he + could remember nothing as to himself since the day of the + injury. There was right facial weakness; he could not close the + right eye or whistle, but there was little apparent want of + symmetry; there was weakness in the grip of both hands, more + marked on the right side; both lower extremities could be + moved. The reflexes were normal, although the left limb was + slightly rigid. The pupils were equal, reflex normal; slight + nystagmus. Pulse 72, small and regular. Temperature normal. + Rapid improvement followed. + + During the fourth week the temperature rose to 103°, and + remained elevated for six days, but no local or general signs + appeared; at the end of five weeks there was little evidence of + the paralysis remaining. The patient was discharged from the + service on his return home. + +In the upper part of the occipital region glancing or superficial +injuries were comparatively favourable; those near the base, especially +if perforating, were very dangerous. Two such cases are referred to +elsewhere. Case 69 is included as the only example of cerebellar injury +I happened to see who lived any appreciable time after the accident. + +The main interest in these cases centres in the defects produced in the +area of the visual field. I am extremely indebted to my colleague, Mr. +J. H. Fisher, who has kindly determined this for me in three of the +following cases. It will be noted that in two instances the injury was +to the left occipital lobe. In these the resulting hemianopsia was of +the pure lateral homonymous character, and in both the visual symptoms +were accompanied by a certain degree of amnesic aphasia (65 and 68). + +In 65 the injury was definitely unilateral, and at the time of the +operation I decided that at least an inch and a half of the posterior +extremity of the left occipital lobe was totally destroyed. + +In 68 the lesion was probably confined to the left lobe, but it is +impossible to exclude slight injury to the right lobe also. In this +instance amnesic aphasia was a far more marked symptom than in 65, and +the position of the lesion suggested damage both to the visual and +auditory word centres. + +Cases 66 and 67 are instances of damage to both occipital lobes. In 66, +although the wound was a glancing one, and did not perforate, it was so +near the median line, and accompanied by such severe damage to the bone, +that a symmetrical lesion of the cuneate and precuneate lobules of both +right and left sides is to be inferred. In 67 the great longitudinal +fissure was traversed by the bullet obliquely. It is of great interest +to observe that in each of these cases the lesion of the visual field +was a horizontal one and affected the lower half in place of assuming a +lateral distribution. + +In all four cases the primary effect of the occipital injury was the +same--viz. absolute blindness--while the return of vision in each was of +the nature of the dawning of light. I regret that I am unable to furnish +any detail as to increase of the field of vision in the progress of the +cases, but circumstances rendered continuous observation of the patients +impossible. + +In each case deafness was apparently the direct result of concussion of +the ear on the side corresponding to the wound. Deafness of the opposite +ear was never noted. + +In case 67 some general blunting of sensation was noted in the paralysed +upper extremity, and in this patient, no doubt, injury to the inferior +parietal lobule accompanied the occipital lesion. + + (65) _Injury to left occipital lobe._--Wounded at Belmont. A + single transverse wound, 2 inches in length, extended across + the occipital bone, 2 inches above the level of the external + protuberance. When seen on the third day the wound was gaping + and pulped cerebral matter was found in it. The patient was + very drowsy, lying with closed eyes, and complaining of great + coronal and frontal headache. He could distinguish light and + darkness, but not persons. Total blindness immediately followed + the injury, persisting some three days, and the patient spoke + of return of sight as of the appearance of dawn. The pupils + were equal, moderately dilated and acted to light, which was + unpleasant to him. He was somewhat irritable and silent, but + apparently rational. Temperature 99°. Pulse 56 full. Tongue + clean. No sickness, no difficulty in micturition. + + Fifty-six hours after the injury the wound was opened up and + cleaned, and an oval fractured opening about 3/4 by 1/2 inch + was exposed 3/4 inch to the left, and 2 inches above the + occipital protuberance. The margins of the opening showed + several small fragments of lead attached to the bone. A + 3/4-inch trephine was applied at the left extremity of the + opening, and it was found that about a square inch of the + internal table was comminuted and driven into the brain, + together with several small fragments of lead. On introducing + the finger, about 1-1/2 square inches of the occipital lobe + were found to be pulped, and the finger could be swept across + the tentorium. There was no sinus hæmorrhage (nor did the + history suggest that hæmorrhage had ever been severe). The + cavity was carefully sponged out, and the wound closed with a + drainage aperture. Little change followed in the patient's + condition, and on the sixth day he was sent to the Base + hospital. + + Three weeks later the wound was firmly healed. The patient + still complained of frontal headache, and wore a shade, as the + light hurt his eyes and made them water freely. The pupils + acted, but were wide; objects could be distinguished, and also + persons. Otherwise, the man's condition was good: he began to + get up, and at the end of six weeks returned to England. + + A year later the man was earning his living as a Commissionaire + porter. He complains of giddiness when he stoops, or when he + looks upwards, and at times he suffers much with headache both + in the region of the injury and across the temples. + + There is a bony defect and slight pulsation at the site of the + injury, but no prominence. When attempts are made to read the + lines run together, and a dark shadow comes before his eyes. He + speaks of the latter as still terribly weak. Speech is slow and + somewhat simple, but he makes no mistakes as to words. Memory + is bad for recent events. + + Mr. Fisher makes the following report as to the eyes: Pupils + and movement of eyes normal in every respect. No changes in + fundi. + + Vision, R. 5/12 with--0.5 5/6 + L. 5/9 with--0.5 5/5 + +[Illustration: FIG. 73.--Right Visual Field, in case 65. Injury to left +occipital lobe. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good daylight. Right +homonymous hemianopsia] + +[Illustration: FIG. 74.--Left Visual Field, case 65] + + There is therefore practically full direct vision. Though the + man chooses a concave glass he is not really myopic. There is + typical right homonymous hemianopsia; the answers, when tested + with the perimeter, are quite certain, and the fields + absolutely reliable. + + The man's statements confirm the condition; he is aware of his + inability to see objects to his right-hand side, and is apt to + collide with persons or objects on that side. + + The lesion is one of the left occipital cortex in the cuneate + lobe and the neighbourhood of the calcarine fissure. The speech + suggests a slight degree of aphasia. + + (66) _Injury to occipital lobes._--Wounded at Magersfontein + while in prone position. Distance, 500 yards. He says he was + never unconscious, but for two days was absolutely blind. His + eyesight gradually improved, but headache was very severe, and + sleeplessness nearly absolute. On the eighth day the wound, + which was situated over the right posterior superior angle of + the parietal bone, was opened up, and a number of fragments of + bone and a quantity of pulped brain removed from a depressed + punctured fracture, surrounded by an annular fissure, + completely encircling it, 1-1/2 inch from the opening. The + portion of brain destroyed was probably a considerable portion + of the cuneate and precuneate lobules of both sides, as well as + a portion of the first occipital convolution, and the superior + parietal lobule of the right side. There was no evidence of + injury to the superior longitudinal sinus in the way of + hæmorrhage. + + After the operation the patient slept better, but still + complained of headache, and when he arrived at the Base, the + flap became oedematous, and the stitch holes and also the + central part of the wound suppurated. The temperature rose to + 101°. The wound was therefore re-opened, and a number of + additional fragments of bone, some as deeply situated as 2 + inches from the surface, were removed. Steady improvement + followed, and at the end of a further three weeks the wound was + healed, the headache had ceased, and there were no abnormal + symptoms, except that light was unpleasant to the right eye, + and the field of vision was manifestly contracted (Mr. Pooley). + + A year later the man was employed as a letter-carrier. He + complains of headache at times, and on six occasions has had + 'fainting fits.' He says that the latter commence with tremor, + that his legs then give way and he falls. In a quarter of an + hour he gets up, and feels no further inconvenience. Speech is + perfect, there is no deafness. The bone defect is very nearly + completely closed. + + Mr. Fisher reports as follows as to the vision. There is a high + degree of hypermetropia in each eye, the R. has nearly 6.0 D + and the L. about 5.0 D. With correction he gets practically + full direct vision with each. + +[Illustration: FIG. 75.--Right Visual Field, in case 66. Injury to both +occipital lobes. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good artificial +light. Defect in field complicated by functional symptoms] + +[Illustration: FIG. 76.--Left Visual Field, in case 66. Defect in lower +half of field] + + The patient has been examined before, and has been informed + that his vision quite incapacitates him from further service. + He began by stating that he could not see on either side of + him, but only straight in front; that he is apt to collide with + people in walking, was nearly knocked down by a horse, and that + his acquaintances accuse him of passing them unnoticed. The + fields of vision are very small, but the loss is not typically + in the temporal half of either. That of the right eye which we + know as the spiral field, becoming more and more contracted as + the perimeter test is continued, is what is found in functional + cases; that of the left, however, shows a characteristic loss + of the lower part of the field of vision, and agrees with the + statement of the man that he can see the upper part of my face + but not the lower when he looks at me. Such a loss agrees with + a lesion involving the upper part of the cuneate lobe above the + calcarine fissure. + + I feel satisfied that there is considerable loss in the right + field also, but the functional element obscures its exact + nature. + + The fundi, pupils, and ocular movements are all normal. + + (67) _Injury to occipital lobes and left motor and sensory + areas._--Wounded outside Lindley (Spitzkop). Range within 1,000 + yards. _Entry_, one inch within the right lateral angle of the + occipital bone, external wound more than 1/2 an inch in + diameter; _exit_, 2 inches from the median line, over the upper + half of the left fissure of Rolando. Behind the wound of exit + comminution of the parietal bone, extending back to the + lambdoid suture, existed. I attributed this to oblique lateral + impact by the bullet on the inner surface of the skull. + + The patient could afterwards remember being struck, but became + rapidly unconscious. When brought into the Field hospital some + five hours later the condition was as follows: Semi-conscious, + can speak, apparently blind, pupils equal, of moderate size, do + not react to light. Right hemiplegia. No sickness. Moans with + pain in head. Passes water normally. + + Considerable hæmorrhage had occurred from each wound, the scalp + was puffy, and the bones yielded on pressure over the left + parietal bone, indicating considerable comminution. + + The night was so cold that no operation could be considered, so + the head was partly shaved, the wounds cleansed, and a dressing + applied. The next morning the Division marched at 5 A.M., and + it was considered wise to leave the man at Lindley in the local + hospital. + +[Illustration: FIG. 77.--Right Visual Field, in case 67. Injury to both +occipital lobes. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good artificial +light. Defect in lower half of field] + +[Illustration: FIG. 78.--Left Visual Field, in case 67] + + No operation was performed there, but I heard later that the + man recovered full consciousness at the end of five days, and + at the end of a fortnight he commenced to see again. + + Six weeks later he travelled to Kroonstadt, thence to + Bloemfontein, and thence to Cape Town and home to Netley. The + paralytic symptoms meanwhile steadily improved. + + Seven months later his condition is as follows: Scarcely a + trace of facial paralysis. Slight power of movement of arm, + forearm, and fingers, but grip is very weak. Little power of + abduction of the shoulder or of straightening the elbow. The + latter movement is made with effort and in jerks. Sensation + over the back of the arm is somewhat lowered, and is 'furry' at + the finger tips. There is very little wasting of the muscles + noticeable. + + Walks well, but with some foot-drop. Slight increase of + patellar reflex. He says that he does not walk in the street + with confidence, as he often feels as if omnibuses &c. were + coming too near him. + + He is absolutely deaf in the right ear. + + The openings in the skull are closed, the occipital lies about + halfway between the external auditory meatus and the external + occipital protuberance, while the parietal still affords + evidence of the earlier comminution, one fissure passing + backwards as far as the lambda, and the whole surface is lumpy + and uneven. + + The track through the brain no doubt involved a considerable + extent of the outer aspect of the right occipital lobe and the + cuneate lobule. It must also have crossed the great + longitudinal fissure, and penetrated the left Rolandic region, + just above its centre, probably involving the precuneate + lobule, and a portion of the internal capsular fibres as well + as the cortex on the left side. The deafness was probably due + to concussion of the internal ear. + + Mr. Fisher has kindly furnished the following note regarding + the vision. The pupils, movements, and fundi are quite healthy. + There is good direct vision R. or L. 5/5 fairly, and together + 5/5. The man complains he has lost his side sight, also the + lower; he demonstrates the latter quite obviously with his + hand, and says he has to repeatedly look down when walking. He + thinks no improvement has taken place during the last month. + The accompanying fields of vision show the loss quite + characteristically. + + (68) _Injury to left occipital lobe._--Wounded at Paardeberg. + _Entry_ (Mauser), through the lambdoid suture on the right side + of the mid line. Bullet retained, but a palpable prominence + behind the left ear suggested its localisation. + + The patient became at once unconscious and remained so for + several days. He was completely blind; vision returned later, + but only to a limited degree. There was complete loss of + memory as to the events of the day. + + When admitted at Rondebosch into No. 3 General Hospital the + condition was as follows: The field of vision is limited, and + examination shows right homonymous hemianopsia. When any one + comes into the tent the patient sees a shadow only until his + bed is reached. + + When spoken to the patient 'thinks and thinks,' and then + apologises for not answering, saying he will remember at some + future time. He is absolutely unable to remember times, names, + or localities, but places his hand to his head and appears to + think deeply in the effort to recall them. Occasionally when + you go into his tent he suddenly remembers something he has + been trying to think of for some days, and will tell you. + + A fortnight later after an attack of influenza the patient was + not so well, and vision was apparently becoming more impaired. + + An incision was made (Mr. J. E. Ker) so as to raise a flap the + centre of the convexity of which was 2-1/2 inches behind the + left external auditory meatus. A slight prominence and a + fissure was discovered in the temporal bone, and over this a + trephine was applied. On removal of the crown of bone the + bullet was discovered with the point turned backwards (having + evidently undergone a partial ricochet turn) on the upper + surface of the petrous bone, just above the lateral sinus. The + dura-mater was healed but thickened, and some clot upon its + surface was removed. + + The wound healed per primam, and a rapid recovery was made. Ten + days later a running water-tap was able to be detected 120 + yards from the tent door. The hemianopsia however persisted. + +The following letter, dictated by the patient to his wife, and sent to +me, gives a clear account of his condition ten months later:-- + + I am pleased to say my memory is better than it was some time + ago, though at times I am entirely lost and really forget all + that I was speaking about. I also find that I often call things + and places by their wrong names. I sometimes try to read a + paper or book which I have to read letter by letter, sometimes + calling out the wrong letter, such as B for D &c., and by the + time I have read almost halfway through, I have forgotten the + commencement. + + My sight is about the same. There is no improvement in the + right eye, and the doctor at Stoke said that the left eye was + not as it ought to be and might get worse. + + I ofttimes go to take up a thing, but find I am not near to it, + though it appears to me so. + + I have no pain to speak of in the head, though at times a + shooting pain. + + I have a continual noise in the left ear as if of a locomotive + blowing off steam, and a deafness in the left ear which I had + not before being wounded. + +I am extremely indebted to my friend Mr. J. Errington Ker for the notes +of the above case, so successfully treated by him. + + (69) _Injury to occipital lobe._--Wounded at Modder River. + Scalp wound in occipital region. Two days later on arrival at + the Base the patient was extremely restless and in a condition + of noisy delirium. The wound was explored (Mr. J. J. Day) and a + vertical gutter fracture discovered 1/2 an inch above and to + the left of the occipital protuberance. The gutter was 1-1/2 + inch in length and finely comminuted, the dura wounded, and the + left occipital lobe pulped. A number of fragments of bone (one + lodged in the wall of, but not penetrating, the lateral sinus) + and pulped brain were removed. No improvement took place in the + general condition, but the patient lived twenty-two days, + during which time he coughed up a large quantity of gangrenous + lung tissue and foul pus. + + At the _post-mortem_ examination a wound track was found + extending to the crest of the left ilium, where the bullet was + lodged. The patient was no doubt lying with his head dipped + into a hole scooped out in the sand (a common custom) when + struck; the bullet then traversed the muscles of the neck, + entered the upper opening of the thorax, where it struck the + bodies of the second and third dorsal vertebræ, one third of + the bodies of each of which were driven into an extensive + laceration of the lung; it then grooved the inner surfaces of + the eighth and ninth ribs, fractured the tenth and eleventh, + and passing the twelfth traversed the deep muscles of the back + to the pelvis. Beyond the injury to the occipital lobe, the + cerebellum was found to be lacerated and extensively bruised + and ecchymosed. + +_Complications._--_Hernia cerebri_ as a primary feature has already been +mentioned as one of the peculiarities of some explosive wounds. In the +later stages of the cases in which primary union did not take place the +development of granulation tumours was often seen, sometimes in +connection with slight local suppuration, sometimes over a cerebral +abscess. In some cases a wound which had once closed reopened and a +hernia developed. This sequence was chiefly of prognostic significance +as an indication of intra-cranial inflammation, usually of a chronic +character, and affecting rather the lowly organised granulation tissue +formed in the cavity than the brain itself. When primary union of the +skin flap and wound failed, the process of definitive closure of the +subjacent cavity was always a very prolonged one, and it was in such +cases that a great proportion of the so-called herniæ developed. + +_Abscess of the brain._--Local abscesses formed in a considerable +proportion of the cases where serious damage to the brain had occurred, +in whatever region this happened to be. I never saw one develop in cases +where primary union had taken place, even when bone fragments had not +been removed; neither did I ever see an abscess situated at a distance +from the original injury. I take it that the latter is to be explained +by the early date of the suppuration, and the fact that in the great +majority of small-calibre wounds the exit opening exists in the +situation of the contre-coup damages of civil practice. + +The main feature in the symptoms when abscesses developed was the +insidious mode of their appearance, usually at the end of fourteen to +twenty-one days, and their comparative mildness. + +Very slight evidences of compression were observed; thus, varying +degrees of headache, drowsiness, irritability of temper or depression, +twitchings, or in some cases Jacksonian seizures, combined with slow +pulse and slight rises of temperature. I never happened to see complete +unconsciousness. The slight evidence of compression was perhaps +explained in most cases by the large bony defect in the skull, which +acted as a kind of safety-valve. Again the firm nature of the +cicatricial tissue which formed at the periphery of the injury and +extended up to the skull and there formed a more or less firm +attachment, also preserved the actual brain tissue to some degree from +either pressure or direct irritation. After evacuation of the pus, the +usual difficulty was experienced in ensuring free drainage, and +definitive healing and closure of the cavities was very slow. The +following two cases will illustrate the character of the cases of +cerebral abscess we met with:-- + + (70) _Fronto-parietal abscess._--Wounded at Magersfontein + (Mauser). _Entry_, 1-3/4 inch above the line from the lower + margin of the orbit to the external auditory meatus, and 1-3/4 + inch behind the external angular process; _exit_, a little + posterior to the left parietal eminence. There was right + hemiplegia. The wounds were explored, and a large number of + fragments of bone and pulped brain were removed, especially + from the anterior wound. No great improvement followed, and the + patient was sent to the Base. At this time there was a large + hernia cerebri at the anterior wound which was suppurating. + + A further operation was here performed (Mr. J. J. Day). The + hernia cerebri was removed, also several fragments of bone + which were found deeply imbedded in the brain. The patient then + improved, but a month later his temperature rose, and on + exploration an abscess was discovered in the frontal lobe and + drained. + + Subsequently the patient suffered with Jacksonian seizures, + sometimes starting spontaneously, sometimes following + interference with the wound. The convulsions commenced in the + muscles of the face, and the twitchings then became general. + Meanwhile the right upper extremity remained weak, although the + fist could be clenched, and all movements of the limb made in + some degree. + + Some difficulty was experienced in maintaining a free exit for + the pus, which was however overcome by the use of a silver + tube. All twitchings ceased about a month after the opening of + the abscess, the man improved steadily, and he left for England + fifteen weeks after the reception of the injury, walking well, + with a firm hand-grip, and the wounds soundly healed. + + (71) _Frontal injury. Secondary abscess._--Wounded at Modder + River. Aperture of _entry_ (Mauser), just external to the + centre of the right eyebrow; _exit_, above the centre of the + right zygoma. The wound did not render the man immediately + unconscious, but he lost all recollection of what had happened + to him for the next three or four days. The wounds were + explored on the second day, at which time the patient was in a + semi-conscious drowsy state, the pupils contracted and the + pulse slow. A number of fragments of bone and pulped brain + matter were removed. + + Subsequently to the operation the patient showed more signs of + cerebral irritation than usual, lying in a semi-conscious state + and more or less curled up. He answered questions on being + bothered. He improved somewhat, and was sent to the Base, + where the improvement continued, but he suffered much from + headache. + + Later the headache became much more severe, and eleven weeks + after the injury the man complained of great pain both locally + and over the whole right hemisphere; he lay moaning, with the + temperature subnormal, and the pulse very slow. At times there + was nocturnal delirium. + + The wound had remained closed and apparently normal, but now a + small fluctuating pulsating nipple-like swelling developed in + the situation of the aperture of entry. This was incised, and + two ounces of sweet pus evacuated (Professor Dunlop). A tube + was introduced, and removed later on the cessation of + discharge. + + Removal of the tube was followed by a recurrence of the same + symptoms, and this occurred on no fewer than six occasions + whenever the wound closed. + + At the end of twenty weeks the patient appeared quite well, the + wound had been closed six weeks, the previously irritable + mental state was replaced by placidity, and he was sent home. + +_Diagnosis._--The importance of proper exploration of scalp wounds to +determine the condition of the bone has already been insisted upon. The +localisation of the position and extent of the injury to the cranial +contents depended simply on attention to the symptoms, and needs no +further mention here. + +_Prognosis._--This subject can only be very imperfectly considered at +the present time, since only the more or less immediate results of the +injuries are known to us, while the more important after consequences +remain to be followed up. + +As to life the immediate prognosis has been already foreshadowed in the +section on the anatomical lesions. It is there shown that the first +point of general importance is the range of fire at which the injury has +been received. At short ranges, as evidenced by the history, the +characters of the wounds, and the severity of the symptoms, the +immediate prognosis was uniformly bad, a very great majority of the +patients dying, and that at the end of a few hours or days. + +The rapidity with which death followed depended in part on the actual +severity of the wound, and still more on the region it affected; the +nearer the base and the longer the track the more rapidly the patients +died, and this always with signs of failure of the functions of the +heart and lungs due to general concussion, pressure from basal +hæmorrhage, or rapid intracranial oedema. In my experience no patients +survived direct fracture of the base in any region but the frontal, +although many, no doubt, got well in whom fissures merely spread into +the middle or posterior fossa. Patients with very extensive injuries at +a higher level, on the other hand, often survived days, or even a week, +then usually dying of sepsis. + +The actual relative mortality of these injuries I can give little idea +of, but it was a high one both on the field and in the Field hospitals; +thus of 10 cases treated in one Field hospital, after the battle at +Paardeberg Drift, no less than 8 died; while of 61 cases from various +battles who survived to be sent down to the Base during a period of some +months, only 4 or 6.55 per cent. died. Many of the latter, as is seen +from the cases here recorded which were among the number, were none the +less of a very serious nature. The early causes of death in patients +dying during the first forty-eight hours have been already mentioned; +the later one was almost always sepsis. + +As in civil practice the best immediate results were seen in injuries to +the frontal lobes, and after these in injuries to the occipital region. +In the latter permanent lesions of vision were, however, common. The +above injuries apart, the prognosis depended on the severity and depth +of the lesion. The frequency and extent of radiation symptoms often made +it possible to give a more hopeful prognosis than the immediate +conditions seemed to warrant, if the exact situation of the lesion, and +the probable velocity at which the bullet was travelling, were taken +into account; since the actual destructive lesion, when the velocity had +been insufficient to cause damage of a general nature, was often very +strictly localised. + +Another very important point in the immediate prognosis was the primary +union of the scalp wound; if this could only be ensured, few cases went +wrong afterwards. Such remote effects as I witnessed were mainly the +results of the actual destructive lesion, such as paralyses and +contraction. I know of only one case in which early maniacal symptoms +closely followed on a frontal injury, and here the symptoms accompanied +the development of an abscess. Some patients were depressed and +irritable, and some were blind or deaf, probably from gross lesion; in +one patient the mental faculties generally were lowered. + +In spite of the surprising immediate recoveries which occurred, and the +small amount of experience I am able to record as to remote ill effects +of these injuries, I feel certain that a long roll of secondary troubles +from the contraction of cicatricial tissue, irritation from distant +remaining bone fragments, as well as mental troubles from actual brain +destruction, await record in the near future. + +Since my return to England I have heard of four cases of injury to the +head, which died on their return, as the result of the formation of +secondary residual abscesses; and of one who died suddenly, soon after +his return to active service in South Africa apparently well. These +occurrences are sufficiently suggestive. + +It may be of interest to add here two cases of secondary traumatic +epilepsy of differing degree:-- + + (72) _Gutter fracture over left temporo-sphenoidal lobe. + Traumatic epilepsy._--A trooper in Brabant's Horse was wounded + at Aliwal North, in March, in several places. A Mauser bullet + entered the head 1-1/2 inch above the junction of the anterior + border of the left pinna with the side of the head. The exit + wound was situated just below and behind the left parietal + eminence. The patient stated that the shot was fired by a man + he recognised in a laager 150 yards distant from him. + + The man remained unconscious eleven days, and when he came + round paralysis of the right upper extremity, and weakness of + both lower extremities, were noted. There was also ataxic + aphasia. + + The wounds healed, but two months later the man began to suffer + from fits every few days. He spoke of them as fainting fits, + but they were accompanied by general twitchings. + + The patient was shown to me in July by Major Woodhouse, + R.A.M.C. The strength of the right upper extremity was then + good, and he walked well. Speech was slow, but correct. The + pupils were equal, and acted normally. + + The mental condition was weak, and the temper irritable. The + man had hallucinations, and was very obstinate: there was + complete deafness of the left ear. He refused surgical + treatment, but was really hardly a responsible individual. + + (73) _Gutter fracture in right frontal region. Traumatic + epilepsy._--Wounded at Pieter's Hill. Gutter fracture crossing + the outer aspect of the frontal lobe, immediately above the + level of the right Sylvian fissure. The wound was perforating + at the central part, but only reached as far back as the lower + end of the ascending frontal convolution. The patient was + rendered unconscious and was removed to Mooi River. He was + there seen by Sir William MacCormac, who removed a number of + fragments of bone. The patient rapidly recovered consciousness + after the operation, but was completely hemiplegic. After a + month he suddenly found he was able to move his lower + extremity, and later the paralysis became steadily less. + + On his return home the man obtained employment as a + Commissionaire, but nine months after the injury, while his + wife was helping him on with his coat one morning, he was + suddenly seized with a fit; the paralysed arm was jerked up, + and convulsions became general, a wedge needing to be inserted + to prevent the tongue suffering injury. + + When admitted into the hospital, the cicatrix of the wound was + considerably depressed, and the central part was evidently + continuously attached to the surface of the brain. Pulsation + was both visible and palpable, there was little or no + tenderness on examination, and the patient did not complain of + pain. + + Little trace of the left facial paralysis remained. The man + walked well, but with foot-drop. The left upper extremity was + rigid, but chiefly from the elbow downwards. The fingers were + flexed, but a slight increase of grip could be effected. No + other active movements of hand. The elbow was held flexed, but + could be straightened to about 3/4 range on effort. The + shoulder could be slightly abducted, but wide movements were + made by the scapular muscles. + + Sensation was dull over the left side of the face, also over + the left side of the neck. There was complete loss of cutaneous + sensibility over the lower half of the forearm and hand, and a + similar patch in the left axilla. Over the rest of the + extremity the sensation was better on the flexor than on the + extensor aspects. There was little alteration in the common + sensation elsewhere, except that the contrast between that of + the dorsum and sole of the foot was somewhat more marked than + usual. The temperature of the insensitive axilla was one degree + higher than that of the right. + + The left knee jerk was somewhat exaggerated. + + On December 15 an incision was made through the old cicatrix + directly over the defect in the skull. On separating the skin + it was found directly adherent to the cicatrised dura, and when + this was incised a large vicarious arachnoid space was opened + up. The space was crossed by a number of strands of connective + tissue, and the cavity had no epithelial lining. The fluid ran + out freely, and the space was evidently in free communication + with the general arachnoid cavity. A trephine crown was taken + out at the posterior end of the gutter, and the surface of the + brain explored, but no fragments of bone were found. I + therefore replaced the crown, and closed the bony defect in the + floor of the gutter with a plate of platinum fitted into a + groove made in the bony margin. The wound was then sutured. + Primary union took place, and there was no constitutional + disturbance beyond one temperature of 100° on the evening of + the second day; otherwise the temperature remained normal, and + the pulse did not rise above 75. + + On the second evening a fit occurred, coming on while the + patient was apparently asleep. It lasted about a quarter of an + hour and was general, the patient becoming for a short time + unconscious, and passing water involuntarily. + + On the third morning two similar fits occurred, the first a + severe one, during which the patient passed a motion + involuntarily. The commencement of all three fits was observed + by the nurse only, but in each the convulsions apparently + commenced in the face and then became general. + + Three months later no further fits had occurred, and the + patient, who throughout had said he felt remarkably well, + complained of nothing. The upper extremity was apparently + slightly less rigid than before the exploration, and the + patient said he walked somewhat better than before. The closure + of the skull was perfect. + +_Treatment._--The treatment of fractures of the skull possesses a degree +of surgical interest that attaches to no other class of gunshot injury, +since operative interference is necessary in every case in which +recovery is judged possible. The injuries are, without exception, of the +nature of punctured wounds of the skull, and the ordinary rule of +surgery should under no circumstances be deviated from. An expectant +attitude, although it often appears immediately satisfactory, exposes +the patient to future risks which are incalculable, but none the less +serious. Happily the operations needed may be included amongst the most +simple as well as the most successful, and expose the patient with +ordinary precautions to no increase of risk beyond that dependent on the +original injury. + +Cases of a general character, or in which the base has been directly +fractured other than in the frontal region, are seldom suitable for +operation, since surgical skill is in these of no avail; but in all +others an exploration is indicated. I use the word 'exploration' +advisedly, since what may be called the formal operation of trephining +is seldom necessary except in the case of the small openings due to +wounds received from a very long range of fire; in all others there is +no difficulty, but very great advantage, in making such enlargement of +the bone opening as is necessary with Hoffman's forceps. + +The scalp should be first shaved and cleansed; if for any reason an +operation is impossible, this procedure at least should be carried out, +with a view to ensuring, as far as possible, future asepsis, infection +in head injuries being almost the only danger to be feared. The shaving +may need to be complete, but local clearance of the hair suffices in +many cases. The hair having been removed, the scalp is cleansed with all +care, a flap is raised of which the bullet opening forms the central +point, and the wound explored. In slight cases the entry opening is the +one of chief importance, and the exit may be simply cleansed and +dressed. In some instances, as in direct fracture of the roof of the +orbit from above, the exit should not be touched. + +The flap having been raised, if the wound be a small perforation, a +1/2-inch trephine crown may be taken from one side; but it is rare for +the opening to be so small that the tip of a pair of Hoffman's forceps +cannot be inserted. The trephine is more often useful in cases of +non-penetrating gutter fractures where space is needed for exploration, +and the elevation or removal of fragments of the inner-table. Loose +fragments may need to be removed from beneath the scalp, but the +important ones are those within the cranium. These may either be of some +size, or fine comminuted splinters of either table, often at as great a +distance as 2 inches or more from the surface. The cavity must be +thoroughly explored and all splinters removed. I have seen more than +fifty extracted in one case of open gutter fracture. The brain pulp and +clot should then be gently removed or washed away, and the wound closed +without drainage. Fragments of bone, as a rule, are better not replaced, +but complete suture of the skin flap is always advisable in view of the +great importance of primary union, and the fact that a drainage opening +exists at the original wound of entry, and that the wound is readily +re-opened to its whole extent, should such a step be advisable. + +The detection of fragments is easiest and most satisfactorily done with +the finger, and in all but simple punctures the opening should be large +enough to allow thoroughly effective digital exploration; the remarks +already made as to the factors determining the size of fragments are of +interest in this connection. The determination of the amount of brain +pulp which should be removed is somewhat more difficult; one can only +say that all that washes readily away should be removed, and its place +is usually taken up by blood. + +Few fractures of the base are suitable for treatment; the only ones I +saw were those of direct fracture of the roof of the orbit or nose, +produced by bullets passing across the orbits; here the advisability of +interference with the injured eye led to opening of the orbit, and +sometimes exposed the fracture. Some patients recovered, even when the +damage had been sufficient to cause escape of pulped brain into the +orbit. + +The after treatment simply consisted in keeping the patients as quiet as +circumstances would permit, and the administration of a fluid diet. In +some cases recurring symptoms pointed to the continued presence of bone +fragments; these were usually indicated by signs of irritation, or often +of local inflammation, in the latter case infection taking the greater +share in the causation. Such cases needed secondary exploration, and the +wonderful success of this operation, even when the wound was evidently +infected, was perhaps one of the most striking experiences of the +surgery in general. + +I should add a word here as to the most satisfactory time for the +performance of these operations; as in all cases the earlier they could +be undertaken the better, but in the head injuries the advantages of +early interference were more evident than in any other region. This +depended on the fact that, as in civil practice, the scalp is one of the +most dangerous regions as far as auto-infection of the wound is +concerned, and one of the most difficult to cleanse, except by thorough +shaving. Beyond this the extreme simplicity of the operative procedure +needed, called for few precautions beyond those for asepsis, and very +little armament in the way of instruments, &c. + +When on the march from Winberg to Heilbron with the Highland Brigade we +had some five days' continuous fighting, and on this occasion several +perforating fractures of the skull were brought in. The coldness of the +nights at that time made evening operations an impossibility; hence the +operations on these men were performed at the first dressing station, in +the open air, at the side of the ambulance wagons, often during the +progress of fighting around. Of several cases so operated on, all healed +by primary union without a bad symptom of any kind, except one (see p. +249), in whom a very large entrance opening over the right cortical +motor area led down to an extensive destruction of the brain, +complicated by a fracture of the base in the middle fossa. This wound, +from the first considered hopeless, became septic during the four days' +travelling in an ambulance wagon that was necessary, and the man died at +the end of fourteen days. As the whole cortical motor area was +destroyed, death was, perhaps, the end most to be desired; but the fight +that this man made for recovery, and the fact that his death, after all, +was due to general infection and not to any local extension of the +injury, very strongly impressed me with the possibility of recovery, +even in such extensive cases, if only an aseptic condition can be +maintained. I saw many other cases of the same nature, particularly in +men who, as a result of unfortunate circumstances, were necessarily left +out on the field for more than twenty-four hours. In some of these +maggots were found in the wounds only thirty-six hours after the +infliction of the injury. + +I have said nothing as to the treatment of the large primary herniæ +cerebri in wounds of an explosive nature, since these were rarely +subjects suitable for operation; but in the instances of minor severity +they were treated as the other cases where the pulped brain lay mostly +within the skull. + +In cases where the wounds were in the frontal or fronto-parietal +regions, and hemiplegia existed, the rapid improvement in the paralytic +symptoms, after operation, was very marked, showing that the signs were +mainly, or entirely, due to 'radiation' injury. I am inclined to think +that temporary injury of this kind from vibratory disturbance and small +parenchymatous hæmorrhages, were far more often the cause of the +paralysis than surface hæmorrhage, since the latter was rarely found in +large quantity. Large clots, however, no doubt growing in both size and +firmness, occasionally occupied the area of destroyed brain, and these +sometimes manifestly exercised pressure that was at once relieved by +their evacuation. + +In cases where inflammatory hernia cerebri developed, a secondary +exploration was often indicated for the removal of fragments of bone or +the evacuation of pus, otherwise the condition was best treated by dry +dressings and gentle support. + +Abscess of the brain was treated by simple evacuation and drainage by +metal or rubber tubes: the operations were always of extreme simplicity, +since the abscess in every case I saw was in the direct line of the +wound track, and was readily opened by the insertion of a director or +blunt knife. The only trouble in the after treatment was that already +referred to, of preventing premature closure of the drainage opening. + +I have made no special reference to the method of dressing, since it was +of the ordinary routine kind. The most important factor in success was +the efficient primary disinfection of the scalp; a piece of antiseptic +gauze and some absorbent wool, efficiently secured, was all that was +needed later. + +As usual the consideration of the treatment of cases in which the bullet +was retained may be considered last. Such accidents were distinctly +rare. I operated in only one (No. 54, p. 260) in whom the indications +both for localisation and interference were obvious, since the bullet +had palpably fractured the bone, although it had not retained sufficient +force to enable it to leave the skull. In two other cases that I saw, in +one the bullet was lodged in the zygomatic fossa, in the second just +below the mastoid process. The former patient died; the latter exhibited +symptoms indicative of injury to the occipital lobe (No. 68), and was +successfully treated by Mr. J. E. Ker. I never happened to see a case in +which a retained bullet in the skull was localised by the X rays, but +such might have been possible in case No. 64, p. 275. In no case is +primary interference indicated, unless a fracture exists where the +bullet has tried to escape, or secondary symptoms develop pointing to +irritation. + +Under ordinary circumstances, moreover, the indications for removal of a +bullet are not likely to be sufficiently imperative to necessitate the +operation being undertaken until the patient can be placed under the +best conditions that can be secured. This is the more advisable since +such operations need the infliction of an additional wound, require +great delicacy, and may be very prolonged in performance. The experience +of civil practice has already sufficiently proved the small amount of +inconvenience likely to follow the retention of a bullet in the skull. + +I may again mention the fact that in explorations for the removal of +bone fragments, fragments of lead, from breaking or setting up of the +bullet, are sometimes found. + +Taken as a whole, the operations on the head were extremely satisfactory +from a technical point of view; the large depressed pulsating cicatrix +so often left was the chief defect observed. The circumstances under +which many of the operations had to be performed militated strongly, +however, against the successful replacement of separated bone fragments, +which might have rendered the defects less serious. + +Secondary operations for traumatic epilepsy scarcely come within the +scope of these experiences. In case 73, p. 292, it is of interest to +note the manner in which the cavity due to loss of brain substance was +filled up. No doubt a similar vicarious arachnoid space develops in all +cases in which a soft pulsating swelling fills an aperture in the bones +of the skull. + + +WOUNDS OF THE HEAD NOT INVOLVING THE BRAIN + +_Mastoid process._--The most important wound of the cranium not already +mentioned was that involving the mastoid process and the bony capsule of +the ear. Wounds of the mastoid process obtained their chief interest in +connection with paralysis of the seventh nerve. This nerve rarely or +never escaped, and, as far as my experience went, the facial paralysis +was permanent (see cases 111-114, p. 355). I think the same prognosis +holds good with regard to the deafness resulting from these injuries, +and it is difficult to believe, with our experience of the effect of +vibration on other nerve centres and organs, that the internal ear could +ever escape permanent damage. + +In a number of cases the tympanum itself, or the external auditory +meatus, was directly implicated in tracks; in these, also, loss of +hearing was the rule. + +Wounds of the pinna when produced by undeformed bullets were usually of +the same slitlike nature remarked in perforations of the cartilages of +the nose, and healed with equal rapidity. + +_Wounds of the orbit._--Injuries to the orbit were very numerous and +serious in their results, both to the globe of the eye and the +surrounding structures. + +_Anatomical lesions._--The wound tracks, with regard to the injuries +produced, may be well classified according to the direction they took; +thus--vertical, transverse, and oblique. + +Vertical wound tracks were on the whole the least serious, but this +mainly from the fact of limitation of the injury to one orbital cavity. +They were usually produced by bullets passing from above downwards +through the frontal region of the cranium, and were received by the +patients while in the prone position. + +Transverse and oblique wounds owed their greater importance to the fact +that both eyes were more likely to be implicated. + +Besides these tracks, which actually crossed the cavities, a number +involved the bony boundaries, producing almost as severe lesions in the +globe of the eye, many of the patients being rendered permanently blind. +The only difference in nature of such cases was the escape of orbital +structures, and this was of minor importance in the presence of the +graver lesion to vision. The following is an illustrative case:-- + + (74) Wounded at Colenso. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch below the + centre of the margin of the right orbit; _exit_, behind the + right angle of the mandible. Fracture of lower jaw, and + development of a diffuse traumatic aneurism of the external + carotid artery. The common carotid artery was tied for + secondary hæmorrhage (Mr. Jameson) some three weeks later. + + Vision was affected at the time of the accident; the fingers + could be seen, but not counted. After ligation of the carotid + the condition was possibly worse, and this needs mention as + transitory loss of power in the left upper extremity also + followed the operation. + +Fractures of the bony wall were of every degree. The most severe that I +saw were two in which lateral impact by a bullet crossing the cranial +cavity caused general comminution of the whole orbital roof. Fissures of +the roof were common in connection with 'explosive' exit apertures in +the frontal region of the skull. Pure perforations usually accompanied +the vertical or transverse wounds of the cavity, fragments at the +aperture of entry then being projected into the orbit, sometimes +penetrating the muscles. + +Occasionally the margin of the cavity was merely notched. + +The ocular muscles were often divided more or less completely, and +occasionally some difficulty arose in determining whether loss of +movement of the globe in any definite direction depended on injury to +the muscle itself, or to the nerve supplying the muscle. The following +case illustrates this point:-- + + (75) _Entry_ (Mauser), 2 inches behind the right external + canthus; the bullet pierced the external wall and traversed the + floor of the right orbit beneath the globe, crossed the nasal + cavity, and a part of the left orbit; _exit_, at the lower + margin of the left orbit, beneath the centre of the globe of + the eye. + + Complete loss of sight followed the injury, and persisted for + one week. Modified vision then returned. + + Three weeks later there was diplopia; loss of function of the + right external and inferior recti, although the ball could be + turned downward to some extent by the superior oblique when the + internal rectus was in action. Movements of the left globe were + not seriously affected. + + The pupils were immobile and moderately dilated, but atropine + had been employed two days previously. + + A year later the condition was as follows: There is some + weakness of the right seventh nerve, as evidenced by want of + symmetry in all the folds of the face, and in narrowing of the + palpebral fissure. + + When at rest the right eye is somewhat raised and turned + outwards. Active movements outwards or downwards are + restricted. There is diplopia, and the vision of the right eye + is much impaired; the man can see persons, but cannot count + fingers with certainty, although he sees the hand. Putting on + one side the loss of free movement, there is no obvious + external appearance of injury to the eye. + +Mr. J. H. Fisher reported as follows: + + Ophthalmoscopic examination shows the left eye and fundus to be + normal. The right disc is not atrophied, but the whole of the + lower half of the fundus is coated with masses of black retinal + pigment. There is atrophy in spots of the capillary layer of + the choroid, and the larger vessels of the deeper layer are + exposed between the interstices of the pigment masses. There is + no definite choroidal rupture. The lesion encroaches upon and + implicates the macular region. + + The injury is a concussion one, not necessarily resulting from + contact, and certainly not due to a perforation. The loss of + movement and faulty position are the result of injury to the + muscles, and not to nerve implication. + + The man complained that when he blew his nose the left eye + filled with water and air came out. The left nasal duct was + however shown to be intact, as water injected by the + canaliculus passed freely into the nose. + +Intra-orbital bleeding, subconjunctival hæmorrhage with proptosis and +ecchymosis of the lids were usually well marked. The latter was +sometimes extreme. + +Injury to the nerves was naturally of a very mixed character. In many +instances the branches of the first two divisions of the fifth nerve +were obviously implicated and regional anæsthesia was common. This was +often transitory when the result of vibratory concussion, contusion, or +pressure from hæmorrhage. In other cases it was more prolonged as a +result of actual division of the nerve. As is usually the case, when a +small area of distribution only was affected, sensation was rapidly +regained from vicarious sources, even when section had been complete. + +As individual injuries, those to the optic nerve were the most +frequently diagnosed. I am sorry to be unable to attempt a +discrimination of injuries to the nerve alone from those in which both +nerve and globe suffered, but the globe can rarely have escaped injury, +either direct or indirect, when the bullet actually traversed the +orbital cavity. (A few further remarks concerning injuries to the optic +nerve will be found in Chapter IX.) + +Injuries to the globe of the eye, either direct or indirect, accompanied +most of the orbital wounds. + +In some the lesion was of the nature of concussion. In such the bone +injury was usually at the periphery of the orbit, or to the bones of the +face in the neighbourhood. The loss of vision might then be temporary, +persisting from two to ten days, then returning, often with some +deficiencies. + +In other similar external injuries, the lesion of the globe was more +severe, and permanent blindness followed. + +In variability of degree of completeness, these lesions of the globe +corresponded exactly with those produced in other parts of the nervous +system by bullets striking the bones in their vicinity, and they were no +doubt the result of a similar transmission of vibratory force. + +In a third series of cases the globe suffered direct contusion, and in a +fourth was perforated and destroyed. + +In cases in which permanent blindness was produced without solution of +continuity of the sclerotic coat, the nature of the lesion was probably +in most cases vibratory concussion and the development of multiple +hæmorrhages from choroidal ruptures of a similar nature to those seen in +the brain and spinal cord. The actual hæmorrhagic areæ varied in size; +but, as far as my experience went, gross hæmorrhages into the anterior +chamber did not occur without severe direct contact of the bullet. + +In the vast majority of the cases blindness, whether transitory or +permanent, developed immediately on the reception of the injury, and was +possibly in its initial stage the result of primary concussion. + +Cases were, however, seen occasionally in which the symptoms were less +sudden, of which the following is an example. I did not think that the +mode of progress seen here could be referred to simple orbital +hæmorrhage, although this existed, but rather to intravaginal hæmorrhage +into the sheath of the optic nerve. On external inspection the globes +appeared normal. + + (76) Wounded at Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), over the centre + of the right zygoma; the bullet traversed the right orbit, + nose, and left orbit. _Exit_, immediately above the outer + extremity of the left eyebrow. + + The patient stated that he could 'see' for thirty minutes with + the right eye and for an hour with the left, immediately after + the injury. He then became totally blind, and has since + remained so. During the next three weeks there were occasional + 'flashes of light' experienced, but these then ceased. + + At the end of three weeks the condition was as follows: Ocular + movements good in every direction except that of elevation of + the globe. The levator palpebræ superioris acted very slightly; + the right, however, better than the left. + + There were marked right proptosis, less left proptosis, and + slight patchy subconjunctival hæmorrhage of both eyes. The + pupils were dilated, motionless, and not concentric. + + The patient was invalided as totally blind (November, 1900). + +Mr. Lang, who saw this patient on his return to England, kindly +furnishes me with the following note as to the condition. There was +extensive damage to both eyes, hæmorrhage, and probably retinal +detachment as well as choroidal changes. + +The quotation of a few illustrative examples typical of the ordinary +orbital injuries may be of interest:-- + + (77) _Vertical wound._--_Entry_, into left orbit in roof + posterior to globe, and internal to optic nerve; _exit_, from + orbit through junction of inner wall and floor into nose. + + Complete blindness followed the injury, but upon the second day + light was perceived on lifting the upper lid. There was marked + proptosis, subconjunctival ecchymosis, swelling and ecchymosis + of the upper lid, and ptosis. Anæsthesia in the whole area of + distribution of the frontal nerve. + + At the end of three weeks, fingers could be recognised, but a + large blind spot existed in the centre of the field of vision. + The general movements of the globe were fair, but the upper lid + could not be raised. The proptosis and subconjunctival + hæmorrhage cleared up. + + Little further improvement occurred; six months later the + patient could only count the fingers excentrically. A very + extensive scotoma was present. The optic disc was much + atrophied, the calibre of the arteries diminished and the veins + full (Mr. Critchett). The ptosis persisted. It was doubtful in + this case whether the ptosis depended on injury to the nerve of + supply, or on laceration and fixation of the levator palpebræ + superioris. The latter seemed the more probable, as the + superior rectus acted. The absence of any sign of gross + bleeding into the anterior chamber is opposed to the existence + of a perforating lesion of the globe in this case. + + (78) _Entry_ (Mauser), from cranial cavity, just within the + centre of the roof of the right orbit; _exit_, from the orbit + by a notch in the lower orbital margin internal to the + infra-orbital foramen; track thence beneath the soft parts of + the face to emerge from the margin of the upper lip near the + left angle of the mouth. Collapse of globe, proptosis, + subconjunctival hæmorrhage, oedema and ecchymosis of lids. + + Shrunken ball removed on twenty-fourth day (Major Burton, + R.A.M.C.). + + (79) _Entry_ (Mauser), at the posterior border of the left + mastoid process, 3/4 inch above the tip; _exit_, in the inner + third of the left upper eyelid. Globe excised at end of seven + days. Facial paralysis and deafness. + + (80) _Entry_ (Mauser), from cranial cavity through centre of + roof of orbit; _exit_, through maxillary antrum. Total + blindness. Movements of ball good, no loss of tension. + Proptosis, subconjunctival hæmorrhage, ecchymosis of eyelids. + No improvement in sight followed. One month later the globe + suppurated and was removed. The bullet had divided the optic + nerve and contused the ball. + +_Prognosis and treatment of wounds of the orbit._--Except in those cases +in which return of vision was rapid, the prognosis was consistently bad +in the injuries to the globe. When the globe was ruptured it, as a rule, +rapidly shrank. The case (80) quoted above is the only one in which I +saw secondary suppuration. + +With regard to active treatment, the majority of the cases were +complicated by fracture of the roof of the orbit, and in many instances +concurrent brain injury was present. In all of these, as a general rule, +it was advisable to await the closure of the wound in the orbital roof +prior to removal of the injured eye, if that was considered necessary. +The only exception to this rule was offered by instances in which the +bullet passed from the orbit into the cranium; in these primary removal +of fragments projecting into the frontal lobe was preferable. As already +indicated, such wounds were comparatively rare except in the case of +bullets coursing transversely or obliquely. + +The wounds were, as a rule, followed by considerable matting of the +orbital structures. + +_Wounds of the nose._--I will pass by the external parts, with the +remark that perforating wounds of the cartilages were remarkable for +their sharp limitation and simple nature. I remember one case shown to +me in the Irish Hospital in Bloemfontein by Sir W. Thomson, in which at +the end of the third day small symmetrical vertical slits in each ala +already healed were scarcely visible. This case very strongly impressed +one with the doctrine of chances, since on the same morning I was asked +to see a patient in whom a similar transverse shot had crossed both +orbits, destroying both globes and injuring the brain. + +A retained bullet in the upper portion of the nasal cavity has already +been referred to (fig. 60). This accident was naturally a rare one; in +that instance the bullet had only retained sufficient force to insert +itself neatly between the bones. + +Wounds crossing the nasal fossæ were comparatively common. The +interference with the sense of smell often resulting is discussed in +Chapter IX. + +_Wounds of the malar bone_ were not infrequent. The small amount of +splintering was somewhat remarkable considering the density of structure +of the bone. In this particular the behaviour of the malar corresponded +with what was observed in the flat bones in general. A case quoted in +Chapter III. p. 87, illustrates the capacity of the hard edge of the +bone to check the course of a bullet, and cause considerable deformity +and fissuring of the mantle. + +_Wounds of the jaws. Upper jaw._--A large number of tracks crossing the +antrum transversely, obliquely, or vertically were observed. In the +first case the nasal cavity, in the others the orbital or buccal cavity, +were generally concurrently involved. It was somewhat striking that I +never observed any trouble, immediate or remote, from these perforations +of the antrum. If hæmorrhage into the cavity occurred, it gave rise to +no ultimate trouble. I never saw an instance of secondary suppuration +even in cases where the bullet entered or escaped through the alveolar +process with considerable local comminution. The branches of the second +division of the fifth nerve were sometimes implicated. In one instance a +bullet traversed and cut away a longitudinal groove in the bones, +extending from the posterior margin of the hard palate, and terminating +by a wide notch in the alveolar process. + +A good example of a troublesome transverse wound of the bones of the +face is afforded by the following instance:-- + + (81) _Entry_ (Mauser), through the left malar eminence, 1 inch + below and external to the external canthus; _exit_, a slightly + curved tranverse slit in the lobe of the right ear. + + The injury was followed by no signs of orbital concussion, and + no loss of consciousness. There was free bleeding from both + external wounds and from the nose. The sense of smell was + unaffected, but taste was impaired, and there was loss of + tactile sensation in the teeth on the left side also on the + hard palate. There was no evidence of fracture of the neck of + the mandible, nor of the external auditory meatus, but there + was considerable difficulty in opening the mouth widely or + protruding the teeth. The latter difficulty persisted for some + time, and was still present when I last saw the patient. + +_Mandible._--Fractures of the lower jaw were frequent and offered some +peculiarities, the chief of which were the liability of any part of the +bone to be damaged, and the absence of the obliquity between the cleft +in the outer and inner tables so common in the fractures seen in civil +practice. + +The neck of the condyle I three times saw fractured; in each instance +permanent stiffness and inability to open the mouth resulted. This +stiffness was of a degree sufficient to raise the question whether the +best course in such cases would not be to cut down primarily and remove +a considerable number of loose fragments, and thus diminish the amount +of callus likely to be thrown out. + +Fractures of the ascending ramus and body were more frequent. They were +accompanied by considerable comminution, but all that I observed healed +remarkably well, and in good position, in spite of the fact that many of +the patients objected to wear any form of splint. + +The most special feature was the occurrence of notched fractures, +corresponding to the type wedges described in Chapter V. When these +fractures were at the lower margin of the bone, the buccal cavity +occasionally escaped in spite of considerable comminution, the latter +confining itself to the basal portion of the bone. + +When the base of the teeth, or the alveolus, was struck, a wedge was +often broken away, and from the apex of the resulting gap a fracture +extended to the lower margin of the bone. + +When fractures of the latter nature resulted from vertically coursing +bullets, much trouble often ensued. I will quote two cases in +illustration:-- + + (82) Wounded at Rooipoort. _Entry_ (Mauser), through the lower + lip; the bullet struck the base of the right lateral incisor + and canine teeth, knocked out a wedge, and becoming slightly + deflected, cut a vertical groove to the base of the mandible; + _exit_, in left submaxillary triangle. The bullet subsequently + re-entered the chest wall just below the clavicle, and escaped + at the anterior axillary fold. The appearance of these second + wounds suggested only slight setting up of the bullet; the + original impact was no doubt of an oblique or lateral + character. + + The injury was followed by free hæmorrhage and remarkably + abundant salivation (I was inclined to think that the latter + symptom was particularly well marked in gunshot fractures of + the body of the mandible), and very great swelling of the floor + of the mouth. + + The patient could not bear any form of apparatus, but was + assiduous in washing out his mouth, and made a good recovery, + the fragments being in good apposition. + + (83) _Entry_ (Mauser), over the right malar eminence; the + bullet carried away all the right upper and lower molars, + fractured the mandible, and was retained in the neck. + + A fortnight later an abscess formed in the lower part of the + neck, which was opened (Mr. Pooley), and portions of the mantle + and leaden core, together with numerous fragments of the teeth, + were removed. The bullet had undergone fragmentation on impact, + probably on the last one (teeth of mandible), and still + retained sufficient force to enter the neck. + +This case affords an interesting example of transmission of force from +the bullet to the teeth, and bears on the theory of explosive action. + +In the treatment of fractures of the upper jaw, interference was rarely +needed. In the case of the mandible, a remark has already been made as +to the advisability of removing fragments when the neck of the condyle +has suffered comminution. The removal of loose fragments is necessary in +all cases in which the buccal cavity is involved. Experience in fracture +of the limbs has shown a tendency to quiet necrosis when comminution was +severe, in spite of primary union. This is no doubt dependent on the +very free separation of fragments on the entry and exit aspects from +their enveloping periosteum. In the case of the mandible, considerable +necrosis is inevitable, and much time is saved by the primary removal of +all actually loose fragments. + +A splint of the ordinary chin-cap type with a four-tailed bandage meets +all further requirements, but the patients often object to them. Cases +in which the fragments could be fixed by wiring the teeth were not +common, as the latter had so frequently been carried away. The usual +precautions as to maintaining oral asepsis were especially necessary. + +The results of fractures of the mandible were, in so far as my +experience went, remarkably good, as deformity was seldom considerable. +The absence of obliquity and the effect of primary local shock were no +doubt favourable elements, little primary displacement from muscular +action occurring. + +Wounds of the _cheek_ healed readily, and the same was noticeable of the +lips. Wounds of the _tongue_ healed with remarkable rapidity when of the +simple perforating type, often with little or no swelling or evidence of +contusion. At the end of a few days it was often difficult to localise +them. + +In connection with this subject a remarkable case which occurred at the +fighting at Koodoosberg Drift is worthy of mention, although the +projectile was a shell fragment and not a bullet of small calibre. + + (84) A Highlander was the unfortunate possessor of an entire + set of upper teeth set in a gold plate. A small fragment of a + shell perforated the upper lip by an irregular aperture, and + struck the teeth in such a manner as to turn the posterior edge + of the plate towards the tongue, which latter was cut into two + halves transversely through to the base. + + The patient asserted that the plate had been driven down his + throat, but nothing was palpable either in the fauces or on + external examination of the neck. He spoke distinctly, but + there was dysphagia as far as solids were concerned. + + On the second day swelling of the neck due to early cellulitis + developed, especially on the left side, and signs of laryngeal + obstruction became prominent. Chloroform was administered, but + on the introduction of the finger into the fauces, respiration + failed and a hasty tracheotomy had to be performed. No foreign + body was palpable with the finger in the pharynx. + + Tracheitis and septic pneumonia developed, and the man died of + acute septicæmia thirty-six hours later. Death occurred just as + the Division received marching orders, and no _post-mortem_ + examination was made. As a result of palpation at the time of + the tracheotomy, the probabilities seemed against the presence + of the tooth plate in the pharynx, but the absence of positive + evidence scarcely allows the case to be certainly classed as + one of cellulitis and septicæmia secondary to wound of the + tongue. + + +WOUNDS OF THE NECK + +Wounds of the neck were not unfrequent and were of the gravest +importance; there can be little doubt that they accounted for a +considerable proportion of the deaths on the field. On the other hand, +the neck as a region offered some of the most striking examples of +hairbreadth escape of important structures. Consideration of a number of +the vascular lesions (see cervical aneurisms, p. 135) also shows +conclusively that in no region did the small size of the bullet more +materially influence the result, since no doubt can exist that all these +wounds would have proved immediately fatal if produced by projectiles of +larger calibre. + +In this place only a few general considerations will be entered into, as +most of the important cases are dealt with under the general headings of +vessels, nerves, and spine; but it is convenient to include here the few +remarks that have to be made concerning the cervical viscera. + +The wounds of the soft parts might course in any direction, but vertical +tracks from above downwards were rare. In point of fact, these occurred +only in connection with perforations of the head, and as vertical wounds +of the latter were received in the prone position, usually when the head +was raised, the necessary conditions for longitudinal tracks were seldom +offered. One case of a complete vertical track in the muscles of the +back of the neck has been already quoted (No. 69, p. 286). + +Tracks coursing upwards from the trunk were somewhat more frequent in +occurrence; thus a considerable number traversing the thorax were seen. +In such instances the aperture of exit was generally situated in the +posterior triangle, and some of the brachial nerves often suffered. + +The commonest forms of wound were the transverse or the oblique. A large +number of cases with such tracks will be found among the cases of injury +to the cervical vessels and nerves. In some instances the course was +restricted to the neck alone, in others the trunk or upper extremity was +also implicated. + +The favourable influence of the arrangement of the structures of the +neck, which allows of the ordinary displacement excursions necessary for +deglutition, respiration, and their cognate movements, was very strongly +marked. Thus in several cases the bullet traversed the neck behind the +pharynx and oesophagus without injuring either viscus, and the escape +of the main vessels and nerves was equally striking. In such wounds the +wedge-like bullet without doubt separated and displaced all these +structures, causing mere superficial contusion. + +In connection with the latter statement, the rarity of direct sagittal +wounds in the hospitals should be mentioned. This is probably to be +explained by the facts that wounds in the mid-line of the neck +implicated the cervical spinal cord, and that sagittal wounds +implicating the vessels were apt to lead more directly to the surface, +and thus external hæmorrhage was favoured. A few examples of cervical +tracks will suffice to illustrate these remarks:-- + + (85) _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), below angle of scapula; _exit_, + centre of posterior triangle. Injury to the lung, and + hæmothorax. No damage to neck structures. + + (86) _Entry_ (Mauser), over Pomum Adami; _exit_, below right + scapular spine. Median and musculo-spiral paralysis. + + (87) _Entry_, a large oval aperture through ninth right rib, + 1/2 an inch external to scapular angle; _exit_, anterior border + of sterno-mastoid opposite Pomum Adami. Second entry, opposite + angle of mandible; exit, in centre of cheek. + + Wound of lung. Musculo-spiral paralysis still persisting at the + end of nine months. + + (88) _Entry_ (Mauser), 2 inches above left clavicle at margin + of trapezius; _exit_, 1 inch from sternum in left first + intercostal space. Contusion of brachial plexus, with mixed + signs, which disappeared in two months. No signs of vascular + injury. + +See also cases of cervical aneurism, &c. + +_Wounds of the pharynx._--I saw only three cases of wound of the +pharynx; in each the injury was in the nasal or buccal segment of the +cavity, and in each the soft palate was injured, in two instances the +wound being a small perforation. + +All three cases belong to the somewhat miraculous class. The first (89) +was the only one in which the wound gave rise to subsequent trouble. The +second was under the charge of Mr. Bowlby, and will no doubt be more +fully recounted by him, as interesting signs of injury to the cervical +cord were present. In the third the occipital neuralgia was the only +troublesome symptom. + +In both cases 90 and 91 the high position of the wound in the fixed +portion of the pharynx no doubt accounted for the absence of any +infective trouble. + + (89) _Wounds of the pharynx._--_Entry_ (Lee-Metford), + immediately below the tip of right mastoid process; the bullet + traversed the neck, entering the pharynx close to the right + tonsil, crossed the cavity of the pharynx and the mouth, + emerging through the left cheek. Great swelling of the fauces + and dysphagia persisted for some days after the injury, and + there was considerable hæmorrhage. + + Infection of the posterior portion of the track from the + pharynx resulted, and suppuration continued for some weeks: a + small sequestrum eventually needed to be removed from the tip + of the transverse process of the atlas. + + (90) _Entry_ (Mauser), through mouth; the bullet pierced the + soft palate and the posterior wall of the pharynx, and passed + out between the transverse process of atlas and the occiput. No + serious pharyngeal symptoms. + + (91) _Entry_ (Mauser), through the mouth, knocking out the left + upper canine and bicuspid teeth. Perforation of the soft palate + just to the right of the base of the uvula and the posterior + wall of the pharynx; _exit_, 1-1/2 inch internal to and 1/2 an + inch below the tip of the right mastoid process. Hæmorrhage + persisted for half an hour, and the patient could not swallow + solids for a week. Great occipital neuralgia followed the + wound. + +_Wounds of the larynx._--I saw only one wound of the larynx (see No. 10, +p. 135). In this instance the thyroid cartilage was wounded on either +side at the level of the Pomum Adami. Transitory hæmorrhage and signs of +oedema were the only signs referable to the wound, but in addition the +bullet contused the left vagus and gave rise to temporary laryngeal +paralysis. The same course was observed in a second case of perforation +of the larynx of which I was told. + +_Wounds of the trachea._--The two cases recounted below are the only +tracheal injuries I met with; in one the oesophagus was also +implicated. This patient died from mediastinal emphysema. In the second +case the wide development of emphysema was prevented by the early +introduction of a tracheotomy tube. + + (92) _Entry_ (Mauser), on the outer side of the right arm, + 3-1/2 inches below the acromion; _exit_, 3 inches below the tip + of the left mastoid process, through the sterno-mastoid. Thirty + six hours later there was very free hæmorrhage into the right + posterior triangle, emphysema at the episternal notch, + dysphagia, and complete obliteration of the cardiac area of + dulness. Respiration was rapid (40) and extremely noisy. Pulse + 130, small and weak. + + A tracheotomy was performed (Mr. Stewart), but the patient died + an hour later. When the operation was performed a considerable + amount of mucus from the oesophagus was discovered in the + wound. The bullet had passed obliquely between trachea and + oesophagus, wounding both tubes. + + (93) _Entry_, at the centre of the margin of the left + trapezius; _exit_, in mid line of the neck over the trachea. + Dyspnoea was noted the next morning, which increased during a + journey in a wagon. On the third day the dyspnoea was more + troublesome and emphysema began to develop in the neck. A + tracheotomy was performed (Mr. Hunter), and the tube was kept + in for four days. No further trouble was experienced, and the + wound shortly closed, and the patient, a surgeon, returned to + his duties. Temporary signs of median nerve concussion and + contusion were noted. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +INJURIES TO THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN AND SPINAL CORD + + +Every degree of local injury to the constituent vertebræ and the +contents of the spinal canal was met with considerable frequency. Pure +uncomplicated fractures of the bones were of minor importance, except in +so far as they exemplified the general tendency to localised injury in +small-calibre bullet wounds. Injuries implicating the spinal medulla, on +the other hand, were proportionately the most fatal of any in the whole +body to the wounded who left the field of battle or Field hospital +alive, and these cases formed one of the most painful and distressing +features of the surgery of the campaign. + +The prognostic gravity of any spinal injury depended upon two factors: +first, the obvious one of relative contiguity or direct implication of +the cord or nerves in the wound track; secondly, the degree of velocity +retained by the bullet at the moment of impact with the spine. +Observation of the serious ill effects produced by bullets passing in +the immediate proximity of large strongly ensheathed peripheral nerves +surrounded by soft tissue, such as those of the arm or thigh, would lead +one to expect that a comparatively thin-clad bundle of delicate nerve +tissue like the spinal cord, enclosed in a bony canal so well disposed +for the conveyance of vibrations, would suffer severely, and such proved +to be the case. + +_Fractures in their relation to nerve injury_ will be first dealt with, +and secondly injuries to the cord itself. + +Isolated fractures of the processes were not uncommon, the determination +of the injury to anyone being naturally dependent on the position and +direction taken by the wound track. + +For implication of the _transverse processes_ sagittal wounds coursing +in varying degrees of obliquity were mainly responsible. Such injuries +might be unaccompanied by any nerve lesion. Thus a Boer received a +Lee-Metford wound at Belmont which passed from just below the tip of the +right mastoid process across the pharynx and through the opposite cheek. +No bone damage was at first suspected; suppuration in the neck, however, +followed infection from the pharynx, and when a sinus which persisted +was opened up later, a number of small comminuted fragments were found +detached from the transverse process of the axis. In other cases more or +less severe symptoms of nerve lesion were observed, varying from +transient hyperæsthesia, due to implication of the issuing nerves, to +symptoms of spinal hæmorrhage, such as are portrayed in the following:-- + + (94) A private in the Black Watch was wounded at Magersfontein + from within a distance of 1,000 yards. Among other wounds, one + track entered 1 inch to the right of the second lumbar spinous + process, and emerged 1 inch internal to the right anterior + superior iliac spine. There were signs of wound of the kidney, + and in addition, retention of urine, incontinence of fæces, + complete motor and sensory paralysis of the right lower + extremity, and total absence of all reflexes. Anæsthesia + existed over the whole area of skin supplied by the nerves of + the sacral plexus, hyperæsthesia over that supplied by the + lumbar nerves. + + On the tenth day subsequent to the injury, the hyperæsthesia in + the area of lumbar supply was replaced by normal sensation, + motor power began to be slowly regained in the muscles supplied + by the anterior crural and obturator nerves, and the patellar + reflex returned. At this time lowered sensation returned in the + area supplied by the sacral plexus, but no improvement in motor + power took place, and no control was regained over the bladder + and rectum. + + During the succeeding week some sciatic hyperæsthesia + developed, but on the twenty-eighth day the patient developed + secondary peritonitis from other causes and died on the + thirty-first. A fracture of the transverse process existed, but + unfortunately the spinal canal was not opened for examination + and no details can be given as to the condition of the cord. + (See case 201, p. 463.) + +Fractures of the _spinous processes_, or those involving both the +process and laminæ, were not uncommon. Isolated separation of the +spinous process was usually the result of wounds crossing the back +obliquely or transversely. Examples of this injury were numerous, +especially in the dorsal region, as being the most prominent, +particularly when the patients assumed the prone position when advancing +on the enemy. + +Cervical injuries, owing to the comparatively sheltered position of the +more deeply sunk spines, and from the fact that the head was usually +under cover of a stone or ant-heap, were less common; in one instance +hyperæsthesia was noted in one upper extremity as the result of a +crossing bullet having struck the fourth cervical spine. In a man +wounded at Paardeberg Drift the bullet entered at the centre of the +buttock, traversed the bones of the pelvis, and, leaving that cavity +above the crest of the ilium, crossed the spine to emerge in the +opposite loin. Suppuration occurred, and when the wound was laid open +the third and fourth lumbar spinous processes were found to be loosened, +but still connected to the surrounding soft parts. There were no nerve +symptoms in this case; these would not have been expected, since by the +time that the bullet had traversed the bones of the pelvis its velocity +must have been considerably lessened, even if high at the moment of +primary impact. In another case a dorsal spine, together with its +lamina, was separated and moveable; the only nerve symptoms were slight +pain and a crop of herpes on the line of distribution of the +corresponding intercostal nerve, the bullet having probably struck the +nerve in passing across the intercostal space. In one instance of a +retained bullet lying beneath the skin of the back, its passage between +two contiguous dorsal spines without fracture of either was determined +during an extraction operation. + +When the prone position was assumed by the men, more or less +longitudinal wounds in the course of the spine were naturally liable to +occur. These tracks assumed somewhat greater importance than the +transverse ones, because the injury to bone was more often multiple, and +the laminæ were frequently implicated. The relative importance of such +injuries was dependent on the velocity of the bullet and the depth at +which it travelled. As an instance of a more serious character the +following may be given:-- + + (95) In a Highlander wounded at Magersfontein, probably at a + range within 1,000 yards, the bullet entered at the right side + of the sixth cervical vertebra; tracking downwards, it loosened + the laminæ of the fifth and sixth dorsal vertebræ from the + pedicles, and separated the tip of the seventh spine. The + bullet was extracted from beneath the skin at the latter spot, + its force having been no doubt exhausted by the resistance of + the firm neural arches supported by the weight of the man's + body. Symptoms of total transverse lesion of the cord followed, + and the patient died at the end of fifty-four days. The bone + had not apparently been sufficiently depressed to exert + continuous pressure, but the cord was diffluent and actually + destroyed over an area corresponding with the fourth, fifth, + sixth, and seventh dorsal segments. + +I saw no instance of wound of the _neural arch_ from a direct shot in +the back in any of our men, neither was I ever able to detect an injury +to the articular processes as a localised lesion. + +Injuries to the _centra_ were very frequent, but differed +extraordinarily in their importance. Perforation by bullets travelling +at a relatively low grade of velocity, but still one sufficient to allow +them to pass through the body, produced in many instances no symptoms +whatever when the track did not lie in immediate contiguity to the +spinal canal or perforate it. + +In all the wounds which I had the opportunity of examining post mortem, +the fracture was of the nature of a pure perforation of the cancellous +tissue of the centrum, with no comminution beyond slight splintering of +the compact tissue at the aperture of exit. In one instance the bullet +passed in a coronal direction so close to the back of the centrum as to +leave a septum of only the thickness of stout paper between the track +and the spinal canal. In this case signs of total transverse lesion were +present. I never happened to meet with a case in which the canal was +encroached upon from the front by displaced bone. In some cases at the +end of six weeks there was difficulty in determining the position of the +openings, and section of the bone was necessary in order to assure +oneself as to the direction of the track. + +In some instances the centra were pierced in the coronal direction with +varying degrees of obliquity; in others the direction was more sagittal; +in two of the latter the bullet was retained in the spinal canal. The +tracks were sometimes confined to one vertebra, but often implicated +two. In others the bullet passed longitudinally through the thorax, +grooving or perforating one or more centra. + +The accompanying evidences of nerve injury varied from nil to those of +pressure or irritation of the nerve roots, transient signs of spinal +concussion, signs of contusion and hæmorrhage, or to evidence of total +transverse lesion. Instances of all these conditions will be quoted +under the heading of injuries to the cord or nerves. + +_Signs of injury to the vertebræ._--Separation of the spinous processes +was often indicated by slight deformity, either evident or palpable, +local pain, tenderness, mobility, and crepitus. In some cases these +local signs were reinforced by evidence of cord injury. Fractures +involving the laminæ differed merely in the degree to which the above +signs were developed. Fractures of the transverse processes were +generally only to be assumed from the position and direction of the +wounds, the assumption being sometimes strengthened in probability by +evidence of injury to the cord and nerves. + +Fractures of the centra were also frequently only to be assumed from the +direction of the wound tracks, and possibly from evidence of nerve +injury. When no paralysis supervened, interference with the movements of +the back, or pain, was so slight as to be inappreciable, especially in +the presence of concurrent injury to other parts, which was seldom +absent. I only once saw any angular deformity from this injury, and that +slight, and not apparent before the end of three weeks. In this +particular a very striking difference exists between injuries from +small-calibre bullets and larger ones such as the Martini-Henry. In the +only instance of Martini-Henry fracture of the spine that came under my +notice, the centrum was severely comminuted and deformity was obvious. +Still, as in so many particulars, the difference was only one of degree, +since comminution of the centra in gunshot wounds has always been +observed to be slight in nature compared with what is met with in the +compression fractures of civil life. + +A few words will suffice to dismiss the questions of diagnosis, +prognosis, and treatment of the above injuries. The diagnosis depended +on attention to the signs above indicated, the prognosis almost entirely +on the concurrent injury to the nervous system, which will be considered +later, and the treatment consisted in enforcing rest alone. + + +INJURIES TO THE SPINAL CORD ACCOMPANYING SMALL-CALIBRE BULLET WOUNDS OF +THE VERTEBRÆ + +_Anatomical lesions._--In introducing the subject of the nature of the +lesions of the spinal cord and membranes, I should again enforce the +statement that their character and degree, in comparison with the slight +accompanying bone damage, are pathognomonic of gunshot wounds, and that +these characters find their completest exemplification in injuries +produced by bullets of small calibre, endowed with a high grade of +velocity. Again, that the varying degrees of damage depend comparatively +slightly on the position of the bone lesion, apart from actual +encroachment on the canal, while the degree of velocity retained by the +bullet at the moment of impact is all-important. In no other way are the +divergent results to be explained which follow an apparently identical +injury, in so far as extent, position, and external evidence of damage +to the spinal column are concerned. + +Injuries to the nerve roots of the nature of concussion and contusion, +are dealt with in Chapter IX. + +_Pure concussion_ of the spinal cord may, I believe, be studied from a +better standpoint in the case of small-calibre bullet injuries than in +any others, since in many instances it is, I think, possible to exclude +any complications such as wrenches and strains of the vertebral column, +and ascribe the symptoms to the pure effect of extreme vibratory force +communicated to the cord by its enveloping bony canal. The condition +must be considered under the two headings of slight and severe. + +In _slight concussion_ the usually transient effects of the injury, and +its happy tendency not to destroy life, place us in a state of +uncertainty as to the occurrence of anatomical changes, since no +opportunity of post-mortem examination occurred. The clinical condition +included under this term corresponds with that implied in 'spinal +concussion' in civil practice. One point of extreme interest, whether +the subjects of small-calibre bullet spinal concussion will in the +future suffer from the remote effects common to similar sufferers in +civil life from other causes such as railway collisions, still remains +for future determination. An ample field for such observations has at +any rate been created by the present war. + +In _severe concussion_ a far more highly destructive action is exerted. +This condition may be followed by complete disorganisation of the cord, +accompanied or not by multiple parenchymatous hæmorrhages into its +substance. Either or both of these pathological conditions are produced +by the impact of the bullet with the spine, given a sufficiently high +degree of velocity, and it is difficult to separate clinically the +resulting symptoms. This is a matter perhaps of less importance, since +it stands to reason that a vibratory force, capable of rupturing the +spinal capillaries, would at the same time damage the nervous tissue. + +In speaking of concussion of this degree, it should be clearly +recognised that a general condition, such as is indicated by the use of +the term 'concussion of the brain,' is in no wise implied. The condition +is really far more nearly allied to one of contusion, a strictly +localised portion of the spinal cord undergoing the destructive process +which affects the segments below only in so far as it interrupts the +normal channels of communication with the higher centres. + +Case 102 is an instance of such a lesion, the post-mortem examination +showing clearly that the spinal canal was not encroached upon by the +bullet. The cord in this instance appeared little changed +macroscopically, and this fact was observed in other instances, both +during operations and post mortem. + +_Contusion._--This condition is very closely allied to the last. In +cases 101 and 103 the spinal canal was as little encroached upon as in +102, but the bullet struck the somewhat elastic neural arch in each +case, and post mortem an adhesion between the cord and the enveloping +dura opposite the point at which impact of the bullet was closest +suggests that, in spite of the escape of the bone from fracture, it may +have been momentarily depressed to a sufficient degree to contuse the +cord, or the latter may have suffered a _contre-coup_ injury. For these +reasons the inclusion of the cases as instances of pure concussion is +not warranted. In both Nos. 99 and 100 the neural arch had actually +suffered fracture, and although the bone was not depressed or exercising +pressure at the time of the autopsies, it was no doubt driven in +temporarily at the moment of impact of the bullet. + +At the post-mortem examinations of injuries of this nature it was common +to find one to four segments of the spinal cord completely disorganised. +At the end of some five weeks, the common duration of life, the +structure of the cord was represented by a semi-diffluent yellowish +material, the consistence of which was so deficient in firmness as to +allow the partial collapse of the membranes covering the affected +portion, so as to exhibit a definite narrowing when the whole was held +up (see fig. 79). In such cases traces of extra- or intra-dural +hæmorrhage sometimes still persisted. + +_Hæmorrhage._--This occurred as surface extravasation and in the form of +parenchymatous hæmorrhages. I saw the former both in the extra-dural and +peri-pial forms, but never in sufficient quantity to exert a degree of +pressure calculated to produce symptoms of total transverse lesion. Here +again, however, it is difficult to speak with confidence since the +conditions which regulate the tension within the normal spinal canal are +so complicated and liable to variation, that it is very difficult to +estimate the effect of any given hæmorrhage discovered. + +My friend Mr. R. H. Mills-Roberts described to me one fatal case under +his care in the Welsh Hospital in which extra-dural hæmorrhage was so +abundant as, in his opinion, to have taken a prominent part in the +production of the paralytic symptoms. + +Examples of both extra- and intra-dural (peri-pial) hæmorrhage are +afforded by cases 99, 102, and 103; in none was it large in amount or +widely distributed. The condition was probably also frequently +associated in varying degree with that to be immediately described +below. + +_Intra-medullary hæmorrhage_ (_hæmato-myelia_).--The importance of this +condition is lessened in small-calibre bullet injuries by the fact +already alluded to, that it is almost invariably accompanied by +concussion changes. In one instance in which death took place at the end +of eight days, partly as the result of concurrent injury, in a man in +whom signs of total transverse lesion of the cord were present, the +substance of the cord was found to be closely scattered over with +hæmorrhages of various sizes and extending for a longitudinal area of +some three inches. + +As to the frequency with which hæmorrhage into the substance of the cord +occurred, I regret to be unable to give an opinion. In the late +post-mortem examinations I witnessed, a yellow discoloration of the +softened cord was the only macroscopic evidence of hæmorrhage. + +Hæmorrhages of this nature may, however, account for the grave paralytic +symptoms in some cases of partial or total transverse lesion not due to +direct compression or laceration. + +The conditions of concussion, contusion, or hæmatomyelia were, I +believe, responsible for at least nine-tenths of the cases in which a +total transverse lesion was indicated by the symptoms. The extreme +importance of realising this fact and the rarity of the production of +symptoms by continuing compression both from the prognostic and the +therapeutic point of view is obvious. + +The analogous injuries termed generally in Chapter IX. nerve contusion, +although frequently accompanied by tissue destruction, may be followed +by reparative change, and are capable of complete or almost complete +spontaneous recovery; while the lesions in the spinal cord are +permanent, and complete recovery is only witnessed in the parts affected +by the remote pressure or irritation from blood extravasation, or in +those influenced by concussion. + +I include below short abstracts of all the cases of lesion of the spinal +cord which terminated fatally, in which I had the opportunity of +witnessing the post-mortem conditions. In a considerable proportion of +the cases at the end of six weeks the spinal cord was softened over an +area of from two to four segments in such degree as to have practically +lost all continuity. Although the autopsies were made on patients who +had died slowly and in summer weather, often twelve to sixteen hours +after death, I think it can be but fair to assume, when the consistency +of the remaining portion of the spinal cord is considered, that the +softening was only in slight degree if at all exaggerated by post-mortem +change. Again symptoms of secondary myelitis and meningitis had been +observed in some of the fatal cases prior to death. + +I had but one opportunity of observing a case in which a retained bullet +exercised compression, and none in which this was due to displaced bone +fragments. I also only once came across a case of complete section, but +no doubt both bone pressure and section may have occurred with greater +frequency amongst patients dying on the field or shortly after. The case +of section is illustrated in fig. 80. It will be noted that, although +the section is complete, the bullet lies to one side of the canal, and +hence the bullet, as fixed in its course by the bone of the centrum, +directly struck but half of the whole width of the cord. + +It was striking how little secondary change in the cord had occurred in +the neighbourhood of the spot of division. This well illustrates the +comparatively slight vibratory effect of a bullet travelling with a +degree of velocity insufficient to completely perforate the vertebral +column. + +_Symptoms of injury to the spinal cord._--In _slight spinal concussion_ +these exactly resembled those of the more severe lesions, except in +their transitory nature. They consisted in loss of cutaneous +sensibility, motor paralysis, and vesical and rectal incompetence. The +phenomena persisted from periods of a few hours to two or three days, +return of function being first noticeable in the sensory nerves, and +often with modification in the way of lowered acuteness, or minor signs +of irritation, such as formication, slight hyperæsthesia or pain, +pointing to a combination with the least extensive degrees of +hæmorrhage; later, motor power was rapidly regained. The subjects of +such symptoms often suffered from weakness and unsteadiness in movement +for some days or weeks; a sharp line of discrimination between such +cases and those described in the next paragraphs is manifestly +impossible. + +_Spinal hæmorrhage._--The symptoms of this condition developed +differently according to whether concurrent concussion existed. +Occasionally very typical instances of pure hæmorrhage were observed +with transient symptoms:-- + + (96) A private in the Yorkshire Light Infantry was wounded at + Modder River; the bullet entered between the eleventh and + twelfth ribs, just posterior to the left mid-axillary line, + emerging in the posterior axillary fold, at its junction with + the right side of the trunk. On the second day after the injury + the lower extremities became drawn up, the knees and hips + assuming a flexed position, and this was followed shortly by + the advent of complete motor and sensory paraplegia, + accompanied by retention of urine. Two days later, the patient + again passed water normally, and gradual and rapid return of + both sensation and motor power took place. At the end of + fourteen days no trace of the condition remained, and the + patient was shortly after sent home. + +The symptoms, however, were rarely so simple as in this example; it was +very much more common to meet with an admixture of signs of primary +concussion, or at any rate symptoms of radiation. The following is an +extreme but excellent example of more complicated and prolonged effects: + + (97) A lance-corporal of the Black Watch was wounded at + Magersfontein at a range of from 400 to 500 yards. The bullet + entered over the left malar bone 2-1/2 inches from the outer + canthus, while the aperture of exit was 2-1/4 inches above the + inferior angle of the right scapula, 3/4 of an inch anterior to + its axillary margin. + + Very shortly after the injury complete motor and sensory + paralysis developed in both upper extremities, followed by the + development of a similar condition in the left lower limb, and + retention of urine and fæces, but the latter unaccompanied by + the marked abdominal intestinal distension so characteristic in + cases of total transverse lesion. The right side of the chest + continued to work well, but the intercostals of the left side + were paralysed. No disturbance of the normal action or + condition of the pupils was noted. After the first few days the + condition began to improve. + + Three weeks later, the chest was moving symmetrically and well, + sensation and motor power had returned in considerable degree + in the left lower extremity, with marked increase in both the + plantar and patellar reflexes; sensation had returned in both + upper extremities, a slight amount of motor power was regained + in the right, but the left remained entirely flaccid and + incapable of movement. + + At the end of a month power was regained over both bladder and + rectum, some slight movement of the left thumb was possible, + and a certain degree of hyperæsthesia developed over the back + of the forearm. + + At the end of six weeks there was little further alteration, + but that in the direction of improvement. There was some + wasting of the muscles of the left upper extremity, and this + was most marked in the muscles supplied by the ulnar nerve. + + At the end of ten weeks the patient had been up some days; he + could stand and walk, but was unable to rise from the sitting + posture without help. The plantar and patellar reflexes were + much exaggerated, and there was ankle clonus, most marked in + the left limb. The right upper extremity was normal, but weak; + there was wrist-drop on the left side and the deltoid was + wasted and powerless; on the other hand the fingers could be + flexed, and although the elbow could not be, there were signs + of returning power in the biceps, and some movements of the + shoulder could be performed by the capsular muscles. It was + remarkable that common sensation was more acute in the left + than the right lower extremity, but I attributed this to the + remains of hyperæsthesia on the left side. The patient left for + home shortly after the last note. + +In both these cases the absence of marked hyperæsthesia or pain points +to medullary hæmorrhage (hæmato-myelia) as the pathological condition +produced by the injury. In this particular they contrast well with case +94 quoted on page 315, where the degree of both hyperæsthesia and pain +indicated a combination of pressure and irritation of the nerve roots by +surface hæmorrhage on the affected side. In case 97 the persistence for +four weeks of paralysis of the bladder and rectum suggested medullary +hæmorrhage in addition, while the return of patellar reflex in the +paralysed limb negatived the occurrence of an extensive destructive +lesion. + +In view of the extreme interest of these cases I will shortly detail one +other in which the cauda equina alone was affected. + +I must confess my inability to place the case definitely in the +category either of concussion or medullary hæmorrhage. As so often +happened, both conditions probably took part in the lesion. The +immediate development of the primary symptoms is no doubt to be referred +to concussion, while the patchy nature of the prolonged lesion and +gradual recession of the symptoms point to the presence of hæmorrhages. +We find here the link most nearly connecting the spinal cord and the +peripheral systemic nerves. Such a case goes far to show that the +condition which I have in the next chapter often referred to as nerve +contusion may in fact be produced by an injury far short of actual +contact. + + (98) A trooper in the Imperial Yeomanry, while advancing in the + crouching attitude, was struck by a bullet from his left front, + at an estimated distance of 300 yards. The bullet traversed the + right arm anteriorly to the humerus, entered the trunk in the + line of the posterior axillary fold, 1-1/2 inch below the level + of the nipple, crossed the thoracic and abdominal cavities, + deeply striking the lumbar spine, and finally lodged beneath + the skin over the venter of the left ilium. The skin was + broken, but the force of the bullet was not sufficient to cause + it to pass through, and it was later expressed from the wound + by the surgeon. The bullet was a Mauser, and not in any way + deformed, although it must at any rate have struck the spine + and perforated the ilium. + + Immediate paraplegia resulted, both sensation and motor power + were completely abolished, but there was no trouble either with + the bladder or rectum. No symptoms of injury to either thoracic + or abdominal viscera were noted. + + Three days after the injury sensation and some return of motor + power were observed in the left extremity, and some power of + movement in the toes of the right foot. + + During the next eight weeks steady but slow improvement took + place; during the last three weeks of this period he made the + voyage to England. Ever since the injury some elevation of + temperature was noted, a rise at night to 100° or at times to + 102°; for this no definite cause was discovered. In the tenth + week the condition was as follows: The temperature has become + normal. The patient has lost flesh to a considerable extent + since the reception of the injury. The lower extremities are + much wasted, especially the peroneal muscles. Patellar reflexes + can be obtained, but the knee jerks are uncertain. Unevenly + distributed paralysis exists in both lower extremities. + Left--Sensation fairly good throughout. Quadriceps very weak; + does not react to electrical stimulation. Calf muscles act + fairly. Anterior tibial and musculo-cutaneous groups are + paralysed. Right--Quadriceps acts better than on left, muscles + below the knee paralysed, and in the same area there is + complete absence of sensation. The patient complains of + shooting pains in both legs, and there is some deep muscular + tenderness. + + Three weeks later an abundant crop of vesicles appeared over + the front of the right thigh and leg, above and below the knee. + Sensation in the limb at the same time returned to a + considerable degree, anæsthesia persisting on the outer aspect + of the thigh only. + + At the end of four months very considerable improvement had + taken place, but there was no return of motor power in the + right leg, or the muscles supplied by the peroneal nerve in the + left leg. There was some general oedema of the legs, + especially of the right, possibly in connection with the + herpetic eruption which was now disappearing. Muscular + tenderness had disappeared. There was also definite improvement + in the size and tone of the peroneal muscles, although no motor + power was regained. + + At the end of five months, slight gradual improvement was still + taking place, but the loss of power was nearly as extensive as + when the last note was taken. The skin of the right leg was + glossy, that of the left apparently normal. At times some + hyperæsthesia of the soles was noted, and the plantar reflex + was very brisk. + + The right anterior tibial and musculo-cutaneous groups of + muscles reacted to the strongest faradic current, not to any + galvanic current below 20-25 m.a., contraction very sluggish. + The same muscles in the left leg also reacted to the strongest + faradic current, but only locally, with no sort of effect on + the tendons. Similar contractions could be induced in the right + quadriceps, but none in the left (Dr. Turney). + + Appreciation of heat and cold applied to the skin was fair, + but, in the case of heat, distinctly slow in the right leg and + foot. + + At the end of seven months improvement was still taking place; + the patient could now stand, walk a little with crutches, and + even ascend and descend a staircase. + + * * * * * + + _Severe concussion, contusion, or medullary hæmorrhage + producing signs of total transverse lesion, and complete + transverse section._--The symptoms of these conditions will be + taken together, because, with very slight variations, they may + be considered as lesions of equal degree as to severity, bad + prognosis, and unsuitability for active interference. + + All were characterised by the exhibition of the same essential + phenomena, symmetrical abolition of sensation and motor power + on either side of the body, absence of any signs of irritation + in the paralysed area, and loss of patellar reflex. In a small + number of the cases of medullary hæmorrhage some return of + sensation was observed prior to death; in a still smaller, + traces of motor power, and in one or two irritability of the + muscles or feeble reflexes pointed to the fact that destruction + of the cord was not absolute. As abstracts of a series of cases + are appended on page 330, it is only necessary to add a few + remarks as to any slight peculiarities which seemed directly + dependent on the mode of causation. + + It may be first stated that these severe injuries were + accompanied by signs of a very high degree of shock. In fact, + the shock observed in them was more severe than in any other + small-calibre bullet injuries that I witnessed. The patients + lay still with the eyes closed, great pallor of surface, + sometimes moaning with pain, the sensorium much benumbed, or + occasionally early delirium was noted. The pulse was small, + often slow and irregular, and the respiration shallow. The + originally quiet state was often changed to one of great + restlessness of the unparalysed part of the body, with the + appearance of reaction. + + The degree of primary pain varied greatly, but as a rule it was + considerable; in some cases it was excruciating in the parts + above the level of the totally destructive lesion, and commonly + of the zonal variety. A hyperæsthetic zone at the lower limit + of sensation usually existed. + + In the majority of the cases pain must have depended on + meningeal hæmorrhage. In one of the cases related, positive + evidence was offered as to this particular by the autopsy, + although this was made as long as six weeks after the original + injury, since no other source of pressure or irritation was + discovered. When I first saw this patient some twenty-four + hours after the injury he was moaning with pain, although a + strong and plucky man; I hastened to give him an injection of + morphia, and assured him that it would relieve his suffering: + as I left I heard him say to his neighbour: 'That is no use; + they gave me three last night, and I was no better,' and his + remark proved true. + + In high dorsal and cervical injuries the temperature rose high, + in one case to 108° F.; I had no opportunity, however, of + observing the temperature in any case immediately before and + after death. During the hot weather the profuse sweating of the + upper part of the body contrasted very strongly with the dry + skin of the paralysed part. + + The heart's action was often particularly irregular in the + dorsal injuries, and the respiration slow and irregular; as + these cases, however, were often complicated by severe + concurrent injuries to internal organs, the irregularities + could hardly be ascribed to the spinal-cord lesion alone. In + cases of pure diaphragmatic respiration, the rate did not as a + rule exceed the normal of 16 or 20 to the minute, and it was + quite regular; this was noted soon after the injury and + persisted throughout the course of the cases. As is usually the + case, both respiration and the heart's action were most + embarrassed in the cases in which abdominal distension was a + prominent feature. In some of the neck cases the Cheyne-Stokes + type of respiration was very strongly marked. + + In cases of low dorsal injury intestinal distension was + extreme, and I think more troublesome than the same condition + as seen in civil practice. The distension was accompanied by + most persistent vomiting, continuing for days, and in the cases + that lived for some time severe gastric crises of the same type + occurred in some instances. + + Priapism was a common symptom; but, as is seen from the cases + quoted, was rarely due to any gross direct laceration of the + cord. + + Trophic sores were both early to develop, and extensive; + primary decubitus occurred in all the cases I saw, and steady + extension followed. In one case a remarkable symmetrical + serpiginous ulceration developed in the area of distribution of + the cutaneous branches of the external popliteal nerve on the + outer side of the leg. + + The paralysis in nearly every case was of the utterly flaccid + type, and wasting of the muscles was early and extreme. This + was occasionally accentuated by the supervention of myelitis. + + Opportunities for making observations on the quantity of urine + secreted were not great, and I can offer no remark as to the + occurrence of polyuria. In one rapidly fatal case, however, + suppression of urine occurred. + + (99) _Lumbar region. Transverse lesion._--Range under 1,000 + yards. Wound of _entry_ (Mauser), over the seventh rib 1 inch + from the left posterior axillary fold; _exit_, over the centre + of the right iliac crest. Complete symmetrical motor and + sensory paralysis of lower extremities, entire abolition of + reflexes, retention of urine. + + On the ninth day there was some return of sensation in the + lower extremities, and a cremasteric reflex was to be obtained. + A large bedsore had developed over the sacrum. No further + change occurred in the lower extremities. The patient became + progressively emaciated and exhausted, cystitis persisted, the + bedsore deepened. The man eventually developed signs of a large + basal abscess in the left lung, and died on the forty-second + day. + + At the _post-mortem_ a fracture of the first lumbar lamina was + discovered, with some splintering of the bone; the lumbar + spinous process was attached and in its normal position. + Opposite the centre of the cauda equina were the remains of a + considerable hæmorrhage, both extra- and intra-dural, the + nerves appearing somewhat compressed, but of normal + consistency. The muscles of the back were infiltrated with + putrid pus on both sides. A pulmonary abscess cavity the size + of a hen's egg occupied the upper part of the lower lobe of the + left lung. The kidneys were congested, and the bladder + thickened and chronically inflamed. + + (100) _Cervico-dorsal region. Total transverse lesion._--Wound + of _entry_ (Mauser), to the right of the sixth cervical + vertebra: the bullet was removed on the field from the left of + the seventh dorsal spinous process, which was somewhat + prominent. Complete motor and sensory paralysis extended + upwards to the third intercostal space; the breathing was + almost entirely diaphragmatic. Retention of urine. Entire + abolition of reflexes in lower limbs and trunk. Hyperæsthesia + was present in both upper extremities, with a zone of + hyperæsthesia around the chest. The patient suffered greatly + for some weeks from pain in the hyperæsthetic area, he + developed severe cystitis and later incontinence of urine. A + large trophic sacral bed-sore steadily increased in depth and + size. + + About ten days before death, which occurred on the fifty-third + day from exhaustion and septicæmia, the patient complained of + pains in his legs; but there was no return of sensation, + motion, or reflexes. + + At the _post-mortem_, the seventh dorsal spinous process was + found to be loose and the laminæ of the fifth, sixth, and + seventh vertebræ were separated from the pedicles, and somewhat + depressed on the left side. These laminæ were adherent to the + dura, as were also a few small separated bony spiculæ. There + was no sign of old hæmorrhage. The spinal cord was practically + gone between the levels of the fourth and seventh dorsal + vertebræ, and diffluent from myelitis up to the third cervical. + + (101) _Dorsal region; total transverse lesion._--Wound of + _entry_ (Mauser), in the left supra-spinous fossa of the + scapula; _exit_, between the eleventh and twelfth ribs of the + right side. Complete motor and sensory paralysis, with absence + of reflexes from mid-dorsal region downwards. Upper + intercostals working. Retention of urine, penis turgid. + Sensation perfect to lower extremity of sternum. Early trophic + sacral bed-sores developed and steadily increased in depth and + extent, slighter ones developed on the heels. The paralysis was + flaccid throughout. The patient gradually emaciated with fever, + and died on the seventy-eighth day. + + At the _post-mortem_ the wound proved not to have penetrated + the thorax, and both the vertebral spines and laminæ were + intact, no trace of bony injury being discoverable. Opposite + the sixth dorsal vertebra, for a distance of 1-1/2 inch, the + cord and dura were adherent, and over the same area the cord + was represented by soft custard-like material. There was no + sign of old hæmorrhage. + + (102) _Dorsal region; total transverse lesion; slight + extra-dural hæmorrhage._--Wound of _entry_ (Mauser), at the + posterior aspect of the right shoulder; _exit_, 2 inches to the + left of the spine below the ninth rib. + + Complete motor and sensory paralysis below the site of the + lesion, with absence of superficial and deep reflexes. + Retention of urine. Great abdominal distension, pain, and + vomiting. Bed-sores over the sacrum developed on the third day; + meanwhile the vomiting continued on and off for a week, and + very severe girdle pain persisted. + + One month later when seen at the Base hospital considerable + improvement had occurred. Sensation had returned in both lower + limbs; but flaccid paralysis persisted and both were wasted, + especially the left. There was no return of reflexes in the + lower limbs, the urine was passed in gushes, and the patient + was cognisant when these occurred. The sacral bed-sores were, + however, very extensive and becoming larger and deeper. + + At the end of the fifth week slight power was regained in the + flexors and abductors of the right thigh, and the same muscles + of the left limb could be made to contract feebly. Meanwhile + the patient suffered with severe fever, accompanied by frequent + rigors and profuse sweats; the bed-sore continued to extend, + and the urine was foul and contained pus. + + The patient continued in a similar condition, progressive + emaciation and exhaustion taking place, and at the end of six + weeks he died. + + At the _post-mortem_ the bullet was found to have tracked + beneath the right scapula, entering the chest by the fifth + intercostal space and lacerating the right lung; thence it + entered the eighth dorsal centrum and tunnelled both this and + the ninth diagonally, to escape beneath the ninth rib. On + opening the spinal canal the tunnel was found to be separated + only by the compact tissue of the centrum from the cavity, + while a thin extra-dural hæmorrhage separated the dura from the + bones anteriorly. The spinal cord exhibited no sign of pressure + and was firm and continuous, but up to the lower limit of the + dorsal region there was septic myelitis and meningitis, the + result of pus having tracked up the canal from the sacral + bedsore. Suppurative cystitis and pyelitis were present. The + patient was the subject of an old urethral stricture which had + given rise to trouble during treatment. + + (103) _Dorsal region; total transverse lesion; slight + intra-dural hæmorrhage._--Wound of _entry_ (Mauser), below + spine of scapula, close to right axilla; _exit_, 2-1/2 inches + to left of tenth dorsal spinous process. + + Complete motor and sensory paralysis below ensiform cartilage, + with well-marked hyperæsthetic zone around trunk. All reflexes + absent. Retention of urine. Incontinence of fæces. Bed-sores in + sacral region developed during the first two days, and + seventeen days later well-developed serpiginous trophic sores + developed on the outer side of each leg and continued to + increase slowly until death. The paralysis remained of the + absolutely flaccid variety. Great emaciation occurred, + accompanied by hectic fever, the temperature ranging from + normal to 102.5°. During the third week double pleurisy + developed. + + At the _post-mortem_ no bone injury could be detected. The cord + and dura-mater were adherent over an area corresponding to the + fifth to the eighth dorsal vertebræ, and opposite the seventh + the cord was soft and of the consistence of butter. A small + intra-dural hæmorrhage was still evident below the main lesion, + not extensive enough to give rise to serious compression. + General adhesions in each pleura. Cystitis. + +[Illustration: FIG. 79.--Appearance of Spinal Cord enclosed in membranes +in case 103 after removal from the canal. When the membranes were opened +a white custard-like substance took the place of the cord. Slight +evidence of extra-dural hæmorrhage existed] + + (104) _Dorsal region; section of cord; retained bullet._--Wound + of _entry_ (Mauser), in seventh right intercostal space, 4-1/2 + inches from the dorsal spinous processes, oval in outline; + bullet retained. + + Complete motor and sensory paralysis, with absence of reflexes + below umbilicus. Retention of urine, incontinence of fæces. + Large sacral bed-sore developed rapidly. Right hæmothorax. + + The patient emaciated rapidly, and for the last fourteen days + the temperature ranged to 104°, the bed-sore steadily + increasing in size. Death occurred on the forty-second day. + + At the _post-mortem_ a Mauser bullet was found embedded in the + centrum of the twelfth dorsal vertebra. The bullet was slightly + curved; its anterior extremity had passed across the spinal + canal, and wounding the dura posteriorly rested against the + left lamina. The plating of the mantle of the bullet was + stripped from half the area of the tip. The dura was not + adherent, and the cord was softened for half an inch above the + point of section; above this it was normal, the vessels + coursing normally to the softened spot. Below the point of + section the cord was blanched, but offered no other macroscopic + evidence of disease. No evidence of either intra- or + extra-dural hæmorrhage was detectible. + +[Illustration: FIG. 80.--Complete division of Spinal Cord. The bullet is +retained, and from its position can be seen to have struck the right +half of the cord only. The nickel plating of half of the tip of the +bullet is stripped off. Case No. 104] + + The right pleura contained a large quantity of dark cocoa-like + fluid. Extensive adhesions were present in both pleural + cavities. The spleen was much enlarged. At the base of the + bladder a large submucous hæmorrhage had occurred, the + blood-clot had assumed a dark orange colour, and on first + opening the viscus the appearance was that of a mass of fæces. + The mucous lining elsewhere was slaty grey, with small + hæmorrhages. The kidneys were large, but no abscesses or + pyelitis were present. + + (105) _Cervico-dorsal region; total transverse lesion._--Wound + of _entry_ (Mauser), opposite right sixth cervical transverse + process; _exit_, on left side of third dorsal spinous process. + Slight grasping power was present in the hands, and the patient + could hold his arms across his chest. Complete motor and + sensory paralysis, with absence of all reflexes below. The + pupils were moderately contracted. Retention of urine. On the + second day blebs appeared on each buttock, and the patient + complained of very severe pain in the neck: the temperature + rose to 103°, and on the third day he died suddenly. No + _post-mortem_ examination was made. + +I observed two similar cases in the Field Hospital at Orange River, the +patients dying on the third day; pain and high temperature were +prominent symptoms in both. In one patient early delirium was present. + + (106) _Dorsal region; Martini-Henry wound._--Wound of _entry_, + oval, 1 inch × 3-1/4 inches; long axis obliquely crossing + infra-spinous fossa of right scapula; bullet retained + (Martini-Henry). Spine of third dorsal vertebra loose, and a + distinct thickening to its right side. Complete symmetrical + paralysis extending up to upper extremities. No sensation on + surface of trunk below cervical area. Respiration entirely + diaphragmatic. Retention of urine, penis turgid. Total absence + of reflexes, superficial and deep. Reddening of buttocks, but + no bullæ. + + General hyperæsthesia of upper extremities, with severe + spasmodic attacks of pain. + + On the third day an exploration was decided upon, in view of + the local deformity, and the severe pain in the upper + extremities. The third dorsal spine was found to be loose, as a + result of bilateral fracture of the neural arch; the bullet had + crossed the right limit of the spinal canal, and destroyed the + body of the vertebra, and passing onwards had entered the left + pleural cavity, into which air entered freely from the + operation wound. + + The patient was relieved from his pain by the exploration, and + lived four days. On the second day after operation, however, + the temperature rose to 107°, while on the last two days the + temperature was normal in the mornings, rising to 105° in the + evenings. No alteration resulted in the trunk symptoms. + +_Diagnosis._--The pure question of the fact of injury of the spinal cord +needs no discussion; but it is necessary to make some remarks on the +discrimination between concussion, contusion and hæmorrhage, meningeal +and medullary hæmorrhage, the latter condition and compression, and on +partial and complete severance of the cord. + +The sharp discrimination of cases of concussion from those of slight +medullary hæmorrhage was necessarily impossible. I think the only points +of any importance in diagnosing pure concussion were the transitory +nature of the symptoms, and the uniformity of recovery, without +persistence of any signs of minor destructive lesion. In medullary +hæmorrhage the tendency for a certain period was towards increase in +gravity in the signs. It goes almost without saying that the latter +point was seldom accurately determined in patients struck on the field +of battle; these perhaps lay out for hours before they were brought in, +and when they were placed in the Field hospital the rush of work did not +usually allow the careful observation necessary to clear up this +difference in the development of the symptoms. Nevertheless it is +preferable to consider the cases in which transitory symptoms persist +for a period of hours, or even a couple of days, as instances of pure +concussion, unless the existence of this condition can be disproved by +actual observation. + +Extra-medullary hæmorrhage, accompanied by only slight encroachment on +the spinal canal, certainly results with some frequency from +small-calibre wounds. Some of the quoted cases show this decisively by +_post-mortem_ evidence, others by such clinical signs of irritation as +pain and hyperæsthesia. I think its presence may also be assumed in +cases of total transverse lesion due to medullary hæmorrhage or severe +concussion, accompanied by well-marked pain and hyperæsthesia above the +level of paralysis. As affecting treatment, however, determination of +its presence is of small importance. + +The important conditions for discriminative diagnosis are those of local +compression, actual destructive lesion, whether from concussion changes, +contusion, or medullary hæmorrhage, and partial and total section of the +cord. + +First, with regard to compression of the cord, the possible sources are +three; (i) extra-dural hæmorrhage, which may, I think, be dismissed with +mention as rarely capable of producing severe symptoms. (ii) The +displacement of bone fragments. This is of less importance than in civil +practice, because an injury by a bullet of small calibre, capable of +seriously displacing fragments, has probably at the same time produced +grave changes in the cord. In the presence of severe immediate symptoms +we may tentatively assume that a simultaneous destructive lesion has +been produced. In such injuries pain, combined with a tendency to +improvement in the paralytic symptoms and return of reflexes, is the +only point in favour of bone pressure, unless considerable deformity of +the spinal column can be detected by palpation or examination with the +X-rays. + +(iii) Pressure from the bullet. This is the most important form of +compression, because the mere fact of retention of the bullet is +evidence of a low degree of velocity, and therefore opposed to the +existence of the most severe form of intramedullary lesion. In a case of +apparent transverse lesion with retained bullet, shown to me at No. 3 +General Hospital by Mr. J. E. Ker, the pain was very severe, and so +greatly aggravated by movement that an anæsthetic had to be administered +prior to the renewal of some necessary dressings. The general condition +of this patient precluded a projected operation, and after death the +bullet was found to be pressing laterally upon a cord not materially +altered on macroscopic inspection. In the case of retained bullet +recorded (No. 104), the slight degree to which the severed ends of the +cord appeared altered has been already remarked upon. + +Beyond this we are helped by the position of the aperture of entry, and +its shape, as evidence of the direction in which the bullet passed, the +presence of pain, and positive proof may be obtained by examination with +the X-rays. + +Lastly, we come to the discrimination of total or partial section, +destruction by vibratory concussion or contusion, and severe +intramedullary hæmorrhage. Except in the case of partial section with +localised symptoms, which must be rare, I believe this to be impossible +from the primary symptoms, although some indication of possible +encroachment on the canal may be obtained from careful consideration of +the course of the wound, as evidenced by the position and shape of the +openings, the position of the patient's body at the time of reception of +the injury being taken into consideration. Later we may get some aid +from the possible improvement in the symptoms in the case of hæmorrhage. +In cases with signs of total transverse lesion, however, the +discrimination of the conditions is of little practical importance, +since either is equally unfavourable and unsuitable for surgical +treatment. + +In closing these remarks reference must be made to the occasional +occurrence of paraplegic symptoms of an apparently purely functional +nature. I saw these on one or two occasions, of which the following is +a fair example. A man was wounded in the lower extremity and fell. When +brought into the hospital he complained of loss of power in the legs and +inability to straighten his back. No very definite evidence was present +of serious impairment either of motor or sensory nerves, and the man was +got up and walked with crutches. While moving about the hospital camp, +another man pushed him down, and the patient then became completely +paraplegic. He was placed in bed, and the next day moved his limbs +without any difficulty, and gave rise to no further anxiety. + +_Prognosis._--In slight concussion the importance of prognosis is as to +remote effects, and upon this no opinion can be given at the present +time. The same may be said concerning cases in which transient symptoms +followed the slighter degrees of surface and medullary hæmorrhage. In +the case of the latter, however, I think it would be rash to give a too +confident opinion as to the future non-occurrence of secondary changes. + +Severe concussion is probably irrecoverable. + +Meningeal hæmorrhage of either form is one of the slighter lesions, and +less dangerous, both as an immediate condition and as to the +probabilities of after trouble. None the less the possibilities of +secondary chronic meningitis, or chronic trouble from adhesions, must be +kept in mind. + +Cases of medullary hæmorrhage with incomplete signs are favourable in +prognosis, as far as life is concerned; as to complete recovery, +however, this is hardly possible; in many cases serious functional +deficiency at any rate will remain, while in others the healing of the +lacerated tissue and subsequent contraction can scarcely fail to +influence unfavourably an already imperfect recovery. + +I think it must be a rare occurrence for pressure from bone fragments to +be able to be regarded as a favourable prognostic condition, since in +the very large majority of cases the velocity of the bullet causing the +injury will have been such as to inflict irreparable damage on the cord. +Still, cases may occasionally be met with where the velocity has been +sufficiently low, or contact with the bone slight enough, to allow of +the comparative escape of the cord. In this relation cases in which the +bullet is retained, especially if the symptoms of transverse lesion are +incomplete, may be regarded as relatively favourable. + +Cervical and high dorsal injuries, as in civil practice, offered the +worst prognosis. In cases in which symptoms of total transverse lesion +were present, as far as my experience went, it was, however, only a +matter of importance as to the prolongation of a miserable existence. +All the patients eventually died; those with higher lesions at the end +of a few days; the lower ones, at the completion on an average of six +weeks of suffering. + +The actual causes of death resembled exactly those met with in civil +practice, except in so far as it was more often influenced or determined +by concurrent injuries, a complication so characteristic of modern +gunshot wounds. Thus exhaustion, septicæmia from absorption from +suppurating bed-sores or from severe cystitis, secondary myelitis, and +pulmonary complications, carried off most of the patients. + +_Treatment._--The general treatment of the cases demanded nothing +special to military surgery, except in so far as it was modified by the +disadvantage to the patient of necessarily having to be transported, +often for some distance. The ill effects of this, particularly in cases +of hæmorrhage, are obvious, but in so far as fracture was concerned the +question of transport did not acquire the importance that it does in +civil practice, since the nature of the fractures and their strict +localisation did not render movement either painful or particularly +hurtful. It was indeed striking how little pain movement, made for the +purposes of examination, caused these patients. The treatment of +bed-sores, cystitis, or other secondary complications possessed no +special features. + +The importance of insuring rest in the early stages of the cases of +hæmorrhage is self-evident; hence, if the possibility exists of not +moving the patient, its advantage cannot be too strongly insisted upon. +Again, if transport is inevitable, the shorter distance that can be +arranged for the better. It should be borne in mind, also, that from the +peculiar nature of causation of the injuries, stretcher or wagon +transport for short distances is preferable to the vibratory movements +of a long railway journey. Beyond this the administration of opium, and +in some cases the assumption of the prone position, are both useful in +the recent or possibly progressive stage of hæmorrhage. + +Lastly, as to active surgical treatment by operation. In no form of +spinal injury is this less often indicated, or less likely to be useful. +It is useless in the cases of severe concussion, contusion, or medullary +hæmorrhage which form such a very large proportion of those exhibiting +total tranverse lesion, and equally unsuited to cases of partial lesion +of the same character. Extra-medullary hæmorrhage can rarely be +extensive enough to produce signs calling for the mechanical relief of +pressure; the section of the cord cannot be remedied. In one case with +signs of total transverse lesion, in which a laminectomy was performed, +no apparent lesion was discovered, and this would frequently be the +case, since the damage is parenchymatous. The experience was indeed +exactly comparable to that which followed early exposure of the +peripheral nerves. + +Only three indications for operation exist. 1. Excessive pain in the +area of the body above the paralysed segment; operation is here of +doubtful practical use, except in so far as it relieves the immediate +sufferings of the patient. + +2. An incomplete or recovering lesion, when such is accompanied by +evidence furnished by the position of the wounds, pain, and signs of +irritation of pressure from without, or possibly palpable displacement +of parts of the vertebra, that the spinal canal is encroached upon by +fragments of bone. + +3. Retention of the bullet, accompanied by similar signs to those +detailed under 2. + +In both the latter cases the aid of the X-rays should be invoked before +resorting to exploration. + +Operation, if decided upon, in either of the two latter circumstances, +may be performed at any date up to six weeks; but if pressure be the +actual source of trouble, it is obvious that the more promptly operation +is undertaken the better for early relief and ulterior prognostic +chances. + +In only one case of the whole series I observed did it seem possible to +regret the omission of an exploration. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +INJURIES TO THE PERIPHERAL NERVE TRUNKS + + +The occurrence of these injuries has undoubtedly increased in frequency +with the employment of bullets of small calibre, and no other class of +case more strikingly illustrates the localised nature of the lesions +produced by small projectiles of high velocity. Again, no other series +of injuries affords such obvious indications of the firm and resistent +nature of the cicatricial tissue formed in the process of repair of +small-calibre wounds, and in none is the advantage of a conservative and +expectant attitude so forcibly impressed upon the surgeon. Implication +of the nerves may be primary, or secondary to an injury which left them +originally unscathed. + +_Nature of the anatomical lesions._--In degree these vary in +mathematical progression, but the extent of the lesion is not always +readily differentiated by the early clinical manifestations, and again +the actual damage is not to be estimated by the gross apparent +anatomical lesion alone; but, in addition, consists in part in changes +of a less easily demonstrable nature, varying with the velocity with +which the bullet was travelling and the consequent comparative degree of +vibratory force to which the nerve has been subjected. In these +injuries, as in those of every part of the nervous system, the degree of +velocity appears to gain especial importance both in regard to the +general symptoms and the local effect on the functional capacity of the +nerve. + +This is perhaps a fitting place for the introduction of a few further +remarks as to the significance of the term 'concussion' in connection +with the injuries produced by bullets of small calibre, since the most +striking exemplification of the results following the transmission of +the vibratory force of the projectile is afforded by the behaviour of +the comparatively densely ensheathed and supported peripheral nerves. + +As already pointed out in Chapters VII. and VIII. the chief concussion +effects on the nervous tissue of the brain and spinal cord are of a +destructive nature, far exceeding those accompanying the injuries +designated by the same term seen in the ordinary accidents met with in +civil practice, and this damage is comparatively localised in extent. + +In the case of the peripheral nerves I have still employed the terms +'concussion' and 'contusion' to designate certain groups of symptoms and +clinical phenomena, but any sharp distinction between the two conditions +on a morbid anatomical basis is impossible. The results of severe +vibratory concussion may, in fact, be more generally destructive than +those of contusion, and the subsequent effects more prolonged. A certain +length of the affected nerve is apparently completely destroyed as a +conductor of impulses, the connective-tissue element alone remaining +intact. Under these circumstances a nerve, the subject of the most +serious degree of vibratory concussion, which, if cut down upon, may +exhibit no macroscopic change, may take a longer period to recover than +one in which the presence of considerable local thickening points to +direct contact with the bullet, with resulting hæmorrhage into the nerve +sheath and perhaps partial gross rupture of nerve fibres. + +The therapeutic and prognostic importance of the above remarks, if +correct, is obvious. The course of the nerve is preserved by its intact +connective-tissue framework, and ultimate recovery by a regeneration of +the nerve fibres is more likely to be complete, and will be just as +rapid, if nature be relied on and the nerve be left untouched by the +hand of the surgeon. + +It is, I think, undeniable that nerve trunks may escape severe or +irrecoverable injury by lateral displacement. The mere fact that the +trunk itself may be perforated by a slit in its long axis would suggest +the possibility of displacement of the whole structure, and this no +doubt occurred with some frequency. Displacement would naturally be most +frequent in the case of nerves, such as those of the arm, which run long +courses in comparatively loose tissue. In a remarkable case already +narrated, an exploratory operation showed the musculo-spiral nerve in +the upper part of the arm to have been driven into a loop which +projected into, and provisionally closed, an opening in the brachial +artery. + +I. _Simple concussion._--Anatomically, or histologically, no information +exists as to the changes which give rise to the often transitory +symptoms dependent on this condition. We are reduced to the same +theories of molecular disturbance and change which have been invoked to +account for similar affections of the central nervous system. The +causation of concussion is, however, materially influenced in its degree +by the velocity of flight of the bullet and consequent severity of the +vibratory force exerted. Hence actual contact of the bullet with the +nerves is not necessary for its production, as is seen in the temporary +complete loss of functional capacity in the limbs in many cases of +fracture, where the vibrations are rendered still more far-reaching and +effective as the result of their wider distribution from the larger +solid resistance afforded by the bone. The relative density and +resistance offered by the different parts of the bone acquire great +significance in this relation, since local shock due to nerve concussion +is far more profound when the shafts are struck than when the cancellous +ends furnish the point of impact. + +The form of concussion which most nearly interests us in this chapter is +that affecting single nerve trunks in wounds of the soft parts alone, +and here the passage of the bullet is, as a rule, so contiguous to the +nerve that there is difficulty in drawing a strict line of demarcation +between such cases and those dealt with in the next paragraph. + +II. _Contusion._--Clinically this was the form of nerve injury both of +greatest comparative frequency and of interest from the points of view +both of diagnosis and prognosis. + +The seriousness of a contusion depends on two factors: first, the +relative degree of violence exerted upon the nerve, which is dependent +on the force still retained by the travelling bullet; and, secondly, on +the extent of tissue actually implicated. The range of fire at which the +injury was received determines the importance of the first factor; the +second varies with the degree of exactness with which the nerve is +struck, and on the direction taken by the bullet. Naturally transverse +wounds affect a small area; while an oblique or longitudinal direction +of the track may indefinitely increase the extent of injury to the nerve +trunk, and hence acquire prognostic significance in direct ratio to the +amount of tissue which needs to be regenerated. + +As to the actual anatomical lesion resulting in the cases which we +designated clinically as contusion I can give no information. On many +occasions when the symptoms were considered of such a nature as to +render an exploration advisable, no macroscopic evidence of gross injury +was obtained. It was therefore impossible to draw a definite line of +demarcation between such cases and those which we considered merely +concussion. It could only be assumed that the vibration transmitted to +the nerve had occasioned such changes as to destroy its capacity as a +conductor of impressions. + +In some cases the presence of a certain amount of interstitial blood +extravasation was suggested clinically by early hyperæsthesia and signs +of irritation; in others the paralysis was of such a degree as to lead +to the inference that a complete regeneration of the existing nerve +would be necessary prior to the restitution of functional capacity. + +In a certain proportion of the injuries the development of a distinct +fusiform swelling in the course of the nerve pointed to the existence of +considerable tissue damage, while in others this was evidenced +clinically by early signs of neuritis. + +III. _Division or laceration._--The varying mechanical conditions +affecting the last class of injury play a similar rôle here. Thus the +degree of laceration depends on the direction of the wound track, and as +all lacerations are accompanied by contusion, the relative velocity +retained by the travelling bullet assumes the same importance. + +I saw every degree of injury to the trunks, from notching to complete +solution of continuity, and in some cases destruction and disappearance +of pieces from one to two or more inches in length. Such lesions as the +latter were most common in the forearm. In this segment of the limbs +tracks of varying degrees of longitudinal obliquity are readily +produced, whether the patient be in the upright or prone position, +since the upper extremities are commonly in forward action whichever +position is assumed. + +The most peculiar form of injury consisted in perforation of the trunk +without gross destruction of its fibres, and without in many cases +prolonged or permanent loss of functional capacity. I cannot speak with +any confidence as to the comparative frequency of occurrence of this +form of injury, but judging by the analogous perforations of the +vessels, it is probably not uncommon in trunks large enough to allow of +its production. The trunk nerves of the arm, and the great sciatic +nerve, were probably the most frequent seats of such wounds. As, +however, a very short experience of the futility of early interference +in the case of nerve lesions warned me against exploration before a date +at which observations of this nature were unsatisfactory, I gained less +experience on this point than I could have wished. + +In the case of completely divided nerves the development of a bulbous +enlargement on the proximal end was constant, and very marked in degree. +I saw few cases in which primary effects could be certainly referred to +pressure or laceration by bone spicules, excepting in some fractures of +the humerus, and perhaps some injuries of the seventh nerve accompanying +perforating wounds of the mastoid process. + +IV. _Secondary implication of the nerves._--This was a striking +characteristic in many at first apparently simple wounds of the soft +parts. In such cases it was due to implication of the contiguous trunk +in the process of cicatrisation, and its importance varied with the size +of the nerve in question. In the smaller sensory trunks it was often +evidenced by the occurrence of neuralgic pain, especially liable to be +influenced by climatic changes; in the larger, by signs of more or less +severe motor, sensory, and trophic disturbance. Musculo-spiral paralysis +from implication in, or pressure from, callus in cases of fracture of +the humerus was very frequent. This would naturally be expected from the +extreme degree the comminution of the bone often reached, and the +consequently large amount of callus developed. + +The effect of cicatrisation of the tissues surrounding the nerves +varied somewhat according to the degree of fixation of the individual +nerve implicated. Thus if a nerve lay in a fixed bed some form of +circular constriction resulted; if, on the other hand, the nerve was +readily displaceable, the cicatrix often drew it considerably out of its +course; in either case symptoms corresponding with those of pressure +resulted. + +_Symptoms of nerve lesion_.--These differed little in character from +those common to such injuries in civil practice, except in the relative +frequency with which they assumed a serious aspect. After all in civil +practice nerve concussion is most familiar to us in the degree common +after knocking the elbow against a hard object, and the same may be said +in regard to the allied injury of contusion. It is in small-calibre +bullet wounds alone that the occurrence of such severe and sharply +localised injury to deep parts as was observed is possible. + +_Concussion_.--Temporary loss of function was often observed in the +limbs, corresponding to the distribution of one or more nerve trunks +when wound tracks had passed in their vicinity. Interference with +function sometimes amounted to loss of sensation alone: in others to +loss of both sensation and motor power. Such symptoms were of a +transitory character, lasting for a few days or a week; if both +sensation and motion were impaired, sensation was usually the first to +be regained. In these cases secondary trouble was not uncommon, since +the near proximity of the track to the originally affected nerve offered +every chance for implication of the latter in the resulting cicatrix. +This sequence was often observed, and its symptoms are described under +the heading of secondary implication below. Equally striking were the +instances of concussion in the case of the nerves of special sense and +their end organs, temporary loss of smell, vision, or hearing being not +uncommon, often passing off in the course of a few days with no apparent +ulterior ill-effect. + +One of the most interesting illustrations of the occurrence of +concussion was furnished by cases in which complete paralysis of a limb +rapidly cleared up with the exception of that corresponding to a single +individual nerve of the complex apparently originally implicated. +Instances of severe contusion or division of one nerve of the arm, for +instance, accompanied by transient signs of concussion of varying +degrees of severity in all the others, were by no means uncommon. + +_Contusion_.--The symptoms of contusion were somewhat less simple, +since, in addition to lowering or loss of function, signs of irritation +were often observed. In the slighter cases irritation was often a marked +feature, as was evidenced by hyperæsthesia and pain combined with loss +of power. In cases in which pain and hyperæsthesia were primary +symptoms, these were often transitory. I will quote an illustrative case +which, though affecting the nerve roots, is characteristic of the +effects of slight contusion in the case of the nerve trunks in any part +of their course:-- + + (107) _Contusion of cervical nerve roots_.--Range probably + about 1,000 yards. Wounded at Belmont. Aperture of _entry_ + (Lee-Metford), immediately posterior to the right fifth + cervical transverse process; _exit_, immediately anterior to + the space between the third and fourth left cervical transverse + processes. The movements of the neck were perfect, there was + neither pain nor difficulty in swallowing. Extreme + hyperæsthesia was present in both palms and down the front of + the forearms. The grip in either hand was weak, this being + possibly explained in part by the hyperæsthesia of the palms, + as all movements of the upper extremities could be made, + although not with full power. On the fourth day the condition + was much improved on the left side, and at the end of a week + the left upper extremity was normal; the right (side of entry, + and therefore exposed to greater force from the bullet) + improved more slowly, becoming normal only at the end of three + weeks. + +I observed an identical case of injury to the cervical roots, and many +similar instances in injuries of the nerve trunks of the limbs in which +the course was exactly parallel. In the more severe, pain was often +added to hyperæsthesia. + +In the most severe cases the signs corresponded in all particulars, +except in the early entire loss of reaction of the muscles to +electricity, with those of complete section. Loss of sensation and +motion was immediate, complete, and prolonged, the limbs being lowered +in temperature, flaccid, and powerless. General systemic shock was also +severe. In the case either of plexus or multiple contusions, or where +the injury was more local, correspondingly complete signs were present +in the area supplied by the affected nerves. + +In the cases in which the contusion was not of extreme degree, +hyperæsthesia often developed as a later sign, and was probably due to +the irritation of hæmorrhage, when the sensory portion of the nerve +began to regain functional capacity. The date of appearance of the +hyperæsthesia varied from a few days to a week or later. It might then +persist for weeks or many months. + +In a few instances large blebs rose on the back of the hand, or patches +of vesicles appeared over the terminal distribution of the nerve, +pointing to early trophic changes. + +The period of recovery varied greatly; in some instances of very +complete paralysis, function was regained and became apparently normal +at the end of three or four weeks; in others, even after severe wasting +of muscles for weeks, rapid improvement occurred often suddenly, while +in some there was no apparent recovery at the end of months. In cases of +long-deferred improvement, wasting of the muscles became a very +prominent feature; but this without complete loss of reaction of the +muscles to electrical stimulation. + +Recovery of sensation usually preceded by some time that of motion, the +former often reappearing in some degree at an early date, and, even if +very modified in character, it formed a most useful and valuable aid +both in diagnosis and prognosis. + +When in a position allowing of direct examination, the contused portion +of the nerve sometimes developed a palpable fusiform thickening, +manipulation of which might give rise to formication in the area of +distribution--a favourable prognostic sign. + +Many of the cases bore a very marked resemblance in character to those +in which paralysis results from tight constriction of the limb, as in +the arm after the application of an Esmarch's tourniquet. + +_Laceration._--If incomplete, the signs corresponded very nearly to +those of severe contusion, since partial section is impossible without +the occurrence of the latter. The condition indeed was only to be +distinguished by the partial nature of the recovery, and even this +latter might be only more prolonged. + +The same remarks hold good with regard to perforation of the nerve +trunks; but, as regards function, these injuries are not so serious in +prognosis as very much more limited transverse divisions or mere +notching, and in some cases the disturbance of function was by no means +profound or prolonged. + +Absolute loss of reaction to electrical stimulus from above was the only +pathognomonic sign of actual section, unless the position of the nerve +was such as to allow of palpation, when the presence of a bulbous end at +once settled the difficulty. In many cases of superficial tracks with +division of such nerves as the long or short saphenous, the early +development of bulbs in the course of the trunks gave positive +information, and these were often observed. + +_Traumatic neuritis._--This was a common sequence of contusion of the +nerve itself, or of its subsequent inclusion in a cicatrix or callus. It +was evidenced by hyperæsthesia both superficial and deep, pain, +contracture, wasting of the muscles, local sweating, and the development +of glossy skin. + +Examples of this condition were seen in the case of nearly every nerve +in the body. In frequency of occurrence, degree of severity, and in its +selection of individual nerves considerable variation was met with. With +regard to the two former points, personal idiosyncrasy, and degree of or +peculiarity in the nature of the injury, are the only explanations I can +suggest. Perhaps in some instances exposure to wet or cold in the early +stages of the injury was of some import. Thus, I saw several severe +cases of musculo-spiral neuritis in men who were wounded during the +trying and wet march on Bloemfontein. I did not observe that suppuration +or wound complications seemed important explanatory moments, as most of +the cases occurred in wounds that healed rapidly. + +With regard to the question of selection; the same nerves that appear +particularly liable to suffer from idiopathic inflammations, toxic +influences, or to be the seat of ascending changes (e.g. ulnar, +musculo-spiral, and external popliteal), were those most often affected +by secondary neuritis. Many of the most severe cases I saw were in the +musculo-spiral nerve. + +_Scar implication._--The signs of this most commonly commenced with +neuralgia, or painful sensations when such movements were made as to put +the cicatrix on the stretch. Although such neuralgia might not be +constant, it was often observed to be troublesome when the patients were +exposed to cold in sleeping out at night, or to extra fatigue, as in +long marches. The results in many cases stopped at this point, but the +size and wide distribution of certain nerves rendered even such slight +symptoms of importance; while in others well-marked signs of neuritis +declared themselves, such as glossy skin, pain, muscular wasting, and +paralysis. + +_Ascending neuritis._--In a few cases I observed very remarkable +instances of ascending neuritis, after comparatively slight wounds. I +will quote three of these as illustrations and make no further remarks +as to the symptoms. It will be observed that one is a case of ulnar, +both the others of external popliteal, neuritis:-- + + (108) _Ulnar nerve: secondary ascending neuritis._--Boer + wounded at Elandslaagte. Wound of hand, implicating anterior + two-thirds of third metacarpal bone. This bone, together with + the middle finger, was removed, and healing took place by + granulation slowly. + + The resulting gap allowed considerable overlapping of the + fingers, and shortening of the corresponding digit; the index + finger also became flexed as a result of destruction of the + extensor tendons. Three months later the man was still in + hospital in consequence of the tardiness with which the wound + had healed: at this time pain was noted, which became very + severe in the whole course of the ulnar nerve; superficial + hyperæsthesia and deep muscular tenderness developed, but no + wasting. Several crops of herpetic vesicles also developed over + the distribution of the radial nerve in the hand. This pain was + followed by spastic contracture, first of the ulnar fingers and + later of the wrist and elbow, which could only be straightened + by the application of considerable force. The limb was, + therefore, kept straight by the application of a splint; and + warm baths, and a blister applied over the course of the ulnar + nerve, were resorted to: under this treatment the condition + improved until the patient was well enough to be transferred as + a prisoner, and I saw him no more. + + (109) _Peroneal nerve branches._--Wounded at Colenso. _Entry_, + at the anterior margin of the fibula 5 inches above the + external malleolus; the track crossed the anterior aspect of + the leg obliquely, to its _exit_ 1 inch above the centre of the + ankle joint. Incomplete paralysis of the peronei muscles + followed, combined with progressive wasting of the whole limb, + which at the end of a month was marked, and then commenced to + improve. + + (110) In a second case the wound took a similar course in the + centre of the leg, crossing the line of the branches of the + musculo-cutaneous nerve. Motor paralysis of the peronei + followed, together with general lowering of tactile sensation + in the musculo-cutaneous area. + +_Traumatic neurosis._--In connection with the cases just quoted, mention +must be made of the fact that the functional element was often somewhat +prominent. The influence of this factor was not to be neglected in case +108; again, its presence was a feature in cases 132 and 134, of injury +to the sciatic nerve and of peripheral injury to the seventh nerve (p. +355). A remark has been made as to the occurrence of functional +paraplegia on p. 337. Again, in the case of the organs of special sense. +Case 66, of injury to the occipital lobes, showed that a mixture of +organic and functional phenomena might be a source of error, even in the +determination of the visual field in the subject of an undoubted +destructive lesion. On more than one occasion an injury was accompanied +by loss of the power of speech; thus a patient who received a slight +wound of the neck did not speak again until the application of a battery +by my colleague, Mr. H. B. Robinson. A patient was also for a short time +an inmate of No. 1 General Hospital, Wynberg, who had become deaf and +dumb as a result of the explosion of a shrapnel shell over his head. +This patient also did not recover his powers until he returned to the +mother-country. + +In many other cases of nerve concussion or contusion, the recovery of +power and sensation, or the disappearance of neuralgia or contractures, +was so sudden and rapid after prolonged continuance of the symptoms, as +to suggest a very strong functional element in their origin. The +influence of the general shock to the nervous system received by the +patients had an important bearing on these phenomena, and their interest +from a prognostic point of view was very great. + + +INJURIES TO SPECIAL NERVES + +_Cranial nerves._--It will be convenient first to make a few remarks +concerning the nerves of special sense. + +_Olfactory._--I observed temporary loss of smell on three occasions. In +two instances this accompanied transverse wounds of the bones of the +face in which the upper third of the nasal cavities was crossed; in the +third a track passing obliquely downwards from the frontal region passed +through the inner wall of the orbit, and crossed the nose at a lower +level. In view of the small area of the olfactory distribution which was +directly implicated, I was at first inclined to regard the loss of smell +as dependent on the presence of dried blood on the surface of the mucous +membrane, or on obstruction of the cavities from the same cause. Further +observation, however, appeared to show that it was due to concussion of +the branches of the olfactory nerve, since the loss of function +persisted when the cavities were manifestly clear. + +In all these cases we were confronted with the same difficulty which was +experienced both in lesions of sight and hearing, the determination as +to whether the concussion was of the branches or of the olfactory bulb. +When the symptom was the accompaniment of a fracture of the roof of the +orbit, the possibility of concussion of the olfactory lobe was manifest. +In all, again, it was difficult to say what part the accompanying +concussion of the branches of the fifth nerve took in the production of +the symptom. In all three cases mentioned the return of function was +gradual, but apparently fairly complete at the end of three weeks. In +one it was noted that at first the patient was conscious of an odour +before he was able to discriminate its actual nature; later he could +determine the latter readily. + +_Optic._--Some remarks concerning lesions of the optic nerve have +already been made under the heading of wounds of the orbit. Concussion +and contusion of the nerve both occurred, but I was unable to +differentiate between the effects of these on the nerve itself, apart +from the effects on the globe of the eye, which usually accompanied +wounds of the orbit. + +In some cases the nerve was directly divided in orbital wounds, and +either pressure on or division of the nerve in the intra-cranial portion +of its course, or as it traversed the optic foramen, was not uncommon. + +_Auditory._--Loss of hearing was also not infrequent; thus it +accompanied all three wounds of the mastoid process quoted under the +heading of the seventh nerve, also two cases of fracture of the +occipital bone near the ear quoted on p. 278. In all these instances it +was impossible to attribute the deafness to lesion of the nerve alone, +as the causative injury equally affected the internal ear, and in at +least two the bullet implicated the tympanum as well in its course. The +deafness was absolute in each case, and in none had any improvement +occurred at the end of nine months. Deafness was a symptom in a certain +number of the more severe cerebral injuries in which the course of the +bullet was not so near to the internal ear: probably some of these were +central in origin. + +I only once observed any interference with the sense of taste. + +_Remaining cranial nerves._--I have little to say regarding the _third_, +_fourth_, and _sixth_ nerves. In the case of the third nerve, ptosis was +occasionally seen in wounds of the skull involving the roof of the +orbit, but the relative parts taken by injury to nerve and laceration or +fixation of muscle respectively, were usually hard to determine. Again, +the fourth and sixth nerves may have been damaged in some of the more +extensive orbital wounds, especially those in which the globe suffered +injury, but the signs under such circumstances were difficult to +discriminate, and the injury was of slight practical importance, in view +of the major injury to the globe itself. + +_Fifth nerve._--Concussion, contusion, or laceration of the different +branches of the three divisions of the fifth nerve were common in wounds +of the head, but most frequent in fractures of the upper or lower jaws. +Localised anæsthesia was common from one or other of these causes, but +for the most part transitory in the cases of contusion or concussion. I +saw no case of entire loss of function in any one division, symptoms +being mostly confined to certain branches, as the supra-orbital, the +temporo-malar, the dental branches of the second division, the +auriculo-temporal nerve, and the lingual, dental, and mental branches of +the third division. I did not observe any cases in which modification of +the special senses accompanied these injuries beyond those mentioned in +the remarks already made on the subject of anosmia, and one case in +which some modification of the sense of taste accompanied an injury to +the floor of the mouth. It was a matter of surprise, considering the +frequency with which subsequent neuritis was met with in the nerves +generally, that trifacial neuralgia in some form was not more often met +with. I never observed any serious case. Perhaps this is one of the +fields in which a longer after-period may increase our knowledge. +Lastly, I never observed motor paralysis in the case of the third +division, although sensory symptoms in some of the branches were common, +evident proof that injuries to the trunk were rare. + +_Seventh nerve._--Facial paralysis was most commonly observed in cases +of wound of the mastoid process, apart from central cortical facial +paralyses, of which several are quoted in the chapter on injuries of the +head. All the wounds of the mastoid process were, in addition, +accompanied by absolute deafness. I am sorry to be unable to give any +details as to the electrical condition of the muscles in these cases, +but I believe that in the great majority the paralysis was mainly the +result of nerve concussion, since the perforations were clean in +character and not obviously accompanied by comminution. Pressure from +hæmorrhage into the Fallopian canal may, of course, have been present, +and in some instances, particularly those in which the bullet traversed +the tympanic cavity, spicules of bone may have caused laceration. In +every case, however, all the branches were equally affected; the +paralysis was absolute, and in none did any improvement occur while the +cases were under my observation. + +The following are a few illustrative examples:-- + + (111) Boer wounded at Belmont. _Entry_, immediately above + zygoma; the bullet passed through the temporal fossa, fractured + the neck of the mandible, traversed the mastoid process, and + emerged at the lower margin of the hairy scalp, 1 inch from the + median line. Facial paralysis was complete, and there was no + improvement at the end of ten weeks. + + (112) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_, at the posterior + border of the left mastoid process, 1/2 an inch above the tip; + _exit_, through the right upper lip at the junction of the + middle and outer thirds. There was considerable hæmorrhage from + the left ear. The injury was followed by complete deafness, and + facial paralysis, which showed no sign of improvement. + + There was complete anæsthesia over the area of distribution of + the third division of the fifth nerve; this improved rapidly, + and at the end of five weeks was hardly to be detected; neither + at that time could any impairment of power on the part of the + muscles of mastication be detected. No impairment of the sense + of taste was noted. + + (113) _Entry_, above the anterior extremity of the zygoma, + bullet retained. Primary hæmorrhage from ear. Complete facial + paralysis and deafness. Anæsthesia over distribution of + temporal branch of temporo-malar nerve, part of supra-orbital + area, auriculo-temporal nerve, and small occipital cervical + nerve. The muscles of mastication acted well. Ecchymosis below + the right mastoid process. + + (114) Wounded at Paardeberg. 300 yards. _Entry_, at the + posterior border of the right mastoid process, 3/4 of an inch + above the tip; _exit_, the inner third of the left upper + eyelid. (Eye destroyed.) Complete right facial paralysis; deaf, + on right side cannot hear tick of watch either held close or in + contact. Purulent otitis media. + +In this place I might mention two other cases of lesion of the seventh +nerve secondary to wound of peripheral branches. In one a patient was +struck by several fragments of lead from a bullet which broke up against +a neighbouring stone. These for the most part lodged in the skin over +the left orbicularis muscle, but one also lodged in the conjunctiva and +was removed. Some ten days later the patient complained that he could +not lift the upper lid. The levator palpebræ was normal, but spasm of +the orbicularis held the eye firmly closed. The condition did not +improve, and the patient was invalided home. He recovered later. + +In another patient a bullet entered above the right zygoma and traversed +the orbits, without wounding the globes. At the time no want of power of +the muscles of the face was noted, but a year later there was evident +weakness of the whole of the muscles of the right side of the face, with +loss of symmetry. + +In the former case the functional element was strong, but in both an +ascending neuritis was probably present. + +_Tenth nerve._--The pneumogastric was implicated in many wounds of the +neck. I never observed an uncomplicated case, but laryngeal paralysis +was temporarily present in two of the cases of cervical aneurism in +which the wound crossed above the level of origin of the recurrent +laryngeal branch, while in two others the recurrent branch itself was in +close contact with the wall of the aneurism (p. 135). In all such cases +signs of concussion or contusion of the nerve would be expected, judging +from the similar results observed in the brachial nerves when the +neighbouring artery was implicated. The only obvious symptoms occurring, +however, were laryngeal paralysis and acceleration of the pulse. As the +latter symptom was often observed in the cases of arterio-venous +communication, wherever situated, and as the sympathetic nerve also lay +in close contiguity to the wound track, it was difficult to ascribe it +with certainty solely to the vagus lesion. In the two cases of high +vagus injury the laryngeal paralysis steadily improved, and at the end +of six months was apparently well; in the two others it persisted at the +end of three months and a year respectively. + +The nerve must have been very frequently damaged in wounds of the neck; +it is possible that this injury may have been an important factor in the +death of some of the patients with cervical wounds upon the field. + +_Eleventh nerve._--I append the only case of localised spinal accessory +paralysis I observed. This was one of my earliest experiences, and when +I examined the neck, in the Field hospital, I assumed from the +completeness of the sterno-mastoid and trapezius paralysis that the +nerve was severed. The patient, however, made such a rapid recovery +that it became evident that the nerve had been contused only, and that +the recovery of function was not due, as is so often the case, to +vicarious compensation by the cervical supply to the muscles. + + (115) _Entry_, immediately to the right of the fourth cervical + spinous process; _exit_, at the anterior border of the left + sterno-mastoid opposite the angle of the mandible. The left + shoulder was depressed, the head inclined to the injured side. + There was evident spinal accessory paralysis, and marked + hyperæsthesia of the whole left upper extremity, most severe in + the circumflex area. The hyperæsthesia gradually disappeared in + a few days, and was clearly due to concussion and possibly + slight contusion of the cervical nerve roots. The spinal + accessory paralysis improved, so that the patient returned to + the front at the end of a month: when I saw him some four + months later the shoulders were held quite symmetrically. + +The _twelfth nerve_ was occasionally damaged in wounds of the floor of +the mouth. I saw no case of permanent paralysis. + +_Injury to the systemic nerves._ _Cervical plexus._--Evidence of injury +to the superficial branches of the cervical plexus was not rare; thus I +saw cases of small occipital anæsthesia, and great occipital neuralgia, +but none of motor paralysis from injury to the deeper muscular branches. +I take it that the smallness of the branches, and the multiple supply +possessed by many of the muscles of the neck, would both take part in +rendering certain evidence of the injury of an individual motor nerve +rare. + +_Brachial plexus._--Injury to this plexus in the neck was common; the +main peculiarity observed was the partial nature of the damage +inflicted. + +Thus injury to a single nerve, or to a complex of two or more, was far +more common than one implicating the whole plexus. Again, while complete +paralysis might affect one set of nerves, another might simply exhibit +signs of irritation in the form of hyperæsthesia or pain. + +The wounds producing these injuries varied much in direction; thus some +crossed the neck transversely, some were obliquely transverse, while +others took a more or less vertical course. + +These same remarks hold good in the case of the nerves of the arm. In +the upper half, especially, complex injury was not rare, while in the +lower third affection of individual nerves was more common. Another +important difference must be mentioned in regard to the upper and lower +segments of the course of the brachial nerves; they are not only more +widely distributed below, but also more fixed in position, a fact +antagonistic to the escape of the nerve by displacement and liable to +expose it to more severe contusion. + +The latter point holds good in the forearm also; here, individual +injuries often occurred. + +While at work in the Field hospital alone I gained the impression that +the musculo-spiral nerve would not retain the unenviable character of +being the most vulnerable nerve of the upper extremity, since the +chances of each individual nerve seemed about equal, putting the +question of the long course of the musculo-spiral nerve against the +humerus out of question. This expectation was, however, not confirmed, +since the musculo-spiral itself, if not primarily affected, was so often +the seat of secondary mischief in fractures of the humerus. The +posterior interosseous branch seemed to exhibit a similar vulnerability +to slight injuries, to be referred to later under the external popliteal +of the lower extremity. Again, in complex injuries of the brachial +plexus, or nerve trunks, the musculo-spiral branch rarely escaped being +a member, if not individually singled out. + +Of the _thoracic nerves_ I have little to say. They must have been often +injured in the thoracic wounds, yet, as far as my experience went, +intercostal neuralgia was uncommon, or at any rate not a special +feature. One observation of interest, however, does exist; in the cases +in which the ribs were fractured by bullets travelling across them +within the thorax, pain was distinctly a prominent feature. This was no +doubt referable to the facts that in such instances the intercostal +nerves were especially liable to direct injury, and that this was often +multiple. On one occasion a crop of herpetic vesicles developed along +the course of a dorsal nerve in an injury implicating a single +intercostal space posteriorly. + +_Lumbar plexus._--Although not quite so well arranged to escape bullet +wounds as the thoracic nerves, the lumbar, by reason of their deep +position and the comparatively wide area they cover, together with the +rarity of wounds taking a sufficiently longitudinal direction to cross +the course of more than one or two branches, were also comparatively +rarely damaged. I never saw an uncomplicated case of anterior crural +paralysis, and rarely cruralgia. I think this is to be explained in two +ways: first, that the trunk course of the nerve is short; secondly, that +it lies in the inguinal fossa. The second fact is of importance, since +wounds in this region were in my experience responsible for a +considerable percentage of the deaths on the field or shortly +afterwards. Such deaths probably occurred from internal hæmorrhage from +the iliac arteries, and it was in such cases that the anterior crural +nerve stood in greatest danger of injury. I also never saw a case of +localised obturator paralysis. On the other hand, anæsthesia or +hyperæsthesia in the area of distribution of the lumbar nerves in the +groin, the external cutaneous and the long saphenous in the thigh, were +not uncommon. Hyperæsthesia developed in more than one case in which +injury to the psoas had led to hæmorrhage into the muscle sheath. + +_Sacral plexus._--The sacral plexus is far more liable to extensive +direct injury than either of the two preceding. Its cords are larger, +gathered up into a much smaller space, and more liable to injury, from +the fact that the slope in which they lie is more readily followed by a +bullet track. Again, the cords rest for a considerable portion of their +course on a bony bed, a particularly dangerous position in gunshot +wounds, since the nerves are not only exposed to the danger of direct +wound, or pressure from bony spicules, but also readily receive +transmitted vibrations secondary to impact of the bullet with the bone. + +None the less I had few occasions to observe extensive injuries of the +plexus. In one instance damage particularly affecting the lumbo-sacral +cord occurred, but this was complicated by signs of irritation of the +anterior crural and obturator nerves, as the result of retro-peritoneal +hæmorrhage and injury to the psoas muscle. Two cases in which the +sacro-coccygeal plexus suffered isolated injury on account of their +characteristic nature as gunshot injuries will be shortly quoted: + + (116) _Sacro-coccygeal plexus._--_Entry_, at the junction of + the middle and posterior thirds of the left iliac crest; the + bullet passed obliquely downwards through the pelvis to lodge 3 + inches below the right trochanter major. Incontinence of soft + fæces persisted for five weeks, and retention of urine during + three weeks. + + This patient subsequently died on the homeward voyage, but I am + unable to say from what cause. + + (117) _Entry_, over third sacral vertebra; _exit_, 2 inches + from the median line, and 1-1/2 inch above Poupart's ligament + on the anterior abdominal wall. Incontinence, with involuntary + passage of fæces, persisted during the first twenty-four hours, + and for two days the urine had to be withdrawn with a catheter. + No further signs of nerve injury were noted. + +The same explanation of the comparative rarity of injuries to the sacral +plexus that has been already given in the case of the anterior crural +nerve holds good--viz. that in a great many of the pelvic wounds +involving the plexus early death followed from the severity of the +concurrent injuries. + +Injuries to the great sciatic nerve outside the pelvis, or to one of its +constituent elements, on the other hand, formed one of the most familiar +of the nerve lesions. The wounds giving rise to these were of the most +diverse character; some crossed the buttock in a vertical, transverse, +or oblique direction; others travelled through the thigh in +corresponding directions, while a third series involved both buttock and +thigh. + +The size of the great sciatic nerve renders complete laceration by a +bullet of small calibre a matter almost of impossibility; hence complete +division may almost be left out of consideration in the case of this +nerve. On the other hand, partial division, perforation, and severe +contusion are each and all favoured by the same factor. + +With an extended thigh the nerve is in a state of comparatively slight +tension, and this may be still lessened if the knee be flexed. This +factor, together with the density of the sheath of the nerve, favours +the possibility of displacement, and this occurrence is more likely in +the lower segment than in the upper, which is comparatively fixed in +position. + +Clinical experience appeared to illustrate the importance of these +anatomical factors, as the worst cases of sciatic injury that I saw were +in connection with wounds of the buttock or the junction of that segment +of the trunk with the thigh. + +The most striking observation with regard to the injuries of the great +sciatic nerve was the comparatively frequent escape of the popliteal +element and the severe lesion of the peroneal. This was so pronounced as +to amount to as high a proportion of peroneal symptoms as 90 per cent., +and often when the whole nerve was implicated the popliteal signs were +of the irritative, the peroneal of the paralytic type. When bullets +crossed the popliteal space, given wounds of equal severity in +corresponding degrees of contiguity to the respective nerves, the +peroneal element always suffered in greater degree. Again, the peroneal +nerve symptoms were more obstinate and prolonged, and instances of +ascending neuritis were more common than in the case of any other nerve +of the lower extremity, and the trophic wasting of muscles was more +marked. + +The peroneal nerve, therefore, acquires the same unenviable degree of +importance in the lower extremity enjoyed by the musculo-spiral in the +upper. Here, again, we are confronted with the fact that the peroneal +element of the great sciatic nerve is the more prone to idiopathic +inflammations or toxic influences, and hence we can only assume it to +possess a special vulnerability. The peroneal element is of course +somewhat the more exposed, as lying posterior; but it seems unreasonable +to assume that so large a proportion of the injuries can implicate the +posterior segment of the nerve as to make the startling difference in +the incidence of degeneration explicable. In this relation we may bear +in mind that the muscles supplied by this nerve suffer most in the +degeneration subsequent to anterior polio-myelitis, and again that in +cerebral hemiplegia or spinal-cord injuries they are the last to +recover. Unfortunately no explanation of these remarkable facts, so +forcibly impressed by the large series of cases with peroneal symptoms +seen in a short time, is forthcoming. + +I may dismiss the other branches of the sacral plexus in a few words. +The small sciatic was occasionally injured in its course in the buttock, +and the small saphenous in the leg. When either element of the latter +was injured, it was surprising how sharply the imperfections in the +anæsthesia corresponded with the composite character of the nerve. + + +CASES OF NERVE INJURY + +The following cases are added mainly to give some idea of the +comparative frequency with which the individual nerves were injured, and +also to exemplify the more common forms of complex injury met with. +Circumstances, unfortunately, did not always allow of extended +observation at the time, and I have not been very fortunate in my +attempts to obtain subsequent information on this series since my +return. A certain amount of prognostic information is, however, +furnished by some of the records, and I am very much indebted to my +colleague, Dr. Turney, for help in this matter. + + (118) _Brachial plexus._--_Entry_, 2 inches above the clavicle + at the anterior margin of the trapezius; _exit_, first + intercostal space, 1 inch from the sternal margin. Heavy dull + pain developed at once, extending down the upper extremity. A + fortnight later this pain still persisted; there was lowered + sensation in the ulnar area with formication, also lowered + sensation in the internal cutaneous area of distribution; + sensation in the lesser internal cutaneous area was normal. The + patient went home with the nerve symptoms well at the end of a + month. + + (119) _Brachial plexus injury._--Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_, at the anterior border of the sterno-mastoid opposite + the pomum Adami; _exit_, through the ninth rib below and 1/2 an + inch external to the scapular angle. Emphysema and considerable + blood extravasation developed in the posterior triangle of the + neck, also loss of power in the musculo-spiral distribution, + but no anæsthesia. At the end of the first fortnight there was + evident wasting of the muscles, but some power was returning in + the triceps. At the end of a month the man left for England, + with fair power in the triceps, but well-marked wrist-drop. A + year later the wrist-drop still persisted. + + (120) _Plexus injury._--Wound of _entry_, over pomum Adami; + _exit_, below scapular spine, about centre. Complete median and + musculo-spiral paralysis. + + (121) _Median, musculo-cutaneous, and musculo-spiral + nerves._--The wound traversed the axilla from just beneath the + anterior fold; three weeks later a firm mass in the axilla + corresponded to the wound track. Hyperæsthesia developed in the + area of median distribution, with deep pain in the muscles. + There was rigidity of the biceps cubiti and slight wasting in + the radial extensors. The patient improved slowly, and + eventually was discharged and passed out of sight. + + (122) _Brachial nerves._--Wounded at Paardeberg. Range 500 + yards. _Entry_, at the front of the arm, 2 inches below the + junction of the anterior axillary fold; _exit_, a little lower, + at the back of the arm, in the line of junction of the + posterior axillary fold. + + Considerable shock attended the primary injury; when reaction + had taken place, complete motor and sensory paralysis was noted + of the whole upper extremity, with the exception of some power + of movement of the posterior interosseous group of muscles. + Three weeks later the patient could extend the wrist, but + sensation was imperfect in the arm, and completely absent in + the forearm and hand. The track was now hard and palpable, but + there was no hyperæsthesia in any area; when the track was + manipulated slight formication in the hand was experienced. The + biceps and triceps were equally paralysed. There was no wasting + in any of the muscles. + + (123) _Brachial nerves._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_, + through the anterior axillary fold at its junction with the + arm; _exit_, on the posterior wall of the thorax, 1/2 an inch + from the median line at a level with the angle of the scapula. + Complete musculo-spiral paralysis; hæmothorax. Three weeks + later, radial sensation returned; but the triceps was very + weak, and wrist-drop was complete. There was some wasting of + the muscles supplied by the median and ulnar nerves, and + complete obliteration of the radial pulse. A year later the + musculo-spiral paralysis still persisted. + + (124) _Musculo-spiral and median._--Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_, 3 inches below the anterior axillary fold, on the + inner aspect of the arm; track passed obliquely downwards + behind the humerus to a point on the outer aspect of the arm + 1-1/2 inch below the level of the entry. The humerus escaped + injury. Musculo-spiral paralysis was complete; hyperæsthesia in + the distribution of the median followed some days later. One + month subsequently radial sensation had returned, and a feeling + of numbness had taken the place of the median hyperæsthesia. + The triceps and marginal muscles were much wasted, and only + interosseous extension was possible in the fingers. + + (125) _Brachial nerves._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ and + _exit_, in the upper third of the arm internal to the humerus. + Complete median paralysis, anæsthesia in the ulnar area, and in + the radial supply to the dorsum of the middle and ring fingers. + Could flex, extend, and adduct and abduct the wrist; some power + of flexion in index finger, in others none. The flexion of the + wrist was dependent on the ulnar supply to the muscles of the + forearm. No wasting of the interossei, skin normal except for a + large trophic blister on the dorsum of the hand. Little + improvement had taken place in this patient at the end of a + year. + + (126) _Brachial nerves._--Wounded at Magersfontein. The wound + traversed the lower part of the upper third of the arm, + fracturing the humerus. Immediate complete loss of power in the + arm was experienced, together with loss of all sensation. Three + weeks later the humerus was united; the fracture was evidently + the result of passing contact, and not of direct impact. The + paralysis was still complete in the distribution of the median, + ulnar, and musculo-spiral nerves. There was considerable + wasting of the hand and forearm, and a good deal of thickening + in the lower third of the arm. + + Four months after the original injury, the nerves were explored + by Mr. Eve, who kindly gives me the following information. All + the nerves and vessels of the arm were united into one firm + bundle by cicatricial tissue. When dissected clear, the median + nerve was found to be thickened and enlarged for about 1-1/2 + inch of its length; the ulnar was not completely freed, but was + found to be continuous and indurated; the musculo-spiral was + also intact, but at its entrance into the humeral groove a mass + of callus was felt. A sclerosed and thickened portion of the + median nerve 3-1/2 inches in length was resected, also 1 inch + of sclerosed ulnar nerve, and both were sutured. The + musculo-spiral nerve was left for future exploration. A small + traumatic aneurism was found on the brachial artery, and the + vessel was ligatured above it. + + Ten months later no improvement in the median or ulnar nerves. + Electrical reaction present in musculo-spiral group of + muscles. + + (127) _Musculo-spiral._--Transverse wound through arm posterior + to humerus. Slight suppuration. Triceps weakened only, complete + paralysis of radial extensors and posterior interosseous group. + Radial sensation lowered only. + + (128) _Musculo-spiral._--_Entry_, 2 inches above and 1/2 an + inch behind the external humeral condyle; _exit_, at the inner + edge of the biceps, 1/2 an inch lower in the arm than the + entry. It is doubtful whether the paralysis was noted at first, + but a few days later complete posterior interosseous paralysis + and lowered radial sensation were remarked. No change except a + deepening of the anæsthesia, and the development of formication + on manipulation of the wound occurred, and at the end of three + weeks the nerve was exposed (Mr. Watson), and it was found that + a notch had been cut in its outer border, which had opened out + into a V shape. The margins of this notch were refreshed and + the gap closed. Ten days later radial sensation was fairly + good, but the motor symptoms remained unchanged. Nine months + later steady but very slow improvement was reported. + + (129) _Ulnar and musculo-cutaneous nerves._--_Entry_, back of + forearm; the bullet passed between the bones and was retained + at the posterior aspect of the arm. Three weeks later the hand + was glossy and stiff, the fingers extended and adducted, the + thumb was held stiffly in the palm with no power of extension. + The forearm was held semiprone, and the elbow flexed by a rigid + biceps. Six months later the same position was maintained, but + the contracture disappeared under an anæsthetic. + + (130) _Median and posterior interosseous._--_Entry_, over the + external margin of the radius at the centre of the forearm; + _exit_, at the inner margin of the olecranon 1-1/2 inch below + the tip. Lowered cutaneous sensation in median distribution, + and loss of median flexion of wrist and fingers. Complete + wrist-drop. The triceps supinator longus and extensor carpi + radialis longior were perfect. Twelve days later the wrist + could be raised into a direct line with forearm, but there was + no change in the median symptoms. A week after this the + anæsthetic median area became hyperæsthetic both as to skin and + on deep pressure over the muscles. + + (131) _Sacral plexus. Great sciatic nerve._--Wounded at Modder + River. _Entry_, in left loin; _exit_, at lower margin of + buttock. The wound was followed immediately by complete + peroneal paralysis, both motor and sensory. Fourteen days later + hyperæsthesia developed in the area of distribution of the + internal popliteal nerve, the superficial pain being greatest + in the sole; the muscles of the calf were also very tender on + manipulation. The pain increased, and at the end of twenty-four + days the patient's sufferings were so great that Mr. Thornton + cut down upon and exposed the nerve. It was found embedded in + firm cicatricial tissue close to the sciatic notch; this + compressed the nerve to such a degree that a waist was apparent + upon it. + + The nerve was freed and resumed its normal outline. For a few + days the patient was much relieved, but the neuralgia then + returned in greater intensity than ever. Morphia was injected + hypodermically, and other hypnotics employed, but with little + effect, the patient developing the hysterical condition so + common in the subjects of severe sciatica. Some five weeks + later a sudden improvement took place, the morphia was + decreased, and the patient became sufficiently well to return + to England, but there was still deep tenderness in the calf, + and well-marked hyperæsthesia of the sole. + + A year later the patient had been discharged from the Service, + but was earning his living in a shop. He walked fairly well, + but still with foot-drop, and complained of tenderness in the + sole. I am indebted to Dr. Turney for the following report on + the condition of the muscles. + + Calf muscles practically normal. In the anterior tibial and + peroneal groups the faradic irritability is much diminished, + that in the peroneus longus being the lowest of all. + Contraction can be induced in the extensor longus hallucis, + extensor longus digitorum, and peroneus brevis; but reaction is + doubtful in the case of the tibialis anticus and peroneus + longus. + + With the galvanic current contraction is sluggish, and the + irritability diminished. No serious changes are present except + in the peroneus longus. ACC > KCC at 10 M. A. + + (132) _Great sciatic._--_Entry_, at outer aspect of the thigh, + just above the centre; _exit_, at the junction of the inner and + posterior aspects of thigh, about 2 inches lower. The wound was + produced by a ricochet bullet, and beyond the perforation of + the sciatic nerve the femur was fractured obliquely (see plate + XVI.). Hyperæsthesia of the sole was noted early, and when I + saw the patient three months later, there was wasting of the + muscles of the leg, and foot-drop, although he walked with a + stick. + + These symptoms persisted, and on his return to England an + exploration was made by Sir Thomas Smith, and the two fragments + of mantle seen in the skiagram were removed from the substance + of the sciatic nerve. Eight months after the injury, the + patient still walked with foot-drop; there was modified + sensation in the musculo-cutaneous area, and a feeling as if + the bones of the foot were uncovered when he walked. The + circumference of the affected leg was more than 1 inch less + than that of the sound one. Steady but slow improvement was + taking place. + + (133) _Great sciatic_.--In a third patient with a buttock + track, the symptoms were identical with those observed in case + 131. In this an exploration showed that the nerve had been + perforated. Although the symptoms were never so severe as in + No. 131, yet recovery was very much slower and less complete, + the muscular weakness remained more marked, and the skin + exhibited more evidence of trophic lesion. Some contracture of + the knee and rigid foot-drop took place, and at the end of + twelve months the patient walked poorly with a stick. + Improvement is, however, continuing. + + (134) _Great sciatic_.--Wounded at Ladysmith. _Entry_, + immediately below left buttock fold; _exit_, at anterior aspect + of thigh, 3-1/2 inches below Poupart's ligament. The left leg + was paralysed, and patient was sent down to the Base, where he + remained two months. The wound closed by primary union, the + paralysis improved, and the man rejoined his regiment. After he + had been in camp four days, his leg gave way, and he returned + to hospital, where he contracted enteric fever. Later, he was + sent home, and eight months after the reception of the injury + his condition was as follows: + + Left lower limb somewhat wasted, a diminution of 1 inch in the + circumference of the leg and 1/2 an inch in the thigh being + found. The patient walks with foot-drop, and the flexor muscles + of the knee are weak. On examination the peroneal muscles + reacted but sluggishly to faradic irritation. There is complete + anæsthesia of the foot to above the ankle, and up to the knee + tactile sensation and appreciation of pain were dulled. The + left plantar reflex was absent, the right slight, the left + patellar reflex was abnormally brisk. There was neither ankle + nor patellar clonus, and the other reflexes were present and + normal. The gait was spastic, and the patient was more troubled + by a contraction of the calf muscles, which prevented his + putting the heel to the ground, than by the foot-drop. + + Beyond these local phenomena there was marked tremor of the + upper extremities on any exertion, and slight lateral + nystagmus. The patient was not sure that this had not been + present ever since he recovered from the enteric fever, but it + was sufficiently marked to give rise to the suspicion of the + development of disseminated sclerosis. + + The patient was a hard-headed, sensible man. He remained in the + hospital under the care of Dr. Turney, to whom I am indebted + for notes of the case, forty-six days. During this period he + was treated by faradic electricity, and, with some checks, + notably the development of passive effusion into the left + knee-joint, and a fugitive attack of redness over the dorsum of + the foot, both suggesting trophic changes, steadily improved. + The anæsthesia became limited to the outer half of the leg, at + the end of one month was limited to the dorsum of the foot + only, and at the end of six weeks entirely disappeared. + Meanwhile the tendency to drawing up of the heel by the calf + muscles became less, and the gait improved. The man left the + hospital at the end of two months, very satisfied with his + condition, although the tremor of the hands was still present + in a lessened degree. + + (135) _External popliteal._--Wounded at Magersfontein, 250-300 + yards. _Entry_, at the outer side of the thigh, 5 inches above + the lower extremity of the external condyle; _exit_, at the + inner margin of the adductors, at a level 4 inches higher in + the thigh. The track crossed behind the femur. Complete + peroneal motor paralysis and anæsthesia, except in the hinder + part of the region supplied by the mixed external saphenous. + Slight hyperæsthesia of the sole. Improving at the end of three + weeks, but paralysis still nearly complete. + + (136) _External popliteal._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_, + 5 inches below the highest part of the right iliac crest, on + outer aspect of hip; _exit_, at the posterior margin of the + gracilis, 2 inches from the perineum. Complete peroneal + paralysis followed, which rapidly improved, and on the + twenty-second day was nearly well. + + (137) _Internal popliteal. Secondary anæsthesia_.--_Shell_ + wounds of the right popliteal space. Wounded at Belmont. + Anæsthesia of the outer side of the calf, the leg and sole of + foot. No motor paralysis. As cicatrisation progressed, the + anæsthesia became more marked and was complete over the whole + of the external saphenous area. + + (138) _Internal popliteal._--Wounded at Paardeberg. 400-500 + yards. _Entry_, about the centre of the outer half of the + patella; _exit_, at the centre of the calf, about 2 inches from + the popliteal crease. Five days after the injury severe burning + pain developed in the sole. A fortnight later the pain was much + less severe, but varied in degree with the heat of the weather, + being worse when cool. At this date, however, rubbing became + comforting. + + (139) _External popliteal._---Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_, 1 inch above the upper end of the internal margin of + the patella; _exit_, at the margin of leg, just below the outer + tuberosity of the tibia. Complete peroneal paralysis followed + the injury. A month later the nerve was bared and found + slightly thickened. An improvement in cutaneous sensation + followed quickly, and a much slower improvement in the motor + power commenced. + + (140) _External popliteal nerve._--Wounded at Beacon Hill. A + _bayonet_ entered over upper quarter of fibula, and passed + between the bones of leg into the calf. An aneurismal varix of + the calf vessels developed, also incomplete peroneal paralysis. + The scar was raised from the nerve (Major Simpson, R.A.M.C.) + six weeks later, and at the end of a fortnight the power and + sensation were both much improved and the patient returned to + England. + + (141) _External popliteal._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_, + 1/2 an inch above the internal border of the patella; _exit_, + 1-1/2 inch from the head of the fibula and over that bone. The + wound was followed by peroneal paralysis. Six weeks later + sensation was still diminished in the anterior tibial and + musculo-cutaneous nerve areas, and marked foot-drop, little + improved, persisted. The patient came to England, and at the + end of twelve months is reported as very little improved. + + (142) _Anterior tibial._--_Entry_, 1 inch in front and below + the external malleolus; _exit_, at the centre of the sole, just + anterior to the bases of the metatarsal bones. Wasting and + paralysis of extensor brevis digitorum. + + (143) _Small sciatic and small saphenous._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. 200 yards. Two wounds: (i) _Entry_, below the + centre of the twelfth rib on the left side; _exit_, immediately + to the left of the buttock furrow at upper part, (ii) _Entry_, + in the right loin, midway between the last rib and iliac crest; + _exit_, just within the centre of the left buttock; the two + wounds crossed diagonally. Hyperæsthesia in area of + distribution of small saphenous and small sciatic nerves, which + rapidly improved. + + (144) _Lumbar plexus._--Boer, wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_, eleventh interspace, posterior axillary line; _exit_, + tenth interspace, right mid-axillary line. Impaired sensation + in area of distribution of external cutaneous and crural branch + of genito-crural nerves. At the end of a fortnight anæsthesia + was less apparent, but a feeling of numbness persisted, which + soon disappeared. + +_Prognosis and treatment._--In considering the prognosis in cases of +nerve injury, several of the points already raised as to the nature of +the lesion are of importance. Short of actual section, it may be broadly +stated that no lesion is too serious to render ultimate recovery +impossible. + +In cases in which the injury has been produced by a bullet fired at a +short range, or in which contact with the nerve has been close, the +return of functional activity is very slow. In such instances the +condition probably resembles that in which a divided nerve has been +sutured, with the additional disadvantage that a considerable portion of +the nerve, both above and below the point actually struck, has been +destroyed as far as the conduction of nervous impulses is concerned. +This may reasonably be concluded in the light of the evidence offered by +the injuries of the spinal cord, in which several segments usually +suffered if the velocity of the bullet was great, and also if the fact +is remembered that, when thickening takes place, a considerable length +of the nerve is usually implicated. + +Recovery is notably slow in the case of certain nerves, _e.g._ +musculo-spiral and peroneal, even when the injury has not been of +extreme severity. Again, these same nerves are apparently more seriously +affected by moderate degrees of damage than are others. + +As favourable prognostic elements we may bear in mind: low velocity on +the part of the travelling bullet, and with this a lesser degree of +contiguity of the track to the nerve. The early return of sensation is a +favourable sign, and in this relation the development of hyperæsthesia, +whether preceded by anæsthesia or no, points to the maintenance of +continuity of, and a moderate degree of damage to, the nerve. The early +return of sensation, even if modified in acuteness, was always a very +hopeful sign; also the production of formication in the area of +distribution of the nerve on manipulation of the injured spot. As in the +case of nerve injuries of every nature, the disposition and temperament +of the patient exerted considerable influence on the course of the +cases. + +Complete section of the nerves in these bullet wounds only obtained +special importance in two ways: first, in that a considerable portion of +the trunk might be shot away in oblique tracks, and, secondly, in that +very severe contusion might affect the nerve for a considerable +distance beyond the point actually implicated. In point of fact, +complete section when treated by suture was often more rapidly recovered +from than an injury in which only a portion of the width of a trunk was +divided. This was no doubt to be explained on the theory that the +contiguous portion of the nerve suffered less when tension and +resistance were lessened by complete severance of the cord. + +_The treatment_ of slight nerve contusion was simple; rest alone was +necessary, and in the course of hours or days paralysis was recovered +from. The symptoms were most troublesome in patients of a neurotic +temperament, or those who had suffered from severe systemic shock. + +In severe concussions and contusions the first care had to be devoted to +the discrimination of the lesion from that of division. A period of rest +then needed to be followed by one of massage and movement, to maintain +the nutrition of the muscles. In a considerable portion of the cases a +stage of neuritis had to be expected. In all cases, either of severe +concussion, contusion, or complete section, accompanied by the fracture +of a bone, especial care was necessary that the bandaging and fixation +of the limb were not sufficiently tight to add the dangers of muscular +ischæmia to those of the nerve injury already present. + +Neuritis, whether dependent on local injury, implication in the scar, +pressure from callus, or of the ascending variety, needed the same +treatment: rest, preservation of the limb from cold or damp, and the +local application of anodynes, as belladonna, or hot laudanum +fomentations. In some cases a general anodyne, as morphia, was +preferable; then always to be used with caution, as the patients soon +craved inordinately for it, and were unwilling to give it up. Later, +local blisters in the line of the nerve trunk, careful massage and +exercise when muscular and cutaneous tenderness had subsided, the +application of the continuous current to the nerves, and perhaps +faradisation of the muscles, were all useful. + +Splints were often temporarily required to resist contracture, or the +assumption of false positions; in either case they needed to be +frequently removed, and movement &c. made, in order to avoid any chance +of troublesome stiffness. + +_Operative treatment._--Early interference was only warranted by +positive knowledge that some source of irritation or pressure could be +removed; thus a bone spicule, or a bullet, or part of one, particularly +portions of mantles. + +In case of contusion the expiration of three months is the earliest date +at which any operation should be taken into consideration, and +interference is only then advisable if there is good prospect of freeing +the nerve from compressing adhesions. The two strongest indications for +operation are (1) signs pointing to the secondary implication of the +nerve in a cicatrix, especially when these are of such a nature as to +indicate local tension, fixation, or pressure; (2) the possibility of +the irritation being the result of the presence of some foreign body, +such as a bone spicule, or portions of a bullet mantle; in such cases +the X rays will often give useful help. + +With regard to the early exploration of cases of traumatic neuralgia, it +may be pointed out that when this was undertaken the results were as a +rule very temporary. In many cases in which the measure was resorted to, +either no macroscopic evidence of injury to the nerve was discovered, or +a bulbous thickening was met with of such extent as to make excision +inadvisable, even if it were considered otherwise the most suitable +treatment. + +Even when complete section of the nerve was assured by the absence of +any power of reaction to stimulation by electricity from above on the +part of the muscles, operation was better not undertaken until +cicatrisation had reached a certain stage. If done earlier than at the +end of three weeks, the sutured spot became implicated in a hard +cicatrix, and any advantage to be obtained by early interference was +lost. When partial division of a trunk was determined, the same date was +the most favourable one for exploration, the gap in the nerve being +freshened and closed by suture. There is little doubt, however, that in +some cases such injuries were recovered from spontaneously. + +In view of the uniformly bad results observed in the case of the seventh +nerve, I am inclined to think that the above rules might be tentatively +relaxed, and the nerve primarily explored by an operation resembling +that for mastoid suppuration. It is of course doubtful whether the +trouble does not generally result from the vibratory concussion alone; +but as this is not certain, and the operation would only have to be +performed on patients already permanently deaf, it might be worth while +at any rate opening the Fallopian canal with the object of relieving +tension. It is not probable that in any of the cases quoted much +splintering of the bone had occurred, as the wounds appeared to be of +the nature of pure perforations. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +INJURIES TO THE CHEST + + +In regard to Prognosis wounds of the chest furnished the most hopeful +class of the whole series of trunk or visceral injuries. Cases of wound +of the heart and great vessels afforded the only exceptions to an almost +universally favourable course, both as regards life and the +non-occurrence of serious after-effects. + +This was mainly explicable on two grounds: first, the sharply localised +character of the lesion produced by the bullet of small calibre; and, +secondly, the fact that the lung, the most frequently injured organ, is +not materially affected by the grade of velocity with which the bullet +strikes. In point of fact, wounds of this organ probably afford an +instance in which high grades of velocity are distinctly favourable to +the nature of the injury, and this is possibly true in the case of +wounds of the chest-wall also. + +The significance of the calibre of the bullet in wounds of the chest is +evident. The late Mr. Archibald Forbes, in one of his letters from the +seat of the Franco-German war, remarked that in crossing a battlefield +it was easy to recognise the patients who had suffered a wound of the +lung from the fact that the whistle of the air entering and leaving the +chest was plainly audible. This was, indeed, not uncommonly the case in +wounds produced by the older bullets of large calibre, but with the +employment of the smaller projectile it has become an experience of the +past. Some evidence as to the comparative severity of wounds produced by +the larger forms of bullet was, moreover, afforded by the present +campaign, since Martini-Henry wounds were occasionally met with. Of some +instances observed by myself, in one, external hæmorrhage was a +prominent symptom; in another, a piece of lung was prolapsed from a +wound in the back, and twice I observed pneumothorax, an uncommon +sequela to wounds from bullets of small calibre. + +It may be remarked, however, that all these more serious injuries were +recovered from, also that when we consider that the patients were +comparatively young and healthy subjects, the favourable prognosis was +what might have reasonably been expected. When, as occasionally +happened, a patient of more mature years, with enlarged facial +capillaries, received a wound of the lung, the course was in no way so +favourable as that witnessed in the case of the younger men. + +In support of this opinion I may add that wounds from shrapnel and +fragments of shell also did remarkably well, although they sometimes +gave rise to more troublesome symptoms than did wounds produced by +bullets of the Mauser type. Again, these injuries as a whole were of +nothing like so serious a nature as the lacerations of the lung produced +by fractured ribs, which we commonly have to treat in civil practice, +and are not accustomed to regard as especially dangerous. + +It is also a striking fact that the most common and troublesome +complication of wounds of the chest, hæmothorax, was usually the result +of the wound of the chest-wall and not of the lung. I preface these +remarks to the detailed account of the thoracic injuries, because I +think the favourable course usually taken by patients with wounds of the +lung has been accorded somewhat greater prominence than the +circumstances warranted. + +_Non-penetrating wounds of the chest-wall._--Surface wounds were not +very common, and were chiefly of interest in so far as they illustrated +the very superficial course that may be occasionally taken by a bullet +without breach of the integument, and as sometimes affording opportunity +for the exercise of diagnostic skill when the track traversed the +axilla. + +The most common situation for tracks taking a long course on the surface +of the thoracic skeleton was the back. Such wounds were usually received +while the patients were prone on the ground; thus I might instance a +case in which the bullet entered the posterior aspect of the shoulder 3 +inches above the spine of the scapula, passed downwards, pierced that +process, and emerged 2 inches below the inferior angle of the bone. +Wounds of a similar nature coursing in transverse and oblique +directions, and not implicating bone, were also seen. Those implicating +the vertebræ have been already dealt with. The scapular region was also +a favourite one for the lodgment of retained bullets, some resting in +the supra- and infra-spinatus muscles, others lying beneath the bone +itself. + +On the anterior aspect of the chest, bullets coming from the front +sometimes traversed and fractured the clavicle, and then took a short +course downwards, emerging over the ribs or sternum. Figure 81 +represents a particularly long track in this region. In other cases the +precordial region was crossed, but I never witnessed any serious effect +on the heart's action in any such injury at the time the patients came +under my notice. + +Wounds received with the arm outstretched and traversing the axilla +sometimes gave considerable trouble in excluding with certainty a +perforation of the thoracic cavity. Thus a bullet entered below the +centre of the right clavicle and emerged 2-1/2 inches below, above the +angle of the scapula, at its axillary margin. The arm was outstretched +at the moment of the reception of the injury; but when the wound was +viewed with the limb placed alongside the trunk, it seemed almost +impossible that the chest cavity could have escaped. In some cases of +this kind the difficulty was at once cleared up by noting evidence of +injury to the axillary nerves. + +A word will suffice as to the treatment of these wounds. The only +special indication was to keep the scapula at rest for a sufficient +period. I have dealt with the anatomy of them at such length only +because in their extreme form they are so highly characteristic of the +nature of the injuries which may be produced by bullets of small +calibre. + +_Penetrating wounds of the chest._--Tracks crossing the thoracic cavity +in every direction were common. When the erect attitude was maintained, +frontal and sagittal wounds, pure or oblique, were received; when the +prone position was assumed, longitudinal tracks, either purely or +obliquely vertical, were the rule. Experience of wounds of the latter +class was extensive in the present campaign, from the fact that so many +of the advances were made in prone or crawling attitudes. The vertical +and transverse tracks each possessed the special characteristic of +frequently implicating both the thoracic and abdominal cavities, but the +vertical were often prolonged into the neck, or even downwards through +the pelvis. The vertical wounds in addition sometimes exhibited one very +important feature, the fracture of several ribs from within, often at a +very considerable distance from the aperture of either entry or exit. + +[Illustration: FIG. 81.--Superficial Track in anterior Wall of Trunk] + +_Characters of the apertures of entry and exit._--As has already been +mentioned, the chest-wall was one of the situations in which the +aperture of entry was often large, and the oval form due to obliquity of +impact on the part of the bullet was particularly well marked. The exit +wounds were often smaller than those of entry, especially if the bullet +emerged by an intercostal space; even when the ribs were comminuted, the +fragments were, as a rule, too small to occasion more than a slightly +enlarged and irregular aperture. Taken as a class, however, and putting +aside explosive exit wounds, wounds of the chest afforded more numerous +examples of irregular outline and variation in size than were met with +in any other region of the body. + +When the tracks penetrated the broad upper intercostal spaces, an +interesting feature, due to the tense and rigid nature of the muscles +closing the intervals, and their large admixture of fibrous tissue, was +sometimes noticed. The bullet, especially if passing obliquely, was apt +to cut a slit in the muscles far exceeding in size the opening in the +overlying integument, with the result of leaving a palpable subcutaneous +defect. Under these circumstances the yielding spot was often noticed to +rise and fall with the movements of respiration, external palpation met +with an absence of normal resistance, and there was impulse on coughing. + +_Fractures of the ribs._--These injuries were produced in either +transverse or longitudinal coursing tracks, their special feature being +a sharp localisation of the lesion of the bone. + +In tracks crossing the chest transversely the injury to the ribs might +consist in notching, perforation, or complete solution of continuity, +sometimes with fine comminution. In the incomplete injuries some +importance attached to the localisation of the lesion to the upper or +lower border of the rib, in so far as the intercostal artery was +concerned. Comminution at the wound of entry was, as a rule, not so +extensive as at the aperture of exit, and in any case was less apparent, +since the fragments were driven inward. The wider comminution at the +exit aperture depends on the lesser degree of support afforded by the +thoracic coverings to the convex outer surface of the rib, and on the +fact that the velocity of the bullet has been lowered by its passage +through the opposite rib and the chest cavity. + +The splinters of comminuted ribs are small, and wide-reaching fissures +rare. These characters depend on the elastic nature of the resistance +offered by the curved rib to the passage of the bullet, which is +calculated to preserve the bone from the full force of impact, except at +the point actually impinged upon. + +Fractures of the ribs, produced from within by bullets taking a +longitudinal course through the thorax, were still more special in +character. They were also more important, as giving rise to troublesome +symptoms. + +In these, again, the degree of injury to the bones varied considerably. +In some cases the bones were merely grooved internally, without any +external deformity; in other cases a sort of green-stick fracture was +produced, accompanied by the projection of a tender salient angle +externally; in others complete solution of continuity was effected. + +Another feature of importance was the occasional implication of several +ribs. In this case the symptoms accompanying the injury were very much +more like those observed in the corresponding injuries resulting from +indirect violence seen in civil practice. + +Injuries to the _costal cartilages_ closely resembled those to the ribs. +Perforation, bending from injury to the inner aspect, and comminution +were observed. The latter condition differed from the similar one seen +in the case of the ribs only in so far as the tougher consistence of the +cartilage did not lend itself to such free comminution, and the +splinters remained in great part attached. The nature of the fractures, +in fact, somewhat resembled that seen on breaking a piece of cane. + +I saw no fracture of the _sternum_ except of the nature of a pure +perforation; these were not uncommon in the hospitals, either in the +upper or the extreme lower portions of the bone. Fractures in other +portions were no doubt usually associated with fatal injuries to the +heart. The openings were usually so small as to be difficult of +palpation, and I never had the opportunity of examining one _post +mortem_. + +Perforations of the body of the _scapula_ were common, but they were of +little importance in symptoms or prognosis. + +_Symptoms of fracture of the ribs._--Fractures accompanying transverse +wounds of the chest were characterised by the insignificance of the +symptoms produced. Every common sign of fracture of the rib was in fact +absent. Neither pain, stitch on inspiration, nor crepitus, either +audible or palpable, was, as a rule, present. This absence of signs was +accounted for by the nature of the lesion: thus in perforations or +notchings there was no loss of continuity, while in the freely +comminuted fractures the loss of continuity was so absolute as to allow +no possibility of the main fragments rubbing together. Again, part of +the symptoms attending these injuries, as seen in civil practice, +depends upon contusion and laceration of the surrounding structures--a +condition precluded by the localised nature of the application of the +violence by a bullet of small calibre. In order to establish a +diagnosis, therefore, we were in many cases reduced to palpation, and +occasionally to direct examination of the wound. + +Fractures accompanying longitudinal tracks formed a class rather apart +in the matter of symptoms. In these mere groovings might also be +accompanied by no signs, or at the most by slight local pain and +tenderness. When, however, the grooving was sufficiently deep to be +accompanied by deformity, or a complete solution of continuity was +effected, the signs were often severe. The tender salient angle, or, in +the absence of this, a highly tender localised spot, often pointed to +the less severe injuries, and when the fractures were complete or +multiple, pain was a very prominent symptom, both constant and in the +form of inspiratory stitch. The severity of the pain was probably to be +in part ascribed to implication of the intercostal nerves, which in +these injuries was direct and often multiple. Again, severe contusion or +actual laceration of the nerves, with resulting anæsthesia, was less +common than when the bullet directly implicated the nerves in transverse +wounds. Free comminution and absolute solution of continuity were also +less common than in the fractures accompanying transverse wounds; hence +pain from rubbing of the fragments on inspiratory movement or palpation +was more common, and crepitus, either on auscultation or palpation, was +more often met with. Patients with this class of fracture often suffered +greatly from painful dyspnoea, and were unable to assume the supine +position. + +_External hæmorrhage_ of severity was rare from these thoracic wounds; +in many cases it did not amount to more than local staining of the +shirt; altogether I saw only one or two cases where any serious bleeding +occurred. Internal hæmorrhage into the pleura, in consequence of the +position of the intercostal arteries, was common, and often abundant; +this will be treated of under the heading of hæmothorax. + +_Treatment of fractured ribs._--Transverse wounds of the thorax, with no +symptoms of fractured ribs, needed to be dealt with as wounds of the +soft parts alone. + +In multiple fractures accompanying longitudinal tracks, bandaging or +strapping for the purpose of fixation was necessary to relieve pain. A +few fragments of bone sometimes needed primary removal, and occasionally +small sequestra were removed at a later date; but necrosis was rare, +unless some complication led to the development of a fistula. + +Retained bullets were occasionally met with in the chest wall. In such +cases the last remaining energy of the bullet often seemed to have been +spent in diving under the margin of a rib and turning longitudinally up +or down. Removal was sometimes necessary, either from the prominence +produced, the presence of pain, or the continuance of suppuration. Some +of the specimens removed offered interesting evidence of the capacity of +the ribs to withstand considerable violence from a bullet. These were +slightly bent, and marked by a half-spiral groove. I saw such bullets +removed from the thoracic and the abdominal wall, and the evidence +seemed rather against the groove having been produced prior to their +entrance into the body. + +[Illustration: FIG. 82.--Spirally grooved Mauser Bullet] + +_Wounds of the diaphragm._--Perforations of the diaphragm were very +frequent, and as a rule of small significance. When, however, the course +taken by the bullet was parallel with that of the slope of the +diaphragm, a more or less extensive slit was the result. I saw such a +wound still gaping, and 2 inches in length, in the body of a patient +who died three weeks after the infliction of a fatal abdominal injury. + +In several other obliquely transverse thoracic wounds there was reason +to assume the existence of similar slits. Certain signs were more or +less constant under these circumstances. These consisted in shallow +respiration, often accompanied by a groan or the slightest degree of +hiccough on inspiration, and considerable increase in respiratory +frequency. In one patient the respirations were at first 48, only +dropping to 36 some seventy hours after the reception of the injury. In +some of the cases in which the abdominal cavity was implicated, wound to +the diaphragm seemed a more likely explanation of early, frequent, and +painful vomiting than did visceral injury. The possibility of the later +development of diaphragmatic herniæ in some of these patients will have +to be borne in mind in the future. + +_Visceral injuries._--The frequent escape of the thoracic viscera from +injury, putting aside the lungs which fill so great a part of the +cavity, was very remarkable. I never saw a case in which I could assume +injury to any of the posterior mediastinal viscera, although such may +have occurred on the field of battle. An injury to the oesophagus, for +instance, would almost of necessity be accompanied by wound of either +one of the large vessels, even the thoracic aorta, or the spinal column. +I was somewhat surprised, however, to learn on enquiry from surgeons who +had seen a large number of the dead and dying on the field, that +thoracic wounds, putting aside those that directly implicated the heart, +were responsible for but a small proportion of the fatalities. + +The escape of the posterior mediastinal viscera, the great vessels, and +the heart, is, I believe, to be explained by the fact that all are +supported and held in position by the loose meshed mediastinal tissue, +which allows for their displacement after the manner observed in the +case of the vessels and nerves lying in the loose tissue of the great +vascular clefts. + +_Wounds of the heart._--Perforating wounds of the heart were probably +fatal in all instances, in spite of the fact that, in some patients who +survived, the position of wound apertures on the surface of the body +made it difficult to believe that the heart had not been penetrated. +(See cases below.) + +In the case of this organ, we must bear in mind its constant variations +in bulk, its elastic compressibility, and its variations in position in +systole and diastole. The variations in bulk and position would be +capable of explaining the escape of the organ from injury at some +particular moment, when a second shot apparently through the same wound +track might implicate it. Beyond this, reasoning from the case of +analogous hollow viscera, as the arteries or the intestine, a bullet +might readily score the surface of the heart without perforating its +cavity. + +Such accidents were observed. Thus, in a case examined by Mr. Cheatle, +the patient died of suppurative pericarditis, secondary to a wound of +which the external apertures had closed. In this patient both auricle +and ventricle were scored externally by the passage of the bullet. + +I am, however, disinclined to allow that many patients survived direct +blows on the heart, since I believe that in the majority if not in all +cardiac wounds the actual cause of death was not hæmorrhage, but sudden +stoppage of the heart's action. This is to be inferred from the fact +that severe external hæmorrhage did not occur; in some cases the shirt +was hardly stained, and in all death occurred in the course of a very +few minutes. Again, in none of the patients whom I saw who had received +possible wounds of the heart-wall were there evident signs of +hæmo-pericardium. In view of the difficulty of detecting this condition +from physical signs, this argument is naturally not of great weight, but +must be allowed. + +One or two death scenes from cardiac wound were described to me. In one +the patient muttered 'They have got me this time,' and died quietly; in +a second the patient's face became ghastly pale, he lay on his back with +the knees flexed, clutching the ground, gasping for breath, and died +only after some minutes of evident great agony. The absence of any +_post-mortem_ details as to the condition of the heart in these injuries +is much to be regretted. + + (145) _Entry_, in the seventh left intercostal space, in the + posterior axillary line; _exit_, immediately below the ninth + costal cartilage, close to the position of the gall bladder. + + This track in all probability involved the diaphragm twice, + both lungs and pleuræ, and passed immediately beneath the + heart. The liver was also perforated, but the spleen and + stomach probably escaped as far as could be judged from the + symptoms. The patient afterwards developed a pneumo-hæmo-thorax + on the right side. The immediate symptoms were great distress + in breathing and rapid irregular pulse. The difficulty in + respiration was probably in part accounted for by the injuries + to the lung and diaphragm. The pulse remained from 112 to 120 + for three days, at first soft and hardly perceptible, later + very irregular, and dropping one every fifth or sixth beat; and + it seemed fair to attribute this to the shock to the nervous + mechanism of the heart. The patient recovered from the chest + injury. + + In some other patients in whom the track passed close below the + heart a disturbance of the pulse rate was noted, but this was + in some cases a slowing, not below 48, in others quickening to + 100, with irregularity both in force and beat. + + (146) _Entry_, in the fourth right interspace, 3 inches from + the middle line; _exit_, in the seventh left interspace, in the + mid-axillary line. This wound was received at a distance of + 500-600 yards, but the bullet penetrated both sides of a stout + silver cigarette case and some cigarettes before entering the + body. There were minor signs of pulmonary injury, 'coughing day + and night,' and slight discoloration of the sputum on three or + four occasions. The respirations were quickened to 32, and as + much as ten days after the injury the pulse only beat 48 to the + minute; it then rose to 56, but beat in a very deliberate + manner. + +In other cases the signs were almost nil. + + (147) _Entry_, in the fourth right intercostal space 3/4 of an + inch from the sternum; _exit_, in the sixth left interspace in + the posterior axillary line. This patient had no symptoms, + beyond quickening of the pulse to 100, and a 'feeling of + tightness at the heart.' He shortly returned to active duty. + + (148) _Entry_, situated in the third right interspace 3 inches + from the sternal margin; _exit_, in the fourth left space 2-3/4 + inches from the sternal margin. In this case the bullet without + doubt passed through the anterior mediastinum, and slight + injury to the lung was evidenced by transient hæmoptysis. + +Some remarks regarding wounds of the thoracic vessels have already been +made in Chapter IV., where instances of injury to the innominate and +left subclavian arteries are recounted. The escape of the large trunks +was generally quite as astonishing as in other parts of the body, +especially in the superior mediastinum. + + (149) _Entry_, over the first right intercostal space beneath + the centre of the clavicle; _exit_, at left anterior axillary + fold. The great vessels must have been crossed here in + immediate contact, and considerable hæmorrhage from the wound + of entry caused great anxiety; this ceased spontaneously, + however, and, beyond transient hæmoptysis and a right + pneumo-thorax, no further trouble occurred. + + (150) _Entry_, in the ninth interspace, just anterior to the + anterior axillary line; _exit_, through the right half of the + sternum, 1/2 an inch below the upper border. No primary + hæmorrhage of importance followed, but I believe this patient + subsequently died. The wound was received at a range of within + fifty yards. + +_Wounds of the lungs._--Numerically, pulmonary wounds formed the most +important series of visceral injuries met with in the thorax, the +frequency of incidence corresponding with the proportionate sectional +area occupied by the organs. Although these injuries did well, and +needed little interference on the part of the surgeon, many points of +interest were raised by them. + +Thus the comparative importance of the wound in the chest-wall to that +in the lung itself, was scarcely what, without actual experience, would +have been expected, the former proving so very much the more important +element of the two. + +The question of velocity on the part of the bullet took a very secondary +position in these injuries. I saw a number of cases in which the +patients estimated the range at which they received their wounds as from +30 to 50 yards, and although some of the wounds were of a severe type, +the increased gravity depended rather on the injury to the chest-wall +than to that of the lung. If the bullet passed by the intercostal space, +avoiding the rib, I very much doubt if the relative velocity was of any +importance, further than from the fact that a sufficiently low degree to +allow of lodgment of the bullet was distinctly unfavourable. + +In view of the general lack of significance in these injuries it was +interesting to note how very definite was the ill effect of early +transport on the after course. This depended on the frequent development +of parietal hæmothorax in patients who were not kept absolutely at rest. + +The tracks produced in the lungs by the bullets were very minute, and in +the few cases in which opportunity arose for their examination _post +mortem_ some little time after the infliction of the wound, there was +great difficulty in localising them. The slight damage incurred by the +pulmonary tissue is due to its elasticity and non-resistent character. + +Pulmonary hæmothorax was distinctly rare. Reasoning from the analogous +wounds of the liver, tracks scoring the surface of these organs might be +much more to be feared than clean perforations. The elasticity of the +lung tissue, however, must make such lesions rare. In point of fact, +there is no reason why a perforation by a bullet of small calibre should +be much more feared than a puncture from an exploring trocar, and the +danger of the two wounds is probably very nearly the same. + +The only points of importance as to the particular region of the lung +traversed were the distance from the periphery as affecting the probable +size of the vessels injured, and perhaps the implication of the base or +apex of the organ respectively. I am under the impression that wounds in +the apical region were somewhat more liable to be followed by the +development of pneumothorax, and possibly hæmothorax, while wounds at +the base gained their chief importance from the frequency of concurrent +injury to the abdominal viscera. I had no experience of the immediate +results of wound of the great vessels at the root of the lung, but +assume that they led to speedy death. + +_Symptoms of wound of the lung._--I shall describe the whole complex +usually observed, although it is obvious that the wound of the +chest-wall is responsible for a large proportion of the signs. + +The majority of these injuries were accompanied by a certain degree of +systemic shock, and this was more marked in wounds received at a short +range. The shock was, however, rather to be attributed to the injury to +the chest-wall and thoracic concussion than to that to the lung itself. +I think it may also be stated that few patients were inclined to walk +or remain in the erect position after receiving these wounds; this +feature was also noted in horses in whom a bullet passed through the +lungs. + +The remarks made as to the pain accompanying fractures of the ribs apply +equally here. Pain was not a prominent symptom, except in so far as the +actual impact caused temporary suffering. It was striking how often +patients who received wounds through the arm prior to the same bullet +traversing the chest appreciated the chest wound only, yet the chest +might pass unnoticed when a still more sensitive part was struck later, +as has been already mentioned in the section on wounds in general. + +Dyspnoea was not a prominent primary symptom. The patients sometimes +had 'all the wind knocked out of them' at the moment of impact, but when +seen at the Field hospitals a short time later, the respirations were +shallow, but easy and regular, and only moderately quickened; thus 24 +was a not uncommon rate. Naturally if accumulation of blood in the +pleura began early and continued, these remarks do not hold good; and +again in some older men of full-blooded type and the subjects of +recurrent attacks of bronchitis, a considerable degree of pain, +dyspnoea, and even cyanosis was sometimes present soon after the +injury. The complication of wound of the diaphragm has already been +referred to in this relation. + +Local respiratory immobility of the thoracic parietes and consequent +asymmetry of movement were constant. This was especially a marked +feature when the upper part of the chest was implicated on one side +only. It rather corresponded, however, to the local shock observed in +wounds of the limbs than to the instinctive immobility accompanying +fractures of the ribs; since, as already explained, small-calibre bullet +wounds of the ribs are not necessarily painful on movement, and the sign +existed even when the bullet had passed by an intercostal space. This +sign was naturally a transitory one. + +Hæmoptysis was a fairly constant sign, but sometimes quite absent when +no doubt could exist as to the perforation of the lung. As a rule, a +considerable quantity of blood might be coughed up shortly after the +injury; but I never knew this to be sufficient in amount to give rise +to any misgivings as to danger from the hæmorrhage. After the first +evacuation of blood from the wounded lung, the sign varied much; in the +majority of instances the patients continued to expectorate small +quantities of blood mixed with mucus, for some three or four days, the +blood gradually assuming a coagulated condition. Sometimes only the +primary hæmoptysis was noted, and still more rarely the expectoration of +clots was continued for a week, or even longer. This probably depended +partly on personal idiosyncrasy, partly on the size of the vessels which +had been implicated in the track. + +Cough was not commonly the troublesome symptom noted in the contused +wounds of the lung seen in civil practice accompanying fracture of the +ribs. Moist sounds were usually audible on auscultation, but in many +cases over a very limited area and only on the first few days. + +Cellular emphysema was distinctly rare, and usually limited in extent: +thus I saw it in the posterior triangle of the neck alone in an apical +wound; over about a third of the upper part of the thorax in another +wound through the second intercostal space, and in this case oddly +enough the emphysema was the only sign of injury to the lung; and very +occasionally widely distributed--in the latter case there were also +usually multiple fractures of the ribs. Neither issue of air from the +external wound nor frothy blood was ever seen with small-calibre wounds, +but I saw one instance in a case of Martini-Henry wound. + +_Pneumothorax_ was also rare. I saw pneumothorax three times out of +about half a dozen Martini-Henry wounds, but I do not think it occurred +as often in 100 small-calibre wounds. The Martini-Henry wounds all +recovered; but convalescence was very prolonged, and the same remark to +a less degree holds good in the small-calibre cases. + +That the slow recovery in cases of pneumothorax in the Martini-Henry +wounds was due mainly to the size of the opening in the thoracic +parietes was, I think, proved by the fact that in the small-calibre +bullet wounds, followed by the development of pneumothorax, the external +wounds were usually large and irregular in type; also, that in the only +pneumothorax which I saw produced during an extraction operation, the +air was very rapidly absorbed. In the latter case, however, there was +little reason to conclude that wound of the lung had occurred primarily, +and certainly no opening existed at the time the thorax was incised. + +_Hæmothorax._--This was the most frequent and also the most interesting +of the complications of wound of the chest. In 90 per cent. or more of +the cases, the hæmorrhage was of parietal source, and due either to +direct injury to the intercostal vessels by the bullet or to laceration +by spicules of comminuted ribs. For this reason, the passage of the +bullet whether by an intercostal space, or through a rib, provided the +wound was not at the posterior part of the space where the artery +crosses, was a point of considerable prognostic importance. Exclusion of +the lung as the source of hæmorrhage was, I think, amply justified by +the absence of continuous recurrent or progressive hæmoptysis in the +majority of the cases, and by the very small trace of injury found in +the lungs of patients who died some weeks after the injury. In such it +was difficult to discriminate the tracks at all. I only happened to see +one case where free hæmoptysis, during the course of development of a +hæmothorax, pointed to the lung as the source of the blood. + +Hæmorrhage into the pleural cavity occurred in some degree in a very +large proportion of the chest wounds, but it was especially interesting +to note how greatly its extent was influenced by the amount of transport +to which the patients were subjected in the early stages after the +injury. During the early part of the campaign, on the western side, I +saw a large number of chest wounds, and had I been asked my opinion as +to the relative frequency of occurrence of hæmothorax I should have +placed it at about 30 per cent. The patients in these early battles +needed little wagon transport, and when sent down to the Base travelled +in comfortable ambulance trains. After the commencement of the march +from Modder River to Bloemfontein, however, these conditions were +changed, and all the chest as other cases were exposed to the necessity +of three days and nights' journey to the Stationary hospitals and +afterwards to the long journey to Cape Town. Of these patients, at +least 90 per cent. suffered with hæmothorax of varying degrees of +severity. + +In some cases, the least common, signs of considerable intra-pleural +hæmorrhage immediately followed the wound; in others, the accumulation +of blood was gradual, and only manifest in any degree at the end of +three or four days, when it became stationary if the patient was kept at +rest. In a second series the hæmorrhage was of the recurrent variety; +these cases differing little in character from those of slight +continuous hæmorrhage. In a third, the bleeding was definitely of a +secondary character, corresponding with one of the classes of secondary +hæmorrhage described in Chapter IV., and occurring on the eighth or +tenth day from giving way of an imperfectly closed wounded vessel. In +either of the two latter classes the development of the hæmothorax often +corresponded with a journey, or with allowing the patient to get up. + +The general course of these effusions was towards spontaneous absorption +and recovery. Coagulation of the blood took place early, the fluid serum +separated, and tended to undergo absorption with some rapidity, leaving +a small amount of coagulum at the base, which evidenced its presence for +many weeks by a persistence of a certain degree of dulness on +percussion. Early coagulation, I think, accounted for the usual absence +of gravitation ecchymosis as a sign. + +The course to recovery was sometimes broken by signs of slight pleuritic +inflammation, which, as affecting the amount of effusion, will be spoken +of under the heading of symptoms. In some cases the amount of blood was +so great as to necessitate means being taken for its removal; in these a +reaccumulation often took place. Occasionally an empyema followed in +cases thus treated. + +The nature of the blood evacuated on tapping varied much. In very early +aspirations unchanged blood was often met with, but clot sometimes made +evacuation difficult and necessitated a second puncture. In the tappings +done at the end of a week or more a dark porter-like fluid was common, +while when suppuration was imminent a brick-red-coloured grumous fluid +replaced normal blood. In the cases where early incision was resorted +to, blood both fluid and in clots was often mixed with a certain +proportion of lymph flakes, perhaps indicating the part taken by +inflammatory reaction to the irritation of the clot in producing the +rise of temperature. + +_Symptoms of hæmothorax._--In the more severe cases of primary bleeding +the symptoms did not, as a rule, reach their full height until the third +or fourth day after the injury. The patients then often suffered +severely. The pulse and temperature rose, and to general symptoms of +loss of blood were added: occasional lividity of countenance; severe +dyspnoea, accompanied by inability to lie on the sound side or to +assume the supine position; absence of respiratory movement on the +injured side; pain, restlessness, cough, and sometimes continuance of +hæmoptysis, small clots usually being expectorated. + +Accompanying these symptoms were the usual physical signs of fluid in +the pleura in differing degrees and combination. Dulness of varying +extent up to complete absence of resonance on one side, often +accompanied in the incomplete cases by well-marked skodaic resonance +anteriorly. Loss of vocal resonance, and fremitus; oegophony, tubular +respiration over the root of the lung or at the upper limit of the +dulness, and more or less extensive displacement of the heart. Obvious +increase in girth, fulness of the intercostal spaces, or gravitation +ecchymosis was rare. The latter was most common in instances in which +multiple fracture of the ribs existed (see fig. 83). I think the rarity +of the last sign must have been due to the early coagulation of the +blood, and its retention by the pleura, as I saw well-marked gravitation +ecchymosis in one or two cases of mediastinal hæmorrhage. + +The above complex of symptoms was common to all the cases, but in the +slighter ones they gave rise to little trouble, and cleared up with +great rapidity. + +[Illustration: FIG. 83.--Gravitation Ecchymosis in a case of Hæmothorax, +accompanying fracture of three ribs from within. The influence of the +fractures on the development of the ecchymosis is shown by the linear +arrangement of the discoloration] + +The most interesting feature was offered by the temperature, as this was +very liable to lead one astray. A primary rise always occurred with the +collection of blood in the pleura, this reaching its height on the third +or fourth day, usually about 102° F. in well-marked cases; it then fell, +and in favourable instances remained normal. In a large number of cases, +however, where the amount of blood was considerable, this was not the +case, the primary fall not reaching the normal, and a second rise +occurred which reached the same height as before or higher. The second +rise was accompanied by sweating, quickened pulse, and the probability +of the development of an empyema had always to be considered. I believe +in most cases this secondary rise was an indication of a further +increase in the hæmorrhage, for the dulness usually increased in extent, +and such rises were often seen when the patient had been moved or taken +a journey. Again, the temperature often fell to normal after +paracentesis and removal of the blood, to rise again with a fresh +accumulation, which was not uncommon. I have already mentioned the large +proportional incidence of hæmothorax observed in the patients who had +to travel down from Paardeberg, and I might instance another case +related to me by Dr. Flockemann of the German ambulance, which was very +striking. A Boer, wounded at Colesberg, developed a hæmothorax which +quieted down, and he was removed to Bloemfontein; on arrival at the +latter place the temperature rose, and other signs of fever suggested +the development of an empyema; an exploring needle, however, only +brought blood to light. After a short stay at Bloemfontein the symptoms +entirely subsided, and the man was sent to Kroonstadt, when an exactly +similar attack resulted, again quieting down with rest. + +Similar recurrent attacks of hæmorrhage and fever occurred, however, in +patients confined to their beds without moving after the first journey. +Some temperature charts, in illustration of this point, are added to the +cases quoted later. The explanation of the recurrent hæmorrhages is, I +think, to be found in the reduction of the intra-thoracic pressure with +coagulation and shrinkage of the clot in the pleura in the patients kept +quiet in bed, while in the patients who had to travel it was probably +the result of direct mechanical disturbance. + +In many of these cases a pleural rub was audible at the upper margin of +the dulness with the development of the fresh symptoms. Whether this was +due to actual pleurisy or to the rubbing of surfaces rough from the +breaking down of slight recent adhesions which had formed a barrier to +the effusion, I am unable to say, but the signs were fairly constant. In +some instances the increase in the amount of fluid was, no doubt, due to +pleural effusion resulting from irritation from the presence of +blood-clot, or perhaps the shifting of the latter; in these the +secondary rise of temperature may well be ascribed to the development of +pleurisy. + +I am inclined to believe, however, that the primary rise of temperature +was similar to that seen when blood accumulates in the peritoneal cavity +as the result of trauma, and the secondary rises in most cases to those +which we saw so frequently accompanying the interstitial secondary +hæmorrhages spoken of in Chapter IV., and are to be explained on the +theory of absorption of a blood ferment. The secondary rises always +occurred with a fresh effusion, often of blood, occasioning an +extension, which broke down probable light adhesions and exposed a fresh +area of normal pleural membrane to act as a surface for absorption. + +It is, of course, manifest that the fever might also be ascribed to the +infection of the clot or serum from without, and in the first cases I +saw I was inclined to take this view, since we had in every case the +primary wounds of chest-wall, and possibly of lung, and in some the +addition of a puncture by an exploring needle between the first and +second rise. After a wider experience, however, I abandoned the +infection theory, as it seemed opposed by the very infrequent sequence +of suppuration. The effect of simple removal of the blood or serum was +also often so striking as to strongly suggest that it alone was +responsible for the fever. Exactly the same result, moreover, followed +evacuation of the interstitial blood effusions already mentioned +elsewhere. + +The common course of all the cases of hæmothorax was to spontaneous +recovery, the rapidity of the subsidence of the signs depending mainly +on the quantity of the primary hæmorrhage, and the occurrence of further +increases. The blood serum tended to collect at the upper limit of the +original blood effusion (as was often proved on tapping), and this was +first absorbed; the clot deposited on the pleural surface and at the +basal part of the cavity was, however, not absorbed with the same +rapidity. In the majority of the patients when they left the hospitals, +at the end of six weeks on an average, some dulness and deficiency of +vesicular murmur always remained, and the clot and the surrounding +surface, irritated by its presence, will, no doubt, be responsible for +permanent adhesions in many cases. That such adhesions do form in the +majority of cases I feel certain, as, although these patients when they +left the hospital were to all intents and purposes apparently well, few +of them could undertake sustained exertion without getting short of +breath, and sometimes suffering from transitory pain, and for this +reason it became customary to invalid them home. + +In a small proportion of the cases empyema followed; but I never saw +this in any case that had neither been tapped nor opened, and I saw +only one patient die from a chest wound uncomplicated by other injuries. +This case was an interesting one of recurrent hæmorrhage followed by +inflammatory troubles:-- + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 2.--Secondary Hæmorrhages in a case of +Hæmothorax. Case No. 151] + + (151) The wound was received at short range, probably at from + 100 to 200 yards. _Entry_, 1 inch from the left axillary margin + in the first intercostal space; _exit_, at the back of the + right arm 1-1/2 inch below the acromial angle; both pleuræ were + therefore crossed. The patient expectorated at first fluid, + then clotted, blood in considerable quantity. When brought into + the advanced Base hospital on the third day, there were signs + of blood in the left pleura, cellular emphysema over the right + side of the chest, and signs of collapse of the right lung. The + temperature chart gives shortly the course of the case: the + right pneumo-thorax cleared up spontaneously, also the + emphysema; but the left pleura needed tapping to relieve + symptoms of pressure on four occasions, the 13th, 15th, 19th, + and 25th days respectively. On the first two occasions blood + was removed, on the third blood serum only, and on the last + pus. The patient was relieved after each aspiration; after the + third, the temperature fell to normal, the general condition + also improved, and he promised to do well. None the less, + reaccumulation took place, the evacuated fluid assumed an + inflammatory character, and an incision to evacuate pus was + eventually followed by death on the twenty-seventh day. The + amount of hæmoptysis throughout was considerable, and the case + was possibly one of pulmonary hæmothorax, as after death no + source of hæmorrhage could be localised in the intercostal + space. The track in the lung was almost healed, and although a + part of it allowed the introduction of a probe for about an + inch, it could be traced no further even on section of the + organ, and no special vessel could be located as the original + bleeding spot. + +_Empyema._--I may here add the little that I have to say on this +subject. During the whole campaign the single case of primary empyema +that I saw was the one recorded below, which deserves special mention as +illustrating the disadvantage of extracting bullets on the field. Under +the conditions which necessarily accompanied this operation the +ensurance of asepsis was impossible, and the additional wound no doubt +proved the source of infection. + + (152) _Entry_, at the posterior margin of the sterno-mastoid + muscle, 2 inches above the clavicle; the bullet came to the + surface beneath the skin over the fifth rib, in the nipple line + of the right side. There was never any hæmoptysis, but the + patient suffered with some dyspnoea throughout. After a three + days' stay in the Field hospital, where the subcutaneous bullet + was removed, the patient was transported by wagon and train to + the Base, a journey of about 600 miles. + + On the fifth day pus escaped from the extraction wound, and + when the case was examined at the Base, the temperature was + 101°, the pulse over 100, the respirations 30, and the whole + side of the chest was dull, with the exception of a patch of + boxy resonance over the apex anteriorly. On the following day + the chest was drained, and a considerable amount of pus + evacuated, which was mixed with breaking-down blood-clot. A + fortnight later a second operation had to be performed to + improve the drainage, and the patient made a tedious recovery. + +The following case well illustrates the symptoms in a severe case of +hæmothorax, and empyema following aspiration:-- + + (153) The patient was wounded at Paardeberg at a range of from + 500 to 700 yards. _Entry_, just to the left of the episternal + notch; _exit_, in the fifth left interspace posteriorly, midway + between the spine and vertebral margin of the scapula. A + quantity of bright blood was brought up at once, and later + blood was coughed up in clots. + + There was no great pain at the moment of the injury; the man + again got up to the firing line, and later walked two miles to + the Field hospital without aid. He remained here a week, when + he was sent down to the Base, and during the first three days' + journey in the wagon he began to get worse. On the fourth day + cough began to be very troublesome. + + When he arrived at the Base, fifteen days after the original + injury, there was much dyspnoea; the temperature was 102°, + and the pulse 110. The left side of the chest was dull + throughout; an aspirating needle was introduced, and a pint of + very dark liquid blood drawn off. The whole of the blood was + not removed on account of the very severe cough and pain which + the evacuation occasioned. The man appeared to steadily improve + until three weeks later, when the temperature, which throughout + had been uneven, became consistently high, and signs of fluid + at the base increased. An aspirating needle was introduced, and + 16 ounces of pus were drawn off. Two days later a piece of rib + was resected (Mr. Pegg) and another pint of pus evacuated. + After this, rapid improvement took place, and in ten days the + man was able to be up and dressed, although a small amount of + discharge still persisted. He eventually made an excellent + recovery. + +Secondary empyemata not uncommonly followed incision of the chest, or +excision of a rib for draining a hæmothorax. These operations in the +early part of the campaign were more freely undertaken on the +supposition that rise of temperature and other symptoms of fever pointed +to incipient breaking down of the clot. Subsequent experience showed +this not to be the case, and early operations for drainage ceased to be +undertaken. In these operations a primary difficulty was met with in +effectively clearing out the clot, a drain had to be left, and +suppuration occurred later in a considerable proportion. The +suppurations were most troublesome; local adhesions formed, and the pus +collected in small pockets, which were difficult to find and to drain, +and even when the collections seemed to have been successfully dealt +with at the time, residual abscesses often followed at a very late date. +Thus, I saw a case with a contracted chest and a fresh abscess the day +before I left Cape Town, in whom I had advised and witnessed an +operation for the evacuation of clot in the presence of signs of fever a +week after my arrival in the country, nine months previously. I saw +another case where general infection followed incision of a hæmothorax, +but the patient fortunately recovered. + +The question of _pleurisy_ has already been mentioned in connection with +hæmothorax; it no doubt accounted for secondary effusion in some cases, +and beyond this I have nothing to add to what has been there said. + +_Pneumonia_ was rare; there were occasionally signs of consolidation, +but, I think, quite as often in the opposite lung as in the one injured. +I never saw a fatal case, and I am inclined to think that when it +occurred it was as often the result of cold and exposure as of the +injury to the lung. Abscess of the lung I only saw once, and that in a +case in which the injury to the chest was complicated by paraplegia from +spinal injury and septicæmia, and it was possibly pyæmic. + +_Diagnosis._--No difficulties special to small-calibre wounds were +experienced, except such as have been already dealt with. The only class +of case which frequently gave rise to difficulty was hæmothorax. Here +two points especially needed consideration. (1) _The source of the +hæmorrhage as parietal or visceral._ As has been already foreshadowed, +this was mainly to be decided by the amount and persistence of the +hæmoptysis, but naturally free hæmoptysis did not negative concurrent +parietal bleeding. Then the actual source of the bleeding other than +from the lung had to be considered; in the great majority of cases the +intercostal vessels were responsible, and attention to the course of the +tracks often allowed this to be definitely decided upon. + +A case included in the chapter on Injuries to the Blood Vessels (No. 5, +p. 127) is of great interest in this particular; in that instance +feebleness of the radial pulse, together with the position of the wound, +was a valuable indication of injury to the subclavian artery, but +weakened somewhat by the fact of retention of the bullet, and hence +uncertainty as to the exact course that it had taken, and as to whether +the bullet itself was not responsible for pressure on the vessel. Such +indications, however, should make one very chary of interference with a +hæmothorax, even with extremely urgent symptoms, in the light of our +present knowledge of the nature of the lesions to the great vessels +produced by small-calibre bullets, and their tendency to be incomplete. + +(2) _The imminence of suppuration or its actual occurrence._--In most +cases it sufficed to preserve an expectant attitude, and in the +persistence or increase of symptoms, to have recourse to an exploratory +puncture as the best means of solution of the difficulty. + +_Prognosis._--The prognosis both as to life and as to subsequent +ill-effects was remarkably good; in many cases of uncomplicated injury +to the lung the patients rejoined their regiments at the end of a month +or six weeks. In the more serious cases complicated by the collection of +blood in the pleura, convalescence was more prolonged, and an average +time of six to eight weeks often elapsed before the patients could be +safely discharged from hospital. In the more serious a certain amount of +dulness always persisted at this time over the base of the lung, and the +chest was usually somewhat contracted on the injured side, with evidence +in the way of decreased vesicular murmur that the lung was still not +free from compression. With regard to the persistence of dulness on +percussion, it is well to bear in mind that a thin layer of blood +apparently produces as serious impairment of resonance as a much larger +quantity of serum. The signs appeared to favour the view that the space +necessary for the location of the hæmorrhage had been obtained at the +expense of the lung rather than by distension of the thoracic parietes, +and also, I think, denoted the presence of adhesions. Possibly they will +entirely disappear with the return of full excursion movements of +respiration, the latter being often still somewhat restricted when the +patients left hospital. All the patients with such signs were liable to +attacks of pain and shortness of breath on actual bodily exertion. I +happened to meet with an officer, the subject of a Lee-Metford wound of +the thorax, sustained five years previously, and he told me that he was +nine months before he could take active exercise without feeling short +of breath. + +As to the cases of hæmothorax and empyema which needed drainage, all did +well; but expansion of the lung was much less satisfactory than would +have been expected, probably on account of especially firm adhesions. +The importance of concurrent injury I need hardly dwell on; but I might +add that perforation of one or both arms, the most common one, did not +materially affect the general statements above made. + +_Treatment._--In the early stages of the pulmonary wounds rest was the +all-important indication, and when this was assured few serious cases of +hæmothorax occurred. Beyond simple rest, the administration of opium +with a view to checking internal hæmorrhage was used with good effect. +The wounds needed simple dressing only. + +The treatment of hæmothorax at a later date, however, was of much +interest and difficulty. I think the following lines may be laid down +for guidance in such cases:-- + +(i) Hæmothorax, even of considerable severity, will undergo spontaneous +cure. An early rise of temperature may be disregarded. + +(ii) Tapping the chest is indicated when pressure signs on the lung are +sufficiently severe to cause serious symptoms, and the removal of the +blood undoubtedly shortens the period of recovery, as well as relieves +symptoms. + +In such cases the collection of blood has usually been rapid and +continuous; hence a fresh hæmorrhage is always probable when the local +pressure has been removed. Tapping therefore should not necessarily mean +complete evacuation, and should be followed by careful firm binding up +of the chest, the administration of opium, and the most stringent +precautions for rest. + +(iii) Tapping may be needed as a diagnostic aid, and in such +circumstances as much fluid as can be removed should be evacuated with +the same precautions as mentioned in the last paragraph. + +(iv) Tapping may be indicated for the evacuation of serum expressed from +the blood-clot, or due to pleural effusion, on the same lines as in any +other collection of fluid in the pleural cavity. + +(v) Early free incision is, as a rule, to be steadfastly avoided. Some +cases already quoted fully illustrate its disadvantages. + +(vi) Cases in which an incision and the ligature of a parietal artery +are indicated are very rare. I never saw such a one myself. + +(vii) If a hæmothorax suppurates, it must be treated on the ordinary +lines of an empyema. In view of the constant formation of adhesions and +difficulty in drainage, a portion of a rib should always be resected in +order to ensure sufficient space for after-treatment. The cavities, as a +rule, are better irrigated, the usual precautions being taken where +there is any reason to fear that the lung is still in communication with +the cavity. + +Care in carrying out asepsis in tapping, which should be performed with +an aspirator, need hardly be more than mentioned. It will be noted that +in some of the cases quoted suppuration followed tapping, but it must be +remembered that in these the two primary wounds already existed as +possible channels of infection. + +Retained bullets of small calibre in the thoracic cavity were not +common, unless the lodgment had occurred in the bodies of the vertebræ. +I saw very few. Shrapnel bullets and fragments of shells, however, were, +in proportion to the frequency of wounds from such projectiles, more +commonly retained. The rules to be followed in such cases do not +materially deviate from those to be observed in the body generally. + +When the bullet is causing no trouble, and is lodged in either the bone +of the spine or the lung substance, no interference is advisable. When, +on the other hand, the bullet as viewed by the X-rays is seen to be in +the pleural cavity, and any symptoms of its presence exist, it may be +justifiable to remove it. I saw this done in one case for the removal of +a shrapnel bullet from the lower reflexion of the pleura on account of +fixed pain and tenderness complained of by the patient. The bullet, a +shrapnel, had perforated the arm, which the patient was sure was by his +side at the moment of injury, and the X-rays showed it to lie at the +bottom of the pleural cavity, where we assumed it had fallen. When, +however, the bullet was removed by Mr. Watson, he found that the fixed +pain and tenderness had been the result of a fracture of a rib from the +inner side, not involving loss of continuity; hence the actual +indication for the operation had been a delusive one, since the bullet +had not fallen, but expended its last force in injuring the rib. The +patient made an excellent recovery, and rejoined his regiment at the end +of six weeks. I saw several cases in which the bullet was lodged in +either the lung or bones of the spine do well with no interference. The +great disadvantage of primary removal in inducing an artificial +pneumo-thorax and in laying open a hæmothorax is obvious. + +In case of lodgment of the bullet in the lung, bearing in mind the +infrequency of untoward symptoms, the latter should be watched for prior +to interference. + +The following cases illustrate some typical instances of wound of chest +accompanied by the development of hæmothorax:-- + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 3.--Primary Hæmothorax, with rise of +temperature. Secondary rise, with fresh effusion and pneumonia. +Spontaneous recovery. Case No. 154] + + (154) _Severe hæmothorax. Spontaneous recovery._--Wounded at + Modder River at a distance of 30 yards. _Entry_, at the + junction of the left anterior axillary fold with the + chest-wall; _exit_, immediately to the left of the seventh + dorsal spinous process. The patient arrived at the Base with + signs of an extensive hæmothorax, accompanied by a temperature + which reached 102° on the fourth day, and on the evening of the + tenth 103°. The man was very ill, and an exploring needle was + inserted, by which about an ounce of blood was evacuated. The + signs of fluid in the left pleura were accompanied by those of + consolidation over the lower fourth of the right lung, and the + sputa were rusty. Evidence of perforation of the left axillary + artery existed in feebleness of the radial pulse; and there was + musculo-spiral paralysis. + + After the preliminary puncture, the man refused any further + operative treatment, although a second rise of temperature + commenced on the fifteenth day, culminating in a temperature of + 103.2° on the eighteenth. The further treatment of the patient + consisted in the ensurance of rest and the alleviation of pain. + A steady fall in the temperature extended over another three + weeks, together with diminution in the signs of fluid in the + pleura. At the end of seventy-four days the man was sent home, + some slight dulness at the left base, and contraction of the + chest sufficient to influence the spine in the way of lateral + curvature, being the only remaining signs. + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 4.--Primary Hæmothorax. Secondary rise +of temperature, with increase in the effusion. Spontaneous recovery. +Case No. 155] + + (155) _Severe hæmothorax. Secondary effusion. Spontaneous + recovery._--Wounded at Koodoosberg Drift, at a distance of 200 + yards. _Entry_, at angle of the right scapula; _exit_, at the + junction of the left anterior axillary fold with the + chest-wall. No signs of spinal cord injury. The patient was + brought in from the field twelve miles by an ambulance wagon on + the second day, and in crossing the Modder River he was + accidentally upset into the stream. For the first four days + there was no hæmoptysis, but for the succeeding nine days small + brightish red clots were expectorated. There was some + tenderness over the ribs from the fifth to the ninth in the + axillary line, and on the ninth day some gravitation ecchymosis + appeared over the same region. Cough was an early troublesome + symptom in this case, and when admitted to the Base hospital, + about the seventh day, there was evidence of fluid extending + about a third of the way up the back. + + On the tenth day after admission a pleural rub was detected at + the upper margin of the dulness, and the latter shortly + extended upwards over a little more than half the back. + Meanwhile, there was no further hæmoptysis, respiration was + fairly easy, 24 per minute, but accompanied by slight + dilatation of the alæ nasi, and the temperature, which had been + ranging from 99° to 100°, began to rise steadily, on the + fifteenth day reaching 102.5°. The patient refused even an + exploratory puncture, and was treated on the expectant plan. + The temperature slowly subsided, with a steady improvement in + the physical signs, and at the end of about ten weeks he left + for home with only slight dulness and incapacity for active + exertion remaining. (Now again on active service.) + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 5.--Hæmothorax, primary and secondary +rises of temperature, on each occasion falling on the evacuation of the +blood. Case No. 156] + + (156) _Severe hæmothorax. Recurrent secondary effusion. Tapping + on two occasions. Cure._--The patient was wounded at + Paardeberg, and arrived at the Base on the eighteenth day. + _Entry_, below the first rib, just external to its junction + with the costal cartilage; _exit_, through the ninth rib, just + within the posterior axillary line. The whole right side of the + chest was dull, with signs of the presence of fluid, the heart + being displaced to the left. There was considerable distress; + the respirations averaged 40, the pulse 100, and the + temperature reached 101.5° the first evening after arrival. + + On the nineteenth day the thorax was aspirated (Mr. Hanwell) + and 50 ounces of dirty red-coloured fluid, half clot, half + serum, were evacuated. Considerable relief was afforded; the + respirations became slightly less frequent; the heart returned + to a normal position, and distant tubular respiration was + audible. The temperature dropped to normal the third day after + evacuation of the fluid, but on the sixth day it again + commenced to rise, and meanwhile fluid again began to collect. + + On the twenty-sixth day a second aspiration resulted in the + evacuation of 35 ounces of bloody fluid in which flakes of + lymph were found. Three days later the temperature became + normal. The respirations fell to 22, and the patient made an + uninterrupted recovery. + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 6.--Wound of Lung. Secondary +development of Hæmothorax, with rise of temperature. Spontaneous +recovery. Case No 157] + + (157) _Moderate hæmothorax. Secondary effusion at the end of + twenty days. Spontaneous recovery._--Wounded at Paardeberg; + range from 700 to 1,000 yards. _Entry_, in the centre of the + second right intercostal space, anteriorly; _exit_, at the + level of the sixth rib posteriorly, through the scapula, close + to its vertebral margin. + + The patient arrived at the Base on the sixth day; he said he + expectorated some blood at the end of about ten minutes after + being shot, and experienced a 'half-choking sensation.' A small + quantity of phlegm and occasional clots had been expectorated + since. He had walked about a good deal; movement occasioned + cough, and he became 'blown' very rapidly. + + On admission there were signs of fluid in the lower third of + the pleural cavity, but no general symptoms beyond an evening + rise of temperature to an average of 99°. About the twentieth + day the temperature commenced to rise, and on the twenty-third + and four following evenings reached 102°. The fever was + accompanied by some distress, and a well-marked increase in the + physical signs of the presence of fluid in the chest. The pulse + rose to 96, and the respirations considerably above the average + of 24, which was at first noted. A strictly expectant attitude + was maintained, and the temperature steadily fell in a curve + corresponding to the rise, gradually reaching the normal at the + end of a week. The physical signs at the base steadily cleared + up, and at the end of six weeks the patient returned to England + convalescent. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +INJURIES TO THE ABDOMEN + + +Perhaps no chapter of military surgery was looked forward to with more +eager interest than that dealing with wounds of the abdomen. In none was +greater expectation indulged in with regard to probable advance in +active surgical treatment, and in none did greater disappointment lie in +store for us. + +Wounds of the solid viscera, it is true, proved to be of minor +importance when produced by bullets of small calibre; but wounds of the +intestinal tract, although they showed themselves capable of spontaneous +recovery in a certain proportion of the cases observed, afforded but +slight opportunity for surgical skill, and results generally deviated +but slightly from those of past experience. Such success as was met with +depended rather on the mechanical genesis and nature of the wounds than +upon the efforts of the surgeon, and operative surgery scored but few +successes. + +It is true that to the Civil Surgeon accustomed to surroundings replete +with every modern appliance and convenience, and the possibility of +exercising the most stringent precautions against the introduction of +sepsis from without, abdominal operations presented difficulties only +faintly appreciated in advance; but this alone scarcely accounted for +the want of success attending the active treatment of wounds of the +intestine when occasion demanded. Failure was rather to be referred to +the severity of the local injury to be dealt with, or to the operations +being necessarily undertaken at too late a date. Many fatalities, again, +were due to the association of other injuries, a large proportion of the +wound tracks involving other organs or parts beyond the boundaries of +the abdominal cavity. + +The frequent association of wounds of the thoracic cavity with those of +the abdomen afforded many of the most striking examples of immunity from +serious consequences as a result of wound of the pleura. It must be +conceded that in a large number of such injuries only the extreme limits +of the pleural sac were encroached upon, yet in some the tracks passed +through the lungs, although without serious consequences. Under the +heading of injury to the large intestine a somewhat special form of +pleural septicæmia will be referred to. + +It may at once be stated that such favourable results as occurred in +abdominal injuries were practically limited to wounds caused by bullets +of small calibre, and that, although in the short chapter dealing with +shell injuries a few recoveries from visceral wounds will be mentioned, +I never met with a penetrating visceral injury from a Martini-Henry or +large sporting bullet which did not prove fatal. + +_Wounds of the abdominal wall._--It is somewhat paradoxical to say that +these injuries possessed special interest from their comparative rarity +of occurrence, since they were not of intrinsic importance. Their +infrequency depended on the difficulty of striking the body in such a +plane as to implicate the belly wall alone, and their interest in the +diagnostic difficulty which they gave rise to. + +In many cases the position of the openings and the strongly oval or +gutter character possessed by them were sufficient proof of the +superficial passage of the bullet; in others we had to bear in mind that +the position of the patient when struck was rarely that of rest in the +supine position, in which the surgical examination was made, and +considerable difficulty arose. Some superficial tracks crossing the +belly wall have already been referred to in the chapter on wounds in +general and in that dealing with injuries to the chest, in which the +above characters sufficed to indicate that penetration of the abdominal +cavity had not occurred. In other instances a definite subcutaneous +gutter could be traced, and often in these a well-marked cord in the +abdominal wall corresponding to the track could be felt at a later date. +Again, limitation to the abdominal wall was sometimes proved by the +position of the retained bullet, or sometimes by the presence in the +track of foreign bodies carried in with the projectile. See case 160. + +Fig. 84 illustrates an example where the limitation to the abdominal +wall was evident on inspection. Here the division of the thick muscles +of the abdominal wall had led to the formation of a swelling exactly +similar to that seen after the subcutaneous rupture of a muscle, and two +soft fluctuating tumours bounded by contracted muscle existed in the +substance of the oblique and rectus muscles. + +[Illustration: FIG. 84.--Wound of Abdominal Wall (Lee-Metford). Division +of fibres of external oblique and rectus abdominis muscles. Case 159] + +The cases which presented the most serious diagnostic difficulty in this +relation were those in which the wound was situated in the thicker +muscular portions of the lower part of the abdominal and pelvic walls. +Such a case is illustrated in the chapter on fractures (see fig. 55, p. +191). I saw one or two such instances, in which only the exploration +necessary for treatment of the fracture decided the point. In many of +the wounds affecting the lateral portion of the abdominal wall the +question of penetration could never be definitely cleared up, as wounds +of the colon sometimes gave rise to absolutely no symptoms. + +In a certain proportion of the injuries the peritoneal cavity was no +doubt perforated without the infliction of any further visceral injury, +and in these also the doubt as to the occurrence of penetration was +never solved. + + (158) _Wound of belly wall._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ + (Mauser), 2 inches below the centre of the left iliac crest; + _exit_, 1-1/2 inch above and internal to the left anterior + superior iliac spine. The patient was on horseback at the time + of the injury and did not fall; he got down, however, and lay + on the field an hour, whence he was removed to hospital. + Probably the track pierced the ilium, and remained confined to + the abdominal wall. There were no signs of visceral injury. + + (159) Cape Boy. Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), + immediately above and outside right anterior superior spine; + _exit_, 1-1/2 inch below and to right of umbilicus. A + well-marked swelling corresponded with division of the fibres + of the oblique muscles and of the rectus, and on palpation a + hollow corresponding with the track was felt. The abdominal + muscles were exceptionally well developed (fig. 84). + + (160) Wounded at Magersfontein while lying prone. _Entry_, + irregular, oblique, and somewhat contused, over the eighth left + rib, in the anterior axillary line; _exit_, a slit wound + immediately above and to the left of the umbilicus. The bullet + struck a small circular metal looking-glass before entering, + hence the irregularity of the wound. The patient developed a + hæmothorax, but no abdominal signs; the former was probably + parietal in origin, secondary to the fractured rib, and the + whole wound non-penetrating as far as the abdominal cavity was + concerned. + + (161) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1-1/2 inch + external to and 1/2 inch below the left posterior superior + iliac spine; _exit_, 1 inch internal horizontally to the left + anterior superior spine. + + No signs of intra-peritoneal injury were noted, but free + suppuration occurred in left loin; the ilium was tunnelled. + + The same patient was wounded by a Jeffrey bullet in the hand; + the third metacarpal was pulverised, although the bullet, which + was longitudinally flanged, was retained. + + (162) Wounded outside Heilbron. _Entry_, below the eighth right + costal cartilage; _exit_, below the eighth cartilage of the + left side. The wound of entry was slightly oval; that of exit + continued out as a 'flame'-like groove for 2 inches. A week + later the wound track could be palpated as an evident hard + continuous cord. + +_Penetration of the intestinal area without definite evidence of +visceral injury._--This accident occurred with a sufficient degree of +frequency to obtain the greatest importance, both from the point of view +of diagnosis and prognosis, and as affecting the question of operative +interference. Amongst the cases reported below a number occurred in +which it was impossible to settle the question whether injury to the +bowel had occurred or not, and I will here shortly give what explanation +I can for the apparent escape of the intestine from serious injury. + +We may first recall the general question of the escape of structures +lying to one or other side of the track of the bullet. I believe that +there can be no doubt as to the accuracy of the remarks already made as +to the escape of such structures as the nerves by means of displacement, +and that the occurrence of such escapes is manifestly dependent on the +degree of fixity of the nerve or the special segment of it implicated. +The general tendency of the tissues around the tracks to escape +extensive destruction from actual contusion has also been referred to, +and is, I think, indisputable. + +If these observations be accepted, I think there can be no difficulty in +allowing that the small intestine is exceptionally well arranged to +escape injury. First of all, it is very moveable; secondly, it is so +arranged that in certain directions a bullet may pass almost parallel to +the long axis of the coils; thirdly, it is elastic, capable of +compression, and light, and hence offers but a small degree of +resistance to the passage of the bullet across the abdominal cavity. + +Certain evidence both clinical and pathological supports the contention +that the small intestine may escape injury from the passing bullet. + +First of all, the fact may be broadly stated that injuries to the small +intestine were fatal in the great majority of certainly diagnosed cases, +while, on the other hand, many tracks crossed the area occupied by the +small intestine without serious symptoms of any kind resulting. +Secondly, experience showed that when the bullet crossed the line of the +fixed portions of the large intestine the gut rarely escaped, and that, +although a considerable proportion of these cases recovered +spontaneously, in a large number of them immediate symptoms, or +secondary complications, clearly substantiated the nature of the +original injury. As far as my experience went, however, I never saw any +instance in which an undoubted injury of the small intestine was +followed by the development of a local peritoneal suppuration and +recovery, a sequence by no means uncommon in the case of wounds of the +large intestine. Although, therefore, I am not prepared to deny the +possibility of spontaneous recovery from an injury to the small +intestine, under certain conditions which will be stated later, I +believe that in the immense majority of cases in which a bullet crossed +the small intestine area without the supervention of serious symptoms, +the small intestine escaped perforating injury. + +Beyond the clinical evidence offered above, certain pathological +observations support the view that the intestine escapes perforation by +displacement. Most of my knowledge on this subject was derived from the +limited number of abdominal sections I performed on cases of injury to +the small intestine, and may be summed up as follows. + +The small intestine may present evidence of lateral contusion in the +shape of elongated ecchymoses, either parallel, oblique, or transverse +to its long axis. These ecchymoses resemble in extent and outline those +which ordinarily surround a wound of the intestinal wall produced by a +bullet (see fig. 87, p. 418). + +The wall of the small intestine may be wounded to an extent short of +perforation, either the peritoneal coat alone being split, or the wound +implicating the muscular coat and producing an appearance similar to +that seen when the intestine is dragged upon during an operation, but +without so much gaping of the edges (see fig. 85, p. 416). + +I met with these conditions in association with co-existing complete +perforations of the small intestine, and in one case of intra-peritoneal +hæmorrhage in which no complete perforation was discoverable (No. 169, +p. 432). + +The implication and perforation of the small intestine are to some +extent influenced by the direction of the wound. A striking case is +included below, No. 201, in which a bullet passed from the loin to the +iliac fossa on each side of the body, approximately parallel to the +course of the inner margin of the colon, and I also saw some other +wounds in this direction in which no evidence of injury to the small +intestine was detected, and which got well. Again wounds from flank to +flank were, as a rule, very fatal; but I saw more than one instance +where these wounds were situated immediately below the crest of the +ilium, in which the intestine escaped injury (see case 171). A very +striking observation was made by Mr. Cheatle in such a wound. The +patient died as a result of a double perforation of both cæcum and +sigmoid flexure; none the less the bullet had crossed the small +intestine area without inflicting any injury. + +The sum of my experience, in fact, was to encourage the belief that, +unless the intestine was struck in such a direction as to render lateral +displacement an impossibility, the gut often escaped perforation. + +As a rule, the wounds of the abdomen which from their position proved +the most dangerous to the intestine were-- + +1. Wounds passing from one flank to the other were very dangerous, as +crossing complicated coils of the small intestine, and two fixed +portions of the colon. This danger was most marked when the wounds were +situated between the eighth rib in the mid axillary line and the crest +of the ilium; above this level the liver, or possibly liver and stomach, +were sometimes alone implicated, and the cases did well. Again, when the +wounds crossed the false pelvis the patients sometimes escaped all +injury to viscera. + +2. Antero-posterior wounds in the small intestine area were very fatal +if the course was direct; in such the small intestine seldom escaped +injury. + +3. Wounds with a certain degree of obliquity from anterior wall to +flank, or from flank to loin, were on the other hand comparatively +favourable, as the small intestine often escaped, and if any gut was +wounded, it was often the colon. + +4. Vertical wounds implicating the chest and abdomen, or the abdomen and +pelvis, were on the whole not very unfavourable. For instance, when the +bullet entered by the buttock and emerged below the umbilicus, a number +of patients escaped fatal injury; this depended on the comparatively +good prognosis in wounds of the rectum and bladder. A good many +patients in whom the bullet entered by the upper part of the loin, and +escaped 1-1/2 inch within the anterior superior spine of the ilium, also +did well. The same holds good when the wounds either entered or emerged +under the anterior costal margin of the thorax, either prior to or after +traversing the thorax. + +Wounds passing directly backward from the iliac regions were in my +experience very unfavourable; but I believe mainly as a result of +hæmorrhage from the iliac arteries. + +_The occurrence of wounds of the abdomen of an 'explosive' +character._--The vast majority of the abdominal wounds observed in the +Stationary or Base hospitals were of the type dimensions. A certain +number of the abdominal injuries which proved fatal on the field or +shortly afterwards were described as explosive in character, and were +referred by the observers to the employment of expanding bullets. + +A few words on this subject seem necessary, because it seems doubtful +whether such injuries could be produced by any of the forms of expanding +bullet of small calibre in use, unless the track crossed one of the +bones in the abdominal or pelvic wall. That this was sometimes the case +there is no doubt: thus I saw two cases in which the splenic flexure of +the colon was wounded, in which the external opening was large, and a +comminuted fracture of the ribs of the left side existed. One can well +believe that bullets passing through the pelvic bones might 'set up' to +a considerable extent, and although I never happened to see such a case, +an explanation of some of the wounds described by others might be found +in this occurrence. + +In instances in which the soft parts alone were perforated, I am +disinclined to believe that bullets of small calibre, either regulation +or soft-nosed, were responsible for the injuries. I had the opportunity +of examining two Mauser bullets of the Jeffreys variety which crossed +the abdomen and caused death. In the first (figured on page 94, fig. 40) +very little alteration beyond slight shortening had occurred. In the +second the deformity was almost the same, except that the side of the +bullet was indented, probably from impact with some object prior to its +entry into the body. In each case the bullet was of course travelling at +a low rate of velocity; hence no very strong inference can be drawn +from either. In the case of the second specimen, which was removed by +Mr. Cheatle, a remarkable observation was made, which tends to throw +some light on one possible mode of production of large exit apertures. +This bullet crossed the cæcum, making two small type openings; but +later, when it crossed the sigmoid flexure, it tore two large irregular +openings in the gut. This might be explained on the ground that the +velocity was so small as only just to allow of perforation, which +therefore took the nature of a tear. I am inclined to suggest, as a more +likely explanation, that the spent bullet turned head over heels in its +course across the abdomen, and made lateral or irregular impact with the +last piece of bowel it touched. A slightly greater degree of force would +have allowed a similar large and irregular opening to be made in the +abdominal wall also. + +In this relation the question will naturally be raised as to how far the +explosive appearances may have been due to high velocity alone on the +part of the bullet. I am disinclined from my general experience to +believe that explosive injuries of the soft parts were to be thus +explained. On the other hand, I believe that the possession of a low +degree of velocity very greatly increased the danger in abdominal +wounds. I believe that the bowel was, under these circumstances, less +likely to escape by displacement, and was more widely torn when wounded; +again, that inexact impact led to increase of size in the external +apertures, and the bullet was of course more often retained. + +Mr. Watson Cheyne[19] published a very remarkable instance of one of the +dangers of an injury from a spent bullet, in which, in spite of +non-penetration of the abdominal cavity, the small intestine was +ruptured in two places. + +I believe the majority of the wounds designated as explosive were the +result of the passage of large leaden bullets, either of the +Martini-Henry or Express type. The small opportunity of observing such +injuries in the hospitals of course depended on the fact that the +majority were rapidly fatal. + +_Nature of the anatomical lesion in wounds of the intestine._--The +openings in the parietal peritoneum tended to assume the slit or star +forms, probably on account of the elasticity of the membrane. A diagram +of one of these forms is appended to fig. 89. In this instance the +opening in the peritoneum was made from the abdominal aspect, prior to +the escape of the bullet from the cavity, and on the impact of the tip, +the long axis of the bullet was oblique to the surface of the abdominal +wall. + +In the intestinal wall the openings varied in character according to the +mode of impact. + +In some cases the gut was merely contused by lateral contact of the +passing bullet. The result of this was evidenced later by the presence +of localised oval patches of ecchymosis. These were identical in +appearance with the patches shown surrounding the wounds in fig. 87. + +[Illustration: FIG. 85.--Lateral Slit in Small Intestine produced by +passage of bullet. Slit somewhat obscured by deposition of inflammatory +lymph. (St. Thomas's Hospital Museum)] + +More forcible lateral impact produced a split of the peritoneum, or of +this together with the muscular coat. Such a lateral slit is shown in +fig. 85, although the clearness of outline is somewhat impaired by the +presence of a considerable amount of inflammatory lymph. + +Fig. 86 exhibits a lateral injury of a more pronounced form. The bullet +here struck the most prominent portion of the under surface of the +bowel, and produced a circular perforation not very unlike one produced +by rectangular impact, except in the lesser degree of eversion of the +mucous membrane. Here again the appearance is somewhat altered by the +presence of a considerable amount of lymph, but this is of less +importance in this figure because the lymph is localised to the portion +of the bowel in the immediate neighbourhood of the opening which had +suffered contusion and erasion. + +[Illustration: FIG. 86.--Gutter Wound of Small Intestine caused by +lateral impact. Position of shallow portion of gutter indicated by +deposition of inflammatory lymph. Circular perforation. (St. Thomas's +Hospital Museum)] + +Fig. 87, A B, illustrates a symmetrical perforation of the small +intestine; the aperture of entry (A) is roughly circular, and a ring of +mucous membrane protrudes and partially closes the opening. The aperture +of exit is a curved slit, again partially occluded by the mucous +membrane. The same amount of difference between the two apertures did +not always exist; in many cases both were circular, and apparently +symmetrical. Beyond this I have seen three apertures in close proximity, +two lying on the same aspect of the bowel, and the first of these was no +doubt an opening due to lateral impact similar to that seen in fig. 86. +In the recent condition little difference existed between the three +apertures. + +The localised ecchymosis surrounding the apertures is quite +characteristic of this form of injury, and is a valuable aid to finding +the openings during an operation. + +Fig. 88 shows the interior of the same segment of bowel, as fig. 87. It +shows the localised ecchymosis as seen from the inner surface, here +rather more extensive from the fact that the blood spreads more readily +in the submucous tissue. + +[Illustration: FIG. 87.--Perforating Wounds of Small Intestine. A. +Entry; note circular outline and eversion of mucous membrane. B. Wound +of exit; curved slit-like character, eversion of mucous membrane. Note +the localised ecchymosis, more abundant round exit aperture. (St. +Thomas's Hospital Museum)] + +It will be noted that the main feature of the form of injury is the +regular outline and the small size of the wounds. Another feature not +illustrated by the figures should also be mentioned. In the ruptures of +intestine with which we are acquainted in civil practice the wound in +the gut is almost without exception situated at the free border of the +bowel, but in these injuries it was just as frequently at the mesenteric +margin. The importance of this factor is considerable, since wounds +near the mesenteric edge are much more likely to be accompanied by +hæmorrhage, and thus the opportunity for diffusion of infection is +considerably multiplied, to say nothing of the danger from loss of +blood. + +Beyond these more or less pure perforations, long slits or gutters were +occasionally cut. I saw instances of these in the case of the ascending +colon, and in the small curvature of the stomach. The comparative fixity +of the portion of bowel struck is a matter of great importance in the +production of this form of injury. + +[Illustration: FIG. 88.--The same piece of Intestine as that shown in +fig. 87, laid open to show the ecchymosis on the inner aspect of the +Bowel. The two indicating lines lead to the openings, which appear +slit-like, and are sunk at the bottom of folds. (St. Thomas's Hospital +Museum)] + +It may be well to add that, although the figures inserted are all taken +from small-intestine wounds, the nature of the wounds of the +peritoneum-clad part of the large intestine in no way differed from +them, except in so far as fixity of the bowel exposed it to a more +extensive wound when the bullet took a parallel course to its long axis. + +A more important point in the injuries to the large intestine was the +possibility of an extra-peritoneal wound. I saw several such lesions of +the colon, every one of which ended fatally. I became still more fully +convinced of the greater seriousness of extra- to intra-peritoneal +rupture of this portion of the gut than I was when I expressed a similar +opinion in a former paper.[20] It will be seen later that the results of +intra- and extra-peritoneal wounds of the bladder fully confirm this +view, as all extra-peritoneal injuries died, while many intra-peritoneal +perforations recovered spontaneously. + +_Wounds of the mesentery._--I had little experience of this injury; in +fact, case 169, on which I operated, was my sole observation. It stands +to reason, however, that injuries to the mesentery would be much more +frequent proportionately to wounds of the gut than is the case in the +ruptures seen in civil practice, since the whole area of the mesentery +is equally open to injury. Viewing the extreme danger of hæmorrhage into +the peritoneal cavity in these injuries, I should be inclined to expect +that a considerable proportion of those deaths from abdominal wounds +which took place on the field of battle were due to this source. + +_Wounds of the omentum._--Here, again, I am unable to express any +opinion, although the supposition that hæmorrhage from this source took +place is natural. + +Prolapse of omentum was comparatively rare, except in cases with large +wounds; it was apparently seen with some frequency among patients who +died rapidly on the field of battle. I only saw it twice, and on each +occasion in shell wounds. The wounds from small-calibre bullets were as +a rule too small to allow of external prolapse. + +Fig. 89, however, illustrates a very interesting observation. A patient +in the German Ambulance in Heilbron, under Dr. Flockemann, died as a +result of suppuration and hæmorrhage secondary to an injury to the +colon. At the autopsy a portion of the omentum was found adherent in the +wound of exit, but it had not reached the external surface. The chief +interest of the observation lies in the light it throws on the mechanism +of these injuries. It is impossible to conceive that a small-calibre +bullet coming into direct contact with the omentum could do anything but +perforate it. It, therefore, appears clear that in a displacement like +that figured, only lateral impact occurred with the omentum, which was +carried along by the spin and rush of the bullet into the canal of exit, +where it lodged. + +[Illustration: FIG. 89.--Great Omentum carried by the bullet into an +exit track leading from the abdominal cavity. A. Outline of opening in +the peritoneum] + +_Results of injury to the intestine._ 1. _Escape of contents and +infection of the peritoneal cavity._--I think there is little special to +be said on this subject. The escape of contents into the peritoneal +cavity was by no means free, unless the injury was multiple. Thus in one +case of injury to the small intestine, No. 166, on which I operated, +there was absolutely no gross escape until the bowel was removed from +the abdominal cavity, when the contents spurted out freely. In one case +of very oblique injury to the colon there was a considerable quantity of +fæcal matter in a localised space, but as a rule the ordinary condition +best described as 'peritoneal infection' from the wound was found. The +bad effect of anything like free escape was well shown in multiple +perforations; in these suppurative peritonitis rapidly developed and the +patients died at the end of thirty-six hours or less. A typical case is +quoted in No. 168. + +2. _Peritoneal infection, and general septicæmia._--As is evident from +the results quoted among the cases, the degree which this reached varied +greatly. It may of course be assumed that in some measure it occurred in +every case in which the bowel was perforated, but it was sometimes so +slight as to be scarcely noticeable. This may be said to have been most +common in injuries to the large intestine. Wounds of the cæcum, +ascending and descending colon, the sigmoid flexure, or the rectum, were +sometimes followed by no serious symptoms, either local or general. +Again in these portions of the bowel the development of local signs, and +the later formation of an abscess, were by no means uncommon. + +In the case of the small intestine I never observed this sequence, and +the same may be said of the transverse colon, which in its anatomical +arrangement and position so nearly approximates to the small bowel. In +suspected wounds of these portions of the bowel either the symptoms were +so slight as to render it doubtful whether a perforation had occurred, +or marked signs of general peritoneal septicæmia developed, and death +resulted. + +The condition of the peritoneum in fatal cases varied much. In some a +dry peritonitis, or one in which a considerable quantity of slightly +turbid fluid was effused, was found. In others a rapid suppurative +process, accompanied by the effusion of large quantities of plastic +lymph, was met with. My experience suggested that the latter condition +was the result of free infection from multiple wounds of the gut, the +former the accompaniment of single wounds. Hence I should ascribe the +difference mainly to the extent of the primary infection. + +This is perhaps a suitable place to further discuss the explanation of +the escape of a considerable number of the patients who received wounds +of the abdomen, possibly implicating the bowel. Although this was not, I +think, so common an occurrence as has been sometimes assumed, yet many +examples were met with. Several reasons have been advanced. + +(1) Great importance has been given to the fact that many of the men +were wounded while in a state of hunger, no food having been taken for +twelve or more hours before the reception of the injury. In view of the +well-proved fact in these, as in other intestinal injuries, that free +intestinal escape does not occur, and that it is usually a mere question +of infection, this explanation, in my opinion, is of small importance. +It might with far more justice be pointed out that many of these wounded +men were for them in the happy position of not having friends freely +dosing them with brandy and water after the reception of the injury, and +this was possibly an element of some importance. + +Some of the men did, however, drink freely, and in one case which +terminated fatally a comrade gave a man wounded through the belly an +immediate dose of Beecham's pills. + +(2) Mr. Treves has suggested that the effect of the severe trauma on the +muscular coat of the bowel is to cause a cessation of peristaltic +movement. This, as in the case of 'local shock' elsewhere, may no doubt +be of importance, and to it should be added the simultaneous cessation +of abdominal respiratory movements in the segment of the belly wall +covering the injured part. The occurrence of general cessation of +peristaltic movement is, however, to some extent opposed by the fact +that in a certain number of the cases early passage of motions was seen +just as happens in the intestinal ruptures seen in civil practice. + +I should be inclined to ascribe the escape from serious infection in +these injuries to the same cause which accounts for their comparative +insignificance in other regions--namely, the small calibre of the bullet +and consequent small size of the lesion: in point of fact to the minimal +nature of the primary infection. I very much doubt if any patient who +had more than one complete perforation of the small intestine got well +during the whole campaign. This opinion is, moreover, supported by the +fact that the prognosis was so far better in cases of injury to the +large than to the small intestine, in which former segment of the bowel +we have the advantages of a position beyond the region in which +intestinal movement is most free, the unlikelihood of multiple injury, +and a drier and more solid type of fæcal contents. + +In the instances in which recovery followed perforating injuries without +any bad signs we can only assume a minimal infection, and sufficient +irritation and reaction on the part of the bowel to produce rapid +adhesion between contiguous coils, and thus provisional closure. + +The other mode of spontaneous recovery which I saw several times take +place in the injuries to the large bowel consisted in the limitation of +the spread of infection by early adhesions and the development of a +local abscess. The non-observance of this process in any case of injury +to the small intestine raises very great doubts in my mind as to the +frequent recovery of patients in whom the small intestine was +perforated. + + +INJURIES TO THE INTESTINAL TRACT + +1. _Wounds of the stomach._--A considerable number of wounds in such a +situation as to have possibly implicated the stomach were observed, and +of these a certain number recovered spontaneously. The only two +instances that came under my own observation are recorded below. It will +be noted that in each the special symptoms were the classic ones of +vomiting and hæmatemesis. In the first case blood was also passed per +anum, and in the second the diagnosis was reinforced by the escape of +stomach contents from the external wound. + +The second case was a surgical disappointment. No doubt the fatal issue +was mainly dependent on the fact that the external wound had to be kept +open to allow of the escape of the abundant discharge from the wounded +liver. In the absence of the hepatic wound, however, I believe it would +have been possible for this patient to have got well spontaneously, in +view of the firm adhesions which had formed around the opening in the +stomach, and the consequent localisation which had been effected. +Another unfortunate element in this case was the comminuted fracture of +the seventh costal cartilage, which maintained the patency of the +aperture of exit. The latter point, however, was of doubtful importance +from this aspect, as the vent provided for the gastric and biliary +secretions may have been the safety-valve that had allowed localisation +to develop. + +I believe that the secondary hæmorrhage was the main element in robbing +us of a success in this case, and that this depended on the digestion of +the wound by the gastric secretion. The early troubles which arose in +the treatment of this patient well illustrate the difficulties by which +the military surgeon is at times met; but the patient was admirably +attended to and nursed by my friend Mr. Pershouse, and an orderly who +was specially put on duty for the purpose. + + (163) Wounded at Rensburg. _Entry_ (Mauser), in ninth left + intercostal space in posterior axillary line; _exit_, a + transverse slit 1/2 an inch in length to left of xiphoid + appendage. Patient was retiring when struck; he did not fall, + but ran for about 1,000 yards, whence he was conveyed to + hospital. He vomited half an hour after the injury (last meal + bread and 'bully beef,' taken two hours previously), and during + the evening three times again, the vomit consisting mainly 'of + dark thick blood.' He was put on milk diet, and not completely + starved; on the third day a large quantity of dark clotted + blood was passed per rectum with the stool, and this continued + for two days. + + Ten days after the injury the temperature was still rising to + 100°, and did not become normal till the fourteenth day. The + pulse averaged 80. The abdomen, meanwhile, moved fairly well, + respirations 18 to 20. Some tenderness was present in the + epigastrium and towards the spleen. Resonance throughout. + Ordinary diet was now resumed, and beyond slight epigastric + pain on deep inspiration, no further symptoms were observed, + and the patient left for England at the end of the month. The + spleen may have been traversed in this patient, as well as the + lower margin of the right lung. + + (164*) Wounded at Enslin. _Entry_ (Mauser), 3/4 of an inch from + the spine, opposite the eighth intercostal space; _exit_, + through the seventh left costal cartilage, 1 inch from the + median line. The patient was lying in the prone position when + shot: he vomited blood freely, and the bowels acted three times + before he was seen forty hours after the accident, each motion + containing dark blood. + + On the commencement of the third day the patient's expression + was extremely anxious, and he was suffering great pain. Pulse + 96, temperature 100°. Tongue moist, occasional vomiting, bowels + open yesterday. Has taken fluid nourishment since injury. The + abdomen moved with respiration, but was moderately distended, + especially in the line of the transverse colon; it was + tympanitic on percussion, there was no dulness in the flanks, + and only moderate rigidity of the wall on palpation. Frothy + fluid stained with bile and fæcal in odour was escaping from + the wound of exit, and the everted margins of the latter were + bile-stained. + + A vertical incision was carried downwards from the wound for 4 + inches. A rugged furrow was found on the under surface of the + left lobe of the liver; the stomach was contracted and firmly + adherent by recent lymph to the under surface of the liver and + the diaphragm. The transverse colon was much distended. On + separating the stomach a slit wound was found at the lesser + curvature, immediately to the right of the oesophagus. This + wound was closed with some difficulty with two tiers of + sutures; the cavity was mopped out, and then irrigated with + boiled water; a plug was introduced along the line of the + furrow in the liver, and the lower part of the abdominal + incision closed. + + The patient stood the operation well, and was removed to his + tent; during the day, however, two thunder showers occurred + during each of which water, several inches if not a foot deep, + rushed through the camp. After the second flood he was removed + to the operating room, the only house we had, and slept there. + The pulse rose to 120, and respiration to 26, and there was + pain, which was subdued by 1/3 grain of morphia, administered + subcutaneously. A fair amount of urine was passed, and the + bowels acted once, the motion containing blood. + + On the second day after operation there was some improvement; + the pulse still numbered 116, and the temperature was raised to + 100°, but the belly moved fairly, and pain was moderate. + Abundant foul-smelling, bile-stained discharge came from the + wound when the plug was removed. Rectal feeding was + supplemented by small quantities of milk and soda by the mouth. + + The condition did not materially change, but on the fourth day + it was evident that the suturing of the stomach wound had given + way, and liquid food escaped readily when taken. The discharge + remained bile-stained and very foul. No extension of + inflammation to the general peritoneal cavity occurred, but it + was evident that the patient was suffering from constitutional + infection from the foul wound, the lower part of which opened + up somewhat after the removal of the stitches on the seventh + day. The wound was irrigated three times daily with 1-300 + creolin lotion, but remained very foul. The man slowly lost + strength, although escape from the stomach considerably + decreased. On the tenth day a sudden severe hæmorrhage + occurred, presumably from a large branch of the coeliac axis. + The bleeding was readily controlled by a plug, and did not + recur; but the patient rapidly sank, and died on the twelfth + day after the operation, and fourteen days after reception of + the injury. No _post-mortem_ examination was made. + +2. _Wounds of the small intestine._--These were comparatively common, +but offered little that was special either in their symptoms or the +results attending them. Wounds were met with in every part of the small +gut; but I saw no case in which an injury to the duodenum could be +specially diagnosed. + +As to the symptoms which attended these injuries, it is somewhat +difficult to speak with precision, and it must be left to my readers to +form an opinion as to how many of the cases recounted below were really +instances of perforating wounds. My own view is that in the majority of +the cases that got well spontaneously, the injury was not of a +perforating nature, and that for reasons which have been already set +forth. It will, however, be at once noted that in all the five cases in +which the injury was certainly diagnosed in hospital death occurred. + +The cases of injury to the small intestine are perhaps best arranged in +three classes. + +1. Those who died upon the field, or shortly after removal from it. In +these the external wounds were often large, the omentum was not rarely +prolapsed, and escape of fæces sometimes occurred early. Shock from the +severity of the lesion, and hæmorrhage, were no doubt important factors +in the early lethal issue in this class. Many of the injuries were no +doubt produced by bullets striking irregularly, by ricochets, by bullets +of the expanding forms, or by bullets of large calibre. As being beyond +the bounds of surgical aid, this class possessed the least interest. + +2. Cases brought into the Field, or even the Stationary hospitals, with +symptoms of moderate severity, or even of an insignificant character, +in which evidence of septic peritonitis suddenly developed and death +ensued. + +3. Cases in which the position of the wounds raised the possibility of +injury to the intestine, but in which the symptoms were slight or of +moderate severity, and which recovered spontaneously. + +The whole crux in diagnosis lay in the attempt to separate the two +latter classes, and, personally, I must own to having been no nearer a +position of being able to form an opinion on this point, in the late +than in the early stage of my stay in South Africa. The advent of +peritoneal septicæmia was in many instances the only determining moment. +On this matter I can only add that, in civil practice, an exploratory +abdominal section is often the only means of determination of a rupture +of the bowel wall. + +With regard to the cases of suspected injury to the bowel which +recovered spontaneously, the symptoms were somewhat special in their +comparative slightness, and in the limited nature of the local signs. +Thus the pulse seldom rose to as much as 100 in rate, 80 was a common +average. Respiration was never greatly quickened, 24 was a common rate. +The temperature rarely exceeded 100°. Vomiting was occasionally severe, +but usually not persistent, ceasing on the second day. A good quantity +of urine was passed. As to the local signs, these again were of a +limited nature; distension did not occur, or was slight; movement of the +abdominal wall was only restricted in the neighbourhood of the wound, +the affected area amounted to a quarter, or at most half, the abdominal +wall, and rigidity was localised to a similar segment. Local tenderness +usually existed; but, as a rule, there was little or no dulness to point +to the occurrence either of fluid effusion or a considerable deposition +of lymph. + +Again many of the patients suffered with very slight symptoms of +constitutional shock, although there was considerable variation in this +particular. + + (165*) Wounded at Graspan, sustaining a compound fracture of + the fibula. While being carried off the field, a second bullet + (Lee-Metford) entered immediately outside the left posterior + superior iliac spine, perforated the pelvis, and emerged 1-1/2 + inch within the left anterior superior spine. The patient was + then put down and left on the field ten hours; later he was + carried to shelter for the night, and arrived at Orange River + on the second day. He suffered with some pain in the abdomen, + especially during the journey in the train, but was not sick; + the bowels were confined. + + When seen on the third day at 6 P.M., some pain was complained + of in the abdomen, which moved freely in the upper part, but + was motionless below the umbilicus. No distension. Tenderness + around wound of exit and some rigidity. The bowels had acted + four times during the day; motions loose, dark brown, and + containing no blood. Face not anxious, eyes bright, temperature + 102°. Pulse 96, regular, and of good strength. Tongue moist and + little furred. + + The abdomen was opened at 5 A.M. on the fourth day, as the + local signs had become more pronounced, and the patient had + passed a restless night in great abdominal pain. A local + incision was chosen, as the wound was presumably in the sigmoid + flexure. The sigmoid flexure was adherent to the abdominal wall + opposite the wound of exit, and a dark ecchymosed patch was + found, but no perforation could be detected. Foul pus and gas + escaped freely from the pelvis, but no wound of the large bowel + could be discovered here. On enlarging the incision upwards + three openings were found in a coil of jejunum, probably that + about five feet from the duodenal junction usually provided + with the longest mesentery. No fourth opening could be found. + The openings were circular, about 1/3 inch in diameter, clean + cut, with a ring of everted mucous membrane, and the wall of + the bowel in the neighbourhood was thickened. All three + openings were included within a length of 2-1/2 inches. There + was no surrounding ecchymosis of the bowel wall. Very little + escaped intestinal contents were found in the situation of the + bowel. The latter had apparently been retracted upwards, and + lay to the left of the lumbar spine. The wounds were readily + closed by five Lembert's sutures, three crossing the openings, + and one at each end. The belly was then washed out with boiled + water and closed. The delay in finding the wounds due to the + mistaken impression that they would be found in the pelvis + materially prolonged the operation, which lasted an hour and a + half. The patient never rallied, and died seventeen hours + later. It is possible that a wound in the sigmoid flexure was + present which had already closed at the time of operation. + + (166*) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), opposite + central point of left ilium; _exit_, 1-1/2 inch above the + centre of the right Poupart's ligament. Vomiting commenced soon + after the injury, and this was continuous until the patient's + arrival in the Stationary hospital on the fourth day, when the + condition was as follows:-- + + Face extremely anxious in expression. Temperature 101°, + sweating freely. Pulse 110, fair strength. Tongue moist. + Abdomen much distended, rigid, motionless, tympanitic + throughout. Bowels confined. No urine had been passed for + twenty-four hours, [Symbol: ounce]ij in bladder on + catheterisation, clear, and containing no blood. + + Abdominal section. Median incision. A considerable quantity of + bloody effusion was evacuated. Intestine generally congested + and distended. No lymph. Two wounds were found in the ileum on + the opposite sides of one coil; the openings were circular, + with the mucous membrane everted. No escape of fæcal matter was + visible until the intestine was delivered, when intestinal + contents spurted freely across the room. The openings were + sutured with five Lembert's stitches. The bowel was punctured + in two places to relieve distension, and then returned into the + belly, after washing with boiled water. + + Four pints of saline solution were infused into the median + basilic vein, and 1/30 grain strychnine sulph. was injected + hypodermically. + + The patient did not rally, and died twelve hours after the + operation. + + (167*) Wounded at Graspan. _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), midway + between the umbilicus and pubes; _exit_, 1 inch to the left of + the fifth lumbar spine. The patient was seen on the third day + in the following condition: in great pain, expression extremely + anxious, vomiting constantly. Pulse 150 running, respirations + 48. Temperature 100°, sweating freely. Great distension, + rigidity, and general tenderness of immobile abdomen. No + improvement followed the administration of brandy and + hypodermic injection of strychnine 1/30 grain, and operation + was deemed hopeless. + + In the evening the patient was apparently dying. Face blue and + sunken and covered with sweat, eyes dull, speechless, pulse + imperceptible, restlessness extreme, bowels acting + involuntarily, no urine in bladder. + + The man was placed in a tent by himself, and to my surprise was + alive and better the next morning; the expression was still + anxious, but the face brighter and not sweating; the pulse + only numbered 100, but was very weak, and the hands and feet + were cold. The condition of the abdomen was unaltered, but the + thoracic respiration had decreased in rapidity from 48 to 28. + + His condition still seemed to preclude any chance of successful + intervention, but none the less life was retained until the + morning of the seventh day, the state alternating between a + moribund one and one of slight improvement. He was lucid at + times, although for the most part wandering, and was so + restless that no covering could be kept upon him. Vomiting was + continuous, so that no nourishment could be retained; the + bowels acted frequently involuntarily, and little or no urine + was passed. Meanwhile, the abdomen became flat, then sunken, an + area of induration and tenderness about 6 inches in diameter + developing around the wound of entry. Slight variations in the + pulse, and from normal to subnormal in the temperature, were + noted, and death eventually occurred from septicæmia and + inanition. + + (168*) Wounded at Driefontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), above the + posterior third of the left iliac crest, at the margin of the + last lumbar transverse process (probably through ilio-lumbar + ligament); _exit_, 1 inch below and to the left of the + umbilicus. + + The patient was wounded at 3 P.M., but not brought into the + Field hospital until 9 P.M., when the temperature of the tents + was below 28°F. He was considerably collapsed, suffering much + pain, and vomited freely. The abdomen was flat, but very + tender. Bowels confined. The column had to move at 5 A.M. the + next morning, when the temperature was still near freezing, and + during the day continuous fighting prevented any chance of + operation. The man steadily sank during the day, and died + thirty-six hours after the reception of the injury. + + _Post-mortem condition._--Belly not distended, dull anteriorly + in patches, and right flank dull throughout. When the belly was + opened, extensive adhesion of omentum and intestine enclosing + numerous collections of pus were disclosed, and on disturbing + the adhesions a large collection of turbid blood-stained fluid + was set free from the right loin. The great omentum was much + thickened and matted, with deposition of thick patches of + lymph; very firm recent adhesions also united numerous coils of + small intestine. The pus was foetid, but no appreciable + quantity of intestinal contents was detected in it. The lower + half or more of the small intestine was injected, reddened, and + thickened. The wounds which were situated in the lower part of + the jejunum and ileum were multiple, and seven perforations + were detected; besides these the intestine was marked by + bruises, and some gutter slits affecting the serous and + muscular coats only. Considerable ecchymosis surrounded these + latter. The clean perforations were circular, less than 1/4 + inch in diameter, and for the most part closed by eversion of + the mucous membrane. Intestinal contents were not apparent, but + escaped freely on manipulation of the bowel. + + (169*) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), over the + eighth rib in the anterior axillary line; _exit_, 1 inch to the + left of second lumbar spinous process, just below the last rib. + Vomiting commenced almost immediately after reception of the + injury, and the bowels acted frequently. This condition + persisted until the fourth day, when the patient was brought + down to Orange River, and the signs were as follows. + Considerable pain in left half of abdomen, pulse 110, fair + strength, temperature 101°. Some general distension of abdomen + with complete disappearance of hepatic dulness. Some movement + of right half of abdomen, left half immobile, dulness extending + from the flank as far forwards as linea semilunaris. An + incision was made in left linea semilunaris, and Oj blood + evacuated from the left loin. There was no lymph on the + intestines nor sign of inflammation. No perforation was + discovered in either stomach or intestine, but on two coils of + jejunum there were deep slits 3/4 inch long, extending through + both peritoneal and muscular coats. Beyond these wounds, on + other coils oval patches of ecchymosis, due to direct bruising, + were present. The peritoneal cavity was sponged free of all + blood and irrigated with boiled water; no bleeding point was + discovered, and the abdomen was closed. + + The next morning the patient was comfortable; temperature + 100.2°, pulse 100. Tongue clean and moist; he vomited once + during the night. + + Some bloody discharge had collected in the dressing, and at the + lower angle of wound there was a local swelling, apparently in + the abdominal wall. The flank was resonant. + + During the afternoon the patient became faint, and when seen at + 6 P.M. was in a state of collapse, in which he shortly died. + + Death was apparently due to renewal of the previous hæmorrhage. + No _post-mortem_ examination was made. + + (170*) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1/2 inch to + the left of the second sacral spine; _exit_, immediately below + the left anterior superior iliac spine; the patient was + kneeling at the time, and the same bullet traversed his left + thigh in the lower third. When seen on the third day, the + lower part of the abdomen was motionless, tumid, and tender. + The bowels had been confined for three days; there had been no + sickness, and the tongue was moist and clean. Temperature 100°, + pulse 90, fair strength, respirations 38. The patient had once + had an attack of acute appendicitis, and he himself said he was + sure he now had 'peritonitis,' as he had pain exactly similar + in the belly to that he had suffered in his previous illness. + + No further signs, however, developed under an expectant + treatment, and he remained some two months in hospital, while + the wound in the thigh and a third injury to the elbow-joint + were healing. + + (171) _Entry_ (Mauser), at the highest point of the left crista + ilii; _exit_, through the right ilium, 2 inches horizontally + anterior to the posterior superior spine. Absolutely no + abdominal symptoms followed. The bowels were confined five + days, and then opened by enema. The patient complained of some + stiffness in the lumbo-sacral region, but the right + synchondrosis was no doubt implicated in the track. + + (172) Wounded at Paardeberg (range 800 yards). _Entry_ + (Mauser), 2 inches diagonally below and to the right of the + umbilicus; _exit_, not discoverable. For the first two days the + patient had to lie out with the regiment; on the fourth he was + removed to the Field hospital. During the first three days the + patient vomited (green matter) frequently, and the belly was + hard and painful; as biscuit was the only available food, no + nourishment was taken. The bowels acted on the second night. At + the end of a week the patient was sent by bullock wagon (three + days and nights) to Modder River, and then down to Capetown, + where he walked into the hospital on the thirteenth day, + apparently well. + + Two days later the temperature rose to 104°, and enteric fever + was diagnosed, no local signs pointing to the injury existing. + The patient made a good recovery. + + (173) Wounded at Colenso. _Entry_ (Mauser), at junction of + outer 2/5 with inner 3/5 of line from right anterior superior + iliac spine to umbilicus; _exit_, at upper part of right great + sacro-sciatic foramen, in line of posterior superior iliac + spine. Advancing on foot when struck; he then fell and crept + fifty yards to behind a rock, where he remained seven and a + half hours. For two days subsequently he vomited freely; the + bowels acted nine hours after the injury, and then became + constipated. No further symptoms were noted, and at the end of + three weeks the abdomen was absolutely normal. The man is now + again on active service. + + (174*) Wounded at Modder River while retiring on foot. _Entry_ + (Mauser), at highest point of right iliac crest; _exit_, 2-1/2 + inches to right of and 1/2 inch above level of umbilicus. The + injury was not followed by sickness, and the bowels remained + confined. During the first two days 'pain struck across the + abdomen' when micturition was performed. + + When the patient came under observation on the third day the + condition was as follows:--Complains of little pain, + temperature normal, pulse 72, respirations 24, tongue moist, + bowels confined. Rigidity of abdominal wall and deficient + mobility of nearly whole right half of belly, the whole lower + half of which moves little with respiration. No track palpable + in abdominal parietes. No dulness, no distension. The + temperature rose to 99.5° at night. On the fourth day the + bowels acted freely, the pulse fell to 60, the respirations + were 24, and the temperature normal. + + Tenderness and rigidity persisted in the right flank to the end + of a week, after which time no further signs persisted. + + (175*) Wounded at Modder River while lying on right side. Range + 500 yards. Walked 400 yards after injury. _Entry_ (Mauser), at + the junction of the posterior and middle thirds of the right + iliac crest; _exit_, 3 inches to right of and 1/2 inch below + the level of the umbilicus. The injury was followed by no signs + of intra-abdominal lesion; on the third day the temperature was + normal, pulse 80, and the tongue clean and moist. Some soreness + at times and tenderness on pressure were complained of, but the + man was discharged well at the end of one month. + + (176*) Wounded while doubling in retirement at Modder River. + _Entry_ (Mauser), immediately above the junction of the + posterior and middle thirds of the left iliac crest; _exit_, 1 + inch below costal margin (eighth rib), 3 inches to the right of + the median line. The bullet was lying in the anterior wound, + whence it was removed by the orderly who applied the first + dressing on the field. The patient remained on the field seven + and a half hours, and when brought into hospital at once + commenced to vomit. The ejected matter, at first green in + colour, during the next forty-eight hours changed to a dirty + brown. Meanwhile, the abdomen was somewhat painful. When seen + on the third day he had ceased to vomit for three hours. The + face was slightly anxious, and the patient lay on the ground + with the lower extremities extended. Temperature 99°, pulse 72, + fair strength. Respirations 32, shallow. Tongue moist, lightly + furred, bowels not open for four days. He slept fairly last + night. Abdomen soft, moving well with respiration, no + distension, slight tenderness below and to the right of the + umbilicus, and local dulness in right flank. + + The next day the pulse fell to 60 and the bowels acted, but + there was no change in the local condition. The man looked + somewhat ill until the end of a week, but was then sent to the + Base, and at the expiration of a month was sent home well. + + (177*) Wounded at Modder River. Two apertures of _entry_ + (Mauser); (_a_) below cartilage of eighth rib in left nipple + line; (_b_) 2 inches below and 4-1/2 inches to the left of the + median line. No exit wound discovered, and no track could be + palpated between the two openings, which were both circular and + depressed. When seen on fourth day there was tenderness in the + lower half of the abdomen, and the left thigh was held in a + flexed position. Respirations 20, respiratory movement confined + to upper half of abdominal wall. Pulse 70, temperature 99°. + Tongue moist, covered with white fur; bowels confined since the + accident; no sickness. The patient remained under observation + thirteen days, during which time pain and difficulty in + movement of the left thigh persisted, also slight tenderness in + the lower part of the abdomen; but at the end of a month he was + sent to England well, but unfit to take further part in the + campaign. I thought the bullet might be in the left psoas, but + it was not localised. + + (178*) Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ (Mauser), 3-1/2 inches + above and 1-1/2 inch within the left anterior superior iliac + spine; _exit_, 1-1/2 inch to the right of the tenth dorsal + spinous process. The same bullet had perforated the forearm + just above the wrist prior to entering the abdomen. No local or + constitutional signs indicated either bowel injury or + perforation of liver. The man, however, was suffering from a + slight attack of dysentery, passing blood and mucus per rectum + with great tenesmus. He was sent to the Base at the end of a + week, and returned to England well three weeks later. He + attributed his dysentery to the wound, as the symptoms did not + exist prior to its reception; but as the disease coincided + exactly with what was very prevalent amongst the troops at the + time, I do not think there was any connection between it and + the injury. + + (179) Wounded near Thaba-nchu. _Entry_, over the centre of the + sacrum at the upper border of fourth segment; _exit_, 1-1/2 + inch above left Poupart's ligament, 2 inches from the median + line. Aperture of entry oval, with long vertical axis. Exit + wound a transverse slit, with slight tendency to starring (see + fig. 19, p. 58). One hour after being shot the patient vomited + once. There was some evidence of shock and considerable pain. + The bowels acted involuntarily simultaneously with the + vomiting, and incontinence of fæces and retention of urine + persisted for four days. The vomit was bilious in appearance; + no blood was seen either in it or the motions. + + Forty-six hours after the injury the condition was as follows: + Face slightly anxious and pale; skin moist, temperature 100.4°; + pulse 116, regular and of fair strength; respirations 24; + abdomen slightly tumid; tenderness over lower half, especially + on left side; the lower half moves little with respiration. + + Twenty-four hours later the patient had improved. He was + comfortable and hopeful; slept well with morphia 1/3 grain + hypodermically. Tongue moist, covered with white fur; has been + taking milk only, [Symbol: ounce]ij every half-hour. No + sickness. Temperature + + 99°. Pulse 104. Respirations 24. Abdomen flatter; general + respiratory movement; tenderness now mainly localised to an + area 2-1/2 inches in diameter, to the left of the umbilicus, + above exit wound. + + The patient continued to improve, and on the fifth day + travelled six hours in a bullock wagon to Bloemfontein. Soon + after arrival his temperature was normal: pulse 80, + respirations 16, with good abdominal movement. Local tenderness + persisted in the same area, but was less in degree. Tongue + rather dry, bowels confined. Micturition normal. Two drachms of + castor oil and an enema were given. + + On the ninth day patient was practically well, except for + slight deep tenderness. He remained in bed on ordinary light + diet, but at the end of the third week he was seized by a + sudden attack of pain, the temperature rising to 103° and the + pulse to 140, the abdomen becoming swollen and tender. He was + then under the charge of Mr. Bowlby, who ordered some opium, + and the symptoms rapidly subsided. Although this wound crossed + the small intestine area, it is probable that the symptoms may + have been due to an injury of the rectum or sigmoid flexure. + +3. _Wounds of the large intestine._--Injuries to every part of the large +bowel were observed, and spontaneous recoveries were seen in all parts +except the transverse colon, which, as already remarked, is near akin +to the small intestine with regard to its position and anatomical +arrangement. + +The only case of perforation of the vermiform appendix that I heard of, +one under the care of Mr. Stonham, died of peritoneal septicæmia. +Several cases of recovery from wounds of the cæcum and ascending colon +are recounted below. The only points of importance in the nature of the +signs of these injuries were their primary insignificance, and the +comparative frequency with which _local_ peritoneal suppuration followed +them. The absence of a similar sequence in some of the cases in which +wounds of the small intestine were assumed, was, in my opinion, one of +the strongest reasons for doubting the correctness of the diagnosis. It +is also a significant fact that injuries of the ascending colon--that is +to say, of the portion of the large bowel which perhaps lies most free +from the area occupied by the small intestine--were those which most +frequently recovered. + +The following cases afford examples of the course followed in a number +of injuries to the large intestine, and illustrate both the +uncomplicated and the complicated modes of spontaneous recovery. + +No. 180 affords a good example of an extra-peritoneal injury, and of the +especially fatal character of such lesions. This case was also one of my +surgical disappointments. + +Nos. 182, 183 are of great interest in several particulars. First, the +aperture of exit was large and allowed the escape of fæces, not a very +common feature in wounds not proving immediately fatal. Secondly, in +neither were any peritoneal signs observed. Thirdly, in each the exit +wound communicated with the pleura, and the patients died from +septicæmia mainly due to absorption from the surface of that membrane +(_Pleural septicæmia_). + +No. 190 is a most striking instance of spontaneous cure, since no doubt +can exist that both rectum and bladder were perforated. + + (180*) _Injury to the cæcum and ascending colon._--Boer, + wounded at Graspan while sheltering behind a rock, lying on his + back. + + _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), in right thigh, 3 inches below and 1 + inch within anterior superior spine of ilium; _exit_, in back, + on a level with the fourth lumbar spinous process and 3 inches + from that point. + + Half an hour after the wound the patient commenced to suffer + severe stabbing pain; he lay on the field one hour; later he + was taken to a Field hospital, and on the second day was sent + by train a distance of twenty-five miles. + + When seen at the end of fifty hours the condition was as + follows. Face anxious, complexion dusky. Great abdominal pain, + especially about the umbilicus. Vomiting frequent and + distressing; bowels confined since the accident; tongue dry and + furred. Urine scanty. Pulse full and strong, 125; respirations, + entirely thoracic, 30. + + Abdomen generally distended and tympanitic, wall rigid and + motionless. Dulness in right flank, together with superficial + oedema and emphysema. + + Abdominal section fifty-three and a half hours after accident. + Incision in right linea semilunaris. Great omentum adherent to + ascending colon, which was covered with plastic lymph. Gas and + intestinal contents escaped from an opening at the line of + reflexion of the peritoneum from the ascending colon; + retro-peritoneal extravasation and emphysema extended the whole + length of the ascending colon and around duodenum, the wall of + the colon itself exhibiting subperitoneal emphysema. The colon + was freed and the rent sewn up with interrupted sutures. About + [Symbol: ounce] iv of foul fæcal fluid were evacuated from + loin, and a free counter-opening made. The opening in the ilium + by which the bullet had entered the abdomen was found at the + brim of the pelvis; the loin and peritoneal cavity were sponged + dry and flushed with boiled water; no lymph was seen on the + small intestine. A large gauze plug was inserted into the + posterior wound, one end of the plug being brought out of the + operation incision. + + During the succeeding six days progress was not unsatisfactory: + the abdomen became soft, moved with respiration, there was no + sickness, and the bowels acted. The pulse fell to 90, + respirations to 20, and the temperature did not exceed 102° F. + The wound suppurated freely, however, and although there were + no further signs of peritoneal septicæmia, it was evident that + general infection had taken place, and on the sixth day a + parotid bubo developed on the right side, which was opened. + + On the seventh day the patient suddenly commenced to fail + rapidly; vomiting was almost continuous--at first curdled milk, + later frothy watery fluid--and on the eighth day he died. The + abdomen remained soft, sunken, and flaccid, and death no doubt + resulted from general septicæmia rather than from peritoneal + infection, absorption taking place from the large foul cavity + behind the colon. As the cavity in part surrounded the + descending duodenum, this possibly accounted for the attack of + vomiting which preceded death. + + (181*) _Ascending colon._--Wounded at Graspan while lying in + prone position. _Entry_ (Mauser), over ninth rib in line of + right linea semilunaris; _exit_, in right buttock, just below + and behind the top of the great trochanter. + + The injury was followed by little abdominal pain, but a strange + sensation of local gurgling was noted. The bowels acted as soon + as the patient reached camp, some hours after being wounded. + There was no sickness and nothing abnormal was noted in the + motions, except that they were loose and light-coloured. + + On the evening of the third day the patient came under + observation in the ambulance train for Capetown. He looked + somewhat anxious and ill, but he complained of little pain; the + temperature was 102°, pulse 88, fair strength, soft and + regular. There was local dulness, tenderness, and deficiency of + movement in the right iliac region. As it was night, he was + removed from the train and an operation was performed the next + morning. + + Prior to operation the condition was as follows: Pulse 84, + temperature 100°; respiration easy, 20. Tongue moist, but + thickly coated in centre. Abdomen moves fairly, and is + resonant, except in right lower quadrant. No distension. + Dulness, tenderness, and rigidity in right iliac region, marked + to outer side of cæcum. Entry wound nearly and exit quite + healed. Cannot flex right thigh. The following operation was + performed. Appendix incision, about [Symbol: ounce]j of fæcal + fluid and fæces in a localised cavity on outer and anterior + aspect of cæcum evacuated; adhesions very firm. Cavity sloughy + throughout and cæcum covered with dull grey lymph. The opening + in the bowel was not localised, and it was considered wiser to + treat the case like one of perforation from appendicitis than + to run the risk of breaking down adhesions. A small awl-like + opening was found in the ilium with powdered bone at its + entrance leading to the wound of exit. + + The after-treatment of the case gave rise to no anxiety, but + healing of the resulting sinus was slow; fæcal-smelling pus + escaped for some days, and a number of small sloughs came away. + On the twelfth day the patient was sent down to Wynberg, where + he remained twelve weeks. A counter-incision was needed in the + loin to drain the suppurating cavity three weeks after the + primary operation, and five weeks after the operation an escape + of gas and fæces took place from the anterior wound, while the + bowels were acting, as a result of a dose of castor oil. No + further escape of fæces occurred, and he left for England with + a small sinus only. No extension of inflammation into the + original wound track ever occurred, both openings and the canal + healing by primary union. + + The sinus remained open, and occasionally discharged for a + further period of six months, and then healed firmly; since + when the patient has been in perfect health. + + (182*) _Splenic flexure, descending colon._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), in sixth left intercostal + space in mid-axillary line; _exit_, in left loin, below last + rib, at outer margin of erector spinæ. The patient remained in + the Field hospital three days, during which time he exhibited + no serious abdominal symptoms, but during the journey to Orange + River (53-1/2 miles) he was sick. He remained at Orange River + two days, and while there an enema was administered, producing + a normal motion. The abdomen was slightly distended; it moved + fairly, there was slight rigidity, but little tenderness. + Temperature 100.8°, pulse 120. No appearance of fæces in wound. + + When seen on the sixth day the condition was as + follows:--Patient cheerful and not in great pain. Temperature + 99.2°; pulse 120; respirations 48, very shallow. Abdomen soft, + moving freely, no distension or general tenderness. Fluid fæces + escaping in abundance from the wound in loin. Redness of skin + and swelling below level of wound, and cellular emphysema + above. Fæcal-smelling fluid was also escaping from the thoracic + wound. + + The wound was enlarged, but the patient rapidly sank, and died + of septicæmia on the seventh day. + + (183*) An exactly similar case came under observation from the + battle of Modder River, except that the opening in the loin was + somewhat larger, and earlier and freer escape of fæces took + place from it. In this also fæcal matter passed freely into the + left pleural cavity, and fæcal matter was expectorated, while + there was an almost complete absence of abdominal symptoms. + Death occurred on the fourth day. + + No _post-mortem_ examination was made in either case, but I + believe in both the extra-peritoneal aspect of the colon was + implicated and that the septicæmia was in great part due to + absorption from the pleural rather than the peritoneal cavity, + since in neither case were the abdominal symptoms a prominent + feature. + + (184) _Possible wound of cæcum._--Wounded at Spion Kop. Bullet + (Mauser) perforated the right forearm, then entered belly. + _Entry_, 3 inches from the right anterior superior iliac spine, + in the line of the supra-pubic fold of the belly wall (a + transverse slit); _exit_, in right buttock, on a level with the + tip of the great trochanter and 2 inches within it. The wound + was received immediately after breakfast had been eaten. There + was retention of urine and constipation for three days, but no + sickness. Local pain and tenderness were severe, and at the end + of three weeks there was still local tenderness, slight + induration, and dragging pain on defæcation. The patient + returned to England at the end of a month well, except for + slight local tenderness. + + (185) _Possible wound of colon._--Wounded at Paardeberg; range + 200 yards. Walking at time. The bullet (Mauser) perforated the + left forearm, just below the elbow-joint. _Entry_, into belly 1 + inch anterior to the tip of the left eleventh costal cartilage; + no exit. + + The injury was followed by pain in the left half of the abdomen + and vomiting, which continued for two days. The bowels acted on + the third day; no nourishment was taken for two days, but a + small quantity of water was allowed. No further symptoms were + noted, and at the end of a fortnight the patient was well, + except for slight local tenderness. The bullet could not be + detected with the X-rays. + + (186) _Wound of cæcum_.--Wounded at Paardeberg. _Entry_ + (Mauser), 2 inches diagonally above and within right anterior + superior iliac spine; _exit_, immediately to the right of the + fifth lumbar spinous process; the patient was lying on his left + side when struck. A burning pain down the right thigh + immediately followed the accident, and lasted some days. There + was no sickness, the bowels were confined three days, and there + was pain across the back and down the thigh. + + On the tenth day he arrived at the Base, when he was lying on + his back suffering considerable pain. The temperature ranged to + 101°. There was diarrhoea and cystitis, with a considerable + amount of pus in the urine, which was very offensive. A small + fluctuating spot existed on the back, just to the right of the + original exit wound which was firmly healed. The abdomen moved + fairly with respiration in its upper part, but was motionless + below, especially in the right iliac fossa; some induration was + to be felt here. The right thigh was kept flexed. + + During the next few days the pus disappeared from the urine, + and with this change the induration in the right iliac fossa + increased. An incision (Mr. Gairdner) was made into the + fluctuating spot behind, and pus evacuated. The patient + recovered. + + (187) _Possible wound of cæcum._--Wounded outside Heilbron. + _Entry_ (Mauser), in the right loin, 2-1/2 inches above the + iliac crest, at the margin of the erector spinæ; _exit_, 1-1/2 + inch above and within the right anterior superior spine of the + ilium. There was little shock. The patient was brought six + miles in a wagon into camp, and slept comfortably with a small + morphia injection. Prior to the accident the patient was + suffering from diarrhoea, but afterwards the bowels were + confined. The next morning there had been no sickness and + little pain. The tongue was moist and clean, the pulse 80, the + respirations 24, the belly moved generally, although + inspiration was shallow; the temperature was 99°. Slight + tenderness in the belly to the inner side of the exit wound, + but no dulness. + + The patient was starved for the first thirty-six hours, a + little warm water then being allowed. No symptoms developed, + and a perfect recovery followed. + + (188) _Colon_, _liver_.--Wounded outside Heilbron. _Entry_ + (Mauser), midway between the last right rib and the crista + ilii; _exit_, below the eighth costal cartilage in nipple line. + There were no serious primary symptoms, but ten days after the + accident the temperature rose, swelling and pain developed in + the right loin, and on the fourteenth day a large tympanitic + abscess was opened (Dr. Flockemann, German Ambulance.) + Fæcal-smelling gas and pus were evacuated. There was no + extension of the abscess forwards. A week later the patient had + much improved, although there were evident signs of general + absorption, and the discharge from the abscess cavity was + abundant and very foul. On the thirteenth day a serious + hæmorrhage occurred from the loin wound, which was opened up, + but no evident source was discovered; hæmorrhage was repeated + the next day, and the man died. + + At the _post-mortem_ examination a large quantity of + chocolate-coloured fluid was found free in the abdomen and + pelvis. A chain of small local abscesses was found surrounding + the ascending colon, and a larger one over the front of the + cæcum. The wall of the ascending colon was generally thickened, + and from this, in three places, openings with rounded margins + connected the abscess cavities with the lumen of the bowel. One + of the openings, larger than the others, was possibly the + aperture of entry of the bullet; the others were apparently + spontaneous. + + At the anterior border of the right lobe of the liver an + abscess cavity existed in connection with the wound of the + liver, and this was continuous with the aperture of exit, + although not discharging. The aperture of exit was plugged by a + tag of omentum (see fig. 89). No obvious source of the + hæmorrhage was forthcoming, but it probably originated in one + of the large branches of the vena cava. The bullet had struck + the transverse process of the lumbar vertebra, but had not + given rise to any signs of spinal concussion. + + (189*) _Ascending colon._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ + (Mauser), midway between the tip of the tenth right rib and the + iliac crest. Bullet retained. A second wound existed over the + centre of the left sterno-mastoid, and the bullet here was also + retained and never localised. The patient stated that he + brought up blood at short intervals for half an hour + immediately after he was wounded. This might have been + explained by the wound in the neck, but no difficulty in + swallowing was noted. The bowels acted the day after he was + shot, and, except for some local tenderness and immobility, no + abdominal signs were noted. Three weeks later a swelling was + obvious to the right side of the umbilicus, and a tympanitic + abscess developed; this was opened, and a deformed Mauser + bullet extracted. Foul pus, but no fæcal matter, was evacuated, + and after discharging for a fortnight the wound closed, and the + man was sent home as 'well.' In this case I assumed a wound of + the ascending colon had occurred. + + (190*) _Rectum and bladder._--Wounded at Graspan, while + retiring at the double. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch to the right + of the coccyx; _exit_, 1 inch above the junction of the middle + and outer thirds of left Poupart's ligament. The man suffered + with some pain in the abdomen, and for first two days with + retention of urine. The urine was drawn off with the catheter, + and contained blood. During the next five days micturition was + hourly or more frequent; gas was passed _per urethram_, and the + urine was very foul, containing evident fæcal matter. + Micturition continued frequent, with purulent cystitis for one + month. Local tenderness, pain, and immobility developed over + the lower quarter of the abdomen, extending to the right iliac + fossa. A local abscess pointed a little to the right of the mid + line, and 2 inches above the symphysis, and from this + foul-smelling pus, but no fæces, was discharged for three + months, during which period the surrounding dulness and + induration gradually decreased and the sinus healed. When the + patient left for England there was still occasional slight + discharge from the original wound of entry, and there was + slight discomfort on micturition, but he was otherwise well. + + A year later the man had resumed active duty, and, except for + occasional pain on stooping, considered himself well. + +The following cases are appended as of some general interest. The first +two (191, 192) illustrate extra-peritoneal injuries to the rectum. In +neither did positive evidence exist of wound of the bowel, but the +symptoms in each rendered this accident probable. Case 193 is an +illustration of apparent escape of the anal canal in a wound in which +from the position of the external apertures this escape would have +appeared impossible. + +Wounds of the extra-peritoneal portion of the rectum, as a rule, +appeared to have a somewhat better prognosis than would have been +expected; in any case, the prognosis was far better than that obtaining +in wounds of the base of the urinary bladder. My experience on the +subject of these wounds was, however, limited to the two cases quoted. + +Case 194 is inserted as an example of the complicated nature of the +abdominal injuries not so very unfrequently met with. It illustrates +well the difficulty which may arise at any stage in the course of +treatment of an injury, in the certain determination or exclusion of +wound of a part of the alimentary canal. + + (191) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), in the right + loin, immediately below the ribs in the mid-axillary line; + _exit_, about the centre of the left buttock, on a level with + the tip of the great trochanter. A second lacerated shell wound + of back was present. All the wounds suppurated. For the first + sixteen days following the injury all control was lost over the + anal sphincter, and bloody fæces, and later slime, constantly + escaped, but no fæcal matter ever escaped from the wound in the + buttock. There was no history of previous dysentery, and rectal + examination afforded no information. The buttock wound had to + be opened up, disclosing a tunnel in the ilium. + + The wounds granulated slowly with continuous suppuration, but + were healed, and the patient returned home at the end of + fourteen weeks, the bowels acting normally. + + (192) Wounded at Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), at the junction + of the middle and posterior thirds of the left iliac crest; the + bullet was retained, and removed (Mr. Pegg) from the back of + the right thigh, 3 inches below the back of the great + trochanter. After the injury retention of urine followed, with + incapacity to control loose motions, though solid ones could be + retained. The retention was treated by catheterisation, which + was followed by cystitis. The power of micturition was slowly + recovered, and three weeks later he could pass water, at times + in a dribbling stream only; the cystitis had improved. The man + returned to England very much improved, but not quite well, at + the end of five weeks. + + (193) Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_, in the right buttock, + near the outer border at the upper part; _exit_, at the lower + part of outer border of left buttock. The line of the wound + exactly crossed the position of the anus, but no sign of injury + to the rectum could be discovered. + + (194) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1/2 inch + below the margin of the iliac crest, at the junction of its + middle and posterior thirds, and on a level with the fifth + lumbar spinous process; _exit_, below the cartilage of the + eighth rib, just within the left nipple line. Struck while + retiring; fell at once, and remained thirty hours on the field. + Patient stated that he vomited 'blood like coffee grounds' six + times while lying on the field, and twice after being brought + in. His bowels were confined for three days. His right lower + extremity was paralysed. + + On the fifth day there was considerable induration around the + wound of exit, and the upper half of the abdomen was immobile + and tender. The temperature rose to 100°, and the pulse was 96. + Shortly afterwards a similar condition was noted in the lower + half of the abdomen; the temperature continued to be raised and + the pulse quickened, when on the thirteenth day a considerable + quantity of pus was passed per rectum, and diarrhoea set in; + this continued for three days, with marked improvement in the + general symptoms. Micturition, which had been painful, became + normal; the pulse and temperature fell, and the expression + became less anxious. The patient continued to sleep badly, + however, and complained of pain. + + At the end of the third week he still looked ill, but was + easier. Temperature normal in the morning, 100° in evening, + pulse 80. Tongue thickly furred, but moist. Still on milk diet; + appetite bad; bowels irregular. + + The abdomen moved little in the lower half, induration + persisted in the left iliac fossa, the left thigh continued + flexed, and resonance was impaired to the left of the + umbilicus. + + At the end of six weeks a distinct hard swelling in two parts, + separated by a resonant area, was noted to the left of the + umbilicus and in the left iliac fossa. The abdomen moved + fairly, and there was little tenderness over the swelling. + During the next week the swelling appeared to increase and to + fluctuate; at the same time the temperature again began to rise + to 100° and 101° at eve. The swelling was taken to be a + localised peritoneal suppuration, and an incision was made over + it; but this led down to a free peritoneal cavity, with a + tumour pressing up from the posterior abdominal wall. The wound + was therefore closed, and a fresh extra-peritoneal incision + made, immediately above Poupart's ligament, when the swelling + proved to be a large retro-peritoneal hæmatoma. As the cavity + extended into the pelvis and up to the level of the costal + margin, it was deemed wise only to evacuate a part of the + blood-clot. The origin of the bleeding was not determined, and + the wound was closed and healed by first intention. The man + continued to improve, and left for home five weeks later. + + This patient has continued to improve since his return, but the + left thigh is still somewhat flexed. + +_Prognosis in intestinal injuries._--This was of a most discouraging +character compared with the prognosis in abdominal injuries as a whole. +The cases were of two classes, however: those that died within +twenty-four hours, and those that died at the end of from three days to +a week. + +Cases falling into the first category are obviously of little importance +from the point of view of surgical treatment. Many of them died from the +widespread nature of the injury, and the shock produced by it; others +from hæmorrhage from the large abdominal vessels. It is unlikely that +any could have been saved, even under the most satisfactory conditions. + +In the following small table, therefore, I have included only the cases +which have been already quoted, which survived long enough to be +amenable to surgical treatment, and which were for some days under my +own observation. Some of them, in fact almost all, I watched until they +were either convalescent, or died, and in six I performed operations. + +I am aware, and have short details of the histories of eight patients +wounded in the same battles who died prior to the termination of the +first thirty-six hours; but these are not included, for the reason +stated above, and also because I am uncertain whether all the injuries +were produced by bullets of small calibre. + +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ + | | Localised | | | +Viscous wounded | Number of | Secondary | Recovered | Died | + | cases | suppuration | | | + | | occurred | | | +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ +Stomach certain | 2 | -- | 1 | 1 | +Stomach possible | 1 | -- | 1 | -- | +Small intestine certain | 5 | 0 | -- | 5 | +Small intestine possible | 10 | 0 | 10 | -- | +Large intestine certain | 8 | 4[21] | 4 | 4 | +Large intestine possible | 4 | -- | 4 | -- | +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ +Bladder certain | 3 | 3 | 1 | 2 | +Bladder possible | 1 | -- | 1 | -- | +Liver | 6 | -- | 6 | -- | +Kidneys | 6 | -- | 4 | 2 | +Spleen | 3 | -- | 2 | 1 | +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ + Total | 49[22] | -- | 34 | 15 | +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ + +Included in the above table are thirty instances of intestinal injury, +and these are divided up according to the segment of the intestinal +canal implicated, and also as to whether the perforation was certain, or +only assumed from the position of the external apertures and the +presence of abdominal symptoms of a noticeable grade. + +From this analysis it appears clear-- + +1. That wounds of the stomach have a comparatively good prognosis, and +that they may recover spontaneously. It is true that only two examples +are included in my table; but I was at various times shown patients with +similar injuries and histories, and a number of cases which have been +published appear to substantiate the opinion. From our experience of the +occasional spontaneous recovery of gastric perforations from disease, I +think we might be prepared to expect that the stomach would offer a +comparatively favourable seat for these wounds. It may be pointed out, +however, that hæmatemesis, the main feature in the symptoms pointing to +wound, is by no means direct proof of more than contusion. + +2. That perforating wounds of the small intestine are very fatal +injuries; every patient in whom the condition was _certainly_ diagnosed +died. + +3. That in the cases in which a perforation was inferred from the +position of the external apertures and the symptoms, not one patient +suffered from the secondary complications--_e.g._ local peritonitis and +suppuration, which were common in the case of the large intestine, and +which we are accustomed to see after perforation from disease. This +renders the occurrence of actual perforation in the majority of the +cases a matter of very grave doubt. + +If spontaneous recovery does take place after this injury, it is only in +cases in which the wounds are single, and slight in character. + +4. That in eight cases in which perforation of the large intestine was +certain, four recoveries took place; but in each instance suppuration +occurred. I am, however, quite prepared to believe that perforation may +have occurred in some or all of the other four cases included as +'possible,' provided the wounds were intra-peritoneal. + +Wounds of the cæcum and ascending colon are those which have the best +prognosis, and after these of the rectum. The comparatively good +prognosis in these parts is what would be expected, on account of their +greater fixity, and lesser tendency to be covered by the small +intestine. + +An extra-peritoneal wound of any of these portions of the bowel is more +dangerous than an intra-peritoneal, and more likely to give rise to +septicæmia. + +Of the cases included in my table eighteen of the possible intestinal +injuries were observed among the wounded of the four battles of the +Kimberley relief force. These cases I saw early and followed to their +termination, and I believe the list contains the great majority of all +the patients who received intestinal wounds in those battles. On inquiry +I could not learn of others from the officers of the Field hospitals; +but no doubt some patients died before their reception into hospital, +and some may have been overlooked; again, I know of two cases in which +death took place within the first week, but which went direct to the +Base and did not come under my observation. These exceptions being made, +we have a fairly complete series, from which some deductions may be +drawn. The cases included are marked with an asterisk. + +Of the eighteen cases, eight or 44.4 per cent. died. These were made up +as follows:--Stomach, one case; this patient died at the end of fourteen +days, as a result of secondary hæmorrhage and septicæmia. It was +complicated by a severe wound of the liver and also one of the lung. + +Small intestine, four certain cases; all died, two after operation in +the stage of septicæmia, and one after operation from recurrent +hæmorrhage, possibly from the mesentery. Of the other six cases one can +only say that the position of the wounds was such as to render wound of +the intestine possible, and that all suffered with abdominal symptoms of +some severity. + +Large intestine. Of six cases in which wound was certain, three died, +one after operation. One recovered after operation, two recovered with +local peritoneal suppuration. In one case the injury could only be +returned as possible. + +In connection with this subject I have received permission from Mr. +Watson Cheyne to quote the statistics published by him[23] concerning +the abdominal wounds observed after the fighting at Karree Siding, on +March 29, which are as follows:-- + + 'The number of the wounded was 154, and in fifteen it was + considered that the abdominal cavity had been penetrated. Of + these patients, five had already died within twenty-four to + twenty-eight hours after the injury, and I saw ten who were + still alive. Of these nine were left alone, and four died + within the next twenty-four or thirty-six hours; five were + still alive when I left Karee on Sunday afternoon, April 1. On + one I operated, but he died on April 2. + + The Karee statistics are really the only complete ones which I + have as yet been able to obtain. The following are the notes of + the cases above alluded to. + + Besides the five cases of abdominal wounds which had already + died, and of which I could get no complete details, the + following ten are cases which I saw from twenty-four to thirty + hours after they were shot:-- + + +CASES FROM THE ACTION AT KAREE + + CASE I.--The point of entrance was 2 inches to the right of the + umbilicus, and the bullet was found lying under the skin far + back in the left loin. The patient was pulseless, and there was + much rigidity of the abdomen, tenderness, and vomiting. He died + a few hours later. + + CASE II.--The bullet, coming from the side, had entered the + abdomen 4 inches below and behind the right nipple. There was + no exit wound. The patient had been vomiting a good deal, but + not any blood; the abdomen was very rigid and tender. He was + obviously very ill, and died the next morning. The bullet had + probably perforated the liver and _stomach_. + + CASE III.--There was a large wound above the right anterior + iliac spine (probably the point of exit), and a small opening + behind and near the spine on the same side. There was great + tenderness and rigidity of the abdomen. He died a few hours + later. + + CASE IV.--In this case there was a transverse wound of the + abdomen, the bullet having entered on the right side in the + middle of the lumbar region and passed out on the left side, + rather higher up and further back. All the symptoms of acute + peritonitis were present. The patient died the next morning. + + CASE V.--The bullet had entered the anterior end of the sixth + intercostal space on the left side, and was found lying under + the skin over the seventh intercostal space on the right side + and about 2 inches further back. He had vomited blood on the + previous day. The bullet may have perforated the _stomach_. The + epigastrium was somewhat tender, but there were no marked + symptoms. On April 1 he was going on well. + + CASE VI.--The place of entrance of the bullet was 1 inch in + front of the right anterior superior spine, and of exit behind + the left sacro-iliac synchondrosis. There was much hæmorrhage + at the time. His condition when I saw him was fair, and there + was no marked abdominal tenderness. On April 1 his morning + temperature was 101°. There were no signs of general + peritonitis, and his condition was good. + + CASE VII.--The bullet had entered from behind, about the tip of + the twelfth rib on the left side, and had left about the middle + of the epigastrium, and rather to the left of the middle line. + + Vomiting was still going on, but not of blood. There was much + tenderness and rigidity of the abdomen, and he was almost + pulseless. On April 1 his general condition was better, but the + abdomen was very rigid and tender. (Subsequently died.) + + CASE VIII.--The point of entrance of the bullet was about 2 + inches from the anterior end of the seventh left intercostal + space, and of exit rather lower down and further back on the + right side. The patient said that he had vomited brown fluid + after the injury. There was much abdominal pain, but his + general condition was fair. On April 1 there was still much + pain, but his general condition was good. + + CASE IX.--The bullet had entered about 1-1/2 inch in front of + the anterior inferior spine on the right side, had gone + directly backwards, and had come out in the buttock. The + patient, however, suffered very little. On March 31 there was + slight tympanites and tenderness in the right iliac fossa. The + bowels acted well, and no blood was passed. On April 1 he was + very well, and it was considered very doubtful if any viscus + was wounded. + + CASE X.--The point of entrance was in the middle of the right + buttock, a little above the level of the trochanter; the exit + was through the anterior abdominal wall in the right semilunar + line at the level of the umbilicus. The patient was decidedly + ill; the abdomen was a good deal distended, and pressure on it + caused an escape of gas through the anterior opening. There was + a good deal of abdominal tenderness and rigidity. I opened the + abdomen outside the right linea semilunaris, and found a + perforation in the anterior wall of the _ascending colon_, + without any adhesions around, which was easily stitched up. The + posterior opening was found about 2 inches lower down, with a + piece of omentum firmly adherent to it and completely closing + it. As the patient was in a bad state, I thought it better, + instead of excising the piece of intestine beyond the holes or + tearing off the omentum, to leave the wounds alone, merely + cleaning out the peritoneal cavity as well as I could and + arranging for free drainage. He rallied from the operation very + well, and for twenty-four hours it looked as if he might get + better; but he gradually got worse and died on April 2.' + +The above statistics are particularly valuable, as they give the +incidence of abdominal injuries compared with those in general in one +definite battle. This amounted to the high number of 15 in 154 or 9.74 +per cent. wounded. I am inclined to think that this is a higher +proportion than the average of the campaign, and that more of the men +must have been exposed in the erect position than was ordinarily the +case during the fighting. + +The statistics also show that 33.33 per cent. of the patients with +abdominal injuries died within from twenty-four to twenty-eight hours, +and that the percentage of deaths had risen to 73.33 per cent. at the +end of the third day. These numbers again seem high, but in this +relation it may be noted that, as a small force only was present, and as +all the patients were together, Mr. Cheyne had unusually good +opportunities for seeing all the cases. + +One other point is doubtful from the report, and that is what percentage +of the wounds were caused by bullets of small calibre. In one case it is +definitely stated that the wound was large, and in the second that gas +escaped from the wound; both of these may have been instances in which a +large bullet, or some expanding form, had been employed, and there is no +doubt that the use of such projectiles was more common at this stage of +the campaign than it was earlier. + +_Treatment of injuries to the intestine._--Some general rules for the +immediate treatment of all cases may be laid down. First, the patients +must be removed with as little disturbance as possible, and absolute +starvation must be insisted upon. If the patients be suffering from +severe shock, hypodermic injections of strychnine should be +administered, or possibly some stimulant by the rectum. + +After a battle, when these cases may be brought in in considerable +number, they should be collected and placed in the same tent. The +objection to congregating a number of severely wounded patients together +must be disregarded in the face of the manifest advantage of being able +to treat all alike in the matter of feeding. After the battles of the +Kimberley relief force, Surgeon-General Wilson, at my request, had all +the abdominal cases placed in a large marquee, where we were able to +carefully watch the whole of the patients from hour to hour, and little +chance existed for any indiscretion on the part of the patients in the +way of eating or drinking. + +If possible, the patients should be kept absolutely quiet until they are +evidently out of danger. A week's stay at Orange River sufficed for this +object in the cases referred to. The avoidance of transport is +manifestly of extreme prognostic importance. + +When feeding is commenced at the end of twenty-four or thirty-six hours, +it must be in the form at first of warm water, then milk administered in +tea-spoonfuls only. + +In doubtful cases the use of morphia must be avoided. + +Operative treatment is required in a certain number of the cases, but in +the majority of instances we are met with the extreme difficulty that in +a very large proportion of the occasions upon which these wounds are +received an exploratory abdominal section is not warranted in +consequence of the conditions under which it has to be performed. + +A word must be added as to these difficulties; they are in part purely +of an administrative nature, partly surgical. After a great battle the +wounded are numerous, and amongst them a very considerable proportion of +the wounds and injuries are of such a nature as to do extremely well if +promptly dealt with, and each of these makes small demands on the time +of the staff. Abdominal operations, on the other hand, are +unsatisfactory from a prognostic point of view, and their performance +requires much time and the assistance of a considerable number of the +men, who are obliged to neglect the treatment of the more promising +cases for those of doubtful issue. This difficulty, although not +surgical in its nature, is nevertheless a practical one of great +importance and appeals strongly to the Principal Medical Officers in +charge of the arrangements. It is only to be avoided by an increase of +the staff, which is not likely to be made except on very special +occasions. + +Other difficulties are purely surgical. First, the difficulty +of diagnosing with certainty a perforating lesion. In the presence of +the fact that many incomplete lesions follow wounds crossing the +intestinal area, and that these give rise to modified symptoms, I +believe this determination to be impossible without the aid of an +exploratory incision. Here we are met with the remaining surgical +difficulties--disadvantages such as the absence of sufficient aid to the +operating surgeon, difficulties connected with the temperature, wind, +and dust, and as to the subsequent treatment of the patient. Again +difficulty in obtaining the most important adjunct, suitable water, or +indeed any water in a sufficient quantity. + +It is of course obvious that conditions may exist in which all these +troubles may be avoided. Again, the practical difficulty adverted to +above does not come in the way when a single man happens to sustain an +abdominal wound on the march. Under such circumstances an exploration +may be not only justifiable, but obligatory, and the general rules of +surgery must be followed rather than such incomplete indications as are +suggested below. + +My own experience led me to the following conclusions: + +1. A wound in the intestinal area should be watched with care. In the +face of the numerous recoveries in such cases, habitual abdominal +exploration is not justified, under the conditions usually prevailing in +the field. + +2. The very large class of patients excluded by this rule from operation +leads us to a smaller and less satisfactory number to be divided into +two categories: + +Patients who die during the first twelve hours. The whole of these are +naturally unfit for operation, and their general condition when seen +often precludes any thought of it. + +Patients with very severe injuries, as evidenced by the escape of fæces, +or with wounds from flank to flank or taking an antero-posterior course +in the small intestinal area. These patients die, and the majority of +them will always die whether operated upon or not. The undertaking of +operations upon them is unpleasant to the surgeon, as being unlikely to +be attended with any great degree of success, whence the impression may +gain ground that patients are killed by the operations. None the less, I +think these operations ought to be undertaken when the attendant +conditions allow, and it is from this class of case that the real +successes will be drawn in the future. The history of such injuries, +after all, corresponds exactly with what we were long familiar with in +traumatic ruptures in civil practice, and now know may be avoided by a +sufficiently early interference. The whole question here is one of time, +and this will always be the trouble in military work. + +3. The expectant attitude which is obligatory under the above rules in +doubtful cases, brings us face to face with a large proportion of +patients in the early or late stage of peritoneal septicæmia. These +cases run on exactly the same lines as those in which the same condition +is secondary to spontaneous perforation of the bowel, in which we +consider it our duty to operate, and in which a definite percentage of +recoveries is obtained. Hence another unpleasant duty is here imposed +upon the surgeon. Two such cases on which I operated are recounted +above, and although I cannot say they give much encouragement, I should +add that in the only one I left untouched, I regretted my want of +courage for the five days during which the patient continued to carry on +a miserable existence. + +4. The treatment of the cases in which an expectant attitude is followed +by the advent of localised suppuration presents no difficulty; simple +incision alone is needed, and healing follows. + +As a rule this is a late condition. In one case of injury to the +ascending colon recounted above, however, considerable local escape of +fæces had occurred, and a successful result was obtained by a local +incision on the third day without suture of the bowel. In this case I +believe the wound in the bowel to have been of the nature of a long +slit, but the surrounding adhesions were so firm as to render any +interference with them a great risk, and a successful result was +obtained at the cost of a somewhat prolonged recovery. I am convinced +that the best course was followed here. (No. 131.) + +When the suppuration was of a less acute character, it was generally +advisable to allow the pus to make its way towards the surface before +interference. + +5. Cases of injury to the colon in which the posterior aspect is +involved should be treated by free opening up of the wound, and either +by suture of the bowel or else its fixation to the surface. I operated +on one such case, and although the patient eventually died on the eighth +day, from septicæmia, he certainly had a chance. Two cases where the +opening looked so free that one almost thought the wound could be +regarded as a lumbar colotomy did badly; in both infection of the +pleura took place, besides extension of suppuration into the +retro-peritoneal areolar tissue. In the future I should always feel +inclined to enlarge such wounds and bring the bowel to the surface. + +As regards actual technique the majority of the wounds are particularly +well suited to suture; three stitches across the opening and one at +either end of the resulting crease sufficed to close the opening +effectively. The openings in the small intestine were not as a rule +difficult to find, on account of the ecchymosis which surrounded them. +From what I have seen stated in the reports given by other surgeons, +there seems to have been more difficulty in discovering wounds in the +large gut. Under ordinary circumstances the only instruments specially +needed are a needle and some silk. At my first two operations, as my +instruments had gone astray, the wounds were readily closed by a needle +and cotton borrowed from the wife of a railway porter. + +If aseptic sponges or pads are not available, boiled squares of ordinary +lint may be employed for the belly, and towels wrung out of 1 to 20 +carbolic acid solution used to surround the field of operation. Whenever +there is any likelihood of the necessity for operations, water boiled +and filtered should be kept ready in special bottles. + +When septic peritonitis was already present, the ordinary procedure of +dry mopping, followed by irrigation, was necessary, before closing the +belly. + +The after-treatment should be on the usual lines as to feeding, &c. + +I am unaware to what degree success followed intestinal operations +generally during the campaign. I saw only one case in which the small +intestine had been treated by excision and the insertion of a Murphy's +button in which a cure followed: this case was in the Scottish Royal Red +Cross hospital under the care of Mr. Luke. I heard of two cases in which +the large intestine was successfully sutured, and of one other in which +recovery followed the removal of a considerable length of the small +bowel for multiple wounds. + +In concluding these most unsatisfactory remarks, I should add that the +impressions are those that were gained as the result of the conditions +by which we were bound in South Africa, and which might recur even in a +more civilised region. Under really satisfactory conditions nothing I +saw in my South African experience would lead me to recommend any +deviation from the ordinary rules of modern surgery, except in so far as +I should be more readily inclined to believe that wounds in certain +positions already indicated might occur without perforation of the bowel +when produced by bullets of small calibre; and further in cases where I +believed the fixed portion of the large bowel was the segment of the +alimentary canal that had been exposed to risk, I should not be inclined +to operate hastily. + +A careful consideration of the whole of the cases that I saw leaves me +with the firm impression that perforating wounds of the small intestine +differ in no way in their results and consequences when produced by +small-calibre bullets, from those of every-day experience, although when +there is reason merely to suspect their presence an exploration is not +indicated under circumstances that may add a fresh danger to the +patient. + +_Wounds of the urinary bladder._--Perforating wounds of the bladder are +the injuries nearest akin to those we have just considered, but a great +gulf separates them, in so far as the escape of a few drops or even a +considerable quantity of normal urine does not necessarily mean +peritoneal infection. The difference in this particular was very +forcibly demonstrated in my experience, since an uncomplicated +perforation of the bladder in the intra-peritoneal portion of the viscus +proved to be an injury that not infrequently recovered spontaneously, I +believe in a considerable proportion of the cases. + +I include only one such case in my list because it was the only example +which happened to be under my personal observation during its whole +course, but from time to time I was shown several others in which the +position of the external apertures and the transient presence of +hæmaturia left little doubt as to the nature of the injury. The case +recounted above, No. 190, is of especial interest, since the patient +recovered from an injury which involved both the bladder and a fixed +portion of the large intestine in contact with its posterior surface. + +In another, No. 194, a transient inflammatory thickening pointed to a +local inflammation of a non-infective character, since no suppuration +ensued, and this may have been a case of extra-peritoneal wound; on the +other hand, the bladder may have entirely escaped injury. In wounds of +the portions of the viscus not clad in peritoneum, as a rule, a very +different prognosis obtains. Two typical cases are related, which I +believe fairly represent the general results which follow when the +bladder is either wounded behind the symphysis or at the base. The first +case, No. 195, exemplifies a very characteristic form of wound when +small-calibred bullets are concerned. The bullet, taking a course more +or less parallel to that of the wall of the viscus, cut a long slit in +its anterior wall. This bullet in its onward passage comminuted the +horizontal ramus of the pubes, and lodged in the thigh. Into the latter +region the greater part of the extravasated urine escaped. I think the +history of this case fully shows that I made a blunder in not performing +a proper exploration, instead of contenting myself with an incision in +the thigh. My only excuse was that the patient at the time I saw him was +in a very collapsed state, and a severe grade of abdominal distension +suggested that septic peritonitis was already in an advanced stage. In +point of fact, the patient at once improved, sufficiently so to be able +to undergo a second exploration at a later date by Mr. Hanwell at the +Base, only dying of septicæmia at the end of twenty-one days. Even a +free supra-pubic vent might, I believe, have given him a chance of life. + +When the perforation was at the base of the bladder, however, the +prognosis was very bad, and, as far as I know, not a single patient +escaped death. The increase of risk in an extra-peritoneal wound of this +viscus is indeed very great, while an intra-peritoneal perforation may +be considered an injury of lesser severity, provided the urine be of +normal character. + + (194_a_) _Possible wound of the bladder._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), immediately above the + symphysis pubis; _exit_, in the buttock, behind the tip of the + left great trochanter. The man was struck while advancing, and + fell, thinking at the time 'that he was struck in the foot.' He + lay twelve hours on the field, and passed water for the first + time when the bearer removed him. During the next two days he + passed urine only twice, and no blood was noticed. The bowels + acted on the evening of the third day. When seen on the fourth + day he complained of aching pain in the lower part of the + belly, and a concentric patch of tender induration extended for + about 1-1/2 inch around the wound. The abdominal wall was + moving well. The tongue was clean and moist. There was no blood + in the urine, and micturition was not frequent. Temperature + 99.4°. Pulse 80, good strength. The patient was then sent to + the Base. At the end of seventeen days there was still a little + tenderness in the left iliac fossa; but the man was otherwise + well, and at the end of a month he was sent home. + + (195) _Extra-peritoneal wound of the bladder._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), at the fore part of the right + buttock. No exit. The patient was seen on the third day. He had + an expression of extreme anxiety, and complained of very great + pain in the abdomen and thigh. The abdomen was greatly + distended and tympanitic, and the left thigh and groin were + very much swollen and oedematous, with some redness of + surface. Temperature 100°, pulse 120. No sickness, tongue + moist, bowels confined. Retention of urine. The condition of + the patient was very grave; but he was anæsthetised, clear + urine was withdrawn from the bladder by catheter, and an + incision was made into the thigh just below the inner third of + Poupart's ligament, where fluctuation was evident. Two pints of + bloody urine were evacuated, and when a finger was introduced + it passed over a fracture of the pubes into the pelvis, but not + into the peritoneal cavity. In view of the patient's condition + it was not thought wise to proceed further, and he somewhat + improved later, and was sent to the Base. Loss of power in the + right lower extremity pointed to injury to the anterior crural + nerve. + + On the patient's arrival at Wynberg there were signs of local + peritonitis in the lower half of the abdomen, and all his urine + was passed from the wound in the left thigh. Some days later + this wound was enlarged to allow of the freer exit of pus, and + a fragment of bone was removed. The wound granulated healthily, + but the man steadily emaciated and lost ground, with signs of + chronic septicæmia, and he died on the twenty-first day. At the + _post-mortem_ examination a transverse wound of the anterior + wall of the bladder behind the pubes, below the peritoneal + reflexion, was found gaping somewhat widely, and 2 inches in + length. There was little sign of previous peritonitis. The + retained bullet was discovered beneath the femoral vessels in + the left thigh. + + (196) _Extra-peritoneal perforation of the bladder._--Wounded + at Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), 3 inches above the left tuber + ischii; _exit_, above the symphysis, immediately over the right + margin of the penis. The patient was retiring to fetch + ammunition when shot. Urine was noted to escape from both + apertures the day after, and this continued until he was sent + down to the Base on the fourteenth day. The patient was then + considerably emaciated, complained of great pain, especially + down the left thigh (sciatic nerve), the temperature averaged + 100°, the pulse 80, tongue clean and moist, bowels acted + regularly, no sign of injury to the rectum. He was taking food + fairly, but was very sleepless. Urine was passed per urethram, + and also escaped by both wounds. The abdomen was flaccid and + sunken, respiratory movements being confined to the upper half. + + As there was evidence of considerable infiltration in the + buttock, the original entry wound was enlarged, and a catheter + was tied into the bladder. Little change occurred in the + symptoms and the local condition, urine and pus continued to + escape freely from the posterior wound, and the patient + gradually sank, dying on the thirty-eighth day. At the + _post-mortem_ examination the peritoneum was found intact and + unaltered, but there was extensive pelvic cellulitis around the + bladder, a large slough and some pus lying in the cavum Retzii. + An aperture of entry still open existed in the centre of the + anterior wall of the bladder, and a patent exit opening at the + base of the trigone. The bullet had passed out of the pelvis by + the great sciatic notch. + +The above remarks and cases sufficiently set forth the prognosis in +these injuries. For the intra-peritoneal lesions an expectant plan of +treatment may be followed by uncomplicated recovery. Mention has already +been made of a case in which a Mauser bullet was retained in the bladder +and was subsequently passed per urethram. In such a case a cystotomy +would be indicated were the bullet discovered in the viscus. + +As to extra-peritoneal injuries it is difficult to lay down guiding +lines. I believe the ideal treatment would be a supra-pubic cystotomy +and drainage of the bladder by a Sprengel's pump apparatus, such as we +employ at home. Under these circumstances, with the possibility of +keeping the bladder actually empty, I believe good results might be +obtained. Certainly drainage of the bladder by a catheter tied in proved +worse than useless, and I very much doubt whether a simple supra-pubic +opening would give any better results under the circumstances under +which a patient has to be treated in a Field hospital. + +Cases might, however, occur in which oblique passage of the bullet cuts +a groove and makes a large opening in the peritoneum-clad portion of the +viscus. Under satisfactory conditions a laparotomy would be here +indicated. I take it that this condition would most probably be +accompanied by retention of bloody urine, which fact would arouse +suspicion. + + +INJURIES TO THE SOLID ABDOMINAL VISCERA + +_Wounds of the kidney._--Tracks implicating the kidneys were of +comparatively common occurrence. As uncomplicated injuries they healed +rapidly, and without producing any serious symptoms beyond transient +hæmaturia. + +The nature of the lesion appeared to vary with the direction of the +wound. In many cases a simple puncture no doubt alone existed, an injury +no more to be feared than the exploratory punctures often made for +surgical purposes. In other cases the wounds may have been of the nature +of notches and grooves. + +Two of the cases recounted below were of a more severe variety; in one +(No. 201) both kidneys were implicated by symmetrical wounds of the +loin, and in the case of the right organ a transverse rupture was +produced, which was followed by the development of a hydro-nephrosis, +and later by suppuration. This injury was probably the result of a wound +from a short range, as the patient was one of those wounded in the early +part of the day at the battle of Magersfontein. It was complicated by a +wound of the spleen and an injury to the spinal cord producing +incomplete paraplegia accompanied by retention of urine. The last +complication was responsible for the death of the patient, since +ascending infection from the bladder led to the development of +pyo-nephrosis and death from secondary peritonitis. + +Case 202 is an instance of a transverse wound of the upper part of the +abdominal cavity; it is impossible to say what further complications +were present. The early development of a tympanitic abscess suggested an +injury to the colon, but this was not by any means certain. The +condition of the kidney was very likely similar to that in the last +case, but the ultimate recovery of the patient left this a matter of +doubt. The case was also one dependent on a short-range wound, since the +patient, one of the Scandinavian contingent, was wounded at +Magersfontein during close fighting. + +The common history of the symptoms after a wound of the kidney was +moderate hæmorrhage from the organ, persisting for two to four days. In +one of the cases recounted below the hæmaturia was accompanied by the +passage of ureteral clots, but this was not a common occurrence. + +For the sake of comparison I have included one case of wound of the +kidney from a large bullet, in which death was due to internal +hæmorrhage. In this instance the injury was a complex one, the lung +certainly, and the back of the liver probably, being concurrently +injured. None the less if the same track had been produced by a bullet +of small calibre I believe the injury would not have proved a fatal one. +I never saw such free renal hæmorrhage in any of the Mauser or +Lee-Metford wounds. + + (197) _Wound of right kidney._--Wounded at Modder River while + lying in the prone position; retired 100 yards at the double + with his company, and walked a further 1-1/2 mile. There was + very slight bleeding. _Entry_ (Mauser), in the tenth right + intercostal space in the mid-axillary line; _exit_, in eleventh + interspace, 2 inches from the spinous processes. Cylindrical + blood-clots, 3 inches in length, were passed on the first two + occasions of micturition after the accident, and the urine + contained blood. For four days he could only lie on the wounded + side. When seen on the third day the urine was normal, and + there were no signs of injury to either thoracic or abdominal + viscera. He returned to England well at the end of a month. + + (198) _Wound of right kidney._--Wounded at Modder River while + kneeling to dress another man's wound. _Entry_ (Mauser), in the + seventh right intercostal space in the nipple line; _exit_, 1 + inch to the right of the twelfth dorsal spine. The man was + carried off the field, and during the first day vomited + frequently. For two days there was blood in his urine, and he + passed water four to five times daily. He returned to duty at + the end of three weeks. + + (199) _Wound of the left kidney._--Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_ (Mauser), 2 inches to the left and 1 inch below the + left nipple. No exit. Lying in prone position when struck. + Bloody urine was passed at normal intervals for four days, when + the hæmaturia ceased. No thoracic signs, and no other sign of + abdominal injury. There was tenderness in the left loin below + the twelfth rib for some days, possibly over the position of + the bullet, but the latter was neither localised nor removed. + + (200) _Wound of the right kidney._--Wounded at Magersfontein + while retiring on his feet. _Entry_ (Mauser), immediately to + the right of the second lumbar spinous process; bullet retained + and lay beneath margin of ninth right costal cartilage. The man + passed urine containing blood twelve times during the first + day, and hæmaturia continued until the evening of the third + day. On the third day the belly was tumid and did not move + well; there was no dulness in the right flank. Pulse 120, fair + strength. Temperature 99°. Respirations 20. Tongue moist, + bowels confined for four days. The fifth day the pulse fell to + 76, and the bowels were moved by an enema. Great tenderness + over bullet. The tenderness persisted over the bullet and also + in the right flank until the tenth day, when the bullet was + removed. At the end of a month the patient returned to England + well but during the third week there was occasionally blood in + the urine. + + (201) _Wound of both kidneys (rupture of right) and + spleen._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), (_a_) 1 + inch to right of second lumbar spinous process; (_b_) above + angle of left ninth rib: _exits_, (_a_) 1 inch internal to + right anterior superior iliac spine; (_b_) in seventh + intercostal space in mid-axillary line. The wound on the right + side gave rise to a lesion of the lumbar bulb (see p. 315), and + the patient suffered throughout with retention. There was + complete paralysis of the right lower extremity, both motor and + sensory. For ten days there was hæmaturia, and very severe + cystitis developed, while the patient suffered with severe + abdominal pain. The cystitis persisted, also retention, which + gradually gave way to dribbling, while irregular rise of + temperature and tenderness in the loins pointed to ascending + inflammation in the ureters. The patient gradually lost + ground, and a month later suddenly developed signs of + peritonitis, severe vomiting, distension, and dulness in the + right flank; and in two days he died. + + At the _post-mortem_ examination the following condition was + found:--On the right side general pleural adhesions, recent + lymph over ascending colon and cæcum, [Symbol: ounce]vj of + bloody fluid in a localised cavity between colon, kidney, + stomach, and liver. Lower quarter of right kidney in half its + width separated from main part of organ, yellow in colour, and + enveloped in disintegrating clot. Blood-staining of psoas + sheath; no injury to vertebral column or to bowel detected. + + On the left side recent pleural adhesions and consolidation of + base of lung, rent of diaphragm; spleen soft and disorganised + and presenting a yellow cicatrix at its upper end, and at + antero-external aspect of left kidney was a soft yellow + puckered spot about the size of a florin, dipping 3/4 of an + inch into the organ, which was otherwise healthy, beyond + congestion. The capsules of both kidneys were adherent, but + there was no sign of suppuration. + + (202) _Wound of right kidney. Traumatic + hydronephrosis._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ + (Lee-Metford), in the eleventh intercostal space in the + posterior axillary line; _exit_, in the tenth right interspace, + in mid axillary line. The patient was in the prone position + when struck, and lay on the field from 5 A.M. until 6 P.M. + There was no sickness, and the bowels did not act. When seen on + the fourth day he was cheerful, but in some pain. The abdominal + wall moved well, but was rigid; there was some general + distension, and very marked local distension of the gastric + area extending across to the right, so that a depressed band + extended between the upper and lower parts of the belly. There + was marked local dulness in the right flank, which did not + shift on movement; the abdomen was elsewhere tympanitic. Tongue + furred, bowels confined; there has been no sickness, and no + hæmatemesis. Urine normal, and in good quantity. Temperature + 100°. Pulse 84, good strength. There was impairment of + sensation in the area of distribution of the external cutaneous + and crural branch of the genito-crural nerves. + + On the sixth day the bowels acted, after the administration of + [Symbol: ounce]j of sulphate of magnesia, and the distension was + much lessened, although the belly retained its unusual + appearance. The dulness in the flank was unaltered. Temperature + 100.8°, pulse 92. + + A week later the man was much improved, suffering no pain. + Temperature ranged from 99 to 100°, and the pulse about 80. The + abdomen was normal in appearance, except for general prominence + of the right thorax in the hepatic area. + + During the third week a large tympanitic abscess developed at + the aperture of exit, and this was opened (Mr. S. W. F. + Richardson) through the chest, and a large collection of + foul-smelling pus, but no fæcal matter, evacuated. The patient + again improved, but a fortnight later a swelling and apparent + signs of local peritonitis developed in the right inguinal and + lower umbilical and lumbar regions. An incision made over this, + however, disclosed a normal peritoneal cavity and was closed. + + At the end of ten weeks the patient was sent to the Base + hospital; a large firm swelling was then evident, extending + from the liver to the inguinal region, and nearly to the median + line. This gradually increased until it filled half the belly; + it was at first thought to be a retro-peritoneal hæmatoma + (similar to that described in case 194), but it became quite + soft and fluctuating, and was then tapped, and [Symbol: + ounce]50 of blood-stained fluid, which proved to be urine, were + removed. The urine rapidly reaccumulated, and the cavity was + then laid freely open. Urine continued to discharge in large + quantity for two months, the man meanwhile remaining well, and + passing a somewhat variable daily quantity of urine ([Symbol: + ounce]xxiv-[Symbol: ounce]lx). + + At the end of six months the wound had healed, and the man was + serving as an orderly in the hospital. + + (203) _Wound of right kidney and lung._--Wounded near + Paardekraal, while crawling on hands and knees. _Entry_ + (Martini-Henry, or small bullet making lateral impact), just + above the right nipple, opening ragged and large, bullet + retained. There was very severe shock, accompanied by vomiting, + but no hæmatemesis. Later there was some hæmoptysis. Pulse 120, + respirations 48. + + Twenty-four hours later the vomiting had ceased; the patient + had passed a restless night, in spite of an injection of + morphia. He lay on his right side, pale and collapsed, but + answered questions and was quite collected. Pulse + imperceptible, respirations 56; the abdomen moved freely. The + urine had been passed twice, and was chiefly blood. The patient + died shortly afterwards, apparently mainly from internal + hæmorrhage, although restlessness was not a prominent feature. + As the Column was on the march no autopsy was possible. + +The treatment of uncomplicated wounds of the kidney consisted in the +ensurance of rest, either alone, or with the administration of opium if +the hæmaturia was severe. The after-treatment in the event of the +development of hydronephrosis is on ordinary lines. Tapping, or incision +followed by extirpation of the injured viscus, if the less severe +procedures failed. I never saw a case where renal hæmorrhage suggested +the removal of the kidney as a primary step, and much doubt whether such +a case is likely to be met with, as the result of a wound from a bullet +of small calibre. + +_Wounds of the liver._--Wounds of the liver were, I believe, responsible +for more cases of death from primary hæmorrhage than those of the +kidney. I heard of a few cases in which this occurred, although I never +saw one. Case 204 is of considerable interest as illustrating the result +of an injury to one of the large bile ducts. Putting the deaths from +primary hæmorrhage on one side, the prognosis in hepatic wounds was as +good as in those of the kidneys. A few fairly uncomplicated cases are +quoted below, but wounds of the liver occurred in connection with a +large number of other injuries both of the chest and abdomen, and except +in the case of wound of the stomach, recorded on page 425, No. 164, and +in case 188, I never saw any troublesome consequences ensue. + +_Nature of the lesions._--I never saw any case of so-called explosive +lesion of the liver, such as have been described from experimental +results; this may have been due to the fact that such patients rapidly +expired, but such were never admitted into the hospitals. + +The most favourable cases were those in which a simple perforation was +effected; such were usually attended by a practical absence of symptoms, +unless a large bile duct had been implicated, when a temporary biliary +fistula resulted. + +Biliary fistulæ were, however, much more common when the bullet scored +the surface of the organ. One such case is recounted under the heading +of injuries to the stomach, No. 164. Here a deep gaping cleft with +coarsely granular margins extended the whole antero-posterior length of +the under surface of the left lobe, and the escape of bile was free. +This was the nearest approach to one of the so-called explosive injuries +I met with. + +Case 207 is an example of a superficial injury from a bullet possibly of +small calibre in which a superficial groove was followed by temporary +escape of bile, and it is of interest to note a very similar condition +in a shell injury (No. 210) recorded on p. 477. + +Although both these cases recovered, I think notching and superficial +grooving must be considered much more serious injuries than pure +perforation. (See case 188, p. 442.) + +The symptoms observed in these injuries have been already indicated in +the above description of the nature of the lesions. They consisted in +the pure perforations of practically nothing, in the grooves or the +perforations implicating a large duct in the escape of bile. In two of +the cases in which a biliary fistula was present transient jaundice was +noticed. + +In many cases the accompanying wound of the diaphragm gave rise to much +discomfort; again, in the transverse wounds the action of the heart was +often affected by the local cardiac shock accompanying the injury. In +one case in which the colon was at the same time wounded (No. 188), an +abscess formed at the site of the hepatic wound, as might have been +expected. + +As uncomplicated injuries, these wounds were little to be feared. Except +as a source of hæmorrhage in rapidly dying patients, I never heard of a +fatality. As a complication of other injuries, however, the wound of the +liver, as has been shown, was sometimes of importance. It was remarkable +in case 204 how little trouble the biliary fistula gave rise to, +although the bile was discharged across the pleural cavity. + +The treatment consisted in rest, and morphia in the cases of suspected +progressive hæmorrhage, or in the presence of great pain. In cases where +bile was escaping, it was important to ensure a free vent for the +secretion. + + (204) _Wound of liver. Biliary fistula._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), below the seventh rib, in + the left nipple line; _exit_, through the eighth rib, in the + mid axillary line on the right side. The patient lay for + seventeen hours on the field, during which time the bowels + acted once, but there was no sickness. The bowels then remained + confined. When seen on the third day the abdomen was normal and + the chest resonant throughout on both sides; bile to the amount + of some ounces escaped from the wound on the right side. + Suffering no pain; temperature 99°, pulse 100. The bowels acted + freely the following day. + + During the next fortnight there was little change; [Symbol: + ounce]ii-iij of bile escaped daily, and there was occasional + diarrhoea. At the end of that time, however, the temperature + rose; there was local redness and evidence of retention of pus. + The wound was therefore enlarged, some fragments of rib removed, + and a drainage tube inserted. After this the temperature fell, + and for the next two months the patient suffered little except + from the discharge from the sinus; this persisted for three + months, becoming less in amount and less bile-stained, the + fistula eventually closing in the fourteenth week, when the + patient was sent home on parole. + + (205) _Wound of liver_.--_Entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch below and to + the left of the ensiform cartilage; _exit_, in the sixth right + intercostal space, just behind the posterior axillary line. The + trooper was sitting bolt upright on his horse at the time; both + were shot and fell together. 'Stitch' on coughing or laughing + was the only sign noted after the accident; this rapidly + subsided. + + (206) _Wound of the liver._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ + (Mauser), through the seventh left costal cartilage, 1 inch + from the base of the ensiform cartilage; _exit_, below the + twelfth rib 2 inches to the right of the lumbar spines. The + patient lay on the field some hours and was brought in at night + very cold, and suffering with much shock. No signs of abdominal + injury developed, but the pulse remained as slow as 66 for some + days, and there was some pain and stiffness about back and + sides, or on taking a deep breath. These signs persisted some + days, but no others developed, and in six weeks the patient + returned to duty. + + Some three months later this patient suffered from a short + severe attack suggesting local peritonitis, but he again + returned to duty. + + (207) _Wound of the liver._--Wounded at Tweefontein. _Entry_, + in eighth intercostal space in right mid axillary line; _exit_, + 1-1/2 inch below the point of the ensiform cartilage, 1/2 an + inch to the right of the mid line. The wounds were large, and + although the impact had been oblique, they were possibly + produced by a Martini-Henry or Guedes bullet. + + On the second day bile began to escape from the exit aperture, + and this together with a little pus continued to be discharged + for a week, when the wound rapidly healed up. The only symptom + which occasioned any trouble was a stitch on inspiration, + probably attributable to the wound of the diaphragm. There was + no fracture of the rib. + + (208) _Wound of the liver._--Wounded outside Heilbron at a + range of fifty yards. _Entry_ (Mauser), in the tenth right + interspace 2 inches to the right of the dorsal spines; _exit_, + through the gladiolus, immediately to the right of the median + line, and just above the junction with the ensiform cartilage. + There was considerable shock on reception of the injury, and a + great feeling of dizziness. Continuous vomiting set in and + persisted for the first two days, then became occasional, and + ceased only at the end of a week. There was also occasional + hiccough, and stitch on drawing a long breath. The respiration + was shallow and rapid. The bowels acted twice shortly after the + injury. + + The pulse was rapid and small, and a week after the injury was + still above 100. The abdomen was then normal and moving + symmetrically, and the respiration fairly easy. There were no + signs of chest trouble, but some mucous expectoration. A slight + icteric tinge existed. The patient made a good recovery. + +_Wounds of the spleen._--Uncomplicated wounds of the spleen were +necessarily rare, and beyond this the strict localisation of a track to +the spleen is not a matter of great ease. None the less the spleen must +have been implicated in a considerable number of the wounds crossing the +chest and abdomen. I know of only one case in which a wound which +crossed the splenic area caused death from hæmorrhage, and of this I can +give no details, as I never saw the patient. In this instance, however, +a wound of the spleen was diagnosed after death from the position of the +wounds. The patient continued to perform his duty as an officer in the +fighting line for at least an hour after being struck, and then died +rapidly apparently from an internal hæmorrhage. + +In case No. 201, included amongst the renal injuries, a wound of the +spleen existed, but had given rise to no symptoms, and at the time of +death, some three weeks later, was cicatrised. The only other assertion +of importance that I can make is, that, as far as I could judge, wounds +of the spleen from bullets of small calibre were not, as a rule, +accompanied by hæmorrhage, since I never saw a case in which dulness in +the left flank suggested the presence of extravasated blood, and in no +case that I saw was there any history of general symptoms pointing to +the loss of blood. + +This is only to be explained by our similar experience with regard to +wounds of the liver unaccompanied by puncture of main vessels, and +perhaps hæmorrhage is still less to be expected in the case of the +spleen, in consequence of the contractile muscular tunic with which the +organ is provided. + +I can quote no case of certain injury to the spleen, except that already +referred to discovered at a _post-mortem_ examination, but many wounds +were observed in positions of which the following may be taken as a +type. _Entry_, through the seventh left costal cartilage, 3/4 of an inch +from the sternal margin; _exit_, 2-1/2 inches from the left lumbar +spines at the level of the last rib. + +As an instance of the doctrine of chances I might quote the position of +the wound in the patient who lay in the next bed. Both patients were +wounded while fighting at Almonds Nek. _Entry_, through right seventh +costal cartilage, 3/4 of an inch from the sternal margin; _exit_, 1-1/2 +inch from the lumbar spines, at the level of the last right rib. + +In neither of these cases did anything except the position of the +external apertures point to the infliction of visceral injury. + +_General remarks as to the prognosis in abdominal injuries._ The +prognosis in each form of individual visceral injury has been already +considered, but a few points affecting these injuries as a class should +perhaps be further considered. + +First, as to the influence of range on the severity of the injuries +inflicted; I am not able to confirm the greater danger of short range, +except in so far as there is no doubt that more shock attends such +injuries, and possibly some of the most severely wounded were killed +outright as a direct consequence of the greater striking force of the +bullet. + +Among the cases in which but slight effects were noted, however, many +were said to have been hit within a range of 200 yards, as for instance +the two injuries quoted under the heading of wounds of the spleen. + +I personally saw no cases in which explosive injuries of the solid +viscera were to be ascribed to this cause. + +Secondly, as to the immediate prognosis in all abdominal injuries, the +ensurance of rest and limitation as far as possible of transport were of +the highest importance, either in the case of wound of the alimentary +canal, or in wounds of the solid viscera in which hæmorrhage was a +possible result. + +Thirdly, as to the later prognosis in these injuries; very few men are +fit to resume active service without a prolonged period of rest. In +spite of the insignificance of the primary symptoms, or of the +favourable course taken by the injuries, active exertion was almost +always followed for some months by the appearance of vague pains and +occasionally by indications of recurrent peritoneal symptoms, pointing +to the disturbance of quiescent hæmorrhages, or of adhesions. Wounds of +the kidney are apparently those least liable to be followed by trouble. + +Lastly, the prognosis was influenced in the case of many of the viscera +by coexisting injury to other organs or parts. + +For instance, at least thirty per cent. of the abdominal wounds were +complicated by wound of the thorax; and in the lower segment of the +abdomen injury to the extra-peritoneal portions of the pelvic organs was +common. + +Both the immediate and ultimate prognosis were influenced greatly by +this fact. + +As to the individual injuries: + +1. Wounds in the intestinal area, except in certain directions, often +traverse the abdomen without inflicting a perforating injury on the +bowel. + +2. If the alimentary canal is perforated, injuries in certain segments, +even if perforating, may be followed by spontaneous recovery. I should +say the prognosis from this point of view is best in the ascending +colon, then in the rectum; after these most favourable segments, I +should place the others in the following order: stomach, sigmoid +flexure, descending colon. As to perforating wounds of the transverse +colon and small intestine, I believe spontaneous recovery to be very +rare. + +3. Wounds of the solid viscera generally, usually heal spontaneously, +and give no trouble unless one of the great vessels has been injured. I +include in this category all organs except the pancreas, of wounds of +which I had no experience. + +4. Wounds of the bladder, if of the nature of pure perforations in the +intra-peritoneal segment, often heal spontaneously. + +5. As a rule, injuries to the organs in their intra-peritoneal course +have a far better prognosis than those which implicate the organs in +their uncovered portions. + +6. The small calibre of the bullet is alone responsible for the +favourable results observed. + +7. The danger or otherwise of an intestinal injury depends mainly on +mechanical conditions; for instance, the fixity of the ascending colon, +and its comparative freedom from a covering of small intestine capable +by movement of diffusing any infective material, account chiefly for +such favourable results as are seen when that segment of the bowel is +implicated. + + +WOUNDS OF THE EXTERNAL GENITAL ORGANS + +Wounds of the _scrotum_ were not uncommon, especially in connection with +perforations of the upper part of the thigh. They offered no special +feature, beyond the common tendency of every-day experience to the +development of extensive ecchymosis. + +Wounds of the _testicles_ I saw on several occasions. I remember only +one out of some half-dozen in which castration became necessary. I was +told of one case, for the accuracy of which I cannot vouch, in which +destruction of one testicle was followed by an attack of melancholia, +culminating in the suicide of the patient. + +Wounds of the _penis_ also occurred, but as a rule were unimportant. I +append a case, however; in which the penile urethra was wounded, which +is of some interest. + + (209) Wounded at Heilbron. Range 1,500 yards. _Entry_, 2-1/2 + inches below the right anterior superior iliac spine; the + bullet traversed the groin superficially in the line of + Poupart's ligament, emerged, and crossed both penis and + scrotum. The trooper was in the saddle when struck, and the + penis probably somewhat coiled up. Three wounds were found, one + at the junction of the penis and scrotum which opened the + urethra, a second one about 3/4 of an inch along the under + surface of the penis, and a third on the left side of the base + of the prepuce. A considerable amount of oedema and + ecchymosis of the scrotum developed, but no extravasation of + urine. A catheter was kept in the urethra for some days, and + the opening eventually closed by granulation. + +I only once saw a patient with an injury to the deep urethra; in this +case concurrent injury to other pelvic organs led to death on the third +day. As a good many of the patients with pelvic wounds died rapidly, the +accident may have been more common than my experience would suggest. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[19] _British Med. Journal_, May 12, 1900, i. 1195. + +[20] 'On Traumatic Rupture of the Colon.' _Annals of Surgery_, vol. xxx. +1899, p. 137. + +[21] Two of these died. + +[22] The cases of injury to the solid viscera are those only which +happen to be quoted in the text, and give no idea of relative mortality. + +[23] _British Medical Journal_, May 12, 1900, vol. i. p. 1194. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +ON SHELL WOUNDS + + +The title of this work hardly allows of its conclusion without a brief +mention of the shell wounds observed during the campaign. + +As already pointed out, these formed but a very small proportion of the +injuries treated in the hospitals, and beyond this they possessed +comparatively small surgical interest, since, as a rule, the features +presented were those of mere lacerated wounds, while the more severe of +the cases which survived only offered scope for operations of the +mutilating class so uncongenial to modern surgical instincts. + +The fatal wounds consisted in extensive lacerations resulting in the +destruction of the head or limbs, the laying open of the abdominal or +thoracic cavities, or the production of visceral injuries beyond the +possibility of repair. Of such injuries no further mention will be made. + +A very great variety of shells was employed during the campaign, +especially on the part of the Boers, and the frontispiece gives some +idea of these. The photograph was taken by Mr. Kisch after the relief of +Ladysmith. For the want of more extended knowledge I shall confine +myself to the description of a few injuries caused by two classes of +large shell, those of the Vickers-Maxim or 'Pom-pom,' and two varieties +of shrapnel. + +The large shells employed may be divided into classes according to the +metal used in their construction, and the nature of the explosive with +which they were filled. These details are of some surgical import, +because they affect the nature of the fragments into which the shells +are broken up. + +Fragments of shells constructed with cast iron and burst with powder, +and also of forged steel exploded with lyddite, are depicted in fig. 90. + +[Illustration: FIG. 90.--A, B, D. Fragments of 200 lb. forged Steel +Howitzer Shell exploded by lyddite. C. Fragment of Cast-iron Shell +exploded by powder. B exhibits transverse markings which might be +mistaken for the lines seen in the Boer segment shells, but which really +correspond to the area of fixation of the copper driving band] + +Examination of fragment C of a cast-iron shell exploded by powder shows +the characteristic granular fracture, and edges, although sharp, yet of +a comparatively rounded nature. The fragment is also heavier for its +surface measurement, as the metal is thicker than that seen in the +remaining fragments, although the cast-iron shell was of a much smaller +calibre than the steel one. The lesser degree of penetrative power, and +increased capacity to contuse, possessed by such fragments are obvious. + +A B and D are fragments of a large forged steel howitzer shell exploded +by lyddite, such as were cast by our guns. The photograph well shows the +more tenacious structure of the metal in the incomplete longitudinal +fissuring exhibited, while the margins are of a sharp knifelike +character, well calculated to penetrate or, in the case of superficial +injuries, to produce wounds of a more sharply incised character than the +cast-iron shell. Fragments A and B also show an appearance suggestive of +partial fusion, characteristic of high explosive action, in the turning +of the prominent margins. + +The larger fragments of such shells were responsible for the most +serious mutilating injuries, while small fragments sometimes caused +comparatively simple perforating wounds. I remember a fragment of the +fused character not larger than a small nut which had perforated the +front of the thigh of a Boer, and lodged near the inner surface of the +femur. Removal of the fragment was followed by a free gush of +hæmorrhage. When the wound was opened up an opening was found in the +external circumflex artery, hæmorrhage from which had been controlled by +the impaction of the piece of shell. As an example of the cutting power +of sharp fragments of shell I might instance the case of another Boer in +whom light passing contact had been made by the missile. A gaping +incised wound extended from above the angle of the scapula down to the +outer surface of the buttock. The wound involved the latissimus dorsi, +and the external and internal oblique muscles of the abdomen. The +separate muscular layers were sharply defined in the lateral parts of +the floor of the wound, and remained so for some time during the gradual +contraction of the large granulating surface produced. The degree of +contusion was in fact slight, while the incised character was strongly +marked. + +In some cases the fragments merely struck the soldiers on the flat +without producing any wound. In one such case a blow upon the +epigastrium was, according to the patient, followed by the vomiting of a +considerable amount of blood. A fluid diet was ordered, and no further +ill effects were noted. The following case illustrates an oblique blow +of a perforating character, which was nevertheless recovered from. + +[Illustration: FIG. 91.--Various portions of Brass Percussion and Time +Fuses] + + (210) _Shell-wound of abdomen. Injury to liver._--Wounded at + Paardeberg by a fragment of shell. Aperture of entry, a ragged + opening in the median line. The fragment of shell was retained + over the ninth costal cartilage in the nipple line. The wound + bled freely, but the man was taken into camp, and then four + miles on to the hospital, where he was anæsthetised and the + fragment extracted. The wound of entry was at the same time + enlarged, cleansed, and partly sutured. The patient vomited + once after the anæsthetic, and the bowels remained confined for + three or four days after the injury. The extraction wound + healed readily, but a considerable amount of slimy, + bile-stained discharge was still escaping from the ragged + entrance wound on the man's arrival at the Base on the + fourteenth day. The abdomen was then normal in appearance, and + as to physical signs, except for a tympanitic note over the + hepatic area to the right of the wound. The temperature was + normal, the pulse 90, the tongue clean, and the bowels were + acting. At the end of four weeks pleurisy, with effusion, + developed on the right side; the chest was aspirated and + [Symbol: ounce]xx of clear serum drawn off. The man then + rapidly improved; the bile-stained discharge ceased at the end + of five weeks, and a small granulating wound eventually closed + at the end of two months, when the man returned to England. + +Fig. 91 is inserted to illustrate the multifarious nature of the +fragments into which the component parts of shells may break up. The +pieces are for the most part of brass, and formed parts of either time +or percussion fuses. + +Fig. 92 represents the one-pound Vickers-Maxim shell in its actual size. +The wounds produced by this shell are of some interest, since the +Vickers-Maxim may be said to have been on trial during this campaign. +The general opinion seems to have been to the effect that the moral +influence produced by the continuous rapid firing of the gun and the +attendant unpleasant noise were its chief virtues. A considerable number +of wounds must, however, have been produced by it, which, if not of +great magnitude and severity, were, at any rate, calculated to put the +recipients out of action, and these wounds, moreover, were slower in +healing than many of the rifle-bullet injuries. + +The shell is so small that it was said to occasionally strike the body +as a whole, and perforate. I was shown a case in which a wounded officer +was confident that an entire shell had perforated his arm. The entry +wound was at the outer part of the front of the forearm, the exit at the +inner aspect of the arm, just above the elbow. Two ragged contused +wounds existed, which healed slowly, but no serious nervous or vascular +injury had been produced. Although it is probable that only a fragment +perforated in this case, it is of interest in connection with the +following. + +In a case shown to me by Sir William Thomson in the Irish Hospital at +Bloemfontein, an entire shell had passed between the left arm and body +of a trooper, perforating the haversack, as also a non-commissioned +officer's notebook contained within it, without exploding. The only +injury sustained by the trooper was a contusion on the inner aspect of +the elbow-joint, with slight signs of contusion of the ulnar nerve. The +case is of some importance, as showing that a comparatively resistent +body can be perforated without necessary explosion on the part of the +shell; hence the possibility of a similar perforation of the soft parts +of the body. + +[Illustration: FIG. 92.--Unexploded 1-lb. Vickers-Maxim Shell. (Actual +size)] + +Fig. 93 is of a number of fragments of Vickers-Maxim shells, and it was +by such that the great majority of the wounds were produced. + +Wounds from fragments of these shells were, indeed, not at all rare. +They were met with on any position; but, as far as my experience went, +they were more common on the lower extremities than in other parts of +the body, if the sufferers were in the erect position when wounded. I +saw a good many wounds in the neighbourhood of the knee, some of which +implicated the joint. When the injuries were received by patients in the +lying or crouching positions, any part of the body was equally likely to +be affected, or, again, the presence of large stones or rocks in the +vicinity might determine the scattering of the flying fragments at a +more dangerous height than when the shells burst from contact with the +actual ground. + +The relation of one or two examples of wounds from pom-pom fragments may +not be without interest, the more so as they illustrate the favourable +influence of a low degree of velocity on the part of a projectile. I saw +three wounds produced by the percussion fuses of these shells, an +experience which shows that they were not very uncommon. + +[Illustration: FIG. 93.--Fragments of Vickers-Maxim 1-lb. Shells. The +centre fragment of the lower row is the point of a steel armour-piercing +shell; although unsuitable for the purpose, they were occasionally +employed in the field by the Boers] + + (211) _Perforating shell-wound of abdomen._--Wounded at + Magersfontein by the fuse screw of a small shell + (Vickers-Maxim). Aperture of entry ragged, roughly circular, + and 2 inches in diameter, with much-contused margins situated + in the median line, nearly midway between the ensiform + cartilage and umbilicus. The screw was lodged in the abdominal + wall at the margin of the thorax, just outside the left nipple + line. The aperture of entry was cleansed by Major Harris, + R.A.M.C., who determined the fact that penetration of the + peritoneal cavity had occurred, and removed the fuse (see fig. + 94) by a separate incision. The patient made an uneventful and + uninterrupted recovery, the wound healing by granulation and + leaving little weakness of the abdominal wall. He returned to + England at the end of five weeks. + +In a second case the fuse, together with a fragment of the iron case, +entered the buttock by a ragged opening. The fragment of iron escaped by +an exit aperture of about the same size. When the patient arrived at the +Base some days after the injury, a hard body was felt in the wound, and +on exploration the fuse was found and removed. + +In a third case the fuse struck the side of the foot below the outer +malleolus and comminuted the astragalus, and then passing forwards +lodged beneath the extensor tendons of the toes. The wound was explored +at the time of the injury and some fragments of bone removed; +considerable cellulitis supervened, and the fuse was only discovered +some days later when the patient came under the care of Sir W. Thomson +in the Irish Hospital in Pretoria. It was there removed, together with +some more fragments of bone, and the wound slowly granulated. The +patient then returned to England, when the wound rapidly healed after +the removal of some further necrosed fragments of cancellous tissue. The +astragalus had been reduced to a mere shell of compact tissue, and the +convexity of the articular surface was altogether lost. The deformity, +together with the formation of adhesions in the ankle-joint, led to the +development of a firm anchylosis. + +[Illustration: FIG. 94.--Pom-pom Percussion Fuse, exact size] + +My friend Mr. Abbott removed a similar fuse from the substance of the +lung after the lapse of nine months, the patient having developed an +empyema, and a chronic fistula, which rapidly closed after the removal +of the foreign body. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXV + +OBLIQUE FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS CAUSED BY A FRAGMENT OF A VICKERS-MAXIM +OR POM-POM SHELL + +The entire absence of comminution is very striking] + +I will add one further case, that illustrated by plate XXV. In this a +fragment of a pom-pom shell entered the outer aspect of the right +shoulder to escape on the inner aspect of the arm, just below the +confines of the axilla. An oblique, non-comminuted fracture of the +humerus resulted, which in spite of moderate suppuration united well in +the course of six weeks. The case is of particular interest as +illustrating the nature of the fracture to be expected when the velocity +retained by the missile is low. + +The above instances show that such peculiarities as belong to wounds +produced by pom-pom shells depend on the comparatively small size and +weight of the fragments, and on the small degree of impetus with which +they are propelled. + +[Illustration: FIG. 95.--Boer Segment Shell, or Shrapnel. The large +fragment is a piece of the case, the smaller are two of the pieces of +iron packed within] + +Fig. 95 illustrates a form of shrapnel employed by the Boers, the case +of which is of cast metal arranged in definite segments, while the +interior is filled with small fragments of iron so shaped as to pack in +concentric layers. As to the wounds produced by the contained fragments +I have no experience, since I never saw one of the pieces of iron +removed. This no doubt depended in part on the very unsatisfactory +practice made by the Boers with shrapnel generally. Even when they fired +English shrapnel, the shells were, as a rule, exploded far too high to +cause any serious danger to the men beneath. I saw on one occasion a +large number of shrapnel shells exploded over a body of Imperial +Yeomanry, but as a result of the great height at which all the shells +were exploded, not a single casualty resulted. + +The segment casing of the shell, however, I several times saw removed +from the body. The fragment shown in fig. 95 was removed from the +buttock of a man after one of Lord Methuen's early battles. It may be +remarked that the buttock is rather a common, and also a favourable, +seat for shell wounds with retention of the fragment. This no doubt +depends on the fact that the buttock is one of the few superficial +regions in which sufficient depth of tissue exists for the retention or +the passage of so large an object as a fragment of shell. + +Fig. 96 is of a number of leaden shrapnel bullets from our own shells. A +normal undeformed bullet, such as was the usual cause of wounds, is +shown at the left-hand upper corner. The remainder show common forms of +deformity caused by striking on the ground or against rocks. I attribute +small importance to the deformed bullets, as I never saw one removed, +and it is probable that a ricochet shrapnel bullet would rarely retain +sufficient force to penetrate. The lower fragments are inserted to +illustrate a fact that would scarcely have been assumed, that these +bullets on impact occasionally suffer a fracture of a somewhat +crystalline nature. The occurrence of this gross form of fracture is of +some interest in relation to the extreme fragmentation sometimes +undergone by the hardened leaden cores of the small-calibre bullets. + +A considerable number of wounds from leaden shrapnel bullets were met +with among our own men, as well as among the Boers. The wounds possessed +little special interest, except from the fact that the bullets were +often retained. I saw bullets in the chest on several occasions, also in +the abdomen, pelvis, the neighbourhood of joints, and in the limbs. + +I saw one patient who had suffered no less than six perforating wounds +as the result of the bursting of one shrapnel shell. + +I will here quote one case of interest as completing the various forms +of perforating wound of the abdomen met with during the campaign. + +[Illustration: FIG. 96.--Normal, Deformed, and Fractured Leaden Shrapnel +Bullets] + + (212) _Perforating shrapnel-wound of abdomen._--Boer wounded at + Graspan. Aperture of _entry_ (shrapnel), opposite eighth left + costal cartilage, 1 inch external to nipple line. The opening + was circular, and surrounded by an area of ecchymosis 4 inches + in diameter; _exit_, 4-1/2 inches above and to the right of the + umbilicus. Patient was at first in a Boer ambulance, and only + seen by me on the ninth day. At that date he was dressed and + walking with a gauze pad and bandage over the wounds. From the + exit wound, which was 1 inch in diameter, protruded a piece of + sloughing omentum, the margin of the wound being everted and + raised over a circular indurated area. + + It was thought best to allow the sloughing omentum, which was + very foul, to separate spontaneously, and then to return the + stump. At the end of three weeks, however, the slough had not + only separated, but the stump had retracted, and only a small + granulating surface was left, which healed spontaneously. + +I have little to say regarding the treatment of shell wounds. The +mutilating injuries, if not of a fatal character, necessitated treatment +of a corresponding nature to the damage. In all such cases the general +rules of surgery indicate the lines to be followed. + +In the case of shrapnel wounds the bullets were often better removed; +but when in dangerous positions, as sunk deeply in the chest, abdomen, +or pelvis, they were best left, unless some very special indication for +removal existed. Large fragments of shell always demanded removal. + +In conclusion I will only make the further remark, that shell wounds, +with the exception of clean leaden shrapnel tracks, always suppurated. + +I make this closing statement with the view of emphasising the influence +exerted on the aseptic course of modern rifle wounds by the small +calibre of the bullet, since both bullet and shell wounds were exposed +to the same surrounding conditions. + + + + +INDEX + + +Abdomen, injuries to, 407 + General prognosis in, 470 + +Abdominal wounds: + Explosive, 414 + Non-perforating, 409 + Perforating, 411 + +Abscess of the brain, 287 + +Acetabulum, fracture of, 193 + +Acetylene light, 30 + +Ambulance: + Foreign, 30 + Trolly (McCormack-Brook), 18 + Wagons, 19 + +Amputations: + Effect of transport on, 110 + for fracture, 177 + +Aneurisms: + Effect of rest on, 127 + Gangrene after, 152 + Traumatic, 122 + False, 123 + True, 126 + Treatment of, 127 + +Aneurismal varix: + Arm and forearm, 147 + Effect on circulation, 134 + Carotid, 146 + Femoral, 147 + Mode of development, 130 + Popliteal, 147 + Prognosis in, 144 + Signs of, 131 + Treatment of, 144 + +Anosmia, 348 + +Antrum, wounds of, 306 + +Aphasia: + Amnesic, 276 + Ataxic, 273 + Functional, 351 + +Arterial hæmatoma, 123 + Prognosis in, 126 + Treatment of, 126 + +Arteries: + Compression by cicatrices, 113 + Contusion of, 112 + Division of, 114 + Perforation of, 114 + +Arterio-venous aneurism: + Arm and forearm, 150 + Cervical, 149 + Femoral, 150 + Leg, 150 + Popliteal, 151 + Treatment of, 148 + + +Biliary fistula, 467 + +Bladder: + Wounds of, 443, 457 + Extra-peritoneal, 458 + Intra-peritoneal, 457 + Retained bullet in, 110, 460 + +Bones. See Fractures + +Bowlby, Mr.: + Retained bullets in joints, 229, 230 + Wound of pharynx, 311 + +Brain: + Abscess of, 287 + Cerebral irritation, 269 + Compression of, 267 + Concussion of, 266 + Effect of ricochet on, 249 + Explosive injury of, 247, 248 + Frontal injuries, 247, 249, 266 + Fronto-parietal injuries, 273 + Occipital injuries, 276 + Parietal injuries, 273 + Prognosis in cerebral injuries, 289 + Treatment, 289 + +Bread, 7 + +Buck wagon, 21 + +Bullets: + Characters directly affecting wounds: + Aseptic nature, 70 + Calibre, 41 + Composition of, 51 + Deformities of, 81 + Fragmentation, 88 + Length, 41 + Mantles of, 52, 82, 83 + Penetration, 49 + Revolution, 45 + Ricochet, 82 + Shape, 42 + Stability, 51 + Striking force, 50 + Velocity of flight, 42 + Weight, 42 + Effect of resistance of bones on, 86, 87, 88, 93 + Retention of, 71, 79 + Indications for removal of, 110 + in bladder, 110, 460 + in chest, 381, 401 + in nasal fossa, 244 + in or near joints, 229, 230 + in skull, 244, 249, 260, 266, 284, 298 + in spinal canal, 337 + Reversal of, 81 + Varieties of: + Determination of, 105 + Expanding, 91 + Explosive, 95 + Guedes, 48, 51 + Krag-Jörgensen, 48, 51 + Jeffreys, 94 + Large leaden, 95 + Lee-Metford, 52, 89 + Mark IV., 94 + Mauser, 52, 83 + Soft-nosed, 93 + Tampered, 95 + Tweedie, 94 + Waxed, 52 + + +Cauda equina, injury to, 325, 330 + +Cellulitis, 34 + +Cervical nerve roots, injury to, 107 + Plexus, 357 + +Cheatle, Mr. G. L.: + Entry and exit wounds, 72 + First field dressing, 107 + Wound of heart, 383 + " " intestine, 413 + +Cheek, wounds of, 309 + +Chest, injuries to, 374 + Character of wounds, 377 + Influence of small calibre of bullet on, 374 + Martini wounds, 374, 388 + Non-penetrating wounds, 375 + Penetrating wounds, 376 + +Cheyne, Mr. W. W., F.R.S.: + Abdominal wounds, 449 + Spent bullets, 243, 449 + +Civil surgeons, 38 + +Climate, 8, 36, 71 + +Comparison of South African with other campaigns, 14 + +Compression of brain, 267 + Spinal cord, 319 + +Concussion of brain, 266 + Eye, 300 + Joints, 226 + Nerves, 341, 343 + Spinal cord, 315 + +Contour wounds, 65 + +Contusion: + Nerves, 343 + Spinal cord, 316 + +Costal cartilages, fractures of, 379 + +Cox, Dep. Insp.-Gen.: + Case of varix, 148 + + +Day, Mr. J. J.: + Fractures of the skull, 251 + +Deadliness of modern weapons, 16 + +Diaphragm, wounds of, 381 + +Displacement of structures by the bullet, 68 + Abdomen, 411 + Nerves, 342 + Vessels, 382, 384 + Viscera, 310, 382, 411 + +Drink, 8 + +Dust, 8, 35 + Bacteriology of, 36 + + +Empyema, 394, 396 + +Enteric fever, 9 + +Epilepsy, traumatic, 291 + +Equipment of foreign ambulances, 31 + Surgical, 4 + +Erysipelas, 34 + +Expanding bullets, 91 + +Explosive bullets, 95 + +Explosive wounds: + of abdomen, 414 + of fractures, 155 + of head, 245 + of leg, 221 + of soft parts, 97 + of thigh, 197 + +Eye, injuries to, 299 + +Facial paralysis: + Cortical, 273-277 + Peripheral, 355 + +First field dressings, 107 + +Flies, 36 + +Flockemann, Dr.: + Hæmothorax, 393 + Injury to abdomen, 420 + +Fractures: + Course of healing of, 172 + Explosive wounds in, 155 + into joints, 163, 228 + Limb bones, 154 + Local shock in, 172 + Long bones, types of, 161 + Longitudinal, 163 + Notch, 165 + Oblique, 165 + Perforating, 166 + Stellate, 161 + Transverse, 166 + Wedge, 165 + Osteomyelitis in, 174 + Pom-pom fractures, 483 + Prognosis, general, in, 174 + Special features of, 155 + Special bones: + Acetabulum, 193 + Carpus, 183 + Clavicle, 178 + Femur, 193 + Fibula, 219 + Humerus, 178 + Jaws, 306 + Malar, 305 + Mastoid process, 299 + Metacarpus, 185 + Metatarsus, 224 + Orbital walls, 300 + Patella, 215 + Pelvis, 189 + Radius, 183 + Ribs, 377 + Scapula, 177, 379 + Skull: + Base, 262 + Glancing, 254 + Gutter, 255 + Perforating, deep, 245 + Superficial, 259 + Treatment of, 293 + Spine, 314 + Sternum, 379 + Tarsus, 223 + Tibia, 217 + Short and flat bones, 168 + Suppuration of soft parts in, 173 + Symptoms of, 171 + Treatment of: + General, 175 + Femur, 205 + Leg, 221 + Upper Extremity, 135 + Variation in character during the campaign, 154 + +Fractures in Franco-German war (Sir W. MacCormac), 167 + +Fragmentation of bullets, 88 + +Fuses of shells, wounds by, 481 + + +Gangrene: + Acute traumatic, 34 + After ligature of main vessels, 152 + +Genital organs, wounds of, 472 + +Guedes rifle, 65 + +Gutter wounds: + of bladder, 458 + of bones, 231 + of intestine, 417 + of joints, 231 + of liver, 466 + of pelvis, 189 + of scalp, 242 + of skull, 255 + of soft parts, 157 + + +Hæmarthrosis, 232 + +Hæmorrhage, 104, 114 + Control by bullets, 116 + by loop of nerve, 116 + Deaths from, 116 + Fever dependent upon, 118 + Internal, 116 + Interstitial, 118 + Primary, 114 + Recurrent, 117 + Secondary, 117 + Treatment of, 120 + +Hæmorrhoids, 10 + +Hæmothorax, 386, 389 + Behaviour of blood in, 390 + Course of, 390, 394 + Diagnosis of, 398 + Effect of transport on, 389 + Empyema after, 394 + Pleuritic effusion in, 390 + Prognosis in, 399 + Recurrent bleeding in, 393 + Parietal, 389, 398 + Pulmonary, 386, 389 + Symptoms of, 391 + Temperature in, 391, 393 + Treatment of, 400 + +Head, injuries to, 241 + +Health of the troops, 7 + +Heart, wounds of, 382 + in neighbourhood of, 384 + +Hemianopsia, 276 + Altitudinal, 277 + Lateral, 276 + +Hospitals: + Field, 29, 37 + Foreign, 30 + General, 31, 38 + Improvised, 28, 39 + Indian Field, 29 + Stationary, 27, 31, 33, 37 + Varieties of, 28 + +Hospital ships, 24 + Tents, 32 + Trains, 23 + +Hydronephrosis, 464 + + +Impact, irregular, 80, 82 + +Instruments, 4 + +Intestine, injuries to: + Diagnosis of, 428 + Difficulties of operation, 453 + Indications for operation, 454 + Lateral contusion, 416 + Prognosis, 446 + Treatment, 452 + Wounds of, 415 + Extra-peritoneal, 419 + Large intestine, 436, 444 + Results of, 421 + Small intestine, 427 + +Irregular wounds, 97 + +Itinerary, 2 + + +Jam, 7 + +Jaws, fractures of: + Lower, 306 + Upper, 306 + Treatment of, 308 + +Jenner, L. L., bacteriology of dust, 36 + +Joints, injuries to, 225 + Arterial wounds in, 121, 233 + Classification of, 229 + Course after, 232 + Fractures into, 228 + Signs and symptoms, 232 + Suppuration of, 233 + Treatment, general, 235 + +Joints, retained bullets in or near, 229, 230 + +Joints, special: + Ankle, 239 + Elbow, 236 + Hand, 237 + Hip, 238 + Knee, 238 + Shoulders, 236 + Tarsus, 240 + + +Ker, J. E., cases of aneurism, 152 + +Kidney, wounds of, 461 + +Krag-Jörgensen rifle, 65 + + +Laminectomy, 335, 340 + +Larynx, wounds of, 312 + +Leaden bullets, 95 + +Lee-Metford rifle, 53, 64 + +Lewtas, Col. I. M. S., cases of aneurism, 144 + +Lightning stroke, 10 + +Liver, wounds of, 466 + +Local shock, 103 + in fractures, 172 + +Lower jaw, fractures of, 306 + +Lungs, wounds of, 385 + Diagnosis, 398 + Effect of velocity on, 385 + Prognosis, 399 + Retained bullets in, 401 + Symptoms of, 386 + Treatment of, 400 + +Lyddite shells, 475 + + +MacCormac, Sir W.: + Aneurism, 150 + Fractures, 167 + +Malar bone, fractures, 305 + +Mandible, fractures, 306 + +Mantles, stability of, 51, 83 + +Martini-Henry rifle, 48 + Wounds by, 96 + +Mastoid process, 299 + +Mauser rifle, 64 + +Meat, 7 + +Mediastinal wounds, 382, 384 + +Mesentery, wounds of, 420 + +Mills-Roberts, Mr. H. R.: + Spinal hæmorrhage, 321 + +'Modders, the,' 9 + +Mortality, general, 11 + amongst officers, 14 + in battles of Kimberley Relief Force, 12 + + +Nasal _fossæ_, bullet in, 244 + +Neck, wounds of, 309 + +Nerves, injuries to, 341 + Concussion, 341, 343, 346 + Contusion, 343, 347 + Displacement of, 342 + Laceration, 344, 348 + Perforation, 345 + Prognosis in, 370 + Scar, implication of, 345, 350 + Section, 344 + Symptoms of, 346 + Treatment of, 371 + Velocity in relation to, 341 + +Nerves, special: + Cranial: + Fifth, 353 + Fourth, 353 + Eighth, 353, 354 + Eleventh, 356 + Olfactory, 352 + Optic, 352 + Seventh, 354, 372 + Sixth, 353 + Tenth, 356 + Third, 353 + Twelfth, 357 + Spinal: + Brachial, 357 + Cervical, 347, 357 + Lumbar, 359 + Sacral, 359 + Sacro-coccygeal, 360 + Thoracic, 358 + +Neuritis: + Ascending, 350 + Peripheral, 355 + Traumatic, 349 + +Neurosis, traumatic 351 + +Nose, wounds of, 305, 348 + +Nurses, 38 + + +Officers, mortality among, 14 + +Olecranon, fracture of, 183, 237 + +Omentum, wounds of, 420 + Prolapse of, 420 + +Operations: + Difficulties of, 35 + in field, 296 + in Field hospitals, 109 + +Orbit, wounds of, 299 + Prognosis and treatment of, 304 + +Osteomyelitis in fractures, 174 + +Outfit, surgical, 3 + + +Pain in wounds, 103 + +Paraplegia, functional, 337 + +Penetration of bullets, 49 + +Penis, wounds of, 472 + +Peritoneal infection, 412 + +Pharynx, wounds of, 311 + +Pleural septicæmia, 437 + +Pleurisy, 390, 398 + +Pneumonia, 9, 398 + +Pneumo-thorax, 388 + +Pom-pom shells, 478 + +Portland Hospital, 34 + +Psychical disturbance, 101 + + +Rain, 9, 36 + +Range of fire: + Difficulty of judging influence on mortality, 17 + +Rectum, wounds of, 443, 444 + +Removal of wounded from the field, 18 + +Respiration in spinal injuries, 329 + +Retained bullets. See Bullets + +Reversed bullets, 81 + +Revolution of bullet, 45, 46 + +Ribs, fractures of, 377 + Signs of, 379 + +Ricochet, 82 + Effect on wound type, 249 + Lee-Metford, 89 + Mauser, 84 + Within body, + Abdomen, 415 + Skull, 249 + +Rifles: + Bore, 41 + Guedes, 47, 54 + Krag-Jörgensen, 47, 54 + Lee-Metford, 47, 64 + Martini-Henry, 47, 97 + Mauser, 47, 64 + Modern principles of, 40 + Trajectory, 44 + Varieties employed, 47, 48 + + +Scalp wounds, 242, 264 + +Scapula, fractures of, 177, 379 + +Scrotum, wounds of, 472 + +Septic disease, 34 + +Septicæmia: + General, 34 + in enteric fever, 9 + Peritoneal, 421 + Pleural, 437 + +Shells, 474 + Varieties of, 475 + Vickers-Maxim, 478 + Lyddite, 476 + Shrapnel, 483 + +Shell wounds: + of abdomen, 480, 485 + Proportionate occurrence of, 11 + +Shell fuse wounds, 481 + +Ships, hospital, 24 + +Shock: + General, 101 + Local, 103 + Treatment of, 110 + +Shrapnel, 483 + +Simla, 25 + +Skull. See Fractures + Fractures independent of gross brain lesion, 242 + with brain lesion, 248 + +Spinal column: + Injuries to, 314 + Fractures of centra, 317 + Spinous processes, 315 + Transverse processes, 314 + +Spinal cord, injuries to, 315 + Compression by bullets, 319 + Concussion, 319 + Contusion, 320 + Diagnosis, 335 + Hæmato-myelia, 322 + Section of, 323 + Shock accompanying, 328 + Signs of, 323 + Transport of, 339 + Treatment of, 339 + +Spinal hæmorrhage: + Epidural, 321 + Hæmato-myelia, 322 + Peri-pial, 321 + +Spleen, wounds of, 469 + +Splints: + Aluminium, 177 + Field cane, 209, 221 + Hodgen's, 211 + Wire gauze, 187 + +Sternum, fractures of, 379 + +Stevenson, Col. W. F.: + Local shock, 106 + Explosive wounds, 159 + +Stokes, Sir W.: + Treatment of aneurism, 151 + +Stomach, wounds of, 424 + +Stonham, Mr. C.: + Wound of vermiform appendix, 437 + +Sunstroke, 10 + +Suppuration of wounds, 78 + in fracture, 173 + +Synovitis, vibration, 226 + + +Temperature of air, 8, 36 + in blood effusions, 118, 391, 393 + +Tents, 32 + +Testicle, wounds of, 472 + +Tetanus, 34 + +Thirst, 8 + +Thomson, Sir W.: + Pom-pom wounds, 479 + Wound of nose, 305 + +Thoracic vessels, wounds of, 384 + +Tonga, the, 19 + +Tongue, wounds of, 309 + +Trachea, wounds of, 312 + +Traction engines, 23 + +Trains, hospital, 23 + +Trajectory, 44 + +Transport: + after battles, 26 + of wounded men from field, 18 + of wounded of the Kimberley Relief Force, 25 + of chest injuries, 386 + of fractures, 176 + of spinal injuries, 339 + +Traumatic aneurism. See Aneurism + +Traumatic epilepsy, 291 + +Traumatic gangrene, 34 + +Traumatic neurosis, 107, 351 + +Treves, Mr. F.: on cessation of intestinal peristalsis, 423 + +Trolly (McCormack-Brook), 19 + + +Upper jaws, 306 + +Urethra, wounds of, 472 + +Urinary Bladder. See Bladder + + +Varix. See Aneurismal varix + +Vegetables, 7 + +Veldt sores, 10 + +Velocity of bullet: + Circumstances influencing, 43 + Initial, 42, 49 + Remaining of various rifles, 49 + +Velocity, influence of: + on fractures of long bones, 163 + on fractures of short and flat bones, 168 + on wounds of abdomen, 414 + of chest, 385 + of joints, 226, 230 + of lungs, 385 + of nerves, 341 + of skull, 251 + of spine, 319 + +Vermiform appendix, wounds of, 437 + +Vibration synovitis, 226 + +Vickers-Maxim shell, 478 + +Vomiting in spinal injuries, 329 + + +Wagons: + Ambulance, 20 + Buck, 22 + Ox, 20 + +Warfare, deadliness of, 40 + +Water in South Africa: + Character of, 8, 36 + Transport of, 5 + +Waxed bullets, 52 + +Wobble, 80, 81, 251 + +Wounded men, removal from the field, 18 + +Wounds, general: + Aperture of entry, 55, 72 + Aperture of exit, 58, 74 + Climate, influence on, 71 + Clinical, course of, 69 + Contour tracks, 65 + Direct nature of tracks, 63 + Directions of tracks, 66 + Displacement of structures, 68 + Explosive exit wounds, 97 + Foreign bodies in, 71 + First field dressing, 107 + Hæmorrhage, 104 + Irregular types of, 80, 97 + Mode of healing, 72 + Multiple character, 67 + Nature of tracts, 68 + Pain, 103 + Prognosis, 106 + Psychical disturbance, 101 + Shock, 101 + Small bore, 67 + Superficial tracts, 65 + Suppuration, 69, 78 + Symptoms, 100 + Tracks, nature of, 68 + Treatment, 107 + + * * * * * + +PRINTED BY +SPOTTISWOODE AND CO. LTD., NEW-STREET SQUARE +LONDON + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Surgical Experiences in South Africa, +1899-1900, by George Henry Makins + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SURGICAL EXPERIENCES *** + +***** This file should be named 21280-8.txt or 21280-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/1/2/8/21280/ + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Josephine Paolucci and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +https://gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at +https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at https://pglaf.org + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit https://pglaf.org + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including including checks, online payments and credit card +donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. diff --git a/21280-8.zip b/21280-8.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d3fff7a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-8.zip diff --git a/21280-h.zip b/21280-h.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..be3a466 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h.zip diff --git a/21280-h/21280-h.htm b/21280-h/21280-h.htm new file mode 100644 index 0000000..8890340 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/21280-h.htm @@ -0,0 +1,19978 @@ +<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" + "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"> + +<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"> + <head> + <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=iso-8859-1" /> + <title> + The Project Gutenberg eBook of Surgical Experiences in South Africa, by George Henry Makins + </title> + <style type="text/css"> +/*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ +<!-- + p { margin-top: .75em; + text-align: justify; + margin-bottom: .75em; + } + h1,h2,h3,h4,h5,h6 { + text-align: center; /* all headings centered */ + clear: both; + } + hr { width: 33%; + margin-top: 2em; + margin-bottom: 2em; + margin-left: auto; + margin-right: auto; + clear: both; + } + + table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;} + + body{margin-left: 10%; + margin-right: 10%; + } + + .pagenum { /* uncomment the next line for invisible page numbers */ + /* visibility: hidden; */ + position: absolute; + left: 92%; + font-size: smaller; + text-align: right; + } /* page numbers */ + + .linenum {position: absolute; top: auto; right: 4%;} /* poetry number */ + .blockquot{margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 10%;} + .sidenote {width: 20%; padding-bottom: .5em; padding-top: .5em; + padding-left: .5em; padding-right: .5em; margin-left: 1em; + float: right; clear: right; margin-top: 1em; + font-size: smaller; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: dashed 1px;} + + .bb {border-bottom: solid 2px;} + .bl {border-left: solid 2px;} + .bt {border-top: solid 2px;} + .br {border-right: solid 2px;} + .bbox {border: solid 2px;} + + .center {text-align: center;} + .right {text-align: right;} + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + .u {text-decoration: underline;} + .signature {float: right; padding-left: 2em; text-indent: 0em;} + + .caption {font-weight: bold;} + + .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + + .figleft {float: left; clear: left; margin-left: 0; margin-bottom: 1em; margin-top: + 1em; margin-right: 1em; padding: 0; text-align: center;} + + .figright {float: right; clear: right; margin-left: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; + margin-top: 1em; margin-right: 0; padding: 0; text-align: center;} + + .footnotes {border: dashed 1px;} + .footnote {margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-size: 0.9em;} + .footnote .label {position: absolute; right: 84%; text-align: right;} + .fnanchor {vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;} + + .poem {margin-left:10%; margin-right:10%; text-align: left;} + .poem br {display: none;} + .poem .stanza {margin: 1em 0em 1em 0em;} + .poem span.i0 {display: block; margin-left: 0em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + .poem span.i2 {display: block; margin-left: 2em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + .poem span.i4 {display: block; margin-left: 4em; padding-left: 3em; text-indent: -3em;} + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> + </head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Surgical Experiences in South Africa, +1899-1900, by George Henry Makins + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Surgical Experiences in South Africa, 1899-1900 + Being Mainly a Clinical Study of the Nature and Effects + of Injuries Produced by Bullets of Small Calibre + +Author: George Henry Makins + +Release Date: May 3, 2007 [EBook #21280] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SURGICAL EXPERIENCES *** + + + + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Josephine Paolucci and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/frontispiece.jpg" width="500" height="351" alt="FRONTISPIECE. + +Photo, H. Kisch Ladysmith. Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, +Ltd." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="FRONTISPIECE" id="FRONTISPIECE">FRONTISPIECE.</a><br /> + +Photo, H. Kisch Ladysmith. Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, +Ltd.</span> +</div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h1>SURGICAL EXPERIENCES</h1> + +<h4>IN</h4> + +<h1>SOUTH AFRICA</h1> + +<h2>1899-1900</h2> + +<h3>BEING MAINLY A CLINICAL STUDY OF THE NATURE AND EFFECTS OF INJURIES +PRODUCED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE</h3> + + +<h4>BY</h4> + +<h2>GEORGE HENRY MAKINS, F.R.C.S.</h2> + +<p class="center"> +SURGEON TO ST. THOMAS'S HOSPITAL, LONDON<br /> +JOINT LECTURER ON SURGERY IN THE MEDICAL SCHOOL OF ST. THOMAS'S HOSPITAL<br /> +MEMBER OF THE COURT OF EXAMINERS OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF<br /> +SURGEONS OF ENGLAND, AND LATE ONE OF THE CONSULTING SURGEONS<br /> +TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN FIELD FORCE<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +LONDON<br /> +SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 WATERLOO PLACE<br /> +1901<br /> +</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> + +<p class="center"> +TO<br /> +<br /> +SURGEON-GENERAL W. D. WILSON<br /> +<br /> +PRINCIPAL MEDICAL OFFICER TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN FIELD FORCE<br /> +<br /> +THE MEMBERS OF THE ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS<br /> +EMPLOYED IN SOUTH AFRICA<br /> +<br /> +AND TO THE<br /> +<br /> +CIVIL SURGEONS TEMPORARILY ATTACHED TO THAT CORPS<br /> +<br /> +<b>These Experiences are Dedicated</b><br /> +<br /> +AS AN EXPRESSION OF APPRECIATION<br /> +OF THE INVARIABLE KINDNESS AND SYMPATHY EXTENDED<br /> +TO THE AUTHOR<br /> +WITHOUT WHICH THE BOOK COULD NOT<br /> +HAVE BEEN WRITTEN<br /> +</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_vii" id="Page_vii">[Pg vii]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE</h2> + + +<p>A word of explanation is perhaps necessary as to the form in which these +experiences have been put together. The matter was originally collected +with the object of sending a series of articles to the <i>British Medical +Journal</i>. Various circumstances, however, of which the chief was the +feeling that extending experience altered in many cases the views +adopted at first sight, prevented the original intention from being +carried into execution, and the articles, considerably expanded, are now +published together.</p> + +<p>As to the illustrative cases introduced in support of various statements +made in the text, only those have been chosen from my notes which were +under my own observation for a considerable time, and many of these have +been brought up to date since my return to England. I have, as a rule, +avoided the inclusion of cases seen cursorily, and few simple ones have +been quoted since their character is sufficiently indicated in the text. +These remarks seem necessary since the mode of selection has resulted in +the inclusion of a number of cases of exceptional severity, and any +attempt to draw statistical conclusions from them would be most +misleading.</p> + +<p>The first two chapters have been added with a view to affording some +information, first, as to the conditions under which a great part of the +surgical work was done, and, secondly, as to the mechanism and causation +of the injuries, which would not readily be at hand in the case of the +general surgical reader. For much of the information contained in +Chapter II. I must express my indebtedness to the work of MM. Nimier and +Laval, so frequently quoted.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_viii" id="Page_viii">[Pg viii]</a></span></p> + +<p>The only other object of this Preface is to express my thanks to the +many who have aided me in the task of amplifying the observations on +which the articles are founded, and I think no writer ever received more +sympathetic and kindly help in such particulars than the author.</p> + +<p>My first thanks, those due to the Members of the Royal Army Medical +Corps, I endeavour to express by the dedication of this volume. Any +attempt to make individual acknowledgment to either the Members of the +Service, or to the Civil Surgeons temporarily attached, would be +impossible. I have, however, tried to associate the names of many of +those in charge of cases in the recital of histories and treatment +throughout.</p> + +<p>My thanks are not less due to the Military Heads of Departments at the +War Office, who have helped me in the collection of details as to the +subsequent course of many of the cases described, and in the acquisition +of information regarding the weapons and ammunition treated of. I should +particularly express my gratitude to Colonel Robb, of the +Adjutant-General's Department, and Colonel Montgomery, of the Ordnance +Department.</p> + +<p>I am greatly indebted to my former colleague Mr. Cheatle for two of the +illustrations of wounds, and for permission to quote some of his other +experience, and to Mr. Henry Catling, to whose skill I owe the majority +of the skiagrams of the fractures under my observation at Wynberg and +elsewhere.</p> + +<p>I must also express my thanks to Mr. Danielsson and his artist, Mr. +Ford, for the trouble they have taken in converting my rough sketches +into the illustrations contained in the volume.</p> + +<p>Lastly, my warmest gratitude is due to my friends, Mr. Cuthbert Wallace, +who has read some of my chapters, and to Mr. F. C. Abbott, who has read +the whole book for the press and suggested many improvements and +modifications.</p> + +<p> +47 <span class="smcap">Charles Street, Berkeley Square, W.</span><br /> +<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 10em;"><i>February 1901.</i></span> +</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_ix" id="Page_ix">[Pg ix]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS</h2> + +<p> +<span class="linenum">PAGE</span><br /> +CHAPTER I<br /> +<br /> +INTRODUCTORY<br /> +<br /> +ItineraryLinen Holdall with surgical instrumentsSurgical outfit—Personal transport—General health of the +troops—Climate—Consideration of the number of men killed and +wounded—Transport of the wounded—Vehicles—Trains—Ships—Hospitals <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER II<br /> +<br /> +MODERN MILITARY RIFLES AND THEIR ACTION<br /> +<br /> +General type—Calibre, length, and weight of +bullet—Velocity—Trajectory—Revolution—Varieties of rifle in common +use by the Boers—Penetration—Comparison of bullets—Use of +wax—Comparative efficiency of different types <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_40">40</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER III<br /> +<br /> +GENERAL CHARACTERS OF WOUNDS INFLICTED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE<br /> +<br /> +Type wounds—Nature of external apertures—Direct course of wound +track—Multiple wounds—Small bore and sharp localisation of +tracks—Clinical course—Mode of healing—Suppuration—Wounds of +irregular type—Ricochet—Mauser bullet—Lee-Metford bullet—Expanding +bullets—Altered bullets—Large sporting bullets—Symptoms—Psychical +disturbance and shock—Local +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_x" id="Page_x">[Pg x]</a></span>shock—Pain—Hæmorrhage—Diagnosis—Prognosis—Treatment +<span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_55">55</a></span><br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER IV<br /> +<br /> +INJURIES TO THE BLOOD VESSELS<br /> +<br /> +Nature of lesions; contusion, laceration, perforation—Results of +injuries—Primary hæmorrhage—Recurrent hæmorrhage—Secondary +hæmorrhage—Treatment of hæmorrhage—Traumatic aneurisms—Arterial +hæmatoma—True traumatic aneurism—Aneurismal varix and varicose +aneurism—Conditions affecting development—Effects of aneurismal varix +or varicose aneurism on the general circulation—Prognosis and treatment +of aneurismal varix—Prognosis and treatment of varicose +aneurism—Gangrene after ligation of arteries <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_112">112</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER V<br /> +<br /> +INJURIES TO THE BONES OF THE LIMBS<br /> +<br /> +Nature of wounds—Explosive wounds—Types of fracture of shafts of long +bones—Stellate, wedge, notch, oblique, transverse, +perforating—Fractures by old types of bullet—Lesions of the short and +flat bones—Special character of the symptoms in gunshot fracture, and +of the course of healing—Prognosis—Treatment—Special fractures—Upper +extremity—Pelvis—Lower extremity<span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_154">154</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER VI<br /> +<br /> +INJURIES TO THE JOINTS<br /> +<br /> +General character—Vibration synovitis—Wounds of +joints—Classification—Course and symptoms—General treatment—Special +joints<span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER VII<br /> +<br /> +INJURIES TO THE HEAD AND NECK<br /> +<br /> +Anatomical lesions—Scalp wounds—Fracture of the skull without evidence +of gross lesion of the brain—Fractures with concurrent brain +injury—Classification—General injuries—Effect of ricochet—Vertical +or coronal wounds in frontal region—Glancing or oblique wounds of any +region—Gutter fractures—Superficial perforating fractures—Fractures +of the base—Symptoms of fracture of the skull, with concurrent injury +to the brain—Concussion—Compression—Irritation—Frontal +injuries—Fronto-parietal and parietal injuries—Occipital +injuries—Forms of hemianopsia—Abscess of the brain—General +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xi" id="Page_xi">[Pg xi]</a></span>diagnosis—General prognosis—Traumatic epilepsy—General +treatment—Wounds of the head not involving the brain—Mastoid +process—Orbit—Globe of the eye—Nose—Malar bone—Upper +jaw—Mandible—Wounds of the neck—Wounds of the pharynx, larynx, and +trachea <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_241">241</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER VIII<br /> +<br /> +INJURIES TO THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN AND SPINAL CORD<br /> +<br /> +Fractures in their relation to nerve injury—Transverse +processes—Spinous processes—Centra—Signs of fracture of the +vertebra—Injuries to the spinal cord—Effects of high +velocity—Concussion, slight, severe—Contusion—Hæmorrhage, +extra-medullary, hæmatomyelia—Symptoms of injury to the spinal +cord—Concussion—Hæmorrhage—Total transverse lesion—Diagnosis of form +of lesion—Prognosis—Treatment<span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_314">314</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER IX<br /> +<br /> +INJURIES TO THE PERIPHERAL NERVES<br /> +<br /> +Anatomical lesions—Concussion—Contusion—Division or +laceration—Secondary implication of the nerve—Symptoms of nerve +injury—Traumatic neuritis—Scar implication—Ascending +neuritis—Traumatic neurosis—Injuries to special nerves—Cranial +nerves—Cervical, brachial, lumbar, and sacral plexuses—Cases of nerve +injury—General prognosis and treatment <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_341">341</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER X<br /> +<br /> +INJURIES TO THE CHEST<br /> +<br /> +Non-penetrating wounds of the chest wall—Penetrating wounds, special +characters of entrance and exit apertures—Fracture of the ribs, +symptoms, treatment—Wounds of the diaphragm—Wounds of the +heart—Wounds of the lung, symptoms—Pneumothorax—Hæmothorax— +Empyema—Diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of hæmothorax—Cases +of hæmothorax<span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_374">374</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER XI<br /> +<br /> +INJURIES TO THE ABDOMEN<br /> +<br /> +Introductory remarks—Wounds of the abdominal wall—Penetration of +the intestinal area without definite evidence of visceral injury—Wounds +of explosive character—Anatomical characters of intestinal wounds—Wounds +of the mesentery—-Wounds of the omentum—Results of intestinal +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xii" id="Page_xii">[Pg xii]</a></span>wounds, fæcal extravasation, peritoneal infection, septicæmia—Reasons +for the escape of severe injury in wounds traversing the +abdomen—Wounds of the stomach—Wounds of the small intestine—Wounds +of the large intestine—Prognosis in intestinal injuries—Treatment +of intestinal injuries—Wounds of the urinary bladder—Wounds +of the kidney—Wounds of the liver—Wounds of the spleen—General +remarks on the prognosis in abdominal injuries—Wounds of +the external genital organs—Wounds of the urethra <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_407">407</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +CHAPTER XII<br /> +<br /> +ON SHELL WOUNDS<br /> +<br /> +Varieties of shells employed—Large shells—Wounds produced by different +varieties—Pom-Pom shells—Wounds produced by fragments and fuses—Shrapnel— +Boer segment shells—Leaden shrapnel bullets—Treatment of shell wounds<span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_474">474</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<span class="smcap">Index of Contents</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#INDEX">487</a></span><br /> +</p> + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiii" id="Page_xiii">[Pg xiii]</a></span></p> +<h3>ILLUSTRATIONS</h3> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p><i>PLATES</i></p> + +<p> +<span class="smcap">Varieties of Ammunition collected at Ladysmith</span><span class="linenum"><i><a href="#FRONTISPIECE">Frontispiece</a></i></span><br /> +<br /> +1. <span class="smcap">Section of Mauser Aperture of Entry</span> <span class="linenum"><i>To face p.</i> <a href="#PLATE_I">73</a></span><br /> +<br /> +2. <span class="smcap">Section of Mauser Aperture of Exit</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_II">76</a></span><br /> +<br /> +3. <span class="smcap">Punctured Fracture of Clavicle</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_III">162</a></span><br /> +<br /> +4. <span class="smcap">Comminuted Fracture of Shaft of Humerus</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_IV">180</a></span><br /> +<br /> +5. <span class="smcap">Comminuted Fracture of Humerus accompanied by an Explosive Exit</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_V">182</a></span><br /> +<br /> +6. <span class="smcap">Comminuted Fracture of Humerus due to Oblique Impact</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_VI">184</a></span><br /> +<br /> +7. <span class="smcap">Same Fracture healed</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_VII">186</a></span><br /> +<br /> +8. <span class="smcap">Low Velocity Fracture of Humerus With Retained Bullet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_VIII">188</a></span><br /> +<br /> +9. <span class="smcap">Localised Fracture of Humerus Showing Fragmentation of the Bullet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_IX">190</a></span><br /> +<br /> +10. <span class="smcap">Wedge-shaped Fracture of the Radius</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_X">192</a></span><br /> +<br /> +11. <span class="smcap">Fracture of the Metacarpus, showing Fragmentation of the Bullet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XI">194</a></span><br /> +<br /> +12. <span class="smcap">Finely Comminuted Fracture of the Femur</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XII">196</a></span><br /> +<br /> +13. <span class="smcap">The same Fracture Healed</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XIII">198</a></span><br /> +<br /> +14. <span class="smcap">Stellate 'Butterfly' Fracture of the Femur</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XIV">200</a></span><br /> +<br /> +15. <span class="smcap">Lateral Impact of Bullet, with Comminution of the Femur</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XV">202</a></span><br /> +<br /> +16. <span class="smcap">Rectangular Impact of Bullet, with highly Oblique Line of Fracture of the Femur</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XVI">204</a></span><br /> +<br /> +17. <span class="smcap">Punctured Fracture of the Femur with Exit Bone-flap</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XVII">206</a></span><br /> +<br /> +18. <span class="smcap">Fractured Patella</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XVIII">208</a></span><br /> +<br /> +19. <span class="smcap">Oblique Comminuted Fracture of the Tibia</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XIX">210</a></span><br /> +<br /> +20. <span class="smcap">Transverse Fracture of the Tibia</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XX">212</a></span><br /> +<br /> +21. <span class="smcap">Puncture of the Tibia, with an Oblique Fissure</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XXI">214</a></span><br /> +<br /> +22. <span class="smcap">Notched Fracture of the Tibia</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XXII">216</a></span><br /> +<br /> +23. <span class="smcap">Punctured Fracture of the Fibula</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XXIII">218</a></span><br /> +<br /> +24. <span class="smcap">The same Fracture, Lateral View</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XXIV">220</a></span><br /> +<br /> +25. <span class="smcap">Vickers-Maxim Fracture of the Humerus</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#PLATE_XXV">482</a></span><br /> +</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xiv" id="Page_xiv">[Pg xiv]</a></span></p> +<h3><i>IN THE TEXT</i></h3> + + +<p> +FIG. <span class="linenum">PAGE</span><br /> +1. <span class="smcap">Linen Hold-all with Instruments</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_4">4</a></span><br /> +<br /> +2. <span class="smcap">Instrument Hold-all Rolled for Packing</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_5">5</a></span><br /> +<br /> +3. <span class="smcap">Tin Water-bottle for Emergency Operations</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_154">6</a></span><br /> +<br /> +4. <span class="smcap">Buggy on the Veldt</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_7">7</a></span><br /> +<br /> +5. <span class="smcap">McCormack-Brook Wheeled Stretcher Carriage</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></span><br /> +<br /> +6. <span class="smcap">Indian Tonga</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_20">20</a></span><br /> +<br /> +7. <span class="smcap">Service Ambulance Wagon</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_21">21</a></span><br /> +<br /> +8. <span class="smcap">Buck-wagon Loaded with Wounded Men</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_22">22</a></span><br /> +<br /> +9. <span class="smcap">Interior of a Wagon of No. 2 Hospital Train</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_24">24</a></span><br /> +<br /> +10. <span class="smcap">P. & O. Hospital Ship 'Simla'</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_25">25</a></span><br /> +<br /> +11. <span class="smcap">Type of General Hospital</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_32">32</a></span><br /> +<br /> +12. <span class="smcap">Type of Tortoise Tent Hospital</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></span><br /> +<br /> +13. <span class="smcap">Single Tortoise Hospital Tent</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_35">35</a></span><br /> +<br /> +14. <span class="smcap">Five Types of Cartridge in Common Use During the War</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_47">47</a></span><br /> +<br /> +15. <span class="smcap">Sections of Four Bullets To Show Relative Thickness of Mantles</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></span><br /> +<br /> +16. <span class="smcap">Entry and Exit Mauser Wounds</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></span><br /> +<br /> +17. <span class="smcap">Gutter Wound of Shoulder</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></span><br /> +<br /> +18. <span class="smcap">Oblique Gutter Exit Wound</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_57">57</a></span><br /> +<br /> +19. <span class="smcap">Oval Entry, Starred Exit Wounds</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_58">58</a></span><br /> +<br /> +20. <span class="smcap">Circular Entry, Slit Exit Wounds</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></span><br /> +<br /> +21. <span class="smcap">Circular Entry, Starred Exit Wounds</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_59">59</a></span><br /> +<br /> +22. <span class="smcap">Entry and Exit Wounds in Six Successive Spots made by same Bullet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_61">61</a></span><br /> +<br /> +23. <span class="smcap">Four Successive Entry and Exit Wounds of same Bullet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_62">62</a></span><br /> +<br /> +24. <span class="smcap">Superficial Abdomino-thoracic Track</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_64">64</a></span><br /> +<br /> +25. <span class="smcap">Superficial Linear Ecchymosis of Thigh</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></span><br /> +<br /> +25<i>a</i>. <span class="smcap">Sections of Mauser Entry and Exit Wounds</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_74">74</a></span><br /> +<br /> +25<i>b</i>. <span class="smcap">Prolapsed Omentum</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_77">77</a></span><br /> +<br /> +26. <span class="smcap">Sections of Four Bullets</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_82">82</a></span><br /> +<br /> +27. <span class="smcap">Normal Mauser Bullet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_83">83</a></span><br /> +<br /> +28. <span class="smcap">Four Mauser Ricochets</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_84">84</a></span><br /> +<br /> +29. <span class="smcap">Mauser Ricochet, Disc Form</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_85">85</a></span><br /> +<br /> +30. <span class="smcap">Fissured Mauser Mantle</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></span><br /> +<br /> +31. <span class="smcap">Mausers Deformed by Impact on Femur</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_86">86</a></span><br /> +<br /> +32. <span class="smcap">Apical Mauser Ricochet</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></span><br /> +<br /> +33. <span class="smcap">Spiral Ricochet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_88">88</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xv" id="Page_xv">[Pg xv]</a></span><br />34. <span class="smcap">Normal Lee-Metford Bullet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_89">89</a></span><br /> +<br /> +35. <span class="smcap">Apical Lee-Metford Ricochets</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_90">90</a></span><br /> +<br /> +36. " " " <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_91">91</a></span><br /> +<br /> +37. <span class="smcap">Four Types of Soft-nosed Bullets</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></span><br /> +<br /> +38. <span class="smcap">'Set-up' Soft-nosed Lee-Metford Bullets</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_92">92</a></span><br /> +<br /> +39. <span class="smcap">Flattened, Solid-based Mantle From Ricochet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_93">93</a></span><br /> +<br /> +40. <span class="smcap">Mauser Bullet, Jeffreys-Tweedie Modification</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></span><br /> +<br /> +41. <span class="smcap">Section of Mark IV. and Soft-nosed Mauser</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_94">94</a></span><br /> +<br /> +42. <span class="smcap">Tampered Bullets</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_95">95</a></span><br /> +<br /> +43. <span class="smcap">Large Leaden Sporting Bullets</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_98">98</a></span><br /> +<br /> +44. <span class="smcap">Explosive Wound of Back</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_100">100</a></span><br /> +<br /> +45. <span class="smcap">Dead Men on Field of Battle</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_102">102</a></span><br /> +<br /> +46. <span class="smcap">Flattened Leaden Cores from Mantled Bullets</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_105">105</a></span><br /> +<br /> +47. <span class="smcap">Explosive Exit Wound over Fractured Ulna</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_154">156</a></span><br /> +<br /> +48. <span class="smcap">Explosive Exit Wound over Fractured Humerus</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_154">158</a></span><br /> +<br /> +49. <span class="smcap">Explosive Exit and Entry Wounds of Legs</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_154">159</a></span><br /> +<br /> +50. <span class="smcap">Types of Gunshot Fracture</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></span><br /> +<br /> +51. <span class="smcap">Lower End of Fractured Femur</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_164">164</a></span><br /> +<br /> +52. <span class="smcap">Oblique Perforation of Femur, Separation of Fragment at Exit Aperture in Bone</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_169">169</a></span><br /> +<br /> +53. <span class="smcap">Gutter Fracture of Head of Humerus</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_178">178</a></span><br /> +<br /> +53<i>a.</i> <span class="smcap">Diagram of 'Butterfly' Type</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_180">180</a></span><br /> +<br /> +54. <span class="smcap">Wire Gauze Splint</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_187">187</a></span><br /> +<br /> +55. <span class="smcap">Gutter Fracture of Pelvis</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_191">191</a></span><br /> +<br /> +55<i>a</i>. <span class="smcap">Diagram of 'Butterfly' Type</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_200">200</a></span><br /> +<br /> +56. <span class="smcap">Cane Field Splint for Lower Extremity</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_209">209</a></span><br /> +<br /> +57. <span class="smcap">Tunnel Fracture at Surface of Tibia</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_219">219</a></span><br /> +<br /> +58. <span class="smcap">Cane Field Splint for Leg</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_222">222</a></span><br /> +<br /> +59. <span class="smcap">Skiagram of Injury to Interphalangeal Joint</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_237">237</a></span><br /> +<br /> +60. <span class="smcap">Skiagram of Bullet in Nasal Fossa</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_244">244</a></span><br /> +<br /> +61. <span class="smcap">Diagram of Aperture of Entry into Cranium</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_245"> 245</a></span><br /> +<br /> +62. <span class="smcap">Aperture of Entry into Frontal Bone</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></span><br /> +<br /> +63. <span class="smcap">Fragment of Inner Table Displaced from Opening seen in Fig. 62</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_253">253</a></span><br /> +<br /> +64. <span class="smcap">Gutter Fracture of First Degree in Parietal Bone</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_255">255</a></span><br /> +<br /> +65. <span class="smcap">Diagram of Gutter Fractures</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></span><br /> +<br /> +66. <span class="smcap">Gutter Fracture of Second Degree in Parietal Bone</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_257">257</a></span><br /> +<br /> +67. <span class="smcap">Diagrams of Gutter Fractures</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_258">258</a></span><br /> +<br /> +68. <span class="smcap">Superficial Perforating Fracture of Parietal Region</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_259">259</a></span><br /> +<br /> +69. <span class="smcap">Diagram of Superficial Perforating Fracture</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></span><br /> +<br /> +70. <span class="smcap">Fragment Forming Floor of Temporal Gutter Fracture</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_260">260</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_xvi" id="Page_xvi">[Pg xvi]</a></span><br />71. <span class="smcap">Scale of External Table in Low Velocity Injury of Frontal Bone</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></span><br /> +<br /> +72. <span class="smcap">Frontal Perforation, Aperture of Exit</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_261">261</a></span><br /> +<br /> +73. <span class="smcap">Visual Field in Occipital Injury</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></span><br /> +<br /> +74. " " " <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_279">279</a></span><br /> +<br /> +75. " " " <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_281">281</a></span><br /> +<br /> +76. " " " <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_281">281</a></span><br /> +<br /> +77. " " " <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_283">283</a></span><br /> +<br /> +78. " " " <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_283">283</a></span><br /> +<br /> +79. <span class="smcap">Contused Spinal Cord</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_333">333</a></span><br /> +<br /> +80. <span class="smcap">Divided Spinal Cord</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_334">334</a></span><br /> +<br /> +81. <span class="smcap">Superficial Track in Anterior Body-wall</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_377">377</a></span><br /> +<br /> +82. <span class="smcap">Spirally Grooved Bullet</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_381"> 381</a></span><br /> +<br /> +83. <span class="smcap">Ecchymosis in Fractured Ribs with Hæmothorax</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_392">392</a></span><br /> +<br /> +84. <span class="smcap">Subcutaneous Division of Abdominal Muscles</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_409">409</a></span><br /> +<br /> +85. <span class="smcap">Lateral Incomplete Wound of Small Intestine. Slit Form</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_416">416</a></span><br /> +<br /> +86. <span class="smcap">Lateral Perforation of Small Intestine. Gutter Form</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_417">417</a></span><br /> +<br /> +87. <span class="smcap">Entry and Exit Wounds in a Transverse Perforation of Intestine</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_418">418</a></span><br /> +<br /> +88. <span class="smcap">Inner Aspect of Piece of Intestine Shown in Fig. 87</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_419">419</a></span><br /> +<br /> +89. <span class="smcap">Impaction of Omentum in Exit Wound of Abdominal Wall</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_421">421</a></span><br /> +<br /> +90. <span class="smcap">Fragments of Large Shells</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_475"> 475</a></span><br /> +<br /> +91. <span class="smcap">Fragments of Percussion and Time Fuses</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_477">477</a></span><br /> +<br /> +92. <span class="smcap">Complete 1-lb. Pom-pom Shell</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_479">479</a></span><br /> +<br /> +93. <span class="smcap">Fragments of Exploded Pom-pom Shells</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_480">480</a></span><br /> +<br /> +94. <span class="smcap">Percussion Fuse From 1-lb. Pom-pom Shell</span><span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_481">481</a></span><br /> +<br /> +95. <span class="smcap">Fragments of Boer Segment Shells</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_483">483</a></span><br /> +<br /> +96. <span class="smcap">Normal and Deformed Leaden Shrapnel Bullets</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_485">485</a></span><br /> +</p> + +<hr style="width: 45%;" /> +<h3><i>TEMPERATURE CHARTS</i></h3> + +<p> +1. <span class="smcap">Case of Axillary Hæmatoma, Blood Temperature</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></span><br /> +<br /> +2. <span class="smcap">Case of Hæmothorax with Recurrent Hæmorrhages</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_395">395</a></span><br /> +<br /> +3. <span class="smcap">Primary and Secondary Rises of Temperature in Hæmothorax, Recovering Spontaneously</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_402">402</a></span><br /> +<br /> +4. <span class="smcap">Secondary Rise of Temperature in Hæmothorax</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_403">403</a></span><br /> +<br /> +5. <span class="smcap">Falls of Temperature in Hæmothorax following Paracentesis</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_404">404</a></span><br /> +<br /> +6. <span class="smcap">Secondary Hæmothorax, Spontaneous Fall of Temperature</span> <span class="linenum"><a href="#Page_405">405</a></span><br /> +</p> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="SURGICAL_EXPERIENCES" id="SURGICAL_EXPERIENCES"></a>SURGICAL EXPERIENCES</h2> + +<h4>IN</h4> + +<h2>SOUTH AFRICA</h2> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2> + +<h3>INTRODUCTORY</h3> + + +<p>The following pages are intended to give an account of personal +experience of the gunshot wounds observed during the South African +campaign in 1899 and 1900. For this reason few cases are quoted beyond +those coming under my own immediate observation, and in the few +instances where others are made use of the source of quotation is +indicated. It will be noted that my experience was almost entirely +confined to bullet wounds, and in this respect it no doubt differs from +that of surgeons employed in Natal, where shell injuries were more +numerous. This is, however, of the less moment for my purpose as there +is probably little to add regarding shell injuries to what is already +known, while, on the other hand, the opportunity of observing large +numbers of injuries from rifle bullets of small calibre has not +previously been afforded to British surgeons.</p> + +<p>I think the general trend of the observations goes to show that the +employment of bullets of small calibre is all to the advantage of the +men wounded, except in so far as the increased possibilities of the +range of fire may augment the number of individuals hit; also that such +variations as exist between wounds inflicted by bullets of the +Martini-Henry and Mauser types respectively, depend rather on the form +and bulk of the projectile than on any inherent difference in the nature +of the injuries. Thus in the chapter devoted to the general characters +of the wounds, it will be seen that most of the older types<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span> of entry +and exit aperture are produced in miniature by the small modern bullet, +and that the main peculiarity of the deeper injuries is the frequent +strict localisation of the direct damage to an area of no greater width +than that crossed by narrow structures of importance such as arteries or +nerves.</p> + +<p>It is to be regretted that I am unable to furnish any important +statistical details, but incomplete numbers, such as are at my disposal, +would be of little value. In view, however, of the considerable interval +which must elapse before the Royal Army Medical Corps is able to arrange +and publish the large material which will have accumulated, it has +seemed unwise to defer publication until the completion of a report +which will deal with such matters thoroughly.</p> + +<p>It may be of interest to premise the opportunities which I enjoyed of +gaining experience during the campaign. I arrived in South Africa on +November 19, 1899; two days later I proceeded to Orange River with +Surgeon-General Wilson, and on the day three weeks after leaving home +performed some operations in the field hospitals on patients from the +battle of Belmont. I remained at Orange River during the three next +engagements, Graspan, Enslin, and Modder River, and on the day of +Magersfontein I went forward to the Field hospitals at Modder River, +arriving during the bringing in of the patients from the field of +battle. I returned to Orange River with the patients and remained there +a further period of three weeks, during which time the patients were +gradually transferred to the Base hospitals at Wynberg. At Christmas I +followed the patients down to the base, and thus was able to observe the +course of the cases from their commencement to convalescence. I remained +at Wynberg six weeks, during which time a number of cases from the +neighbourhood of Rensburg and some from Natal were received. On February +7, I left Wynberg, following Lord Roberts up to my old quarters at +Modder River, where I saw a few wounded men brought in from the +engagements at Koodoosberg Drift. On Lord Roberts's departure for +Bloemfontein he requested me to return to Wynberg to await the wounded +who might be sent down from the fighting which might occur during his +advance. I therefore had the disappointment of seeing the start of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span> +army, and then returning to Wynberg, where I remained for another six +weeks in attendance at Nos. 1 and 2 General Hospitals.</p> + +<p>During this period a very large number of the wounded from Paardeberg +Drift and other battles were sent down and treated, after which surgical +work began to flag.</p> + +<p>On April 14, I was recalled to the front and journeyed to Bloemfontein, +where I stayed three weeks, making one journey out to the Bearer Company +of the IX. Division at the Waterworks.</p> + +<p>On May 4, I left Bloemfontein with Lord Roberts's army, and shortly +after joined the IX. Division, with which I journeyed until the +commencement of June, seeing a good deal of scattered work in the field +and Field hospitals, and in the small temporary improvised hospitals in +the towns of Winberg, Lindley, and Heilbron. Early in June I left +Heilbron with Lord Methuen's division, and spent the next four weeks +with this division in the field. Thence I journeyed to Pretoria and +Johannesburg, seeing a small number of wounded in each town, and on July +10, with Lord Roberts's consent, I started for home, visiting a number +of the hospitals in the Orange River Colony and Natal on my way down to +Cape Town. During the movements briefly recorded above, which absorbed a +period of nine months, my time was fairly evenly divided between Field, +Stationary, and Base hospitals; hence I had opportunities of observing +the patients in every stage of their illnesses, and in all some +thousands of men came under my notice.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 331px;"> +<img src="images/fig1.jpg" width="331" height="450" alt="Fig. 1." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 1.—Linen Holdall with surgical instruments</span> +</div> + +<p>My departure for the seat of war was rather hurried, hence my surgical +equipment was not of an extensive nature. It may be of interest, +however, to shortly recount what it consisted in, since it proved an +ample one, and yet was carried in a small satchel. The plan of selection +adopted consisted in carefully going through the equipment of the +British Field Hospital, and then adding such other instruments as seemed +to me likely to be useful. With few exceptions, therefore, designed to +meet emergencies, my set of instruments formed a supplement to the +actual necessities carried by the Service hospitals, and was as +follows:—4 trephines, Horsley's elevator, brain knife and seeker. 2 +pairs of Hoffman's and 1 pair of Lane's fulcrum gouge forceps, 3 bone +gouges, 1 pair straight 1 curved necrosis forceps, 1 pair bone forceps. +1 Wood's 1 Horsley's skull saws, 18 Gigli's saws with an extra handle, +and two Podrez' directors for the same. 1 set Lane's bone drills, +broaches, screw-drivers, and counter-sink with eight ounces of screws: +silver patella wire, and 1 pair Peter's bone forceps. 2 aneurism +needles, 1 bullet probe, 1 pair Egyptian Army pattern bullet forceps. 4 +Lane's and 3 pairs Makins's bowel<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span> clamps, Nos. 3 4 and 5 Laplace's +bowel forceps, 6 Murphy's buttons, 1 pair Morris's retractors, 6 dozen +intestine needles, 2 Macphail's needle-holders, Nos. 4 5 6 Thomas's +slot-eyed needles, 1 mouth gag, 1 Durham's double raspatory, 3 strong +plated raspatories, 1 pair tongue forceps, 1 tracheal dilator, 1 pair +hernia needles, 1 hernia and 1 ordinary steel director, 1 transfusion +set with metal funnel, and a stock of Messrs. Burroughes and Wellcome's +compound saline infusion soloids. 1 antitoxin syringe. 6 scalpels, 2 +blunt-pointed curved bistouries, 6 forcipressure forceps, 1 pair Jordan +Lloyd's retractors, 1 pair ordinary retractors, 2 pairs of forceps, 3 +pairs of Scissors, 1 skin-grafting razor and roll of perforated tin +foil, 1 metal pocket case, and 1 hypodermic syringe with tabloids. A +stock of silkworm gut, horsehair and silk ligatures, the latter prepared +and sterilised for me by Miss Taylor, the Theatre Sister at St. Thomas's +Hospital. Some pairs of McBurney's india-rubber, and cotton-thread +operating gloves.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig2.jpg" width="450" height="316" alt="Fig. 2." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 2.—Instrument Holdall rolled</span> +</div> + +<p>The instruments were packed in sets in small linen holdalls suggested +and made by Messrs. Down Bros., who also devised my satchel. In the +light of the experience gained I should have preferred a tin case to the +satchel, as it never needed to be carried on horseback.</p> + +<p>For dressings I trusted entirely to the Royal Army Medical Corps, and at +my request Colonel Gubbins, R.A.M.C., sent out<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span> to the Cape a quantity +of sterilised sponges and pads made by Messrs. Robinson & Co. Ltd. of +Chesterfield, which fully met all requirements in this direction.</p> + +<div class="figleft" style="width: 189px;"> +<img src="images/fig3.jpg" width="189" height="450" alt="Fig. 3." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 3.—Tin Water-bottle for the march (Military Equipment Company)</span> +</div> + +<p>This equipment was superfluous at the Base hospitals, but when in the +field with the troops proved very useful. In the early part of the +campaign I was able to do all my travelling by train, but later I +travelled by road only. I received the greatest kindness and help in +this particular. General Sir William Nicholson, Chief Director of +Transport, provided me with a buggy, a pair of horses, and a driver, and +Prince Francis of Teck, the Chief Remount Officer, selected a pony +suitable to my equestrian powers. The buggy proved a very great success; +the box seat carried my instruments and dressings, the front a 4-gallon +tin water-bottle for emergency operations, and the rear shelf my +personal belongings. The water-bottle was lent to me by the Portland +Hospital. (Fig. 3.)</p> + +<p>The cart was able to cross any drifts or dongas, and when an engagement +was in progress was able to accompany the Ambulance wagons, so that I +had all my necessaries on the spot, even at the first dressing station. +In point of fact when with the Highland Brigade, on some occasions, we +did all necessary operations on the spot during the progress of +fighting; a most useful performance, since fighting on several days did +not cease till dark, and the evenings were much too cold to allow of +operations being done with safety to the patients. The great advantage +of the buggy was its lightness and smallness.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span> On one occasion it +accompanied me between 500 and 600 miles without a single accident, +beyond the fact that one night I was relieved of both my horses by some +troopers whose own were worn out.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig4.jpg" width="450" height="363" alt="Fig. 4." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 4.—My Buggy on the veldt at Bloemfontein. (Photo by Mr. Bowlby)</span> +</div> + +<p>With regard to the general health of the troops as subjects of surgical +wounds, I suppose a better class of patient could scarcely be found. The +men were young, sound, well set and nourished, and hard and fit from +exercise in the open air. Beyond this, in spite of the scarcity of +vegetables, a certain amount of fruit, rations of jam, and lime juice +made any sign of scurvy a rare occurrence—I never saw a case during the +whole of my wanderings. The meat was good, especially in the early part +of the campaign, when it was for the most part brought from Australia +and New Zealand, and we enjoyed the two collateral advantages of getting +plenty of the ice which had been used for the preservation of the meat, +in the camps, and the still greater one of having no butchers' offal to +need destruction or prove a source of danger. When bread was to be got +it was fairly good, and the biscuit was at all times excellent. Except +on the advance from Modder River to Bloemfontein,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span> as far as I could +judge, no large bodies of the men ever really suffered from shortness of +food, and then only for a few days. Drink was a more serious problem: in +the early days beer was to be got at the canteens, but with the increase +of numbers and difficulties of transport this ceased to be the case, and +water was the sole fluid available. This was often muddy, and the +soldiers would take very little care what they drank unless under +constant supervision; hence a great quantity of very undesirable water +was drunk. None the less I think the water was more often the cause of +sand diarrhœa than of enteric fever. A large quantity of fluid was by +no means a necessity if the men would only have exercised some +self-control. During the first week I spent at Orange River, I drank +lime juice and water all day, but after that time, by a very slight +amount of determination, I thoroughly broke myself of the habit, and +drank at meal-times only. Most of the men however emptied their +water-bottles during the first hour of the march, and the rest of the +day endured agony, seizing the first opportunity of drinking any filthy +water they met with. When, for instance, we camped near a vlei, and the +General took the greatest care that the mules and horses should be +watered at one spot only, in order to preserve the cleanliness of the +rest of the pool, the men would often go and fill their water-bottles +amongst the animals' feet rather than take the trouble to walk the few +necessary yards round. In such particulars they needed constant +supervision.</p> + +<p>The climate on the western side was a great element no doubt both in the +general healthiness of the men and in the general good results seen in +the healing of wounds. The days were often hot; thus even in November at +Orange River the thermometer registered 115°F. in the single bell tents, +but on the other hand the nights were cool and refreshing. The air was +very pure and exceedingly dry, while the constant sunshine not only kept +up the spirits, but also proved the most efficient disinfector of any +ground fouled to less than a serious extent. Dust was our principal +bugbear; and when a camp had been settled for a few days, flies; both of +these evils increasing rapidly as the stay on any one spot was +prolonged. My personal experience of rain was small, but I was twice in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span> +camp, once at Orange River and once at Bloemfontein, when very heavy +rain fell, and this was sufficient to make the camps terribly +uncomfortable for a few days.</p> + +<p>Under these conditions, as might be expected, until the outbreak of +enteric fever the health of the men was remarkably good, minor ailments +alone prevailing. One of the most troublesome of these was diarrhœa, +which gained the appellation of 'the Modders,' already a classical name +as far as South Africa is concerned. This most frequently, I think, +depended on errors of diet, combined with the swallowing of a large +amount of sand with the food as dust, and in the water drunk. Cases of +severe dysentery, however, were also not very uncommon. Rheumatic pains +were a common ailment, which, considering the dryness of the atmosphere, +would hardly have been expected. Continued fever of a somewhat special +type was not uncommon, and was sometimes spoken of under the name of the +district, sometimes as veldt fever—of this I will say nothing, as +others better fitted to point out its peculiarities will no doubt deal +with it. Enteric fever, our chief scourge, I will pass over for the same +reason. I might, however, remark from the point of view of one not very +experienced in this disease, that in a large number of the fatal cases I +happened to see, the actual cause of death seemed to me to be septicæmia +from absorption from the mouth. The mouths were unusually bad, even +allowing for the often insufficient cleansing that was able to be +carried out, and I was inclined to attribute these in some degree to the +dryness of the atmosphere, which very quickly and effectively dried up +the mucous membrane of the mouth in patients not breathing through the +nose, and encouraged the formation of large cracks. Pneumonia was rare, +and this was rendered the more striking from the comparatively large +number of men who contracted the disease on board ship on the voyage out +from England.</p> + +<p>As will be gathered from the above, medical disease seldom called for +the aid of the surgeon. Abdominal section was occasionally considered in +cases of perforation in enteric fever, and was, I believe, a few times +performed, but as far as I know without success. It was also proposed to +treat some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> of the severe dysentery cases by colotomy, but I never saw +the method tried. As far as I was concerned I never met with a case of +either disease I thought suitable for the treatment. I saw one case in +which an abscess of the liver had followed an attack of enteric, which +had been successfully treated by incision, and a few cases of tropical +abscess which probably came into the country were also subjected to +operation. Some cases of appendicitis, as would be expected, also needed +surgical treatment. In a few instances empyema followed influenza, and a +few cases of mastoid suppuration had to be dealt with.</p> + +<p>Of surgical diseases the one most special to the campaign, although not +of great importance, was the veldt sore. This was a small localised +suppuration most common on the hands and neck, but sometimes invading +the whole trunk, more particularly the lower extremities however, when +the covered parts of the body were attacked. The sores were no doubt the +result of local infections; they reminded me most of the sores seen on +the hands of plasterers, and I think there is no doubt the dust was +responsible for them. I think piles were somewhat more prevalent than +they should have been among the men, but this was probably dependent on +the strain involved in defæcation in the squatting position, since the +soldiers were for the most part regularly attentive to the calls of +nature.</p> + +<p>I saw a good many cases of lightning stroke, and some were fatal. +Sunstroke was not common, and, considering the heat, it was very +remarkable how little the men suffered from this condition. This was no +doubt in part attributable to the absence of the possibility of getting +alcoholic drinks, but it is not common for any one in South Africa to +suffer in this way, probably as a result of the continuous nature of the +sunshine.</p> + +<p>In spite of the labours of hospital surgeons at home, it was rather +instructive to see the number of men who suffered with hernia, +varicocele, and varicose veins to a sufficient degree to necessitate +going to the base. The experience quite sufficed to explain the trouble +which is taken to prevent men with these complaints entering the +service.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span></p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">General Consideration of the Number of Men Killed and Wounded</span></h3> + +<p>I will now pass to the question of the proportionate frequency with +which the men were killed or wounded during the present campaign. I +propose to take only one series of battles, with which I was personally +acquainted throughout, to illustrate this point. This seems the more +satisfactory course to follow, since the number of casualties is still +undergoing continuous gradual increase, and besides this the warfare has +assumed a peculiar and irregular form, statistics from which scarcely +possess general application.</p> + +<p>The battles included, those of the first Kimberley Relief Force, were +fought under fair average conditions as to the nature of the ground. In +the first two the defending enemy occupied heights, in the two following +the ground advanced over by our men was comparatively even; thus at +Modder River there was only a gradual slope upwards, and at +Magersfontein the advanced trenches of the Boers were only slightly +above the level of the ground over which the advance was made. At the +same time, at the latter battle a great number of the Boers engaged were +on the sides of the hill well above the advanced trenches. In no case +were the Boers in such a position as to have to fire upwards, to them a +considerable advantage. It must also be noted that throughout the Boers +were able to rest their rifles; hence the fire should have been at any +rate of an average degree of accuracy. In the advances of our own men, +anthills and stones were practically the only cover to be obtained, and +little or no help was given by variations in the general surface. All +these points seem to favour a large proportional number of hits on the +part of the riflemen. I very much regret that I am unable to say what +was the proportional number of shell wounds among the men hit, but I can +say with some confidence that among the wounded it was not as great as +ten per cent. I should be inclined to place it as low as five per cent. +Again, I cannot fix the proportionate occurrence of wounds from bullets +of large calibre such as the Martini-Henry, but this was certainly not +large. I think if ten per cent. is deducted to represent the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span> number of +hits from either of these forms of projectile, that we may fairly assume +the remaining 90 per cent. of the wounds to have been produced by +bullets of small calibre. The numbers of the opposing forces were +probably fairly even.</p> + +<p>Taking all these circumstances together, and bearing in mind that our +army was always in the position of having to make frontal attacks on men +well protected in strong positions, I think it must be allowed that a +fair idea should be possible of the effectiveness of the modern weapons. +Only one circumstance, one inseparable from any fighting with the Boers, +seems to affect the numbers in an important manner. This consists in the +fact that the Boer rarely fights to the bitter end, hence the greater +proportion of his hits are obtained at long distances.</p> + + +<h3>TABLE I</h3> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'>Number of troops engaged</td><td align='center'>Killed</td><td align='center'>Wounded</td><td align='center'>Missing</td><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>Percentage of<br />killed and wounded<br />to number of<br />men engaged</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'><i>Belmont:</i></td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Officers</td><td align='center'>297</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>23</td><td align='center'>0</td><td align='center'>26</td><td align='center'>8.75</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Non.-com. officers and men</td><td align='center'>8,396</td><td align='center'>55</td><td align='center'>206</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>265</td><td align='center'>3.15</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>8,693</td><td align='center'>58</td><td align='center'>229</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>291</td><td align='center'>3.34</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'><i>Graspan:</i></td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Officers</td><td align='center'>326</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>7</td><td align='center'>0</td><td align='center'>10</td><td align='center'>3.06</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Non.-com. officers and men</td><td align='center'>8,213</td><td align='center'>18</td><td align='center'>163</td><td align='center'>7</td><td align='center'>188</td><td align='center'>2.29</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>8,539</td><td align='center'>21</td><td align='center'>170</td><td align='center'>7</td><td align='center'>198</td><td align='center'>2.31</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'><i>Modder River:</i></td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Officers</td><td align='center'>335</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>19</td><td align='center'>0</td><td align='center'>22</td><td align='center'>6.56</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Non.-com. officers and men</td><td align='center'>9,856</td><td align='center'>67</td><td align='center'>377</td><td align='center'>18</td><td align='center'>462</td><td align='center'>4.68</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>10,191</td><td align='center'>70</td><td align='center'>396</td><td align='center'>18</td><td align='center'>484</td><td align='center'>4.74</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'><i>Magersfontein:</i></td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Officers</td><td align='center'>379</td><td align='center'>18</td><td align='center'>48</td><td align='center'>2</td><td align='center'>68</td><td align='center'>17.94</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Non.-com. officers and men</td><td align='center'>11,068</td><td align='center'>148</td><td align='center'>669</td><td align='center'>101</td><td align='center'>918</td><td align='center'>8.29</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></td><td align='center'>11,447</td><td align='center'>166</td><td align='center'>717</td><td align='center'>103</td><td align='center'>986</td><td align='center'>8.43</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p> +<p>Table I. gives the number of men engaged, and also that of the killed +and wounded at each of four battles. Table III. shows for comparison the +relative number of killed and wounded in some former campaigns while +older forms of weapon were in use.</p> + +<p>With regard to the numbers in Tables I. and II. it should be at once +said that they are only to be regarded as approximate, since they do not +exactly tally with those officially reported in the 'Times' at a later +date. Sources of error may, however, have crept into both, and as there +is little difference in the gross numbers, I have preferred to retain +the series compiled by Major Burtchaell, R.A.M.C., as Table II. contains +interesting information as to the proportionate number of men who died +during the first 48 hours, after being wounded.</p> + + +<h3>TABLE II</h3> + +<h4><span class="smcap">Showing Proportion of Mortality amongst Men Hit</span>, (<i>a</i>) <span class="smcap">on the Field</span>, +(<i>b</i>) <span class="smcap">during the First Forty-eight Hours</span></h4> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td colspan="2">Percentage mortality</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'>Number of troops engaged</td><td align='center'>Total number of men hit</td><td align='center'>Killed</td><td align='center'>Died within forty-eight hours</td><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>To men hit</td><td align='center'>To force employed</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'><i>Belmont</i>:</td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Officers</td><td align='center'>297</td><td align='center'>26</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>6</td><td align='center'>23</td><td align='center'>2.02</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Non.-com. officers and men</td><td align='center'>8,396</td><td align='center'>265</td><td align='center'>55</td><td align='center'>8</td><td align='center'>63</td><td align='center'>23.77</td><td align='center'>0.75</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>8,693</td><td align='center'>291</td><td align='center'>58</td><td align='center'>11</td><td align='center'>69</td><td align='center'>23.71</td><td align='center'>0.79</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'><i>Graspan</i>:</td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Officers</td><td align='center'>326</td><td align='center'>10</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>1</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>40<a name="FNanchor_2_2" id="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a></td><td align='center'>1.22</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Non.-com. officers and men</td><td align='center'>8,213</td><td align='center'>188</td><td align='center'>18</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>21</td><td align='center'>11.17</td><td align='center'>0.25</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>8,539</td><td align='center'>198</td><td align='center'>21</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>25</td><td align='center'>12.62</td><td align='center'>0.29</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'><i>Modder River</i>:</td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Officers</td><td align='center'>335</td><td align='center'>22</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>1</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>18.18</td><td align='center'>1.19</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Non.-com. officers and men</td><td align='center'>9,856</td><td align='center'>462</td><td align='center'>67</td><td align='center'>9</td><td align='center'>76</td><td align='center'>16.45</td><td align='center'>0.77</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>10,191</td><td align='center'>484</td><td align='center'>70</td><td align='center'>10</td><td align='center'>80</td><td align='center'>16.53</td><td align='center'>0.78</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'><i>Magersfontein</i>:</td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Officers</td><td align='center'>379</td><td align='center'>68</td><td align='center'>18</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>22</td><td align='center'>32.35</td><td align='center'>5.80</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Non.-com. officers and men</td><td align='center'>11,068</td><td align='center'>918</td><td align='center'>148</td><td align='center'>20</td><td align='center'>168</td><td align='center'>18.30</td><td align='center'>1.51</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>11,447</td><td align='center'>986</td><td align='center'>166</td><td align='center'>24</td><td align='center'>190</td><td align='center'>19.26</td><td align='center'>1.66</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p> + +<p>The high death rate among the officers will at once arrest attention, +but this has been noticed in other campaigns, particularly in the +Franco-German war. It is mainly attributable to the circumstance that +the officers, as leading, are always in the front and most exposed +position. I much doubt whether at the end of the campaign the entire +abandonment of distinctive badges will be found to have had any very +important result in decreasing the relative number of casualties as +between officers and men. At close quarters distinctive uniform is no +doubt a danger, but at the common ranges of 1,000 yards and upwards the +enemy's fire is rather directed to cover a zone than to pick out +individuals.</p> + +<p>The especially high mortality among the officers at the battle of +Graspan was attributable to the casualties among the naval officers, and +the men of the brigade suffered most severely also.</p> + +<p>It will be noted that the most expensive battles were those of Belmont +and Magersfontein.</p> + +<p>If the numbers of the men actually taking part in the fighting in these +battles as given in Table I. are massed, we get an approximate total of +12,420.<a name="FNanchor_3_3" id="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a></p> + +<p>Of this number, 1,959 or 15.06 per cent. were reported as killed, +wounded, or missing. Thus: killed, 315 or 2.53 per cent.; wounded, 1,512 +or 12.17 per cent.; missing, 132 or 1.06 per cent. Reference to Table +III. shows that these percentages almost exactly correspond with those +obtaining in the entire Crimean campaign, and are greater than those +observed in the German army during the entire Franco-German campaign.</p> + +<p>The mortality statistics given in Table II. are of great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span> interest, +since to those dying on the field are added all men dying within the +first 48 hours in the Field hospitals. From the surgical point of view +these men all received mortal injury, and are therefore properly +included among the fatalities. Their inclusion, moreover, makes an +appreciable difference in the percentage proportion of mortal injuries +to wounds. Thus, if the numbers are massed (omitting the 'missing'), we +find that in the four battles 1,827 men were hit, of whom 315, or 17.24 +per cent., were killed. Among the wounded carried off the field, +however, 49 received mortal injuries, and if these are added to the 315, +we find that the proportion of mortal injuries reaches 19.92 per cent.</p> + + +<h3>TABLE III<a name="FNanchor_4_4" id="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a></h3> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td rowspan="3"> </td><td align='center'>1815.</td><td align='center'>1854.</td><td align='center'>1871.</td><td align='center'>1877.</td><td align='center'>1899.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Waterloo</td><td align='center'>Crimean War</td><td align='center'>Franco-German War</td><td align='center'>Russo-Turkish War</td><td align='center'>Kimberley Relief Force</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>(English troops)</td><td align='center'>(English troops)</td><td align='center'>(German troops)</td><td align='center'>(Russian troops)</td><td align='center'>(English troops)</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Number of troops engaged</td><td align='center'>36,240</td><td align='center'>97,864</td><td align='center'>887,876</td><td align='center'>300,000</td><td align='center'>15,748</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Number of killed</td><td align='center'>1,759</td><td align='center'>2,775</td><td align='center'>17,570</td><td align='center'>32,780</td><td align='center'>315</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Percentage</td><td align='center'>4.85</td><td align='center'>2.81</td><td align='center'>1.97</td><td align='center'>10.92</td><td align='center'>2</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Number of wounded</td><td align='center'>5,892</td><td align='center'>12,094</td><td align='center'>96,189</td><td align='center'>71,268</td><td align='center'>1,512</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Percentage</td><td align='center'>16.25</td><td align='center'>12.35</td><td align='center'>10.83</td><td align='center'>23.75</td><td align='center'>9.60</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Number of missing</td><td align='center'>807</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>4,009</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>132</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Percentage</td><td align='center'>2.19</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>0.45</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>.83</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>-Total killed, wounded, and missing</td><td align='center'>8,458</td><td align='center'>14,849</td><td align='center'>117,768</td><td align='center'>104,050</td><td align='center'>1,959</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Percentage</td><td align='center'>23.31</td><td align='center'>15.17</td><td align='center'>13.26</td><td align='center'>34.68</td><td align='center'>12.43</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p>The proportion of men killed to those wounded was as follows: killed +315, wounded 1,512, or 1 to 4.8. If we add to the men killed on the +field of battle the 49 dying in the next 48 hours, the proportion of +fatalities is increased to 1 to 4.15. The higher of these proportions is +certainly the surgically correct one.</p> + +<p>With regard to the general accuracy of the numbers given above, a +comparison of those published for the campaign up to September 15, 1900, +is of value, as the two series substantially tally. Thus, up to that +date, 17,072 men were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> hit, and of these 2,998 were killed. The +proportion killed to wounded was therefore 1 to 4.69.</p> + +<p>If it be borne in mind that of the wounded men included in Table I., 1.5 +per cent. died later in the Base hospitals, the percentages are almost +identical.</p> + +<p>Table III. is inserted with a view to instituting a comparison between +the number of casualties in the present and earlier campaigns.</p> + +<p>For the purposes of this table it is necessary to take the approximate +number of men at Lord Methuen's disposal, irrespective of their active +participation in the fighting.</p> + +<p>The result of this addition to the total is to show that the percentage +of men killed and wounded was slightly lower than in the Crimean war, +and nearly corresponded with that observed in the Franco-German +campaign.</p> + +<p>As it has been shown that our numbers correspond in general with those +of the whole war up to September 15, 1900, there can be little doubt +that the same ratios will be maintained to the close of the campaign.</p> + +<p>On the face of the numbers, therefore, there is little ground for +assuming that the change in the nature of the weapons has materially +influenced the deadliness of warfare at all. This is capable of +explanation on the ground that in the Crimea the battles were fought at +much closer quarters, and hence the weapons of the time were as +effective, or more so, than the present ones. That this increased +distance between the combatants will always counterbalance the increased +deadliness of the weapons in the future is more than probable, since the +range of effectiveness has been increased both in rifle and in artillery +fire. In the present campaign the effect of the latter was very +noticeable, since the Boers were, as a rule, quickly displaced by shell +fire, unless they were in especially favourable positions, and this +although no great number of men was hit by the projectiles. Under these +circumstances, except on some occasions, neither side derived all the +advantage from the increased shooting powers of their rifles which might +have been expected. To a lesser degree this will probably always be the +case in the future.</p> + +<p>In connection with these remarks, however, I would point<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> to column 4 of +Table III., as showing how difficult it is to draw definite deductions +from any particular set of numbers alone. This column shows that in the +Russo-Turkish War of 1877 all the percentages were practically doubled +or more, and in the case of the number of men killed on the field of +battle, the number was nearly five times as great as either in the +Crimea or the present campaign. The explanation here depends on the race +of men and their tenacity in resistance alone. In the case of either +nation death in battle is little feared, and slight inclination to avoid +it exists. When the theory of war held by the Boer—<i>i.e.</i> going out to +shoot an enemy without incurring risk of being yourself shot—is borne +in mind, the special circumstances attending the present campaign are +sufficiently obvious to need little further remark. A future campaign in +which the combatants are as equally well armed, but each side stands to +the last, will probably give very different results.</p> + +<p>It is unfortunate that no details can be given as to the influence of +range in altering the relative numbers of killed to wounded. It may be +stated, however, that in no instance did the percentage of killed to +wounded reach 25 per cent. At the battle of Magersfontein it amounted to +19.26 per cent., at Colenso to 17.97 per cent., and at both these +engagements there is little doubt that a considerable number of the men +were hit within a distance of 1,000 yards. When the distances were very +short the injuries were frequently multiple; and this character was a +more common source of danger than increase of severity in the individual +wounds received at a short range.</p> + +<p>A short consideration of the circumstances especially influencing the +ultimate mortality amongst the wounded subsequent to the reception of +the injury is here necessary, although I shall be obliged to make my +remarks as short as possible. The subject is best treated of under the +two headings of Transport and Hospital Accommodation.</p> + +<p><i>Transport.</i>—The importance of transport is felt from the moment of the +injury till the time of arrival of the patient in the mother country. To +the surgeon it is of the same vital importance as the carrying of food +for the troops is to the combatant general.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p> + +<p>(<i>a</i>) Removal of the wounded from the field of battle. My experience was +opposed to hurried action in this matter, although it is necessary to +gather up the wounded before nightfall if possible. As a rule wounded +men should not be removed from the field of battle under fire, at any +rate when the troops are in open order at a range of 1,000 yards or +more. I saw several instances in which mortal wounds were incurred by +previously wounded men or their bearers during the process of removal, +while it was astonishing how many scattered wounded men could lie out +under a heavy fire and escape by the doctrine of chances. The erect +position and small group necessary to bear off a wounded man at once +draws a concentrated fire, if fighting is still proceeding.</p> + +<p>As to the best and quickest method of removing the patients to the first +dressing station, there were few occasions when this was not more +satisfactorily done by bearers with stretchers than by wagons. The +movement was more easy to the wounded men, and, as a rule, time was +saved. Over rough ground the wagons travel slowly, and patients with +only provisional splints were shaken undesirably. A stretcher party in +my experience easily outstripped the wagon unless a road or very smooth +veldt existed. A larger number of men is of course required, but I take +it that on the occasion of a great war men are both more easily obtained +and fed than are transport animals. From what I have been able to learn, +both the Indian dhoolie-bearers and the hastily recruited Colonial +bearer companies were most successful in the removal of the large number +of wounded men from the field of Colenso. I had several opportunities of +comparing the two methods on a smaller scale during the fighting in +Orange River Colony, and felt very strongly in favour of the stretcher +parties.</p> + +<p>For removal of patients from one part of a hospital to another, or +sometimes in loading trains, &c., great economy of men, and increased +comfort to the patients, may be attained by the use of some form of +ambulance trolly.</p> + +<p>I append an illustration of what seemed to me the simplest and best I +came across among several in use in South Africa. The description +beneath is by Major McCormack, R.A.M.C., its inventor (fig. 5).<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span></p> + +<p>When wagons were necessary or preferable, the Indian Tongas (fig. 6), +presented by Mr. Dhanjibhoy, were most useful; they carried two men +lying down, the same number as the big service wagon, and were drawn by +two ponies only. Although somewhat highly springed, the vehicle is so +well arranged and padded, that the occupants are seldom hurt by striking +against the sides with rough jolting, unless quite helpless. I +occasionally made long journeys in this vehicle with much comfort.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig5.jpg" width="450" height="282" alt="Fig. 5." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 5.—The McCormack-Brook Wheeled Stretcher Carriage.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>It consists of an under-carriage built up of two light wheels with steel +spokes and rims with rubber tyres and ball bearings; on the axle are two +light elliptic springs, to which is attached a transverse seat for the +stretcher-carrier proper. This is securely bolted on to the seat, and +consists of two pieces of hard wood, suitably worked, and forming an +angle frame. On the bottom side the stretcher poles rest, and the sides +of the L formed by the carrier proper prevent most effectually any +jerking or turning of the stretcher when once it has been laid in the +carrier. The carrier is about thirty inches long, but can be increased +to any length desired. It has been found that this length is admirably +suited for all purposes. To prevent the stretcher from any lateral or +upward movement, two buttons with tightening screws are attached to the +top of the carrier on each side. When the stretcher is laid on the +carrier the screws are tightened and the stretcher is held rigid.</b></p> + +<p class="center"><b>Two iron supports are provided, one at each end and on opposite sides of +the carrier. These are lowered when it is desired either to place the +stretcher on the carriage or remove it therefrom, which can be effected +in a second. The carriage meanwhile remains perfectly still. When the +carriage is in motion the iron supports are turned up, and lie along the +respective sides of the carrier, where each rests in a small clip. The +great object of this stretcher carriage has been to obtain mobility, +strength, and lightness combined with efficiency and a ready and easy +means of transport for sick and wounded, no matter where a patient has +to be transported from. The loaded stretcher and wheeled carriage can be +readily handled by one man on good roads, and by two men in rough +country. The springs prevent any jar being felt by the patient on the +stretcher.</b></p> + +<p>(<i>b</i>) For the longer journeys to the Field or Stationary<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span> hospitals, the +service wagon and other transport vehicles came into use, particularly +the South African ox-wagon.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig6.jpg" width="450" height="327" alt="Fig. 6" title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 6—Indian Tonga on the march. (Photo by Mr. Bowlby)</span> +</div> + +<p>The service wagon (fig. 7) is a heavy four-wheeled vehicle, drawn by ten +mules. The good construction of the wagon was amply proved by the manner +in which it stood the hard wear and tear of the present campaign. It is, +however, very heavy, and in comparison with its size affords very small +accommodation. Two lying-down patients and six sitting is its entire +capacity. Some modified patterns were in use, notably those with the +Irish and Imperial Yeomanry Field Hospitals, capable of carrying four +lying-down cases, the men being arranged in two tiers. Major Hale, +R.A.M.C., made a very successful trek from Rhenoster to Kroonstadt with +some of these, carrying twice the regulation number of lying-down cases +in his wagons. Some modification in the mode of fixation is, however, +necessary to increase the security of the stretchers of the upper +series.</p> + +<p>A really satisfactory wagon, combining both strength and comfort, still +remains to be devised.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig7.jpg" width="450" height="337" alt="Fig. 7." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 7.—Service Ambulance Wagon, the six front mulesremoved.<br /> + +(Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)</span> +</div> + +<p>During the later stages of the campaign, a very large number of patients +were transported by the South African ox- or mule- (buck) wagons. +Although not of prepossessing appearance, and unprovided with any sort +of springs, these vehicles were far from unsatisfactory. The ox-wagon +consists of a long simple platform, 19 ft. 2 in. in length, 4 ft. 6 in. +in width, from the sides of which a slanting board rises over the wheels +for the posterior two-thirds. These bulwarks increase the actual width +to 6 ft. 6 in., which corresponds with the gross width occupied by the +wheels. One third is covered by a small hood 5 ft. 6 in. in height +erected on wooden stave hoops. The latter was often absent in transport +wagons. The two hind wheels are large, the fore somewhat smaller. They +are attached to very heavy wooden cross-beams bearing the axles, and the +two beams are connected by a longitudinal bar, continuous with the +düssel boom or pole. This latter bar is in two sections, the connection +of which allows considerable play in the long axis and serves to break +the jolts occurring when either pair of wheels passes over uneven spots +on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span> ground. When some sacks of oats or hay were spread over the +floor the wounded men travelled comparatively comfortably in these +wagons, the great distance between the fore and hind wheels tending to +minimise the jolting. The principal objection to them was the slow pace +of the oxen, and the fact that to obtain the greatest amount of work +from these animals a major part of the journey must be performed during +the night. The ox-wagon carries, with comfort, four lying-down cases on +stretchers, or six without stretchers; or twenty sitting-up cases.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig8.jpg" width="450" height="338" alt="Fig. 8." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 8.—South African Wagon, loaded with patients, and +mule transport. (Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)</span> +</div> + +<p>The mule- or buck-wagon, which is of the same class but smaller, can +only accommodate two stretchers, four lying-down men without stretchers, +or 12-14 sitting-up cases. As a rule, the wagons were loaded with +recumbent cases in the centre, while more slightly wounded men sat +around, and were able to give help to those lying down when needed. The +wagons can be covered with canvas throughout.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p> + +<p>The steady even pace of the oxen is a great advantage, and I was often +surprised to see how well men bore transport in these wagons, who seemed +utterly unfit to be moved had it not been an absolute necessity. A very +large number of the wounded from Paardeberg Drift were transported to +Modder River in them.</p> + +<p>One other advantage of these wagons, the possibility of converting them +into an excellent laager, is not to be underrated. Any one who saw the +comfortable encampment which a naval contingent on the march made by +massing the wagons with intervals covered by macintosh sheets, could at +once appreciate their capabilities for a long trek.</p> + +<p>Traction engines were, as far as I know, never employed as a means of +transporting the sick. The tendency of these heavy machines to stick in +the mud and to break down bridges is so well known that it hardly needs +mention. Putting these disadvantages on one side, with a supply of fuel +ensured, and such roads as are afforded by a civilised country, a great +future is probably before this means of transport for the wounded. A +large number of patients might be carried at an even pace, and the camps +would be saved all the trouble and worry of the transport animals.</p> + +<p><i>Trains.</i>—In many cases in Natal, and in a few instances on the western +side, the wounded men were able to be transferred from the first +dressing station directly into the trains. Space will not allow me to +describe any of those in use, but the accompanying illustration shows +the general arrangement of the beds in Nos. 2 and 3 trains (fig. 9). The +carriages were converted from ordinary bogie wagons of the Cape +Government Railway stock under the supervision of Colonel Supple, +R.A.M.C., P.M.O. of the Base at Cape Town. Each train was provided with +accommodation for two medical officers, two nursing Sisters, orderlies, +a kitchen, and a dispensary, and each carried some 120 patients. The +trains were under the charge of Major Russell, R.A.M.C., and Dr. Boswell +(and later other civilian medical officers) and of Captain Fleming, +R.A.M.C., D.S.O., and Mr. Waters, and carried many thousand patients +from all parts of the country to the Base and Station hospitals. They +were most admirably worked, and seemed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span> to offer little scope for +improvement except in minor details. To them much of the success in the +treatment of the wounded who had to traverse the immense distances +incident to South Africa must be attributed. I made many pleasant +journeys in each of them. Later, two additional trains, Nos. 4 and 5, of +a similar nature, were added. Two trains, No. 1, and the Princess +Christian train, which I was not fortunate enough to see, performed +similar duties for Natal.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig9.jpg" width="450" height="382" alt="Fig. 9." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 9.—Interior of one of the Wagons of No. 2 Hospital +Train</span> +</div> + +<p><i>Hospital Ships.</i>—These were numerous and some especially well +arranged. Fig. 10 is of the 'Simla,' a P. & O. vessel which was +admirably adapted to the requirements of a hospital ship. On her main +deck some 250 patients were accommodated in a series of wards all on the +same level, which much lightened the difficulties of service usually +experienced. During the present campaign the abundance of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span> transport +vessels rendered the transhipment of patients to England a matter of +comparative ease, and good vessels were always available. Considering +the constant transhipment of invalids from India and our other colonial +possessions, it would seem advisable that, in place of having to +hurriedly improvise hospital ships, the Government should possess two or +three hospital ships of the 'Simla' type. It is true this would deprive +our naval transport officers of a duty which in this war was performed +with extraordinary celerity and success; thus the 'Simla' was fitted in +seven days, and sailed with a cargo of invalids ten days after her +arrival at Durban; but on the other hand it would ensure that really +suitable vessels were always provided.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig10.jpg" width="450" height="317" alt="Fig. 10." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 10.—P. & O. Hospital Ship 'Simla' in Durban +Harbour</span> +</div> + +<p>To give some idea of the amount of work contingent on the transport of +wounded men from an army of some 15,000, fighting its way against +continued opposition, I will quote the approximate number of men moved +during Lord Methuen's advance from Orange River to Magersfontein. (The +number<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span> of men actually present at each battle is shown in Table I., p. +12.)</p> + +<p>Belmont, the first battle, was fought on November 23.</p> + +<p><i>November 24.</i>—No. 2 hospital train removed 152 cases to the Stationary +Field hospitals at Orange River, then returned and loaded up with 130 +more. Some of the most severe cases in the latter were detrained at +Orange River, and the remainder were taken direct to Wynberg (591½ +miles).</p> + +<p>The division marched, and the battle of Graspan was fought during the +day.</p> + +<p><i>November 26.</i>—A train of specially constructed trucks brought 90 of +the less severe cases, including 20 Boers, to Orange River.</p> + +<p><i>November 27.</i>—The division marched, and in the morning No. 3 hospital +train removed 80 severe cases from the Field hospitals direct to +Wynberg.</p> + +<p><i>November 28.</i>—Battle of Modder River.</p> + +<p><i>November 29.</i>—339 patients, including a few sick, and some wounded +Boers, were sent down to Orange River in open trucks with impromptu +shelters made with rifles and blankets.</p> + +<p>Later, 97 severe cases were sent down in ordinary carriages, of which +some had doors sawn out to admit lying-down patients.</p> + +<p><i>December 10.</i>—The division marched, and on the next day the battle of +Magersfontein was fought.</p> + +<p><i>December 11.</i>—Nos. 2 and 3 trains were loaded up during the night and +early morning of the 12th, in part from the Field hospitals, in part +directly from the Ambulance wagons. During the day of the 12th, No. 3 +train made three journeys to Orange River, and No. 2 was sent direct to +Wynberg.</p> + +<p>In all some 800 patients needed transport; they were picked up by 10 +ambulance wagons and 5 buck wagons for slighter cases and the two bearer +companies sent out from Modder River. On the 12th Lord Methuen sent out +a number of bearers with stretchers, and at 12 noon all the wounded were +collected, but many had lain out through the night. The bearers had to +retire under a shell fire kept up by the Boers as long as our army was +within range of their position.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span></p> + +<p>Four Field hospitals were present, but only that of the IX. Brigade at +Modder River was so situated as to be of general use. This hospital, +under the command of Major Harris, R.A.M.C., did an immense amount of +work most expeditiously and with great success.</p> + +<p>The nature of the advance on Kimberley necessitated the evacuation of +the Field hospitals with extreme promptitude, as the troops were in +constant action, and the arrangements for this were carried out with +great success by Colonel Townsend, the P.M.O. of the First Division.</p> + +<p>The amount of fighting far exceeded anything that had been expected, and +the Stationary hospitals on the lines of communication at Orange River +and De Aar were unable to cope with the number of severe cases thrown on +their hands, with the constant possibility of new arrivals. Hence a +number of severe cases had to be sent direct to Wynberg.</p> + +<p>This experience strongly illustrated the necessity of possessing +Stationary hospitals of greater mobility and a higher degree of +equipment than the service at present possesses. In these a large number +of severe cases could have been retained, and only the slighter ones +exposed to the fatigue and general disadvantage of transport. In South +Africa very special difficulties existed in the length of the line of +communication, the single line of rails, and the absence of any source +of supply within 500 to 600 miles; but in any other country mobile +Stationary hospitals, although more easily equipped, would be equally +valuable.</p> + +<p>The difficulties of transport experienced in the advance of the +Kimberley Relief Force were many times multiplied in that upon +Bloemfontein, since the whole of the severely wounded men had to be sent +back thirty to forty miles to the railway. The ambulance accommodation +on the occasion of this march, although, if untouched, proportionately +smaller than that possessed by Lord Methuen, was reduced to one-fifth to +meet the exigencies of warfare. Beyond this the equipment transport of +the Field hospitals was reduced from four ox-wagons to two, and the +Scotch cart was cut off, only two ox-wagons and the two water-carts +being allowed. This greatly hampered the Field hospitals on the march, +and when they arrived at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> Bloemfontein and had to undertake the work of +Stationary hospitals, their efficiency was seriously impaired. Again, on +the advance from Bloemfontein to Kroonstadt many of the Field hospitals +were unable to accompany their respective divisions, not alone on +account of the number of patients remaining in them, but also because +the mule transport had been otherwise employed for military purposes.</p> + +<p>The transport of the ambulances and hospitals stands in a very special +position. As far as my experience went, neither ambulances nor hospitals +were ever taken or retained by the Boers, and consequently the transport +animals originally devoted to this purpose should have been held sacred +to it.</p> + +<p><i>Hospitals.</i>—Accommodation for the wounded was provided under canvas in +the Field hospitals, also in the large General hospitals. Beyond this +iron huts were erected in many of the Base and Station hospitals. At +Capetown, Maritzburg, and Ladysmith barrack huts were modified and +equipped as hospitals, and in towns such as Bloemfontein, Kimberley, and +Johannesburg large civil hospitals were at our disposal. Beyond these +sources of accommodation, churches, schools, public institutions, and +private houses were made use of in the smaller towns.</p> + +<p>As to the broad question of canvas <i>v.</i> buildings, experience amply +showed that in a climate such as is possessed by South Africa, canvas +affords the greater advantages. The hospitals are more mobile, more +readily extended, and the more healthy. Except under unusual conditions +of rain and dust, the patients did excellently in the tents.</p> + +<p>Rain and dust were occasionally most troublesome, especially when +combined with wind. I once saw a whole hospital, fortunately unoccupied, +levelled to the ground in the course of some twenty minutes. Under such +circumstances iron huts present advantages, and were on many occasions +utilised with much success. They are readily erected, and it would have +been a considerable improvement if a number of them had been ready for +use at the earliest part of the campaign. Except in the matter of +weight, they possess in a considerable degree the advantage of mobility +possessed by canvas, and in addition they offer much more<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span> protection +from the weather. On the other hand, they are more liable to become +unhealthy from prolonged use.</p> + +<p>Churches and public institutions were mainly troublesome from the +necessity of having to improvise sanitary arrangements, and sometimes +the disadvantage of the collection of a large number of men in one +chamber could not be avoided. None the less I cannot look back without +admiration on the temporary hospitals established in the Raadzaal at +Bloemfontein, and the Irish hospital in the Palace of Justice in +Pretoria.</p> + +<p>The State schools in the smaller towns of the Orange River Colony also +afforded excellent accommodation as small temporary hospitals.</p> + +<p>Private houses, possessing the disadvantages of ill-adapted construction +and the necessity of a considerably increased staff to work them, were +on the whole little used as hospitals. The scattered farmhouses +occasionally afforded shelter to very severely wounded men. In most of +the country I traversed, however, the farms were so wide apart as to be +of little use in this respect; and again, under the special +circumstances, patients left in them might have to be abandoned to the +enemy.</p> + +<p>The chief interest during the campaign centred in the working of the +Field and General hospitals.</p> + +<p>Two types of Field hospital were employed, one the Home, the other the +Indian. The latter differs from the Home in that in it the bearer +company is attached and consists of Indian natives, and that the +hospital is separable into four sections in place of two only.</p> + +<p>The amalgamation of the Field hospital and bearer company into one unit +is much to be desired in the Home service, both for economy of working +and the more equal distribution of duties to the medical officers +engaged. Again the divisibility of the hospital into four sections is +also an advantage. It allows of the advance or the leaving of sections, +in the case of either small expeditions or the presence of a number of +severely wounded men unfit to travel. As far as I could judge, it +necessitates very small addition to the present equipment, and is in +every way desirable.</p> + +<p>As to the working of the Field hospitals in the present<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> campaign, it +was universally acknowledged to possess a very high degree of +excellence. The equipment, with small exceptions, proved equal to the +demands made upon it. The mobility of the camps was proved again and +again, and the rules governing their administration evidenced by their +effectiveness the care and experience which have been bestowed on the +organisation of the hospitals.</p> + +<p>It is difficult for any one who has not had an opportunity of observing +the actual amount of work performed in the Field hospitals either to +appreciate the storm and stress following an important engagement when +the wounded men are first brought in, or the demands that are made on +the powers of the medical officers in charge. To a civilian the first +feeling is one of impotence, followed by an attempt to see no further +than the case under immediate observation, and to nurture the conviction +that the work is to be got through if it is only stuck to. I gathered +that this first impression was absent in the minds of the officers in +charge of the Field hospitals, as work commenced at once, and was +carried on without intermission during the persistence of daylight, in +the winter often by the aid of lanterns, and eventually the huge task +was accomplished. In early days at Orange River work commenced at 4 +<span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, and was steadily continued until 6 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> or later, and this state +of things persisted sometimes for many days together.</p> + +<p>The officers of the Field hospitals, the bearer companies, and those +doing regimental duty carried out their duties with a calmness and +efficiency which not only impressed observers like myself, but also +excited the admiration of our German colleagues sent by their government +to observe the working of the British system.</p> + +<p>I saw on several occasions the German and Dutch ambulances, and was much +struck by the excellence of their equipment. In some details there was +much to be learned from them, especially in the matter of appliances, +dressings, and instruments. The Dutch ambulance I saw at Brandfort had a +complete installation of acetylene gas, which was carried, gasometer and +all, in one Scotch cart. They were, however, really designed to fill the +combined position of our<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span> Field, Stationary, and General hospitals, and +when it became necessary for them to move about frequently, the inferior +mobility they possessed in comparison with our own Field hospitals was +at once demonstrated.</p> + +<p>The large General hospitals of 500 beds were a great feature in the +campaign. Although designed and organised some time since, the present +was the first occasion on which they have come into general use, and +they may be said to have actually been on trial. The organisation of +these hospitals proved itself excellent, and in the case of the best of +them left little to be desired.</p> + +<p>In some cases the accommodation was temporarily strained enormously, and +the number of patients was extended beyond more than three times the +regulation limit. The additional patients were then accommodated in +marquees and bell tents, according to the nature of their diseases. +Under these circumstances the working of the hospitals was difficult, +and the officers both of the R.A.M.C. and the civilian surgeons were +placed at a great disadvantage.</p> + +<p>My space does not allow me to give any description of the general +arrangement of these hospitals, but I would suggest that a certain +number of them should be so modified as to increase their mobility and +allow of their being more readily utilised as Stationary hospitals.</p> + +<p>During the whole campaign it seemed to me that the Stationary hospitals +(that is to say, the hospitals necessary to receive patients when the +Field hospitals were rapidly evacuated), were those in which some +increased uniformity of organisation was most needed.</p> + +<p>It scarcely needs to be pointed out that this is the most difficult link +of the whole hospital chain to be uniformly well organised and equipped. +It is needed at short notice, and often for a short period, and it is +difficult to maintain a regular staff of officers ready for any +emergency without keeping a certain number of men idle.</p> + +<p>The conversion of Field hospitals to Stationary purposes is undesirable, +as the troops move with only a regulation number of the former, which +under ordinary circumstances is the minimum that may be necessary.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span></p> + +<p>Stationary hospitals as individual units are undesirable for the reasons +above given.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig11.jpg" width="450" height="326" alt="Fig. 11." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 11.—Type of a General Hospital (No. VIII. +Bloemfontein) extended by use of bell tents in the distance. (Photo by +Mr. C. S. Wallace)</span> +</div> + +<p>The difficulty might be met by increasing the mobility of a certain +number of the General hospitals, by making them divisible into five +sections, each of which should be able to move independently, and to the +last of which should be attached the heavy part of the equipment, such +as the iron huts for operating and X-ray rooms, kitchens, store sheds, +&c. The tents might also be lightened by the substitution of the +tortoise tent for the service marquee. The tortoise tent is lighter (360 +as against 500 lbs.), easily pitched and moved, and holds at least two +more patients with ease. The capabilities of this tent were amply proven +during its use by the Portland, Irish, and other civil hospitals +attached to the army. It withstood wind and weather, the former better +than the service marquee. Figs. 11 and 12 show the appearance of camps +composed of the two varieties. I must admit a warm preference for the +appearance of the service pattern,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span> but I think it is indubitable that +the other is the more useful.</p> + +<p>Given the possibility of division of a General hospital in this manner, +single sections could readily be sent up the lines of communication to +serve as Stationary hospitals at various points behind the advance of +the troops, and on the cessation of active need, the sections could be +reunited at any point to form an advanced Base hospital. The sections +could be kept in touch throughout by visits from the officer of the +lines of communication. This would appear a ready means of providing +well-organised Stationary hospitals at short notice, and would save the +disadvantage of a definitely separate series.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig12.jpg" width="450" height="255" alt="Fig. 12." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 12.—Type of Tortoise Tent Hospital. Portland +Hospital, Bloemfontein. (Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)</span> +</div> + +<p>Such hospitals might have been used on many occasions when the transport +of an entire General hospital was an impossibility. The service, +moreover, has some experience in this direction, since at one time No. 3 +General Hospital was divided into two definite sections.</p> + +<p>Bearing in mind the extreme readiness and promptitude with which the +officers during the present campaign extended the accommodation of +either Field or General hospitals, one of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span> such sections as are proposed +might readily be made far more capacious than its regulation number +would suggest.</p> + +<p>My duties being entirely in connection with the service hospitals, I did +not become intimately acquainted with any of the volunteer hospitals +which did such excellent service, except the Portland, to the staff of +which I was indebted for much hospitality and kindness. This hospital +was practically of about the capacity proposed for the above-mentioned +sections, and the report of its work will no doubt furnish many points +of detail as to equipment, &c., which may be useful.</p> + +<p>The general results of the surgical work done during the campaign were +excellent, and taken as a whole the occurrence of any severe form of +septic disease was unusual.</p> + +<p>Pure septicæmia, especially in connection with abdominal injuries, +severe head injuries and secondary to acute traumatic osteo-myelitis, +was the form most commonly seen. Pyæmia with secondary deposits was +uncommon, and often of a somewhat subacute form; thus I saw several +patients recover after secondary abscesses had been opened, or the +primary focus of infection removed. The only really acute case of joint +pyæmia I heard of, developed in connection with a blistered toe followed +by cellulitis of the foot.</p> + +<p>Cutaneous erysipelas I never happened to see, and really acute +phlegmonous inflammation was rare.</p> + +<p>I may mention the occurrence of acute traumatic gangrene in two cases. +This developed in each instance with gunshot fracture of the femur; in +one amputation was performed, and the process extended upwards on to the +abdomen. The cases occurred with the army in the field in the +neighbourhood of Thaba-nchu and not in a stationary hospital.</p> + +<p>Acute traumatic tetanus occurred only in one instance to my knowledge. +In this case the primary injury was a shell wound of the thigh, and the +patient developed the disease and died within ten days.</p> + +<p>To the civil surgeon the performance of operations, and the dressing of +severe wounds at the front, proved on occasions a somewhat trying +ordeal.</p> + +<p>When operations were necessary in the field, during the daytime, it was +often possible to perform them in the open<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> air, provided tolerable +protection could be obtained from the sun. A number of cases were so +operated upon during the march of the Highland Brigade from Wynberg to +Heilbron, and gave excellent results, the patients deriving considerable +benefit from the early cleansing and closure of the wounds.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig13.jpg" width="450" height="337" alt="Fig. 13." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 13.—Tortoise Hospital Tent. Portland Hospital. +(Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)</span> +</div> + +<p>In camp, in the Field, or Stationary hospitals, the difficulties were +often much greater. The operations were necessarily performed under +shelter for reasons of privacy. In the tents the draught carrying the +dust from the camp was one of the commonest troubles. The exclusion of +dust was impossible, and it not only found its way into open wounds, but +permeated bandages with ease. Often when a bandage was removed, an even +layer of dust moistened by perspiration covered the whole area included +with a coating of mud. Again, in dust storms a similar layer of mud +sometimes covered the whole of the exposed parts of the bodies of +patients lying on the ground in the tents.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span></p> + +<p>It is of some interest to remark with regard to this dust, that Dr. L. +L. Jenner lately kindly examined a specimen collected at Modder River +after the camp had been more than two months established, and discovered +no pathogenic organisms in it. As a period of seven months had elapsed +since this dust was collected, the fact is of no practical import, +beyond showing that, if such organisms had existed, at any rate they +were not of a resistent nature.</p> + +<p>Insects, particularly common house-flies, were an intolerable pest at +times. In a fresh camp they were sometimes not abundant, but after two +or three days they multiplied enormously. Not only hospital tents, but +living and mess tents, swarmed with them, the canvas appearing +positively black at night. Even when dressing a wound, without unceasing +passage of the hand across the part, it was impossible to keep them from +settling, and during operations the nuisance was much greater.</p> + +<p>Storms of rain were occasionally as troublesome as, though perhaps less +harmful than, those of dust. On one occasion a whole Field hospital was +flooded only a few hours after a number of important operations had been +performed, and the patients were practically washed out of the tents. It +was somewhat remarkable that none of the men suffered any serious ill as +a result.</p> + +<p>At times the temperature was sufficiently high to make either dressing +or operating a most exhausting process to the surgeon. The heat of the +day was not on the whole so disadvantageous from the point of view of +the operator, as the cold of the nights during the winter in Orange +River Colony. On one or two occasions serious operations had to be left +undone, as it was only possible to consider them in camp, where, as we +arrived at night only, the temperature was too low to justify the +necessary exposure.</p> + +<p>Water for use at operations was often a great difficulty. Even at Orange +River, where, though muddy, the water was wholesome, it was impossible +to get water suitable for operations unless it had previously gone +through the complicated processes of precipitation by alum, boiling, and +filtration. At Orange River a small room in the house of one of the +railway<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span> servants was obtained and fitted as a rough operating room by +the Royal Engineers. The necessary utensils were provided by Colonel +Young, Commissioner of the Red Cross Societies. Here a stock of prepared +water was kept for emergencies.</p> + +<p>The remaining difficulties mainly consisted in those we are familiar +with in civil practice, such as the securing of suitable assistance in +the handling of instruments and dressing, when the rush of work was very +great.</p> + +<p>At the Base hospitals accommodation for operating in properly equipped +rooms obviated many of the difficulties above referred to.</p> + +<p>In concluding this introduction I should sum up in a few words my +experience of the general working of the hospital system during my stay +in South Africa.</p> + +<p>The excellence of the Field hospitals for their purpose has been already +alluded to, and, as far as I could ascertain, won the confidence and +approval of patients, military commanders, and civilians such as myself.</p> + +<p>The Stationary hospitals (by which I intend to indicate those receiving +the patients directly from the Field hospitals before the establishment +of advanced Base hospitals), as already indicated, were not in my +opinion so perfectly conceived or organised. The requirements of these +are, however, far greater than those of the Field hospitals, and they of +all others are dependent on the possession of facilities for rapid +transport. In South Africa the difficulties of supplying them were +enormous, and no doubt the conditions of the campaign in this, as so +many other particulars, were novel and unusual. None the less the +experience gained will no doubt be utilised in the future. With regard +to the extravagant criticisms levelled at the Field hospitals serving as +Stationary hospitals at the time of the early period of the occupation +of Bloemfontein, it may be pointed out that the only proper ground for +comparison was not between the patients at Bloemfontein and those in +hospital at the base, but between the men in hospital and those in the +field at that time, since the conditions were equally adverse to both. +Besides, it must not be forgotten that a large proportion of the +patients, at that time, were really comfortably housed in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span> the Raadzaal +and other buildings, the preparation of which entailed a very great +amount of both labour and resource.</p> + +<p>The difficulties experienced at that time will, it is hoped, go far +towards securing greater facilities and rights of transport to the Royal +Army Medical Corps in the future. As a civilian, one cannot but +recognise that the conditions of modern warfare are much altered from +those of the past. Prisoners are well cared for and kindly treated, the +sick and wounded are respected by both sides, and except in the actual +horrors of fighting the condition of the soldier is a happier one. Under +these circumstances the limitation of the transport facilities of a +department so closely concerned with the well-being of all, and which +has been organised on a most moderate scale, must soon become a +tradition of the past in civilised armies.</p> + +<p>As to the efficiency of the organisation of the General hospitals, +either at the advanced or actual base, I have already testified. +Naturally the working of these hospitals varied with the personal +equation of the officer in charge of them, but as a whole the service +has every reason to be proud of their success. As far as surgical +results are concerned, and with these I had special acquaintance, the +success of the hospitals was amply demonstrated.</p> + +<p>Adverse criticism was not however wanting, and often expressed in the +strongest terms by persons totally unacquainted with hospital methods, +and apparently unconscious that such excellence as is exhibited in a +London hospital is the result of continuous work and development for +some centuries, and that such institutions are worked by committees and +staffs of permanent constitution.</p> + +<p>The proportion of female nurses employed in these hospitals underwent +steady increase from the commencement of the campaign, and the immense +value of the nursing reserve was fully proved. There is no doubt that in +Base hospitals the actual nursing should always be entrusted to women.</p> + +<p>The demands of the campaign necessitated the employment of a large +number of civil surgeons in the various hospitals. These gentlemen +accommodated themselves with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> true British aptitude to the conditions +under which they were placed, and in all positions their sterling work +contributed in no small degree to the success that was attained.</p> + +<p>One class of hospital still remains for mention. I refer to the +improvised hospitals prepared in the Boer towns prior to the British +occupation. They were met with in all the smaller towns, and also in the +larger ones such as Johannesburg and Pretoria.</p> + +<p>The Burke hospital in Pretoria, started by a private citizen and his +daughter, and the Victoria hospital in Johannesburg, presided over by +Dr. and Mrs. Murray, were two of the largest, but each and all deserve +due recognition.</p> + +<p>I am sure that many of our wounded officers and men who were cared for +in these hospitals while prisoners in the hands of the Boers, will never +lose their sense of gratitude to those inhabitants who spared no effort +to render their position as happy as possible under the circumstances; +and the existence of these hospitals was no small boon to the service +when called upon to take charge of the sick and wounded therein +contained.</p> + +<p>I cannot close this chapter without recognition of the immensity of the +task which has fallen on the Royal Army Medical Corps in the treatment +of the sick and wounded during the course of the campaign and full +appreciation of the manner in which that task has been met. The strain +thrown upon this department of the service, originally organised for the +needs of an army less than half the magnitude of that eventually taking +the field, was incalculably great, and the medical profession may well +be proud of the efforts made by its military representatives to do the +best possible work under the circumstances.</p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> 3,328 men of the IX. Brigade present are not included, as +they never came into action.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_2_2" id="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> The high mortality was due to deaths amongst the officers +of the Naval Brigade.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_3_3" id="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> To obtain this total the numbers of killed, wounded, and +missing, after the three earlier battles, have been massed, and added to +the total number of men known to have taken part in the battle of +Magersfontein. The inaccuracy dependent on the fact that some of the men +reported as wounded or missing in the earlier battles had already +returned to their regiments, and are included in the total of 11,447, +must be disregarded.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_4_4" id="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> Numbers quoted from Fischer, <i>Handbuch der +Kriegschirurgie</i>, vol. i. p. 22, 1882.</p></div> +</div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2> + +<h3>MODERN MILITARY RIFLES AND THEIR PROJECTILES IN RELATION TO INJURIES +PRODUCED BY THEM ON THE HUMAN BODY</h3> + + +<p>Before proceeding to the actual description of the wounds inflicted by +modern military rifles, it is necessary to prefix a few remarks on the +mechanism and mode of production of these injuries.</p> + +<p>Recent tendency in the construction of military rifles has been in the +direction of reduction of bore, and a corresponding one in the calibre +of the bullet, the resulting loss of weight in the latter as an element +in striking power being compensated for by the attainment of an +augmentation of velocity in the flight of the projectile, and a +comparatively flat trajectory.</p> + +<p>Changes in this direction have endowed the weapons with increase both in +range and accuracy of fire; while the greater rapidity with which +magazine rifles can be discharged and, in consequence of reduction in +weight, the greater number of cartridges which can be carried by each +man, also form important factors in the possible deadliness of warfare +at the present day. None the less the experience of the present campaign +has scarcely justified the early prognostications expressed as to a +great increase in the number and severity of wounds amongst the +combatants.<a name="FNanchor_5_5" id="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> This comparative immunity is to be explained mainly on +two grounds. The increased distance which for the most part separated +the two bodies of men, a feature no doubt accentuated by the mode of +warfare adopted by the Boer, and his strong sense of the folly of close +combat on equal terms, tended to efface one of the chief characters, +velocity of flight, on the part of the projectile. The want of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> +effectiveness of the small-calibre bullet as an instrument of serious +mischief also kept down the mortality.</p> + +<p>Since the year 1889 the calibre of the bullet in our own army has been +reduced from that of the Martini-Henry (.450 in.) to one of .309 in. in +the Lee-Metford, and a consequent reduction in weight from 480 to 215 +grains. To allow of the satisfactory assumption of the more complicated +rifling by the more rapidly projected bullet, the lead core has been +ensheathed in a mantle of denser metal. The bullet itself is of an +original calibre (.309 in.) somewhat exceeding the bore of the rifle +barrel (.303 in.), in which way a species of 'choke' is obtained and +deep rifling of the surface ensured. Beyond this the comparative +transverse and longitudinal measurements and shape have been altered in +order to maintain weight, preserve a proper balance during flight, and +increase the power of penetration. These alterations with slight +differences in detail embody the general principles that underlie the +construction of each of the weapons adopted by European nations. It will +be well here to consider the influence of each alteration from the point +of view of the surgeon.</p> + +<p><i>Calibre.</i>—The effect of the diminution of calibre is (<i>a</i>) to reduce +the area of impact of the bullet on the part impinged upon, and hence to +lower the degree of resistance offered by the tissues; this to a certain +extent tends to neutralise the augmented striking force resulting from +the increased velocity of flight. (<i>b</i>) To limit considerably the +destructive powers of the bullet, as a smaller area of tissue is exposed +to its action. (<i>c</i>) To allow of the production of very 'neat' injuries +and the frequent escape of important structures, also the production of +remarkably prolonged subcutaneous tracks in positions where such would +be regarded as scarcely possible, and in point of fact were impossible +with the older and larger projectiles.</p> + +<p><i>Length.</i>—The comparative increase in length of the bullet is, from the +surgical point of view, only of material importance in increasing the +weight and therefore the striking power, and in so far as it is a +mechanical necessity for the flight of the projectile on an axis +parallel to its long diameter,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> and so tends to ensure impact on the +body by the tip of the bullet. This latter is, however, surgically +favourable as ensuring a smaller wound.</p> + +<p><i>Weight.</i>—The decrease in weight must be regarded on the whole as +altogether to the advantage of the wounded individual, since it cannot +be considered to be entirely compensated for by the resulting increased +velocity of flight, unless the range of fire is moderately close.</p> + +<p><i>Shape.</i>—The ogival tip and general wedge-like outline, while +decreasing the aerial resistance to and increasing the power of +penetration possessed by the bullet, at the same time allow the escape +of some structures by displacement, while others are saved from complete +destruction by undergoing perforation. Beyond this the sharper the tip, +the smaller is the area of the body primarily impinged upon, the less +the resistance offered to perforation, and to some degree the less the +destruction of surrounding tissues.</p> + +<p><i>Increased velocity of flight.</i>—This multiplies the striking force, and +compensates in part for decrease in volume and weight of the bullet. It +is customary to speak of the velocity as 'initial' and 'remaining.' +Initial velocity is the term employed to express the velocity at the +time of the escape of the bullet from the barrel; this is also +designated as 'muzzle velocity.' 'Remaining velocity' expresses that +obtaining during any subsequent portion of the flight of the projectile.</p> + +<p>The greatest initial velocity is obtained with the use of bullets of the +smallest calibre, but this is not of the practical importance which +might be assumed, since the remaining velocity of flight of such +projectiles falls more rapidly than that of those of slightly greater +mass. Thus, although there may be a difference of a hundred metres per +second in initial velocity between two rifles of calibres varying from +6.5 to 8 millimetres (.303-.314 in.), at the end of 1,000 metres the +discrepancy is greatly reduced, while at 2,000 metres it hardly exists. +Under such circumstances the projectile of greater weight and volume, as +possessing the greater striking force, is considerably the more +formidable of the two. This is the more important if it be allowed, as I +believe to be the case, that velocity <i>per se</i> is of no practical import +in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> case of wounds of the soft parts of the body, which after all +form the preponderating number of all gunshot injuries. The effect of +the higher degrees of velocity differs, however, with the amount of +resistance met with on the part of the body; hence its serious import is +well exemplified when parts of the osseous skeleton are implicated, +although even here considerable variations exist, dependent upon the +structure of that part of the bone actually involved. The most obvious +ill effect of injuries from bullets travelling at high rates is seen in +the case of the various parts of the nervous system, and here it is +undeniable. High velocity and striking force are also responsible for +the prolonged course sometimes taken by bullets through the body.</p> + +<p>The actual degree of velocity, as judged by the range of fire at which +an injury is received and the resulting injury, is very hard to estimate +on account of the many and varying factors which enter into its +determination. The mere recital of some of these will suffice to make +this evident.</p> + +<p>1. Quality of the individual cartridge employed, as to loading, the +materials employed, and their condition.</p> + +<p>2. The condition of the rifle as to cleanliness, heating, and the state +of the grooves of the barrel.</p> + +<p>3. The angle of impact of the bullet with the part injured.</p> + +<p>4. Resistance dependent on the weight of the whole body of the man +struck, or of an isolated limb.</p> + +<p>5. Special peculiarities of build in the individual struck, such as +thickness and density of the integument and fasciæ, strength and +thickness of the bones, &c.</p> + +<p>6. State of tension of the muscles, fasciæ, and ligaments at the moment +of impact, and fixity or otherwise of the part of the body struck.</p> + +<p>7. The degree of wind, temperature, and hygroscopic conditions of the +atmosphere.</p> + +<p>These form some of the more important points which have to be taken into +consideration, in addition to a mere calculation of the actual distance +from which a wound has been received from a particular rifle, and taken +with the unsatisfactory nature of the evidence as to the latter, which +is usually alone obtainable, it is clear that definite assumptions are +scarcely<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> possible. In a great number of cases I came to the conclusion +that the only indisputable evidence of low velocity was the lodgment of +an undeformed bullet. There is little doubt, moreover, that the general +tendency of wounded men was to minimise the range of fire at which they +were struck, and again that in the majority of cases in this campaign it +was quite impossible to determine whence any particular bullet had come, +since the enemy was seldom arranged in one line, but rather in several. +Again, smokeless powder was generally employed. Beyond this, in some +cases where there was no doubt of the short distance from which the +bullet was fired, the wounds were due to 'ricochet' of portions of +broken-up bullets. The following instance well illustrates this. A +sentry fired five times at two men within a distance of six paces, +knocking both down. One man received a severe direct fracture of the +ilium, the bullet entering between the anterior superior and inferior +iliac spines and emerging at the upper part of the buttock. The entry +and exit apertures were large but hardly 'explosive,' as a subcutaneous +track four to five inches long separated them. Besides this both men had +other lesser injuries; thus in the second two perforating wounds of the +arm existed. The latter were not unlike type Lee-Metford wounds, and +were regarded as such until a few days afterwards when a hard body was +felt in the distal portion of one track and removed. This proved to be a +part of the leaden core only, and the similar wound had no doubt been +produced by a like fragment, the bullet having broken up on striking the +stony ground.</p> + +<p><i>Trajectory.</i>—The comparative flatness of this depends on the +construction of the rifle and the propulsive force employed, and varies +as does velocity with the nature, excellence, and amount of the +explosive, the correctness of the principles upon which the bullet is +devised, and the mechanical perfection of its manufacture. Its +importance naturally consists in the manner in which it affects the +possibility of covering objects on a wide area of ground and thus +creating a broad 'dangerous zone.' A bullet fired on level ground from +any one of three of the rifles referred to later (Lee-Metford, Mauser, +Krag-Jörgensen), sighted to 500<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> yards and fired from the shoulder in +the standing position, will cover some part of an erect man of average +height during the whole extent of its flight. A body of men within that +distance is therefore in a position of extreme peril in the face of a +good shooting enemy.</p> + +<p>The importance of a flat trajectory is progressively lost, however, with +any rifle, as the weapon is gradually sighted to greater distances. Thus +when sighted to 2,000 yards the bullet from the Lee-Metford rifle rises +174 feet, and a whole army might comfortably be situated over a +considerable area within that distance. The importance of flatness of +trajectory is also influenced by the nature of the ground occupied by +the combatants. Thus when the area to be covered consists in ground +first rising then falling from the rifleman, the trajectory will become +more or less parallel to the surface crossed, and the 'dangerous zone' +will be correspondingly increased in extent. On the other hand, when the +ground slopes away from the rifleman the rise of the projectile is +exaggerated, and reaches its most limited capacity of covering an +intervening space when the flight crosses a hollow.</p> + +<p><i>Revolution of the bullet.</i>—It only remains in this place to say a few +words concerning the revolution imparted to the bullet by the rifling of +the barrel. This ensures the flight of the projectile on a line parallel +to its long axis, and notably increases its power of penetration.</p> + +<p>Both these properties of the flight are to the advantage of the wounded, +since, as already mentioned, the more exactly the impact corresponds to +a right angle with the skin, the more limited will be the area of +contusion, even if it be of the most severe character, while to the +twist of the bullet must be ascribed a not inconsiderable part in the +explanation of the ready and neat perforations of narrow structures +which are frequently produced.</p> + +<p>It has been pointed out that the Lee-Metford bullet turns on its own +axis once in a distance of ten inches, while the Mauser revolves once in +a distance of eight and eleven-sixteenths inches; hence not more than at +most two revolutions are made in tracks crossing the trunk, and not more +than half a full revolution in the perforation of a limb. None the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> +less, no one can deny the influence of the one half turn of supination +in entering a perforating tool of any description, both as preventing +splintering, and in preserving the surrounding parts from damage.</p> + +<p>Beyond this, the spiral turn of the bullet, by diverting a part of the +transmitted vibrations into a second direction, must, in the case of +wounds of the body, help to throw off contiguous structures, and while +those that are in actual contact are more severely contused, the +surrounding ones suffer somewhat less direct injury. It must be borne in +mind, also, that rapidity of revolution does not fall <i>pari passu</i> with +that of velocity of flight, but that the former undergoes a +comparatively slighter diminution until the bullet is actually spent. +Hence, the influence of revolution is felt, however low the velocity may +be, provided sufficient striking force is retained to enter the body. A +word must be added here as to the surface of a discharged bullet; this, +in taking the rifling of the barrel, becomes permanently grooved. The +depth of the groove differs with the variety of rifle. In the +Lee-Metford the grooves are deep (.009), in the Mauser slightly less so +(.007), but the surface of both bullets is comparatively roughened when +revolving in the body, and this circumstance, since the projectile +exactly fits its track, may influence the degree of the surface +destruction of tissue, and somewhat aid in the clean perforation of +bone, since a little bone dust is always found at the entrance aperture +of a canal in cancellous bone.</p> + +<p>During the campaign many varieties of rifle projecting bullets of widely +differing calibre were employed by the Boers, many of whom as sportsmen +preferred the rifle to which they were accustomed to a regulation +weapon, and an illustration of a large variety of bullets from +cartridges which I collected from arsenals and camps is given below (p. +96). The great majority of the men, however, were armed with +small-calibre weapons of some sort, and as the wounds produced by these +are of chief interest at the present day, I shall say little of any +others, beyond an occasional reference to Martini-Henry rifle wounds +which may be considered to represent approximately those made by large +leaden sporting bullets.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig14.jpg" width="450" height="415" alt="Fig. 14." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 14.—Type Cartridges in common use during the war.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"> +<b>From left to right: Martini-Henry, Guedes, Lee-Metford, (Spanish) +Mauser, Krag-Jörgensen</b></p> + +<p>The most important, as the most frequently employed, rifles projecting +small-calibre bullets were the Krag-Jörgensen, Mauser, Lee-Metford, and +Guedes, given in the order of increase of calibre (from 6.5 to 8 +millimetres, or .254-.314 in.) in the bullets. As to the seriousness of +wounds produced by these there is little to choose, differences in +character being only those of degree. Such differences depended on the +area of tissue implicated, corresponding with the calibre of the +particular bullet, the comparative weight of the bullet, and the degree +of velocity of flight maintained at the moment of impact. When, however, +any of these bullets have been exposed in their flight to influences +capable of causing deformity of their outline and symmetry, +peculiarities of construction and in the composition of the metals +employed in their manufacture may materially alter the character of the +wounds produced and revolutionise a classification founded purely on the +relative weight, calibre, and degree of velocity with which each is +endowed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span></p> + + +<h3>TABLE I</h3> + +<div class='center'> +<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'>Martini-Henry</td><td align='center'>Guedes</td><td align='center'>Lee-Metford</td><td align='center'>Lee-Enfield</td><td align='center'>Mauser</td><td align='center'>Krag-Jörgensen</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Calibre of rifle</td><td align='center'>.45 in.</td><td align='center'>.314 in.</td><td align='center'>.303 in.</td><td align='center'>.303 in.</td><td align='center'>.276 in.</td><td align='center'>.254 in.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Number of grooves</td><td align='center'>7</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>7</td><td align='center'>5</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>4</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>One twist in</td><td align='center'>22 in. to right</td><td align='center'>9.85 in. to right</td><td align='center'>10 in. to left</td><td align='center'>10 in. to left</td><td align='center'>8-11/16 in. to right</td><td align='center'>8 in. to left</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Muzzle velocity</td><td align='center'>1,300 f.s.</td><td align='center'>1,988 f.s.</td><td align='center'>2,000 f.s.</td><td align='center'>2,000 f.s.</td><td align='center'>2,262 f.s.</td><td align='center'>2,309 f.s.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Sighted to</td><td align='center'>1,450 yds.</td><td align='center'>2,600 paces</td><td align='center'>2,800 yds.</td><td align='center'>2,800 yds.</td><td align='center'>2,187 yds.</td><td align='center'>2,406 yds.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Weight of cartridge</td><td align='center'>758 grains</td><td align='center'>464.05 grains<a name="FNanchor_6_6" id="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a></td><td align='center'>416½ grains</td><td align='center'>416½ grains</td><td align='center'>384.5 grains</td><td align='center'>372.1 grains</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Weight of bullet</td><td align='center'>480 grains</td><td align='center'>244 grains</td><td align='center'>215 grains</td><td align='center'>215 grains</td><td align='center'>173.3 grains</td><td align='center'>156.4 grains</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Length of bullet</td><td align='center'>1.250 in.</td><td align='center'>1.250 in.</td><td align='center'>1.250 in.</td><td align='center'>1.250 in.</td><td align='center'>1 in.</td><td align='center'>1.250 in.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Calibre of bullet</td><td align='center'>.450 in.</td><td align='center'>.315 in.</td><td align='center'>.309 in.</td><td align='center'>.309 in.</td><td align='center'>.280 in.</td><td align='center'>.260 in.</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Charge of powder</td><td align='center'>85 grains (black powder)</td><td align='center'>20-23 (grains nitro-smokeless)</td><td align='center'>31½ grains (cordite)</td><td align='center'>31½ grains (cordite)</td><td align='center'>38.0 grains (smokeless)</td><td align='center'>36 grains (nitro-smokeless)</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Nature of alloy used for mantle of bullet</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>Mantle: Mild steel, greased</td><td align='center'>Cupro-nickel</td><td align='center'>Cupro-nickel</td><td align='center'>Mantle: Steel with alloy of copper on surface</td><td align='center'>Mantle: Mild steel coated with copper nickel, the composition of the latter being that of the cupro-nickel of the Lee-Enfield bullet</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Thickness of mantle</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>Mark II. bullet</td><td align='center'>Mark II. bullet</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>—</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Tip</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>.031</td><td align='center'>.036</td><td align='center'>.036</td><td align='center'>.031</td><td align='center'>.022</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Sides .984 from tip</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>.011</td><td align='center'>.015</td><td align='center'>.015</td><td align='center'>.015</td><td align='center'>.015</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p> +<p>Some particulars of the four rifles and their projectiles are collated +in Table I., to which is added the corresponding information regarding +the Martini-Henry for the purposes of comparison.</p> + + +<h3>TABLE II.—<span class="smcap">Penetration</span></h3> + +<p>The penetration of the Martini-Henry and the Lee-Metford or Lee-Enfield +rifle with Mark II. bullet is as follows:</p> + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="10" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='center'>Martini-Henry</td><td align='center'>15½ in. of 1 in. deal boards 1 in. apart</td><td align='center'>19 in. of sand containing 15 per cent. of moisture</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Lee-Metford {Mark II. }</td><td rowspan="2">42 in. of 1 in. deal boards 1 in. apart</td><td rowspan="2">60 in. of sand containing 15 per cent. of moisture</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Lee-Enfield {bullet }</td></tr> +</table></div> + + +<p>The penetration of bullets of .314 calibre differs little from that +possessed by the Lee-Metford or Lee-Enfield, of which the muzzle +velocities are very little lower, with Mark II. bullet. The Belgian +Mauser perforates 55 inches of fir-wood at 12 metres distance. With +regard to the penetration of bullets of smaller calibre that of the +Roumanian Mannlicher (.256) may be taken as typical. When fired into a +sand butt at 25 yards the bullet enters 9 inches and then breaks up.</p> + +<p>The comparative size of the different cartridges is shown in fig. 14.</p> + +<p>The general remarks already made as to the effect of weight, calibre, +and velocity sufficiently explain the importance of the particulars +given in this table, but it will be noted that the Lee-Metford rifle is +inferior to both the Krag-Jörgensen and Mauser rifles in the initial +velocity transmitted to its bullet. The tendency to equalisation, in +this particular, when the remaining velocity is considered, has been +mentioned; but it may be of interest if I quote from Nimier and Laval<a name="FNanchor_7_7" id="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> +the scale on which the decrease in velocity takes place in the case of +the three weapons.</p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span></p> + +<h4><span class="smcap">Metres per Second</span></h4> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='center'> </td><td align='center'>Lee-Metford</td><td align='center'>Mauser</td><td align='center'>Krag-Jörgensen</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Initial velocity</td><td align='center'>630</td><td align='center'>718</td><td align='center'>720</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Remaining velocity:</td><td colspan="3"> </td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>At 100 metres</td><td align='center'>574</td><td align='center'>699</td><td align='center'>718</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>At 1,000 metres</td><td align='center'>249</td><td align='center'>264</td><td align='center'>269</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>At 2,000 metres</td><td align='center'>159</td><td align='center'>165</td><td align='center'>165.9</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p>Giving full importance to the effects of velocity as a factor in the +severity of the injuries produced, when the large proportion of wounds +received at distances above 1,000 yards is borne in mind, we see how +rapidly the superiority of the smaller projectiles is lost. This loss, +even in the early stages, is probably more than made up for in the case +of the Lee-Metford, when the superiority in weight, calibre, and +bluntness of extremity as contributing to striking force is taken into +consideration.</p> + +<p>The striking force (kinetic energy) of a bullet is indicated by the +following formula: <span class="smcap">f</span> = 1/2 mv.<sup>2</sup>; that is to say, the striking force +is equal to half the weight of the bullet multiplied by the square of +the velocity.</p> + +<p>In point of fact, with unaltered regulation bullets I was never able to +determine any very material difference between the wounds produced, +further than that the wounds of entry and exit in the soft parts tended +to correspond with the calibre of the particular bullet concerned. +Although the immense majority of the wounds which came under my notice +were caused by the Mauser bullet, yet I saw some hundreds of wounded +Boers and a good many of our own men wounded by Lee-Metford bullets, in +the latter case no doubt by some of the sporting varieties. The only +cases that I can call to mind or have noted as exhibiting a superior +wounding power in the Lee-Metford bullet are some injuries to bone. Thus +I saw a considerable number of clean perforations of the patella +produced by Mauser bullets, while the only two Boers whom I saw with +injured patellæ had suffered transverse fractures. Again, I have a +lively recollection of an old Boer who had suffered a fracture of the +middle third of the femur, in the thigh of whom, with small apertures of +entry<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> and exit, a cavity of destroyed tissue, five inches across, was +found beneath the fascia lata at the distal side of the fracture. I +cannot however say that I did not observe many equally severe injuries +to the femur produced by Mauser bullets in our own men, and as far as +fractures of the skull went, a somewhat crucial test, among the men +brought off the battlefield alive, I never saw any difference in +severity whatever.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig15.jpg" width="450" height="217" alt="Fig. 15." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 15.—Sections of four Bullets to show relative shape +and thickness of mantles.</span> +</div> +<p class="center"><b>From left to right: 1. Guedes; regular dome-shaped tip; mild steel +mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; at sides of body 0.3 mm. 2. +Lee-Metford; ogival tip; cupro-nickel mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; +gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 3. Mauser; pointed dome tip, steel +mantle plated with copper alloy; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; gradual +decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 4. Krag-Jörgensen; ogival tip as in +Lee-Metford; steel mantle plated with cupro-nickel; thickness at tip 0.6 +mm.; gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. The measurements of the sides +are taken 2.5 cm. from the tip. Note the more gradual thinning in the +Lee-Metford mantle.</b></p> + +<p>These points of comparison having been made, it only remains to consider +one other point, that of the relative stability of the bullets. This is +a matter of the greatest importance as regards the regularity or +otherwise of the wounding power of the projectile, and, as far as my +experience went, I believe the Mauser to far exceed the Lee-Metford in +instability of structure.</p> + +<p>The core of all four bullets is composed of lead hardened by a certain +admixture of tin or antimony, but the mantle differs in composition, +thickness both general and in different parts of the bullet, mode of +fixation, and consequently in its power of resistance to violence.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span></p> + +<p>Fig. 15 gives an exact representation of the relative thickness of the +mantles, and shows the general tendency to a thickening of the mantle at +its upper extremity, designed to increase both the stability and +striking power of the projectile. It will be noted that in general +stoutness the Lee-Metford stands first, as the case increases gradually +in thickness from base to apex.</p> + +<p>Beyond this it must be noted that the Lee-Metford is the only one of the +four that is ensheathed with a mantle composed of a definite alloy, this +consisting of 80 parts of nickel and 20 of copper. Two of the remaining +bullets, the Mauser and Krag-Jörgensen, are ensheathed with steel +covered with a thin coating of an alloy of copper or cupro-nickel, to +take the rifling of the barrel, while the third has a plain steel mantle +which is covered with a layer of wax to take the place of the nickel +used in the manufacture of the two others. It is interesting to mention +here that the Boers evidently found the copper alloy coating +insufficient for its purpose, or at any rate not satisfactory in +preserving the weapon from the ill-effects consequent on the friction +between the steel case and the rifling of the barrel, as at about the +middle of the campaign they began to use their bullets waxed, as in the +case of the Austrian Mannlicher; hence the legend of the poisoned +bullets which caused such a sensation for a short period amongst the +uninitiated. It is possible also that the additional layer of wax was +necessitated by the wearing of the barrel.</p> + +<p>The wax employed for the Mauser bullets was not originally green. Mr. +Leslie B. Taylor informs me that it is probably paraffin wax, the green +colour depending on the formation of verdigris from the copper alloy +with which the steel envelopes are plated. This completely corresponds +with my own experience, since on the bullets in my possession the green +colour, originally pale, has steadily increased in depth. Many old +leaden bullets I found in the Boer arsenals were also waxed, but in this +case no alteration in colour had taken place. The Guedes bullets, which +are cased in mild steel, become somewhat brown with exposure from a +similar oxidation or rusting of the surface.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p> + +<p>As far as my experience went, however, the steel casing has an important +surgical bearing beyond the mere question of wear and tear on the rifle +barrel. That it possesses elasticity and capability of bending is +obvious, and in a later chapter, devoted to irregular wounds, several +illustrations of such deformities are given; but when it strikes stone I +believe it splits and tears with very much greater freedom than the +cupro-nickel mantle of the Lee-Metford. At any rate, I never came across +Lee-Metford bullets deformed to the same degree as Mauser bullets, +either when removed from the body, or as ricochet projectiles on the +field of battle. For this reason, therefore, provided the fighting takes +place on stony ground, I believe the Mauser bullet and others ensheathed +in steel to be much more dangerous surgically than those encased in +cupro-nickel. I fancy this would be equally the case even if the mantles +were of exactly the same thickness.</p> + +<p>The layer of copper alloy on the steel mantles is also a physical +characteristic worthy of mention. This very readily chips off in a +manner similar to that we are accustomed to see with nickel-plated +instruments. This may be due to the compression into the grooving of the +rifle, or as the result of passing impact of the bullet with an obstacle +previous to entering the body or contact with a bone within it. Small +scales of metal set free in one of these ways are seen in a very large +proportion of Mauser wounds, and although they are so small as usually +to be of little importance, the presence of such in, for instance, the +substance of one of the peripheral nerves which has been perforated +cannot be considered a desirable complication.</p> + +<p>To recapitulate, it would appear that at mean ranges, both in striking +force and as regards the area of the tissues affected, the Lee-Metford +is a superior projectile to the Mauser, in spite of the greater initial +velocity possessed by the latter. On the other hand the comparative ease +with which the Mauser bullet undergoes deformation either without or +within the body, so ensuring more extensive injury and laceration, +renders it the less desirable bullet to receive a wound from when not in +its normal shape and condition.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span></p> + +<p>I can say little about the remaining two rifles. The Krag-Jörgensen was +little used, and beyond pointing out its capacity to inflict very neat +individual injuries, in which it must surpass even the Mauser, I can +only add that I had no opportunity of forming an opinion as to the +danger dependent on the great initial velocity imparted to the bullet. +The Guedes rifle has been included in the table because it approximates +in bore to the other three. Its bullet is of the same calibre as the +Austrian Mannlicher, one of the most powerful military rifles in use, +and it was used to a considerable extent during the war by the Boers.<a name="FNanchor_8_8" id="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a> +As to its capabilities, it appeared an inferior weapon, since want of +velocity and striking power of the bullets was indicated by the number +of these which were retained in the body, and by the fact that I never +saw one extracted that had undergone any more serious deformation than +some flattening on one side of the tip. On the other hand wounds of the +soft parts occasioned by it were only to be distinguished from Mauser +wounds by their slightly greater size, and at a short range of fire the +weight and volume of the bullet made it a dangerous projectile.</p> + +<p>The question of deformed bullets will be again referred to at length in +the section on wounds of irregular type, and a number of type specimens +are there figured and described (p. 76). In the same chapter will be +found illustrations of a number of sporting bullets of small calibre, as +well as of large calibres in lead, found in the Boer arsenals and camps. +I have placed them in that position as mainly of interest in connection +with the occurrence of large and irregular wounds (see figs. 42 and 43, +pp. 95 and 98).</p> + +<p>The small sporting bullets were mostly of the Mauser (.276), Lee-Metford +(.303), or Mannlicher (.315) calibre.</p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_5_5" id="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> See tables, pp. 12, 13, 15, Chapter I.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_6_6" id="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> The weights are from cartridges brought home. The charge of +powder was small and variable.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_7_7" id="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> H. Nimier and E. Laval, <i>Les Projectiles des Armes de +Guerre</i>, p. 20. F. Alcan. 1899.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_8_8" id="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> Mr. Leslie B. Taylor informs me that this rifle is a +discarded Portuguese regulation pattern, with which a copper-ensheathed +soft-nosed bullet was originally employed. For the purposes of the +present campaign a modified cartridge was constructed. Examination of +some specimens in my possession showed the charge of powder to be very +small. (Table I. p. 48.)</p></div> +</div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2> + +<h3>GENERAL CHARACTERS OF WOUNDS PRODUCED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE</h3> + + +<p>The effects of injuries inflicted by bullets of small calibre may be +divided into two classes:</p> + +<p>1. Direct or immediate destruction of tissue.</p> + +<p>2. Remote changes induced by the transmission of vibratory force from +the passing projectile to neighbouring tissues or organs.</p> + +<p>Those of the first class will be mainly considered in this chapter; the +remote effects will be dealt with under the headings devoted to special +regions.</p> + +<p>In dealing with the wounds as a whole I shall first describe those of +uncomplicated character as type injuries, and deal with those possessing +special or irregular characters separately.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Type Wounds</span></h3> + +<p>1. <i>Nature of the external apertures.</i>—The apertures of entry and exit +in uncomplicated cases are very insignificant, but the size naturally +varies slightly with that of the special form of bullet concerned. As +will be shown moreover, the difference in size is the only real +distinguishing characteristic in many cases between wounds produced by +the modern bullet of small calibre and those resulting from the use of +the older and larger projectiles of conical form. I have been very much +struck on looking over my diagrams of entry, and especially exit, wounds +to find that they reproduce in miniature most of those figured in the +History of the War of the Rebellion; some of these diagrams are +reproduced in this chapter.</p> + +<p><i>Aperture of entry.</i>—The typical wound of entry with a normal +undeformed bullet varies in appearance according to whether the +projectile has impinged at a right angle or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> at increasing degrees of +obliquity, or again, to whether the skin is supported by soft tissues +alone, or on those of a more resistent nature such as bone or cartilage.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 445px;"> +<img src="images/fig16.jpg" width="445" height="362" alt="Fig. 16." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 16.—Mauser Entry and Exit Wounds.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>A, entry in +buttock; circular opening filled with clot and crossed by a tag of +tissue. B, exit in epigastrium near mid-line; irregular slit form, with +well-marked prominence. Specimens hardened in formalin immediately after +death; the resulting contraction has slightly exaggerated the +irregularity of outline of the entry wound</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig17.jpg" width="450" height="339" alt="Fig. 17." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 17.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Gutter Wound of outer aspect of shoulder, +caused by a normal Mauser, which subsequently perforated a man's leg. At +the central part the gutter was 3/4 in. deep a few days after the +injury</b></p> + +<p>When the bullet impinges at a right angle the wound is circular, with +more or less depressed margins, and of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span> diameter, corresponding to the +size of the bullet occasioning it, from a quarter to a third of an inch. +The description 'punched out' has been sometimes applied to it, but it +would be more correct to reverse the term to 'punched in,' since the +appearance is really most nearly simulated by a hole resulting from the +driving of a solid punch into a soft structure enveloped in a denser +covering. The loss of substance, moreover, in the primary stage is not +actually so great as appears to be the case, fragments of contused +tissue from the margin being turned into the opening of the wound track. +The true margin therefore is not sharp cut, and the nature of the line +differs somewhat according to the structure of the skin in the locality +impinged upon. Thus the granular scalp and the comparatively homogeneous +skin of the anterior abdominal wall will furnish good examples of the +nature of the slight difference in appearance. From the first the margin +is also often somewhat discoloured by a metallic stain, similar to that +seen when a bullet is fired through a paper book. This ring is, however, +narrow, and not likely to be noticeable when the bullet has passed +through the clothing. In any case it is subsequently obscured by the +development of a narrow ring of discoloration due to the contusion. This +latter varies in width, and still later a halo of ecchymosis half an +inch or more in diameter surrounds the original wound.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 245px;"> +<img src="images/fig18.jpg" width="245" height="450" alt="Fig. 18." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 18.—Oblique Exit Gutter. </span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Diagram enlarged to actual size from case shown in fig. 24, p. 64.</b></p> + +<p>With increasing degrees of obliquity of impact more and more pronounced +oval openings of entry result, culminating in an actual gutter such as +is seen in fig. 17.</p> + +<p>In all oval openings the loss of substance is more pronounced<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span> at the +proximal margin, while the wound is liable to undergo secondary +enlargement at the distal margin, since in the former the epidermis is +mainly affected, while in the latter the epidermis is spared as an +ill-nourished bridge, the deeper layers of the skin suffering the more +severely. When the wound occurs in regions, such as the chest-wall or +over the sacrum, where the skin is firmly supported, the oval openings +are often very considerable in size, reaching a diameter at least double +that of the circular ones. In the case of the oval openings the +depression of the margins is not such a well-marked feature as in wounds +resulting from rectangular impact of the bullet, since the distal margin +is really lifted.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig19.jpg" width="450" height="236" alt="Fig. 19." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 19.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Oval Entry Wound over third sacral vertebra. +Exit wound, anterior abdominal wall. Slightly starred variety. Diagram +made on second day</b></p> + +<p><i>Aperture of exit.</i>—The wound of exit in normal cases offers far more +variation in appearance than that of entry, this variation depending on +several circumstances: first, the want of support to the skin from +without, and such other factors as the degree of velocity retained by +the travelling bullet, the locality of the opening, and the density, +tension, and resistance offered by the particular area of skin +implicated.</p> + +<p>When the range has been short and the velocity high, it is often +difficult to discriminate between the two apertures. Both may be +circular and of approximately the same size, and the only distinguishing +characteristic, the slight depression of the margin of the wound of +entrance, may be absent if any time has elapsed between the infliction +of the injury and examination by the surgeon. One very strong +characteristic if present is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> the general tendency of the margins, and +even the area surrounding the exit wound itself, to be somewhat +prominent. Fig. 16 shows this point, although the wound from which it +was drawn had been produced thirty-six hours before death. The specimen +was then hardened in formalin and still preserves its original aspect. +This character is, however, more frequently displayed in wounds received +at mean, or longer, ranges. In wounds produced by bullets travelling at +the highest degrees of velocity it is often absent.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig20.jpg" width="450" height="234" alt="Fig. 20." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 20.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Circular Entry back of arm; exit (bird-like) in +anterior elbow crease</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig21.jpg" width="450" height="236" alt="Fig. 21." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 21.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Circular Entry over patella. Starred exit of +elongated form in popliteal crease</b></p> + +<p>When the range of fire has been greater and the velocity retained by the +bullet lower, slit wounds are common, or some of the slighter degrees of +starring. Actual starring I never saw, but reference to figs. 20 and 21 +will show a tendency in this direction, also a close resemblance to the +starred wounds<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> resulting from perforations by large leaden bullets. +Such wounds, I believe, are usually the result of a somewhat low degree +of velocity.</p> + +<p>Slit exit wounds may be vertical or transverse (fig. 20) in direction, +and the production of these is dependent on the locality in which they +are situated, the thickness, density, and tension of the skin, and the +nature of the connection of the latter with the subcutaneous fascia in +the locality. Thus in wounds of different parts of the hairy scalp, so +little variation exists in the relative density and structure of the +skin, that, in spite of the want of external support at the aperture of +exit, it is often difficult to discriminate offhand the two apertures, +if neither bone nor brain débris occupies that of exit.</p> + +<p>If, however, a wound crosses from side to side a region such as the +thigh where well-marked differences exist in the subjacent support, +thickness, and elasticity of the skin implicated in the apertures, the +wound of entry, if in the thick skin of the outer aspect, was usually +circular, while the exit in the thin elastic skin of the inner aspect +was either slit-like or starred. The difficulty in laying down any +general rule as to the occurrence of circular or slit apertures of exit +in any definite region is, however, great, as may be seen by reference +to the accompanying diagrams taken from two patients wounded at +Paardeberg (figs. 22 and 23).</p> + +<p>In fig. 22 the bullet entered the outer and posterior aspect of the left +buttock, crossed the limb behind the femur, and emerged at the inner +aspect by a vertical slit: the bullet then entered the scrotum by a +vertical slit, and emerged by a typical circular aperture; re-entered +the right thigh by a transverse slit aperture, and, striking the femur +in its further course, underwent deformation, and finally escaped by an +irregular aperture 3/4 of an inch in diameter. The occurrence of exit +slits in the adductor region is common, and to be explained by the +tendency of the comparatively thin elastic skin to be carried before the +bullet; the slit entry in this position must, I suppose, be explained by +the comparatively slight support afforded by the underlying structures, +which are often in a condition of hollow tension. The scrotal wounds are +perhaps more difficult to account for, but in this case the fact of the +distal aperture being directly supported by the right thigh is a ready +explanation of the circular exit, while the skin corresponding to the +slit entry was no doubt carried before the bullet, and finally gave way +in the line of a normal crease.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig22.jpg" width="450" height="168" alt="Fig. 22." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 22.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Entry and Exit Wounds in both thighs and +scrotum.<br /> From right to left: 1. Circular entry in left buttock behind +trochanter. 2. Vertical slit exit in adductor region. 3. Slit entry in +scrotum (probably inverted before bullet broke the surface, and then a +slit occurred in a normal crease). 4. Circular exit in scrotum (here +supported by surface of right thigh). 5. Transverse slit entry in right +adductor region. 6. Irregular 'explosive' exit, the bullet having set up +on contact with the front surface of the femur, but without having +caused solution of continuity of the bone</b></p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p> + +<p>In fig. 23 all the wounds are circular except the final exit, which was +irregular as a result of the bullet in this case also having struck the +femur in the second thigh. Considerable variation also exists in the +size of the circular apertures; this illustrates the secondary +enlargement often occurring in such wounds, and most marked at the +apertures of entry, as the more contused. Both diagrams were made from +patients eight days after the reception of the wounds.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig23.jpg" width="450" height="240" alt="Fig. 23." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 23.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Wound of both Thighs. First and second entry +typical circular wounds. First exit a small circular wound; the bullet +'set up' on contact with the femur without causing solution of +continuity of the bone, and second exit is irregular and large.</b></p> + +<p class="center"><b>This diagram is of considerable interest when compared with fig. 22. I +believe the comparative regularity in the wounds to have been due to a +higher degree of velocity of flight on the part of the bullet</b></p> + +<p>Lastly, vertical or transverse slits may be looked for with considerable +confidence in situations in which transverse oblique or vertical folds +or creases normally exist in the skin, and depend on the lines of +tension maintained by the connection of the skin in these situations to +the underlying fascia. Thus I saw well-marked transverse and vertical +slits in the forehead corresponding with the creases normally found +there, and in this situation I noted some slit entries. Transverse +slits<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span> were common in the folds of the neck, the flexures of the joints +(fig. 20), and the anterior abdominal wall either in the mid line or in +creases like those stretching across from the anterior superior iliac +spines. Again they were seen in the palms and soles, but here more +readily tended to assume the stellate forms. Vertical slits are less +common; they occurred with the greatest frequency in the posterior +axillary folds.</p> + +<p>Oval apertures of exit are far less common than those of entry, since +the most common factor for the production of an oval opening, bony +support, is never present. In long subcutaneous tracks, or very +superficial wounds, they are however sometimes met with and may +terminate in a pointed gutter (see figs. 18 and 24).</p> + +<p>The greatest modifications in the appearance and nature of the apertures +of entry are dependent on previous deformation of the bullet, when all +special characteristics are lost, and it becomes impossible to form any +opinion as to the type of bullet concerned. These modifications are +naturally far more common in the aperture of exit, since the bullet so +often acquires deformity in the body as the result of impact with the +bones. Further remarks on this subject will be found with the +description and comparison of the various bullets on p. 81.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 351px;"> +<img src="images/fig24.jpg" width="351" height="450" alt="Fig. 24." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 24.—Superficial Thoracico-abdominal Track. </span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p class="center"><b>Small +entry: discoloration of surface over costal margin from deep injury to +skin; well-marked 'flame' gutter exit (see fig. 18)</b></p> + +<p>2. <i>Direct course taken by the wound track.</i>—This character primarily +depends on the velocity with which bullets of small calibre are made to +travel, and on the small area of the tissues upon which they operate. In +this relation the degree of velocity retained by the bullet is often of +minor importance, provided it be sufficient to penetrate the body. Fired +within a distance of 2,500 yards there is little doubt that a bullet of +the Lee-Metford, Mauser, or Krag-Jörgensen types, passes straight +between the apertures of entry and exit when these are of the type +outline, even when the bones are implicated. By reason of the small size +of the projectiles, their shape, and the spin and velocity transmitted +to them, there is no reason why at a sufficiently short range they +should not traverse the body from the crown of the head to the sole of +the foot. The necessary conditions of position and distance for such an +injury are obviously not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span> often obtained, but it may be pointed out that +the Belgian Mauser rifle at a distance of five yards is capable of +driving a bullet 55 inches or nearly five feet into a log of pine-wood. +Many examples of long tracks will be referred to later, but the +following instances may be of interest in this relation. A bullet +entering at the occipital protuberance traversed the muscles of the +neck, passed through the thoracic cavity, fractured the bodies of the +third and fourth and grooved the seventh and eighth dorsal vertebræ, +grooved the seventh and eighth and fractured the ninth and tenth ribs, +traversed the muscles of the back and finally lodged against the ilium; +the whole length of this track measured some 25 inches. Again, at the +battle of Belmont a Mauser bullet entered the pelvis of a horse just +below the anus, and traversed the entire trunk before emerging from the +front of the chest: it may be of interest to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span> mention that this animal +was alive and moving about the next day, but I am sorry I can give no +further information regarding his fate.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 352px;"> +<img src="images/fig25.jpg" width="352" height="450" alt="Fig. 25." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 25.—Superficial Track on external surface of Thigh.<br /> +Local discoloration of skin five weeks after reception of injury</span> +</div> + +<p>The possibility of contour tracks travelling around the walls of the +chest or abdomen has therefore rarely to be considered, except in +occasional instances where the bullet fired from a long range has +impinged against a bone and is retained in the body. The small volume of +the bullets, however, allows the production of very prolonged direct +subcutaneous tracks in the body wall, in positions where they would be +manifestly impossible with projectiles of larger calibre.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p> + +<p>Figs. 24 and 25 illustrate wounds of this nature. In the case figured in +fig. 24 the bullet entered over the third rib in a vertical line above +the right nipple; it then coursed obliquely down, crossing the seventh +costal cartilage, and finally emerged 3 inches above the umbilicus. +Where the track crossed the prominence of the thoracic margin the skin +was so thinned as to undergo subsequent discoloration, while a distinct +groove was evident there on palpation. In some similar cases I have seen +the central part of the track secondarily laid open as a result of the +thinning of the skin and consequent sloughing due to the interference +with its vitality.</p> + +<p>Short of sloughing, the skin may show signs of alteration of vitality +for a long period after the injury; thus fig. 25 depicts the condition +seen in a superficial wound of the thigh five weeks after the injury. +The line of passage of the bullet between the two openings was still +clearly visible as a dark red coloured streak. Grooves in such cases are +generally readily palpable in the early stages, while later the want of +resistance is replaced by the readily felt firm cord representing the +cicatrix. These points are of much importance in discriminating between +perforating and non-perforating wounds of the abdomen, and are again +referred to in that connection.</p> + +<p>The direction of the tracks obviously depends on the attitude assumed by +the patient at the moment of impact of the bullet and the direction +whence the firing has proceeded. The frequent assumption of the prone +position during the campaign led to the occurrence of a large proportion +of longitudinal tracks in the trunk, or trunk and head, which will be +referred to later. Certain battles were in fact strongly characterised +by the nature of the wounds sustained by the men. Thus at Belmont and +Graspan, where some rapid advances were made in the erect attitude, +fractured thighs were proportionately numerous, while at Modder River, +where many of the men lay for a great part of the day in the prone +position, glancing wounds of the uplifted head, of the occipital region, +or longitudinal tracks in the trunk and limbs were particularly +frequent. I very much regret that the material at my disposal does not +allow me to add some remarks<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span> as to variation in the nature of the +wounds according to whether they were received from an enemy firing from +a height or from below, but it is possible that some information on this +subject may be forthcoming when the returns of the Service are made up, +since it is naturally of great importance as to the effect of trajectory +in the proportionate occurrence of hits.</p> + +<p>3. <i>Multiple character of the wounds.</i>—The same conditions responsible +for the length and directness of the tracks, account for the frequently +multiple character of the wounds implicating either the limbs or +viscera—thus, lung, stomach, liver; neck, thorax, abdomen; abdomen, +pelvis, thigh. Also for the frequent infliction of two or more separate +tracks by the same bullet—thus, arm and forearm with the elbow in the +flexed position; both lower extremities; both lower extremities, penis +or scrotum; leg, thigh, and abdomen, with a flexed knee; upper extremity +and trunk, and more rarely one upper and one lower extremity. Again, it +was remarkable how often the same bullet would inflict injuries on two +or more separate men, not unfrequently dealing lightly with the first +and inflicting a fatal injury on the second, or vice versâ. The small +calibre of the bullet, moreover, allows of the neatest and most exact +multiple injuries. Thus in a patient who was crawling up a kopje on all +fours, the flexed middle digit of the hand was struck. The bullet +entered at the base of the nail, first emerged at the distal +interphalangeal flexor fold, re-entered the metacarpo-phalangeal fold, +and finally emerged from the back of the hand between the third and +fourth metacarpal bones.</p> + +<p>4. <i>Small 'bore' of the tracks, and tendency of the injury to be +localised to individual structures of importance.</i>—Here we meet with +the most striking characteristic of the injuries, and evidence that +reduction of calibre affects more strongly the nature of the lesion than +does any other element in the structure of the modern rifle. The +diameter of the track slightly exceeds that of the external apertures, +probably as a result of the more ready separability of the elements of +the structures perforated than exists in the skin. The calibre, +moreover, tends to be fairly even throughout<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> when soft structures only +are implicated, though local enlargements result wherever increased +resistance is met with. Thus a strong fascia may offer such resistance +as to increase locally the bore of the track, and in this particular the +state of tension of the fascia when struck will affect the degree of the +enlargement. The most striking instances of local enlargement of the +track are of course seen when a bone lies in the course of the bullet, +but we must here bear in mind the introduction of a new element—the +propulsion of comminuted fragments together with the bullet itself. In +cases of fracture the distal portion of the track is in consequence many +times larger than the proximal. The most striking examples of small even +tracks are seen, on the other hand, in punctures of the elastic and +practically homogeneous lung tissue, where the wounds are extremely +small.</p> + +<p>On transverse section of the track the gross amount of actual tissue +destruction occupies a lesser area than that corresponding to the +diameter of the bullet. The destructive action of the projectile is in +fact exerted mainly on the tissues directly lying in its course, the +track being opened up during the rush of the passage of the bullet, +partly as a result of its wedge-like shape and partly as a result of the +throwing off of the tissues forming the walls of the track by a +diversion of a portion of the force in the form of spiral vibrations +dependent on the revolution of the bullet. Again, the opening out of the +tissues may be aided by the direction taken by the first and strongest +as well as the simplest series of vibrations transmitted, which would +assume the shape of a cone of which the point of impact forms the apex.</p> + +<p>The escape from actual destruction by structures lying in the immediate +neighbourhood of the track is indeed often surprising, but not perhaps +so astonishing as the perforation of long narrow structures such as the +peripheral nerves and vessels, without irreparable damage to the parts +remaining, and this although the structures themselves may be of a +diameter not exceeding that of the bullet itself. The capacity of these +projectiles to split such structures as tendons was already well known +before our experience in this campaign, but the injuries to the nerves +and vessels of the same character came as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span> a surprise to most of us. The +lateral displacement of tissues seems to bear a strong resemblance to +what is seen on the passage of an express train, when solid bodies of +considerable weight are displaced by the draught created without ever +coming into contact with the train itself. The tendency to lateral +displacement is still more strongly exhibited when dense hard structures +such as bone are implicated. Here the fragments at the actual points of +impact on the proximal and distal surfaces of a shaft are driven +forwards, while the lateral walls of the track in the bone are simply +comminuted and pushed on one side without loss of continuity with their +covering periosteum.</p> + +<p>The extension of this form of displacement to a degree amounting to a +so-called explosive character in the case of the soft tissues, even when +the bullet passed at the highest degrees of velocity, was, however, +never witnessed by me, and I very much doubt the existence of a +so-called 'explosive zone' so far as wounds of the soft parts are +concerned. On the contrary, I am inclined to believe that the highest +degrees of velocity are favourable to clean-cut neat injuries of the +soft tissues. I saw a large number of type wounds of entry and exit +inflicted at a range of under fifty yards.</p> + +<p>5. <i>Clinical course of the wounds.</i>—The tendency of simple wounds such +as are above described to run an aseptic course was very marked, and, +given satisfactory conditions, deep suppuration and cellulitis were +distinctly rare. It may also be confidently affirmed that when +suppuration did occur, with apertures of entry and exit of the normal +small type, this was always the result of infection from the skin, or +infection subsequent to the actual infliction of the wound. The +infrequency of suppuration depended on the aseptic nature of the injury, +the smallness of the openings, the small tendency of the track to weep +and furnish serous discharge in any abundance, the comparative rarity of +the inclusion of fragments of clothing or other foreign bodies, and +possibly in some degree on the purity and dryness of the atmosphere, +which favoured a firm dry clotting of the blood in the apertures of +entry and exit, and consequent safe 'sealing of the wound.'<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p> + +<p>As to the aseptic nature of the injury, it will be well to first +consider the question of the sterility of the bullet. Putting laboratory +experiments on one side, the large experience of this campaign seems to +prove to absolute demonstration that, bearing in mind the very large +proportion of instances of primary union in simple tracks, the surgeon +has nothing to fear on the part of the bullet itself. This is the more +striking when we remember that these bullets shortly before their +employment were carried in a dirty bandolier, and freely handled by men +whose opportunities of rendering either their hands or implements +aseptic were as bad as it is possible to conceive.</p> + +<p>Several explanations are to hand, but none of them conclusive. Two must, +however, be shortly considered. First, the surface of the bullet, except +its tip and base, is practically renewed by passage through the barrel. +Secondly, there is the question of the heat to which it is subjected. As +far as cauterisation of the tissues is concerned, this question has been +practically settled in the negative, since actual determinations of the +heat immediately after the moment of impact have been made, and again it +has been shown that butter is not melted, and that neither gunpowder nor +dynamite is exploded, by firing bullets through small quantities of +those materials. Again, the absence of any sign of scorching of the +clothes of the wounded is strong evidence against the possibility of any +considerable heat being applied to the tissues of the body; while +another observation, although of less importance as affecting spent +bullets only, that bullets, which have perforated the body but lie +between the skin and the clothing, leave no sign of cauterising action +on either, may be mentioned. None the less, the sources of heating while +the bullet is passing from the barrel are many and obvious. Thus there +is the heat consequent on explosion of the powder, the warm state of the +barrel itself when the rifle has been fired a few times consecutively, +and the heat resulting from the force and friction essential to the +propulsion of the bullet through the barrel. Again, bullets covered with +wax before their introduction into the barrel retain no trace of this +when they have been fired, although at any rate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span> the portion covering +the tip is not exposed to friction on the part of the rifle, and lastly +the base of the bullet has no other explicable reason for its +innocuousness than subjection to a certain degree of heat. While not +claiming any cauterising action on the tissues by the bullet, I should +therefore still be inclined to allow the probability of the heat to +which the surface of the bullet is exposed exerting a cleansing action +on the projectile. In regard to this point it is interesting to bear in +mind that shots from an ordinary gun seldom or never give rise to +infection.</p> + +<p>Foreign bodies were rarely carried into the wounds with the bullet. I +saw several instances in which portions of the metal of cigarette cases +and of cartridge cases when the bullet had perforated cartridges in the +wounded man's bandolier, and in one instance small pieces of glass from +a pocket mirror, must have been carried in without any obvious ill +effect. Fragments of clothing, on the other hand, in every case caused +suppuration: clothing was not often carried in, the khaki linen was +perforated with a clean aperture, most commonly a slit; but the thick +woollen kilts of the Highlanders, and thick flannel shirts, occasionally +furnished fragments. The introduction of large pieces of clothing is a +sure proof of irregularity of impact on the part of the bullet. The +frequency with which portions of cloth were introduced from the kilt was +one of the strongest surgical objections to its retention as a part of +the uniform on active service.</p> + +<p>Retained bullets themselves remained as foreign bodies in a certain +number of cases. I cannot say that suppuration never followed the +retention of a bullet, since in two of the instances where I saw such +removed they lay in a small cavity containing at any rate a 'purulent +fluid.' In one of these the bullet was a Martini-Henry, and in both the +bullet had been imbedded for some weeks, and had certainly not +occasioned a primary suppuration of the wound.</p> + +<p>The favourable influence of the pure and dry nature of the atmosphere in +this campaign must certainly not be underrated, and in support of this +influence I think I may say, from the experience of cases that I saw +coming from Natal where the climate and surroundings were not so +favourable as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span> on the western side, that suppuration was more common and +more severe in the moister atmosphere.</p> + +<p>Putting aside all the above remarks, however, I am inclined to think +that a general tendency to primary union and the absence of suppuration +will always be a feature of wounds from bullets of small calibre, and +that this favourable tendency is attributable to certain inherent +characters of the injuries. Of these the nature and small size of the +openings, the dry character of the lining of the track due to +superficial destruction and condensation of the tissue forming its wall, +the small disposition to prolonged primary hæmorrhage, and the absence +of any great amount of serous exudation during the early stages of +healing are the most important.</p> + +<p>A mechanical factor of great importance also exists in the spontaneous +collapse and automatic apposition of the walls of the track. This +closure is rendered additionally effective in many cases by the +interruption of the continuous line in the wounded tissues consequent on +alteration in the position of the parts traversed when an attitude of +rest is assumed by the injured part. The indisposition to suppuration +and the apparent unsuitability of the tissue lining the track for the +development and spread of infecting organisms are well illustrated by +several observations. Thus, even if the bullet be thoroughly aseptic, +the fragments of destroyed skin driven into the track by the bullet can +scarcely be free from organisms; yet these seldom give rise to trouble. +Again, if for any reason a deep portion of a track becomes infected and +suppurates, there is no tendency for the spread of infection along the +line of wounded tissue, but rather for the development of a local +abscess, pointing in the ordinary direction of least resistance, +irrespective of the course originally taken by the bullet.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<img src="images/plate1.jpg" width="600" height="574" alt="PLATE I." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_I" id="PLATE_I">PLATE I.</a></span> +</div> + + +<p>Mauser Wound of Entrance, a little more than 48 hours after infliction. +About 12/1.</p> + +<p class="right"><span class="smcap">G. L. Cheatle.</span></p> + +<p>Section of the entry segment of an aseptic Mauser wound removed a little +over forty-eight hours after its infliction. Magnified twelve diameters.</p> + +<p>The margins of the opening are still sloping and depressed, indicating +the originally 'punched-in' nature of the aperture. A thin stratified +layer of epidermis completely closes it. No scab remains.</p> + +<p>The wound track is occluded by an effusion of lymph, commencing +organisation of which is shown under a higher magnifying power by the +presence of leucocytes near the margin of the bounding tissue, and some +giant cells. The effusion of lymph occupies a slightly wider area +immediately beneath the papillary layer of the skin, then narrows, and +broadens again as the subcutaneous fascia is reached, indicating the +effect of resistance in widening the area of damage.</p> + +<p>The subcutaneous connective tissue bounding the track shows little sign +of alteration beyond a general slight tendency of the lines of structure +to deviate in the direction of the passage of the bullet.</p> + +<p>No hæmorrhage is apparent beyond a small collection of blood situated +immediately beneath the new layer of epidermis at the left-hand corner +of the opening.</p> + +<p>Range probably within 800 yards. Seat of wound, abdominal wall a highest +point of iliac crest.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>Fig. 25 (<i>a</i>), <span class="smcap">a</span> (plate I.) represents a section carried across an +aseptic aperture of entry. The specimen was removed by Mr. Cheatle from +a patient who died forty-eight hours after reception of the injury. It +shows well the small amount of gross destruction suffered by the +subcutaneous tissue, and the rapid repair which follows, since +macroscopically the track is scarcely discernible. Reference to plate I. +shows the remarkable fact that even at this early date considerable +progress towards definite healing has occurred, and a thin layer of +stratified epidermis covers the original opening. The question may be +raised whether the origin of this epidermal layer is not in part a +floating up of the margins of the main aperture.</p> + +<p>During the course of healing some variation takes place in the +appearance of the apertures, especially that of entry. This, at first +contracted, later becomes somewhat relaxed, while in many cases a small +halo of ecchymosis develops around it. The blood-clot occupying its +centre now contracts, the margins rapidly become approximated +centripetally, and a small circular dark spot only remains, which is +later replaced by a small red cicatrix. The dark central spot under +these circumstances consists of the contused margin of the wound in the +skin, and a small proportion of blood-clot which finally comes away as a +small dry scab. When slight local infection occurs in place of simple +contraction and dry scabbing, the process is prolonged, the contused +margin separates by granulation, the clot in the opening breaks down, +and a small ulcer of somewhat larger proportions than the original wound +remains and takes some days to heal.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 370px;"> +<img src="images/fig25a.jpg" width="370" height="450" alt="Fig. 25 (a)." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 25 (a).</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b><i>A.</i> Wound of entry 48 hours after +reception. <i>B.</i> Wound of exit, 7½ days after reception. 1. Skin. 2. +Subcutaneous fat carried into the lips of the wound by the bullet. 3. +Infected blood extravasation in subcutaneous tissue. Exact size. (See +plates I. and II.)</b></p> + +<p>The aperture of exit in simple wounds of the soft parts sometimes heals +even more rapidly than that of entry, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> if of the slit form may be +almost invisible at the end of ten days or a fortnight, actual primary +union having taken place as after a simple small incision. Larger or +irregular exit apertures, however, take a longer period to close than +entry wounds, and this is most often observed when the bullet has +undergone deformation within the body, or bone fragments have been +driven out with the bullet.</p> + +<p>Fig. 25 (<i>a</i>), <span class="smcap">b</span> (plate II.) represents a section of an infected exit +aperture from a patient who died seven and a half days after its +infliction. Two main points of interest are at once apparent: 1. The +carrying forwards of the subcutaneous fat into the lips of the skin +wound by the bullet. This illustrates the manner in which lightly +supported structures are carried forward by the bullet, and throws some +light on the mode by which vessels and nerves may escape by a process of +displacement. This figure may be compared with fig. 25 (<i>b</i>) which shows +a tag of omentum similarly carried forward by a bullet crossing the +abdominal cavity and plugging the exit wound. 2. The second feature of +interest is the amount of hæmorrhage into the subcutaneous tissue. In +this respect the contrast between the exit and entry apertures is +marked, since in the latter hæmorrhage is scarcely apparent. The +presence of such hæmorrhages is explained by the same dragging action as +the extrusion of the fat, and is of course dependent on consequent +rupture of small vessels. It is of importance as predisposing the exit +wound to more easy infection, and it accounts for the persisting +subcutaneous induration more often detected beneath healed exit than +entry apertures. Again, it suggests that the presence of blood in the +deeper parts of the tracks may be the determining cause of the indurated +cords often replacing them.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 600px;"> +<img src="images/plate2.jpg" width="600" height="600" alt="PLATE II" title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_II" id="PLATE_II">PLATE II</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p class="right"><span class="smcap">G. L. Cheatle.</span></p> + +<p>Mauser Wound of Exit, 7½ days after infliction. Healing delayed by +Infection. About 12/1.</p> + +<p>Section of the exit segment of a Mauser wound, removed seven and a half +days after infliction. Magnified twelve diameters.</p> + +<p>The healing process has been delayed by infection.</p> + +<p>There is no attempt at closure by a layer of epidermis, and the margins +are not depressed.</p> + +<p>The wound track is narrower than that seen in the entry wound plate I., +and completely occluded by a plug of the subcutaneous fat which has been +carried forward by the bullet in its passage. A small wedge-shaped plug +of lymph indicates the position of the actual track at its termination.</p> + +<p>Dragging on the surrounding tissue consequent on the extrusion of the +plug of fat has ruptured some capillaries, and given rise to +considerable extravasation of blood, which is seen as a darker layer in +the deepest portion of the wound.</p> + +<p>Comparison of this plate with the exit wound depicted in fig. 16, p. 56, +explains the nature of the tags of tissue there seen to protrude from +the convex opening.</p> + +<p>Range 800 yards. Seat of wound, abdominal wall below 9th costal +cartilage.</p></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>Pari passu</i> with the closure of the external openings, healing of the +track takes place, but this is not always so rapid a process as is +apparently the case. In many instances the closure, and even definite +healing, of the external wounds is complete long before the track has +actually healed, even though it be contracted up to complete closure as +far as any cavity is concerned. This is well seen in many cases in which +the exit opening is large as a result of deformation of the bullet, or +the passage of bone splinters in conjunction with it; here, in spite of +absence of all suppuration, the track may remain patent for many weeks. +This may point to infection, but the tardiness in actual consolidation +corresponds with what we are well acquainted with in the case of all +aseptic wounds when a slough has to separate or become absorbed, and it +is therefore only what might be reasonably expected when we remember +that every such bullet track is lined by a thin layer of damaged tissue.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 411px;"> +<img src="images/fig25b.jpg" width="411" height="450" alt="Fig. 25 (b)." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 25 (b).</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Great Omentum carried by the bullet into +an exit track leading from the abdominal cavity. A. Outline of opening +in the peritoneum</b></p> + +<p>When fully healed, the points of entry and exit are so insignificant as +to be less obvious than ordinary acne scars, and later are often hardly +visible, but for a considerable period they are often more palpable than +apparent. This depends upon the induration of the line of cicatrix +corresponding<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span> to the course of the original track which is adherent to +the two points. The induration is indeed so marked as to occasionally +give rise to the suspicion that a foreign body such as a fragment of +lead or of the mantle of the bullet has been enclosed during the healing +of the wound.</p> + +<p>In the deeper portions of the tracks the extreme density of the cicatrix +is a factor of great prognostic importance, since if it implicates +muscles, tendons, vessels, or nerves, impairment of movement, +circulatory disturbance, or signs of neuritis or nerve pressure are +often witnessed. Thus, for instance, a track traversing the calf, will +more or less tie the whole thickness of the structures perforated at one +spot, and the apertures of entry and exit may be visibly retracted when +the muscles are put in action with consequent pain and stiffness to the +patient. Such pain and stiffness form some of the most troublesome +after-consequences of many simple wounds. It is remarkable for how long +a period after the healing of the wound and resumption of active duty +the patients suffer from pain in and radiating from the locality of the +wound, when fatigued or suffering from stiffness from the prolonged +retention of one attitude or exposure to cold. The cords, however, +eventually completely disappear, and the cicatrices become moveable. The +effects of secondary pressure on the vessels and nerves are considered +under the headings devoted to those structures.</p> + +<p><i>Suppuration.</i>—While the occurrence of deep suppuration or septic +phlegmon was rare, local suppuration of the apertures of entry and exit +was seen in a considerable proportion of the wounds. This was referable +to infection from the skin itself, or to infection from without +subsequent to the infliction of the injury. Infection from the skin, +difficult to obviate at all times, is especially likely to occur in +wounds the first dressing of which is often delayed, and which happen to +men sweating freely into clothes the condition of which is at least +undesirable for contact with a recent wound. Beyond this, the first +dressing materials, removed from a soiled tunic by possibly a comrade or +a stretcher-bearer, are scarcely above reproach of the probability of +containing septic organisms themselves. Again, once applied, the +exigencies of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span> situation often necessitate an amount of movement +fatal to the retention of the dressing over the wound, and a second +opportunity of infection arises before the patient comes into the hands +of the surgeon in the Field hospital.</p> + +<p>The general tendency of such suppurations when they occurred in +uncomplicated flesh wounds was to remain superficial, either involving +the contused margin of the cutaneous opening and the plug of blood-clot +occupying it, and resulting in a slight enlargement of the wound only, +or at most involving the subcutaneous tissue and not extending into the +deep planes of the trunk or limbs. In either case a slight delay in +healing was the most serious result, while constitutional signs of +infection were either absent or of the slightest nature. The same +indisposition to spread by the track was equally noted when a deep +portion became infected from, for instance, the intestine in a belly +wound.</p> + +<p>Wounds of irregular type, however, such as those caused by ricochet +bullets, or accompanying severe fractures, or those caused by fragments +of larger projectiles, often suppurated freely in spite of exposure to +no more unsatisfactory surrounding conditions than the wounds of small +bore. This appears to show conclusively that the first element in the +general slight consequences of small-bore wounds is their calibre, and, +secondly, that increase of velocity on the part of the bullet, while it +in some measure compensates for the loss of volume in the projectile, on +the other hand reacts in favour of the wounded in so far as the injuries +it effects on the soft tissues are ill suited to the development of +septic organisms in the parts.</p> + +<p><i>Retained bullets.</i>—These were met with more frequently than might have +been expected, but I can give no idea as to their proportional +occurrence, since so many of the slighter injuries never came under my +observation. Experience, however, showed that the bullets of large +calibre and low velocity employed during the campaign were far more +commonly lodged in proportion to the frequency of their use. Thus I saw +a considerable number of Martini-Henry, Snider, large leaden sporting +bullets, and shrapnel retained. Again, among the bullets of smaller +calibre, the Guedes 8-mm.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> bullet, which travels at a comparatively low +rate of velocity and with moderate spin, was far more frequently lodged +than the Lee-Metford or Mauser in comparison with the number of Guedes +rifles in use.</p> + +<p>Bullets of small calibre were, however, also retained with some degree +of frequency, either as the result of striking at a long range, or in +such a direction as to need to traverse a large segment of the body +before escaping, or as striking large or several bones, or making some +irregular form of impact: the last was a not infrequent explanation of +lodgment, especially when a bone lay in the course of the track. +Ricochet bullets naturally were especially likely to be retained, both +on account of the low velocity with which they often travel and the +irregularity of their surface with consequent loss of penetrating power.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Wounds of Irregular Type</span></h3> + +<p>Many of the wounds met with deviated so greatly in appearance and +general characters from what has been described above as to afford +little or no evidence of having been inflicted by small-calibre bullets, +and before describing these it is necessary to give a short account of +the circumstances which are responsible for such departures from the +common type. In the case of the wound of entry, the simplest +explanations are lateral impact on the part of the cylindro-conoidal +projectile, due to the position of the part struck or the direction in +which the bullet has been fired, wobbling on the part of the bullet due +simply to loss of velocity and force in flight, or to turning of the +bullet by impact with an obstacle to its course (ricochet) which may +amount to actual reversal of the striking end. As a rule, in such cases +the size of the aperture of entry exceeds that of exit, and in a large +proportion the bullet is retained within the body.</p> + +<p>Of these explanations that of the 'wobble' needs some passing notice. In +its simplest form it depends merely on loss of velocity of flight on the +part of the bullet, the centre of gravity of which lies behind its +middle; hence a tendency to turn over and over is acquired. As a result +of this, either the side of the tip, the side of the bullet, the side of +the base,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span> or the base itself may form the portion of the projectile +which comes into contact with the body. The tendency to wobble is +naturally greatly increased in ricochet bullets, since the contact, if +lateral, serves to check the spin on which the bullet depends for its +flight on an axis parallel to its long diameter. The first effect of +wobbling is to increase the size and interfere with the regularity of +outline of the wound of entry; but it also acts in a more serious +manner, since the increase of the area of impact augments the resistance +offered by the body; therefore the degree of damage to the tissues is +accentuated and becomes greater than it would be from a bullet +travelling at the same rate on its normal axis. Hence the wounds are +both large and severe, or if the velocity is very low, the projectile is +especially likely to be retained.</p> + +<p>Actual reversal of the bullet usually only slightly enlarges the +aperture of entry, but injuries to cancellous bone are apt to be more +severe when the bullet enters in this manner, or again it is often +retained. I saw several such cases during the campaign.</p> + +<p>Another form of wobble is suggested by Nimier and Laval,<a name="FNanchor_9_9" id="FNanchor_9_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_9_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> of which I +can offer no experience. They suggest that, as rotation slows, the +bullet may on impact wobble like a top before it ceases to spin. +Probably the power of penetration possessed by a bullet wobbling in this +manner would not be very great, but its effect would mainly be altered +in the direction of an abnormal increase in the size of the aperture of +entry, or possibly in the degree of comminution in fractures.</p> + +<p>It is probable that some of the more serious wounds observed were merely +the result of unusual forms of impact with normal flight on the part of +the bullet. The majority, however, depended, in the case of the wound of +exit, on deformation of the bullet within the body, or the propulsion of +bone fragments with it, and, when both apertures were affected, to +previous ricochet on the part of the projectile.</p> + +<p>It is here necessary to give a short account of the more common +deformities met with, and to refer to the special characters possessed +by different types of bullet of small<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span> calibre which may affect the ease +with which deformity is produced, and the degree to which it is commonly +carried. The effect of ricochet is to lower the velocity of flight, and +at the same time to effect certain alterations of form in the bullet. +These with rectangular impact in the case of bullets travelling at a low +degree of velocity consist in a bending and deformation of the tip; in +the higher degrees, of bending, shortening, extensive destruction, or +complete fragmentation. If the bullet makes lateral impact, only +widening and flattening result, often with the escape of the lead core +from the mantle. That a ricochet bullet may travel a considerable +distance is shown by the following observations quoted from Nimier and +Laval.<a name="FNanchor_10_10" id="FNanchor_10_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_10_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig26.jpg" width="450" height="218" alt="Fig. 26." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 26.—Sections of four Bullets to show relative shape +and thickness of mantles.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>From left to right: 1. Guedes; regular dome-shaped tip; mild steel +mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; at sides of body 0.3 mm. 2. +Lee-Metford; ogival tip; cupro-nickel mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; +gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 3. Mauser; pointed dome tip, steel +mantle plated with copper alloy; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; gradual +decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 4. Krag-Jörgensen; ogival tip as in +Lee-Metford; steel mantle plated with cupro-nickel; thickness at tip 0.6 +mm.; gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. The measurements of the sides +are taken 2.5 cm. from the tip. Note the more gradual thinning in the +Lee-Metford mantle.</b></p> + +<p>Up to a distance of 1,700 to 1,800 metres the bullet may make several +ricochet bounds. When the bullet strikes first at short distances (as +600 metres), it may make several bounds of from 300 to 400 metres: at +moderate distances (as from 600 to 1,200 metres), bounds of 200 to 300 +metres; and at distances above 1,200 metres, bounds of 100 to 200<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span> +metres. The length of the ricochet bounds depends on the angle of impact +of the bullet with the ground, the nature of the slope of the latter, +and the velocity of the bullet.</p> + +<p>Putting aside the question of calibre and volume of the bullets we are +concerned with, I believe the most important variations as serious +effects of ricochet depend on the relative thickness and the composition +of the mantles. Fig. 26 illustrates the relative thickness of the +mantles in the Krag-Jörgensen, Mauser, Lee-Metford, and Guedes bullets. +Given an equal degree of force and velocity on the part of the bullet at +the moment of impact, the assumption is justifiable that the thinner +mantles would tear or burst more readily in direct ratio to their +relative thinness. I believe this assumption to be borne out by my own +experience of the common deformities that occurred; but the great +relative frequency with which Mauser bullets came under my observation, +and the difficulty of forming any estimate of the velocity and force +retained by any particular bullet at the moment of impact, make it +impossible for me to express myself with the confidence which I should +wish.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 222px;"> +<img src="images/fig27.jpg" width="222" height="450" alt="Fig. 27." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 27.—Normal Mauser Bullet</span> +</div> + +<p>The second condition which influences the nature and degree of the +deformities depends on the relative tenacity or brittleness peculiar to +the metal employed in the manufacture of the mantles. In the case of the +Lee-Metford this consists of an alloy of 80 parts of nickel with 20 of +copper. The Krag-Jörgensen and Mauser are ensheathed in steel plated +with cupro-nickel, and the Guedes has a plain steel envelope coated with +wax.</p> + +<p>Both as a result of experience in the field gained from ricochet +bullets, and in the hospitals from bullets which had undergone +deformation within the body, I am under the firm impression that the +thin nickel-plated steel envelope of the Mauser bullet splits more +readily than the thicker and more tenacious cupro-nickel envelope of the +Lee-Metford, that the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span> direction of the ruptures is more purely +longitudinal, and the fissuring itself more extensive and complete.</p> + +<p>I append below a series of deformities observed in Mauser bullets, some +of which were collected on the field of battle, but all of which were +familiar to me in bullets removed from the bodies of patients, except +the complete disc shape shown in fig. 29. They correspond with specimens +of which I made sketches at the time of removal from the body, but which +I had not the heart to retain in view of the natural wish of the +patients to keep them as mementoes of their wounds.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig28.jpg" width="450" height="228" alt="Fig. 28." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 28.—Four common types of lateral Mauser Ricochet +Bullets.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>From left to right: 1. Slipper form; slight broadening and turning of +tip. 2. More pronounced degree of form 1, with laceration of the mantle +opposite the shoulder of the bullet. This is the weakest spot, for two +reasons: the alteration in curve at this position, and the junction of +the thickened point of the mantle with the thinner sides. 3. Lateral +ricochet involving nearly whole length of bullet. Rupture of mantle from +broadening of core opposite shoulder. 4. Similar lateral ricochet with +extensive longitudinal rupture of mantle, the latter being turned out +and forming a cutting 'flange.'</b></p> + +<p>Slight indentations and deviations from strict symmetry of form of such +degree as not seriously to influence the outline and nature of the +apertures were very common. Beyond these one of the most frequent +primary deformities was that we familiarly spoke of as the 'slipper +form' (No. 1, fig. 28). This results from light glancing contact of the +tip with a hard body: in it the mantle of the bullet is rarely +fractured, and the deformity itself is of slight importance, except in +so far as it may influence the direction of the wound track, which +acquires a tendency to be curved. The tip of the bullet is slightly +flattened and turned up, down, or to one side,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span> according to the point +struck. I saw this deformity frequently, both with Lee-Metford and +Mauser bullets. Nos. 2, 3, and 4 are more pronounced degrees of the same +type of deformity, accompanied by more or less extensive fissuring of +the mantle. No. 4 illustrates the turning out of the longitudinally +fissured mantle in such a way as to make a cutting flange. I have seen +such bullets removed, and the variety is of some importance as +materially increasing the cutting capabilities of the bullet, and +augmenting its area of destructive action. No. 5, fig. 29, is the only +form I have not seen removed, but such a bullet would account for some +of the long irregular gutter wounds observed, if it retained sufficient +velocity to strike with any force.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig29.jpg" width="450" height="244" alt="Fig. 29." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 29.—'Disc'-shaped Lateral Ricochet.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>This form is of +little practical importance, as the velocity retained by the bullet is +low, and no perforating power would be retained. It is inserted +separately in order to complete the series, shown in fig. 28.</b></p> + +<p>Fig. 30 illustrates complete longitudinal fissuring of the mantle. Such +mantles are common, and still more so are the opened-out sheets such as +is shown still attached in fig. 29. Free mantles are often very numerous +on stony ground, but are of little importance, since I never saw +fragments of them removed or impacted. They probably travel a very short +distance after their formation, and if they did strike would possess +little power of penetration. The freed leaden cores do, however, +sometimes enter the body, and some of the specimens removed have been +referred to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span> use of expanding bullets. In all the Mauser specimens +the longitudinal direction of the fissuring of the mantle is striking.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 437px;"> +<img src="images/fig30.jpg" width="437" height="450" alt="Fig. 30." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 30.—Ruptured Mauser Mantle, to illustrate the +tendency to complete longitudinal fissuring</span> +</div> + +<p>Fig. 31 represents bullets removed from the body and illustrates types +of deformity due to impact with the bones. The deformity resembles in +some degree that of the mushroomed lead cores, and also indicates that +the shoulder of the cased bullet is its weakest point. Each specimen +exhibits shortening and widening without fracture of the mantle, the +latter being simply thrown into folds; both bullets were lodged in the +thigh after fracturing the femur. The localisation of injury to the fore +part of the bullet, and the fact of expansion, allow us to infer that +the degree of velocity retained on impact with the bone was +comparatively low, and that neither bullet had been exposed to very +severe strain.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig31.jpg" width="450" height="353" alt="Fig. 31." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 31.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Two retained Mauser Bullets which had produced +comminuted fractures of the femur of moderate severity. Each has given +way at the shoulder, but the mantle has developed creases without +rupture, and the bullets are correspondingly bent. Both bullets were +travelling at a moderate if not low degree of velocity</b></p> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span></p> + +<p>Fig. 32 is also of a retained bullet in which the fore part of the +mantle is very extensively fissured and the core set free. In this the +mantle has suffered severely and the leaden core to a less extent. As an +apical ricochet it corresponds with the Lee-Metford shown in fig. 36.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig32.jpg" width="450" height="290" alt="Fig. 32." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 32.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Apical Ricochet Mauser Bullet (see text). The +'mushrooming' of the core is moderate, but the destruction of the +anterior part of the mantle very considerable</b></p> + +<p>The deformity found in fig. 32 I met with both in retained bullets and +also in those which had been fired into sand or anthills. The particular +specimen figured was removed from the thigh of a patient wounded at the +battle of Belmont. An irregular entry wound was situated over the +internal tuberosity of the tibia, while a large fluctuating hæmatoma +existed in the lower third of the thigh, at the upper part of which a +hard elongated body was palpable. As was so often the case with internal +hæmorrhages, the patient's temperature rose high, and on the third day +the hæmatoma was incised by Major Coutts, R.A.M.C. The core of the +bullet was then found in the blood cavity near the surface, but on +introduction of the finger a second body was discovered entangled in the +quadriceps muscle, and this proved to be the tattered mantle. I saw +similar deformity produced within the body by a bullet, which, entering +by a small type aperture in the left ala of the nose, struck the margin +of the right malar bone, and lodged beneath the latter. The similarity +of this bullet to that seen in the ricochet in fig. 32 was exact. The +form<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span> is of great importance both on account of the degree of laceration +it effects in the track, the presence of two foreign bodies in the +wound, and from the fact that it can be produced by making the bullet +travel through sand or antheaps, since both the former in the shape of +sandbags and the latter in their natural state so often formed the cover +to men during the campaign. Bullets of 6.5 mm., such as the +Krag-Jörgensen, with steel envelopes apparently break up with great ease +in sand.</p> + +<p>Fig. 33 shows a form not uncommon when the bullet comes into contact +with the ribs. It is produced in bullets travelling at a low rate of +velocity and striking by their side. I several times met with it when +the bullet was retained, and also without fracture of the rib. In some +variety it might occur after impact with any narrow margin of bone, and +some importance attaches to the form, since it affords evidence as to +the ease with which alterations in symmetry can be produced in Mauser +bullets. Again its bent outline favours deviation in the further course +of the bullet subsequent to impact with the bone, a result which I +observed on more than one occasion.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 247px;"> +<img src="images/fig33.jpg" width="247" height="450" alt="Fig. 33." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 33.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Grooved Mauser removed from anterior abdominal +wall after crossing the ribs. I saw several such removed from the +thoracic wall, and am inclined to attribute the grooving to impact with +the margin of the ribs</b></p> + +<p>Lastly, the question of actual spluttering or breaking up of the bullets +must be considered. It is extraordinary into how many fragments either a +Lee-Metford or a Mauser bullet may break up if it strike a hard body +while travelling at a high rate of velocity. Fragmentation is exhibited +in the skiagram forming the subject of plate XI. p. 194. It is somewhat +remarkable how often this occurred when the short hard bones of the +metacarpus were struck. With regard to the casing, the separation of +small scales of the nickel plating has already been referred to; +reference to the skiagrams, plates IX. and XVI., shows how readily the +whole thickness of the mantle breaks up into small fragments, even when +the bullet is travelling at moderately<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span> low degrees of velocity, and +this I believe to be a special characteristic of the thin +cupro-nickel-plated steel mantles.</p> + +<p>Any variety of cased bullet, however, when it strikes against a stone, +hard ground, or a bone, may be broken into innumerable fragments. The +leaden fragments occasionally show a simple fractured surface, such as +is illustrated on a larger scale by the broken shrapnel bullets shown in +fig. 96, p. 485. More commonly, however, the fragments, if of any size, +appear torn, and if small, are mere spicules. These if of lancet shape +often bury themselves in the skin only, while larger ones may penetrate +deeply or even perforate. Thus, of a group of three officers standing +near a stone on which a bullet struck, all were spattered about the +face; most of the fragments lodged in the skin, but one perforated the +concha of the ear and bruised the mastoid area, while others caused +small jagged cuts. In another instance, both thighs of the patient were +spattered after perforation of the clothes, and a large fragment lodged +beneath the skin of the penis. A case in which larger fragments +perforated and simulated type wounds has already been referred to on p. +44.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 247px;"> +<img src="images/fig34.jpg" width="247" height="450" alt="Fig. 34." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 34.—Normal Lee-Metford Bullet</span> +</div> + +<p>The above remarks apply, for the most part, to Mauser bullets only, +because my experience of that projectile was far wider than of the +Lee-Metford. The only deformed Lee-Metford bullets that I saw removed +from the body were of the 'slipper' variety, exactly corresponding to +the similarly altered Mausers, and with no fissuring of the mantle. I +saw none so freely deformed as the Mausers depicted in figs. 28, 29, 31, +and 32.</p> + +<p>In spite of diligent search on several battlefields, I was unable to +collect many forms of Lee-Metford ricochet, although I found many +undeformed bullets. I insert here, therefore, some illustrations I +obtained through the kindness of Colonel Hopton, Director of the School +of Musketry at Hythe, which are of interest, and in some degree +substantiate the impression<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span> I formed in South Africa as to the greater +stability of the Mark II. Lee-Metford bullet (fig. 34). I am aware that, +as meeting a smooth target at right angles, some of these are not +strictly comparable to the Mauser bullets forming the subjects of the +preceding illustrations, which struck stones, and these mainly by their +sides (if we except figs. 31 and 32), but they sufficiently exhibit the +characters on which I wish to insist. That they support my opinion is +the more probable as, with the exception of the type included above, I +am under the impression that the large majority, if not all, of the +Mauser bullets which struck stones fairly with their tips were broken to +pieces, otherwise I must have met with some among the immense number +which I saw. On the top of Tabanyama, for instance, the whole ground was +littered at the time of my visit with shattered mantles and leaden +cores, deformed almost past recognition.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig35.jpg" width="450" height="375" alt="Fig. 35." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 35.—Apical Lee-Metford Ricochets.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>From Hythe +targets. Tendency of cupro-nickel envelope to tear in transverse +direction</b></p> + +<p>The specimens depicted in figs. 35 and 36 indicate—(1) a greater +malleability on the part of the mantle; thus in fig. 35 the cupro-nickel +is obviously hammered and flattened out, while the fissures are neither +numerous nor extensive. (2) Both bullets exhibit transverse tearing of +the mantle, a common feature in Lee-Metford ricochets, of which I could +offer other examples, but which I less often observed in Mauser<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span> +bullets. (3) Tear is the term best expressing the nature of the +fissures, while fracture more nearly expresses the nature of the +fissures in the Mauser mantles. (4) Fig. 36 shows a mushroomed core and +split mantle, which may be compared with the similarly deformed Mauser +depicted in fig. 31. I think the variation in appearance is +characteristic, the fissuring of the mantle being much less extreme, +while the leaden core is normal at its base in consequence of the +support afforded by the more tenacious cupro-nickel mantle. With regard +to complete splitting of the mantles, however, I must add that free +Lee-Metford mantles are often found from bullets fired at the target or +elsewhere, and Nimier and Laval figure numerous forms.<a name="FNanchor_11_11" id="FNanchor_11_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_11_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig36.jpg" width="450" height="334" alt="Fig. 36." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 36.—Apical Lee-Metford Target Ricochet. </span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Well-marked +'mushrooming' of core. 'Torn' nature of the fissures in the mantle and +limited extent. Compare with fig. 32</b></p> + +<p><i>Expanding bullets.</i>—The wounds resulting from perforation with +deformed regulation bullets, such as are described above, differ for the +most part by deviation from the type appearances, and a tendency to take +a less favourable course on account of their increased size and of the +greater degree of laceration of the tissues accompanying them. I must +now pass on to the consideration of the forms of bullet especially +likely to occasion those wounds spoken of as 'explosive' in character, +and my remarks on these must be prefaced by a short description of the +varieties which were in use during the campaign.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 358px;"> +<img src="images/fig37.jpg" width="358" height="450" alt="Fig. 37." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 37.—</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>From left to right: 1. Mauser (.275); small amount of core exposed. 2. +Lee-Metford (.303). 3. Lee-Metford, with larger amount of exposed core, +also cupped apex. This is probably the most effective of these forms. 4. +Mannlicher (.315)</b></p> + +<p>These consisted in soft-nosed bullets of the Mauser and Lee-Metford +patterns, Tweedie and Jeffreys modifications of the Lee-Metford and +Mauser, several soft-nosed bullets of a slightly larger calibre, mostly +old Mauser or Mannlicher types, and a large variety of sporting leaden +bullets of larger calibre and volume. Figs. 37 and 43.</p> + +<p>With regard to the various soft-nosed bullets of small calibre, I will +first advert to a feature common to all, which consists in a solid base +to the mantle. In the regulation whole-cased bullets the leaden core is +inserted from the base, and the edge of the mantle is then so turned +over for fixation purposes as to leave the central portion of the lead +exposed. The position of the exposed portion of the core is therefore +reversed in the two varieties. The small experience I had the +opportunity of obtaining was all to the effect that the solid base +considerably increases the stability of the mantle, and I never saw the +latter seriously torn in any specimen either collected on the field or +removed from the body.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig38.jpg" width="450" height="424" alt="Fig. 38." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 38.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Two Soft-nosed Lee-Metford Bullets (see text). +1. Removed from forearm. 2. Removed from beneath skin of back after it +had perforated the scapula. In both the velocity retained was no doubt +low, and neither encountered great resistance</b></p> + +<p>Fig. 38, 1, represents a soft-nosed Lee-Metford removed from just below +the lesser sigmoid cavity of the ulna, after it had perforated the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span> +elbow-joint. The soft nose appears to have been torn, and separated by +impact with the bone, but the mantle is little altered. There can be +little doubt, however, that the bullet was travelling at a comparatively +low rate of velocity, since it was retained in the forearm, whence its +various parts were removed by Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C. I picked up a +number of similarly deformed bullets on the field. No. 2 represents a +soft-nosed Lee-Metford which perforated the scapula from the front; the +bullet was retained, hence again velocity cannot have been very high, +and the comminution was slight. If it had passed out, a large exit wound +would, however, have resulted.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 279px;"> +<img src="images/fig39.jpg" width="279" height="450" alt="Fig. 39." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 39.—Soft-nosed Lee-Metford Mantle.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Lateral ricochet. +Illustrating effect of solid base in maintaining the stability of the +mantle</b></p> + +<p>Fig. 39 represents a type of ricochet sometimes found on the field. In +spite of a considerable amount of violence which has caused the escape +of the core, the fissuring of the mantle is comparatively slight. In +point of fact, the casing is, as a rule, preserved from the severe +violence it suffers when complete, by the flattening and turning over of +the soft nose. I am sorry I cannot append an illustration of a damaged +soft-nosed Mauser, but I am of opinion that those used during the +campaign were not of a very dangerous nature on account of the small +amount of lead exposed. To gain the full advantage of the soft nose at +least a third of the core should be exposed. No. 3, fig. 37, of a +Lee-Metford, probably represents the most effective form of such +bullets. I am inclined to think these bullets as a class, however, are +not more dangerous to the wounded man than the regulation Mauser fired +at short range, if the latter either comes into contact with bone or +suffers ricochet.</p> + +<p>The Tweedie and Jeffreys bullets come under a somewhat different +category. In the Tweedie the top of the bullet is sawn off in such a +manner as to flatten the tip and widen the surface of direct impact, and +to expose the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span> leaden core over a small area. The general principle of +the flat tip resembles that of the French Lebel bullet. In the Jeffreys +modification the mantle is sawn down for about half the length of the +whole mantle, the slits neither reaching tip nor base. I seldom saw +these bullets removed, but they were used to a considerable extent. Fig. +40 illustrates one of Mauser calibre in the possession of Mr. Cuthbert +S. Wallace. It perforated the abdomen, producing fatal injuries, but the +only alteration in outline consists in slight bulging and shortening. +This specimen, however, manifestly suffered but slight resistance. A +somewhat general impression existed that a number of severe injuries had +been produced by the Jeffreys bullets, but it was a matter of +conjecture, as few of them were removed. A weekly illustration appears +in the advertisement sheet of the 'Field,' showing the deformity of some +of them shot into animals, which bear a strong resemblance to the Mauser +figured earlier (fig. 31), and which we have seen can be produced in the +human body by contact of a regulation fully cased bullet with a bone +like the malar. A tendency on the part of the longitudinal slits to +become caught in the rifling of the barrel militates against the use of +this bullet.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 252px;"> +<img src="images/fig40.jpg" width="252" height="450" alt="Fig. 40." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 40.—Jeffreys modification of Mauser.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>The bullet is +in the possession of Mr. C. S. Wallace. It perforated the abdomen and +caused death. The bullet is only slightly shortened by bulging at the +shoulder</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig41.jpg" width="450" height="438" alt="Fig. 41." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 41.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>1. Section of Mark IV. Lee-Metford. Note +thickness of mantle and exposed core at base. 2. Soft-nosed Mauser. Note +solid base. Short pattern</b></p> + +<p>Fig. 41 represents sections of the soft-nosed Mauser, and the British +Mark IV. bullet, and shows the different method of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span> closure of the base. +If the former remarks on the influence of the closed base in maintaining +the stability of the bullet be correct, Mark IV. should be a very +destructive bullet. I have no experience of its use, but I am inclined +to think that here, as elsewhere, the thickness and resistance of the +cupro-nickel mantle would endow it with considerable stability, unless +it met with very great resistance.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig42.jpg" width="450" height="386" alt="Fig. 42." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 42.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Types of Bullets tampered with by the Boers in +the trenches. 1 and 3. Cross-cut tips, Martini-Henry and Lee-Metford. 2. +Groove cut at base of exposed tip of Lee-Metford. Another modification +of the Martini-Henry consisted in boring it longitudinally and inserting +a wooden plug</b></p> + +<p>In connection with the subject of soft-nosed bullets, I should mention +that the Boers occasionally extemporised various modifications of them, +such as are shown in fig. 42, with intent to increase the wounding power +of the projectiles. I am unable, however, to give any information as to +the effects produced by these, and I do not think they were often +employed. The illustrations are from cartridges found in trenches which +had been occupied for some time by the Boers, who had no doubt used +their spare time in exercising their ingenuity on the bullets.</p> + +<p>'Explosive' bullets of small calibre were also said to have been +employed; with regard to these I can only say that I never met with any +example of a hollow bullet containing explosive material.</p> + +<p>One officer in a Colonial corps who spoke freely about them, told me he +had 'sawn' them in half and found the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span> cavities, but the method of +investigation he had employed seemed against the presence of any +fulminant in the body of the bullets. Others based their statements on +the fact that they had frequently heard the bullets burst in the air; +but this is probably to be explained by the breaking up of regulation +bullets on impact with stones, which makes a smart crack like a small +explosion.</p> + +<p>A clip of soft-nosed Mauser cartridges, in which a copper centre to the +bullet suggested a percussion-cap, was sent home to the War Office. +Colonel Montgomery has kindly furnished me with the following report on +the bullet:</p> + +<p>'The bullet contains no explosive matter, it is fitted with a hollow +copper tube in the nose, similar to the ordinary "Express" bullet. The +envelope is made with a solid base, which is possible in this bullet +owing to the core being inserted from the front.'</p> + +<p>One cannot help feeling some astonishment at the strong feeling that has +been exhibited regarding the use of expanding bullets of small calibre, +both at the Hague Conference and during this campaign, when the +Martini-Henry, a far more dangerous and destructive missile in its +effects at moderate ranges, is allowed to pass muster without notice.</p> + +<p>Lastly, we come to bullets of large calibre unprovided with a mantle. +The Martini-Henry is practically representative of all these, but I +append a photograph of some twenty out of thirty varieties which came +into my possession during searches amongst captured ammunition. Some of +these were provided with a copper core to facilitate 'setting up,' +others were cupped at the top, and others flattened, to increase the +resistance on impact. I can say little about them except that I believe +some of the forms were responsible for a considerable proportion of the +most severe injuries we met with, in some of which a large and regular +entry made their use certain, while a considerable proportion of them +were retained. In the case of the viscera their power of doing serious +damage was very striking compared with that of the bullets of small +calibre. As with the small sporting bullets I think their use was often +due to the fact that the sporting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span> Boer preferred to use the weapon he +was accustomed to rather than his military weapon.</p> + +<p>A considerable number of the Boers were armed with Martini-Henry rifles, +and this was particularly the case with small bodies of men, rather than +with the larger commandos fighting regular engagements. The Transvaal +Government, moreover, had Martini-Henry rifles made as late as 1898. The +Martini-Henry bullet was responsible for some of the worst fractures +that came under my notice, but it is of interest to remark that its +capability to do damage did not satisfy some of the Boers, who cut them +as is shown in fig. 43. I cannot say what the effect of this manœuvre +was, although it may have accounted for some of the wounds of the calf +such as are mentioned below.</p> + +<p>Some odd missiles were met with during the campaign; thus, at Ladysmith, +I was told ball bicycle bearings were at one time in use amongst the +Boers.</p> + +<p><i>Anatomical characters of wounds of irregular type.</i>—It will be seen +from the above that in dealing with wounds of irregular type we have to +consider those due to irregular impact of normal regulation bullets, to +bullets deformed by contact with bone, to ricochet bullets, and lastly +to bullets of the expanding type.</p> + +<p>No further mention of those due to irregular impact is needful beyond +what has already been said under the heading of wobbling, except to +point out that, given a fair degree of velocity, these injuries may +assume an actual explosive character, especially in the case of skull +fractures. The description of extensive wounds accompanying comminuted +fractures finds its most appropriate place under the heading of injuries +to the bones, and will be there considered (Chapter V. p. 155).</p> + +<p>'Explosive' exit apertures are, however, described as occasionally +occurring in injuries involving the soft parts only. I saw no cases +substantiating this belief, but several were described to me as having +been met with in abdominal injuries, which terminated fatally at an +early date.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig43.jpg" width="450" height="258" alt="Fig. 43." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 43.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Four Soft-nosed Bullets of small calibre shown +in fig. 37. Twenty large-calibre leaden carbine and rifle bullets from +cartridges found in Boer arsenals. These were not very extensively used, +but specimens of most varieties were at times removed from our wounded +men. It will be noted that some are of great weight, and a large +proportion either cupped or flattened at the apex to increase area of +impact and consequent resistance. The 'express' bullet with a copper +core is included in this series. It is worth remarking that all the +bullets of this nature in the Pretoria Arsenal were waxed, and that the +wax retained its white colour on the lead.</b></p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p> + +<p>I still, however, incline to the opinion that the bullet in these cases +had come into contact with some bone, or was one of the larger varieties +of projectile. A few cases of wound of the calf did, however, come under +my observation which presented fairly typical 'explosive' characters +without evidence of solution of continuity of the bones. I will shortly +recount two of them. In the first the exit opening was very large and on +the outer aspect of the limb in the upper third. The bullet had +apparently passed between the bones. Secondary hæmorrhage from the +anterior tibial artery necessitated exploration of the wound and +ligature of the vessel (Mr. Carré). When the wound was thus laid open no +injury to the bones could be detected, but I do not consider that it +could be actually excluded. In the second case a wound traversed the +calf transversely, just above the centre; the exit aperture was large +and ragged. Deep suppuration occurred, and the wound had to be laid +open, when a fracture of the tibia without solution of continuity was +discovered. I also saw one or two wounds of the buttock in which very +large exit apertures were present with small entry openings; in these +again it was impossible to exclude passing contact of the bullet with a +part of the pelvic wall. Unfortunately in all these cases it is +impossible to obtain the bullet responsible for the injury. In this +relation I append a diagrammatic illustration of a peculiar wound shown +to me by Mr. Hanwell. In this case a typical small entry wound was +situated at the outer margin of the left erector spinæ muscle in the +loin. The bullet had taken a subcutaneous course of not more than +three-quarters of an inch, while the exit opening was a long shallow +wound measuring 4½ in. in length by 1½ in. width. (Fig. 44.)</p> + +<p>The wound was stated to have been received at a distance of from fifty +to a hundred yards. I think we can scarcely assume that impact with the +margin of the erector spinæ could have resulted in 'setting up' of the +bullet, while an irregular tongue of skin at the point where the wound +crossed the spines of the lumbar vertebræ did suggest possible bony +contact. That the latter must have been of the slightest nature is +evident, as no signs of concussion of the spinal cord were noted. I +should rather be inclined to compare this case to one of gutter wound +quoted on p. 56, and to assume that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span> the bullet passed so closely +beneath the surface as either to entirely sever the skin, or at any rate +to allow it to give way on flexion of the back on movement.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 372px;"> +<img src="images/fig44.jpg" width="372" height="450" alt="Fig. 44." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 44.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Small Circular Entry, large 'explosive' skin +wound of back. Track only an inch or less in length (see text)</b></p> + +<p>On the ground of the observations made in the foregoing pages it will be +gathered that the opinion I formed was against either the very free use +or the great wounding power of so-called expanding bullets of small +calibre. I believe that a great number of the injuries which were +attributed to the employment of these missiles were produced either by +ricochet regulation bullets of small calibre, or by large leaden bullets +of the Martini-Henry type.</p> + +<p><i>Symptoms.</i>—I very much doubt whether the general symptoms observed as +the result of wounds from bullets of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> small calibre differ in more than +slight degree from those described when larger bullets were regularly +employed. Great variation was met with, but I do not think a diminution +in serious results in this direction corresponding to the comparatively +limited nature of the direct injury to the organs or tissues can be +affirmed. It is true that the immediate symptoms in many patients were +amazingly slight, but after all, this has always been a feature of +gunshot injuries on the field of battle and cannot be assigned a +position of distinctive importance.</p> + +<p>1. <i>Psychical disturbance and shock.</i>—Some remarkable instances of +psychical disturbance were observed, and although perhaps in no way +influenced by the calibre of the projectile, they seem worthy of note in +this place. Thus a patient wounded over the cervical spine and who +suffered later with a slight degree of spinal concussion emitted an +involuntary shriek like that of a wounded hare on being struck; another +(Martini wound), after receiving a wound of the chest, lost all sense of +his surroundings for a considerable period, and occupied himself in +attempts to write on a white stone lying near him on the veldt; then +suddenly realising his position he was greatly bewildered in trying to +account for his own action. A similar instance of preoccupation is +probably offered by the dead man in the accompanying photograph (fig. +45), whose arms, forearms, and hands had evidently been in play until +the actual moment of death. Again the influence of the psychical state +on the actual occurrence of shock was often illustrated by the mental +condition of the wounded after a battle; thus after the battles of +Belmont and Graspan the patients came into hospital in excellent +spirits, and minimised their injuries in the wish of rapidly regaining +the front; while after the battle of Magersfontein the men were +depressed and miserable, shock was more pronounced, and their sufferings +were undoubtedly greater.</p> + +<p>On the whole, however, shock was by no means a prominent symptom in the +small-bore injuries of soft parts, and was possibly less than when +larger bullets were the rule, and again it was often remarkably slight +after the infliction of serious visceral injury. Still shock was +observed in a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span> considerable proportion of the patients, and its +occurrence appeared to vary under very much the same conditions as +obtain in civil practice. Grades of severity depended on individual +idiosyncrasy, on the degree of excitement or preoccupation at the moment +of injury, and to a certain degree on the range of fire at which the +injury was received.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig45.jpg" width="450" height="427" alt="Fig. 45." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 45.—Note position of head, neck, and forearms in +upper figure</span> +</div> + +<p>The last is the only special factor, and as far as my observation went +it was one of considerable importance. When the soft parts only were +affected, even high velocity did not produce much effect; but when to a +flesh wound a severe bone fracture or injury to any part of the nervous +system was added, shock might be severe or profound. The question of +shock dependent on visceral injury will be considered in succeeding +chapters, but it may be well to state here that the most severe shock +appeared to follow injuries to the central nervous system especially to +the spinal cord, fracture of the larger bones, and wounds of the +abdominal and thoracic<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span> viscera, the latter especially when the cardiac +neighbourhood was encroached upon: hence the severity depended almost +solely on the importance of the part injured and the degree of damage +inflicted. I never observed instances of entire absence of shock in +visceral injuries, unless the range of fire had been an especially long +one.</p> + +<p>To these remarks on constitutional shock I should add a few on the +'local shock' exhibited by the actual part of the body struck. The +phenomena were of a severity I was quite unacquainted with in civil +practice, and apparently were attributable to the local vibration +transmitted to the whole structure of a limb or part of the trunk. In +many fractures, and in some wounds of the soft parts alone, without the +direct implication of any large nerve trunk, the loss of functional +capacity of the limb was complete, and this condition persisted for +hours or even days.</p> + +<p>2. <i>Pain.</i>—As an initial symptom the occurrence of pain varied greatly +with the idiosyncrasy of the patient, and according to the circumstances +under which the wound was received. Some individuals are remarkably +insensitive, and in these the fact of a wound being a gunshot injury in +no way altered their habitual insensibility, but in persons of what may +be termed the normal type in this particular great differences were +observed.</p> + +<p>When a wound was received in the full excitement of battle during a +rapid advance, pain was often slight, or so trifling in degree that it +was almost unnoticed; many patients did not realise that they had been +struck until a second wound, possibly implicating a bone or some +specially sensitive structure, was superadded. In such instances the +pain was often described as 'burning' in character, or even likened to a +'sting from an insect.' Occasionally the pain was referred to a distant +part; thus a man struck in the head first felt pain in the great toe, +and another struck in the abdomen also felt pain in his foot only. Again +in some multiple injuries, pain was only felt in the more sensitive of +the regions implicated; thus a patient in whom a bullet (Martini) +traversed the arm and chest emerging in the neck to again enter the chin +and comminute the mandible, only felt pain<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span> in the chin and first +realised that he had been wounded elsewhere when he undressed. A +striking instance of the entire absence of initial pain was afforded by +a man shot through the buttock, the bullet then traversing the abdomen: +this patient remained unaware that he had been hit until on undressing +he found blood in his trousers and exclaimed: 'Why I have got this +bloody dysentery!' None the less his internal injuries were sufficiently +severe to lead to death during the next thirty-six hours.</p> + +<p>Although initial pain might be slight or absent, practically all the +patients complained of some of varying severity at the end of an hour +after reception of the wound.</p> + +<p>In a large proportion of the wounded, however, pain was more or less +severe from the first, and this was especially the case when the men had +been exposed to fire for some hours behind inadequate 'cover.' The most +common descriptions under these circumstances were that they felt as if +they had been struck by 'a brick,' 'a ton of lead,' or 'a +sledge-hammer.'</p> + +<p>3. <i>Hæmorrhage.</i>—This question is fully treated under the heading of +injuries to the blood-vessels. It will suffice here to say that +hæmorrhage was rarely of a dangerous nature so far as life was +concerned, unless the large visceral vessels or those in the walls of +serous cavities were concerned, when death was often rapid. From limb +wounds, even when the largest trunks were implicated, the general +tendency was to spontaneous cessation of the hæmorrhage. Consequently, +except these patients were seen on the field, one seldom had to deal +with serious bleeding. None the less, the condition of the patients' +clothes bore testimony to a free rush immediately after the injury, and +pools of blood were occasionally found where patients had lain. In +nearly all cases the rush of the bullet determined the initial flow of +the blood from the exit wound, and this aperture usually furnished any +hæmorrhage of importance.</p> + +<p><i>Diagnosis.</i>—The only diagnostic point which it is necessary to +consider in this chapter is the determination of the nature of the +bullet which has caused the particular injury under observation, and +this is more a matter of interest than importance.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p> + +<p>The primary indication lies in the size of the aperture of entry, which +naturally varies with the calibre of the bullet employed, and the +difference, except in the case of large projectiles, is not always +easily determined, unless we can be sure that the impact of the bullet +was at right angles. In the latter case it is possible to distinguish +even between, for instance, a Lee-Metford and a Mauser wound, if the +resistance likely to be offered by the part struck is kept in mind. A +ricochet bullet, on the other hand, may upset all our calculations, if +size alone be taken as an indication; but here the irregularity of the +wound often serves to exclude one of the larger varieties as the cause. +The appearances of the exit wound are less useful in determining the +nature of the bullet employed, as irregularities of outline are so much +more common whatever projectile may have emerged; but examination of +this wound often gives us useful information as to the existence of an +injury to the bones not involving loss of continuity.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig46.jpg" width="450" height="317" alt="Fig. 46." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 46.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Two flattened Leaden Cores to illustrate means +of determination of nature of bullet. Note ring at base. The right-hand +bullet is probably a 'man-stopping' revolver bullet; it flattened +against bone</b></p> + +<p>Other information beyond that furnished by the external wounds may be +gleaned from the presence of fragments of lead in the wound; these, if +unaccompanied by portions of casing, afford some presumptive evidence of +the use of an unsheathen bullet, especially if found on the fractured +surface of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span> bones; but it must be borne in mind that in the case of +ricochet bullets the leaden core often perforates when entirely freed +from its mantle. Pieces of the mantle again may give useful information +both from examination of their thickness and composition. Lastly a naked +core nearly always retains the marking on its base corresponding to the +turning over of the mantle, this not being likely to suffer impact +calculated to efface the groove. When this groove existed the employment +of any of the soft-nosed bullets used in this campaign might be safely +excluded (fig. 46).</p> + +<p><i>Prognosis.</i>—The question of general mortality amongst the wounded has +already been considered (Chapter I. p. 11), and it has been shown, +putting aside those dying at once on the field, or during the first +twenty-four hours, that the mortality was a low one. Some other points +specially dependent on the nature of the injury are, however, worthy of +mention in this place. First, it has been shown, with a slight +reservation as to when a wound can be considered definitely sound, that +if suppuration did not occur, healing was rapid, and that many men with +slight wounds were back with their regiments in the course of a very few +days. Again, that suppuration when it did occur tended to be local in +character; none the less, if it was at all extensive, it often proved +very prolonged and difficult of treatment, while residual abscesses +after apparent healing were not uncommon. In connection with this +subject I may quote from Colonel Stevenson<a name="FNanchor_12_12" id="FNanchor_12_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_12_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> an observation that limbs +the subject of marked local shock are especially liable to furnish +septic discharges. Parts the subject of local shock when infected show a +lesser degree of vitality and power of resistance to the spread of +infection than do normal ones, and if infected do badly. I think I +convinced myself of this on many occasions, and also of the fact that +cases of fracture in which this condition was marked were slow in +consolidating. Again I am inclined to think that the bad results which +sometimes followed the tying of the limb arteries were also consequent +on lowered vitality, and possibly vaso-motor disturbance due to the +effects of the exquisite vibratory force to which the nerves had been +subjected. On<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span> this account I was never anxious to hurry operations in +such cases, unless obviously necessary at the moment.</p> + +<p>The larger question of general nervous breakdown as the result of +injuries from bullets of small calibre is at present hardly capable of +an answer, and is so complicated by the co-existence of concurrent +mental anxiety, exposure, &c., that a definite answer will always be +difficult. I think there is already sufficient evidence, however, to +suggest that the remote effects of many of these injuries may be far +more serious than we expected at the moment, especially in the direction +of sclerotic changes in the nervous system.</p> + +<p><i>Treatment</i>.—In view of the remarks on the treatment of special +injuries contained in succeeding chapters, I shall confine myself here +to the question of the treatment of wounds of the soft parts alone.</p> + +<p>This consisted during the campaign in the primary application of the +regulation first field dressing by one of the wounded man's comrades, an +orderly, or less commonly an officer or a medical man. This dressing is +composed of a piece of gauze, a pad of flax charpie between layers of +gauze, a gauze bandage 4½ yards long, a piece of mackintosh +water-proof, and two safety pins, enclosed in an air-tight cover. Mr. +Cheatle,<a name="FNanchor_13_13" id="FNanchor_13_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_13_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> in insisting on the importance of an immediate antiseptic +dressing in the field, recommends the following. A paste contained in a +collapsible tube, made up in the following proportions: Mercury and zinc +cyanide grs. 400, tragacanth in powder gr. 1, carbolic acid grs. 40, +sterilised water grs. 800; sufficient bicyanide gauze and wool for the +dressing of two wounds, a bandage, and four safety pins; the whole +enclosed in a mackintosh bag. The paste possesses the advantage over any +liquid or powder, that it can be applied in any position of the body to +severe wounds, and its application in the open air is not interfered +with by draughts of wind. Mr. Cheatle used a similar preparation with +success during the campaign.</p> + +<p>On arrival at the Field hospital, or in some cases at the station of the +bearer company, the wounds were then commonly dressed as follows: The +parts around the wound<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span> were cleansed with an antiseptic lotion, either +solution of perchloride of mercury 1 in 1,000, or 2½ per cent. +solution of carbolic acid. The wound itself was then cleansed, and a +dressing of double cyanide of mercury and zinc applied. This was covered +with a pad of wool and secured with a bandage. The gauze was usually +wrung out in the lotion before application as a precaution against +previous contamination, and the moistening was also useful as helping to +ensure the dressing from subsequent displacement. It was early +recognised that the drier the dressing the better, and hence anything +like a mackintosh layer was carefully avoided. In some instances, +antiseptic powders were employed, but they did not find much favour, and +because they tended to favour slipping of the dressing, and to prevent +the adhesion of the gauze dressing to the wound, they were certainly not +desirable when there was any necessity for the patient to travel. In the +absence of reliable water the use of antiseptic lotions was obligatory, +and such is likely to be the case in most campaigns; in the present one, +filtration of the thick muddy water was impossible, without a +considerable expenditure of time, which could only be obtained when the +hospitals were fairly stationary. I very much preferred carbolic acid +lotions.</p> + +<p>The wound having been once cleansed, or rather the surroundings of the +wound, the drier the surface was kept the better; hence a too heavy or +impervious dressing was not satisfactory; in point of fact, I think some +of the slighter wounds in which all the dressings slipped off, and in +which there was less consequent chance of the dressing being moistened +with the sweat of the patient, did as well as any.</p> + +<p>I do not think the bicyanide gauze, absorbent wool, and common open-wove +bandages, together with a good supply of nail brushes, soap, and +carbolic acid for the primary disinfection of the skin and the external +wound, are to be greatly bettered at the present day as materials for +the first permanent dressing of cases in the field. The wound itself +should be carefully shielded during the preliminary cleansing of the +skin by a firmly applied antiseptic pad, and then the dressing applied +as above described. The one desirable improvement is some mode of +ensuring the dressing being kept in good<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span> position, and for this some +form of adhesive covering for the gauze and wool should be devised. When +the atmosphere is such as to allow of rapid drying, thin moistened +book-muslin bandages would be preferable to the plain open-wove ones. +The one period of danger is that of transport, and when that is over, +the dressing in Stationary or Base hospitals should give no trouble.</p> + +<p>As a rule the wounds themselves need no interference, but in some +instances either the exit or entrance wounds may be in undesirable +positions for purposes of asepsis, when a large opening may seem safer +closed and actually sealed. I saw this method tried in a few cases, but +without much success. It is one which might be of much use in Base +hospitals if the patients were brought directly into them, but in the +Field hospitals, in face of the rush with which the first dressings have +to be done, I think it is seldom applicable, and consider the +interference with the wound as rather likely to increase the danger of +infection than to decrease it.</p> + +<p>Dressings should not be too frequent; two should suffice for simple +wounds with type forms of entry and exit; there is little discharge and +usually no bleeding: hence the more the dry scab form of healing can be +simulated the better. When a dressing needs changing from fouling of its +outer parts, it is preferable to cut round the adherent part of the deep +layers and apply some fresh gauze over the central scab rather than to +remove it. One point should be kept in mind: the first dressing in the +Field hospital seals the fate of the wound as to the chances of primary +union, and hence too much care is impossible with it.</p> + +<p>Operations in the Field hospitals were proportionately not numerous, and +they should be kept down in number, as far as possible. At the same time +such operations as are necessary are mostly of capital importance, such +as the treatment of fractures of the skull, abdominal section, the +ligature of arteries, and amputations. Of these only the first and last +classes occur with any degree of frequency. In order to be prepared for +these a stock of filtered water which has been boiled, and some special +sterilised sponges, should be at hand if possible, also some small +towels which can be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span> wrung out in antiseptic lotion. If sterilised +sponges are not to be had, wool pads wrung out in carbolic lotion must +be substituted.</p> + +<p>Primary amputations bore transport badly. I saw few sent down from the +front within a few days of their performance in which the flaps did not +slough, or worse consequences ensue. On the other hand, if the first +fortnight could be tided over at the front, they did well enough. The +head cases on the other hand bore movement fairly well, provided only +that asepsis was ensured.</p> + +<p>Retained bullets are rarely suitable for removal in the rush of the +first work of a Field hospital after an engagement. A short delay is of +no importance, and ensures their being removed safely if necessary. With +regard to the broad question of the advisability of removing them at +all, it may be laid down that they should not be interfered with unless +some obvious reason exists. Those most commonly calling for removal are +as follows: 1. Bullets lying immediately beneath the skin or quite +superficially in any region, or those which, although they have produced +an exit opening, yet lie within the body. 2. Those which lie at the +bottom of an infected track, or cause secondary suppuration. 3. Those +causing pressure on important structures, particularly nerves. 4. Those +which interfere with the movements of joints when lodged in the bones or +soft tissues in close proximity, or those which lie within the articular +cavity itself. Bullets sunk in the great body cavities or in positions +difficult of access should never be interfered with. Retained bullets +sometimes give rise to unexpected surprises; thus in a man with a +retained bullet in the pelvis no steps for its removal were taken. +During the man's voyage home on a transport he had an attack of +retention of urine. As a catheter would not pass, he was placed in a +warm bath, and shortly after passed a Mauser bullet per urethram, and +thus saved himself a cystotomy.</p> + +<p>One word may be added as to the treatment of shock when severe. Quiet in +the supine position, and the administration of a small amount of +stimulant, was usually all that was required. Hypodermic injections of +strychnine sulph. grs. 1/30 to 1/10 were useful, and in some severe +cases, especially where<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span> operations were needed, saline infusions with a +small amount of stimulant were made into the veins, either at the elbow, +or in amputation cases into one of the large veins exposed.</p> + +<p>The treatment of hæmorrhage is dealt with in Chapter IV.</p> + +<p>The after treatment of simple wounds needs little comment, but bearing +in mind what has been said as to the definite healing of the internal +portion of the tracks, it will be obvious that in parts such as the +thigh or calf, care was needed as to not commencing active work at too +early a date. On the other hand, a too long period of absolute rest is +also to be deprecated. The best results were obtained by careful +movement and massage, commenced after the first week or ten days, +according to the appearance presented by the external wound, followed by +a gradual resumption of active movement. It was a striking fact that +some of the patients suffering from such wounds took longer to become +apparently well than many of those who had suffered visceral injuries.</p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_9_9" id="Footnote_9_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_9_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> <i>Loc. cit.</i> p. 31.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_10_10" id="Footnote_10_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_10_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> <i>Loc. cit.</i> p. 100.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_11_11" id="Footnote_11_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_11_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> <i>Loc. cit.</i> pp. 54, 55.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_12_12" id="Footnote_12_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_12_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> <i>Wounds in War</i>, p. 83. Longmans & Co. 1897.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_13_13" id="Footnote_13_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_13_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> A First Field Dressing, <i>Brit. Med. Jour.</i> 1900, vol. ii. +p. 668.</p></div> +</div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2> + +<h3>INJURIES TO THE BLOOD VESSELS</h3> + + +<p>The small calibre of the modern bullet, and its tendency to take a +direct course, naturally favour the occurrence of more or less +uncomplicated wounds of the large vascular trunks, and both the nature +of these wounds and the results which follow them are in some respects +most characteristic.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Nature of the Lesions</span></h3> + +<p>1. <i>Contusion or laceration without perforation.</i>—(<i>a</i>)The vessel may +be struck laterally, the injured portion then forming a part of the +bounding wall of the wound track, or (<i>b</i>) one or more layers of the +vessel wall may be destroyed over a limited area. Given primary union, +these conditions are only of importance in so far as subsequent +contraction of the lumen of the vessel may result from implication in +the neighbouring cicatrix. One of the most striking features of the +wounds as a whole was seen in the hair-breadth escapes of the large limb +vessels with no subsequent ill effects, and such injuries were seen in +every situation.</p> + +<p>In a certain proportion of wounds in close proximity to large vessels, +however, a diminution of the normal calibre of the arteries was +observed, either shortly after the injury or later in the advanced +stages of cicatrisation. As an example of early obstruction, the +following may be related. A Mauser bullet passed from the inner side of +the thigh across the neck and great trochanter of the femur beneath the +femoral vessels, and probably struck and grooved the bone, since the +aperture of exit was large and irregular, some 3/4 of an inch in +diameter. One week later no pulse was palpable in either anterior or +posterior tibial arteries at the ankle, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span> pulsation which was strong +in the common femoral artery was very weak in the superficial femoral. +Slight fulness existed in the hollow of Scarpa's triangle, but not +sufficient to make any serious difference in the contour of the two +limbs. No thrill or abnormal murmur was discoverable. There was no +œdema of the limb, which was also normal in temperature. The patient +was kept at rest in the supine position for three weeks, during which +time the tibial pulses gradually returned. Three weeks later he was +invalided home, the pulses, however, still remaining considerably +smaller than normal.</p> + +<p>In the advanced stages of cicatrisation narrowing of the lumen of the +trunk vessels was far from uncommon, especially in cases of wounds of +the arm crossing the course of the brachial artery; in many of these the +radial pulse was diminished almost to imperceptibility. How far this +condition may prove permanent there has been little opportunity of +judging; nor as to the possible ultimate weakening of the vessel wall +and the development of a secondary aneurism has time allowed the +acquisition of experience. In the light of the observation of so many +cases in which large vessels were wounded without the occurrence of +severe hæmorrhage, either primary or secondary, it is impossible to be +certain whether some of the cases of arterial obstruction were not +secondary to perforating lesions of the vessels.</p> + +<p>Pressure on, or minor lesion of the vessel was sometimes evidenced by +the development of a murmur, as in the following case. A Mauser bullet +entered immediately within and below the left coracoid process, and +emerged at the back of the arm at its inner margin, 2½ inches above +the junction of the right posterior axillary fold. During the first week +dysphagia and some pain and soreness in the episternal notch, with pain +and difficulty of respiration, were noticed. Eight weeks later no +trouble with the pharynx or œsophagus remained, but a short sharp +systolic murmur was audible over the first part of the left axillary +artery, which could be extinguished by pressure on the subclavian; the +radial pulse was normal.<a name="FNanchor_14_14" id="FNanchor_14_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_14_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p> + +<p>When primary union failed or was prevented by infection<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span> and +suppuration, lesions, although incomplete, of the vessel coat naturally +frequently gave rise to secondary hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p>2. <i>Perforation of the vessels.</i>—(<i>a</i>) This may be oblique or +transverse to the long axis of a trunk; when the vessel is impinged upon +laterally, an oval or circular notch, as the case may be, is produced; +or (<i>b</i>) the bullet may strike more or less in the centre of the vessel, +perforating both in front and behind, while lateral continuity is +maintained; (<i>c</i>) beyond these degrees a vessel may, of course, be +completely divided. Cases of notching of the vessel will be referred to +under the heading of traumatic aneurism; those of perforation under that +of aneurismal varix and varicose aneurism, the perforations in these +cases affecting a parallel artery and vein.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Results of Injury to the Vessels</span></h3> + +<p>1. <i>Hæmorrhage.</i>—The fact that hæmorrhage was not a prominent feature +in the wounds received during this campaign can scarcely be regarded as +an experience confined to injuries caused by bullets of small calibre. +The same observation was often made in the case of larger bullets in old +days, and the absence of severe hæmorrhage has previously been regarded +as a special characteristic of gunshot wounds. None the less, as high a +proportion as 50 per cent. of deaths occurring on the field in earlier +days has been ascribed to this cause.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately no new facts can be furnished on this point, although a +few cases of rapid death from primary hæmorrhage will be found recounted +under the heading of visceral injuries. Beyond these the general +evidence offered by observations on men brought in from the field with +vascular injuries, was opposed to the frequent occurrence of death from +hæmorrhage, at any rate of an external nature. This subject will be +dealt with under the classical three headings of primary, recurrent, and +secondary hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p><i>Primary hæmorrhage.</i>—A marked distinction needs to be drawn between +external and internal hæmorrhage. External hæmorrhage from the great +vessels of the limbs, or even of the neck, proved responsible for a +remarkably small proportion of the deaths on the battlefield. This +statement<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> may be made with confidence, since it is not only my own +experience, but coincides with what I was able to glean from many +medical officers with the Field bearer companies. It is, moreover, +supported by the facts that cases in which primary ligature had been +resorted to were extremely rare at the Base hospitals, while, on the +other hand, traumatic aneurisms and aneurismal varices of any one of the +great trunks of the neck and limbs were comparatively common. Again, +primary amputation for small-calibre bullet wounds, except when +complicated by severe injury to the bones, was so rare as to render more +than doubtful the frequent occurrence of severe primary hæmorrhage on +the field. Only one case of rapid death due to bleeding from a limb +artery was recounted to me. In this a wound of the first part of the +axillary artery proved fatal in the twenty minutes occupied by the +removal of the patient to the dressing station. The amount of hæmorrhage +in many instances was no doubt checked by the application of pressure at +the time of the first field dressing; but it can scarcely be argued that +such dressings as were applied were of sufficient firmness to control +bleeding from such trunks as the brachial, femoral, or carotid arteries.</p> + +<p>The spontaneous cessation of hæmorrhage is rather to be ascribed to the +special method of production and the consequent nature of the wound. The +lesions were the result of immense force strictly localised in its +application, which might well induce very complete and rapid contraction +of the vessel wall; while the track in the soft parts was not only +narrow, but also lined by a thin layer of tissue possibly so devitalised +superficially as to specially favour rapid coagulation of the blood. +Beyond this the tracks were often sinuous when the position of the limb +at the time of reception of the injury was replaced by one of rest. The +influence of mere narrowness of the track is illustrated by classical +experience in the development of aneurismal varices after stabs by +knives or bayonets; and in the injuries under consideration the frequent +development of large interstitial hæmorrhages into the tissues of the +limbs indicated that blood does not readily travel along the wound +track. It was noteworthy that when hæmorrhage did occur it was most free +from, or often limited<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span> to, the wound of exit. This is due to the +direction of the active current set up by the rush of the bullet through +the tissues. The mechanical factor is, no doubt, the most important.</p> + +<p>Control of primary hæmorrhage from a wounded vessel by the impaction of +a foreign body was of much less frequent occurrence than appears to have +been the case with the older bullets. I saw a case in which, on removal +of a fragment of shell (Mr. S. W. F. Richardson), very free hæmorrhage +occurred from a wound of one of the circumflex arteries of the thigh, +but not a single one in which a similar result followed the extraction +of a bullet of small calibre. The comparative infrequency of retention +of modern bullets is probably one of the main elements in this relation. +A very curious instance of provisional plugging of a wound in the upper +part of the brachial artery by an inserted loop of the musculo-spiral +nerve was related to me by Mr. Clinton Dent. This instance must, I +think, be regarded as an accident definitely dependent on the size and +outline of the bullet and on the nature of the force transmitted by it +to neighbouring structures.</p> + +<p>While, however, deaths from external primary hæmorrhage were rare, a +considerable number resulted from primary internal hæmorrhage. In some +of these, injury to the largest trunks in the thorax or abdomen led to +an immediately fatal issue; in others wounds of the large visceral +arteries, as of the lungs, liver, or mesentery, were scarcely less rapid +in their results. In such cases the potential space offered by the +peritoneal or pleural cavities favours the ready escape of blood from +the wounded vessel, while the tendency of the blood effused into serous +cavities to rapid coagulation is notably slight. Beyond this the +comparative deficiency in direct support afforded by surrounding +structures to vessels running in the large body cavities is also an +important element in their behaviour when wounded.</p> + +<p>These remarks receive support from the observation that few, if any, +patients survived an injury to the external iliac vessels within the +abdomen, while the remarkable instances of escape from fatal hæmorrhage +from large vessels recorded below (cases 1-19) indicate that the mere +size of a wounded vessel is not to be regarded as the sole factor in +prognosis.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>Recurrent hæmorrhage</i> was occasionally met with both in the case of the +limb and trunk vessels. In the limbs it often necessitated ligature of +the artery. I saw several cases in the lower extremity where recurrent +hæmorrhage on the second or third day was treated by ligature of the +femoral or popliteal artery, and it also occurred during the course of +development of one of the carotid aneurisms recounted below. On two +occasions I saw rapid death follow recurrent abdominal hæmorrhage; in +one I was standing in a tent when a man who had been wounded the day +before suddenly exclaimed: 'Why, I am going to die after all.' The +appearance of the man was ghastly, and on examining the abdomen it was +found greatly distended, and with dulness in the flanks; the patient +expired a few minutes later. Another example of recurrent abdominal +hæmorrhage is related in case 169, p. 432.</p> + +<p><i>Secondary hæmorrhage.</i>—In simple wounds of the soft parts by +<i>small-calibre bullets</i> this was decidedly rare. In wounds complicated +by fractures of the bones, especially when they exhibited the so-called +'explosive' character, secondary hæmorrhage was not uncommon, and this +not necessarily in conjunction with infection and suppuration.</p> + +<p>In the chapter on fracture some remarks will be found on the +prolongation of healing often observed in the exit portion of the wound +track, which is explained by the well-known fact that, given an aseptic +condition of the wound, sloughs of tissue separate very slowly. +Secondary hæmorrhage in these cases is due to lesions of the vessel +short of perforation, but severe enough to so lower the vitality that +local gangrene of the wall occurs. In such instances hæmorrhage most +usually occurred on the tenth to the fourteenth day, but occasionally +still later. In one instance of ligature of the anterior tibial artery +for such hæmorrhage three-quarters of the whole lumen of the vessel had +been devitalised. The resemblance of some cases of secondary hæmorrhage +of this class to those occasionally observed after amputation, and due +to accidental non-perforative injury of the artery at the time of +operation above the point of ligature, was very striking.</p> + +<p>In other cases secondary hæmorrhage was the result of perforation of the +vessel by a sharp spicule of bone, but in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span> the large majority sepsis and +suppuration were the cause. Naturally therefore the accident was +commoner in the more severe kinds of wound, and in those caused by +<i>large</i> bullets or fragments of shell. The symptoms in nearly all cases +were the classical ones of repeated small hæmorrhages followed by a +sudden copious gush.</p> + +<p>The forms of secondary hæmorrhage, however, which afforded most interest +were the interstitial and the internal, mainly on account of the scope +they allowed for diagnosis.</p> + +<p>Characteristic examples of internal secondary hæmorrhage are furnished +by cases of chest injury accompanied by hæmothorax and fully dealt with +under that heading (Chapter X.). Cases of interstitial secondary +hæmorrhage are also described under the heading of traumatic aneurism +and abdominal injuries (No. 194, p. 445). It therefore suffices here +merely to remark on the diagnostic difficulties the condition gave rise +to. These mainly depended upon the elevation of general bodily +temperature by which the hæmorrhage was often accompanied. Further +evidence of the condition was furnished by the development of local +swellings, or physical signs indicative of the collection of fluid in a +serous cavity. These signs developed rapidly, and the rise of +temperature was sudden and decided enough to suggest commencing +suppuration. In several cases incisions were made under the supposition +that this had already occurred.</p> + +<p>The fever accompanying blood effusions was generally a somewhat special +feature in the wounds of the campaign. At first bearing in mind that in +every case a track, even if closed, led from the surface to the effused +blood, one was disposed to suspect an infection of the clot of a +somewhat innocuous nature. The absence of subsequent suppuration, +however, was definitely opposed to this view, and suggested that the +fever resulted from absorption of some element of the blood, possibly +the fibrin ferment, or some form of albumose. A pronounced illustration +was in fact afforded of the evanescent rise of temperature usually the +accompaniment of simple fractures in the case of the limbs, and of the +more marked rise not uncommon in cases of traumatic blood effusion into +the peritoneal cavity, or when the pleuræ or joints<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span> were the seats of +the mischief. In the case of interstitial hæmorrhages I only remember to +have seen fever of such marked continued type in the subjects of +hæmophilia with recent effusions, although one is of course acquainted +with it in a less pronounced form as a result of hæmorrhage into +operation wounds.</p> + +<p>In primary interstitial hæmorrhages a similar continued rise of +temperature was also common, and I cannot perhaps better illustrate its +character than by the brief relation of two instances.</p> + +<p>In a patient wounded at Kamelfontein the bullet entered four inches +below the acromion, pierced the deltoid, splintered the humerus, and +crossed the axilla. A large blood extravasation developed in the axilla, +accompanied by cutaneous ecchymosis extending halfway down the arm. +There was no perceptible pulsation in either the brachial or radial +artery, but the limb was warm. There was partial paralysis of the parts +supplied by the ulnar and musculo-spiral nerves and complete loss of +power and sensation in the area of distribution of the median nerve. Six +months later the radial pulse was still absent in this patient, but +there was no sign of the development of an aneurism.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/tempchart1.jpg" width="450" height="301" alt="Temperature Chart 1." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Temperature Chart 1.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Axillary Hæmatoma. Shows range of +temperature during process of absorption and consolidation without +suppuration</b></p> + +<p>The accompanying temperature chart is characteristic.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span> The blood +effusion gradually gained in consistency and underwent steady diminution +in size. No suppuration occurred.</p> + +<p>The median paralysis was found to be accompanied by the inclusion of the +nerve in a sort of foramen of callus, when the patient was explored at a +later date by Mr. Ballance.</p> + +<p>In a patient wounded at Paardeberg, a Mauser bullet entered by the left +buttock, pierced the venter ilii, traversed the pelvis, and emerging at +the brim of the latter, crossed the back, fractured the spine of the +fourth lumbar vertebra, and escaped below the twelfth right rib. The +track suppurated where it crossed the back, but the man did well until +the twentieth day, when a swelling developed in the left iliac fossa and +the general temperature rose to 102°. An abscess was at once suspected +and the swelling incised by Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C. A large +subperitoneal hæmatoma only was discovered, and evacuated. The +temperature at once fell and the after progress was uneventful, the +wound healing by primary union.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Treatment of Hæmorrhage</span></h3> + +<p><i>Primary.</i>—No deviation from the ordinary rules of surgery should be +necessary in the majority of cases, but in a certain number the +conditions are so unusual that the special considerations must be taken +into account. The natural tendency to spontaneous cessation of primary +hæmorrhage in small-calibre wounds is the first of these. Experience has +shown that often mere dressing, or at any rate slight pressure, suffices +to efficiently stanch immediate bleeding. Although, however, immediate +control is to be obtained by such means, the cases of traumatic aneurism +of every variety related in the next section show that the ultimate +result is in many such cases by no means satisfactory.</p> + +<p>Under these circumstances it may be said that the classical rule of +ligation at the point of injury should never be disregarded. Against +this, however, certain objections may be at once raised; thus in many +cases both artery and vein need ligature, a consideration of much +importance in the case of such vessels as the carotid and femoral +arteries. Again in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span> many of the injuries to the popliteal artery the +wound directly communicated with the knee joint, a complication which, +while it may be disregarded in civil practice, must take a much more +important place in the circumstances under which many operations in +military surgery are performed.</p> + +<p>On the whole, it seems clear that the military surgeon must be guided by +circumstances, since it may be far better to risk the chances of +recurrent hæmorrhage, or the development of an aneurism or varix, all of +which are amenable to successful treatment later, than those of gangrene +of a limb or softening of the brain. As a general rule, therefore, on +the field or in a Field hospital, primary ligature of the great vessels +is best reserved for those cases only in which hæmorrhage persists, +while in those in which spontaneous cessation has occurred, or in which +bleeding is readily controlled by pressure, rest and an expectant +attitude are to be preferred.</p> + +<p>A word must be added as to the objections to distant proximal ligature +for primary or recurrent hæmorrhage. In some situations this may be +unavoidable, and it is sometimes successful, but none the less it is +opposed to all rules of good surgery and a most uncertain procedure. It +leaves the patient exposed to all the risks attendant on the employment +of simple pressure. In one case which I saw, the third part of the +subclavian artery had been ligatured for axillary bleeding; secondary +hæmorrhage, as might have been expected, occurred, and that as late as +five weeks after the operation. In another case ligature of the femoral +artery for popliteal hæmorrhage was followed by the development of a +traumatic aneurism in the ham.</p> + +<p><i>Secondary.</i>—In secondary hæmorrhage the treatment to be adopted +depends upon the nature of the case. When the wound is aseptic, and +bleeding the result of the separation of sloughs, local ligature is the +proper treatment, and this was often successfully adopted, especially in +the case of such arteries as the tibials. In septic cases, on the other +hand, it is usually far better if possible to amputate, unless the +general state of the patient and the local conditions are especially +favourable.</p> + +<p>When neither amputation nor direct local ligature is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span> practicable, +proximal ligature may be of use. Sometimes this may be obligatory in +consequence of the difficulties attendant on direct local treatment. I +saw a few cases successfully treated in this manner: in one the common +carotid was tied (Mr. Jameson) for hæmorrhage from an arterial hæmatoma +in connection with the internal maxillary artery. Although ligature of +the external carotid would perhaps have been preferable, the result was +excellent. When even this expedient is impracticable, local pressure is +the only resort.</p> + +<p>Lastly, as to the treatment of secondary interstitial blood effusions, I +believe the best initial treatment is the expectant. If interference is +needed, it is much more likely to be satisfactory the more chronic the +condition has become, since the source of the bleeding may be impossible +to discover. I never saw a patient's life endangered by the amount of +such hæmorrhage, but if this should seem to be likely, local treatment +is of course unavoidable. In several cases quoted below, incision and +evacuation were followed by excellent results; in any such operation too +much care to ensure asepsis is impossible.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Traumatic Aneurisms</span></h3> + +<p>The experience of the campaign fully bears out that of the past as to +the steady increase of the number of aneurisms from gunshot wounds in +direct ratio to diminution in the size of the projectiles employed. +Every variety of traumatic aneurism was met with, and most frequently of +all, perhaps, aneurismal varices and varicose aneurisms. While so +experienced a military surgeon as Pirogoff could say, in 1864, that he +had never seen a case of aneurismal varix, every young surgeon lately in +South Africa has met with a series. Again, although the condition is a +well-known one, it has been rather in connection with civil life; for +the great majority of recorded cases were the result of stabs or +punctured wounds such as are liable to be received in street brawls, or +as a result of accidents with the tools of mechanics. Thus of ninety +cases collected by K. Bardeleben in 1871, only 12 or 13.33 per cent. +were the result of gunshot wound.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>False traumatic aneurism or arterial hæmatoma.</i>—This condition was met +with comparatively frequently, and bears a very close relation to that +already described under the heading of interstitial hæmorrhages. The +latter might almost have been included here, since the difference +between the two conditions depended merely on the size of the vessels +implicated. The exact correspondence in the period of development of +some of the arterial hæmatomata, and of the occurrence of the aseptic +form of secondary hæmorrhage, also explains the pathology of the two +conditions as identical; except that in the former the effused blood is +retained in the tissues, while in the latter it escapes externally. The +history of these cases was uniform and characteristic. A wound of the +soft parts, or sometimes a fracture, was accompanied by a certain degree +of primary interstitial hæmorrhage, which might or might not have been +associated with external bleeding. A hæmatoma resulted in connection +with the wounded vessel, the general tendency in the effusion being to +coagulation at the margins and subsequent contraction. Meanwhile the +opening in the artery became more or less securely closed by the +development of thrombus, and possibly by retraction of the inner and +middle coats of the vessel. With the return of full circulatory force as +shock passed off, or with the resumption of activity and consequent +freer movement of the limb, the temporary thrombus became washed away. +The newly formed wall of soft clot bounding the effusion proved +insufficient to withstand the full force of the blood pressure, and +extension of the cavity resulted. In the more rapidly developing +hæmatomata, temporary pressure by the effused blood on the bleeding +vessels was also, no doubt, a common explanation of temporary cessation +of increase in size.</p> + +<p>A diffuse soft fluctuating swelling, sometimes accompanied by pulsation, +but oftener without, developed, and not uncommonly diffusion was +accompanied by some discoloration of the surface and elevation of the +general temperature. Such arterial hæmatomata commonly developed from +ten days to three weeks after the original wound. A few examples will +suffice.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>1</b>) A patient wounded at Elandslaagte was sent down to Wynberg. +The antero-posterior wound in the upper third of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span> arm was +healed, but a month after the injury a large fluctuating +arterial hæmatoma developed in the axilla and upper third of +the arm. This was incised (Colonel Stevenson) and a wound of +the axillary artery in its third part discovered, and the +vessel ligatured. The patient made an excellent recovery.</p> + +<p>(<b>2</b>) A patient received a wound at Doornkop which traversed the +calf in an obliquely antero-posterior longitudinal direction. +Three weeks later a soft fluctuating swelling developed at the +inner margin of the tendo Achillis occupying the lower third of +the leg. Neither pulsation nor murmur was detected. There was +anæsthesia in the area of distribution of the posterior tibial +nerve. No tendency to further increase was observed, and +operation was postponed. The temperature was normal.</p> + +<p>(<b>3</b>) An Imperial Yeoman was struck at Zwartskopfontein at a +range of one hundred yards. The man rode four miles on his +horse after being hit, but the horse then fell and rolled over +him twice. The man was treated successively in the Van Alen, +Boshof, and Kimberley Hospitals, and from the last he was sent +to Wynberg which place he reached on the twenty-third day. When +admitted into No. 2 General Hospital the wounds of type form +and size (<i>entry</i>, in posterior fold of axilla; <i>exit</i>, 1½ +inch below junction of anterior fold with arm) were healed. The +whole upper arm was swollen and discoloured, while an indurated +mass extended along the line of the vessels into the axilla. +This was considered a blood effusion; it was not obviously +distensile, and pulsation was very slight. The brachial radial +and ulnar pulses were absent. A fluctuating swelling was +present along the anterior border of the deltoid. There were +some signs of nerve contusion, but no paralysis, beyond tactile +anæsthesia in the area of distribution of the median nerve.</p> + +<p>Four days later little alteration had been noticed beyond a +tendency to variation in firmness of the different parts of the +swelling. On the thirty-first day considerable enlargement was +observed. This enlargement, together with continued rise of +temperature, aroused the suspicion of suppuration, and an +exploratory puncture with a von Graefe's knife was made by +Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C., after consultation with Professor +Chiene. Blood clot first escaped, followed by free arterial +hæmorrhage. The incision was enlarged while compression of the +third part of the subclavian was maintained; a large quantity +of clot was turned out, and an obliquely oval wound half an +inch in long diameter was found in the axillary artery. +Ligatures were applied above and below the opening between the +converging heads<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span> of the median nerve. The veins were not +damaged. The wound healed by first intention. On the twelfth +day a feeble radial pulse was perceptible, and shortly +afterwards the man left for England, diminished median tactile +sensation being the only remnant of the original symptoms.</p> + +<p>(<b>4</b>) A private of the 2nd Rifle Brigade was struck while +doubling at Geluk, at a range of one hundred yards. The Mauser +bullet entered four inches above the upper border of the left +patella, internal to the mid line of the limb, and escaped in +the centre of the popliteal space. The man lay in a farmhouse +during the night and bled considerably from both wounds. He did +not fall when struck, but could not walk. He was sent to No. 2 +General Hospital in Pretoria. On arrival there the external +wounds were scabbed over, and a large tumour existed beneath +the entrance wound. There was much discoloration from +ecchymosis, but no pulsation could be detected. The posterior +tibial pulse was good. At the end of ten days pulsation became +marked both in the front of the limb and in the popliteal +space. There were no symptoms of nerve injury. On the +thirteenth day an Esmarch's bandage was applied and Major +Lougheed laid the tumour open opposite the opening in the +adductor magnus. Much clot was removed, and both artery and +vein, which were found divided in the adductor canal, were +ligatured.</p> + +<p>The foot remained very cold for the first twenty-four hours, +but otherwise progress was satisfactory, the wound healing by +first intention. No pulsation was palpable in the tibials at +the end of a month.</p></div> + +<p>For the last two cases I am very much indebted to Major Lougheed. I am +glad to include them, as they illustrate one or two points of special +importance. No. 3 shows the tendency to variation in the tension and +firmness of the tumours, the tendency to primary contraction of the sac, +followed by diffusion, and the rise of temperature often accompanying +the latter occurrence. This is of great interest in relation to the +similar rise of temperature seen with the increase of hæmorrhage in +cases of hæmothorax. For purposes of comparison, the progress may well +be considered alongside of that in the case related on p. 119, in which +the wounded vessel was probably also the main trunk itself.</p> + +<p>No. 4 differs from any of the others in depending on a complete division +of a large artery and vein. The development<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span> of the hæmatoma was +consequently more rapid and continuous. Another point of interest was +the maintenance of pulsation in the tibial vessels, in spite of complete +solution of continuity in the parent trunk. That this was independent of +the collateral circulation seems evident from its complete disappearance +and slowness of return after ligation of the wounded vessels.</p> + +<p><i>Prognosis and treatment.</i>—The treatment in these cases is sufficiently +obvious, and consists in direct incision and ligature of the wounded +vessels. The cases related show the success with which this procedure +was attended, since uniformly good results were obtained. When possible, +an Esmarch's tourniquet should be applied in the case of the lower limb. +In the upper, compression of the subclavian is necessary during +interference with axillary hæmatomata, combined with direct pressure on +the bleeding spot after the clot has been removed. In the case of the +arm, digital compression is always to be preferred, in view of the +well-known danger of damage to the brachial nerves from the tourniquet.</p> + +<p>Proximal ligature is always to be avoided. It is inadequate, and proved +more dangerous as far as the vitality of the limb was concerned, the +latter point probably depending on the interference with the collateral +circulation by pressure from the extravasated blood, which is unrelieved +by the operation. I know of at least two cases of gangrene which +occurred consecutively to proximal ligature of the femoral artery for +this condition.</p> + +<p><i>True traumatic aneurisms.</i>—The cases met with differed so little from +those seen in ordinary civil practice, that but slight notice of them is +necessary. They differed from the last variety mainly in the more +localised nature of the tumour, the greater firmness of its walls, and +the more pronounced expansile pulsation. The development of this form of +aneurism was probably influenced by several circumstances, such as the +more complete rest secured for the patient, the locality in the limb as +affecting movement of the spot in the vessel actually wounded, the size +of the opening in the vessel, and the degree of support afforded by +surrounding structures. (Examples are furnished by cases 6-9.)<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span></p> + +<p>Under the influence of rest, all that I saw tended to contract and +become firmer, and they so far resembled spontaneous aneurisms as to be +readily cured by proximal ligature of the artery. The ideal treatment no +doubt consists in local incision and ligature on either side of the +wounded spot, with or without ablation of the sac. The choice of direct +or proximal ligature in any case depends on the position of the +aneurism, and the ease with which the former operation can be carried +out. In all these cases a very great advantage in the localisation and +diminution of the tumours was gained by postponing interference until +they became stationary. I need scarcely add that any evidence of +diffusion indicated immediate operation. The preference of direct or +proximal ligation will probably, to a certain extent, always depend on +the personal predilection of the surgeon, but while proximal ligature +has often given good immediate results during this campaign, it cannot +be with certainty decided whether the patients are definitely protected +from the dangers of recurrence.</p> + +<p>Reference to cases 7 and 9 as illustrating the possible spontaneous cure +of traumatic aneurisms is of great interest.</p> + +<p>I saw a number of cases successfully treated by proximal ligature; also +a number where continuous improvement followed rest, and which were sent +home for further treatment. None of these demand any special mention.</p> + +<p>One case of a very special nature, which terminated fatally, is of great +interest:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>5</b>) In a man wounded at Belmont the bullet entered the second +left intercostal space and was retained in the thorax. He was +sent directly to the Base and came under the care of Mr. +Thornton at No. 1 General Hospital, Wynberg. Signs of wound of +the lung developed in the form of hæmoptysis and left +hæmothorax. The left radial pulse was almost imperceptible.</p> + +<p>The entry wound did not close by primary union, and three weeks +later an incision was made into the chest in consequence of the +presence of fever, progressive emaciation, and weakness. +Breaking down blood clot was evacuated: general improvement +followed, and the radial pulse increased considerably in +volume.</p> + +<p>A fortnight later sudden severe hæmorrhage occurred from the +external wound, and the man rapidly collapsed and died. At the +post-mortem a traumatic aneurism the size of an orange was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> +found in connection with an oval wound in the first portion of +the left subclavian artery which admitted the tip of the +forefinger.</p></div> + +<p>This case is noteworthy as an illustration of the magnitude of an artery +which can be wounded without leading to rapid death from primary +hæmorrhage, even when in communication with a serous sac, and still more +as emphasising the importance of weakening of the radial pulse as a sign +in connection with a wound of the upper part of the chest on the left +side. It is somewhat surprising that this sign was not marked in two +cases (Nos. 13 and 14, p. 140) recorded below, in which the innominate +and right carotid arteries respectively were probably perforated.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>6</b>) <i>Traumatic popliteal aneurism.</i>—Wounded at Modder River. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), over centre of tibia 1 inch above the +tubercle. <i>Exit</i>, about centre of popliteal space. No +hæmorrhage of any importance occurred from the wound, but there +was a typical hæmarthrosis, which subsided slowly. Twelve days +after the injury a pulsating swelling the size of a hen's egg, +to which attention was drawn on account of pain, was noted in +popliteal space. The pulsation extended upwards in the line of +the artery some 3 inches. The limb was placed on a splint and +treated by rest, and a month later the aneurism had decreased +to one half its former size, the wall having greatly increased +in firmness. Pulsation was easily controlled by pressure above +the tumour; there was no thrill present, but a high-pitched +bellows murmur. The patient was sent home on February 1.</p></div> + +<p>When admitted at Netley the patient came under the care of Major Dick, +R.A.M.C., who ligatured the popliteal artery on the proximal side by an +incision in the line of the tendon of the adductor magnus. The aneurism +then consolidated.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>7</b>) <i>Traumatic popliteal aneurism.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), centre of patella. <i>Exit</i>, centre of +popliteal space; the knee was bent at the time it was struck. +There was considerable primary external hæmorrhage, and so much +blood collected in the knee-joint that it was aspirated. On the +eighth day secondary hæmorrhage occurred from the exit wound +and the femoral artery was tied in Hunter's canal. No further +hæmorrhage occurred, but at the end of three weeks feeble +pulsation was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span> palpable in the popliteal space, suggesting an +aneurism; the latter decreased and the patient was sent home +apparently well.</p> + +<p>(<b>8</b>) <i>Traumatic axillary aneurism.</i>—Wounded at Karree. The +bullet entered 2½ inches below the acromial end of the right +clavicle and emerged over the 9th rib in the posterior axillary +line. The Mauser bullet was found in the patient's haversack. +Both apertures were of the slit form, and healed per primam. +Three weeks later at Wynberg a large arterial hæmatoma which +pulsated was noted in the axilla. Signs of injury to the +musculo-spiral nerve were also observed. The tumour altered +little, but a fortnight later Major Burton, R.A.M.C., cut down +upon it through the pectorals. The aneurism was of the third +part of the axillary artery, and a ligature was applied at the +lower margin of the pectoralis minor. The wound healed by +primary union and the aneurism rapidly shrank. The patient left +for England a month later; the musculo-spiral paralysis was +improving. I am indebted to Major Burton for the notes of this +case.</p> + +<p>(<b>9</b>) <i>Traumatic popliteal aneurism.</i>—Wounded in Natal. <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), immediately above head of fibula. <i>Exit</i>, immediately +inside semi-tendinosus tendon at level of central popliteal +crease. Fulness but no pulsation was noted at end of three +weeks; seven days later pulsation was evident, and an aneurism +the size of a pigeon's egg, with firm walls, became localised +and palpable. It gave rise to no symptoms, and patient refused +operation during the three weeks he remained in hospital. The +aneurism continued to contract, and the patient was sent home. +The aneurism has since spontaneously consolidated.</p></div> + +<p><i>Aneurismal varix and varicose (arterio-venous) +aneurism.</i>—Uncomplicated cases of aneurismal varix, as might be +expected, were less common than those in which the arterio-venous +communication was accompanied by the formation of a traumatic sac. The +initial lesion accountable for each condition was, however, probably +identical, and dependent on the passage of a bullet of small calibre +across the line of large parallel arteries and veins. Thus, obliquely +coursing antero-posterior wounds of the neck produced carotid and +jugular varices; vertically coursing tracks laid the subclavian vessels +in communication; antero-posterior tracks the brachial, popliteal, and +lower part of the femoral; and transverse tracks, the vessels of the +calf and forearm. Given an arterial wound, the mode of development of +the aneurismal sac in no way<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span> differs from that of the ordinary +traumatic variety; the main point of interest, therefore, is to seek an +explanation of the causes which may restrict the ultimate result to the +formation of a pure aneurismal varix. The explanation is possibly to be +found in some of the following circumstances.</p> + +<p><i>Size, position, and symmetry of the vascular wound.</i>—It seems scarcely +necessary to insist on the calibre of the projectile, since this alone +determined the frequency of these conditions, but it must be borne in +mind that in the diameter of the bullets, classed as of small calibre +during this war, a range of from 6.5-8 mm. existed. In the case of both +the Krag-Jörgensen and Mauser, the shape of the bullet also was better +adapted to pure perforation of the vessels. I saw no case of +arterio-venous communication in which a larger bullet than one of the +four types chosen had been responsible for the primary injury, but a +difference of 1½ mm. in calibre in the small projectile might well +determine the division, the pure and symmetrical perforation of the two +vessels, or the giving way of one side, so that they were deeply notched +instead of perforated.</p> + +<p>Such positive evidence as was afforded by operation as to the exact +condition of the vessels in two cases of femoral arterio-venous aneurism +was, that in either case a clean perforation existed.</p> + +<p>It is improbable that notching of the two vessels can primarily produce +a pure varix, although it may result in the formation of an +arterio-venous aneurism, especially if the bullet should have passed +between the two vessels in such a way as to notch the contiguous sides. +It is impossible to say, in any given case, what the result of secondary +contraction of a sac produced in this manner may be in the determination +of the ultimate relation of the vessels. In many of the cases clinically +designated pure varix, the remains of such a sac may still actually +persist. In the case also of pure perforation of the vessels, it is +difficult to believe that a localised blood cavity has not originally +existed. Given complete division of the vessels, as far as my experience +went, arterial hæmatoma was the uniform result.</p> + +<p>Under these circumstances I am inclined to believe that a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span> symmetrical +perforation of both vessels is the most common precursor of either +condition; that the pure varix is the rarer and less likely result, and +that its formation is dependent mainly on certain anatomical conditions. +The most important of these conditions are the proximity and degree of +cohesion of the two vessels, the comparative spaciousness or the +opposite of the vascular cleft, and the degree of support afforded by +surrounding structures.</p> + +<p>Thus, the close proximity of the popliteal artery and vein, together +with the particularly firm adhesion which exists between the vessels, +probably favours the formation of a varix; again, a varix more readily +forms if the femoral artery and vein are wounded in Hunter's canal than +if the injury is situated high in Scarpa's triangle, where the vessels +lie in a large areolar space. The passage of a bullet between an artery +and vein may perhaps produce either condition, but wide separation of +the two vessels, as for instance of the subclavian artery and vein, +renders an aneurismal sac almost a certainty. These suggestions seem +borne out by the cases recounted below, since the pure varices are one +femoral, one popliteal, and one axillary. I cannot include the calf and +forearm cases, as the existence of a small sac could not be disproved.</p> + +<p>To these anatomical factors certain others must be added. In most cases +a false sac exists at first, which tends to undergo contraction and +spontaneous cure, as is observed in some of the ordinary traumatic sacs. +This history of development is moreover supported by the observation +that proximal ligature of the artery usually converts an arterio-venous +aneurism into an aneurismal varix. The process is no doubt favoured by +cleanness and small size of the perforation, moderation in the amount of +primary hæmorrhage, the tone and resistance of the surrounding tissues, +special points in the circulatory force and condition of the blood, and +the possibility of maintaining the part at rest after the injury.</p> + +<p>Aneurismal varix, when pure, was evidenced by the presence of purring +thrill and machinery murmur alone. In none of the cases I saw was pain +or swelling of the limb present. In one popliteal varix, slight +varicosity of the superficial veins of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span> the leg was present, but it was +not certain that the development of this was not antecedent to the +injury, as the patient did not notice it until his attention was drawn +to its existence. In none of the cases under observation in South Africa +had enough time elapsed for sufficient dilatation of the artery above +the point of communication to give rise to any confusion from this cause +as to the presence of a sac.</p> + +<p>When an arterio-venous sac has once formed, clinical observation shows +that the general tendency is towards extension in the direction of least +resistance. This direction of course varies with the situation of the +aneurism, and also with the nature of the wound track.</p> + +<p>Speaking generally the direction of least resistance in a typically pure +perforation is towards the vein. Initial flow of blood from the wounded +artery is naturally favoured towards the potential space afforded by a +canal occupied by blood flowing at a lower degree of pressure. The +partial collapse of the vein dependent on the wound in its wall also +probably helps in determining the initial flow in its direction. +Examples are afforded by the carotid aneurisms (cases 10, 11, and 14), +and here it must be borne in mind that the outer limits of the cervical +vascular cleft are those least likely to offer resistance to extension +of the sac. In each the aneurisms mainly occupied the exit segment of +the track; this is the general rule, as in the case of external +hæmorrhage, and is determined by the same cause.</p> + +<p>The latter rule however finds exceptions when the entry segment is so +situated as to cross a region of lesser resistance, and case 12 +illustrates this point with regard to the cervical vascular cleft. +Examples of the tendency to spread in the anatomical direction of least +resistance are also offered by the cases of aneurism at the root of the +neck, where extension was into the posterior triangle.</p> + +<p>The further clinical history and signs are as follows. A local swelling +is found, usually at first diffuse, often commencing to develop with +cessation of the external hæmorrhage. It increases, for the first few +days maintaining its diffuse character. If near the surface, it may be +superficially ecchymosed. At the end of this time a tendency to +localisation,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span> as evidenced by increasing firmness and more definite +margination, takes place, and this is followed by general contraction +and rounding off of the tumour. The latter process may be continuous, +and eventually the sac may become small and stationary or ultimately +disappear and a pure varix be the result. The latter is only likely to +be the case under the most satisfactory of the conditions enumerated +above. Occasionally an opposite course may be followed, and fresh +extension take place, as evidenced by enlargement of the tumour, +disappearance of sharp definition, softening, and pain. The natural +termination of such cases in the absence of interference would no doubt +be rupture, and possibly death in some positions, loss of the limb in +others. The former I never saw.</p> + +<p><i>Purring thrill.</i>—This, the pathognomonic sign of either condition, was +always present in the fully developed stage, and is probably present +from the first unless a temporary thrombosis obstructs the vascular +openings. It was noted as early as the third day in case 13. In many of +the other patients it was palpable only with the subsidence of the +primary swelling attendant on the injury. In some of the forearm and +calf aneurisms, and in some of the popliteal, it was only discovered by +accident some weeks even after the injury, but this often because no +serious vascular lesion had been suspected. The thrill was widely +conducted, often apparently superficial on palpation, and much more +pronounced with light than with forcible digital pressure.</p> + +<p>In case 10 the <i>visible</i> vibration in consonance with the thrill when +the vein was exposed during the operation of ligature of the carotid was +a novel experience to me.</p> + +<p><i>Murmur.</i>—The typical 'bee in the bag,' or 'machinery' murmur was +present in every case, and was often very widely distributed, especially +over the thorax. (Cases 13, 14, and 20.)</p> + +<p>In all three carotid cases the murmur was troublesome, being audible to +the patient at night when the head was rested on the side corresponding +to the aneurism.</p> + +<p><i>Expansile pulsation.</i>—Pulsation in combination with the existence of a +tumour is the main feature in the diagnosis between the conditions of +pure varix and varicose aneurism.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span> It was not always existent or +prominent in the earliest stages, probably from temporary blocking of +the artery, or from the diffuse and irregular nature of the cavity +offering conditions unsuitable to the satisfactory transmission of the +wave. When localisation had occurred it was always present.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Effects of Aneurismal Varix or Varicose Aneurism on the Circulation</span></h3> + +<p>(<i>a</i>) <i>General.</i>—The most striking feature in these injuries is the +remarkable effect of the disturbance to the even flow of the circulation +on the heart. This first struck me in two of the cases of carotid +arterio-venous aneurism recorded below (Nos. 10 and 11). In these I was +inclined at first to attribute the rapid and irritable character of the +pulse solely to injury to the vagus, as in each laryngeal paralysis +pointed to concussion or contusion of the nerve. The pulse reached a +rate of 120-140 to the minute. This disturbance was not of a transitory +nature, for in the two cases referred to the rapid pulse persists, in +spite of entire recovery of the laryngeal muscles, and the fact that in +one case the aneurismal sac has been absolutely cured, and in the second +only a small sac remains, in each as a result of proximal ligature of +the carotid artery. In the former a varix still exists, and at the end +of seven months the pulse is still over 100. In the latter, in which a +sac is still present, the pulse rate varies from 110 to 130. In each +case the condition has now existed twelve months. My attention once +directed to this point, I noted a similar acceleration of the pulse in +the case of these aneurisms elsewhere; thus in a femoral aneurism the +rate was 120, and in an axillary varix of twenty years' standing which +came under my observation the pulse rate varied from 110 to 120, +according to the position of the patient. Unfortunately I had not +directed my attention to this point in the early series of cases which +came under observation.</p> + +<p>It will be remarked in cases 13 and 14 that at the expiration of a year +the pulse rate was still high, but these again are cervical aneurisms +each in contact with or near the vagus.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span></p> + +<p>In a case of aneurismal varix of the femoral artery of three years' +standing, which was under the charge of Mr. Mackellar, the pulse rate +was normal. In this instance great dilatation of the vessels had +occurred.</p> + +<p>These observations raise the interesting question whether the irritable +circulation which has been classically considered one of the +predisposing causes of spontaneous aneurism should not rather be +regarded as a result of the condition.</p> + +<p>(<i>b</i>) <i>Local.</i>—In none of the cases of varix was the period of +observation long enough to allow me to determine the development of +dilatation of the arterial trunk above the point of obstruction. This, +however, is the common sequence, and no doubt will occur in those +patients who resume active occupation without operation.</p> + +<p>The effects of either condition on the distal circulation were +remarkably slight. The distal pulses were little, if at all, modified in +strength or volume, and signs of venous obstruction, if present at +first, disappeared with much rapidity. In one case (No. 15) of a large +arterio-venous popliteal aneurism there was considerable swelling of the +leg, but in this case the sac was large and situated at the apex of the +space, and no doubt exercised external pressure on the vein.</p> + +<p>In the case of the carotid aneurisms, especially that probably on the +internal carotid, transient faintness was a symptom in the early stages +of the case. All three of the cases recorded here, however, had been the +subjects of very free hæmorrhage, either primary or recurrent.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>10</b>) <i>Carotid arterio-venous aneurism.</i>—Wounded at Paardeberg. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser) to the right side of the Pomum Adami, <i>exit</i> +at anterior margin of left trapezius, two inches below the +angle of the jaw. There was some hæmorrhage at the time from +the exit wound, but no hæmoptysis; about four hours later, +however, in the Field hospital bleeding was so free that an +incision was made with the object of tying the common carotid. +During the preliminary stages of the operation bleeding ceased +and the wound was closed without exposing the vessel. The +patient remained a week in the Field hospital, and then made a +three day and night's journey in a bullock waggon to Modder +River (40 miles), and fourteen days later he was transferred to +the Base hospital at<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span> Wynberg, when the condition was as +follows. Operation and bullet wounds healed. Considerable +extravasation of blood in the posterior triangle. Beneath the +sterno-mastoid in the course of the bullet track, swelling, +thrill and pulsation over an area 1½ inch wide in diameter. +Loud machinery murmur audible to the patient when the left side +of the head is placed on the pillow, and widely distributed on +auscultation. The left eye appears prominent, but the pupils +are normal and equal in size. Voice weak and husky, and there +is cough. Laryngoscopic examination showed the cords to be +untouched, but some swelling still persisted. No headache, but +giddiness is troublesome at times. Pulse 100, regular but +somewhat irritable.</p> + +<p>The patient was kept quiet in the supine position for a month, +and during this time the condition in many ways improved. The +voice improved in strength, the pulse steadied, falling to 80, +the prominence of the left eye disappeared, and all the blood +effusion in the posterior triangle became absorbed. Meanwhile +the aneurism contracted at first, until it became oval in +outline, with a long axis of 2 inches by 1½ broad extending +in the line of the wound track, but mainly situated in the exit +half. During the last fortnight, however, it remained quite +stationary in size, and as it showed no further signs of +diminution in spite of the favourable conditions under which +the patient had been placed, it was considered best to try to +ensure its consolidation by a proximal ligature. Thrill had +become slightly less pronounced, and was less evident to the +patient himself, but was otherwise unchanged. The probabilities +in this case seemed rather in favour of wound of the internal +carotid artery, and it was decided to bare the upper part of +the common carotid, follow up the main trunk, and if possible +apply the ligature to the internal branch. On April 12, 61 days +after the injury, the classical incision for securing the +common carotid was made, and the sterno-mastoid slightly +retracted. It was found that the sac of the aneurism extended +over the bifurcation of the artery, reaching to the wall of the +larynx. The omo-hyoid muscle was therefore divided, and the +artery ligatured beneath, in order to ensure against any +interference with the sac. Some difficulty was met with, for on +opening the vascular cleft the vein was exposed and found to +completely overlie the artery: although it was on the left side +of the neck, the position of the vein was so completely +superficial that there seemed no doubt that it had been +displaced by the development of the aneurismal sac. A striking +appearance was noted on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span> exposure of the vein, the coats of +which vibrated visibly, quivering in exact consonance with the +palpable thrill. On tightening the silk ligature all pulsation +ceased in the aneurism, and the vibratory thrill in the vein +became much lessened.</p> + +<p>The patient made a good recovery, only disturbed by a slight +attack of vomiting, and at the end of a week the wound had +healed, and pulsation in the aneurism had completely ceased. +The thrill persisted as before.</p></div> + +<p>Six months later, a small sac still exists beneath the sterno-mastoid. +The pulse still reaches 110-120 in pace. The purring thrill is very +slight. The condition gives rise to little or no trouble. Pulsation is +strong in the external carotid artery, there is little in the common +carotid. The voice is strong and good. This aneurism is either at the +bifurcation of the common carotid, or on the immediate commencement of +the internal carotid. Ligature of the external carotid will probably +cure it.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>11</b>) <i>Arterio-venous aneurism, probably affecting both +carotids.</i> Wounded at Paardeberg. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at dimple +of chin immediately below mandibular symphysis. <i>Exit</i>, at +margin of right trapezius, the track crossing the carotids +about the level of normal bifurcation. The patient was lying on +his back with the head down when struck. Some hæmorrhage from +the exit wound occurred at the time, and later on the way to +Jacobsdal this was so profuse as to be nearly fatal. A +considerable hæmorrhage also occurred on the tenth day. The +patient made the journey to Modder River safely, and was then +under the charge of Mr. Cheatle. A large diffuse pulsating +swelling developed on the right side of the neck, with +well-marked thrill and machinery murmur. During the next three +weeks the swelling steadily contracted, and the patient was +sent down to the Base one month after receiving the wound, when +the condition was as follows. There is no evidence of any +fracture of the jaw. On the right side of the neck a large +aneurism fills the carotid triangle, extending from the +mid-line backwards to the margin of the trapezius, and from the +level of the top of the larynx upwards to the margin of the +mandible. The wall is fairly firm, pulsation is both visible +and palpable, and a well-marked thrill and machinery murmur are +present. The latter annoys him by its buzzing when the head +rests on the right side. The pupils are equal. Pulse somewhat +irritable, about 100. The voice is weak and husky, and there is +difficulty in swallowing solids. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span> actual swelling is +somewhat remarkable in outline, on the one hand following up +the course of the external carotid and facial arteries, and on +the other extending backwards in the line of the wound track +towards the exit. The patient was kept on his back with +sandbags around the head during the next fortnight. For the +first eight days such change as occurred was in the direction +of localisation and contraction, but during the last six, +evident extension occurred both backwards and downwards; this +extension was accompanied by severe pain in the cutaneous +cervical nerve area of the neck. The larynx became pushed over +3/4 of an inch to the left of the median line, and the +extension beneath the sterno-mastoid downwards raised a doubt +as to whether the common carotid could be exposed without +encroaching on the walls of the sac. Owing to indisposition I +had not been able to see the patient for some days, but now, +after consultation with Major Simpson and Mr. Watson, it was +decided that the best plan would be to expose and tie the +common carotid as high as could be safely done. The operation +was performed six weeks after the injury, and somewhat to our +surprise offered little difficulty. The carotid was exposed at +the upper border of the omo-hyoid, only a small amount of +infiltration having occurred in the vascular cleft. No +dilatation of the jugular was noticeable, and when a silk +ligature was applied to the artery all pulsation was +controlled, and the thrill in the vein disappeared completely. +The after progress was satisfactory, but four days later the +wound was dressed, as the patient's temperature had risen above +100°. The tumour was consolidated: no pulsation could be felt, +but there was little apparent diminution in its size. A loud +blowing murmur was audible, especially at the posterior part of +the swelling.</p> + +<p>On the morning of the fifth day the patient mentioned that he +again heard the whirr during the night. There had been no sign +of any cerebral disturbance and the pupils had remained equal +throughout.</p> + +<p>A week after the operation the stitches were removed, there was +evidence of some blood clot in the lower part of the wound, and +this later liquefied and was let out on the eleventh day. At +that time a slight bubbling thrill could be felt at the upper +part of the tumour, also slight pulsation in the line of the +external carotid and at the most posterior part of the sac. The +latter was much contracted, diminished in size and apparently +solid, so that it was hoped that such pulsation as existed was +communicated.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span> Ten months later, no trace of the aneurismal sac +exists. Neck normal, except for purring thrill. Voice strong +and good. Pulse 100. Following his usual work.</p> + +<p>(<b>12</b>) <i>Carotid arterio-venous aneurism</i>.—Wounded at Paardeberg. +Aperture of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), at the posterior border of the +left sterno-mastoid, 1 inch above the clavicle; <i>exit</i>, near +the posterior border of the right sterno-mastoid, 2 inches from +the sterno-clavicular joint. The injury was followed by very +free hæmorrhage, mainly from the wound of entry, some 'quarts' +of blood escaping; at any rate his clothes were saturated. The +voice was hoarse and weak, and there was much difficulty in +swallowing; for the first twenty-four hours he could swallow +nothing, but gradual improvement took place. The patient was +carried two miles to the Field hospital, and three days later +travelled 36-40 miles in a bullock waggon to Modder River. +Thence he travelled to Orange River 55 miles by train on the +next day. A swelling was first noted when the wound was dressed +some seven days after the injury. No evidence was ever existent +of gross damage to either trachea or œsophagus beyond the +initial dysphagia. The hoarseness of voice due to left +laryngeal paralysis slowly improved, and was probably the +effect of concussion or contusion of the left recurrent +laryngeal nerve. During the patient's stay at Orange River a +large pulsating swelling with a strong thrill developed. This +was at first diffuse, but under the influence of rest it +steadily contracted and localised. During this period the +patient was seen several times by Mr. Cheatle, who noted +considerable temporary enlargement of the thyroid gland.</p> + +<p>At the end of eight weeks he had been allowed up some days, and +travelled 570 miles to Wynberg. The aneurism was about 1½ +inch in diameter, smooth and rounded, extending just beneath +the left clavicle and nearly the whole width of the +sterno-mastoid, but well defined in all directions. There was +well-marked expansile pulsation, purring thrill along the +jugular vein and over the tumour, and loud machinery murmur +widely diffused along the whole neck and into the thorax. The +voice was still weak and husky, but there was no dysphagia or +dyspnœa. The left pupil was larger than the right.</p> + +<p>The patient acquired enteric fever at Wynberg and when +convalescent was sent to Netley, whence he returned home. The +aneurism caused little discomfort. It may possibly have been of +the inferior thyroid artery.</p> + +<p>(<b>13</b>) <i>Innominate arterio-venous varix</i>.—Wounded at Modder<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span> +River. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser) posterior margin of left +sterno-mastoid, close above the clavicle. <i>Exit</i> in anterior +axillary line one inch below the right anterior axillary fold. +Soon after the injury a considerable amount of blood was +coughed up, and occasional hæmoptysis persisted for the next +four days. The patient was moved from the Field hospital by +train to Orange River, a journey of 55 miles and some four +hours' duration, on the fourth day. When examined there was +slight fulness over an area roughly circular and about 2½ +inches in extent, of which the sterno-clavicular joint lay just +within the centre. Over this area there was faint pulsation +with a strongly marked thrill and loud systolic bruit. The +radial pulses were even, the right pupil larger than the left. +No pain, and no dyspnœa. The right eye was partially closed, +but could be opened by the levator palpebræ superioris. The +patient was shortly afterwards sent to the Base, and when seen +there twenty-five days after the injury, there was little +change in the condition except that the fulness had +disappeared, the thrill was more marked, and a typical +machinery murmur transmitted along both carotid and subclavian +arteries had developed. There was no headache and the man +himself did not notice the bruit. Evidence of mediastinal +hæmorrhage existed in the presence of subcutaneous +discoloration of the abdominal wall, below the ensiform +cartilage and extending slightly over the costal margin of the +thorax. In the absence of an aneurismal swelling, or of the +development of any further symptoms, the patient was sent home +to Netley in January.</p></div> + +<p>I saw this patient in Glasgow a year later. He was employed as a +lamplighter, and was able to do his work well, only complaining of +attacks of shortness of breath on exertion. He said these were apt to +come on each evening about 6 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> The pulse was 100 when the erect +position was maintained, and 84 to 88 in the sitting posture. The right +pupil was still dilated, reacting for accommodation but little to light. +The palpebral fissure was normal in size and there was little, if any, +diminution in strength of the right radial pulse.</p> + +<p>On inspection no pulsation was visible; in fact, the pulsation of the +normal left subclavian was more apparent in the posterior triangle of +that side. The sterno-mastoid was prominent, also the sternal third of +the clavicle. On firm<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span> pressure some pulsation was palpable beneath the +sterno-mastoid, but no definite evidence of the presence of a sac could +be detected. Purring thrill and machinery murmur were still present, but +the former was slight, and palpable only with the lightest pressure. The +machinery murmur had ceased to be audible to himself, and was by no +means loud or very widely distributed.</p> + +<p>The condition had, in fact, steadily improved, and become far less +obvious. The prominence of the sterno-mastoid and clavicle still present +was difficult of explanation, except on the theory of an injury to the +bone, or that an aneurismal sac had consolidated spontaneously.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>14</b>) <i>Arterio-venous aneurism, root of right carotid.</i>—Wounded +at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), centre of right +infra-spinous fossa. <i>Exit</i>, 3/4 of an inch above clavicle, +through point of junction of the heads of the right +sterno-mastoid muscle. Range 200-300 yards. When wounded the +man ran two hundred yards to seek cover. There was no serious +external hæmorrhage, but the injury was followed by some +difficulty in swallowing, and hæmoptysis, which lasted for the +first two days. The right radial pulse was noted to be smaller +than the left, and weakness in flexion of the fingers, with +hyperæsthesia in the ulnar nerve distribution, was observed. +The right pupil was also noted to be larger than the left.</p> + +<p>The patient was sent down to the Base, and on the twenty-fourth +day the condition was as follows. A pulsating swelling existed +extending 1¼ inch upwards beneath the right sterno-mastoid, +from the mid line of the neck backwards to the centre of the +posterior triangle, and downwards over 2 inches of the first +intercostal space, which latter was dull on percussion. There +was some evidence of a bounding wall, but it was thin and the +tumour was soft and yielding. A loud machinery murmur was +audible over the tumour, over nearly the whole extent of the +thorax, and in the distal vessels as far as the temporal +upwards, and the brachial as far down as the bend of the elbow. +The murmur was audible to the patient with his ears closed. +Over the swelling a strong thrill was palpable; this extended +some little distance into the distal vessels and felt +remarkably superficial. It was particularly evident in the line +and course of the anterior jugular vein, and appeared to be +extinguished by local pressure. Although readily felt in the +posterior triangle, it was impalpable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span> on deep pressure in the +suprasternal notch, a fact which seemed in favour of localising +the aneurismal varix to the subclavian artery and vein. The +right pulse was good, although smaller than the left, and was +said to have improved in volume. The right pupil was slightly +larger than the left, but reacted normally. There was no pain +or difficulty in swallowing. Weakness in power of flexion of +the fingers persisted, and there was some impairment of +sensation in the area of distribution of the ulnar nerve.</p> + +<p>Three weeks later no material change had occurred, except that +the swelling was perhaps softer and the thrill more +superficial, and at the end of two months the patient was sent +to England.</p></div> + +<p>I saw this patient a year later in Glasgow, when the condition was as +follows. He was living at home, and out of employment. He complained of +shortness of breath on exertion, and said that when he mounted stairs he +felt 'as if his heart were going to leave him.' The heart's apex beat in +the sixth interspace in the nipple line, and the precordial dulness was +somewhat increased. The pulse numbered 80 to 84. The muscles supplied by +the ulnar nerve were very weak, but not much wasted, and ulnar sensation +was imperfect.</p> + +<p>The aneurism had considerably altered in form and outline; its walls +were dense and firm; it extended 2½ inches upwards in the line of the +carotid artery, beneath the sterno-mastoid, but projected beyond the +posterior border of that muscle. The larynx was displaced 1/2 an inch to +the left of the median line; the voice was still husky, although much +stronger than it was; the anterior jugular vein was dilated. The purring +thrill was very superficial, and chiefly palpable over the subclavian +vessels. The machinery murmur was still loud, but much less widely +distributed than before; it was still audible to the patient when he lay +on his right side.</p> + +<p>This case was of much interest from the diagnostic point of view. When I +first saw the patient I considered the injury to have implicated the +innominate vessels. Later, from the facts that the thrill was +imperceptible in the episternal notch, and that the main part of the +tumour was situated in the posterior triangle, that the wound was of the +root of the right subclavian vessels.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span></p> + +<p>It now appears that, at any rate, the root of the right carotid is the +artery implicated.</p> + +<p>In spite of the continued existence of a large aneurism, the +localisation of the sac, which had taken place, was very striking, +considering that the man had been walking about freely, and living an +ordinary life, except that he had undertaken no work.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>15</b>) <i>Popliteal arterio-venous aneurism</i>.—Wounded at +Paardeberg. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at lower margin of patella. +<i>Exit</i>, at centre of back of thigh. Perforation of lower end of +femur. The patient was lying down with crossed knees when the +injury was received. Much œdema of the foot and leg followed +the injury, and on the third day a thrill was discovered. Three +weeks later there was still some swelling of the calf, the +posterior tibial pulse was imperceptible, the anterior very +small. An aneurism was palpable at the inner part of the top of +the popliteal space, about the size of a pigeon's egg; a strong +thrill was to be felt, especially when the knee was flexed, and +with this expansile pulsation and a loud machinery murmur. The +entry wound was firmly healed; the exit still furnished +blood-stained serous discharge. The synovial cavity of the knee +was distended and doughy on palpation. During the next three +weeks the aneurism contracted considerably and the patient was +sent home.</p> + +<p>When admitted to the Herbert Hospital the patient complained +chiefly of pains in the foot and leg. The aneurism was cured by +ligation of the vein above and below the communication and +proximal ligature of the popliteal artery.<a name="FNanchor_15_15" id="FNanchor_15_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_15_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a></p> + +<p>(<b>16</b>) '<i>Femoral arterio-venous aneurism.</i>—A private of the West +Yorkshire Regiment was hit on February 11, 1900, at Monte +Christo by a bullet which passed through the inner border of +his right thigh above its middle. On arrival at Woolwich the +patient was found to have a varicose aneurism at the upper end +of Hunter's canal. On May 31 the femoral artery was ligatured +just above its communication with the vein, and as this stopped +all pulsation in the vein, it was decided to postpone ligature +of the latter to a subsequent occasion, if it should ever be +necessary; such a procedure would, it was thought, interfere +less with the circulation of the limb, and would therefore be +less likely to be followed by gangrene, which is so frequent a +result of high ligature of the femoral. But a few days after +the operation the foot became<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span> cold and mummified, and there +was no alternative but to amputate the limb through the +condyles of the femur. From this operation the patient made a +good recovery, and when discharged there was no sign of an +aneurism of the vein.'</p></div> + +<p>Case 16 is quoted from a paper in the <i>Lancet</i> by Lieut.-Colonel Lewtas, +I.M.S. It illustrates a result with which I became acquainted in three +other instances not under my own observation.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Aneurismal Varices</span></h3> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>17</b>) <i>Axillary.</i>—Wounded at Modder River. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at +inner margin of front of left arm, just below level of junction +of axillary fold. <i>Exit</i>, at about centre of hollow of axilla. +A month later when the wound was healed a typical thrill and +machinery murmur were noticed. The latter was audible down to +the elbow and upwards into the neck. The radial pulse appeared +normal. No swelling or pulsation existed. At the end of three +months the condition was unaltered; the patient said he noticed +nothing abnormal in his arm, except that it was sometimes 'sort +of numb' at night.</p> + +<p>(<b>18</b>) <i>Popliteal.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), +in centre of popliteal space. <i>Exit</i>, about centre of patella, +which latter was cleanly perforated. Three weeks later the +typical thickening of the knee-joint following hæmarthrosis was +present, also a well-marked thrill and machinery murmur in the +popliteal vessels with no evidence of a tumour. The leg was +normal except for slight enlargement of the internal saphenous +vein and its branches, probably independent of the arterial +lesion.</p> + +<p>(<b>19</b>) <i>Femoral.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 7 +inches below left anterior superior iliac spine. <i>Exit</i>, at +inner aspect of thigh. One month later slight fulness without +pulsation was discovered on the inner side of the femoral +vessels just above the level of the wound track. Some +blood-staining still remained in the fold between the scrotum +and thigh. Machinery murmur and a well-marked thrill, most +palpable to the inner side of the superficial femoral artery, +were noted. No further symptoms developed and the patient was +sent home.</p></div> + +<p><i>Prognosis and treatment.</i>—No one can help being struck with the +disinclination shown by the older surgeons to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span> interference in cases of +either aneurismal varix or varicose aneurism, even after the time that +ligation of the vessels had become a favourite and successful operation. +The objections lay in the technical difficulties of local treatment, and +the danger of gangrene after proximal ligature. Modern surgery has +lightened the difficulties under which our predecessors approached these +operations, but none the less the experience in this campaign fully +supports the objections to indiscriminate and ill-timed surgical +interference, as accidents have followed both direct local and proximal +ligature.</p> + +<p>In <i>pure varix</i> no doubt can exist as to the advisability of +non-interference in the early stage, in the absence of symptoms. This is +the more evident when we bear in mind that a stage in which an +aneurismal sac exists can seldom be absent. In many cases an expectant +attitude may lead to the conviction that no interference is necessary, +especially in certain situations where the danger of gangrene has been +fully demonstrated. In connection with this subject I cannot help +recalling the first case of femoral varix that ever came under my own +observation. I discovered the condition accidentally in a man admitted +into the hospital for other reasons. The patient remarked: 'For heaven's +sake, sir, do not say anything about that. I have had it many years, and +it has never given any trouble. If it is known, I shall be worried to +death by people examining it.'</p> + +<p>None the less it must be borne in mind that beyond enlargement of the +vein dilatation of the artery above the seat of obstruction does occur, +and gives trouble in some situations. Again the disturbance of the +general circulation already adverted to shows that the existence of this +condition is sometimes of importance in its influence on the cardiac +action.</p> + +<p>Under these circumstances the treatment varies with regard to the +vessels affected, and the degree of disturbance the condition gives rise +to.</p> + +<p>With regard to locality, experience appears to have shown clearly that +communications between the carotid arteries and jugular veins usually +give rise to so little serious trouble that, in view of the grave nature +of the operation and its possible after consequences on the brain, +interference is as a rule better<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span> avoided. I should, however, be +inclined to draw a distinction between operations on the common and +internal carotid arteries in this particular, and should regard varix of +the latter vessel and the internal jugular vein as especially +undesirable for interference.</p> + +<p>The vessels at the root of the neck are probably to be regarded from the +same point of view, as to surgical interference.</p> + +<p>The arteries of the upper extremity are the most suitable for operation, +and the axillary may perhaps be the vessel in which interference is most +likely to be useful. In this relation it may be of interest to include +here a case of a man who took part in the campaign when already the +subject of an aneurismal varix of the axillary artery.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>20</b>) Twenty years previously the patient suffered a punctured +wound of the left axilla from a pencil. A varix developed, but +was only discovered by accident ten years later. The patient +was seen by several surgeons, and treatment was discussed; the +balance of opinion was, however, in favour of non-interference, +and nothing was done beyond giving injunctions as to care in +the use of the limb. Up to the time of discovery of the varix +no inconvenience had been felt, although the patient was of +athletic habits. Subsequently, the patient himself was positive +that a swelling existed, but he pursued his usual work. In +1899-1900 he took part in the operations in South Africa as a +combatant, and during this time was subjected to very hard +manual work. During this he was seized with sudden pain in the +left side of the head and neck, and in consequence invalided. +No restriction in the movements of the upper extremity, and no +subcutaneous ecchymosis developed, but the patient was positive +as to the tumour having greatly enlarged.</p> + +<p>Four months later the condition was little altered. A pulsating +swelling 1½ inch broad existed along the line of the upper +two-thirds of the axillary artery, and along the subclavian in +the neck, rising some 1½ inch into the posterior triangle. +Pulsation was visible; the murmur was audible when sitting +beside the patient, and widely distributed over the whole +chest, the neck, and upper extremity on auscultation. The pulse +rate varied with the mental condition of the patient, which was +excitable, between 96 and 120. There was neuralgic pain in the +neck and scalp, and down the distribution of the brachial +plexus. The pupils<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> were equal, but flushing of the face and +profuse sweating followed any exertion. I concluded the tumour +in this case to be mainly due to dilatation of the trunk above +the point of obstruction on account of its outline, the absence +of any restriction of movement in the upper extremity, and the +non-occurrence of subcutaneous ecchymosis at the time of the +attack of severe pain. Difficulties arose as to undertaking any +active form of treatment for this patient, which, to be +satisfactory, needed an antecedent period of absolute rest, and +he passed from my observation. I think, however, operation by +ligature above and below the communication would have been +possible. The case affords a good example of the course the +condition may sometimes take if precaution is neglected.</p></div> + +<p>The vessels of the arm or forearm may in almost all cases be interfered +with, but in many instances an absence of any serious symptom renders +operation unnecessary.</p> + +<p>With regard to the femoral varices, I would refer to the remarks below, +and those on the treatment of varicose aneurism as indicating that a +certain amount of caution should be exercised in interfering with them.</p> + +<p>The same remarks in a lesser degree apply to the popliteal vessels. In +the leg the tibials may readily and safely be attacked, but it may be +mentioned that the widespread and diffused nature of the thrill may in +some cases give rise to considerable difficulty in sharp localisation of +the varix to either of the vessels, or to any particular spot in their +course. In one case in my experience the posterior tibial was cut down +upon, when the varix was probably peroneal in situation.</p> + +<p>The operation most in favour consists in ligation of the artery above +and below the varix, the vein remaining untouched. Even this operation, +however, in two cases of femoral varix failed to effect more than a +temporary cessation of the symptoms, although the ligatures were placed +but a short distance from the communication. Failure is due to the +presence of collateral branches, which are not easy of detection. Even +when the vessels lie exposed, the even distribution of the thrill +renders determination of the exact point of communication difficult, and +the difficulty is augmented by the temporary arrest of the thrill +following the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span> application of a proximal ligature to the artery. A +successful case is reported by Deputy Inspector-General H. T. Cox, R.N., +in which the ligatures were placed 1/2 an inch from the point of +communication.<a name="FNanchor_16_16" id="FNanchor_16_16"></a><a href="#Footnote_16_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> Single ligation, or proximal ligature, is useless.</p> + +<p>If the vein cannot be spared, excision of a limited part of both vessels +may be preferable, particularly in those of the upper extremity.</p> + +<p>Proximal ligation of the artery combined with double ligature of the +vein, as adopted in case 15 by Colonel Lewtas for a varicose aneurism, +might offer advantages in some situations.</p> + +<p>Given suitable surroundings and certain diagnosis, the ideal treatment +of this condition, as of the next, is preventive—<i>i.e.</i> primary +ligation of the wounded artery. Many difficulties, however, lie in the +way of this beyond mere unsatisfactory surroundings. It suffices to +mention the two chief: uncertainty as to the vessel wounded, and the +necessity of always ligaturing the vein as well as the artery in a limb +often more or less dissected up by extravasated blood, to show that this +will never be resorted to as routine treatment.</p> + +<p><i>Arterio-venous aneurism.</i>—Many of the remarks in the last section find +equal application here, but in the presence of an aneurismal sac +non-intervention is rarely possible or advisable. In the early stages +the proper treatment in any case consists in placing the patient in as +complete a condition of rest as possible, and affording local support to +the limb by a splint, preferably a removable plaster-of-Paris case. +Should no further extension, or, what is more likely, should contraction +and diminution occur, it will be well to continue this treatment for +some weeks at least.</p> + +<p>When the aneurism has reached a quiescent stage the question of further +treatment arises, and whether this should consist in local interference +or proximal ligature. The answer to this mainly depends on the size and +situation of the vessels concerned. To take of the cases above described +the five instances in which the cervical vessels were the seat of the +aneurism. In No. 13 the symptoms appeared fairly conclusive of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span> the +injury being to the innominate artery and vein, or possibly innominate +artery and jugular vein. Fortunately the aneurismal sac in this case was +small and showed a tendency to decrease, but in any case no interference +would have been justifiable. I think a similar opinion was unavoidable +in No. 14, probably affecting the root of the right carotid. Here under +any circumstances interference would have been most hazardous. The +position of large aneurism made the route of approach to the wounded +spot necessarily through the sac, exposing the patient to the double +danger of immediate hæmorrhage and of entrance of air into the great +veins. Nos. 10, 11, and 12 fall into the same category, except that in +No. 11 the immediate indication for interference was extension. In each, +ligature of the artery above and below the point of communication would +have necessitated so near an approach to the sac which must remain in +communication with the vein as to have entailed injury to the latter, +when both artery and vein must have been ligatured, probably risking +serious cerebral trouble. In No. 11 I believe both the external and +internal carotids were implicated; in No. 10 I believe the internal +alone, close to its origin. The operation of proximal ligature ensured +primary consolidation of the sac in both cases 10 and 11, but left the +thrill unaltered, except in so far as it was temporarily weakened. It, +in fact, converted these cases from arterio-venous aneurisms into pure +aneurismal varices. In No. 10 a sac subsequently redeveloped. No. 12 +stood on a different basis. No operation was done for him in South +Africa, but the first portion of the carotid might have been ligatured +in the episternal notch, or by aid of removal of a part of the sternum, +and a second ligature placed above the sac. Here a ligature above and +below the communication would have been comparatively easy.</p> + +<p>As a general rule proximal ligature is to be reserved for those cases +alone in which double ligature is either impracticable or inadvisable, +and it can only be expected to convert a varicose aneurism into the less +dangerous condition of aneurismal varix.</p> + +<p>In the case of arterio-venous aneurisms in the limbs the possibilities +of treatment are enlarged, and here the alternatives<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span> of (<i>a</i>) local +interference with the sac and direct ligature of the wounded point, +(<i>b</i>) simple ligature above and below the sac, (<i>c</i>) proximal ligature +(Hunterian operation), come into consideration.</p> + +<p>Direct incision of the sac is suitable, and the best method of treatment +for aneurisms in the calf, forearm, and probably arm. Several cases in +the two former situations were successfully treated by this method. On +the other hand, the only case I saw in which a proximal ligature had +been applied for an arterio-venous aneurism of the leg resulted most +unsatisfactorily. The sac in the calf suppurated at a later date, and +for many weeks the escape of small quantities of blood from the +remaining sinus kept up the fear of a severe attack of secondary +hæmorrhage until the sinus closed.</p> + +<p>In the case of femoral and popliteal aneurisms the method of Antyllus is +often unsuitable. A case of arterio-venous aneurism of the femoral +artery quoted in the <i>Lancet</i><a name="FNanchor_17_17" id="FNanchor_17_17"></a><a href="#Footnote_17_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a> will illustrate the difficulty which +may be met with in determining the actual bleeding point in the +irregular cavity laid open. In any case the necessary ligature of both +artery and vein is a serious objection to the direct method either in +the thigh or ham, and more particularly if adopted before the damage +dependent on the dissection of the limb by extravasated blood has been +repaired.</p> + +<p>Proximal ligature (Hunterian) even, offers dangers under these +circumstances. In one case with which I became acquainted, it was +followed by gangrene, necessitating amputation. The lesion in this +instance was a perforating one of the femoral artery and vein.</p> + +<p>For either femoral or popliteal arterio-venous aneurisms ligature of the +artery above and below the aneurism is the best and safest treatment. In +view of the healthy state of the vascular wall in most of these cases, +the advantage of placing the ligatures as near to the wounded spot as +can be managed without interference with the sac is afforded. A number +of popliteal cases treated in this way did perfectly. In the femoral +cases a considerable period of rest to allow of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span> consolidation of the +sac, and readjustment of the circulation, should always be allowed to +elapse.</p> + +<p>In the case of popliteal arterio-venous aneurisms a number were +successfully treated by proximal (Hunterian) ligature, and by single +ligature immediately above the sac. In a considerable proportion of the +latter both artery and vein were tied. This was apparently the result of +the difficulty of isolating the vessels in the tangled mass of clot and +cicatricial tissue surrounding them, and is a strong argument against +too early interference. The late Sir William Stokes expressed himself as +in favour of ligature of the artery in Hunter's canal, combined with +that of the great anastomotic branch, and quoted some successful cases +to me. I have grave doubts, however, whether the varix can often be +permanently cured by this operation.</p> + +<p>I can give no useful statistics on this subject, but with regard to the +popliteal aneurisms I may state that in three instances gangrene of the +leg followed early operative interference in the popliteal space.</p> + +<p>My own opinion on this subject is strong, and to the effect that none of +these operations should be undertaken before a period of from two to +three months after the injury, unless there is evidence of progressive +enlargement. In every case which came under my own observation +progressive contraction and consolidation took place up to a certain +point under the influence of rest. When this process has become +stationary, and the surrounding tissues have regained to a great extent +their normal condition, the operations are far easier, and beyond this +more likely to be followed by success.</p> + +<p>It appears to me that one argument only can be raised against the above +opinion, viz. the possibility of healing of the recent wound in the +vessels when the force of the circulation is lowered by proximal +ligature. Such experience as that quoted from Sir W. Stokes and two of +Mr. Ker's cases, mentioned below, support this possibility, but in all +the reported results were recent. Against them I can only advance my +knowledge of several mishaps following early operation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span></p> + +<p>In concluding these observations on injuries to the arteries and +aneurisms, a few general remarks as to the occurrence of gangrene after +operation must be added. This was not uncommon, and in the main was no +doubt attributable—(1) to the lowering of the vitality of the +surrounding tissues by creeping blood extravasation, and sometimes to +actual pressure by the extravasation on the vessels necessary for the +establishment of the collateral circulation. (2) To the frequency with +which both artery and vein required to be ligatured.</p> + +<p>Beyond these common causes, however, others must be advanced, dependent +on the general and local condition of the nervous system in these cases. +In general mental state many of the patients were much shaken, and in +others the condition spoken of as local shock in a former chapter had +been marked. In a third series obvious individual nerve lesions were +co-existent with those to the vessels. Beyond this a fourth nervous +element of unknown quantity, the effect of the form of injury on the +vaso-motor nerves accompanying the great vessels, must be taken into +consideration.</p> + +<p>I believe all these factors were of importance, since it appeared to me +that gangrene occurred more often than I should have expected. In one +case which I have heard of, gangrene followed a very slight injury to +the foot in a patient who had apparently made an excellent recovery +after ligature of the femoral artery.</p> + +<p>The nervous factor seems another element in favour of reasonable delay +in active interference with traumatic aneurisms of the above varieties +in the absence of threatening symptoms.</p> + +<p>It is worthy of remark that no case of gangrene due to aneurism came +under my notice, except subsequently to operation.</p> + +<p>Since the above chapter was written, my friend, Mr. J. E. Ker, has sent +me his experience in the treatment of four aneurisms, which is of such +interest that I insert it as an addendum.</p> + +<p><i>Arterial hæmatomata.</i>—(1) Popliteal, treated by local incision. Both +artery and vein completely divided. Ligature<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span> of the four ends. Cure. +(2) Traumatic aneurism of upper third of forearm. Treated by rest and +pressure by bandage. On the eighth day pulsation and bruit ceased +spontaneously, and the remains of the sac steadily consolidated until +the man's discharge on the twenty-sixth day.</p> + +<p><i>Arterio-venous aneurisms.</i>—(1) At junction of brachial and axillary +arteries. Proximal ligature. Cure. (2) Arterio-venous aneurism at the +bend of the elbow. Ligature of the brachial at the junction of the +middle and lower thirds of the arm. Cure.</p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_14_14" id="Footnote_14_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_14_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> The murmur is still present at the expiration of one year, +but no other change.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_15_15" id="Footnote_15_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_15_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Lieut.-Colonel Lewtas, I.M.S. See <i>Lancet</i>, 1900, vol. ii. +p. 1073.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_16_16" id="Footnote_16_16"></a><a href="#FNanchor_16_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> <i>Lancet</i>, 1900, vol. ii. p. 1074.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_17_17" id="Footnote_17_17"></a><a href="#FNanchor_17_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> Sir W. MacCormac, <i>Lancet</i>, vol. i. 1900, p. 876.</p></div> +</div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2> + +<h3>INJURIES TO THE BONES OF THE LIMBS</h3> + + +<p>Injuries to the bones of the limbs formed a very large proportion of the +accidents we were called upon to treat, and afforded as much interest as +any class, since they possessed many special features. I shall hope to +show, however, as in some of the other injuries, that these features +differed only in degree from those exhibited by injuries from the old +leaden bullets of larger calibre, although with few exceptions they were +of a distinctly more favourable character.</p> + +<p>It is of considerable interest to note that, taking the fractures as a +whole, there was a somewhat striking change in their nature during the +earlier and later portions of the campaign. In the earlier stages I +think there is no doubt that punctured fractures were proportionately +more common than in the later, when comminuted fractures were much more +often seen. There was, I believe, a source of error in this opinion, as +far as I myself was concerned, in that the first cases I saw were at +Capetown and had come from Natal. There is no doubt that the punctured +fractures were earlier fit to travel, and hence a larger number of them +found their way to the Base hospitals at a period when the comminuted +fractures were still in the Field or Stationary hospitals. I do not, +however, rely on the cases seen at Capetown alone for my opinion, as +while at the front I saw the same large proportion of clean punctures in +the early engagements of the Kimberley relief force.</p> + +<p>I am inclined to attribute the change to two reasons: first, I believe +that the use of regulation weapons was more universal in the earlier +part of the war, while later, as more men were engaged, the +Martini-Henry came more into evidence,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span> and the Boers took more freely +to the use of sporting rifles and ammunition. Another element also in +the less clean punctures of the short and cancellous bones was probably +the less accurate and hard shooting of the Mauser rifles as they became +worn; the bullets seemed to evidence this by the comparative shallowness +of their rifle grooves, which, I take it, would mean less velocity and +accuracy in flight. This would be of importance, since the clean +puncture of cancellous bone was no doubt favoured by a high rate of +velocity.</p> + +<p>The special features of the fractures caused by the small-calibre +bullets were: (1) The nature of the exit wound, which in a certain +proportion of the cases exhibited the so-called 'explosive' character. +(2) The presence, in a marked degree in the severe cases, of the +condition spoken of in Chapter III. as 'local shock.' (3) The striking +contrast of clean perforation and extreme comminution in different +cases. (4) The occasional occurrence of fractures of a very high degree +of longitudinal obliquity. (5) The rarity of any that could be termed +transverse fractures. (6) The general tendency of longitudinal fissuring +when it occurred to stop short of the articular extremities of the +bones.</p> + +<p>It will perhaps be most convenient to consider first the explanation of +the development of the so-called explosive apertures, and then to pass +on to a general consideration of the types of fracture commonly met +with, before proceeding to the description of the injuries to the +separate bones.</p> + +<p><i>Explosive wounds in connection with fractures.</i>—The aperture of entry +in these injuries presented little or no deviation from the normal, +unless it was due to the passage of ricochet bullets, when it might be +very irregular, but usually not of great size.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 333px;"> +<img src="images/fig47.jpg" width="333" height="450" alt="Fig. 47" title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 47</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>(21) 'Explosive' Exit Wound of Forearm over +margin of ulna. Note creased tongue of skin originally covering whole +wound. The entry wound was a small typical circular one</b></p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p> + +<p>The aperture of exit offered special features beyond simple increase in +size. First of all, as in the small type wounds, the actual extent of +destruction of the skin was small, this having been projected outwards +by the passing bullet and then either burst or torn by the bullet and +accompanying bony fragments. Fig. 47 well illustrates this feature. A +triangular tongue of skin was lifted by the passing bullet and probably +by the lower end of the upper fragment of the fractured ulna; through +the resulting opening a mass of soft tissues and bone fragments, bound +together by an infiltration of coagulated blood, was extruded, +separating the lateral lips of the aperture, while the original tongue +has shortened and retracted up to the top of the wound.</p> + +<p>The small extent of skin actually destroyed is an important element in +the rapid contraction often seen in these wounds when they progress +favourably. Thus the large wound portrayed in fig. 48 contracted to +one-fourth its original size ten days after the diagram and measurements +were made. The large mass of protruded tissue was often most striking +when a muscle such as the biceps in fig. 48 had been divided; but the +herniæ were more persistent when the mass projected in regions where +tendons formed a large integral constituent, as at the wrist or lower +third of the forearm. The protruding tissues naturally consisted of many +varieties, according to what lay in the track of any particular wound.</p> + +<p>It should be added that for 'explosive' features to reach their +strongest development, it is necessary that the bone affected should lie +near the surface of the body; hence the most characteristic explosive +wounds were met with in the forearm or leg, over the metacarpus or +metatarsus, or in the arm. In the thigh, on the other hand, where the +femur in a great part of its course not only lies deeply, but is also +protected by particularly strong and resistent skin and fascia, another +type of wound was met with. The explosive exit aperture, although large, +was still only moderate in extent, sometimes, as in the front of the +lower third, exposing a somewhat angular large track walled by the +divided quadriceps extensor cruris. In other cases, on introducing the +finger through a moderate exit opening on the inner aspect of the thigh, +a large cavity, sometimes 4 or 5 inches in diameter, was discovered, +full of clot and shreds of destroyed tissue and lined by a layer of +similar material. In either of these latter cases the fractured bone +ends were situated too deeply to take part in the actual laceration of +the skin, while the force transmitted to the bone fragments, although +sufficient to cause them to widely destroy the first soft tissues met +with, did not suffice to cause them to burst or lacerate the skin +widely.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 331px;"> +<img src="images/fig48.jpg" width="331" height="450" alt="Fig. 48." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 48.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>(22) 'Explosive' Exit Wound of front of Arm. +Wound actual size eight days after its infliction. The prominences in +the upper and lower parts correspond with the lacerated biceps. The dark +crater led down to the fracture. In another week the wound had +contracted to half the size. The entry aperture was a normal circular +one. The arm a year later was used in the patient's employment as a +hammer-man</b></p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p> + +<p>With regard to the theories of the production of these phenomena, that +of the transmission of a part of the force of the bullet to the +comminuted fragments, which thus themselves acquire the characters of +secondary projectiles, seems quite adequate.<a name="FNanchor_18_18" id="FNanchor_18_18"></a><a href="#Footnote_18_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a> Examination of any of +the skiagrams in which considerable comminution has taken place, shows +that the fragments are carried forward and perforate the tissues distal +to the fracture.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig49.jpg" width="450" height="361" alt="Fig. 49." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 49.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>'Explosive' Wounds of Legs. Large irregular +entry (1 ×3/4 in.). First exit (2 in.) roughly circular. Second entry +wound, produced by bone fragments driven out of left leg, very large and +irregular (5 ×3½ in.). The measurements were taken eight days after +infliction of the wounds. The right limb was amputated later for +secondary hæmorrhage</b></p> + +<p>Fig. 49, although a poor delineation of the actual condition, shows well +the possible action of projected fragments, even after they have been +driven from the wound. In this case either a large or a ricochet bullet +entered on the outer aspect of the upper third of the left tibia; it +produced a severe comminuted fracture, the fragments from which,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span> +together with the deformed bullet, then struck and perforated the upper +third of the right tibia. A large irregular entry wound 5 inches in +transverse diameter was produced in the second limb together with a +comminuted fracture of the bone. The right limb had eventually to be +amputated for secondary hæmorrhage, but I am unacquainted with the later +history of the patient.</p> + +<p>The mode of displacement of the lateral fragments when a wide shaft such +as that of the femur is struck, throws some light on that of the +displacement of soft tissues such as the component parts of a perforated +nerve or artery. The bullet, passing through, expends the chief part of +its energy in driving before it the fragments produced in its direct +course, while a minor part of the energy is expended on displacing the +lateral fragments, which are pushed to either side without becoming +separated from their periosteal attachment. The appearance, in fact, +somewhat suggests what might be expected were a small charge of dynamite +introduced into the centre of a small tunnel made across the shaft of +the bone. Examination of some of the skiagrams also illustrates another +point of interest, viz. that a certain degree of recoil on the part of +the bone results from the blow, since in many of them portions of the +mantle of the bullet and bone fragments are seen in that portion of the +track proximal to the fractured bone.</p> + +<p>The importance of 'setting up' of the bullet is at once evident in +relation to the production of wounds of an explosive type in connection +with fractures of the bones. There can be no doubt that a considerable +number of the most severe injuries we saw were produced by the various +soft-nosed or expanding forms of bullet, also that others of an equally +serious nature were produced by Martini-Henry or large leaden sporting +bullets. Allowing for this, however, I think a considerable proportion +were the result of deformation from bony impact, or ricochet deformities +external to the body acquired by regulation Mauser bullets, and I think +these bullets can be quite as formidable as any of the sporting +varieties met with. The soft-nose varieties of small calibre may not set +up enough to cause severe injury, while the large leaden bullets often +flatten out so completely as to lose all penetrating power. As<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span> far as +my impressions went, the small soft-nosed bullets needed to be +travelling at a very considerable rate of velocity to be dangerous. In +the form of soft-nose Mauser employed, the soft-nose was too short to +allow of as successful a mushrooming of the bullet as often occurred +with the regulation projectile, because, as already explained, the +mantle acquires increased stability from its closed base.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Fractures of the Shafts of the Long Bones</span></h3> + +<p><i>Types of fracture.</i>—The common types of fracture of shafts of the long +bones are illustrated diagrammatically in fig. 50. Of the whole series +comminuted fractures were by far the most frequently met with, while the +various wedge-shaped forms were the most strongly characteristic of the +special form of injury in which we are interested.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig50.jpg" width="450" height="254" alt="Fig. 50." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 50.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Five Types of Fracture: A. Primary lines of +stellate fracture; wedges driven out laterally and pointed extremities +left to main fragments. B. Development of same lines by a bullet +travelling at a low degree of velocity; suppression of two left-hand +limbs and substitution of a transverse line of fracture; a spurious form +of perforation. See plate XXIII. C. Typical complete wedge. See plate +VII. D. Incomplete wedge; impact of bullet, lateral or oblique, and two +left-hand lines seen in A are suppressed. E. Oblique single line, one +right and one left hand line seen in A, suppressed. The influence of +leverage from weight of the body probably acts here. Compare plates XVI. +and XXI.</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 354px;"> +<img src="images/plate3.jpg" width="354" height="600" alt="PLATE III." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_III" id="PLATE_III">PLATE III.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>23</b>) <span class="smcap">Spurious Perforation of Clavicle</span></p> + +<p>Range unknown, probably either mean or long.</p> + +<p>The bullet entered from the front, grooved the under surface of the +acromial end of the clavicle with increasing depth, and eventually +perforated the posterior margin of the bone, raising the compact tissue +in an angular manner.</p> + +<p>The commencement of an incomplete groove extending from the anterior +margin is seen, resembling the groove of the humerus, fig. 58.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>1. <i>Stellate comminuted fractures.</i>—<span class="smcap">a</span> shows the primary nature of the +lesion in all comminuted fractures of compact bone, consisting in the +production of a number of radiating fissures, which assume a stellate +form of which the point of impact corresponds to the centre. <span class="smcap">b</span> shows an +incomplete development of this form, the fragments being simply +displaced laterally with slight loss of substance, so as to simulate a +real punctured fracture. An illustration of this fracture produced by a +bullet travelling at a low degree of velocity is seen in plate XXIII., +which also shows the unaltered bullet lying in close proximity to the +injured fibula.</p> + +<p>The degree of comminution in these fractures depends first on the range +of fire and consequent striking force retained by the bullet, a high +degree of velocity producing extreme comminution of compact bone. The +severity of the latter again may be influenced by the measure of +resistance dependent on the density and brittleness of any individual +bone, or on the possession of the same characters as a special property +by the tissues of the man struck. Thus plate IV. shows a fracture of the +humerus produced by a bullet shot from a short range, and the fragments +are comparatively large and of even dimensions, while plate XIV. shows +extreme comminution of the portion of the femur exposed to direct +impact, with elongated large fragments at the sides of the track. Plate +XIX. shows less extreme comminution and less separation of the +fragments, and was probably produced by a bullet from a longer range of +fire.</p> + +<p>The separation of elongated lateral fragments is a special feature, and +best marked when the portion of bone struck is considerably wider than +the bullet, as in the case of the shaft of the femur. These fragments +correspond in the method of their production to those seen in the wedge +fractures described below, while their separation leaves a pointed +extremity to either segment of the shaft. This fracture in its purest +type is, I believe, spoken of as the 'butterfly fracture.'</p> + +<p>With regard to the spread of the fissures in the long axis of the bone +into neighbouring articulations I think fractures produced by bullets of +small calibre differ considerably from those produced by larger +projectiles, in that their general tendency is not to extend beyond the +commencement of the cancellous bone forming the joint end. This is +perhaps capable of explanation on several grounds: first, the smaller +area of impact results in the assumption of a strongly marked stellate +figure, the radiating fissures of which rapidly reach the lateral limits +of the shaft, producing a solution of continuity in the bone which +interrupts the continuance of the action of the wedge represented by the +bullet. Secondly, the small size<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span> of the wedge itself is opposed to the +wide separation of the parts directly implicated, which is necessary for +the continued progress of the process of fissuring, and again the +rapidity of passage minimises the period during which the force is +exerted. It is in these points that I believe the chief differences +between the modern and old gunshot fractures find their explanation, +since with the larger bullets fractures extending from some distance +into the joints were a somewhat special feature. In addition it is +probable that the alteration in structure at the junction of the shafts +with the cancellous ends also tends to check the regular extension of +the fissures, as a similar limitation is illustrated even in some +fractures by Snider bullets. Fig. 51 of the lower end of the femur +illustrates a not uncommon lower limit to a comminuted injury in this +region.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 401px;"> +<img src="images/fig51.jpg" width="401" height="450" alt="Fig. 51." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 51.—Lower end of Femur. </span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>From Case needing +amputation. It shows the usual tendency of the fissures to stop short of +the articular ends of the long bones</b></p> + +<p>The degree and nature of the comminution also vary with the directness +of impact on the part of the bullet. The more nearly this approaches at +a right angle, the more severe is the local comminution, but probably a +lesser area of the shaft is implicated. Plate V. shows an example of +this: all trace of continuity is lost, a wide gap separates the bone +ends, while the fragments themselves have been for the most part driven +altogether out of the wound. Oblique impact, on the other hand, may +widen the comminuted area at the point of impact, while, if the bullet +retains sufficient force and regularity of outline, it may then travel +'cutting its way' through the remainder of the bone in an oblique +direction. It will be of course recognised that the exact impact of the +bullet depends not alone on the direction of the projectile, but also<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span> +on the nature of the slope offered by the surface of bone struck.</p> + +<p>2. <i>Wedge fractures.</i>—This form (<span class="smcap">c</span> and <span class="smcap">d</span>, fig. 50) is equally +characteristic of gunshot injury with pure perforation; it is met with +in two varieties. <span class="smcap">c</span> illustrates the more strongly marked type; in it the +bullet makes passing lateral impact with the shaft, and from the point +struck radiating fissures extend to the opposite margin, so that a +wedge-shaped piece of bone often secondarily comminuted is separated +from the remainder of the shaft; see plate X. of the radius.</p> + +<p>The second variety, <span class="smcap">d</span>, is an incomplete development of the stellate +fracture in which the fissures pass to one margin of the bone only. The +explanation of this variation is probably to be sought in the direction +of impact on the part of the bullet, since the main fissure is often +accompanied by secondary lines which run a somewhat parallel course to +the main one, and suggest the dispersion of the force in the form of +concentric waves. Such fractures were most strongly marked in the tibia, +the breadth of the surfaces of this bone presenting especially +favourable conditions for their production.</p> + +<p>3. <i>Notched fractures.</i>—These may be a slight degree of the form of +wedge fracture last described; such a one is depicted in plate XXII. +where a portion of the spine of the tibia has been carried away by a +passing bullet. Other notched fractures approximate themselves more +nearly to perforations, the notch being a groove secondary to the +opening up of such a track as is shown in the illustration of a +perforation of the lower third of the shaft of the tibia (fig. 57 on p. +219). Notching or grooving is naturally much more common in the +cancellous portions of bones.</p> + +<p>4. <i>Oblique fractures.</i>—These also occur in two varieties: the first +has been already alluded to; in it the bullet actually cuts an oblique +track in the bone; the main line of fracture is often considerably +comminuted, usually at the proximal end of the track (see plates XV. and +XIX.).</p> + +<p>The second variety (<span class="smcap">e</span>, fig. 50) is less common; in it two of the main +limbs of the simple stellate figure are suppressed, while the remaining +two form a continuous line from one margin of the shaft to the other, +the point of impact lying<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span> approximately in the centre of the line of +fracture. Such a fracture is illustrated by the skiagram of a femur in +plate XVI. in which the bullet traversed the soft parts transversely at +the level of the centre of the fracture, which was 9 inches in length. +In another case the line of fracture occupied the lower third of the +femur, passing from the inner border of the shaft, the lower end of the +upper fragment was formed by the compact tissue forming the outer wall +of the external condyle. This latter perforated the vastus externus and +lay beneath the skin; as it could not be disentangled, an incision was +made over it, and the fragments when reduced were screwed together by +Mr. S. W. F. Richardson. In neither fracture was there any comminution. +Such fractures most nearly resemble the oblique or spiral ones met with +in civil practice as the results of falls. In all the instances I +observed the patients were supported on the lower extremities at the +time of the accident, and one can only assume that a twist of the trunk +consequent on the fall of the body diverts the most forcible vibrations +resulting from the impact of the bullet into one line, and thus produces +a solution of continuity of a simple oblique nature. In both the cases +mentioned above the bullet was probably travelling at a low degree of +velocity; in the first it was a ricochet and was retained. I never saw +one of these fractures in the upper extremity.</p> + +<p>Plate XXI. affords an excellent example of this mechanism. The patient +was standing when struck, and then fell backwards. An incomplete fissure +7 inches in length is seen to extend from an otherwise pure perforation +of the shaft of the tibia.</p> + +<p>5. <i>Transverse fractures.</i>—Throughout these were of very rare +occurrence. Plate XX. illustrates a pure transverse fracture produced by +passing contact of a bullet probably fired at a distance not exceeding +400 yards, and which subsequently struck the fibula plumb and produced +considerable comminution. No fissure extended into the ankle-joint. +Comminutions such as that illustrated by plate V. more or less simulated +transverse fractures, but I saw no examples of transverse tracks +comparable to the oblique ones described above 'cut through' the shaft +of a bone.</p> + +<p>6. <i>Perforations.</i>—Although these were common in cancellous bone, they +were comparatively rare in the compact<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> shafts. I saw, however, complete +pure perforations of the shafts of the tibia, femur, clavicle, and other +bones. These perforations were, I believe, always the result of low +degrees of velocity, and they took the place of simple transverse +fractures of the 'cut' variety. The apertures of entry and exit in the +bones resembled in character those seen in the soft parts, or in the +bones of the skull in low-velocity injuries (see figs. 71 and 72, p. +261). The entry was more or less cleanly cut, while at the exit a plate +of bone was raised, and either separated or turned back on a hinge by +the bullet (fig. 52), (plate XVII.) Such a projecting hinged fragment +was sometimes a source of some trouble; thus in a case of +postero-anterior perforation of the lower third of the shaft of the +femur, the long exit fragment projected into the substance of the +quadriceps extensor muscle, and interfered with flexion of the +knee-joint. Fig. 57 of a superficial tunnel of the lower third of the +tibia is especially interesting as bringing such injuries of the long +bones into line with fractures of the flat bones of the skull, such as +are illustrated in fig. 68, p. 259.</p> + +<p>Plate XXI. affords an excellent example of perforation of the shaft of +the tibia, although complicated by the secondary fissure.</p> + +<p>Plates XXIII., VIII., and III., of the fibula, humerus, and clavicle, +exhibit examples of what may be called spurious perforations of the +shafts of bones, since comminution or loss of continuity accompanies all +three.</p> + +<p>Subsequently to writing the above paragraphs, I took the opportunity of +re-examining the magnificent series of gunshot fractures collected +during the Franco-German campaign by Sir William MacCormac, and +afterwards presented by him to the museum of St. Thomas's Hospital.</p> + +<p>The close approximation in type between the main features in these and +those in the fractures produced by the modern bullet is very striking. +In the case of the shafts of the long bones, the same stellate, oblique, +wedge-shaped, and even perforating injuries are illustrated on a coarser +scale. In a specimen of a patella, a perforation of the lower half, +implicating also the tendon of the quadriceps muscle is, though large, +almost as pure as a Mauser perforation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p> + +<p>The difference in the nature of the lesions of the bones is seen to be, +firstly, one of pure magnitude, corresponding to the size of the large +Snider bullet by which they were produced. Thus the fragments generally +are larger, and occupy a wider area of the shafts, the first character +depending on the lesser degree of velocity of the bullet, the latter on +its volume and weight. Fine comminution, however, the most striking +feature of the modern injury, is throughout absent.</p> + +<p>The effect of the larger size of the wedge provided by the bullet in +increasing the length of secondary longitudinal fissures is well marked, +and for the same reason the perforations are usually accompanied by +fissures of considerable extent. It is interesting to note, however, +that even in the case of the large bullets, and the special tendency +shown by them to cause the extension of fissures into the joints, one or +two specimens still show that these fissures incline to stop short when +the point of junction between the portion of the shaft occupied by the +medullary canal and that built on a foundation of cancellous tissue is +reached.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Lesions of the Short and Flat Bones</span></h3> + +<p>The above types of fracture are those common to the shafts of the long +bones, but the difference in structure of the articular ends and the +short and flat bones endows lesions of these with somewhat different +characters, the nature of which varies between grooving, perforation, +and great comminution.</p> + +<p>The most typical injury consists in the production of a clean +perforation of the cancellous bone; this was common both in the +articular ends and in the short bones. The tunnel differed little in +character from those already described, a tendency always existing to +the lifting of a lid of compact tissue at the exit end of the track.</p> + +<p>For the production of the cleanest forms of injury I believe high rates +of velocity were distinctly favourable, although I am unable to maintain +this statement by proof in the case of injuries received at the shortest +ranges of fire. When the velocity was lower, yet with force still +sufficient to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> produce a perforating injury, the separation of an +extensive scale of bone at the exit aperture was a marked feature not +seen in perforations produced by higher degrees of velocity. Fig. 52, of +a perforation of the lower end of the femur, well exhibits this feature; +but it must be borne in mind in this case that the illustration is not a +pure one, both shaft and epiphysis taking part in the walls of the +track, and the exit opening is in the former, where a thicker layer of +compact bone exists than would cover any epiphysis, and hence the +fragment is larger. I use the example, however, because it so forcibly +illustrates the effect of increased resistance on the part of the bone +struck in widening the area of the lesion. When the track was entirely +limited to the articular ends the small amount of damage at either +aperture was shown by clinical evidence in the rarity of subsequent +limitation of joint movements due to bony deformity.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 382px;"> +<img src="images/fig52.jpg" width="382" height="450" alt="Fig. 52." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 52.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Oblique perforation, implicating both epiphysis +and diaphysis. Large fragment detached at exit aperture. Caused by a +bullet travelling at a low rate of velocity. Compare with figs. 71 and +72 of a skull fracture. The dotted lines indicate the course of the +track</b></p> + +<p>Again, it was rare for fissuring to extend from these tunnels to the +articular surfaces; thus many instances could be given of perforation of +the head of the humerus, the olecranon, or the femoral condyles, in +which no evidence of joint fissure was discoverable. The slight amount +of resistance offered by the cancellous ends was also clinically +illustrated by the absence of severe synovial effusions when they were +struck. When the joint cavity was not crossed, slight effusion only +resulted, while in the case of fractures of the femoral shaft great +effusion into the knee-joint, resulting from the forcible vibration +transmitted to the limb, was a common feature, even when the point +fractured was situated<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span> above the centre of the bone. Again, when the +joint cavity was crossed a moderate degree only of hæmarthrosis was the +most common result.</p> + +<p>With regard to the implication of joints, either primary or secondary, +in connection with fractures of the articular ends, I am inclined to +place the lesions of the upper end of the tibia in a more important +position than those of any other bone. Evidence of this implication was +in my experience more frequent here than in any other situation. This +may in part be attributable to the complexity of structure of this +epiphysis, and perhaps more correctly to the influence of its irregular +outline in favouring lateral forms of impact on the part of the bullet +and consequent increase in the area of damage.</p> + +<p>Next to tunnelling, grooving was the most common form of injury to the +short bones. In the case of superficial tracks the compact tissue might +be considerably comminuted, but not, as a rule, over a width greatly +exceeding the calibre of the bullet.</p> + +<p>Comminution and crushing of a single or several bones were rare in +proportion to the occurrence of similar injuries produced by +Martini-Henry or large leaden bullets. When the condition was produced +by bullets of small calibre, I believe it was in the majority of cases +the result of irregular impact on the part of the projectile. In support +of this view it may be added that such injuries were most common in the +bones of the tarsus, bones especially liable to be struck by ricochet +bullets.</p> + +<p>It was generally believed that bullets travelling at a very high degree +of velocity were liable to cause severe comminution of the short bones, +but I never saw any cases supporting this opinion; in point of fact, all +the short-range lesions of this nature that I saw were of the clean +perforating variety. I believe that this is capable of satisfactory +explanation on the ground of the thin character of the layer of compact +tissue which for the most part ensheaths the short bones; this decreases +the resistance offered to the bullet and so tends to localise the +lesion. This statement may be supported by two observations with regard +to the long and flat bones. First, if the shaft of a long bone be hit +above the junction of diaphysis and epiphysis, the cancellous tissue in +and extending from the medullary<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span> cavity is pulverised, and examination +of fragments from such fractures gives the impression of the inner +aspect having been scraped clean. Secondly, I saw one fracture of the +ilium produced by a bullet taking a course between its compact layers +for 3 inches from the notch between the anterior superior and anterior +inferior spines; the bone to the extent of 2½ square inches was +pulverised, the cancellous tissue blown away as dust, and the compact +tissue only represented by scales still adhering by their periosteum to +the muscles attached to the two surfaces of the bone. This injury was +produced from a rifle fired at five yards distance, and was an extreme +example; but, on the other hand, it illustrates only what we are +thoroughly well acquainted with in the case of flat bones, such as those +of the cranium, where the compact element is abundant in comparison with +the cancellous, and the resistance offered to the bullet is consequently +great.</p> + +<p>Some remarks on transverse fractures of the patella will be found under +the heading devoted to that bone.</p> + +<p>Lesions of the flat bones are considered at some length in Chapter VII., +which deals with injuries to the head, and their special features are +there described; some further remarks on these injuries will be found +under the headings of the individual bones.</p> + +<p><i>Special characters of the symptoms observed, and of the course of +healing of the fractures.</i>—Peculiarities in the initial signs may be +rapidly passed over. The first depended on the large number of lesions +of the bone which were unaccompanied by loss of continuity. In the case +of perforations attention to the course of the track, external +palpation, and possibly the detection of bone dust in the aperture of +exit, were usually sufficient to indicate injury to the bones. When +these did not suffice the introduction of a probe would usually set the +question at rest; but this is always to be avoided if possible, as +adding a fresh item of risk to the wound. The X rays were not always to +hand, and are not always capable of giving reliable information in the +matter of perforations, although very useful in detecting grooves or +notching. The latter injuries are those in which information<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span> as to the +condition of the bones is often of most interest in view of the +characters of the external wounds.</p> + +<p>Fractures with solution of continuity were, as a rule, easy of +detection, but the relative prominence of the classical signs varied +somewhat from what we are accustomed to see in civil practice.</p> + +<p>The first striking peculiarity noted in comminuted fractures of the long +bones was the degree of local shock; the limbs were often quite +powerless, the muscles flaccid, and common sensation lowered. This was +of importance in two ways; firstly, shortening of the limb was often +absent as a sign, and, secondly, pain was sometimes not at all +pronounced even when the patient was moved. The primary absence of +shortening, even persisting for the first two or three days, was a +phenomenon always important to bear in mind, as it affected the degree +of extension needed in the treatment of the fracture, which, if +sufficient at the moment, often proved quite inadequate with the return +of tone in the muscles. Secondly, abnormal mobility was usually strongly +marked, and this sometimes without very definite crepitus, as a result +of the fine nature of the comminution and the displacement of the small +fragments.</p> + +<p>During the course of healing some other peculiarities are worthy of +mention. First of all, union was tardy and often not strong. On the +other hand, an abundance of provisional callus was common, which formed +large swellings apt to implicate neighbouring nerves, and sometimes to +interfere with the movements of joints. The slowness of healing was +particularly noticeable in those cases where the degree of local shock +had been marked, and was probably to some extent dependent on +disturbance of the general nutrition of the tissues of the affected +limb. Beyond this, however, it was in many cases a direct result of the +degree of comminution and displacement of the fragments, which +necessitated the formation of a large amount of provisional callus, and +time for the proper consolidation and contraction of the same. In many +cases a large ball-like mass of callus surrounding the fragments was +developed, into which the actual ends of the broken bone only dipped, +and hence union was weak and insecure. As to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span> those cases in which the +wounds closed by primary union, we must bear in mind in this relation +the tardy union often observed in civil practice, when the irritation of +suppuration and consequent inflammation are absent.</p> + +<p>Another peculiarity of a similar nature was the occasional late necrosis +of fragments; the wounds apparently healed well, only to break down +weeks or months later for the discharge of a sequestrum. Such cases were +quite distinct from those in which primary suppuration had occurred. I +saw one or two instances in fractures of the humerus, the trouble +arising with commencing use of the limb, and I suppose that fragments +which suffered death at the time of the injury had been enclosed, and +only caused irritation as foreign bodies when the muscles again came +into action. In the absence both of evident necrosis and suppuration, +however, in some cases the exit portion of the track in the soft parts +was extremely slow in healing. Although no discharge beyond a small +quantity of blood-tinged serum escaped, the wounds remained open for +many weeks, even when the fracture consolidated well. I ascribed this to +slow separation of aseptic sloughs, a point which has already been +mentioned under the heading of wounds in general.</p> + +<p>Superabundance of callus, as far as I had an opportunity of judging, +comparatively seldom gave rise to permanent mechanical trouble. This was +no doubt due to the infrequency of extension of the comminuted fractures +beyond the junction of diaphysis and epiphysis.</p> + +<p>Lastly, with regard to suppuration, only a small proportion of the +fractures, accompanied by the presence of large wounds, escaped +infection. When infection did occur, the results offered some special +features dependent on the small relative amount of damage to the soft +tissues, compared with that suffered by the bone. In an ordinary +compound fracture, such as we meet with in civil practice, whether the +result of direct or indirect violence, a considerable amount of +contusion or laceration, as the case may be, accompanies the injury to +the bone. The result of this is a widespread effusion of blood into the +limb, which tears and strips up the various layers of soft parts, and +opens up the way to the spread of infection, often into the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span> whole +length of the segment of the limb affected. In fractures produced by +bullets of small calibre, even when the exit portion of the track is +large, the injury to the soft parts is far more localised, except in +extreme cases, while the bone itself is the tissue which has suffered +the most severe violence and contusion. When infection occurred, its +spread corresponded with this anatomical feature of the lesion, and the +bone itself and its immediate neighbourhood suffered the most severely.</p> + +<p>At the present day one is naturally not very familiar with a large +series of suppurating compound fractures, but during my whole experience +I have never seen so many cases of what might be regarded as fairly pure +instances of acute osteo-myelitis. The symptoms corresponded with the +main seat of the suppuration; only moderate swelling of the limbs +occurred, this mainly consisting in soft superficial œdema; often +there was no redness, and fluctuation was difficult to determine. At the +same time symptoms of constitutional infection, such as continued fever, +rapid pulse, restlessness, loss of strength, progressive anæmia, and +emaciation, were marked. Pyæmia, as evidenced by secondary deposits, +was, however, rare; I only saw two cases, both in fractures of the +femur; in both recovery followed secondary amputation.</p> + +<p><i>Prognosis.</i>—This depended almost entirely on the nature of the injury +to the soft parts; given moderate injury to these, and the preservation +of the wound from infection, scarcely any degree of injury of the bones +precluded recovery, even if this were slow and prolonged. The existence +of perforations scarcely increased to an important extent the gravity of +a wound of the soft parts alone; in fact, this injury could not be +regarded as more severe than an ordinary surgical osteotomy, putting the +risks of infection of the wound under the special circumstances on one +side.</p> + +<p>With regard to the functional results, these depended on the degree of +comminution; when this was extreme, union was slow and for a time weak, +and shortening was often considerable, but a fair result was as a rule +obtained.</p> + +<p>Suppuration and osteo-myelitis were the dangerous features when they +occurred; still, even in the presence of these, I never saw a fatal +result in an upper extremity fracture, although<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span> in the lower extremity +a considerable mortality followed fractures both of the leg and thigh, +the deaths being most commonly from septicæmia, or from a combination of +this with secondary hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p><i>Treatment.</i>—The general treatment was of a simple character. The +perforations may be at once dismissed, since nothing more was needed +than what has been already described under the heading of wounds of the +soft parts. Again, with regard to the co-existence of vascular injury, +or injury to the soft parts generally, the ordinary rules guiding us in +civil practice were followed.</p> + +<p>The first point of importance, and needing consideration in the +treatment of severely comminuted fractures, was as to whether in these +it was better simply to try to obtain union of the wound with as little +disturbance as possible, or to anæsthetise the patient and explore the +wound, removing such fragments as were free or widely displaced. I think +the answer to this question depends entirely on the nature of the +external wounds. If these be of the small type forms, or if the exit +aperture is, at any rate, of only moderate size, a strictly conservative +attitude is the better when the risk of making an exploration under the +circumstances is borne in mind, the more so as an exploration, to be +safe and useful, ought to be done at once. If the exit wound is of the +large or explosive type, on the other hand, there is no doubt that the +best results are to be obtained by early exploration and the removal of +all loose fragments. I saw several excellent results obtained in this +way, even when the patients had to undergo the risk of transport +shortly, in some cases the very next day, after the operation. The loose +fragments are an immediate source of danger, and later may interfere +with the healing of the fracture, even if suppuration does not occur. In +all the cases that I saw the exit wound was dressed, but left freely +open, and I do not think any attempt to close it should ever be made.</p> + +<p>The question of operative fixation rarely needs consideration; it +occasionally happens, however, that oblique fractures, such as one +mentioned on p. 166, are met with, in which screwing or wiring of the +bone ends is advisable. What<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span> has been said above as to fractures, +accompanied by loss of continuity, applies equally to cases of severe +wedge-fracture, where many loose fragments exist.</p> + +<p>As to the disinfection of the limb, primary cleansing, mainly by soap +and water, of course precedes the exploration, and when the latter has +been carried out a second cleansing and disinfection, preferably with +spirit and carbolic acid lotion, are imperative.</p> + +<p>Immobilisation is a more difficult problem. In practised hands +plaster-of-Paris splints answer most requirements except in the case of +the thigh; but the splints take time to apply and also to set firmly, +and, as sometimes needing frequent removal, are not altogether suitable +for Field hospital work. Of all the splints I saw in use, I think the +best were wire splints, and the Dutch cane folding splints for the thigh +and leg (figs. 56, 58); wire-gauze splints with steel at the margins +(fig. 54), or strips of ordinary cardboard applied with some variety of +adhesive bandage for the arm and forearm; and plain wooden of various +lengths for any situation.</p> + +<p>A question of constant difficulty was that of frequency of dressing; in +a Stationary or Base hospital this is not difficult, as the same surgeon +has the patient continuously under his charge, and can readily decide as +to the proper moment for the renewal of the dressing. When the patient +is, however, being moved from the Field to the Stationary hospital, and +thence to the Base, a constant succession of surgeons has the case in +hand for short periods, the movements during transport disturb the +fixity of the dressing, and, in consequence, dressings are apt to be far +more frequent than is advisable. This question raises the larger one of +the advisability of <i>any</i> transport beyond what may be an actual +necessity. There is only one answer to this. No fractures of the thigh +or leg, and few of the arm, can be transported for any distance without +material disadvantage. The risks attendant on disturbance of the +fracture and tissue injury, septic infection as a result of slipping of +the dressing and the impracticability of efficiently renewing it, far +more than counterbalance any advantage to be gained from the superior +comforts available at a Base hospital. For these reasons, if possible,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span> +all fractures of the arm, thigh, or leg should be kept at a Stationary +hospital for a period of three or more weeks, and, as far as splints and +appliances are concerned, these should be as numerous and complete as at +a Base hospital. I have had a useful set made of aluminium. A word will +be added later as to the splints suitable for different regions of the +body.</p> + +<p>The necessity for <i>primary amputation</i> chiefly depends on the nature of +the injury to the soft parts, less commonly on the extent of the injury +to the bones, and should be decided on exactly the same lines as in +civil practice. So-called intermediate amputations are always to be +avoided if possible; the results were consistently bad, and the +operation should only be undertaken in cases of severe sepsis where +little can be hoped from it, or for secondary hæmorrhage. When the +operation could be tided over until the septic process had settled down +and localised itself, secondary amputation gave very fair results. In +either intermediate or secondary amputation for suppurating fractures, +it was necessary to bear in mind the special likelihood of the existence +of extensive osteo-myelitis. If this condition affected the upper +fragment, an amputation was of little use unless the whole bone was +removed, as septic infection continued and brought about a fatal issue, +or a fresh amputation was required in order to obtain a stump that would +heal.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Special Fractures</span></h3> + +<p><i>Upper Extremity.</i>—Fractures of the <i>scapula</i> were not uncommon, but +were mostly of the perforative variety; thus perforations both of the +spine in longitudinal wounds of the back, and of the ala in perforating +wounds of the thorax, were tolerably frequent. They possessed little +practical interest; as a rule, the openings were not large, and the most +unexpected feature was the small interference with the movements of the +bone on the chest wall that resulted. It might be assumed that +comminuted fragments would project into the muscles and cause both pain +and interference with movement; but neither was the case. I saw grooving +of the crest of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span> spine, but never happened to meet with a fracture +of the acromion process. Many axillary tracks passed in the closest +proximity to the coracoid, but this again I never saw separated. One +practical point of importance with regard to the scapula was the +frequency with which bullets lodged in the venter, or the firmly +bound-down muscles of the supra- and infra-spinous fossæ. These retained +bullets often gave rise to remarkably little trouble in this situation; +thus I have a skiagram of a shrapnel bullet lying in the deepest part of +the subscapular fossa, which did not inconvenience its possessor.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 387px;"> +<img src="images/fig53.jpg" width="387" height="450" alt="Fig. 53." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 53.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Head of Humerus, showing broken perforation. The +roof forms a hinged covering to a groove</b></p> + +<p>Every variety of <i>fracture of the clavicle</i> was met with, even +perforation of the most compact portion of the shaft; comminuted, wedge, +or notched fractures were, however, the more common, and were +accompanied by the development of very large masses of provisional +callus during the process of healing. An interesting skiagram is +reproduced in plate III., which shows a compound form of injury to the +clavicle. The bullet has passed obliquely beneath the acromial end, +rising to perforate the posterior compact margin, and producing one of +the diamond-shaped openings sometimes occurring in compact bone with the +passage of bullets at a low rate of velocity. No case of perforation of +the subclavian vein by comminuted fragments of the clavicle came under +my notice.</p> + +<p><i>Fractures of the humerus</i> of every variety were common, and I think +when the statistics of the campaign are published, it will be shown that +the humerus was the most frequently injured individual bone in the whole +body. I remember to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span> have seen thirteen fractures of the shaft of the +humerus in one pavilion alone at Wynberg after the battle of Paardeberg.</p> + +<p>Perforations of the upper articular extremity were common, and as a rule +gave rise to wonderfully little trouble in the shoulder-joint. The outer +aspect of the head of the humerus is a common situation for the +production of a special form of broken canal or groove (fig. 53). The +slope from the greater tuberosity to the shaft naturally favours the +production of the injury in this position.</p> + +<p>I saw only one case in which a vertical fissure extended from a fracture +of the shaft into the shoulder-joint; in this case the transverse +solution of continuity was at the upper part of the middle third of the +bone. Skiagram, plate IV., illustrates a well-marked stellate +comminution of the shaft with large fragments. Plate V. shows extreme +comminution with fragments blown out of the wound. Two plates, Nos. VI. +and VIII., illustrate well the difference resulting from the oblique +passage of a bullet at high and low rates of velocity respectively. In +both cases good results were obtained; in the more severe the resultant +mass of ensheathing callus was very large, temporarily interfered with +flexion of the elbow-joint, and consolidation was very slow (see plate +VII.). The patient was wounded at Belmont in November 1899, but he was +able to row at the end of the summer of 1900, although very prolonged +suppuration occurred, and the elbow movements became practically normal. +Plate IX. illustrates a transverse track, the bullet having undergone +considerable injury during its passage through the bone, as evidenced by +the presence of fragments both of mantle and lead in the limb. This +might be called an example of transverse fracture, and illustrates the +nearest approach to one seen when the bone is struck fairly plumb.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 369px;"> +<img src="images/plate4.jpg" width="369" height="600" alt="PLATE IV." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_IV" id="PLATE_IV">PLATE IV.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>24</b>) <span class="smcap">Comminuted Fracture of the Humerus</span></p> + +<p>Range about '300 yards.'</p> + +<p>The wound track took a directly antero-posterior course. Impact +rectangular. The musculo-spiral nerve was completely divided.</p> + +<p>The plate affords a good example of the so-called 'butterfly' fracture. +Two long doubly wedge-shaped lateral fragments, and pointed extremities +to both main fragments, are shown.</p> + +<p>The fracture healed well, with the deposition of a large mass of +provisional callus. The musculo-spiral nerve was united by suture some +three months later.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 180px;"> +<img src="images/fig53a.jpg" width="180" height="450" alt="Fig. 53 a." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 53 <i>a.</i>—Diagram of "butterfly' type</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p> + +<p>Plate VIII. exhibits an oblique fracture of the lower part of the shaft +produced by a bullet passing at a low rate of velocity. It does not +widely differ from a perforation, and the illustration possesses some +further interest as showing the deviation of a bullet likely to occur +when a bone lies in its course. Although the velocity with which this +bullet was travelling must have been very low, when the bone had been +traversed the deviation in its course was slight. A few bony fragments +from the compact tissue of the posterior surface of the humerus have +been carried into the distal portion of the track.</p> + +<p>Fractures of the various prominences of the lower articular extremity +were not uncommon, but deviated little from the types with which we are +familiar in civil practice; the after results were good, both as to +union and movement of the elbow.</p> + +<p>Explosive wounds of the soft parts were not infrequent in the arm, and +fig. 48, p. 158, exhibits an extreme example. The humerus in respect of +depth of covering, however, comes between the femur and the bones of the +leg and forearm; hence such injuries were not so easily produced as in +the latter segments of the limbs.</p> + +<p>In connection with the subject of fractures of this bone, one word must +be added as to the occurrence of the most characteristic of its +complications, musculo-spiral paralysis. This was frequent in every +position of the fracture, and came on either immediately, or, at a +subsequent period, as a result of callus irritation or pressure. Its +frequency is only what would be expected when the nature of the fracture +is considered, but the chief interest of the condition lay in the +difficulty of certainly detecting it in the initial stages of the cases; +this depended on the fact that in many of them the local shock to the +limb was so severe that the function of the whole of the muscles was +lowered, or in some cases, although the musculo-spiral was the nerve +chiefly affected, the other large trunks had also suffered concussion or +contusion. In consequence of this difficulty the actual localised +paralysis often only became evident at the end of a week, or even more, +when there was difficulty in deciding as to whether the paralysis was +primary or due to secondary trouble. In the fracture illustrated by +skiagram, plate IV., the nerve suffered complete division, and was +united some three months later, improvement in the symptoms being very +slow. The latter was a common experience, and although not unusual in +civil practice, I think it is more marked in these injuries as a result +of the more widespread character of the nerve lesion.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 508px;"> +<img src="images/plate5.jpg" width="508" height="600" alt="PLATE V." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_V" id="PLATE_V">PLATE V.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>25</b>) <span class="smcap">Comminuted Fracture of the Humerus</span></p> + +<p>Range '50 yards.' Velocity extreme.</p> + +<p>Impact somewhat oblique. The bullet entered anteriorly about 3 inches +above the elbow crease. The wound of exit was on the inner aspect of the +arm and explosive in character; it still measured 4 inches by 2 inches +three weeks after the injury was received.</p> + +<p>The wounds suppurated locally, but at the end of six weeks fair union of +the bone had taken place and the wound of exit had contracted to a +sinus. The musculo-spiral nerve was concussed, but not divided.</p> + +<p>The skiagram was taken three weeks after the reception of the injury.</p> + +<p>Comparison with plate IV. demonstrates the effect of high velocity in +free comminution of the bone, the sharper radiation of the stellate +lines of fracture, and the propulsion of bone fragments.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>The <i>bones of the forearm</i> were also often fractured. The principal +peculiarity of these fractures was the common localisation of the injury +to one bone, which is readily seen to be probable.</p> + +<p>Each bone offered some special features dependent on its structural +character and anatomical position. In the case of the <i>ulna</i>, pure +perforation of the olecranon process, without obvious evidence of +implication of the elbow, was seen on several occasions. The other +important feature with regard to this bone depends on its subcutaneous +position, which accounted for the frequency with which highly developed +explosive exit wounds were met with. One is figured in the general +section (fig. 47, p. 156). This, however, is a very slight instance +compared with what was often seen in the upper and middle thirds of the +bone, where the lateral soft parts often protruded as a much larger +tumour, the particular illustration being mainly designed to show the +nature of the injury to the skin. The <i>radius</i>, as more deeply placed in +the upper part of its course, was less often the seat of such +well-marked explosive injuries; but when the lower end was struck this +character was sometimes very striking: thus in a track passing +antero-posteriorly through this bone, the whole lower end appeared +shattered, all the tendons at the back of the wrist being implicated in +the protruding mass, while the bone itself seemed shortened, so that the +hand took up the position common in Colles's fracture. It was found +impossible to place the bone in good position; nevertheless the patient +retained his hand, which is still of use in writing.</p> + +<p>Plate X. is a good example of a high-velocity injury in which lateral +contact with the radius has produced local comminution, some slight +injury to the casing of the bullet, and the separation of a large wedge. +The case from which this was taken also illustrated well one of the +chief troubles of such fractures of the forearm; the degree of +splintering resulted in the formation of a large mass of callus, which +for a time rendered any degree of pronation and supination impossible.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 356px;"> +<img src="images/plate6.jpg" width="356" height="600" alt="PLATE VI." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_VI" id="PLATE_VI">PLATE VI.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>26</b>) <span class="smcap">Comminuted Fracture of the Humerus</span></p> + +<p>Range '250 yards.'</p> + +<p>Impact oblique. Wound of entry 1 inch below the insertion of the +deltoid; exit, on inner aspect of arm at a slightly lower level. The +bullet probably struck the bone laterally, and drove out the central +fragment.</p> + +<p>Prolonged suppuration resulted, but the humerus healed well, and good +movement of the elbow was preserved.</p> + +<p>The effect of oblique impact together with high velocity is well +illustrated. Had the resistance been greater, as in the case of the +femur, a nearer resemblance to the effect seen in plate XV. would have +been the result.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>Of <i>fractures of the hand</i> I have little to say. In the case of the +<i>carpus</i>, the slight degree of resistance offered by the bones rendered +injuries of an explosive character rare. I never saw one. Fractures of +the <i>metacarpus</i>, on the other hand, presented exactly the opposite +features. The density of these small bones was well illustrated by the +frequency with which the bullet suffered injury, even amounting to +fragmentation, and the great comminution they themselves suffered. The +breaking up of the bullet in these fractures was a curious feature, +which may perhaps be explained by the tendency of the distal part of the +limb to be driven in the course of the bullet, with the result of +somewhat lengthening the period of contact of the projectile, or more +probably by somewhat frequently occurring irregular impact. Plate XI. is +a good example of an injury of this nature of moderate severity. The +soft parts suffered much in these injuries, the tendons were torn and +lacerated at the moment, and were very apt to acquire more or less +permanent adhesion. This latter condition was sometimes to be improved +by the removal of bone fragments, and I have freed tendons from actual +clefts in the bones where they had been carried in by the bullet. In +some cases very great deformity of the digits, due to shortening, +developed, even when no fragments were removed beyond those blown away +by the bullet.</p> + +<p>One form of injury of some interest was multiple fracture of the +phalanges produced by a bullet travelling in a course parallel to the +length of the rifle when pointed by the patient. Occasionally several +digits were lost.</p> + +<p><i>Treatment of fractures of the upper extremity.</i>—The general lines of +this have already been foreshadowed in the general section, the remarks +as to transport being applicable to all serious fractures of the shaft +of the humerus, and this is the only one of the bones of the upper +extremity on which anything special need be said, as the treatment of +all the other fractures exactly coincides with that of ordinary civil +practice.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 358px;"> +<img src="images/plate7.jpg" width="358" height="600" alt="PLATE VII." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_VII" id="PLATE_VII">PLATE VII.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>26</b><i>a</i>) <span class="smcap">Condition of the same Fracture shown in Plate VI., a year after +its production</span></p> + +<p>The ensheathing callus is still very abundant, but less so than at an +earlier date. No trouble with the musculo-spiral nerve was noted, but +residual abscesses occurred from time to time in connection with the +fracture.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 205px;"> +<img src="images/fig54.jpg" width="205" height="450" alt="Fig. 54." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 54.—German Wire Gauze Splint on steel wire +foundation.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>(German Ambulance, Heilbron)</b></p> + +<p>The treatment of wounds should be on the lines already laid down: +thorough cleansing, and then an attempt to seal. In severely comminuted +fractures, however, the exit wound may be of very large size, and then +frequent dressings are necessary. Loose fragments, by which those freed +from their periosteal connections are meant, need removal. The question +which most interested me was the best method of fixation. This needs to +be sufficient to effect immobility, but on the other hand in many cases +the weight of the arm as a means of extension is very valuable. Some of +the most successfully treated cases that I saw were fixed by means of +simple strips of pasteboard, applied moist, and fixed with an adhesive +bandage. Ordinary book-muslin bandages are as good as anything for this +purpose, as they can be reinforced by a stronger form outside them. +Where necessary, an angular piece of cardboard can be applied on the +inner aspect, or a wooden angular splint may be substituted, if it is at +hand; but in this case most of the advantage of the weight of the arm as +a means of extension is lost. The cardboard cases possess the great +advantage of being readily cut off and reapplied much as is done with +plaster of Paris. During the period in which dressing may be necessary I +believe this form of splint is as good as can be got for use in Field +hospitals, the only point needing care being to ensure that the +bandaging is not too tight. It is much more reliable than are ordinary +splints if transport is unavoidable, and is much lighter and less +irksome to the patient. With such strips of cardboard, a few of the +gauze splints (fig. 54), and a few angular and wooden splints, I believe +a Field hospital is fully equipped for the treatment of any fractures of +the upper extremity.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 349px;"> +<img src="images/plate8.jpg" width="349" height="600" alt="PLATE VIII." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_VIII" id="PLATE_VIII">PLATE VIII.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>27</b>) <span class="smcap">Oblique Fracture of the Humerus of the nature of a Perforation</span></p> + +<p>Range more than '1,000 yards.'</p> + +<p>The distance was probably much greater, as the bullet was retained and +undeformed, and the comminution of the bone was very slight. The wound +of entry was just below the elbow.</p> + +<p>The bullet has cut its way through the inner half of the humerus, +producing little comminution and mere solution of continuity of the bone +without displacement<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p></div> + +<p><i>Fractures of the pelvis.</i>—These, as a rule, were of so slight a nature +as to form a very insignificant part of the entire injury with which +they were associated, or when uncomplicated they were of little more +importance than simple wounds of the soft parts. The very great majority +were of the simple perforating type. I had the opportunity of examining +three at the brim of the pelvis, these all passing in a downward +direction. The openings were of about the same calibre as the bullet, +and at their entrance was a small amount of bone dust such as would be +found at the entry hole of a gimlet. It was these that made me consider +the possibility of the rifle grooves having some part in the ease with +which certain perforations are made. Of a large number of cases in which +bullets traversed the ilium, the openings in the bone, as a rule, were +with difficulty palpated. I must say that I was astonished that I never +met with an instance of an extensive stellate fracture in the case of +the ilium. Such may have occurred in some of the cases fatal on the +field or shortly afterwards, but I never came across one in the +hospital. It says much for the combined density and toughness of the +human pelvis.</p> + +<p>Comminuted fractures were, however, occasionally met with when the +bullet passed in a track parallel to the plane of the bone. One such of +an unusual character has already been mentioned on p. 171. A still more +interesting form, and one highly characteristic of flat bone injuries, +is shown in fig. 55. The patient, a man wounded at Modder River, was +struck at a range of 300 to 400 yards. The bullet entered over about the +centre of the ilium and emerged in the anterior abdominal wall about 2 +inches above the anterior-superior spine. As there was some doubt as to +penetration of the abdomen, and as the exit wound was of considerable +size, the wound was explored, an anæsthetic having been given. A +clean-cut track in the bone was discovered which allowed the middle +finger to be placed in it. There was little splintering of either inner +or outer table of the bone beyond the width of the track, but plates of +each table adhered on the one side to the origin of the gluteus medius, +and on the other to the iliacus, the latter muscle being somewhat widely +separated from the venter ilii by effused blood. There was no +perforation of the abdominal cavity.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 367px;"> +<img src="images/plate9.jpg" width="367" height="600" alt="PLATE IX." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_IX" id="PLATE_IX">PLATE IX.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>28</b>) <span class="smcap">Localised Comminuted Fracture of the Humerus</span></p> + +<p>Range '100 yards.'</p> + +<p>The entry and exit wounds were on the front and back aspects of the arm, +about 3 inches above the elbow.</p> + +<p>Fragmentation of the mantle of the bullet has occurred. It will be noted +that the fragments are lodged in both the proximal and distal segments +of the track. This may indicate that the bullet was damaged prior to +entry, or the recoil of fragments. I incline to the latter view. The +skiagram was taken a fortnight after the injury.</p> + +<p>The large median fragment carried forwards, and the small degree of +comminution, suggest the decrease of resistance and prolongation of +impact by carriage back of the arm when struck.</p> + +<p>The fracture is one of the nearest approaches to a transverse cleft that +I met with.</p> + +<p>The plate may well be compared with No. XII., where the effect of +increased resistance in augmenting the degree of comminution is seen.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>Lesser degrees of the same kind of injury amounting to grooving of the +surface or notching of the crest of the ilium were not uncommon, and the +occasional large character of exit openings in buttock wounds pointed to +contact of travelling bullets with other parts of the external pelvic +wall.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 340px;"> +<img src="images/fig55.jpg" width="340" height="450" alt="Fig. 55." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 55.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Clean Gutter Fracture of the Ilium (range +placed by patient at 300 yards. Highland Brigade, Magersfontein). The +gutter was clean cut, and admitted the forefinger. The inner and outer +tables of the bone were in part blown out of a large irregularly +circular exit opening about 1½ in. above the crest of the ilium. The +cancellous tissue was probably entirely blown out. Plates of the outer +and inner tables still remained connected by their periosteum to the +deep aspects of the iliacus and gluteus medius muscles. The peritoneal +cavity was not opened. The patient did well. Compare with the gutter +fractures of the skull shown in figs. 64, 66</b></p> + +<p>Certain portions of the pelvis were subject to more severe comminution; +thus in one case in which the bladder was wounded, a very much +comminuted fracture of the horizontal ramus of the pubes was produced by +a bullet which subsequently lodged in the thigh behind the femoral +vessels. In this case the track was so oblique as to have necessitated +almost pure lateral impact on the part of the bullet; hence the form of +injury was nearly allied to the comminutions of the ilium already +described.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 357px;"> +<img src="images/plate10.jpg" width="357" height="600" alt="PLATE X." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_X" id="PLATE_X">PLATE X.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>29</b>) Wedge-shaped Fracture of the Radius</p> + +<p>Range 'a few yards.'</p> + +<p>The officer shot the man, his assailant, with a revolver. The entry +wound was on the posterior aspect of the forearm at the junction of the +middle and lower thirds. The exit wound was on the anterior aspect of +the forearm, 1 inch below the elbow crease, and of moderate size.</p> + +<p>Some fine fragmentation of the mantle of the bullet is indicated, and +very fine comminution of the bone. The fracture healed well, but the +resulting mass of callus at the end of three months prevented any +movements of pronation or supination.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>I never observed a fracture of the floor of the acetabulum by a bullet +which had entered from the back of the pelvis, although tracks entering +by the great sciatic notch were not infrequent. I saw one case in which +a bullet which traversed the upper part of the shoulder and emerged at +the axilla entered a second time an inch behind and above the anterior +superior spine, and split off a layer of the outer table of the ilium of +the extent of two square inches, which involved the upper portion of the +rim of the acetabulum. No displacement upwards of the femur resulted; +but external rotation was accompanied by crepitus. The wound suppurated, +and some general infection resulted, but six weeks later there was no +evidence of fluid in the hip-joint, the limb was adducted and slightly +rotated outwards, and some movement in each direction could be made +without causing any great amount of pain. I can say nothing of the +further course of this case, as I neglected to take the patient's name.</p> + +<p>I saw one or two instances of perforation of the sacrum. One is +mentioned in the chapter on injuries to the abdomen, in which a central +puncture at the level of the fourth vertebra was accompanied by +temporary incontinence of fæces.</p> + +<p>Fractures of the <i>femur</i> were fairly numerous and formed one of the most +serious classes of case we had to treat, as well as one of the most +fertile sources of mortality in the Base hospitals. In spite of the last +observation, however, it is probable that the results in this campaign +will be far better than in any previous war, both as to the smaller +proportion in which amputation was needed and as to recovery.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 418px;"> +<img src="images/plate11.jpg" width="418" height="600" alt="PLATE XI." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XI" id="PLATE_XI">PLATE XI.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>30</b>) <span class="smcap">Comminuted Fracture of the Second Metacarpal Bone</span></p> + +<p>Large fragments of the mantle of the bullet.</p> + +<p>Fragmentation of the bullet was comparatively common when the metacarpal +bones were struck, also free comminution of a somewhat coarser variety +than that seen when bones offering greater resistance were struck.</p> + +<p>This may be a result of the more frequent lateral impact of the bullet +on these small bones.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>In spite of a considerable experience, I never saw a case of perforation +of either the head or neck of the thigh bone. I saw numerous tracks +emerging at the side of the femoral vessels and entering at the buttock +or vice versa, but never one accompanied either by effusion into the +hip-joint or impairment of movement. Considering the regularity with +which hæmarthrosis occurred when the other joints were crossed, and also +the nature of the compact tissue of the neck of the femur, which must +have ensured some splintering, I do not think I can have overlooked an +injury of this nature. No doubt also the escape of the neck of the bone +was explained in some of the cases by the fact that the injuries were +received while the hip-joint was in a position of flexion, the bullet +passing over the neck of the femur. In two cases of extensive +comminution of the upper third of the femur that I saw, the fissures +stopped short at the inter-trochanteric line anteriorly, but in one of +them a large angular fragment was torn out of the posterior surface of +the neck.</p> + +<p>Excepting transverse fracture every form was met with in the shaft, +although I saw only two instances of perforation. One has been already +alluded to and was situated in the broadening portion of the lower +third, the bullet taking an antero-posterior course. The second is seen +in plate XVII.</p> + +<p>Plate XII. shows an instance of extreme comminution of the upper third +accompanied by the presence of two typical elongated fragments. The +course taken by the bullet was almost directly antero-posterior, and the +wounds were of moderate size even in the case of the exit one. This +seems to preclude the possibility of the injury having been produced by +a ricochet bullet, while the fact of perforation and escape of the +bullet in spite of the serious damage suffered by the mantle points to +the injury having been produced at a short range of fire. The patient +himself owns to being quite unable to give any estimate of the distance. +Although no suppuration occurred, this fracture was very slow in +consolidating, and the free comminution with consequent inaccurate +apposition led to the development of four inches shortening of the limb. +The skiagram was taken about six weeks after the occurrence of the +injury, a few days after I first saw the patient; I have, however, had +the opportunity of seeing a second skiagram taken some four months +later. This is of considerable interest, as throwing light on the mode +of union of such fractures. The two elongated fragments in the later +skiagram are widened to three times their original breadth, and form +buttresses on either side of the point of union, while the irregular +ends of the shaft are rounded off, and the mass of fine fragments behind +is consolidated. Beyond this the second skiagram shows that the upper +fragment, apparently intact in the first, was really split +longitudinally, and therefore was far less useful as a point of support +than might have been assumed from the earlier skiagram, plate XIII. The +case illustrates well the chief difficulty in the treatment of such +fractures: that of maintaining the fragments in line, since absolutely +no help is received from the apposition of the two ends, and artificial +traction alone must be relied upon.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 508px;"> +<img src="images/plate12.jpg" width="508" height="600" alt="PLATE XII." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XII" id="PLATE_XII">PLATE XII.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>31</b>) <span class="smcap">Highly Comminuted Fracture of the Upper Third of the Shaft of the +Femur</span></p> + +<p>Range 'short.'</p> + +<p>Impact fairly direct. The wounds were of moderate size and at nearly the +same level. The exit wound near the buttock fold was of moderate size, +and presented no special features.</p> + +<p>Considerable fragmentation of the bullet occurred. The comminution of +the bone is very fine, suggesting high velocity, and great resistance by +the bone. The skiagram was taken five weeks after the injury was +received, and at that time no union had occurred.</p> + +<p>Reference to plate XIII. will explain more fully the difficulty +experienced in maintaining this fracture in position. The upper fragment +is seen to be split into fragments, beyond the separation of the long +splinter on the inner side; hence no aid was to be obtained from the +apposition of the ends. About 2 inches of the shaft were actually +pulverised; the fine fragments seen in a mass to the inner side of the +bone in the exit portion of the back, eventually formed a large mass of +callus, and the fracture united, with considerable shortening.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>Plate XIV. offers a good contrast; the fracture here presents a typical +stellate form, and a good result without shortening was readily +obtained. I assume that the difference in character of these two +fractures depended mainly on the rate of velocity with which the bullet +was travelling, since it passed fairly directly across the limb in each. +I think it is clear, however, that the bullet struck the femur rather +nearer the centre of the width of the shaft and therefore more directly, +in the more severe injury.</p> + +<p>This brings me to the question of explosive exit wounds in the thigh. In +spite of the great tendency to comminution of the shaft, these were rare +in a severe form. This depended simply on the depth and thickness of the +coverings of the bone, and, as already mentioned, although the skin +openings were often comparatively small, a large cavity or area of +destroyed soft tissues may be contained within the limb. I do not think +I ever saw an exit wound in the thigh exceeding 1½ inch in diameter.</p> + +<p>The oblique fracture illustrated by plate XVI. has been already referred +to, and the influence of the weight and movement of the trunk on its +production has been considered.</p> + +<p>Plate XV. illustrates an obliquely comminuted fracture of another +character. The bullet has here been stripped of its mantle, which has +undergone fragmentation, but the leaden core is little altered in shape. +This is of much interest, since it shows that the bullet struck the bone +by its side. The effect of such lateral impact on the part of the +projectile is well shown: there is great bone comminution of a less +regular character than usual, and the bullet is retained. Retention in +this case was probably not a result of low velocity of flight, but of +the increased resistance offered by the broad area of bone struck, and +the check exerted on the axial rotation of the bullet by the lateral +contact.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 491px;"> +<img src="images/plate13.jpg" width="491" height="600" alt="PLATE XIII." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XIII" id="PLATE_XIII">PLATE XIII.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>31</b><i>a</i>) <span class="smcap">The Fracture Shown in Plate XII., six months after reception of +the injury</span></p> + +<p>The amount of callus furnished around the loose fragments is very +striking.</p> + +<p>The upper end of the bone is shown to have been divided into at least +two fragments, hence one of the difficulties of maintaining the ends in +apposition. The stoppage of the fissuring short of the epiphysis is +characteristic.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>Slighter injuries to the femur in which the shaft was chipped or grooved +without loss of continuity were not uncommon, and showed well the +capacity of the bone to withstand the lateral shock transmitted by small +bullets. Two figures inserted in the chapter on wounds in general (figs. +22, 23, pp. 61, 62) are of cases in which, from the appearance of the +wound of exit, the bullet probably underwent deformation, or was so +deflected as to escape on a considerably altered axis. Beyond the nature +of the exit wound in the case depicted in fig. 22, some thickening +beneath the femoral vessels denoted bone injury, but unfortunately no +skiagram was taken.</p> + +<p>I saw no case in which a transverse fracture of the shaft accompanied +such injuries, but am under the impression that, if they had been +produced by bullets of greater volume and weight, transverse solution of +continuity would have been more common. In point of fact, no case of +pure transverse fracture of the femur ever came under my notice.</p> + +<p>The diagram depicted in fig. 51, p. 164, is from a sketch made of the +lower end of a femur in which a severely comminuted fracture followed by +suppuration necessitated an amputation of the thigh, performed by Major +Lougheed, R.A.M.C. It is inserted as an illustration of the tendency of +the fissures to stop short above the actual articular extremities of the +bones. In this case the comminution was extreme and accompanied by the +usual long lateral fragments, one of which measured five inches in +length and might well have extended into the knee-joint had that been an +ordinary occurrence.</p> + +<p>Perforations of the lower extremity of the bone were very common. These +were sometimes transverse and limited to the articular extremity itself, +or the same limitation occurred to the antero-posterior tracks. These +were the slightest forms of injury, putting on one side incomplete +tunnels and grooves on the surface of the bone. With regard to the +latter, however, when they invaded the joint cavity the injury was +liable to be more severe than a complete perforation, in consequence of +the projection of comminuted fragments into the joint cavity near the +line of reflection of the synovial capsule and ulterior interference +with freedom of movement.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 182px;"> +<img src="images/fig55a.jpg" width="182" height="450" alt="Fig. 55a." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 55a.—Diagram of 'Butterfly' type.</span> +</div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 369px;"> +<img src="images/plate14.jpg" width="369" height="600" alt="PLATE XIV." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XIV" id="PLATE_XIV">PLATE XIV.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>32</b>) <span class="smcap">Typical Stellate (Butterfly) Comminuted Fracture of the Femur</span></p> + +<p>Range 'short.'</p> + +<p>Wounds small, impact direct, very little fine comminution. The bone +united without shortening of the limb.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>Other tracks took a direction of longitudinal obliquity, and then +implicated both epiphysis and diaphysis. Fig. 52, p. 169, shows an +example, and also the peculiarity likely to be assumed by the exit +aperture in the bone, especially if the bullet was travelling at a low +rate of velocity, a considerable plate of the compact bone being driven +out. In some cases these oblique tracks involved both femur and tibia. +They will be referred to again under the heading of injuries to the +joints, and some remarks will also be found there regarding the synovial +effusion so often occurring into the knee-joint in cases of fracture of +the shaft of the bone.</p> + +<p>It may be of interest to insert here a few remarks as to the clinical +characteristics of fractures of the femur. First with regard to the +primary signs and symptoms. A very considerable degree of general or +constitutional shock usually accompanied them, and this was perhaps more +constant than in the case of any other injury in the body. This was, +moreover, no doubt increased by the unfavourable conditions in which +patients on the field of battle are situated in regard to transport. +When the patients were brought into hospital some delay in the primary +treatment was often necessary until reaction took place. Local shock to +the part was also a prominent feature. Abnormal mobility was very free +in the badly comminuted cases. Crepitus was often loose, and of 'the bag +of bone' variety. The result of local shock and consequent flaccidity of +the muscles was to reduce the development of primary shortening; in some +cases of severe comminution this was practically nil during the first +day or two, when, with return of tone in the muscles, it sometimes +became very considerable. Swelling of the limb was often very great, and +vascular injury definitely far more common than in the fractures of +civil practice, in consequence, no doubt, not only of the number and +sharpness of the fragments, but also of the force with which they were +driven into the surrounding tissues. The exit segment of the track was +out of all proportion in size to the entry, as a result of the +propulsion of bone fragments through it. This often made the closure of +the exit wound a very protracted event, the track continuing to +discharge a small quantity of bloody serum and fragments of necrosed +tissue for many weeks.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 384px;"> +<img src="images/plate15.jpg" width="384" height="600" alt="PLATE XV." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XV" id="PLATE_XV">PLATE XV.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>33</b>) <span class="smcap">Comminuted Fracture of the Femur</span></p> + +<p>Range 'short.'</p> + +<p>Normal entry wound of slightly oval form.</p> + +<p>Oblique lateral impact on the part of the bullet, the mantle of which +burst into numerous fragments. The bullet is seen to the inner side of +the shaft, almost devoid of its mantle, and little deformed at the tip. +The comminution of the upper portion of the fracture is very fine; the +bullet has merely cut its way down the lower portion, and one or two +long fragments are separated. The skiagram shows well the result of +lateral impact by the side of the bullet.</p> + +<p>Compare this plate with No. VI. as illustrating lesser resistance, and +No. VIII. as illustrating the effect of lower velocity.</p></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span></p> + +<p>In a large proportion of the cases which were transported for any +distance suppuration occurred; this must have been the case in at least +60 per cent. of the fractures. Suppuration was of the character already +described in the general section, affecting particularly the bone +itself, and accompanied by very marked signs of general infection.</p> + +<p><i>Prognosis in fractures of the femur.</i>—As regards mortality fractures +in the upper third of the bone proved one of the most formidable +injuries which came under treatment. Suppuration was common, at least 60 +per cent. of the wounds becoming infected. This depended on several +reasons, often inseparable from the injuries, or from their treatment in +Field hospitals: such as (1) the exit wound being situated in the +dangerous region of the thigh; (2) ineffective dressing and fixation; +(3) the impossibility of ensuring primary cleansing and removal of +detached fragments of bone; (4) the necessity of the early transport of +patients to the Stationary or Base hospitals, often for great distances; +(5) the comparatively long period that often had to elapse before the +opportunity of doing the first efficient dressing arrived.</p> + +<p>Fractures in the middle and lower thirds of the bone were more easy to +treat successfully, but these also added to the list both of amputations +and fatalities.</p> + +<p>Punctured fractures of the lower articular extremity were usually of +little importance, as they progressed without exception, as far as my +experience went, favourably.</p> + +<p>I can give no idea of the general results obtained during the whole +campaign, but I am able to state the results of the fractures of the +shaft treated at No. 1 General Hospital during my stay in South Africa. +Thirty-two cases of fracture of the shaft of the bone came under +treatment, and of these 6 or 18.7 per cent. needed amputation, and of +the whole number 5 or 15.6 per cent. died. To emphasise the satisfactory +nature of these figures I need only quote the results attained in the +American War of the Rebellion; mortality in upper third, 46 per cent.; +middle third, 40.6 per cent.; lower third, 38.2 per cent.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 398px;"> +<img src="images/plate16.jpg" width="398" height="600" alt="PLATE XVI." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XVI" id="PLATE_XVI">PLATE XVI.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>34</b>) <span class="smcap">Oblique Fracture of the Shaft of the Femur</span></p> + +<p>Range '300 to 400 yards.'</p> + +<p>Aperture of entry just above the centre of the outer aspect of the +thigh. Exit, about 2 inches lower, at the junction of the inner and +posterior aspects. The bullet was retained just within the wound, and +when removed the mantle fell off in two parts. The leaden core was +mushroomed. The bullet had passed through another soldier previous to +entering the patient's thigh. Only two small fragments of the mantle +were retained, as seen in the skiagram. These were in the substance of +the great sciatic nerve, and were subsequently removed by Sir Thomas +Smith.</p> + +<p>It is difficult to determine how the bone was struck; reference to plate +XXI. would suggest that the shaft may have been perforated, but no +evidence of this remains in the skiagram taken, which was five months +later.</p> + +<p>The patient was standing at the moment of reception of the injury, and +the obliquity of the fracture no doubt depended on his fall and the +resulting influence of the weight of the body. The length of the +fracture cleft was 9 inches.</p></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span></p> + +<p>I need hardly dwell upon the difference between the nature of the +injuries received in the American War of the Rebellion and in the +present campaign, as in the former the old large bullets were employed, +and shell injuries are possibly included; but I ought to add in this +relation, that the numbers quoted from No. 1 General Hospital included, +to my knowledge, at least three severe Martini-Henry wounds.</p> + +<p>The first element for a favourable prognosis is a small wound, and +opportunity for an efficient primary treatment of the same; the second +the absence of necessity for transport of the patient. With regard to +the second of these requirements, we were unfortunately situated in +South Africa, and the majority of the cases which did badly were moved +during the first few days and for a distance of between five and six +hundred miles. On the other hand, as a rule, the external wounds were +small.</p> + +<p>As to functional result, the fractures did well. I think an average of +an inch and a half would well cover the shortening, and in many the +length was little altered. Considering the serious nature of many of +these fractures, this was good.</p> + +<p><i>Treatment.</i>—In all punctured fractures of the lower extremity, +dressing of the wounds like uncomplicated ones and a short period of +immobilisation were all that was necessary. In oblique fractures, and +those with slight comminution, closure of the wound by dressings, after +it had been carefully cleansed, was all that was necessary prior to +applying the splints for immobilisation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 456px;"> +<img src="images/plate17.jpg" width="456" height="600" alt="PLATE XVII" title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XVII" id="PLATE_XVII">PLATE XVII.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">(<b>35</b>) Perforation of +the Shaft of the Femur. Flap of bone raised at the aperture of exit in +the popliteal surface of the shaft.</span></p> + +<p>Range 'over 1,000 yards.'</p> + +<p>Compare with fig. 52, p. 169.</p></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></p> + +<p>In the highly comminuted fractures a more radical treatment was +indicated, especially if the exit wound was large. In these, after +careful preliminary cleansing of the limb, the wounds, especially the +exit aperture, needed exploration and, if necessary, enlargement, and +all free splinters needed removal. If interference with the entry wound +could be avoided, this was always preferable, as it was rare for this +not to heal by primary union unless free suppuration occurred. Under +Field hospital conditions I think the exit wound should never be +sutured, whatever its situation; and in the present campaign, where +carbolic acid lotion was freely used, this step was manifestly +inadvisable, in view of the abundant serous discharge always to be +expected when this disinfectant has been employed. Except in cases +manifestly infected at the time of exploration, the use of drainage +tubes or plugs is not to be recommended. I would point out also that in +the majority of cases it is quite hopeless to attempt to make the entry +wound the safety-valve for drainage, as its natural tendency, even if +enlarged, is to heal, while the condition of the tissues in the exit +segment of the track usually renders primary union an impossibility.</p> + +<p>The wound having been dealt with, the next indications were for the +reduction of deformity, immobilisation of the limb, and the provision of +a proper degree of extension. As to the reduction of the fracture, this +was always a matter of ease, needing only slight axis traction. The +provision of efficient means of extension and immobilisation was a very +different matter. These questions had to be considered under two sets of +conditions: (1) when it was possible to keep the patient at rest in the +hospital he was first deposited in; (2) when it was necessary for him to +be transported for a considerable distance, probably not less than 500 +miles.</p> + +<p>When transport is a necessity, the best method of immobilisation is the +application of breeches of plaster of Paris, and a long outside splint. +The latter we often had excellently made on emergency by the Ordnance +Department or the Royal Engineers. A perineal band is the only form of +extension possible under these circumstances. The Dutch ambulances were +provided with a very excellent emergency splint for cases of fractured +thigh, which is illustrated in fig. 56. I think something of this kind +should be carried in one of the ambulances going on to every field of +battle, as being far more suitable than a long outside splint for hasty +and inaccurate application. This splint, fixed with some kind of firm +bandage, is an excellent temporary one for use during transport.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 356px;"> +<img src="images/plate18.jpg" width="356" height="600" alt="PLATE XVIII." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XVIII" id="PLATE_XVIII">PLATE XVIII.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>36</b>) <span class="smcap">Obliquely Transverse Fracture of the Patella</span></p> + +<p>Range 'short.'</p> + +<p>The entry and exit wounds were small, and a distinct grooving from loss +of substance of the bone was palpable superficial to the actual cleft of +the fracture.</p></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 262px;"> +<img src="images/fig56.jpg" width="262" height="450" alt="Fig. 56." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 56.—Dutch Cane Field Emergency Splint for Thigh or +Lower Extremity. (Dutch Ambulance, Winberg)</span> +</div> + +<p>In cases which can be treated at a Stationary hospital near at hand, a +long outside splint supplemented by plaster breeches, and a well-applied +American extension, is a very good method of treatment, the only point +to bear in mind being frequent examination of the position of the limb +to ensure the extension being efficient. As already mentioned, the +shortening in the primary stages is often slight and easily combated, +but in many of these cases if examined in a few days the limbs are found +to have shortened considerably, principally as a result of recovery of +tone by the muscles, and the absence of any help from the resting of the +two fragments end to end. The weight, therefore, has often to be +progressively increased and the fracture readjusted if necessary. +Although this method of treatment is satisfactory in cases with a small +wound, it is very troublesome to carry out, even when a bracket is +inserted opposite the wound, when frequent dressing is necessary, as is +generally at first the case when the wounds are large. For this purpose +a much more satisfactory method is the use of Hodgen's splint. This +allows of automatic adjustment of the degree of extension, and the +dressing of the wound without interference with the position of the +fracture. A continuous many-tailed bag is preferable to the strips +usually employed for the suspension of the limb, as more easily +adjustable and as offering a more even support to the limb.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 352px;"> +<img src="images/plate19.jpg" width="352" height="600" alt="PLATE XIX." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XIX" id="PLATE_XIX">PLATE XIX.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>37</b>) <span class="smcap">Oblique Comminuted Fracture of the Tibia</span></p> + +<p>Range '600 yards.'</p> + +<p>The entrance wound was large and the exit also. The fracture may have +been caused by a Mannlicher (8 mm.) soft-nosed bullet, or possibly a +ricochet. The fragmentation is somewhat coarse at the periphery, but +very fine in the track of the bullet. Several fragments of the mantle +are visible.</p> + +<p>The fracture affords a good example of obliquity due to cutting by the +bullet, and contrasts well with those due to rectangular impact such as +are shown in plates IV. and XIV.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>While at Orange River, in conjunction with Major Knaggs, R.A.M.C., and +Mr. Langmore, we treated several cases of fracture of the shaft of the +femur by this method. The splints were made for us by the Ordnance +Department, while the Royal Engineers erected a kind of gallows for us +down the centre of a commissariat marquee in order to avoid the risk of +using the tent poles for suspension. The patients were then ranged on +each side of the tent in two rows so that the pull of the two sets of +limbs opposed each other on the gallows from which they were suspended. +Although these patients had to lie on the ground, they were really +comfortable compared with those treated with long outside splints, and +the results obtained were very good: in three cases which I had the +opportunity of measuring later the bones were in good position and the +shortening was less than one inch.</p> + +<p>I have no doubt whatever that Hodgen's splint is by far the best method +of treating all cases of fractured thigh in the Stationary field +hospitals; and, more than this, I believe it is the only practicable and +efficient one. It can be applied without the use of an anæsthetic +without causing undue suffering to the patient, it allows of ready +change of the dressing, it is comfortable and permits considerable range +of movement on the part of the patient, it is as efficient with patients +lying on the ground as in a bed, it keeps the limb in good position and +allows of constant inspection on this point, and it is the only method +which provides satisfactory extension without constant readjustment.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 349px;"> +<img src="images/plate20.jpg" width="349" height="600" alt="PLATE XX." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XX" id="PLATE_XX">PLATE XX.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>38</b>) <span class="smcap">Transverse Fracture of the Tibia, Comminuted Fracture of the Fibula</span></p> + +<p>Range '300 yards.'</p> + +<p>Wound of soft parts nearly transverse, entry on tibial aspect. The +bullet crossed and grooved the posterior aspect of the tibia, but struck +the fibula full. This is the only instance of a transverse cleft which +came under my notice.</p> + +<p>The wound suppurated, and a number of fragments of the fibula needed +removal; hence the amount of callus present.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>Cases in which operative fixation is indicated are rare, but a few +oblique fractures may be treated with advantage in this manner if the +conditions surrounding the patient admit of it. Screwing is generally +preferable to wiring.</p> + +<p>Lastly, we come to the cases in which primary amputation is necessary. I +may say at once that I saw no case of wound from a bullet of small +calibre in which this was indicated, and only one shell injury in which +it was performed. I believe with small bullets that injury to the main +blood-vessels is almost the only indication which is likely to be met +with, and this by no means always indicates an amputation. First of all +the question arises as to whether the wound in the vessel is caused by a +bone fragment or by the bullet itself; reference to the chapter on +blood-vessels would seem to prove that a bullet wound is by no means a +necessary indication for amputation. Given favourable conditions, it +might be treated locally by ligature at the time, while if hæmorrhage is +not proceeding, developments should be awaited before proceeding to +amputation. In the case of bone fragment punctures, secondary hæmorrhage +is a more likely indication for amputation than primary.</p> + +<p>Broadly, it may be laid down that very extensive injury to the soft +parts is the only indication for primary amputation beyond primary +hæmorrhage, and it may be added that the condition is rare with wounds +from small-calibre bullets. If a primary amputation is necessary the +observations as to the transport of fractured thighs are equally +applicable. I never saw a primary amputation do well that was moved +during the first week; sloughing of flaps or hæmorrhage followed as a +rule, and often death.</p> + +<p>Intermediate amputations were indicated in cases of septic infection and +those of hæmorrhage; they seldom did well, and should be avoided if +possible. Secondary amputations for sepsis or hæmorrhage were attended +by fair results, but I can give no statistics. Unless extensive +osteo-myelitis is evident, or very widespread cellulitis of the limb +exists, I am strongly of opinion that the amputations when the fractures +are above the middle of the thigh should be through the fracture, and +not at the hip-joint, even if a subsequent secondary operation is +risked.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 361px;"> +<img src="images/plate21.jpg" width="361" height="600" alt="PLATE XXI." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XXI" id="PLATE_XXI">PLATE XXI.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>39</b>) <span class="smcap">Perforation of the Shaft of the Tibia, and Incomplete Oblique +Fissure extending from the lower part of The opening to the crest of the +bone.</span></p> + +<p>Range medium. Entry and exit wounds at same level.</p> + +<p>The patient was standing when struck, and fell backwards, his rifle +falling at the same time and striking the shin. The fibula is intact.</p> + +<p>The perforation indicated by the well-marked translucent spot is small.</p> + +<p>The forking of the lower extremity of the cleft suggests the starting of +the fissure from above. The fissure comes to the surface at the seat of +election, but its position may possibly have been determined by the blow +from the falling rifle.</p> + +<p>The backward fall of the patient clearly explains the mechanism of +production of the fissure, and throws light on the production of an +oblique fracture such as shown in plate XVI.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p></div> + +<p><i>Fractures of the patella.</i>—Punctured fractures of the patella were +common with direct impact of the bullet; these were often difficult to +palpate, and were only to be certainly diagnosed by attention to the +direction of the track, and the development of hæmarthrosis. I saw at +least three or four in which the bullet, in addition to traversing the +knee-joint, injured the popliteal vessels. I have notes of one case in +which a bullet traversed the soft parts from above downwards and scored +a vertical groove on the surface of the patella; this was readily +palpable, but produced no solution of continuity. In several cases the +margin of the patella was notched by a passing bullet.</p> + +<p>I never saw a case of stellate fracture, and by this my experience in +the case of the ilium was confirmed.</p> + +<p>On two occasions I saw pure transverse fractures of the bone; in each +the wound was produced by a Lee-Metford bullet. This is of some interest +as denoting that the greater volume and weight, in conjunction with the +blunter tip, of the Lee-Metford may produce more severe injury to the +bones than the Mauser. I believe this to be the case, given an equal +degree of velocity on the part of the bullet at the moment of impact; +but it is probable that the position of the patella with regard to the +condyles of the femur when struck is of far greater importance in +relation to the production of transverse fractures. The skiagram +represented in plate XVIII. shows an obliquely transverse fracture, +which in this instance resulted from a crossing bullet, which grooved +the surface of the bone.</p> + +<p>With regard to the two cases of transverse fracture above referred to, I +may add that one occurred in a youth under twenty, and a good result was +obtained by treatment with splints, and later by massage. In the second +the patient was a man over fifty, who had received other injuries. The +wound over the patella healed and some union had occurred, when the +patient fell and burst both the bone union and the skin cicatrix. +Secondary suppuration of the knee-joint, necessitating an amputation of +the thigh, followed, but the patient made a good recovery. The third +case also did well.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 364px;"> +<img src="images/plate22.jpg" width="364" height="600" alt="PLATE XXII." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XXII" id="PLATE_XXII">PLATE XXII.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>40</b>) <span class="smcap">Notch Fracture of the Crest of the Tibia</span></p> + +<p>Range 'short.'</p> + +<p>The raising of the margins of the notch suggests a perforation. Compare +with figs. 51 and 57 in the text.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>The treatment of these injuries differed in no way from that adopted in +civil practice, given satisfactory surroundings. Suture might be +indicated in some cases of transverse fracture, but this would only be +necessary if the fragments were widely separated. The punctured +fractures needed treatment as for simple wounds, combined with a short +period of rest and pressure for the condition of hæmarthrosis. It was +important not to prolong the period of rest beyond a week or ten days if +the effusion was slight, in view of possible ulterior interference with +range of movement in the knee-joint.</p> + +<p><i>Fractures of the tibia.</i>—Some remarks have already been made regarding +fractures of the head of the tibia, and the importance of the +overhanging prominent margins in the production of somewhat irregular +injuries (p. 170). Putting these peculiarities on one side, the +cancellous ends are subject to the type forms of injury; thus +perforations either of the head of the bone or the malleolus were common +injuries. The fractures of the shaft also deviated from the type in so +far as the broad flat surfaces in the upper two thirds of the bone +rendered it especially liable to the results of lateral impact, and to +the production of the extreme wedge-shaped types of fracture. Plate +XXII. illustrates the different result of a bullet striking the dense +and strong spine at a low rate of velocity, a notch only resulting. If, +on the other hand, the lateral surfaces were struck, a wedge with the +base corresponding to the posterior surface was the most common injury, +the spine in many cases remaining intact and maintaining the continuity +of the bone. Wedge-shaped fractures of this bone were apt to show +multiple secondary wave fissures concentric with the main line, and +consequently free comminution. I saw several examples, the loose +fragments being remarkably numerous. Plate XIX. is an example of an +oblique fracture produced by a bullet which has ploughed across the +bone, displacing large fragments anteriorly, but finely comminuting the +bone in its course, and leaving small fragments of the mantle on its +way. Plate XX. is an example of the rare condition of transverse +fracture.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 413px;"> +<img src="images/plate23.jpg" width="413" height="600" alt="PLATE XXIII" title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XXIII" id="PLATE_XXIII">PLATE XXIII.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>41</b>) <span class="smcap">Spurious Perforation of the Fibula</span></p> + +<p>Moderate range, 'about 1,000 yards.'</p> + +<p>The injury was caused by an 8 mm. bullet, which entered base foremost +and lodged in the calf. The fracture is really an incomplete stellate +form, two well-marked transverse fissures extending from the point +struck. The position of the bullet suggests its entry into the limb base +foremost, and as it is retained low velocity may be assumed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>This fracture was produced by a bullet travelling at a high rate of +velocity, which struck the posterior surface of the tibia, and caused a +grooving, accompanied by a horizontal fissure through the whole +thickness of the bone; later it struck the fibula more directly, and +produced an ordinary comminuted fracture two inches above the malleolus. +Perforations of the shaft were far more common than in the case of the +femur, and I saw them in every part of the length of the bone (plate +XXI.). Fig. 57 illustrates a form of peculiar interest as showing the +gradual transition of the tunnel to the groove, and also as bringing +fractures of the long bones into line with such fractures of the flat +bones of the skull as are depicted in fig. 68.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 305px;"> +<img src="images/fig57.jpg" width="305" height="450" alt="Fig. 57." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 57.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>(42) Perforation of lower third of Tibia, +showing lifting and fissuring of the compact roof of the tunnel. Compare +with fig. 68, p. 259, of a fracture of the cranial vault.</b></p> + +<p><i>Fractures of the fibula</i> offered no special features of importance. Any +form might occur. The plate No. XXIII. is of interest as showing a +spurious form of perforation, and also the primary form of displacement +of the fragments in stellate fractures. It was produced by a reversed +ricochet, but undeformed, bullet, still seen in position in the +skiagram; the bullet only possessed sufficient force to perforate the +bone, and then appears to have turned on its transverse axis. The +following plate, No. XXIV., is inserted to show the depth at which the +bullet lay, and its distance from the surface of the tibia, which +appears in the first plate to be nil. It is also of interest as showing +the ease with which a false impression may be obtained from a single +picture, as, beyond a spot of transparency, no obvious injury to the +fibula, and certainly no displacement, is discernible.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 438px;"> +<img src="images/plate24.jpg" width="438" height="600" alt="PLATE XXIV." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XXIV" id="PLATE_XXIV">PLATE XXIV.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>41</b><i>a</i>) This skiagram is inserted to show the depth at which the bullet +lay from the surface. It is also interesting to note the insignificance +of the fracture of the fibula from this aspect. Without the second +skiagram the injury might have passed for a simple perforation or a +transverse fracture.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>Fractures of the bones of the leg possessed an unenviable degree of +importance. First, on account of the very severe injuries to the soft +parts that often accompanied them, without an apparently correspondingly +serious damage to the bone. Secondly, on account of the frequency with +which the vessels were implicated in these injuries to the soft parts, +either by the bullet or bone fragments. Beyond this, fracture of either +articular end of the tibia was certainly more frequently followed by +troublesome joint complications than occurred in the case of any other +bone.</p> + +<p>In the matter of 'explosive' injuries, I think more were seen in the +calf of the leg than in any other part of the body, and this often +without solution of continuity of the bones, and sometimes without +evidence even of contact of the bullet with either tibia or fibula. Some +remarks on this subject have already been made in the chapter on wounds +in general, and some sources of fallacy exposed. I believe that in +practically all these so-called explosive injuries the wound was either +caused by a ricochet, or a bullet which deformed with great ease on bony +contact during its progress through the limb. A considerable number of +the wounds which were referred by the men to the use of expanding +bullets were probably the result of the use of Martini-Henry or large +leaden sporting bullets, and evidence of this was often forthcoming on +examination of the entry wounds. In other cases the irregularity of the +opening plainly pointed to ricochet of a small bullet as the explanation +of the character of the injury. The greater frequency of ricochet +injuries in the leg and foot when the men were standing is readily +understood.</p> + +<p>Concurrent injury to the vessels of the leg was common, but primary +hæmorrhage, as was the case generally, usually ceased spontaneously. The +importance of injury to the vessels was rather in view of secondary +hæmorrhage, which occurred with some frequency, and I think more +commonly from the anterior than the posterior tibial vessels, usually +occurring at the end of a week or ten days, and naturally most +frequently in cases which suppurated.</p> + +<p><i>Prognosis and treatment in fractures of the leg.</i>—In fractures of the +leg, except those of extreme severity, almost any form of splint +sufficed to maintain the bones in position, but for field purposes the +Dutch cane splint (fig. 58, p. 222) was certainly very convenient. For +later use in cases that needed frequent<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span> dressing, a wooden back splint, +with a foot-piece, or, if obtainable, a Neville's splint with a +suspension cradle, was the best. Where the wounds were small and +frequent dressing was not required, nothing was so good as plaster of +Paris, especially when transport was a necessity.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 343px;"> +<img src="images/fig58.jpg" width="343" height="450" alt="Fig. 58." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 58.—Dutch Cane Field Emergency Splint for Leg</span> +</div> + +<p>In cases with large wounds suppuration was very frequent, and in +connection with this secondary hæmorrhage, or in the case of fractures +near the articular ends, especially the upper, joint suppuration. The +treatment of these cases varied: in many an amputation was the best or +only treatment advisable; but I several times saw good results follow +ligation of the anterior tibial artery for secondary hæmorrhage, even +when suppuration existed, and occasional good results<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span> after incision +and drainage of joints if the infection was not of the most acute form.</p> + +<p>Primary amputation was rarely needed for any case of injury from a +bullet of small calibre, since it was only necessary either in the case +of injury to both main arteries, and this was rare, or in cases of very +extensive injury to the soft parts. I saw many of the latter make fair +results when treated conservatively, even though the condition seemed +almost hopeless at first sight. All the primary amputations that I saw +were either for shell or large bullet injuries. A word may be inserted +here as to the weight that ought to attach to nerve injuries in this +relation. From the experience gained elsewhere it is clear that we +should attach little importance to these unless the divided nerves are +actually in sight, as far as deciding on amputation is concerned. On the +other hand, there is little doubt that the presence of concurrent nerve +injury, be it only concussion or contusion, exerts an important ulterior +influence on the healing of the wound, whether the part be amputated or +not. Amputation flaps in such cases possess a very considerably lowered +degree of vitality.</p> + +<p>Secondary amputations were often needed for sepsis, and on the whole did +very well; both for the same cause and for hæmorrhage intermediate +amputations had occasionally to be performed; the results of these, as +elsewhere, were bad.</p> + +<p><i>Fractures of the tarsus.</i>—Wounds of these short bones were as a rule +of slight importance, given fairly direct impact on the part of the +bullet. They then consisted of either simple perforations or surface +grooving. A single bone might be implicated or several might be +tunnelled; in the latter case the implication of the joints very +considerably influenced the prognosis, since the addition of the joint +injury caused much more prolonged weakening of the foot.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the foot were common from the fact that when the men lay out +in the prone position, the foot was often the part least protected by +the cover chosen, and particularly the heel. In these circumstances the +os calcis was the bone most frequently implicated, and that by tracks +taking an oblique course downwards from the leg to the sole. Again the +foot was often struck by ricochet bullets, as a result of its position<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span> +when the erect attitude was assumed. The latter fact was of much +importance with regard to the nature of the injury sustained by the +bones, as under these circumstances the mode of impact was irregular, +and consequently comminution was often produced.</p> + +<p>The behaviour of the different bones of the tarsus varied somewhat. On +the whole the prognosis in cases of injury to the os calcis was the +best, since the injury was more often individual and did not implicate +any joint, and also because of the comparatively regular architecture of +the bone. In the smaller bones concurrent injury to a joint was more +frequent. In the astragalus the central hard core extending upwards from +the interosseous groove, as increasing resistance, I think accounted for +the fact that comminution was more marked in this bone than in any +other. The effect of wound of bones of the tarsus in producing a certain +degree of laxity in the mediotarsal joint resulting in a slightly flexed +position of the fore part of the foot and some projection of the head of +the astragalus did not seem to me easy of explanation, but it occurred +with some regularity.</p> + +<p>The injuries to the <i>metatarsus</i> corresponded so nearly to those already +spoken of in the case of the metacarpus that they need no further +mention. They were less common, however, and I am under the impression +that fragmentation of the bullet was not such a marked feature, probably +on account of the lower degree of density of the bones, and their +greater fixity of position.</p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_18_18" id="Footnote_18_18"></a><a href="#FNanchor_18_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> Col. W. F. Stevenson. <i>Loc. cit.</i> p. 69.</p></div> +</div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2> + +<h3>INJURIES TO THE JOINTS</h3> + + +<p>Until recent times gunshot injuries of the joints formed a class +entailing the gravest anxiety to the surgeon, both in regard to the +selection of primary measures of treatment and in the conduct of the +after progress of the cases. The external wounds were severe, +comminution of the bones was great, and retention of the bullet within +the articulation was not uncommon. Operative surgery therefore found a +large field in the extraction of bullets, removal of bone fragments, +excision of the joints, or even amputation of the limbs.</p> + +<p>The introduction of bullets of small calibre has robbed these injuries +of much of the importance they possessed in earlier days and during the +present campaign direct clean wounds of the joints were little more to +be dreaded than uncomplicated wounds of the soft parts alone. No more +striking evidence of the aseptic nature of the wounds, and the harmless +character of the projectile as a possible infecting agent, than that +offered by the general course of these injuries in this campaign, is to +be found in the whole range of military surgery.</p> + +<p>The aseptic nature of the wounds, and the slight and localised character +of the bone lesions, have in fact justified the opinion previously +expressed by Von Coler, that these injuries in the future would be less +feared than fractures of the diaphyses of the bones.</p> + +<p>Not less important than the localised character of the bone lesion +itself is the fact that the accompanying wounds of the soft parts retain +the small or type forms. Thus I occasionally observed more troublesome +results from minor shell wounds in the neighbourhood of joints, but not +implicating the synovial<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span> cavity, than in actual perforating injuries +produced by bullets of small calibre.</p> + +<p><i>Vibration synovitis.</i>—Before proceeding to the consideration of wounds +of the joints, a short account is necessary of a condition of some +importance which is, I believe, more or less special to injuries from +bullets of small calibre travelling at high rates of velocity. This +condition, if not novel, at any rate excited little comment in the +descriptions of the older forms of injury, although this may have +depended on the more serious nature of the primary local lesions +accompanying wounds from the larger bullets, among which it formed a +comparatively unimportant element.</p> + +<p>The condition referred to was the occurrence of considerable synovial +effusion into the joints of limbs in which the articulation itself was +primarily untouched. These effusions sometimes occurred even when the +soft parts alone were perforated, especially when the wounds were +situated above or below the knee-joint. They were apparently the direct +result of vibratory concussion of the entire limb dependent on the blow +received from the bullet.</p> + +<p>The effusions were most strongly marked in cases of fractures of the +diaphyses, although this was more noticeable in some situations than +others. Thus with fractures of the shaft of the femur anywhere below the +junction of the upper and middle thirds of the bone, and in some cases +even higher, effusion into the knee-joint was very common, and sometimes +extreme. On the other hand, similar effusions into the hip-joint were +less marked, since I failed to determine their existence in the majority +of cases. I am inclined to ascribe this to the different anatomical +arrangement of the two joints, particularly to the fact that the head of +the femur is included in a bony cup, into the hollow of which it is +accurately fixed by the resilient cotyloid fibro-cartilage. The latter +by its firm grasp of the head allows of little play in the joint; hence +vibrations are conveyed directly to the acetabulum in continuous waves, +and rocking of the articular surfaces is prevented. Beyond this no doubt +the difficulty of detecting small effusions in this joint is an element +which must be taken into consideration.</p> + +<p>I do not think that wrenches of the knee-joint in the act<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span> of falling +can be suggested as an explanation of the frequency of effusions into +that articulation, since the fractures of the femur were not always +received while the erect position was maintained, and effusion was most +marked when the diaphysis was the part affected, the latter point +illustrating the greater resistance offered by compact bone. Again, when +fracture had taken place, the solution of continuity rendered the +directly injured point the most mobile, and tended to prevent lateral +strain from falling on the joints.</p> + +<p>Effusion into the knee or ankle, or sometimes both joints, was common in +fractures of the shaft of the tibia.</p> + +<p>In the articulations of the upper extremity the condition was also +common, but somewhat less marked than in the lower limb. Effusions into +the shoulder or elbow occurred. In the former these were less striking; +again, perhaps, as a result of the difficulty of detecting small +effusions in this situation. The elbow was to a certain extent protected +by the possession of a degree of fixity somewhat resembling that already +mentioned in the case of the hip-joint, although here depending on the +conformation of the bones alone. I think this explained the absence of +free effusion in many cases of fracture of the humeral shaft, but when +the latter affected the lower third effusion into the elbow was usually +abundant.</p> + +<p>The lighter weight and greater mobility of the upper extremity as a +whole, as decreasing the resistance to the bullet, were also probably an +element in the fact that these effusions were less severe than those in +the joints of the lower limb.</p> + +<p>The nature of the effusions was apparently simple, since they were +rapidly reabsorbed, and little thickening of the synovial membrane +remained to suggest either a marked degree of inflammation, or the +deposition of blood-clot on the inner aspect of the same.</p> + +<p>The only treatment indicated was a short period of rest, accompanied in +the early stages by pressure and slight fixation, followed later by +massage and movement if necessary.</p> + +<p>Before dismissing this subject, I should like to particularly emphasise +the fact, that in the cases described there was no reason to suspect the +extension of fissures from the point of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span> fracture in the shafts into the +articular ends of the bones. This was as far as possible excluded by +clinical examination, and in the cases where wounds of the soft parts +only were present, the rapid return of the patients to active duty, with +absence of remaining joint trouble, negatived the possibility of such +fractures.</p> + +<p>I only saw one case in which a longitudinal fracture actually extended +for any considerable distance into a neighbouring joint. In this a +comminuted fracture occurred just above the centre of the shaft of the +humerus. At the time of examination and putting up of the fracture there +was considerable swelling of the whole arm, and nothing special was +noticed about the shoulder-joint. Three weeks later, however, when the +fracture was consolidating, difficulty in abduction of the shoulder was +noted, and the arm could not be placed closely in contact with the +trunk. There was no evident displacement of the head of the humerus +forwards. A skiagram, which I much regret I have not been able to +insert, showed that a longitudinal fissure extended from the seat of +fracture upwards in such a manner as to divide the upper fragment into +two parts, of which the outer bore the greater tuberosity, the inner the +articular surface of the head. The latter fragment had become somewhat +displaced downwards, and had united in such a manner that the head +rested on the lower part of the glenoid cavity. Abduction of the limb +therefore brought the greater tuberosity into contact with the acromion +process, and movement was checked. This case passed out of my +observation shortly afterwards, and I have no knowledge of the final +result as to movement.</p> + +<p>Fractures of the bony processes surrounding the elbow-joint, and of the +malleoli of the tibia and fibula, were not infrequent, but offered no +special features.</p> + +<p>One other form of injury indirectly affecting the joints is perhaps +worthy of mention, but I observed it only once, and that in the case of +the shoulder, the only joint where it is likely to be marked. I refer to +the displacement of the head of the humerus by the force of gravity, +when the circumflex nerve is injured. In the instance I refer to, a +fracture of the surgical neck of the humerus was accompanied by +complete<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span> motor paralysis of the deltoid and very rapid wasting of the +muscle. Circumflex sensation was impaired, but not absent at the time +the condition of the muscle was noted—a favourable prognostic sign of +much importance. At the end of five weeks, when the fracture of the bone +was consolidated, the head of the humerus had dropped vertically at +least an inch, but could be replaced with ease. Shortly afterwards an +improvement in the condition of the muscle commenced, and with this the +head of the humerus was gradually raised. This patient later recovered +his power in great part, but not completely.</p> + +<p>In a few cases bullets lodged in the neighbourhood of joints in such +positions as to limit movement by mechanical impact with the bones. Thus +I saw one case in which a bullet lay between the radius and ulna just +below the lesser sigmoid cavity; in another the bullet lay in front of +the ankle-joint, and limited the possibility of flexion; and in a case +related to me by Mr. Bowlby, a bullet was removed by him from the wall +of the acetabulum where it was tightly fixed in the substance of the +bone. In two other cases I saw bullets lying deeply on the anterior +surface of the hip capsule and so limiting flexion. In all such cases +the indication for removal of the bullet was sufficiently strongly +marked.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Wounds of the Joints</span></h3> + +<p>These may be divided into several classes, varying much in comparative +severity, and in prognostic importance.</p> + +<p>1. The comparatively rare instances in which a wound implicated a joint +cavity, without accompanying lesion of any bone.</p> + +<p>2. Perforating wounds in which the bullet was retained within the +articular cavity. These were also rare.</p> + +<p>3. Wounds of the joints accompanied by grooving of the articular +extremities of the bones.</p> + +<p>4. Complete perforating tracks through the articular ends of the bones, +crossing the joint cavity in various directions.</p> + +<p>5. Comminuted fractures of the terminal parts of the diaphyses extending +into joints.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span></p> + +<p>Of these several classes, the first was of the least prognostic +importance. In the absence of bone injury the wounds usually healed +without any obvious ill effect beyond the transient effusion into the +joints of a mixture of blood and synovial fluid. When suppuration of the +wound in the soft parts occurred, however, the remarks made as to the +injuries classed under the third heading also apply here in a lesser +degree.</p> + +<p>With regard to the retention of the bullet, in the case of bullets of +small calibre this was a distinctly rare occurrence. I never happened to +see an instance of retention of either a Mauser or Lee-Metford bullet in +an articulation. It is only possible with bullets practically spent, or +travelling at a very low rate of velocity and making irregular impact.</p> + +<p>The influence of both volume and velocity of flight was well illustrated +by my own small experience of retained bullets. In one case a +Martini-Henry was found impacted between the femoral condyles, having +slipped in beneath the margin of the patella. It caused a semiflexed +position to be assumed by the joint, and was removed by Mr. Brown in No. +1 General Hospital at Wynberg. The second instance I saw in the Portland +Hospital at Bloemfontein in a patient of Mr. Bowlby's. The bullet was a +Guedes, a form which has been already described as possessing low +velocity and deficient power of penetration; beyond this, in the +particular instance irregular impact was evidenced by the presence of a +large irregular contused wound of entry over the tuberosity of the +tibia.</p> + +<p>The presence of the bullet in the knee-joint was later determined by the +X-rays, and Mr. Bowlby removed it successfully. Seven months later the +range of movement was nearly normal.</p> + +<p>I may add that I saw several instances of large leaden bullets lodging +in the popliteal space, and a comparatively insignificant number of +bullets of small calibre in the same situation. This was very striking, +in view of the immense relative frequency of use of the latter forms. +There is no doubt, moreover, that small bullets rarely lodge even in the +neighbourhood of joints, unless at the distal end of a long track. To +take the extreme example of large bullets,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span> those employed as shrapnel, +in comparison with the frequency with which wounds were produced by +them, bullets lying at the bottom of short tracks in the neighbourhood +of joints were not uncommon. Thus I saw one lying over the hip-joint, +and another in close proximity to the shoulder capsule.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the third class, where the bones had been superficially +grooved, were in some respects the most serious. This was especially so +in the knee and ankle joints, and some cases will be quoted later under +the heading of the special joints to illustrate this point. Danger only +arose in the event of suppuration; and here the presence of the long +oblique superficial track in a neighbourhood liable to comparatively +free movement was the important element. Such tracks usually opened the +synovial sac more extensively than direct perforating wounds, and if +suppuration occurred in any portion of the track, the pus was very +liable to be sucked into the joint on any free movement. The presence of +fine splinters of the bone displaced in the production of the groove was +also a special character of wounds of this class. Another point worthy +of mention is that in these cases it was not always easy to be quite +certain whether the joint cavity had been implicated or not, since cases +often occurred in which, although the bones had been grooved, the joint +cavity escaped. The indication, however, was to consider any wound in +the immediate proximity of a joint as perforating until it was healed. +This course was the more easy to take, since a large proportion of such +wounds were accompanied by some degree of synovial effusion, even when +the neighbouring joint had escaped puncture.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the fourth class, although the most highly characteristic of +the form of accident, were in many instances the most favourable in +regard to their course. The tracks might course directly across the +joint in any direction, or they might course obliquely, traversing +either one or both the component bones. In the latter case the exit +might be in the diaphysis, and be accompanied by the separation of an +exit fragment such as is illustrated in fig. 52, p. 169. The +particularly favourable character of the direct transverse and +antero-posterior wounds depended on the slight amount of splintering of +the bones, the limited nature of the opening into the joint,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span> and the +shortness of the tracks in the soft parts, which ensured that, even if +infection did occur, the resulting pus was near the surface, and +generally spread in that direction and escaped.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the fifth class were the most dangerous, but the danger was +entirely a secondary one, dependent on the occurrence of infection. +These injuries were liable to be accompanied by the presence of +extensive irregular wounds of the soft parts, in which suppuration was +frequent, and the suppuration of the joint frequently meant subsequent +amputation, if not a worse result.</p> + +<p><i>Course and symptoms of wounds of the joints.</i>—The immediate result of +any perforation of a joint was the development of intra-articular +effusion. This consisted of synovial fluid admixed with a varying +proportion of blood. The degree of synovitis was apt to vary with the +amount of force expended in the production of the injury; for this +reason both high velocity and irregular impact were of importance in +this relation.</p> + +<p>The constant feature, however, depended on the effusion of blood; this +was not rapid, or, as a rule, very abundant, but tended to increase +during the first twenty-four hours. It resulted in a swelling of the +joint, which possessed some peculiar features. At first elastic and +resilient, it slowly decreased in volume with the assumption of a soft +doughy character on palpation. In the case of the knee, where readily +palpated, it very much resembled a tubercular synovial membrane, except +for its extreme regularity of surface; still more closely the condition +noted in a hæmophilic knee of some duration. Absorption took place with +some rapidity, and except for slight thickening, the joints might appear +almost normal, in a period of from two to four weeks. With the +development of the effusion there was local rise in temperature of the +surface, and in a considerable number of the cases a general rise of +temperature.</p> + +<p>This latter was sometimes very marked, as in the case of all the other +traumatic blood effusions, but not quite so regular in occurrence. It +was important, as I have seen it give rise to the suspicion of +suppuration, when tapping resulted in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span> nothing more than the evacuation +of turbid synovia mixed with blood. Pain was rarely a prominent symptom +in consequence of the generally moderate degree of distension.</p> + +<p>As a rule, these injuries were characterised by the small tendency to +the development of adhesions; but this in great part depended on the +care expended on their treatment. If kept too long quiet, either from +necessity when the effusion was followed by much thickening, or when the +external wound was large and so situated as to be harmfully influenced +by movement, or in the ordinary course of treatment, troublesome +stiffness, even amounting to firm anchylosis, sometimes followed. I saw +several such cases, some of the most confirmed being wounds of the +knee-joint complicated by injury to the popliteal vessels or nerves. The +latter complication I saw altogether six times, but only once with a +thoroughly bad knee, and in this case the injury had affected both the +vessels and the internal popliteal nerve. The joint in that case was +straightened out by continuous extension by Major Lougheed, when it came +under his charge some six weeks after the primary injury, but I hear has +again relapsed, and the popliteal paralysis is not much improved.</p> + +<p>The small tendency to formation of adhesions in uncomplicated cases +probably depended on the coagulation of a layer of blood over the whole +internal lining of the joint. This kept the synovial surfaces apart at +the lines of reflection of the membrane, and, given sufficiently active +treatment, mobility was restored before any firm union could take place.</p> + +<p>The primary escape of synovial fluid was rarely observed, as the wounds +of the soft parts were too small and valvular to permit of it. Synovia +in some abundance, mixed with pus, sometimes escaped in considerable +quantity when infection had opened up the tracks.</p> + +<p>Primary suppuration in any joint as a result of small and direct wounds +was very rare. I observed it only on one occasion. On the other hand, a +considerable number of cases in which secondary suppuration occurred +came under my notice. In some of these the suppuration was secondary to +comminuted fractures of the shaft of the tibia, in which the articular +extremity was implicated. These offered no special<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span> peculiarity. In +others infection of the joint was secondary to infection and suppuration +in the deep part of long oblique wound tracks, and these were of +sufficient interest to warrant the insertion of two illustrative cases.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>43</b>) In a man wounded at Paardeberg the bullet entered the leg +to the inner side of the crest of the tibia, about 3 inches +below the tubercle; thence it coursed upwards to emerge about 2 +inches above the cleft of the knee-joint on the outer side. +Regulation dressings were applied, and a week later the man +arrived at the Base, with little apparent mischief in the +knee-joint. He was placed in bed and warned against movement; +on the second day, however, he got up and walked to the +latrine. When bending his knee to sit down he was seized with +agonising pain in the joint, and had to call out for help; he +was then carried back to bed in a more or less collapsed +condition. The knee commenced to swell; there was rise of +temperature and great pain, together with extreme restlessness. +I was asked to see him two days later, and after a +consultation, Major Burton, R.A.M.C., freely incised the +knee-joint bi-laterally. One opening was closed, the second +plugged for drainage, as there was a large quantity of pus. No +improvement followed, and a week later Major Burton amputated +through the thigh. An attack of secondary hæmorrhage a few days +later, combined with the degree of septic infection, ended the +man's life. On examination of the joint, a groove forming +three-fourths of a tunnel was found in the external tuberosity +of the tibia, leading into the knee-joint beneath the external +semilunar cartilage. The bullet had then passed upwards over +the outer border of the cartilage, bruised the margin of the +external condyle of the femur in such a manner as to depress +the outer compact layer, and finally escaped from the joint +near the upper reflection of the synovial membrane. The +synovial membrane was granular in appearance and reddened, but +there was no suppuration outside the confines of the joint, +except in a cavity corresponding to 2 inches of the track +before it actually perforated the tibia. A localised abscess +had evidently formed here and been diffused into the joint by +the movement of flexion already described.</p> + +<p>(<b>44</b>) A man wounded during General Hamilton's advance on +Heilbron was struck on the outer aspect of the heel. An oval +opening of some size led down to a track in the os calcis; the +bullet was retained. The foot was dressed, and put up later in +a plaster-of-Paris splint. On the tenth day the splint was +removed to see to the wound, which looked satisfactory and was +re-dressed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span></p> + +<p>A few hours later the man was seized with very severe pain in +the ankle, and a day later I was asked to see him by Mr. +Alexander. The man was anæsthetised, and I examined the wound +with care, and also removed the retained bullet from the inner +margin of the leg. The bullet was reversed, having no doubt +suffered ricochet, hence the large aperture of entry, but it +was in no way deformed. I could not certainly determine the +presence of any fluid in the ankle-joint, and as the pain was +apparently localised to the distribution of the +musculo-cutaneous nerve, I decided not to freely open the +joint. In this, however, I erred, and two days later, after +consultation, the joint was freely incised by Mr. Alexander. It +was then found that the bullet in its passage had just touched +the posterior aspect of the tibia and wounded the ankle-joint. +A localised collection of pus which had formed in the deep part +of the wound had been diffused into the joint by the movements +made when the splint was removed, in a similar manner to that +described in the last case. This joint also did badly, and an +amputation of the leg had to be performed by Mr. Alexander to +save the man's life.</p></div> + +<p>These two cases are particularly instructive as showing, first, how +quietly a small amount of deep suppuration may sometimes take place; +and, secondly, the importance of keeping the joints quiet on a splint +when there is any reason to suspect their implication by wounds of this +character.</p> + +<p><i>The general treatment</i> of the wounded joints was simple. The old +difficulties of deciding on partial as against full excision, or +amputation, were never met with by us. We had merely to do our first +dressings with care, fix the joint for a short period, and be careful to +commence passive movement as soon as the wounds were properly healed, to +obtain in the great majority of cases perfect results. Careful light +massage, if available, was used to promote absorption of blood.</p> + +<p>If suppuration occurred, the choice between incision and amputation had +to be considered. In the early stages this choice depended entirely on +the nature of the injury to the bones. If this were slight, incision was +the best plan to adopt. I saw several cases so treated which did well, +although convalescence was often prolonged, and only a small amount of +movement was regained. Amputation was sometimes indicated in cases of +severe bone-splintering, when the shafts were implicated,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> but was as a +rule only performed after an ineffectual trial to cut short general +infection of the septicæmic type by incision.</p> + +<p>I have dwelt at such length on the subject of suppuration on account of +its importance, but I should add that, on the whole, suppuration of the +joints was uncommon, except in the case of injuries far exceeding the +average in primary severity.</p> + +<p><i>Special joints.</i>—Such deviations from the general type of injury as +above described depended entirely on peculiarities of anatomical +arrangement, and peculiarities in the situation of the joint clefts in +the different parts of the body. A few words as to these are perhaps +necessary.</p> + +<p><i>Shoulder-joint.</i>—Wounds of this articulation were by no means common. +This depended, I think, on two points in the architecture of the joint: +first, a bullet to enter the front of the cavity and traverse the joint +needed to come with great exactitude from the immediate front; secondly, +wounds received from a purely lateral direction calculated to pierce the +head of the humerus and the glenoid cavity were naturally of very rare +occurrence. Wounds of the prominent tip of the shoulder received while +the men were in the prone position were not uncommon, but it was +remarkable how rarely the shoulder-joint was implicated in these. The +question of the narrow nature of the cleft exposed also comes up in this +position. As far as my experience went, injuries to the lower portion of +the capsule accompanying wounds of the axilla were those most often met +with. The ease and neatness with which pure perforations of the head of +the humerus can be produced was also an important element in the +frequent escape of this joint. No case of fracture of the glenoid cavity +happened to come under my notice.</p> + +<p>I saw few instances in which the joint needed incision, and cannot +recall or find in my notes any case in which serious trouble arose.</p> + +<p><i>Elbow-joint.</i>—Injuries to this joint came second in frequency in my +experience to those of the knee. They were, in fact, comparatively +common, especially in conjunction with fractures of the various bony +prominences surrounding the articulation. Fractures of the lower end of +the humerus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span> were of worse prognostic significance than those of the +ulna, on account of the greater tendency to splintering of the bone. I +saw several cases of pure perforation of the olecranon without any signs +of implication of the elbow-joint. In a case which has been utilised for +the illustration of some of the types of aperture (fig. 20, p. 59), at +the end of a week there was no sign of any joint lesion, although the +bullet had obviously perforated the articulation.</p> + +<p>Several cases of suppuration which came under my notice did well. I saw +one of them a few days ago, six months after the injury, with perfect +movement. In another of which I took notes, the bullet entered over the +outer aspect of the head of the radius, to emerge just above the +internal condyle anteriorly. A considerable amount of comminution of the +olecranon resulted, and when the man came into hospital some ten days +later the joint was suppurating. The joint was opened up from behind, +and some fragments of bone removed by Mr. Hanwell. On the 26th day this +joint was doing well, and considerable flexion and extension were +possible without pain. There was a somewhat abundant discharge of bloody +synovia during the first few days after the operation.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig59.jpg" width="450" height="275" alt="Fig. 59." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 59.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Illustrates the very neat and limited injury to +the Phalanges over the dorsal aspect of the first inter-phalangeal joint +of the Middle Finger, accompanying a gutter wound received by the +patient while holding a rifle</b></p> + +<p>I never saw any troublesome results from perforations of the <i>carpus</i>. +The joints of the <i>fingers</i> also offered little<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span> special interest, +except in so far as they afforded astonishing examples of the extreme +neatness of the injuries which a small-calibre bullet can produce. Fig. +59 is a good example of such an injury.</p> + +<p><i>Hip-joint.</i>—I can only repeat with regard to this joint what I have +already said as to the injuries to the head of the femur. I had +practically no experience of small-calibre bullet injuries to the +femoral constituent, and beyond the single case of injury to the +acetabular margin mentioned on p. 193 I saw no obvious wounds of the +joint at all.</p> + +<p><i>The knee</i>, as usual, proved itself <i>par excellence</i> the joint most +commonly injured, no doubt as a result of its size, the extent of its +capsule anteriorly, and its exposed position. In spite, however, of the +frequency with which it suffered injury, and the opportunities it +afforded for observation of the progress of the effusions towards +absorption, the injuries to the joint gave less anxiety and attained a +more favourable prognostic character than is the case in civil practice. +This depended on the very favourable course observed in the frequent +pure perforations following a direct line. These occurred in every +direction, the accompanying hæmarthrosis usually disappearing completely +in an average period of little over a month. The extremes can be fairly +placed at a fortnight and six weeks. Limitation of movement was slight +or non-existent in many cases; in others it was of a very moderate +character, and I only remember to have seen one case in which a really +serious anchylosis developed. In this the man was struck from a distance +of 300 yards, and a considerable amount of bone dust from the femur was +found in the lips of the exit aperture. The wounds healed <i>per primam</i>, +but when I saw the man two months later anchylosis in the straight +position was apparently complete.</p> + +<p>The comparatively frequent association of popliteal aneurisms with +wounds of the knee-joint has already been spoken of in relation to +anchylosis. Wounds of the popliteal space from larger bullets sometimes +caused more troublesome after-stiffness than wounds of the articulation +itself. Again I remember a small pom-pom wound at the inner margin of +the ligamentum patellæ without obvious wound of the joint,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span> which was +accompanied by synovitis from contusion, and was followed by very +considerable limitation of movement. This had only been partially +improved when the patient returned home, in spite of prolonged massage +and passive movement.</p> + +<p>The general remarks on the joints cover all that need be said as to +suppuration of the knee-joint.</p> + +<p><i>The ankle-joint</i> maintained the undesirable character which it has +always held as a subject for gunshot injuries. This is entirely a +question of sepsis, and in great measure depends on the fact that the +foot, as enclosed in a boot, is invested with skin particularly +difficult to thoroughly cleanse; while the socks are an additional +source of infection to the wounds before the patients come under proper +treatment.</p> + +<p>Of seven cases of suppurating ankle-joint, of which I have notes, only +two retained the foot, and one of these after a very dangerous illness. +This case was one of special interest as exemplifying the results +dependent on variations in velocity on the part of the bullet. The +patient was struck at a distance of twenty yards. The bullet entered the +front of the right ankle-joint and emerged through the internal +malleolus, just behind its centre, causing no comminution of the latter. +It then entered the left foot by a type wound one inch behind and below +the tip of the internal malleolus, traversed and comminuted the +astragalus, and emerged one inch below the tip of the external +malleolus. The first joint healed <i>per primam</i>. The second produced by +the bullet when passing at a lower rate of velocity was accompanied by +considerable comminution of the bone. It suppurated, and gave rise to +great anxiety both for the fate of the foot and the life of the patient. +It is probable that the more abundant hæmorrhage which took place from +the second wound was in part responsible for the occurrence of +infection.</p> + +<p>The second of the two cases is of some interest in relation to the +doctrine of chances as to the position in which a wound may be received. +The man was wounded in one of the earlier engagements, a bullet passing +transversely through his leg immediately behind the bones and about half +an inch above the level of the ankle-joint. He recovered, and rejoined +his regiment,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span> only to receive at Paardeberg a second wound, about an +inch lower, which traversed the ankle-joint. On his return to Wynberg he +happened to be sent to the same pavilion, and occupied the same bed he +had left on returning to the front.</p> + +<p>The subject of the result of wounds of the joints of the <i>foot</i> has +received sufficient consideration under the heading of wounds of the +tarsus.</p> + +<p>The repetition of the fact that, among the whole series of cases on +which this chapter is founded, not a single instance of primary or +secondary excision of a joint, either partial or complete, is recorded, +forms an apt conclusion to my remarks on this subject.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII</h2> + +<h3>INJURIES TO THE HEAD AND NECK</h3> + + +<p>Injuries to the head formed one of the most fruitful sources of death, +both upon the battlefield and in the Field hospitals. It has been +suggested that the mere fact of wounds of the head being readily visible +ensured all such being at once distinguished and correctly reported, +while wounds hidden by the clothing often escaped detection. When the +external insignificance of many of the fatal wounds of the trunk is +taken into consideration this is possible; but, on the other hand, it +must be borne in mind that the head is in any attitude the most +advanced, and often the most exposed, part of the body, and even when +the soldier had taken 'cover,' it was frequently raised for purposes of +observation. For the latter reasons I believe injury to the head fully +deserved the comparative importance as a fatal accident with which it +was credited.</p> + +<p>A number of somewhat sensational immediate recoveries from serious +wounds of the head have been placed upon record. Observation, however, +shows that these, with but few exceptions, belonged either to certain +groups of cases the relatively favourable prognosis in which is familiar +to us in civil practice, or that the wounds were received from a very +long range of fire, and hence the injuries were strictly localised in +character.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Anatomical Lesions</span></h3> + +<p><i>Wounds of the scalp.</i>—Nothing very special is to be recorded with +regard to these; they either formed the terminals of perforating wounds, +or were the result of superficial glancing shots. The glancing wounds +were of the nature of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span> furrows, varying in depth from mere grazes to +wounds laying bare the bone. Their peculiarity was centred in the fact +that a definite loss of substance accompanied them, the skin being +actually carried away by the bullet; hence gaping was the rule. Every +gradation in depth was met with, but the only situations in which wounds +of considerable length could occur were the frontal region in tranverse +shots, or, when the bullet passed sagitally, the sides of the head, or +the flat area of the vertex.</p> + +<p>The danger of overlooking injuries to the bone was of special importance +in the short subcutaneous tracks occasionally met with at the points at +which the surface of the skull makes sharp bends. In all such wounds it +was a safe rule to assume a fracture of the skull until this was +excluded by direct examination. In some of the gutter wounds and +subcutaneous tracks crossing the forehead and sides of the head, signs +of intracranial disturbance were occasionally observed in the absence of +external fracture, such as transient muscular weakness, unsteadiness in +movements, giddiness, diplopia, or loss of memory and intellectual +clearness. In connection with such symptoms the classical injury of +splintering of the internal table of the skull, the external remaining +intact, had to be borne in mind, but I observed no proven instance of +this accident. I am of opinion, moreover, that its occurrence with small +bullets travelling at a high degree of velocity must be very rare, since +little deflection is probable unless the contact has been sufficiently +decided to fracture the external table; while in the cases of spent +bullets the injury is unlikely, as requiring a considerable degree of +force.</p> + +<p><i>Injuries to the cranial bones, without evidence of gross lesion to the +brain.</i>—It may be premised that these were of the rarest occurrence, +and they may be most readily described by shortly recounting the +conditions observed in a few cases I noted at the time. The injuries +resulted from blows with spent bullets, from bullets barely striking the +skull directly, or those striking over the region of the frontal +sinuses. Wounds of the mastoid process will not be considered in this +connection as being of a special nature (see p. 299).<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span></p> + +<p>I saw only one case of escape of the internal, with depressed fracture +of the external, table of the skull.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>45</b>) In marching on Heilbron a man in the advance guard was +struck by a bullet at right angles just within the margin of +the hairy scalp. The regiment was at the time to all intents +and purposes outside the range of rifle fire, and the patient +was the only individual struck among its number. When brought +into the Highland Brigade Field Hospital, a single typical +entry wound was discovered; examination with the probe gave +evidence of a slight depression in the external table of the +frontal bone just above the temporal ridge. Although no +perforation was detectible by the probe, and this was +positively excluded on the raising of a flap (Major Murray, +R.A.M.C.), it was considered advisable to remove a 1/4-inch +trephine crown, the pin of the instrument being applied to the +margin of the depression. No depression or splintering of the +internal table was discovered, nor any injury to the dura, nor +blood upon the surface of that membrane. The man made an +uninterrupted recovery.</p> + +<p>(<b>46</b>) A case of frontal injury was shown to me at Wynberg, in +which a distinct furrow could be traced across the upper part +of the frontal sinuses. There had been no symptoms beyond +temporary diplopia, and the wound was healed; no surgical +interference had been deemed necessary.</p> + +<p>(<b>47</b>) In a man wounded at Poplar Grove, a single typical wound +of entry was found 3/4 of an inch above the right eyebrow and +the same distance from the median line. No primary symptoms +were observed, but on the evening of the second day the +temperature rose above 100° F., and the man seemed somewhat +heavy and dull. The patient was examined by Major Fiaschi and +Mr. Watson Cheyne, and it was decided to explore the wound. Mr. +Cheyne removed fragments both of external and internal tables, +one of the latter having made a punctiform opening, not +admitting the finest probe, in the dura-mater. The bullet was +traced into the nasal fossæ, where it was subsequently +localised with the aid of the Roentgen rays when the patient +came under my observation at Wynberg some days later (fig. 60).</p></div> + +<p><i>Gunshot fracture of the skull with concurrent brain injury.</i>—This was +the commonest form of head injury, and possessed two main peculiarities; +firstly, the large amount of brain destruction compared with the extent +of the bone lesion; secondly, the fact that any region of the skull was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span> +equally open to damage. In consequence of the second peculiarity, the +position and direction of secondary fissures are not so dependent on +anatomical structure as in the corresponding injuries of civil practice. +Thus, fractures of the base, for instance, were less constant in their +course and position. The cases as a whole are best divided into four +classes.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig60.jpg" width="450" height="390" alt="Fig. 60." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 60.—Mauser Bullet in Nasal Fossa. (Skiagram by H. +Catling.) Case No. 47</span> +</div> + +<p>1. Extensive sagittal tracks passing <i>deeply</i> through the brain, and +vertical wounds passing from base to vertex or <i>vice versa</i>, in the +posterior two thirds of the skull. These will be referred to as general +injuries.</p> + +<p>2. Vertical or coronal wounds in the frontal region.</p> + +<p>3. Glancing or obliquely perforating wounds of varying depth in any part +of the head.</p> + +<p>4. Fractures of the base.</p> + +<p>Of these classes the first was nearly uniformly fatal; the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span> second +relatively favourable, and with low degrees of velocity often +accompanied by surprisingly slight immediate effects; while the third +had perhaps the best prognosis of all, but this varied as to the defects +that might be left, and with the region of the head affected.</p> + +<p>1. <i>General injuries.</i>—Fractures of this class may be treated of almost +apart. For their production the retention of a considerable degree of +velocity on the part of the bullet was always necessary, and the results +were consequently both extensive and severe.</p> + +<p>The aperture of entry was comparatively small, since to take so direct +and lengthy a course through the skull the impact of the bullet needed +to be at nearly an exact right angle to the surface of the bone. Any +disposition to assume the oval form, therefore, depended mainly upon the +degree of slope of the actual area of the skull implicated. In size the +aperture of entry did not greatly exceed the calibre of the bullet; in +outline it was seldom exactly circular, but rather roughly four-sided, +with rounded angles, slightly oval, or pear-shaped. The margin of the +opening consisted of outer table alone, the inner being always +considerably comminuted. Fragments of the latter, together with the +majority of those corresponding to the loss of substance of the outer +table, were driven through the dura mater and embedded in the brain. +These bony fragments were more or less widely distributed over an area +of a square inch or more, and not confined to a narrow track.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 219px;"> +<img src="images/fig61.jpg" width="219" height="250" alt="Fig. 61." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 61.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Diagram of Aperture of Entry in Occipital Bone, +showing radiating fissures exact length. The exit in the frontal region +was of typical explosive character. Range '100 yards'</b></p> + +<p>The amount of fissuring at the aperture of entry was often not so +extensive as I had been led to expect. Fig. 61 is a diagram illustrating +a fairly typical instance; in some cases no fissuring existed. As a rule +the nearer to the base, the greater was the amount of fissuring +observed. The fissures were sometimes very extensive in this position, +probably as a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span> result of the lesser degree of elasticity in this region +of the skull. Again, when the aperture of entry was near the parts of +the vertex where sudden bends take place, considerable fissuring of the +same nature as that seen in the superficial tracks (fig. 68) was +produced in the flat portion of the skull above the point of entrance.</p> + +<p>Radial fissuring around the aperture of entry in the skull scarcely +corresponds in degree with that seen when the shafts of the long bones +are struck, and is far less marked and regular than when one of these +small bullets strikes a thick sheet of glass set in a frame. I saw +several apertures in the thick glass of the windows of the waterworks +building at Bloemfontein produced by Mauser bullets. They differed +little from the opening seen in an ordinary plate-glass window resulting +from a blow from a stone, except perhaps in the regularity and +multiplicity of the radial fissures. As in the skull, the opening was a +little larger than the calibre of the bullet, and the loss of substance +on the inner aspect considerably exceeded that on the outer.</p> + +<p>The degree of fissuring is probably affected by the resistance offered +by the particular skull, or the special region struck, but as a rule the +elasticity and capacity for alteration in shape possessed by the bony +capsule, is opposed to the production of the extreme radial starring +observed in the long bones or a fixed sheet of glass. Corroborative +evidence of the influence of elasticity in the prevention of starring is +seen in the limited nature of the comminution of the ribs in cases of +perforating wounds of the thorax.</p> + +<p>In the most severe cases we can only speak of the 'aperture' of exit in +a limited sense in so far as the opening in the scalp is concerned; this +was often comparatively small, not exceeding 3/4 of an inch in diameter. +Beneath this limited opening in the soft parts, the bone of the skull +was smashed in a most extensive manner. The portion exactly +corresponding to the point of exit of the bullet was carried altogether +away, but around this point a number of large irregularly shaped +fragments of bone, from 3/4 to 1 inch in diameter, were found loose, and +often so displaced as to expose a considerable area of the dura-mater. +Beyond the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span> area of these loose fragments, fissures extended into the +base and vertex, in the latter case often being limited in their extent +by the nearest suture.</p> + +<p>Over extensive fractures of this nature general œdema and +infiltration of the scalp, due to extravasation of blood, were present. +When the exit was situated in the frontal region ecchymosis often +extended to the eyelids and down the face, while in the occipital region +similar ecchymosis was often seen at the back of the neck.</p> + +<p>The opening in the dura mater at the aperture of entry was either +slitlike, or more often irregular from laceration by the fragments of +bone driven in by the bullet. At the point of exit a similar limited +opening corresponded with the spot at which the bullet had passed, while +separate rents of larger size were often seen at some little distance. +The latter were the result of laceration of the outer surface of the +membrane by the margins of the large loose fragments of bone above +described.</p> + +<p>Injury to the brain more than corresponded in extent to the fractures of +the bone. Pulping of its tissue existed over a wide area both at the +points of entrance and of exit. In the former position the amount of +damage was the less, the gross changes roughly corresponding with the +tissue directly implicated by the bullet itself, and the fragments of +bone carried forward by it. The degree of splintering of the skull +therefore in great part determined the severity of the lesion. At the +exit aperture much more widespread destruction existed, while masses of +brain tissue, small shreds of the membranes, fragments of bone, and +<i>débris</i> from the scalp were found occasionally bound together by +coagulated blood and protruding from an exit opening of some size. The +largest masses of such <i>débris</i> were most often seen in instances in +which the bullet had entered by the base to escape at the vertex of the +skull.</p> + +<p>The brain in the line of injury suffered comparatively slightly, but +small parenchymatous hæmorrhages into its tissue indicated in lesser +degree the same type of injury undergone by the mass of brain pulp and +small blood-clots found at the external limits of the wound. Beyond this +extensive hæmorrhages at the base of the skull were common.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p> + +<p>With regard to the extensive character of the brain destruction in the +region of the aperture of exit, it must be borne in mind that this +lesion corresponds in position with one which would exist even if the +injury were of a non-penetrating degree. A large proportion of the +contusion and destruction is therefore explained by violent impact of +the projected brain with the skull prior to the passage of the bullet, +and not to the direct action of the bullet on the tissues.</p> + +<p>These cases of 'general injury' afford a marked example of the lesions +to which the term 'explosive' has been applied, and as such have an +important bearing on the theories held as to the mode of production of +explosive effect. The increased area of tissue damage at the aperture of +exit favours the theory of direct transmission of a part of the force +with which the bullet is endowed, to the molecules of tissue bounding +the track made by the projectile. Thus the area of destruction +corresponds with the cone-like figure which one would expect to be built +up by the vibrations spreading from the primary point of impact. The +exit region of the skull is subjected not alone to the force of the +travelling bullet, but also to that exerted over a much wider area by +the tissue to which secondary vibrations have been communicated. The +brain itself is, in fact, dashed with such violence against the bone as +to cause a great part of the injury.</p> + +<p>No doubt the brain in its reaction to the bullet forms as near an +approach to a fluid as any solid tissue in the human body, and +experimental observation has shown how greatly its presence or absence +in the skull affects the degree of comminution on the exit side; hence +the fondness for the so-called hydraulic theory that has been always +exhibited in the case of these injuries. The localisation of the injury +in its highest degree to the neighbourhood of the exit aperture, +however, shows that in any case the main wave takes a definite direction +in a course corresponding to that of the bullet.</p> + +<p>The real importance of the presence of the brain within the skull in +increasing the amount of damage at the exit end of the track, is as a +medium for the ready transmission of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span> forcible vibrations. That the +latter are to some extent conveyed as by a fluid is evidenced by the +occasional presence of brain matter and fragments of bone in the +aperture of entry, which suggests recoil or splash such as would be +expected from a fluid wave.</p> + +<p>Experience of the character of the lesions observed after severe +concussion by the ordinarily somewhat coarser forms of violence common +to civil life, fully explains the severity of the damage to the brain +tissue met with in injuries due to bullets of small calibre. Viewing the +elaborate arrangements which exist for the preservation of the central +nervous system from the moderate vibration incidental to ordinary +existence, it is easy to appreciate the harmfulness of such exquisite +vibratory force as that transmitted by a bullet of small calibre +travelling at a high rate of velocity.</p> + +<p><i>Effect of ricochet in the production of severe forms of injury.</i>—In +connection with the lesions above described mention must be made of +cases in which the aperture of entry reaches a large size, or a portion +of the skull is actually blown away.</p> + +<p>Examples of the former class were not uncommon; I will briefly relate +one.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>48</b>) A Highlander while lying in the prone position at +Rooipoort, was struck by a bullet probably at a distance of +about 1,000 yards. A large entry wound in the scalp was +produced, while the defect in the skull was coarsely comminuted +and was capable of admitting three fingers into a mass of +pulped brain. Both brain matter and fragments of bone were +found in the external wound, which was situated just anterior +to the right parietal eminence. The bullet passed onwards +through the base of the skull, crossing the external auditory +meatus, fracturing the zygoma and probably the condyle of the +mandible, and eventually lodged beneath the masseter muscle. +Blood and brain matter escaped from the external auditory +meatus.</p> + +<p>The patient was brought off the field in a semi-conscious +condition, the pupils moderately contracted but equal, the +pulse 66, very small and irregular in beat, the respiration +quiet and easy, and with paralysis of the left side of the +body. The fæces had been passed involuntarily.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p> + +<p>The wound was cleansed and bone fragments removed. The patient +had to travel in a wagon for the next three days until the +column halted. The progress of the case was unsatisfactory, as +the wound became infected, and the man eventually died on the +14th day of general septicæmia, but with little evidence of +local extension of septic inflammation.</p> + +<p>In this instance the head was no doubt struck by a bullet which +had previously made ricochet contact with the ground. I saw +several such cases.</p></div> + +<p>Closely connected with such injuries are those in which large portions +of the skull and scalp were actually blown away. I never witnessed one +of these myself, but I recall two instances described to me by officers +who lay near the wounded men on the field. In one the frontal region was +carried away so extensively that, to repeat the familiar description +given by the officer, 'he could see down into the man's stomach through +his head.' In a second case the greater part of the occipital region was +blown away in a similar manner, and this was of especial interest as the +wounded man was seen to sit up on the buttocks and turn rapidly round +three or four times before falling apparently dead. The observation +offers interesting evidence of the result of an extensive gross lesion +of the cerebellum.</p> + +<p>In the absence of exact information, it may well be that such injuries +as the two latter were produced by some special form of bullet, but as +both were produced while the patients were lying on the ground, and +therefore especially liable to blows from ricochet bullets, I am +inclined to attribute both to this cause.</p> + +<p>In considering injuries of the above nature, one cannot help speculating +on the possible influence of a head-over-heels ricochet turn on the part +of the bullet while traversing the long sagittal axis of the skull. It +is not uncommon for apical target ricochets to present evidence of +damage to the apex and base of the mantle alone. This must depend on a +rapid turn on impact, which might well be imitated in the case of the +skull, and would then go far to explain the production of some of the +most severe forms of explosive exit wounds met with. See cases 48, 54, +68.</p> + +<p>Short of ricochet, the influence of simple wobbling must<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> also be +considered in shots from a long range. The entry wound may be large as a +result of this condition, but as the velocity possessed by the bullet is +low, the injuries would probably not be of a very severe nature.</p> + +<p>In connection with the subject of wobbling, reference should be made to +the form suggested by Nimier and Laval, in which the wobble, as the +result of resistance to the apex of the revolving bullet, assumes the +form of movement seen when the spin of a top is failing. This would +explain a peculiarity in some wounds of entry over the skull first +pointed out to me by Mr. J. J. Day. When such wounds were explored, as +well as the presence of brain in the entry aperture, a number of +fragments of the external table of the skull were found everted and +fixed in the tissues of the scalp. As already suggested, this may be +mere evidence of splash, but it may be equally well explained by a +process of wobble around the axis of revolution of the bullet. This +might, no doubt, also be invoked to explain the displacement of some of +the fragments in fractures of the long bones, where considerable +resistance to the passage of the bullet is offered.</p> + +<p>II. <i>Vertical or coronal wounds in the frontal region.</i>—These injuries +were common, and offered some of the most interesting illustrations of +the variations in symptoms and effects following apparently exactly +identical lesions, judging from the condition of the external soft parts +alone; since the latter sometimes gave little indication of the force +(dependent on the rate of velocity) which had been applied.</p> + +<p>With the lower degrees of velocity simple punctured fractures of the +skull resulted, without extensive lesion of the frontal lobes as +evidenced by immediate symptoms. The nature of the fractures differed in +no way from the punctured fractures we are familiar with in civil +practice. The openings of entry in the bone were irregularly rounded, +corresponding in size to the particular calibre of the bullet concerned. +The margin consisted of outer table alone, while the inner table was +either considerably comminuted, or a large piece was depressed, wounding +the dura-mater and projecting into the brain substance (see fig. 63). +The aperture of exit presented exactly the opposite characters, the +splintering comminution<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span> or separation of a large fragment affecting the +outer table, while the inner presented a simple perforation. The latter +condition is represented in figs. 71 and 72, and I will here give short +notes of four illustrative cases, as being the shortest and most +satisfactory method of conveying a correct idea of the nature of such +injuries.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 381px;"> +<img src="images/fig62.jpg" width="381" height="450" alt="Fig. 62" title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 62—Aperture of Entry in Frontal Bone. Case No. 50. +1/2</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>49</b>) <i>Vertical perforation of frontal bone.</i>—Wounded at +Belmont, while in the prone position. Aperture of <i>entry</i> +(Mauser), at the anterior margin of the hairy scalp on the left +side; course, through the anterior part of the left frontal +lobe, roof of the left orbit, cutting the optic nerve and +injuring the back of the eyeball, floor of the orbit, the +antrum, the hard palate, and tongue. <i>Exit</i>, in mid line of the +submaxillary region. No cerebral symptoms were noted, and on +the fifth day the man was sent to the Base hospital without +operation; the pulse was then 70 and the temperature normal. +The movements of the eyeball were perfect, but blindness was +absolute. At the Base hospital the eye suppurated and was +removed. The patient was then sent home apparently well. He has +since been discharged from the service, and is now employed as +a painter in Portsmouth Dockyard.</p> + +<p>(<b>50</b>) <i>Vertical perforation of frontal bone.</i>—Wounded at +Paardeberg while in the prone position. Range, 600-700 yards. +Aperture of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), at the fore margin of the hairy +scalp above the centre of the right eyebrow; course, through +the anterior third of the right frontal lobe, roof of orbit, +front of eyeball, margin of floor of orbit making a distinct +palpable notch, and cheek; <i>exit</i> through the red margin of the +upper lip, 1/2 an inch from the right angle of mouth. The +bullet slightly grooved the lower lip.</p> + +<p>The patient rose almost immediately after being struck, and +walked about a mile, although feeling dizzy and tired. The +wounds, which both bled considerably, were then dressed. After +three days' stay in a Field hospital, the patient was sent in a +bullock wagon three days and nights' journey to Modder River +and thence to the Base.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p> + +<p>There was anæsthesia over the area supplied by the outer branch +of the supra-orbital nerve, extending from the supra-orbital +notch backwards into the parietal region, but none over the +area supplied by the second division of the fifth nerve.</p> + +<p>On the tenth day there were no signs of cerebral disturbance +except a pulse of 48. The eyeball was suppurating, and the +temperature rose to 99° at night. The lids were still swollen +and closed.</p> + +<p>A few days later the eyeball was removed and at the same time a +flap was raised and the fracture explored (Major Burton, +R.A.M.C.). An opening somewhat angular, 1/3 of an inch in +diameter, was found with a thin margin in the outer table of +the skull (fig. 62); when this was enlarged with a Hoffman's +forceps, an opening in the dura was discovered, and +cerebro-spinal fluid escaped. A piece of the inner table of the +skull (fig. 63), 3/4 by 1/3 an inch in size, was discovered +projecting downwards vertically into the brain. This latter was +removed and the wound closed. Healing by primary union +followed, and no further symptoms were observed.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig63.jpg" width="450" height="242" alt="Fig. 63." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 63.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Fragment of Inner Table depending +vertically from lower margin of puncture shown in fig. 62. The +centre was perforated. Exact size</b></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>51</b>) <i>Transverse frontal wound.</i>—Wounded at Paardeberg. The +man was sitting down at the time he was struck, in the belief +that he was out of the range of fire. The <i>entry</i> and <i>exit</i> +wounds were almost symmetrical, placed on the two sides of the +forehead at the margin of the hairy scalp, 2¼ inches above +the level of the external angular processes of the frontal +bone. The patient lost consciousness for about half an hour, +then rose and walked half a mile to the Field hospital. The +wounds were dressed, and after a stay of three days in +hospital, the man was sent the three days' journey to Modder +River; during the journey he got in and out of the wagon when +he wished. After two days' stay at Modder, a journey was again +made by rail to De Aar (122½ miles). The wounds were healed. +The man stayed at De Aar nearly a month, and then, rejoining +his regiment, made a two days' march of some 22 miles on hot +days. He had to fall out twice on the way by reason of +headache, feeling dizzy, and 'things looking black.' He did not +own to any loss of memory or intellectual trouble, but was +invalided to England. This patient returned to South Africa +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>later, and is now on active service.</p> + +<p>(<b>52</b>) <i>Transverse frontal wound.</i>—Within a few days an almost +identical symmetrical wound in the frontal region occurred in +the same district, from a near range. The patient became +immediately unconscious, and remained so until his death some +four days later, his symptoms being in no way alleviated by +operation and the removal of a quantity of bone fragments and +cerebral <i>débris</i>. At the <i>post-mortem</i> examination, extensive +destruction of both hemispheres of the brain was revealed, and +large fissures extended into the base of the skull.</p></div> + +<p>III. <i>Glancing or oblique perforating wounds of varying depth in any +portion of the cranium.</i>—These injuries were the most common, the most +highly characteristic of small-calibre bullet wounds, the most +interesting from the point of view of diagnosis, prognosis, and +treatment, and beyond this they formed the variety most unlike any that +we meet with in civil practice.</p> + +<p>They were met with in every region of the cranium, and in every degree +of depth and severity. The lesser are best designated as gutter +fractures, the deeper are perforating and gradually approximate +themselves to the type of injury described as class 1.</p> + +<p>When the bullet struck a prominent or angular spot on the skull a +considerable oval-shaped fragment was occasionally carried away, leaving +an exposed surface of the diploë (case 60, p. 274). Under these +circumstances the apparent lesion on raising a flap was slight, but +exploration often showed extensive intra-cranial mischief. Thus in the +case referred to both dura and brain were wounded, and continuing +hæmorrhage led to the development of progressive paralysis, relieved +only by operation.</p> + +<p>From the more deeply passing bullets a more or less oval opening +resulted, in which both tables were freely comminuted and displaced. +These cases differed from the typical gutter fracture only in length and +outline, and the nature of the accompanying intra-cranial lesion was +identical, while in the latter particular they differed much from +fractures in which the impact of the bullet was direct, in spite of a +near resemblance in the appearances in the osseous defect.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p> + +<p>I saw one instance in which a circular fissure about 1½ inch from +the actual opening of entry surrounded the latter, the area of bone +within the circle being somewhat depressed, though radial fissures were +absent.</p> + +<p>In several of these cases fragments of lead were either found on the +fractured surface of the bone or within the cranial cavity, showing that +the bullets had undergone fissuring of the mantle, or had actually +broken up on impact.</p> + +<p><i>Gutter fractures.</i>—The nature of the injury to the bones in these is +best illustrated by a series of diagrams of sections such as are shown +below.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig64.jpg" width="450" height="240" alt="Fig. 64." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 64.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Gutter Fracture of first degree. The drawing +does not show well the small fragments of bone usually carried from the +margins of the depression by the bullet</b></p> + +<p>In the most superficial injuries the outer table was grooved and +depressed, usually with loss of substance from small fragments directly +shot away: these latter had either been driven through the wound in the +soft parts, or remained embedded on the deep aspect of the enveloping +scalp (fig. 64). In the less common variety the scalp was slit to a +length corresponding with the injury to the bone, but more often oval +openings in the skin existed at either end of the track. The inner table +was practically never intact, but the amount of comminution naturally +varied with the depth to which the outer table was implicated (fig. 65 +<span class="smcap"><i>A</i></span>, and <span class="smcap"><i>B</i></span>).</p> + +<p>The following is an illustrative example of this degree,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span> and also +emphasises the consequences which may follow primary non-interference.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig65.jpg" width="450" height="446" alt="Fig. 65." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 65.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Diagrammatic transverse sections of varying +condition of bones in Gutter Fractures of the first degree. <i>A.</i> With no +loss of substance. <i>B.</i> With comminution</b></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>53</b>) <i>Superficial gutter fracture in parietal region. +Convulsive twitchings. Secondary paralysis.</i>—Wounded at Modder +River. Range, 400 yards. A scalp wound 3 inches in length ran +vertically downwards, commencing 1 inch from the median line, +and situated immediately over the upper third of the right +fissure of Rolando. The patient was unconscious for several +hours after the injury, and later suffered with severe +headache, and twitchings in the left shoulder and arm.</p> + +<p>The wound healed, but a well-marked groove was palpable in the +bone beneath, and the twitchings persisted. The latter came on +about every twenty minutes, and loss of power in the left upper +extremity, and to a less degree in the lower, developed. The +memory was defective, and the patient suffered at times with +headache. The pupils were equal but sluggish in action. No +changes were discovered in the fundus beyond a well-developed +myopic crescent at the lower and outer part of the left disc +(Mr. Hanwell).</p> + +<p>The twitchings became more frequent and latterly were +accompanied by somewhat severe muscular contractions in the +upper extremity, while the loss of power in the lower extremity +became more marked. Headache was also more troublesome.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span></p> + +<p>The patient throughout refused any operation, saying he would +rather go home first, and at the end of a month he left for +England.</p></div> + +<p>In the deeper injuries more and more of the outer table was cut away, +and the inner became gradually more depressed, fractured, or comminuted +(fig 66).</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig66.jpg" width="450" height="310" alt="Fig. 66." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 66.</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p class="center">Gutter Fracture of the second degree. +Perforating the skull in the centre of its course. External table alone +carried away at either end</p></div> + +<p>Bevelling at the expense of the outer table at both entry and exit ends +of the course existed, but in either case a portion of the inner table +was also detached and depressed. Sometimes the depressed portion of the +inner table was mainly composed of one elongated fragment; this was +either when the bullet had not implicated a great thickness of the outer +table, or had passed with great obliquity through especially dense bone +(see fig. 70). When the bullet had passed more deeply the inner table +was comminuted into numberless fragments. I have frequently seen 50 or +60 removed. Where such tracks<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span> crossed convex surfaces of the skull, the +two conditions were often combined; thus at one portion of the track, +usually the centre, the comminution was extreme, while at either end a +considerable elongated fragment of inner table was often found, the +latter perhaps more commonly at the distal or exit extremity (fig. 67).</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 356px;"> +<img src="images/fig67.jpg" width="356" height="450" alt="Fig. 67." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 67.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Diagrammatic transverse sections of complete +Gutter Fracture. <i>A.</i> External table destroyed, large fragment of +internal table depressed. (Low velocity or dense bone.) <i>B.</i> Comminution +and pulverisation of both tables centre of track. <i>C.</i> Depression of +inner table (low velocity)</b></p> + +<p>The nature of the injury to the bone when the flight of the bullet +actually involved the whole thickness of the calvarium was comparable to +that seen in the case of the long bones when struck by a bullet +travelling at a moderate rate (see plate XIX. of the tibia, or what is +illustrated in the case of the pelvis in fig. 55). In point of fact, a +clean longitudinal track appeared to have been cut out. The length of +these tracks naturally depended upon the region of the skull struck. +When a point corresponding to a sharp convexity, or a sudden bend in +the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span> surface, was implicated, an oval opening of varying length in its +long axis was the result; when a flat area, as exists in the frontal or +lateral portions of the skull, was the seat of injury, a long track was +cut.</p> + +<p><i>Superficial perforating fractures.</i>—These formed the next degree; the +chief peculiarity in them was the lifting of nearly the whole thickness +of the skull at the distal margin of the entry, and the proximal edge of +the exit, openings; the flatter the area of skull under which the bullet +travelled the more extensive was the comminution. In some cases nearly +the whole length of the bone superficial to the track would be raised; +in fact, the bullet having once entered, the force is applied from +within in exactly the same way that it operates on the inner table in +the gutter fractures. A corresponding injury is met with in the case of +the bones of the extremities (see fig. 57 of the tibia), and again the +resemblance between these injuries of the skull and such perforations of +the long bones as are illustrated by skiagrams Nos. III. and XXIII. of +the clavicle and fibula is a close one.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig68.jpg" width="450" height="239" alt="Fig. 68." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 68.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Superficial Perforating Fracture. Illustrating +lifting of roof at both entry and exit openings</b></p> + +<p>I will add here a case of coexistent gutter fracture and perforating +wound of the skull, the conditions of the bone in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span> which will illustrate +the behaviour of the outer and inner tables respectively, when struck +with moderate force.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig69.jpg" width="450" height="153" alt="Fig. 69." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 69.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Diagrammatic longitudinal section of Fracture +shown in fig. 68</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 194px;"> +<img src="images/fig70.jpg" width="194" height="350" alt="Fig. 70." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 70.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Fragment forming the main part of the floor of +Gutter Fracture in the squamous portion of the temporal bone. (Low +velocity, hard bone)</b></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>54</b>) Wounded at Thaba-nchu. Guedes bullet. <i>Entry</i> behind left +ear, just above posterior root of zygoma; gutter fracture; +bullet retained within skull. Above and corresponding to right +frontal eminence there was a hæmatoma, beneath which a loose +fragment of bone was readily palpable. When brought into the +Field hospital, twenty-four hours after the injury, the man +appeared to understand when spoken to, but made no answers to +questions. The urine was passed unconsciously, the bowels were +confined.</p> + +<p>He was drowsy, the pupils widely dilated, the pulse 68, of good +strength, and the temperature 104°. He slept well the following +night and midday there was little change, except that the +pupils acted to light, and the pulse had risen to 88, becoming +dicrotic and small. The temperature was 103°, the tongue furred +and dry, but he was lying with the mouth wide open.</p> + +<p>At 2 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> the wound was explored. The entry led down to a +typical gutter fracture in the squamous portion of the temporal +bone, at the point of junction of the vertical with the +horizontal part; the floor of the gutter had been displaced +inwards as a single fragment (fig. 70). A flap was raised in +the frontal region, where a scale of outer table (fig. 71), +clothed with diploic tissue, was found loose. Beneath this a +puncture on the frontal bone, about corresponding in size to +the bullet, was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span> discovered. This opening was enlarged, and a +bullet detected and removed. The bullet was a Guedes, with no +marks of rifling, and was in no way deformed. At least a square +inch of the right frontal lobe was pulped, so that the bullet +lay in a cavity.</p> + +<p>The patient improved somewhat during the next two days, and on +the third took a 16 hours' journey to Bloemfontein, where Mr. +Bowlby (who was present at the operation) kindly took him into +the Portland Hospital. The pulse gradually rose to 112, the +temperature remained on an average from 102° to 103°, the +respiration rose to 36, the face became somewhat livid, and on +the sixth day death occurred rather suddenly, apparently from +respiratory failure. For two days before his death the patient +sometimes asked for food, &c.; there was occasional twitching +of the left angle of the mouth, and, when the posterior wound +was manipulated, some twitching of the fingers of the left +hand. When the wound was dressed on the fourth day, there were +breaking-down blood-clot and signs of incipient suppuration.</p> + +<p>Mr. Bowlby made a <i>post-mortem</i> examination, and found +considerable pulping of the tip of the right frontal and left +temporo-sphenoidal lobes, and a thick layer of hæmorrhage +extending over the whole base of the brain.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig71.jpg" width="450" height="337" alt="Fig. 71." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 71.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Scale of outer table of Frontal Bone and +Diploë. Exact size, from fracture shown in fig. 72</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 366px;"> +<img src="images/fig72.jpg" width="366" height="450" alt="Fig. 72." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 72.—Perforating Fracture of Frontal Bone from +within Separation of plate outer table. (Low velocity.) 1/2</span> +</div> + +<p>The injury to the <i>cranial contents</i> varied with the degree of bone +injury. Hæmorrhage on the surface of the dura may in rare instances have +been the sole gross lesion; I never met with such a condition, however. +In all the cases in which comminution had occurred, some laceration of +the dura, even if<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span> not more than surface damage or a punctiform opening, +had resulted. In the more serious gutter fractures an elongated rent of +some extent usually existed. In the perforating fractures two more or +less irregular openings were the rule. The amount of hæmorrhage, even if +the venous sinuses were implicated, was on the whole surprisingly small, +when the cases were such as to survive the injury long enough to be +brought to the Field hospital. I never saw a typical case of middle +meningeal hæmorrhage, although many fractures crossing the line of +distribution of the large branches came under observation. Case 60, p. +274, illustrated the fact that the osseous lesions of lesser apparent +degree are sometimes the more to be feared in the matter of hæmorrhage, +as compression is more readily developed.</p> + +<p>The degree of injury to the brain depended on the depth of the track, +the resistance offered by the bones of any individual skull, the weight +of the patient, but chiefly on the degree of velocity retained by the +bullet. It was sometimes slight and local as far as symptoms would guide +us; but in the majority of cases out of all proportion to the apparent +bone lesion, if the range was at all a short one. Cases illustrative of +these injuries are included under the heading of symptoms.</p> + +<p>It will be, of course, appreciated that the coarse brain lesions under +the third heading differed in localisation and in extent alone, and in +no wise in nature, from those observed in the two preceding classes. The +damage consisted in direct superficial laceration and contusion, and +beyond the limits of the area of actual destruction, abundant +parenchymatous hæmorrhages more or less broke up the structure of the +brain, such hæmorrhages decreasing both in size and number as +macroscopically uninjured tissue was reached. No opportunity was ever +afforded of examining a simple wound track in a case in which no obvious +cerebral symptoms had been present.</p> + +<p>IV. <i>Fractures of the base.</i>—In addition to the above classes, a few +words ought to be added regarding the gunshot fractures of the base of +the skull. These possessed some striking peculiarities; first in the +fact that they might occur in any position, and hence differed from the +typically coursing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span> 'bursting' fractures we are accustomed to in civil +life as the consequence of blows and falls, and consequently were often +present without any of the classical symptoms by which we are accustomed +to locate such fissures. Secondly, the peculiar form was not uncommon in +which extensive mischief was produced from within by direct contact of a +passing bullet.</p> + +<p>As far as could be judged from clinical symptoms, indirect fractures of +the base such as we are accustomed to meet in civil practice in +connection with fractures of the vault were decidedly rare, and, as has +already been mentioned, ocular evidence of extensive fissures extending +from perforating wounds of the vertex was wanting, except in the extreme +cases classed under heading I. For these reasons I am inclined to regard +them as uncommon.</p> + +<p>Direct fractures of the base, on the other hand, were of common +occurrence, especially in the anterior fossa of the skull. These might +be produced either from within, the most characteristic form of gunshot +injury, or from without. The fractures from within were often simple +punctures of the roof of the orbit or nose.</p> + +<p>Punctured fractures of the roof of the orbit caused little trouble as +far as the cranium was concerned, but the orbital structures often +suffered severely. I saw one or two very severe comminutions of the roof +of the orbit caused by bullets which had crossed the interior of the +skull; in one case the whole roof was in small fragments, while the +damage in others was not greater than chipping off some portion of the +lesser wing of the sphenoid. The roof of the orbit again was sometimes +very severely damaged by bullets which first traversed that cavity +itself; thus in one case which recovered, the bullet passed +transversely, smashing both globes, and fracturing the roof of both +orbits and the cribriform plate so severely as to lacerate both +dura-mater and brain, portions of the latter being found in the orbit on +removal of the damaged eyes.</p> + +<p>Fractures of the middle and posterior fossæ were met with far less +frequently, partly I think because vertical wounds passing from the +vertex to the base in these regions were with few exceptions rapidly +fatal, and partly from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span> fact that the occipital region, being +ordinarily sheltered from the line of fire, was rarely exposed to the +danger of direct fracture from without. As an odd coincidence I may +mention that in my whole experience during the war I only once saw +bleeding from the ear as a sign of fracture of the base, apart from +direct injuries to the tympanum or external auditory meatus.</p> + +<p><i>Symptoms of fracture of the skull, with concurrent injury to the +brain.</i>—These consisted in various combinations of the groups of signs +indicative of the conditions of concussion, compression, cerebral +irritation, or destruction. Although the symptoms possessed no inherent +peculiarities, yet certain characteristics exhibited served to +illustrate the fact that, as a result of the special mechanism of +causation of the injuries, the type deviated in many ways from that +accompanying the corresponding injuries of civil practice.</p> + +<p>The characters of the external wounds will be first considered, followed +by some remarks concerning the symptoms attendant on the different +degrees and types of lesion, the symptoms special to injuries to +different regions of the head, and on the subsequent complications +observed.</p> + +<p>In the simplest injuries the type forms of entry and exit wound were +found, and it has already been observed that in these, if symmetrical, +considerable difficulty existed in discriminating between the two +apertures. This is to be explained by the fact that the arrangement and +structure of the scalp are identical in corresponding regions; hence the +only difference in the conditions of production of the entry and exit +wounds exists in the absence of support to the skin in the latter. The +granular structure of the hairy scalp is opposed to the occurrence of +the slit forms of exit, hence the openings were usually irregularly +rounded. Any increase of size in the exit wound in the soft parts due to +the passage of bone fragments with the bullet, was equalised in that of +entry by the fact that the latter, as supported by a hard substratum, +was usually larger than those met with in situations where the skin +covers soft parts alone.</p> + +<p>In some cases of gutter fracture the wounds of entry were large and +irregular, as a result of upward splintering of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span> bone at the distal +margin of the aperture of entry in the skull, and consequent laceration +of the scalp. Again, on the forehead very pure types of slit exit wound +were often met with in the position of the vertical or horizontal +creases. With higher degrees of velocity on the part of the bullet and +consequent comminution at the aperture of exit in the bone, the scalp +was more extensively lacerated, and large irregular openings in the soft +parts, often occupied by fragments of bone and brain pulp, were met +with. It is well to repeat here, however, that the presence of brain +pulp in a wound by no means necessarily indicated the aperture of exit, +for it was sometimes found in the entry opening also.</p> + +<p>In the most severe cases, such as are included in class I., the exit +wound often possessed in the highest degree the so-called 'explosive' +character. From an opening in the skin with everted margins two or more +inches in diameter a mass of brain débris, bone fragments and particles +of dura-mater, skin, and hair, bound together by coagulated blood, +protruded as a primary hernia cerebri if the patient survived the first +few hours after the injury. In other cases of the same class the actual +opening was smaller, but the whole scalp was swollen and œdematous, +sometimes crackling when touched from the presence of extravasated blood +in the cellular tissue, while firm palpation often gave the impression +that the head consisted of a bag of bones over a considerable area.</p> + +<p>Gutter fractures of the scalp were sometimes situated beneath an open +furrow, gaping from loss of substance, or beneath a bridge of skin; in +the latter case they were usually palpable. Simple punctures were also +usually palpable, but the smallness of the openings sometimes rendered +their detection more difficult than might be assumed.</p> + +<p>I never saw a case in which the skull escaped injury when the bullet +struck the scalp at right angles, but the frequency with which Mauser +bullets were found within the helmets of men would suggest that this +must have sometimes occurred. A case of injury to the external table +alone has been described (p. 243). An illustration of the next degree of +injury is afforded by the following:—A bullet lodged in the centre of +the forehead, the point lying within the cranial cavity, while<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span> the base +projected from the surface: this patient suffered but slight immediate +trouble, so little, indeed, that he merely asked his officer to remove +the bullet for him, as it was inconvenient. The bullet was subsequently +removed in the Field hospital.</p> + +<p>In a few cases the bullet entered the skull and was retained, when only +a single wound was found. Such cases are described in Nos. 54 and 68, +where the position of the bullet was determined by palpable fractures +beneath the skin. With regard to the retention of bullets, however, in +small-calibre wounds, it was always necessary to examine the other parts +of the body with great care, and to ascertain, if possible, the +direction from which the wound was received, as an exit was often found +some distance down the neck or trunk. Again the possibility of the +opening having been produced by glancing contact had to be considered.</p> + +<p>In cases which survived the injury on the field, free hæmorrhage, as in +wounds of other regions, was rare, and although general evidence of loss +of blood was often noted in patients brought in, progressive bleeding +was seldom observed. Again, when the wounds were explored, the amount of +blood, although considerable, was usually not more than sufficed to fill +up the space consequent on the loss of brain tissue. This was especially +striking when large venous sinuses, as the superior longitudinal, were +involved in the injury. None the less, hæmorrhage at the base of the +brain was, I believe, responsible for early death in many of the severe +cases, especially when the wounds were near the lower regions of the +skull.</p> + +<p>Escape of cerebro-spinal fluid was not so prominent a feature as might +have been expected, considering how freely the arachnoid space was +opened up in many cases. I think this was usually checked by early +coagulation of the blood, and later by adhesions. It must be remembered +also that extensive wounds were most common on the vertex, or at any +rate over the convex surface of the brain, while fractures of the middle +fossa were usually rapidly fatal.</p> + +<p><i>Concussion.</i>—Cases exhibiting symptoms of pure uncomplicated +concussion were distinctly rare, as would be expected<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span> from the +mechanism of the injuries. On the other hand, symptoms of concussion +formed the dominant feature of all severe cases.</p> + +<p>The symptoms in many instances consisted in great part in transitory +signs of the so-called 'radiation' type, such as are seen in destructive +lesions where the signs of nervous damage rapidly tend to diminish and +localise themselves.</p> + +<p>As to the causation of the 'radiation' symptoms, it is difficult to +discriminate the effects of neighbouring parenchymatous hæmorrhages from +those of local vibratory concussion of the nervous tissue. The local +character of the signs seems, however, to point to causation by +molecular disturbance, resulting from the conduction of forcible +mechanical vibration to the brain tissue rather than to upset in the +intra-cranial pressure. Again the limited nature of the paralysis +observed, sharply defines it from the general loss of power accompanying +ordinary cases of concussion of the brain. The similarity of the +phenomena to those described in other parts of the body under the +heading of 'local shock' is sufficiently obvious.</p> + +<p>The following instance well exemplifies the condition in question:</p> + +<p>(<b>55</b>) Wounded at Spion Kop. A scalp wound 3 inches in length crossed the +left parietal bone nearly transversely, starting 1½ and ending 2 +inches from the median line: the centre of the wound corresponded with +the position of the fissure of Rolando. The patient was struck at a +distance of fifty yards while kneeling; he fell and remained unconscious +an hour and a half. Right hemiplegia without aphasia followed. The wound +was cleansed and sutured, and in three days both arm and leg could be +moved, after which time the man improved rapidly. Three weeks later when +I saw him at Wynberg there was still comparative weakness of the right +side, but beyond some neuralgia of the scalp, the man considered himself +well. No groove could be detected on the bone on palpation. (This case +offers a good example of the ease with which bone injury may be +overlooked. The man came over to England 'well;' but while on furlough, +two pieces of bone came away spontaneously. He is now again on active +service.)</p> + +<p><i>Compression.</i>—Equally rare was it for pure symptoms of compression to +be exhibited. This depended on two circumstances:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span> first, the rarity of +injuries giving rise to meningeal hæmorrhage; secondly, the fact that in +nearly every case a more or less extensive destructive lesion was +present, at the margins of which less completely destroyed tissue +remained, capable of giving rise to symptoms of irritation. Again, as we +have seen, free hæmorrhage into, or from the walls of, the cavities +produced in the brain was not a marked feature, and beyond this the +large defect in the cranial parietes was calculated to render a high +degree of compression impossible.</p> + +<p>As the most serious head injuries presented a remarkable similarity in +their symptoms, I will shortly summarise their common features.</p> + +<p>Every degree of mental stupor up to complete unconsciousness was met +with, but in some instances where the pulse, respiration, and general +bodily condition pointed to speedy dissolution, the patients answered +rationally often between moans or cries indicative of pain.</p> + +<p>Widespread paralysis often existed, but this was seldom completely +general; more commonly it was combined with extreme restlessness of the +unparalysed parts, or sometimes, even when the whole of one hemisphere +was tunnelled, and in all probability widely destroyed, restlessness was +the only symptom. In some cases twitching of the features or the limbs +or severe convulsions were superadded.</p> + +<p>The pupils were rarely unequal, and at the stage in which these patients +were first seen were usually moderately contracted. Wide dilatation was +uncommon throughout.</p> + +<p>The pulse was with very few exceptions slow, sometimes irregular. In +some instances, when the wounds had been thought suitable for +exploration, the slow pulse was altered after operation to a rapid one, +and death usually quickly supervened.</p> + +<p>Respiration was irregular, sometimes sighing; in the late stage often of +the Cheyne-Stokes type; actual stertor was exceptional, but the +respiration was often noisy.</p> + +<p>The temperature was often raised from an early stage to 99° or 100°, and +if the patient survived a day or two, it often rose to 103° or 104°. How +far the secondary rise<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span> depended on sepsis it was not always easy to +determine. The urine was usually retained.</p> + +<p>Cases presenting the above characters were usually those suffering from +lesions such as are described in class I., and mostly died in +twenty-four to forty-eight hours. The correspondence of the train of +symptoms with those due to combined brain destruction and severe +concussion is at once apparent.</p> + +<p>To illustrate the nature of the symptoms in patients suffering from the +less extensive forms of injury, such as those included in classes II. +and III. under the heading of anatomical lesion, the relation of a short +series of histories will be advisable. I may first premise, however, +that the special characteristics of these were in some instances the +almost entire absence of primary symptoms of gravity; in others general +symptoms of a severity out of apparent proportion to the external +lesion; while in all destructive lesions, very widely distributed +radiation symptoms developed, often disappearing with great rapidity.</p> + +<p>The symptoms consisted in those of concussion, irritation, local +pressure, and actual destruction.</p> + +<p>The symptoms of concussion were either general, and then usually +transient, or local paralysis of the radiation variety, which also +rapidly improved.</p> + +<p>Signs of irritation consisted in irritability of temper, drowsiness, +closure of the eyes and objection to light, contracted pupils sometimes +unequal, a tendency to the assumption of the flexed position at all the +joints, twitchings, and sometimes convulsions. Sometimes these appeared +early as a direct result of mechanical irritation from bone fragments or +blood-clot; sometimes only in the course of a few days, as a result of +irritation of parts recovering from the radiation effects which had +prevented earlier nervous reaction. Possibly in some cases the symptoms +of irritation depended upon an increase in the amount of hæmorrhage, and +in others upon the development of local inflammatory changes.</p> + +<p>Local pressure, or actual destruction of brain tissue, was evidenced by +temporary paralysis in the former, permanent loss of function in the +latter, condition.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span></p> + +<p>Fractures of the anterior fossa of the skull were attended by very +marked evidence of orbital hæmorrhage, as subconjunctival ecchymosis +(rarely pure), increased tension, and proptosis.</p> + +<p>Injuries to the cranial nerves at the base, with the single exception of +lesion of the optic nerves, which was not rare, were in my experience +uncommon in the hospitals—a fact pointing to the very fatal nature of +direct basal injuries, except in the anterior fossa of the skull. Signs +indicative of injury to the olfactory lobe were occasionally observed.</p> + +<p>I should, perhaps, again insist here on the rarity with which acute +diffuse septic infection occurred in cases of these degrees of severity, +also on the fact that interference with the wounds in the way of +secondary exploration, even when they were manifestly the seat of local +infection, was followed almost without exception by good immediate +results; and, lastly, that when suppuration did occur, it was usually +strictly local in character. The influence of the climate of South +Africa and our surroundings has already been discussed, but whether +climate, condition of the patients, or peculiarity in the nature of +causation of the wounds was responsible, in no series of cases was the +absence of acute inflammatory troubles more striking than in this one of +brain injuries.</p> + +<p>Frontal injuries were those most frequently unaccompanied by primary +symptoms of severity; slowing of the pulse—this often fell to 40—and +occasional irregularity, were almost the only constant signs of cerebral +damage. Some patients temporarily lost consciousness, others rose at +once and walked to the dressing station, and in few cases was any +psychical disturbance noted in the early stages.</p> + +<p>I think, however, it may be affirmed that frontal injuries, accompanied +by trivial signs, resulted without exception from the passage of bullets +travelling at a low rate of velocity. Thus in several of the instances +here related the patients at the time of reception of the wound were +under the impression that they were entirely beyond the range of fire, +and in one, in which well-marked signs of concussion followed, the +bullet, which had traversed the head, retained only sufficient force to +perforate the skin of the neck and bury itself<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span> in the posterior +triangle without even fracturing the clavicle, against which it +impinged. In men struck at a shorter range, signs of concussion, often +followed by transient radiation signs of injury to the parietal lobe, +were common. These signs were, I think, not as a rule due to surface +hæmorrhage, since they were of a purely paralytic nature and not +irritative. Several cases with partial or complete hemiplegia, +hemiplegia and aphasia, or facial paralysis are recorded below.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>56</b>) <i>Frontal injury</i>.—Wounded at Magersfontein. In prone +position when struck, distance 700 to 800 yards. <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), at the margin of the hairy scalp above and to the +left of the frontal eminence; course, through anterior third of +left frontal lobe, roof of orbit, obliquely across line of +optic nerve, inner wall of orbit, nose, right superior maxilla +piercing alveolar process, and passing superficial to inferior +maxilla: <i>exit</i>, one inch anterior to angle of jaw. The bullet +again entered the posterior triangle of the neck, struck the +right clavicle, and turned a somersault, so that its base lay +deepest in the wound.</p> + +<p>The patient was unconscious for a short time, suffered with +general headache and giddiness, and was somewhat irritable. On +the third day the pulse was 70, temperature normal, and he was +sent to the Base. There was considerable proptosis, œdema +and discoloration of the eyelid, and subconjunctival +ecchymosis, but the movements of the eyeball could be made and +light could be distinguished. The sense of smell was apparently +absent. A week later the headache was gone, the pulse numbered +80 to 90, the temperature was normal, he slept well, sat up in +bed and smoked, took his food well, and exhibited no cerebral +symptoms. He could detect the smell of tobacco, but not as a +definite odour.</p> + +<p>No further symptoms were noted, the sense of smell returned, +the swelling of the eyelid and proptosis decreased, but the +upper lid could not be raised. When the lid was drawn up, there +appeared to be vision at the margins of the field with a large +central blind spot. The patient left for England at the end of +a month apparently well.</p> + +<p>(<b>57</b>) <i>Gutter fracture of frontal bone.</i>—Wounded at Paardeberg. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 3/4 of an inch within the margin of hairy +scalp above outer extremity of right eyebrow; gutter fracture; +<i>exit</i>, 2 inches nearer middle line, at the same distance from +the margin of the hairy scalp. The patient was knocked head +over heels, his main feeling being a sense of dulness in the +right great toe. He sat up<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span> and got a first field dressing +applied, then lay down, but as he was still under fire, he +retired 1,000 yards to the collecting station; here he dressed +some patients, and later mounted an ambulance wagon and was +driven to the Field hospital. The next day he helped with the +work of the hospital, amongst other things controlling the +artery during an amputation of the arm. He then took a three +days' and nights' journey to Modder River in a bullock wagon, +during which journey he had a fit, which was general, the +thumbs being turned in and a wedge being necessary between the +teeth to prevent him biting his tongue.</p> + +<p>On the sixth day the wound was examined, and between this and +the tenth day he had several fits of the same nature as the +first, accompanied by stertorous breathing and profuse +sweating. On the tenth day Mr. Cheatle opened up the wound and +removed numerous fragments of bone, leaving a clean gutter 2 +inches by 3/4 of an inch. After the operation no further fits +occurred, and eight days later he was conscious, but was +excitable and talked at random. On the twentieth day he arrived +at the Base after 30 hours' railway journey (623 miles). He was +then quite rational, but unable to make any demands on his +memory and very sensitive to noise; at times he wandered in the +evenings and his temperature rose as high as 100°. The wound +was open and granulating, the floor pulsating freely.</p> + +<p>Three weeks later the wound was still open, and the skin dipped +in at the lower margin. The mental condition was much improved, +although attempts at giving a history of his case were +obviously tiresome.</p> + +<p>The wounds in the leather headband of this patient's helmet +were interesting, the round aperture of entry in the exterior +of the helmet being followed by a starred exit aperture in the +leather band, the second entry opening in the leather band +being again circular, and the external opening in the puggaree +a transverse slit.</p> + +<p>(<b>58</b>) <i>Transverse superficial perforating frontal +injury.</i>—Wounded at Graspan. Aperture of <i>entry</i> +(Lee-Metford), at upper and outer part of left frontal +eminence; <i>exit</i>, at margin of hairy scalp over outer third of +right eyebrow. On the second day the patient complained of +giddiness and headache; the pulse was 60. He was then walking +about. The wounds were explored and typical entry and exit +apertures discovered in the frontal bone from which cerebral +matter was protruding. Both openings were enlarged (Mr. S. W. +F. Richardson) with Hoffman's forceps, and a considerable +number of splinters of the inner table were removed from the +aperture of entry.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span></p> + +<p>The headache gradually passed off, but there was throbbing +about the scar, and pulsation was visible for some three weeks, +after which no further symptoms were observed.</p> + +<p>(<b>59</b>) <i>Oblique frontal gutter fracture.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 1/2 an inch to right of median +line of forehead, 3/4 of an inch from the margin of the hairy +scalp; <i>exit</i>, about 3/4 of an inch anterior to the lower +extremity of the right fissure of Rolando. Weakness of left +facial muscles, especially of angle of mouth. No further motor +symptoms. Wounds explored (Mr. Stewart); numerous fragments of +bone and some pulped cerebral matter were removed. Patient +developed no further signs; the paralysis, although improved, +did not completely disappear. The man a year later was still on +active duty, the paralysis almost well, and no further ill +effects of the injury remained.</p></div> + +<p>In the fronto-parietal or parietal regions, signs of damage to the +cortical motor area were seldom absent, sometimes evanescent, at others +prolonged. In some cases the signs were permanent and followed by +evidence of local sclerosis.</p> + +<p>The motor area on both sides of the brain was sometimes implicated; thus +in a child shot at Kimberley the bullet entered in the right frontal +region, and emerged to the left of the line connecting bregma and inion +a little behind its centre. Paralysis of both lower extremities +resulted, power rapidly returning in the right, while incomplete +paralysis persisted in the left.</p> + +<p>In only one instance (see case 73, p. 292) was any permanent sensory +defect observed, and the mental condition of this patient would have +certainly suggested a functional explanation for its presence, had it +not been for the accompanying inequality in the axillary surface +temperatures.</p> + +<p>In a second case (No. 67) blunting of sensation followed a definite +lesion of the inferior parietal lobule. In this instance an occipital +lesion was associated with the parietal.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>60</b>) <i>Parietal gutter fracture.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. A +scalp wound 3 inches in length ran transversely across the +right parietal bone at the level of the lower third of the +fissure of Rolando. A second wound of entry was found crossing +the third dorsal spine; the bullet was retained and was +palpable over the right scapula. There was left facial +paralysis, weakness and numbness<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span> of both upper extremities, +especially of the left, and some difficulty in swallowing. The +man was sent to the Base, where he arrived on the fourth day. +The symptoms had then become much more marked, consciousness +was incomplete, and articulation slow and imperfect. There was +complete left hemiplegia, and deviation of the tongue to the +right. The pulse was 40. An exploration (Mr. J. J. Day) showed +that an oval plate of the outer table of the parietal bone had +been struck off. A trephine was applied to the exposed diploë +and a crown of bone removed; considerable comminution of the +inner table had occurred, several large fragments having +perforated the dura-mater. The latter did not pulsate; it was +therefore freely incised, and many more fragments of bone and a +large quantity of blood-clot removed.</p> + +<p>The first effect of the operation was slight, but ten days +later rapid improvement commenced, the first sign being +acceleration of the pulse, which rose to 70. On the eighteenth +day the original symptoms still remained to a diminished +extent, but a fortnight later there remained traces of the +facial weakness only, and there was little difference in the +grip of the two hands. The patient was shortly afterwards sent +home. Ten months later he returned to South Africa on active +service.</p> + +<p>(<b>61</b>) <i>Fronto-parietal gutter fracture.</i>—Wounded at Graspan. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 1 inch within the margin of the hairy scalp, +1/2 an inch to the left of the median line; <i>exit</i>, 3½ +inches posterior in same line. Complete right-sided hemiplegia. +The wounds were explored on the fourth day (Major Moffatt, +R.A.M.C.) and a gutter fracture involving the frontal and +parietal bones exposed. The dura-mater was lacerated and brain +matter from the frontal lobe escaped freely. A large number of +bone fragments were removed. On the fourth day after the +operation, the patient became unconscious with right-sided +twitchings, but rapidly improved, and at the end of three +weeks, except for slight headache, he was well, the power of +the right side being good. Ten months later he rejoined his +regiment in South Africa, no apparent ill effects remaining.</p> + +<p>(<b>62</b>) <i>Fronto-parietal perforating fracture.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i>, within the margin of the hairy scalp; +<i>exit</i>, behind and below the left parietal eminence, the track +crossing about the centre of the fissure of Rolando. Right +hemiplegia, the lower half of the face only being involved. The +wounds were explored and a large number of fragments of bone +and a quantity of pulped cerebral matter removed. Six days +later the hemiplegia persisted, speech was slow, headache was +troublesome and the pulse not above 45. After this, gradual +improvement took place,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span> and a month later the lower extremity +and face had regained good power. The upper extremity remained +flaccid and paralysed, except for some slight power of movement +of the shoulder.</p> + +<p>(<b>63</b>) <i>Fronto-parietal perforating fracture.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 2½ inches from the median +line, 3½ inches from the occipital protuberance; <i>exit</i>, 3/4 +of an inch from the median line, 4½ inches from the +glabella; sanious fluid escaped from both ears. There was left +facial paralysis, complete paralysis of the left upper +extremity, and partial paralysis of the left lower extremity. +The patient was deaf, drowsy, and the pulse 45.</p> + +<p>Exploration showed the entry wound to be in the parietal, the +exit to involve both parietal and frontal bones. The openings +were enlarged, and a number of fragments of bone, together with +pulped cerebral matter and blood-clot, were removed. The wound +healed, except at the front part, where a small prominence +suggested a hernia cerebri.</p> + +<p>The patient improved slowly; fourteen days after the operation +he could hear well, and the flow from the ears had ceased. The +facial weakness was slight, the upper extremity was still +powerless, but he could move the lower and draw it up in bed. +At the end of six weeks the wound had healed, and he was got up +and dressed.</p> + +<p>At the end of two months he was well enough to be sent home; +there was only a trace of facial weakness; the right upper +extremity, however, was powerless and slightly rigid, +occasional twitchings occurring in it. Considerable power had +been regained in the lower extremity, so that the patient could +walk with help, but foot-drop persisted; the gait was spastic +in character, the reflexes were much exaggerated, and there was +marked clonus. The patient was sensible, but his manner +suggested some mental weakness. Both the openings in the skull +were closed by very firm material, apparently bony.</p> + +<p>This patient became a Commissionaire some ten months later. His +mental condition is normal, and loss of memory seems confined +to the events immediately following the injury. The lower +extremity has improved, but the upper is useless.</p> + +<p>(<b>64</b>) <i>Parietal injury: retained bullet.</i>—Wounded at +Paardeberg. Aperture of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), 1 inch diagonally +below and anterior to left parietal eminence. No exit. The +patient was trephined by the surgeons of the German ambulance +at Jacobsdal.</p> + +<p>Sixteen days later he arrived at the Base. A circular pulsating +trephine opening was then to be felt beneath the flap, but no +information was forthcoming as to the bullet. The patient +could<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span> speak, but lost words and the gist of sentences; he +could remember nothing as to himself since the day of the +injury. There was right facial weakness; he could not close the +right eye or whistle, but there was little apparent want of +symmetry; there was weakness in the grip of both hands, more +marked on the right side; both lower extremities could be +moved. The reflexes were normal, although the left limb was +slightly rigid. The pupils were equal, reflex normal; slight +nystagmus. Pulse 72, small and regular. Temperature normal. +Rapid improvement followed.</p> + +<p>During the fourth week the temperature rose to 103°, and +remained elevated for six days, but no local or general signs +appeared; at the end of five weeks there was little evidence of +the paralysis remaining. The patient was discharged from the +service on his return home.</p></div> + +<p>In the upper part of the occipital region glancing or superficial +injuries were comparatively favourable; those near the base, especially +if perforating, were very dangerous. Two such cases are referred to +elsewhere. Case 69 is included as the only example of cerebellar injury +I happened to see who lived any appreciable time after the accident.</p> + +<p>The main interest in these cases centres in the defects produced in the +area of the visual field. I am extremely indebted to my colleague, Mr. +J. H. Fisher, who has kindly determined this for me in three of the +following cases. It will be noted that in two instances the injury was +to the left occipital lobe. In these the resulting hemianopsia was of +the pure lateral homonymous character, and in both the visual symptoms +were accompanied by a certain degree of amnesic aphasia (65 and 68).</p> + +<p>In 65 the injury was definitely unilateral, and at the time of the +operation I decided that at least an inch and a half of the posterior +extremity of the left occipital lobe was totally destroyed.</p> + +<p>In 68 the lesion was probably confined to the left lobe, but it is +impossible to exclude slight injury to the right lobe also. In this +instance amnesic aphasia was a far more marked symptom than in 65, and +the position of the lesion suggested damage both to the visual and +auditory word centres.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p> + +<p>Cases 66 and 67 are instances of damage to both occipital lobes. In 66, +although the wound was a glancing one, and did not perforate, it was so +near the median line, and accompanied by such severe damage to the bone, +that a symmetrical lesion of the cuneate and precuneate lobules of both +right and left sides is to be inferred. In 67 the great longitudinal +fissure was traversed by the bullet obliquely. It is of great interest +to observe that in each of these cases the lesion of the visual field +was a horizontal one and affected the lower half in place of assuming a +lateral distribution.</p> + +<p>In all four cases the primary effect of the occipital injury was the +same—viz. absolute blindness—while the return of vision in each was of +the nature of the dawning of light. I regret that I am unable to furnish +any detail as to increase of the field of vision in the progress of the +cases, but circumstances rendered continuous observation of the patients +impossible.</p> + +<p>In each case deafness was apparently the direct result of concussion of +the ear on the side corresponding to the wound. Deafness of the opposite +ear was never noted.</p> + +<p>In case 67 some general blunting of sensation was noted in the paralysed +upper extremity, and in this patient, no doubt, injury to the inferior +parietal lobule accompanied the occipital lesion.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>65</b>) <i>Injury to left occipital lobe.</i>—Wounded at Belmont. A +single transverse wound, 2 inches in length, extended across +the occipital bone, 2 inches above the level of the external +protuberance. When seen on the third day the wound was gaping +and pulped cerebral matter was found in it. The patient was +very drowsy, lying with closed eyes, and complaining of great +coronal and frontal headache. He could distinguish light and +darkness, but not persons. Total blindness immediately followed +the injury, persisting some three days, and the patient spoke +of return of sight as of the appearance of dawn. The pupils +were equal, moderately dilated and acted to light, which was +unpleasant to him. He was somewhat irritable and silent, but +apparently rational. Temperature 99°. Pulse 56 full. Tongue +clean. No sickness, no difficulty in micturition.</p> + +<p>Fifty-six hours after the injury the wound was opened up and +cleaned, and an oval fractured opening about 3/4 by 1/2 inch +was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span> exposed 3/4 inch to the left, and 2 inches above the +occipital protuberance. The margins of the opening showed +several small fragments of lead attached to the bone. A +3/4-inch trephine was applied at the left extremity of the +opening, and it was found that about a square inch of the +internal table was comminuted and driven into the brain, +together with several small fragments of lead. On introducing +the finger, about 1½ square inches of the occipital lobe +were found to be pulped, and the finger could be swept across +the tentorium. There was no sinus hæmorrhage (nor did the +history suggest that hæmorrhage had ever been severe). The +cavity was carefully sponged out, and the wound closed with a +drainage aperture. Little change followed in the patient's +condition, and on the sixth day he was sent to the Base +hospital.</p> + +<p>Three weeks later the wound was firmly healed. The patient +still complained of frontal headache, and wore a shade, as the +light hurt his eyes and made them water freely. The pupils +acted, but were wide; objects could be distinguished, and also +persons. Otherwise, the man's condition was good: he began to +get up, and at the end of six weeks returned to England.</p> + +<p>A year later the man was earning his living as a Commissionaire +porter. He complains of giddiness when he stoops, or when he +looks upwards, and at times he suffers much with headache both +in the region of the injury and across the temples.</p> + +<p>There is a bony defect and slight pulsation at the site of the +injury, but no prominence. When attempts are made to read the +lines run together, and a dark shadow comes before his eyes. He +speaks of the latter as still terribly weak. Speech is slow and +somewhat simple, but he makes no mistakes as to words. Memory +is bad for recent events.</p> + +<p>Mr. Fisher makes the following report as to the eyes: Pupils +and movement of eyes normal in every respect. No changes in +fundi.</p></div> + +<div class='center'> +<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='left'>Vision,</td><td align='left'>R.</td><td align='left'>5/12</td><td align='left'>with—0.5</td><td align='left'>5/6</td></tr> +<tr><td align='left'></td><td align='left'>L.</td><td align='left'>5/9</td><td align='left'>with—0.5</td><td align='left'>5/5</td></tr> +</table></div> + + +<p>There is therefore practically full direct vision. Though the +man chooses a concave glass he is not really myopic. There is +typical right homonymous hemianopsia; the answers, when tested +with the perimeter, are quite certain, and the fields +absolutely reliable.</p> + +<p>The man's statements confirm the condition; he is aware of his +inability to see objects to his right-hand side, and is apt to +collide with persons or objects on that side.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 447px;"> +<img src="images/fig73.jpg" width="447" height="450" alt="Fig. 73." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 73.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Right Visual Field, in case 65. Injury to left +occipital lobe. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good daylight. Right +homonymous hemianopsia</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 435px;"> +<img src="images/fig74.jpg" width="435" height="450" alt="Fig. 74." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 74.—Left Visual Field, case 65</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span></p> + +<p>The lesion is one of the left occipital cortex in the cuneate +lobe and the neighbourhood of the calcarine fissure. The speech +suggests a slight degree of aphasia.</p> + +<p>(<b>66</b>) <i>Injury to occipital lobes.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein +while in prone position. Distance, 500 yards. He says he was +never unconscious, but for two days was absolutely blind. His +eyesight gradually improved, but headache was very severe, and +sleeplessness nearly absolute. On the eighth day the wound, +which was situated over the right posterior superior angle of +the parietal bone, was opened up, and a number of fragments of +bone and a quantity of pulped brain removed from a depressed +punctured fracture, surrounded by an annular fissure, +completely encircling it, 1½ inch from the opening. The +portion of brain destroyed was probably a considerable portion +of the cuneate and precuneate lobules of both sides, as well as +a portion of the first occipital convolution, and the superior +parietal lobule of the right side. There was no evidence of +injury to the superior longitudinal sinus in the way of +hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p>After the operation the patient slept better, but still +complained of headache, and when he arrived at the Base, the +flap became œdematous, and the stitch holes and also the +central part of the wound suppurated. The temperature rose to +101°. The wound was therefore re-opened, and a number of +additional fragments of bone, some as deeply situated as 2 +inches from the surface, were removed. Steady improvement +followed, and at the end of a further three weeks the wound was +healed, the headache had ceased, and there were no abnormal +symptoms, except that light was unpleasant to the right eye, +and the field of vision was manifestly contracted (Mr. Pooley).</p> + +<p>A year later the man was employed as a letter-carrier. He +complains of headache at times, and on six occasions has had +'fainting fits.' He says that the latter commence with tremor, +that his legs then give way and he falls. In a quarter of an +hour he gets up, and feels no further inconvenience. Speech is +perfect, there is no deafness. The bone defect is very nearly +completely closed.</p> + +<p>Mr. Fisher reports as follows as to the vision. There is a high +degree of hypermetropia in each eye, the R. has nearly 6.0 D +and the L. about 5.0 D. With correction he gets practically +full direct vision with each.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig75.jpg" width="450" height="436" alt="Fig. 75." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 75.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Right Visual Field, in case 66. Injury to both +occipital lobes. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good artificial +light. Defect in field complicated by functional symptoms</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig76.jpg" width="450" height="437" alt="Fig. 76." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 76.—Left Visual Field, in case 66. Defect in lower +half of field</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span></p> + +<p>The patient has been examined before, and has been informed +that his vision quite incapacitates him from further service. +He began by stating that he could not see on either side of +him, but only straight in front; that he is apt to collide with +people in walking, was nearly knocked down by a horse, and that +his acquaintances accuse him of passing them unnoticed. The +fields of vision are very small, but the loss is not typically +in the temporal half of either. That of the right eye which we +know as the spiral field, becoming more and more contracted as +the perimeter test is continued, is what is found in functional +cases; that of the left, however, shows a characteristic loss +of the lower part of the field of vision, and agrees with the +statement of the man that he can see the upper part of my face +but not the lower when he looks at me. Such a loss agrees with +a lesion involving the upper part of the cuneate lobe above the +calcarine fissure.</p> + +<p>I feel satisfied that there is considerable loss in the right +field also, but the functional element obscures its exact +nature.</p> + +<p>The fundi, pupils, and ocular movements are all normal.</p> + +<p>(<b>67</b>) <i>Injury to occipital lobes and left motor and sensory +areas.</i>—Wounded outside Lindley (Spitzkop). Range within 1,000 +yards. <i>Entry</i>, one inch within the right lateral angle of the +occipital bone, external wound more than 1/2 an inch in +diameter; <i>exit</i>, 2 inches from the median line, over the upper +half of the left fissure of Rolando. Behind the wound of exit +comminution of the parietal bone, extending back to the +lambdoid suture, existed. I attributed this to oblique lateral +impact by the bullet on the inner surface of the skull.</p> + +<p>The patient could afterwards remember being struck, but became +rapidly unconscious. When brought into the Field hospital some +five hours later the condition was as follows: Semi-conscious, +can speak, apparently blind, pupils equal, of moderate size, do +not react to light. Right hemiplegia. No sickness. Moans with +pain in head. Passes water normally.</p> + +<p>Considerable hæmorrhage had occurred from each wound, the scalp +was puffy, and the bones yielded on pressure over the left +parietal bone, indicating considerable comminution.</p> + +<p>The night was so cold that no operation could be considered, so +the head was partly shaved, the wounds cleansed, and a dressing +applied. The next morning the Division marched at 5 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span>, and +it was considered wise to leave the man at Lindley in the local +hospital.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig77.jpg" width="450" height="416" alt="Fig. 77." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 77.—Right Visual Field, in case 67.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Injury to both +occipital lobes. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good artificial +light. Defect in lower half of field</b></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig78.jpg" width="450" height="430" alt="Fig. 78." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 78.—Left Visual Field, in case 67</span> +</div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p> + +<p>No operation was performed there, but I heard later that the +man recovered full consciousness at the end of five days, and +at the end of a fortnight he commenced to see again.</p> + +<p>Six weeks later he travelled to Kroonstadt, thence to +Bloemfontein, and thence to Cape Town and home to Netley. The +paralytic symptoms meanwhile steadily improved.</p> + +<p>Seven months later his condition is as follows: Scarcely a +trace of facial paralysis. Slight power of movement of arm, +forearm, and fingers, but grip is very weak. Little power of +abduction of the shoulder or of straightening the elbow. The +latter movement is made with effort and in jerks. Sensation +over the back of the arm is somewhat lowered, and is 'furry' at +the finger tips. There is very little wasting of the muscles +noticeable.</p> + +<p>Walks well, but with some foot-drop. Slight increase of +patellar reflex. He says that he does not walk in the street +with confidence, as he often feels as if omnibuses &c. were +coming too near him.</p> + +<p>He is absolutely deaf in the right ear.</p> + +<p>The openings in the skull are closed, the occipital lies about +halfway between the external auditory meatus and the external +occipital protuberance, while the parietal still affords +evidence of the earlier comminution, one fissure passing +backwards as far as the lambda, and the whole surface is lumpy +and uneven.</p> + +<p>The track through the brain no doubt involved a considerable +extent of the outer aspect of the right occipital lobe and the +cuneate lobule. It must also have crossed the great +longitudinal fissure, and penetrated the left Rolandic region, +just above its centre, probably involving the precuneate +lobule, and a portion of the internal capsular fibres as well +as the cortex on the left side. The deafness was probably due +to concussion of the internal ear.</p> + +<p>Mr. Fisher has kindly furnished the following note regarding +the vision. The pupils, movements, and fundi are quite healthy. +There is good direct vision R. or L. 5/5 fairly, and together +5/5. The man complains he has lost his side sight, also the +lower; he demonstrates the latter quite obviously with his +hand, and says he has to repeatedly look down when walking. He +thinks no improvement has taken place during the last month. +The accompanying fields of vision show the loss quite +characteristically.</p> + +<p>(<b>68</b>) <i>Injury to left occipital lobe.</i>—Wounded at Paardeberg. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), through the lambdoid suture on the right side +of the mid line. Bullet retained, but a palpable prominence +behind the left ear suggested its localisation.</p> + +<p>The patient became at once unconscious and remained so for +several days. He was completely blind; vision returned later, +but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span> only to a limited degree. There was complete loss of +memory as to the events of the day.</p> + +<p>When admitted at Rondebosch into No. 3 General Hospital the +condition was as follows: The field of vision is limited, and +examination shows right homonymous hemianopsia. When any one +comes into the tent the patient sees a shadow only until his +bed is reached.</p> + +<p>When spoken to the patient 'thinks and thinks,' and then +apologises for not answering, saying he will remember at some +future time. He is absolutely unable to remember times, names, +or localities, but places his hand to his head and appears to +think deeply in the effort to recall them. Occasionally when +you go into his tent he suddenly remembers something he has +been trying to think of for some days, and will tell you.</p> + +<p>A fortnight later after an attack of influenza the patient was +not so well, and vision was apparently becoming more impaired.</p> + +<p>An incision was made (Mr. J. E. Ker) so as to raise a flap the +centre of the convexity of which was 2½ inches behind the +left external auditory meatus. A slight prominence and a +fissure was discovered in the temporal bone, and over this a +trephine was applied. On removal of the crown of bone the +bullet was discovered with the point turned backwards (having +evidently undergone a partial ricochet turn) on the upper +surface of the petrous bone, just above the lateral sinus. The +dura-mater was healed but thickened, and some clot upon its +surface was removed.</p> + +<p>The wound healed per primam, and a rapid recovery was made. Ten +days later a running water-tap was able to be detected 120 +yards from the tent door. The hemianopsia however persisted.</p> + +<p>The following letter, dictated by the patient to his wife, and sent to +me, gives a clear account of his condition ten months later:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>I am pleased to say my memory is better than it was some time +ago, though at times I am entirely lost and really forget all +that I was speaking about. I also find that I often call things +and places by their wrong names. I sometimes try to read a +paper or book which I have to read letter by letter, sometimes +calling out the wrong letter, such as B for D &c., and by the +time I have read almost halfway through, I have forgotten the +commencement.</p> + +<p>My sight is about the same. There is no improvement in the +right eye, and the doctor at Stoke said that the left eye was +not as it ought to be and might get worse.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p> + +<p>I ofttimes go to take up a thing, but find I am not near to it, +though it appears to me so.</p> + +<p>I have no pain to speak of in the head, though at times a +shooting pain.</p> + +<p>I have a continual noise in the left ear as if of a locomotive +blowing off steam, and a deafness in the left ear which I had +not before being wounded.</p></div> + +<p>I am extremely indebted to my friend Mr. J. Errington Ker for the notes +of the above case, so successfully treated by him.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>69</b>) <i>Injury to occipital lobe.</i>—Wounded at Modder River. +Scalp wound in occipital region. Two days later on arrival at +the Base the patient was extremely restless and in a condition +of noisy delirium. The wound was explored (Mr. J. J. Day) and a +vertical gutter fracture discovered 1/2 an inch above and to +the left of the occipital protuberance. The gutter was 1½ +inch in length and finely comminuted, the dura wounded, and the +left occipital lobe pulped. A number of fragments of bone (one +lodged in the wall of, but not penetrating, the lateral sinus) +and pulped brain were removed. No improvement took place in the +general condition, but the patient lived twenty-two days, +during which time he coughed up a large quantity of gangrenous +lung tissue and foul pus.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i> examination a wound track was found +extending to the crest of the left ilium, where the bullet was +lodged. The patient was no doubt lying with his head dipped +into a hole scooped out in the sand (a common custom) when +struck; the bullet then traversed the muscles of the neck, +entered the upper opening of the thorax, where it struck the +bodies of the second and third dorsal vertebræ, one third of +the bodies of each of which were driven into an extensive +laceration of the lung; it then grooved the inner surfaces of +the eighth and ninth ribs, fractured the tenth and eleventh, +and passing the twelfth traversed the deep muscles of the back +to the pelvis. Beyond the injury to the occipital lobe, the +cerebellum was found to be lacerated and extensively bruised +and ecchymosed.</p></div> + +<p><i>Complications.</i>—<i>Hernia cerebri</i> as a primary feature has already been +mentioned as one of the peculiarities of some explosive wounds. In the +later stages of the cases in which primary union did not take place the +development of granulation tumours was often seen, sometimes in +connection with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span> slight local suppuration, sometimes over a cerebral +abscess. In some cases a wound which had once closed reopened and a +hernia developed. This sequence was chiefly of prognostic significance +as an indication of intra-cranial inflammation, usually of a chronic +character, and affecting rather the lowly organised granulation tissue +formed in the cavity than the brain itself. When primary union of the +skin flap and wound failed, the process of definitive closure of the +subjacent cavity was always a very prolonged one, and it was in such +cases that a great proportion of the so-called herniæ developed.</p> + +<p><i>Abscess of the brain.</i>—Local abscesses formed in a considerable +proportion of the cases where serious damage to the brain had occurred, +in whatever region this happened to be. I never saw one develop in cases +where primary union had taken place, even when bone fragments had not +been removed; neither did I ever see an abscess situated at a distance +from the original injury. I take it that the latter is to be explained +by the early date of the suppuration, and the fact that in the great +majority of small-calibre wounds the exit opening exists in the +situation of the contre-coup damages of civil practice.</p> + +<p>The main feature in the symptoms when abscesses developed was the +insidious mode of their appearance, usually at the end of fourteen to +twenty-one days, and their comparative mildness.</p> + +<p>Very slight evidences of compression were observed; thus, varying +degrees of headache, drowsiness, irritability of temper or depression, +twitchings, or in some cases Jacksonian seizures, combined with slow +pulse and slight rises of temperature. I never happened to see complete +unconsciousness. The slight evidence of compression was perhaps +explained in most cases by the large bony defect in the skull, which +acted as a kind of safety-valve. Again the firm nature of the +cicatricial tissue which formed at the periphery of the injury and +extended up to the skull and there formed a more or less firm +attachment, also preserved the actual brain tissue to some degree from +either pressure or direct irritation. After evacuation of the pus, the +usual difficulty was experienced in ensuring free drainage, and +definitive healing and closure of the cavities was very slow. The +following two cases will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span> illustrate the character of the cases of +cerebral abscess we met with:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>70</b>) <i>Fronto-parietal abscess.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein +(Mauser). <i>Entry</i>, 1¾ inch above the line from the lower +margin of the orbit to the external auditory meatus, and 1¾ +inch behind the external angular process; <i>exit</i>, a little +posterior to the left parietal eminence. There was right +hemiplegia. The wounds were explored, and a large number of +fragments of bone and pulped brain were removed, especially +from the anterior wound. No great improvement followed, and the +patient was sent to the Base. At this time there was a large +hernia cerebri at the anterior wound which was suppurating.</p> + +<p>A further operation was here performed (Mr. J. J. Day). The +hernia cerebri was removed, also several fragments of bone +which were found deeply imbedded in the brain. The patient then +improved, but a month later his temperature rose, and on +exploration an abscess was discovered in the frontal lobe and +drained.</p> + +<p>Subsequently the patient suffered with Jacksonian seizures, +sometimes starting spontaneously, sometimes following +interference with the wound. The convulsions commenced in the +muscles of the face, and the twitchings then became general. +Meanwhile the right upper extremity remained weak, although the +fist could be clenched, and all movements of the limb made in +some degree.</p> + +<p>Some difficulty was experienced in maintaining a free exit for +the pus, which was however overcome by the use of a silver +tube. All twitchings ceased about a month after the opening of +the abscess, the man improved steadily, and he left for England +fifteen weeks after the reception of the injury, walking well, +with a firm hand-grip, and the wounds soundly healed.</p> + +<p>(<b>71</b>) <i>Frontal injury. Secondary abscess.</i>—Wounded at Modder +River. Aperture of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), just external to the +centre of the right eyebrow; <i>exit</i>, above the centre of the +right zygoma. The wound did not render the man immediately +unconscious, but he lost all recollection of what had happened +to him for the next three or four days. The wounds were +explored on the second day, at which time the patient was in a +semi-conscious drowsy state, the pupils contracted and the +pulse slow. A number of fragments of bone and pulped brain +matter were removed.</p> + +<p>Subsequently to the operation the patient showed more signs of +cerebral irritation than usual, lying in a semi-conscious state +and more or less curled up. He answered questions on being +bothered. He improved somewhat, and was sent to the Base,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span> +where the improvement continued, but he suffered much from +headache.</p> + +<p>Later the headache became much more severe, and eleven weeks +after the injury the man complained of great pain both locally +and over the whole right hemisphere; he lay moaning, with the +temperature subnormal, and the pulse very slow. At times there +was nocturnal delirium.</p> + +<p>The wound had remained closed and apparently normal, but now a +small fluctuating pulsating nipple-like swelling developed in +the situation of the aperture of entry. This was incised, and +two ounces of sweet pus evacuated (Professor Dunlop). A tube +was introduced, and removed later on the cessation of +discharge.</p> + +<p>Removal of the tube was followed by a recurrence of the same +symptoms, and this occurred on no fewer than six occasions +whenever the wound closed.</p> + +<p>At the end of twenty weeks the patient appeared quite well, the +wound had been closed six weeks, the previously irritable +mental state was replaced by placidity, and he was sent home.</p></div> + +<p><i>Diagnosis.</i>—The importance of proper exploration of scalp wounds to +determine the condition of the bone has already been insisted upon. The +localisation of the position and extent of the injury to the cranial +contents depended simply on attention to the symptoms, and needs no +further mention here.</p> + +<p><i>Prognosis.</i>—This subject can only be very imperfectly considered at +the present time, since only the more or less immediate results of the +injuries are known to us, while the more important after consequences +remain to be followed up.</p> + +<p>As to life the immediate prognosis has been already foreshadowed in the +section on the anatomical lesions. It is there shown that the first +point of general importance is the range of fire at which the injury has +been received. At short ranges, as evidenced by the history, the +characters of the wounds, and the severity of the symptoms, the +immediate prognosis was uniformly bad, a very great majority of the +patients dying, and that at the end of a few hours or days.</p> + +<p>The rapidity with which death followed depended in part on the actual +severity of the wound, and still more on the region it affected; the +nearer the base and the longer the track the more rapidly the patients +died, and this always with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span> signs of failure of the functions of the +heart and lungs due to general concussion, pressure from basal +hæmorrhage, or rapid intracranial œdema. In my experience no patients +survived direct fracture of the base in any region but the frontal, +although many, no doubt, got well in whom fissures merely spread into +the middle or posterior fossa. Patients with very extensive injuries at +a higher level, on the other hand, often survived days, or even a week, +then usually dying of sepsis.</p> + +<p>The actual relative mortality of these injuries I can give little idea +of, but it was a high one both on the field and in the Field hospitals; +thus of 10 cases treated in one Field hospital, after the battle at +Paardeberg Drift, no less than 8 died; while of 61 cases from various +battles who survived to be sent down to the Base during a period of some +months, only 4 or 6.55 per cent. died. Many of the latter, as is seen +from the cases here recorded which were among the number, were none the +less of a very serious nature. The early causes of death in patients +dying during the first forty-eight hours have been already mentioned; +the later one was almost always sepsis.</p> + +<p>As in civil practice the best immediate results were seen in injuries to +the frontal lobes, and after these in injuries to the occipital region. +In the latter permanent lesions of vision were, however, common. The +above injuries apart, the prognosis depended on the severity and depth +of the lesion. The frequency and extent of radiation symptoms often made +it possible to give a more hopeful prognosis than the immediate +conditions seemed to warrant, if the exact situation of the lesion, and +the probable velocity at which the bullet was travelling, were taken +into account; since the actual destructive lesion, when the velocity had +been insufficient to cause damage of a general nature, was often very +strictly localised.</p> + +<p>Another very important point in the immediate prognosis was the primary +union of the scalp wound; if this could only be ensured, few cases went +wrong afterwards. Such remote effects as I witnessed were mainly the +results of the actual destructive lesion, such as paralyses and +contraction. I know of only one case in which early maniacal symptoms<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span> +closely followed on a frontal injury, and here the symptoms accompanied +the development of an abscess. Some patients were depressed and +irritable, and some were blind or deaf, probably from gross lesion; in +one patient the mental faculties generally were lowered.</p> + +<p>In spite of the surprising immediate recoveries which occurred, and the +small amount of experience I am able to record as to remote ill effects +of these injuries, I feel certain that a long roll of secondary troubles +from the contraction of cicatricial tissue, irritation from distant +remaining bone fragments, as well as mental troubles from actual brain +destruction, await record in the near future.</p> + +<p>Since my return to England I have heard of four cases of injury to the +head, which died on their return, as the result of the formation of +secondary residual abscesses; and of one who died suddenly, soon after +his return to active service in South Africa apparently well. These +occurrences are sufficiently suggestive.</p> + +<p>It may be of interest to add here two cases of secondary traumatic +epilepsy of differing degree:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>72</b>) <i>Gutter fracture over left temporo-sphenoidal lobe. +Traumatic epilepsy.</i>—A trooper in Brabant's Horse was wounded +at Aliwal North, in March, in several places. A Mauser bullet +entered the head 1½ inch above the junction of the anterior +border of the left pinna with the side of the head. The exit +wound was situated just below and behind the left parietal +eminence. The patient stated that the shot was fired by a man +he recognised in a laager 150 yards distant from him.</p> + +<p>The man remained unconscious eleven days, and when he came +round paralysis of the right upper extremity, and weakness of +both lower extremities, were noted. There was also ataxic +aphasia.</p> + +<p>The wounds healed, but two months later the man began to suffer +from fits every few days. He spoke of them as fainting fits, +but they were accompanied by general twitchings.</p> + +<p>The patient was shown to me in July by Major Woodhouse, +R.A.M.C. The strength of the right upper extremity was then +good, and he walked well. Speech was slow, but correct. The +pupils were equal, and acted normally.</p> + +<p>The mental condition was weak, and the temper irritable. The +man had hallucinations, and was very obstinate: there was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span> +complete deafness of the left ear. He refused surgical +treatment, but was really hardly a responsible individual.</p> + +<p>(<b>73</b>) <i>Gutter fracture in right frontal region. Traumatic +epilepsy.</i>—Wounded at Pieter's Hill. Gutter fracture crossing +the outer aspect of the frontal lobe, immediately above the +level of the right Sylvian fissure. The wound was perforating +at the central part, but only reached as far back as the lower +end of the ascending frontal convolution. The patient was +rendered unconscious and was removed to Mooi River. He was +there seen by Sir William MacCormac, who removed a number of +fragments of bone. The patient rapidly recovered consciousness +after the operation, but was completely hemiplegic. After a +month he suddenly found he was able to move his lower +extremity, and later the paralysis became steadily less.</p> + +<p>On his return home the man obtained employment as a +Commissionaire, but nine months after the injury, while his +wife was helping him on with his coat one morning, he was +suddenly seized with a fit; the paralysed arm was jerked up, +and convulsions became general, a wedge needing to be inserted +to prevent the tongue suffering injury.</p> + +<p>When admitted into the hospital, the cicatrix of the wound was +considerably depressed, and the central part was evidently +continuously attached to the surface of the brain. Pulsation +was both visible and palpable, there was little or no +tenderness on examination, and the patient did not complain of +pain.</p> + +<p>Little trace of the left facial paralysis remained. The man +walked well, but with foot-drop. The left upper extremity was +rigid, but chiefly from the elbow downwards. The fingers were +flexed, but a slight increase of grip could be effected. No +other active movements of hand. The elbow was held flexed, but +could be straightened to about 3/4 range on effort. The +shoulder could be slightly abducted, but wide movements were +made by the scapular muscles.</p> + +<p>Sensation was dull over the left side of the face, also over +the left side of the neck. There was complete loss of cutaneous +sensibility over the lower half of the forearm and hand, and a +similar patch in the left axilla. Over the rest of the +extremity the sensation was better on the flexor than on the +extensor aspects. There was little alteration in the common +sensation elsewhere, except that the contrast between that of +the dorsum and sole of the foot was somewhat more marked than +usual. The temperature of the insensitive axilla was one degree +higher than that of the right.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span></p> + +<p>The left knee jerk was somewhat exaggerated.</p> + +<p>On December 15 an incision was made through the old cicatrix +directly over the defect in the skull. On separating the skin +it was found directly adherent to the cicatrised dura, and when +this was incised a large vicarious arachnoid space was opened +up. The space was crossed by a number of strands of connective +tissue, and the cavity had no epithelial lining. The fluid ran +out freely, and the space was evidently in free communication +with the general arachnoid cavity. A trephine crown was taken +out at the posterior end of the gutter, and the surface of the +brain explored, but no fragments of bone were found. I +therefore replaced the crown, and closed the bony defect in the +floor of the gutter with a plate of platinum fitted into a +groove made in the bony margin. The wound was then sutured. +Primary union took place, and there was no constitutional +disturbance beyond one temperature of 100° on the evening of +the second day; otherwise the temperature remained normal, and +the pulse did not rise above 75.</p> + +<p>On the second evening a fit occurred, coming on while the +patient was apparently asleep. It lasted about a quarter of an +hour and was general, the patient becoming for a short time +unconscious, and passing water involuntarily.</p> + +<p>On the third morning two similar fits occurred, the first a +severe one, during which the patient passed a motion +involuntarily. The commencement of all three fits was observed +by the nurse only, but in each the convulsions apparently +commenced in the face and then became general.</p> + +<p>Three months later no further fits had occurred, and the +patient, who throughout had said he felt remarkably well, +complained of nothing. The upper extremity was apparently +slightly less rigid than before the exploration, and the +patient said he walked somewhat better than before. The closure +of the skull was perfect.</p></div> + +<p><i>Treatment.</i>—The treatment of fractures of the skull possesses a degree +of surgical interest that attaches to no other class of gunshot injury, +since operative interference is necessary in every case in which +recovery is judged possible. The injuries are, without exception, of the +nature of punctured wounds of the skull, and the ordinary rule of +surgery should under no circumstances be deviated from. An expectant +attitude, although it often appears immediately satisfactory, exposes +the patient to future risks which are incalculable,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span> but none the less +serious. Happily the operations needed may be included amongst the most +simple as well as the most successful, and expose the patient with +ordinary precautions to no increase of risk beyond that dependent on the +original injury.</p> + +<p>Cases of a general character, or in which the base has been directly +fractured other than in the frontal region, are seldom suitable for +operation, since surgical skill is in these of no avail; but in all +others an exploration is indicated. I use the word 'exploration' +advisedly, since what may be called the formal operation of trephining +is seldom necessary except in the case of the small openings due to +wounds received from a very long range of fire; in all others there is +no difficulty, but very great advantage, in making such enlargement of +the bone opening as is necessary with Hoffman's forceps.</p> + +<p>The scalp should be first shaved and cleansed; if for any reason an +operation is impossible, this procedure at least should be carried out, +with a view to ensuring, as far as possible, future asepsis, infection +in head injuries being almost the only danger to be feared. The shaving +may need to be complete, but local clearance of the hair suffices in +many cases. The hair having been removed, the scalp is cleansed with all +care, a flap is raised of which the bullet opening forms the central +point, and the wound explored. In slight cases the entry opening is the +one of chief importance, and the exit may be simply cleansed and +dressed. In some instances, as in direct fracture of the roof of the +orbit from above, the exit should not be touched.</p> + +<p>The flap having been raised, if the wound be a small perforation, a +1/2-inch trephine crown may be taken from one side; but it is rare for +the opening to be so small that the tip of a pair of Hoffman's forceps +cannot be inserted. The trephine is more often useful in cases of +non-penetrating gutter fractures where space is needed for exploration, +and the elevation or removal of fragments of the inner-table. Loose +fragments may need to be removed from beneath the scalp, but the +important ones are those within the cranium. These may either be of some +size, or fine comminuted splinters of either table, often at as great a +distance as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span> 2 inches or more from the surface. The cavity must be +thoroughly explored and all splinters removed. I have seen more than +fifty extracted in one case of open gutter fracture. The brain pulp and +clot should then be gently removed or washed away, and the wound closed +without drainage. Fragments of bone, as a rule, are better not replaced, +but complete suture of the skin flap is always advisable in view of the +great importance of primary union, and the fact that a drainage opening +exists at the original wound of entry, and that the wound is readily +re-opened to its whole extent, should such a step be advisable.</p> + +<p>The detection of fragments is easiest and most satisfactorily done with +the finger, and in all but simple punctures the opening should be large +enough to allow thoroughly effective digital exploration; the remarks +already made as to the factors determining the size of fragments are of +interest in this connection. The determination of the amount of brain +pulp which should be removed is somewhat more difficult; one can only +say that all that washes readily away should be removed, and its place +is usually taken up by blood.</p> + +<p>Few fractures of the base are suitable for treatment; the only ones I +saw were those of direct fracture of the roof of the orbit or nose, +produced by bullets passing across the orbits; here the advisability of +interference with the injured eye led to opening of the orbit, and +sometimes exposed the fracture. Some patients recovered, even when the +damage had been sufficient to cause escape of pulped brain into the +orbit.</p> + +<p>The after treatment simply consisted in keeping the patients as quiet as +circumstances would permit, and the administration of a fluid diet. In +some cases recurring symptoms pointed to the continued presence of bone +fragments; these were usually indicated by signs of irritation, or often +of local inflammation, in the latter case infection taking the greater +share in the causation. Such cases needed secondary exploration, and the +wonderful success of this operation, even when the wound was evidently +infected, was perhaps one of the most striking experiences of the +surgery in general.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span></p> + +<p>I should add a word here as to the most satisfactory time for the +performance of these operations; as in all cases the earlier they could +be undertaken the better, but in the head injuries the advantages of +early interference were more evident than in any other region. This +depended on the fact that, as in civil practice, the scalp is one of the +most dangerous regions as far as auto-infection of the wound is +concerned, and one of the most difficult to cleanse, except by thorough +shaving. Beyond this the extreme simplicity of the operative procedure +needed, called for few precautions beyond those for asepsis, and very +little armament in the way of instruments, &c.</p> + +<p>When on the march from Winberg to Heilbron with the Highland Brigade we +had some five days' continuous fighting, and on this occasion several +perforating fractures of the skull were brought in. The coldness of the +nights at that time made evening operations an impossibility; hence the +operations on these men were performed at the first dressing station, in +the open air, at the side of the ambulance wagons, often during the +progress of fighting around. Of several cases so operated on, all healed +by primary union without a bad symptom of any kind, except one (see p. +249), in whom a very large entrance opening over the right cortical +motor area led down to an extensive destruction of the brain, +complicated by a fracture of the base in the middle fossa. This wound, +from the first considered hopeless, became septic during the four days' +travelling in an ambulance wagon that was necessary, and the man died at +the end of fourteen days. As the whole cortical motor area was +destroyed, death was, perhaps, the end most to be desired; but the fight +that this man made for recovery, and the fact that his death, after all, +was due to general infection and not to any local extension of the +injury, very strongly impressed me with the possibility of recovery, +even in such extensive cases, if only an aseptic condition can be +maintained. I saw many other cases of the same nature, particularly in +men who, as a result of unfortunate circumstances, were necessarily left +out on the field for more than twenty-four hours. In some of these +maggots were found<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span> in the wounds only thirty-six hours after the +infliction of the injury.</p> + +<p>I have said nothing as to the treatment of the large primary herniæ +cerebri in wounds of an explosive nature, since these were rarely +subjects suitable for operation; but in the instances of minor severity +they were treated as the other cases where the pulped brain lay mostly +within the skull.</p> + +<p>In cases where the wounds were in the frontal or fronto-parietal +regions, and hemiplegia existed, the rapid improvement in the paralytic +symptoms, after operation, was very marked, showing that the signs were +mainly, or entirely, due to 'radiation' injury. I am inclined to think +that temporary injury of this kind from vibratory disturbance and small +parenchymatous hæmorrhages, were far more often the cause of the +paralysis than surface hæmorrhage, since the latter was rarely found in +large quantity. Large clots, however, no doubt growing in both size and +firmness, occasionally occupied the area of destroyed brain, and these +sometimes manifestly exercised pressure that was at once relieved by +their evacuation.</p> + +<p>In cases where inflammatory hernia cerebri developed, a secondary +exploration was often indicated for the removal of fragments of bone or +the evacuation of pus, otherwise the condition was best treated by dry +dressings and gentle support.</p> + +<p>Abscess of the brain was treated by simple evacuation and drainage by +metal or rubber tubes: the operations were always of extreme simplicity, +since the abscess in every case I saw was in the direct line of the +wound track, and was readily opened by the insertion of a director or +blunt knife. The only trouble in the after treatment was that already +referred to, of preventing premature closure of the drainage opening.</p> + +<p>I have made no special reference to the method of dressing, since it was +of the ordinary routine kind. The most important factor in success was +the efficient primary disinfection of the scalp; a piece of antiseptic +gauze and some absorbent wool, efficiently secured, was all that was +needed later.</p> + +<p>As usual the consideration of the treatment of cases in which the bullet +was retained may be considered last. Such accidents were distinctly +rare. I operated in only one (No. 54,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span> p. 260) in whom the indications +both for localisation and interference were obvious, since the bullet +had palpably fractured the bone, although it had not retained sufficient +force to enable it to leave the skull. In two other cases that I saw, in +one the bullet was lodged in the zygomatic fossa, in the second just +below the mastoid process. The former patient died; the latter exhibited +symptoms indicative of injury to the occipital lobe (No. 68), and was +successfully treated by Mr. J. E. Ker. I never happened to see a case in +which a retained bullet in the skull was localised by the X rays, but +such might have been possible in case No. 64, p. 275. In no case is +primary interference indicated, unless a fracture exists where the +bullet has tried to escape, or secondary symptoms develop pointing to +irritation.</p> + +<p>Under ordinary circumstances, moreover, the indications for removal of a +bullet are not likely to be sufficiently imperative to necessitate the +operation being undertaken until the patient can be placed under the +best conditions that can be secured. This is the more advisable since +such operations need the infliction of an additional wound, require +great delicacy, and may be very prolonged in performance. The experience +of civil practice has already sufficiently proved the small amount of +inconvenience likely to follow the retention of a bullet in the skull.</p> + +<p>I may again mention the fact that in explorations for the removal of +bone fragments, fragments of lead, from breaking or setting up of the +bullet, are sometimes found.</p> + +<p>Taken as a whole, the operations on the head were extremely satisfactory +from a technical point of view; the large depressed pulsating cicatrix +so often left was the chief defect observed. The circumstances under +which many of the operations had to be performed militated strongly, +however, against the successful replacement of separated bone fragments, +which might have rendered the defects less serious.</p> + +<p>Secondary operations for traumatic epilepsy scarcely come within the +scope of these experiences. In case 73, p. 292, it is of interest to +note the manner in which the cavity due to loss of brain substance was +filled up. No doubt a similar<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span> vicarious arachnoid space develops in all +cases in which a soft pulsating swelling fills an aperture in the bones +of the skull.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Wounds of the Head not Involving the Brain</span></h3> + +<p><i>Mastoid process.</i>—The most important wound of the cranium not already +mentioned was that involving the mastoid process and the bony capsule of +the ear. Wounds of the mastoid process obtained their chief interest in +connection with paralysis of the seventh nerve. This nerve rarely or +never escaped, and, as far as my experience went, the facial paralysis +was permanent (see cases 111-114, p. 355). I think the same prognosis +holds good with regard to the deafness resulting from these injuries, +and it is difficult to believe, with our experience of the effect of +vibration on other nerve centres and organs, that the internal ear could +ever escape permanent damage.</p> + +<p>In a number of cases the tympanum itself, or the external auditory +meatus, was directly implicated in tracks; in these, also, loss of +hearing was the rule.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the pinna when produced by undeformed bullets were usually of +the same slitlike nature remarked in perforations of the cartilages of +the nose, and healed with equal rapidity.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the orbit.</i>—Injuries to the orbit were very numerous and +serious in their results, both to the globe of the eye and the +surrounding structures.</p> + +<p><i>Anatomical lesions.</i>—The wound tracks, with regard to the injuries +produced, may be well classified according to the direction they took; +thus—vertical, transverse, and oblique.</p> + +<p>Vertical wound tracks were on the whole the least serious, but this +mainly from the fact of limitation of the injury to one orbital cavity. +They were usually produced by bullets passing from above downwards +through the frontal region of the cranium, and were received by the +patients while in the prone position.</p> + +<p>Transverse and oblique wounds owed their greater importance to the fact +that both eyes were more likely to be implicated.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span></p> + +<p>Besides these tracks, which actually crossed the cavities, a number +involved the bony boundaries, producing almost as severe lesions in the +globe of the eye, many of the patients being rendered permanently blind. +The only difference in nature of such cases was the escape of orbital +structures, and this was of minor importance in the presence of the +graver lesion to vision. The following is an illustrative case:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>74</b>) Wounded at Colenso. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 1 inch below the +centre of the margin of the right orbit; <i>exit</i>, behind the +right angle of the mandible. Fracture of lower jaw, and +development of a diffuse traumatic aneurism of the external +carotid artery. The common carotid artery was tied for +secondary hæmorrhage (Mr. Jameson) some three weeks later.</p> + +<p>Vision was affected at the time of the accident; the fingers +could be seen, but not counted. After ligation of the carotid +the condition was possibly worse, and this needs mention as +transitory loss of power in the left upper extremity also +followed the operation.</p></div> + +<p>Fractures of the bony wall were of every degree. The most severe that I +saw were two in which lateral impact by a bullet crossing the cranial +cavity caused general comminution of the whole orbital roof. Fissures of +the roof were common in connection with 'explosive' exit apertures in +the frontal region of the skull. Pure perforations usually accompanied +the vertical or transverse wounds of the cavity, fragments at the +aperture of entry then being projected into the orbit, sometimes +penetrating the muscles.</p> + +<p>Occasionally the margin of the cavity was merely notched.</p> + +<p>The ocular muscles were often divided more or less completely, and +occasionally some difficulty arose in determining whether loss of +movement of the globe in any definite direction depended on injury to +the muscle itself, or to the nerve supplying the muscle. The following +case illustrates this point:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>75</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 2 inches behind the right external +canthus; the bullet pierced the external wall and traversed the +floor of the right orbit beneath the globe, crossed the nasal +cavity, and a part of the left orbit; <i>exit</i>, at the lower +margin of the left orbit, beneath the centre of the globe of +the eye.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span></p> + +<p>Complete loss of sight followed the injury, and persisted for +one week. Modified vision then returned.</p> + +<p>Three weeks later there was diplopia; loss of function of the +right external and inferior recti, although the ball could be +turned downward to some extent by the superior oblique when the +internal rectus was in action. Movements of the left globe were +not seriously affected.</p> + +<p>The pupils were immobile and moderately dilated, but atropine +had been employed two days previously.</p> + +<p>A year later the condition was as follows: There is some +weakness of the right seventh nerve, as evidenced by want of +symmetry in all the folds of the face, and in narrowing of the +palpebral fissure.</p> + +<p>When at rest the right eye is somewhat raised and turned +outwards. Active movements outwards or downwards are +restricted. There is diplopia, and the vision of the right eye +is much impaired; the man can see persons, but cannot count +fingers with certainty, although he sees the hand. Putting on +one side the loss of free movement, there is no obvious +external appearance of injury to the eye.</p></div> + +<p>Mr. J. H. Fisher reported as follows:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>Ophthalmoscopic examination shows the left eye and fundus to be +normal. The right disc is not atrophied, but the whole of the +lower half of the fundus is coated with masses of black retinal +pigment. There is atrophy in spots of the capillary layer of +the choroid, and the larger vessels of the deeper layer are +exposed between the interstices of the pigment masses. There is +no definite choroidal rupture. The lesion encroaches upon and +implicates the macular region.</p> + +<p>The injury is a concussion one, not necessarily resulting from +contact, and certainly not due to a perforation. The loss of +movement and faulty position are the result of injury to the +muscles, and not to nerve implication.</p> + +<p>The man complained that when he blew his nose the left eye +filled with water and air came out. The left nasal duct was +however shown to be intact, as water injected by the +canaliculus passed freely into the nose.</p></div> + +<p>Intra-orbital bleeding, subconjunctival hæmorrhage with proptosis and +ecchymosis of the lids were usually well marked. The latter was +sometimes extreme.</p> + +<p>Injury to the nerves was naturally of a very mixed character. In many +instances the branches of the first two<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span> divisions of the fifth nerve +were obviously implicated and regional anæsthesia was common. This was +often transitory when the result of vibratory concussion, contusion, or +pressure from hæmorrhage. In other cases it was more prolonged as a +result of actual division of the nerve. As is usually the case, when a +small area of distribution only was affected, sensation was rapidly +regained from vicarious sources, even when section had been complete.</p> + +<p>As individual injuries, those to the optic nerve were the most +frequently diagnosed. I am sorry to be unable to attempt a +discrimination of injuries to the nerve alone from those in which both +nerve and globe suffered, but the globe can rarely have escaped injury, +either direct or indirect, when the bullet actually traversed the +orbital cavity. (A few further remarks concerning injuries to the optic +nerve will be found in Chapter IX.)</p> + +<p>Injuries to the globe of the eye, either direct or indirect, accompanied +most of the orbital wounds.</p> + +<p>In some the lesion was of the nature of concussion. In such the bone +injury was usually at the periphery of the orbit, or to the bones of the +face in the neighbourhood. The loss of vision might then be temporary, +persisting from two to ten days, then returning, often with some +deficiencies.</p> + +<p>In other similar external injuries, the lesion of the globe was more +severe, and permanent blindness followed.</p> + +<p>In variability of degree of completeness, these lesions of the globe +corresponded exactly with those produced in other parts of the nervous +system by bullets striking the bones in their vicinity, and they were no +doubt the result of a similar transmission of vibratory force.</p> + +<p>In a third series of cases the globe suffered direct contusion, and in a +fourth was perforated and destroyed.</p> + +<p>In cases in which permanent blindness was produced without solution of +continuity of the sclerotic coat, the nature of the lesion was probably +in most cases vibratory concussion and the development of multiple +hæmorrhages from choroidal ruptures of a similar nature to those seen in +the brain and spinal cord. The actual hæmorrhagic areæ varied in size; +but, as far as my experience went, gross hæmorrhages into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span> the anterior +chamber did not occur without severe direct contact of the bullet.</p> + +<p>In the vast majority of the cases blindness, whether transitory or +permanent, developed immediately on the reception of the injury, and was +possibly in its initial stage the result of primary concussion.</p> + +<p>Cases were, however, seen occasionally in which the symptoms were less +sudden, of which the following is an example. I did not think that the +mode of progress seen here could be referred to simple orbital +hæmorrhage, although this existed, but rather to intravaginal hæmorrhage +into the sheath of the optic nerve. On external inspection the globes +appeared normal.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>76</b>) Wounded at Paardeberg. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), over the centre +of the right zygoma; the bullet traversed the right orbit, +nose, and left orbit. <i>Exit</i>, immediately above the outer +extremity of the left eyebrow.</p> + +<p>The patient stated that he could 'see' for thirty minutes with +the right eye and for an hour with the left, immediately after +the injury. He then became totally blind, and has since +remained so. During the next three weeks there were occasional +'flashes of light' experienced, but these then ceased.</p> + +<p>At the end of three weeks the condition was as follows: Ocular +movements good in every direction except that of elevation of +the globe. The levator palpebræ superioris acted very slightly; +the right, however, better than the left.</p> + +<p>There were marked right proptosis, less left proptosis, and +slight patchy subconjunctival hæmorrhage of both eyes. The +pupils were dilated, motionless, and not concentric.</p> + +<p>The patient was invalided as totally blind (November, 1900).</p></div> + +<p>Mr. Lang, who saw this patient on his return to England, kindly +furnishes me with the following note as to the condition. There was +extensive damage to both eyes, hæmorrhage, and probably retinal +detachment as well as choroidal changes.</p> + +<p>The quotation of a few illustrative examples typical of the ordinary +orbital injuries may be of interest:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>77</b>) <i>Vertical wound.</i>—<i>Entry</i>, into left orbit in roof +posterior to globe, and internal to optic nerve; <i>exit</i>, from +orbit through junction of inner wall and floor into nose.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span></p> + +<p>Complete blindness followed the injury, but upon the second day +light was perceived on lifting the upper lid. There was marked +proptosis, subconjunctival ecchymosis, swelling and ecchymosis +of the upper lid, and ptosis. Anæsthesia in the whole area of +distribution of the frontal nerve.</p> + +<p>At the end of three weeks, fingers could be recognised, but a +large blind spot existed in the centre of the field of vision. +The general movements of the globe were fair, but the upper lid +could not be raised. The proptosis and subconjunctival +hæmorrhage cleared up.</p> + +<p>Little further improvement occurred; six months later the +patient could only count the fingers excentrically. A very +extensive scotoma was present. The optic disc was much +atrophied, the calibre of the arteries diminished and the veins +full (Mr. Critchett). The ptosis persisted. It was doubtful in +this case whether the ptosis depended on injury to the nerve of +supply, or on laceration and fixation of the levator palpebræ +superioris. The latter seemed the more probable, as the +superior rectus acted. The absence of any sign of gross +bleeding into the anterior chamber is opposed to the existence +of a perforating lesion of the globe in this case.</p> + +<p>(<b>78</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), from cranial cavity, just within the +centre of the roof of the right orbit; <i>exit</i>, from the orbit +by a notch in the lower orbital margin internal to the +infra-orbital foramen; track thence beneath the soft parts of +the face to emerge from the margin of the upper lip near the +left angle of the mouth. Collapse of globe, proptosis, +subconjunctival hæmorrhage, œdema and ecchymosis of lids.</p> + +<p>Shrunken ball removed on twenty-fourth day (Major Burton, +R.A.M.C.).</p> + +<p>(<b>79</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at the posterior border of the left +mastoid process, 3/4 inch above the tip; <i>exit</i>, in the inner +third of the left upper eyelid. Globe excised at end of seven +days. Facial paralysis and deafness.</p> + +<p>(<b>80</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), from cranial cavity through centre of +roof of orbit; <i>exit</i>, through maxillary antrum. Total +blindness. Movements of ball good, no loss of tension. +Proptosis, subconjunctival hæmorrhage, ecchymosis of eyelids. +No improvement in sight followed. One month later the globe +suppurated and was removed. The bullet had divided the optic +nerve and contused the ball.</p></div> + +<p><i>Prognosis and treatment of wounds of the orbit.</i>—Except in those cases +in which return of vision was rapid, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span> prognosis was consistently bad +in the injuries to the globe. When the globe was ruptured it, as a rule, +rapidly shrank. The case (80) quoted above is the only one in which I +saw secondary suppuration.</p> + +<p>With regard to active treatment, the majority of the cases were +complicated by fracture of the roof of the orbit, and in many instances +concurrent brain injury was present. In all of these, as a general rule, +it was advisable to await the closure of the wound in the orbital roof +prior to removal of the injured eye, if that was considered necessary. +The only exception to this rule was offered by instances in which the +bullet passed from the orbit into the cranium; in these primary removal +of fragments projecting into the frontal lobe was preferable. As already +indicated, such wounds were comparatively rare except in the case of +bullets coursing transversely or obliquely.</p> + +<p>The wounds were, as a rule, followed by considerable matting of the +orbital structures.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the nose.</i>—I will pass by the external parts, with the +remark that perforating wounds of the cartilages were remarkable for +their sharp limitation and simple nature. I remember one case shown to +me in the Irish Hospital in Bloemfontein by Sir W. Thomson, in which at +the end of the third day small symmetrical vertical slits in each ala +already healed were scarcely visible. This case very strongly impressed +one with the doctrine of chances, since on the same morning I was asked +to see a patient in whom a similar transverse shot had crossed both +orbits, destroying both globes and injuring the brain.</p> + +<p>A retained bullet in the upper portion of the nasal cavity has already +been referred to (fig. 60). This accident was naturally a rare one; in +that instance the bullet had only retained sufficient force to insert +itself neatly between the bones.</p> + +<p>Wounds crossing the nasal fossæ were comparatively common. The +interference with the sense of smell often resulting is discussed in +Chapter IX.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the malar bone</i> were not infrequent. The small amount of +splintering was somewhat remarkable considering the density of structure +of the bone. In this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span> particular the behaviour of the malar corresponded +with what was observed in the flat bones in general. A case quoted in +Chapter III. p. 87, illustrates the capacity of the hard edge of the +bone to check the course of a bullet, and cause considerable deformity +and fissuring of the mantle.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the jaws. Upper jaw.</i>—A large number of tracks crossing the +antrum transversely, obliquely, or vertically were observed. In the +first case the nasal cavity, in the others the orbital or buccal cavity, +were generally concurrently involved. It was somewhat striking that I +never observed any trouble, immediate or remote, from these perforations +of the antrum. If hæmorrhage into the cavity occurred, it gave rise to +no ultimate trouble. I never saw an instance of secondary suppuration +even in cases where the bullet entered or escaped through the alveolar +process with considerable local comminution. The branches of the second +division of the fifth nerve were sometimes implicated. In one instance a +bullet traversed and cut away a longitudinal groove in the bones, +extending from the posterior margin of the hard palate, and terminating +by a wide notch in the alveolar process.</p> + +<p>A good example of a troublesome transverse wound of the bones of the +face is afforded by the following instance:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>81</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), through the left malar eminence, 1 inch +below and external to the external canthus; <i>exit</i>, a slightly +curved tranverse slit in the lobe of the right ear.</p> + +<p>The injury was followed by no signs of orbital concussion, and +no loss of consciousness. There was free bleeding from both +external wounds and from the nose. The sense of smell was +unaffected, but taste was impaired, and there was loss of +tactile sensation in the teeth on the left side also on the +hard palate. There was no evidence of fracture of the neck of +the mandible, nor of the external auditory meatus, but there +was considerable difficulty in opening the mouth widely or +protruding the teeth. The latter difficulty persisted for some +time, and was still present when I last saw the patient.</p></div> + +<p><i>Mandible.</i>—Fractures of the lower jaw were frequent and offered some +peculiarities, the chief of which were the liability of any part of the +bone to be damaged, and the absence of the obliquity between the cleft +in the outer and inner tables so common in the fractures seen in civil +practice.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span></p> + +<p>The neck of the condyle I three times saw fractured; in each instance +permanent stiffness and inability to open the mouth resulted. This +stiffness was of a degree sufficient to raise the question whether the +best course in such cases would not be to cut down primarily and remove +a considerable number of loose fragments, and thus diminish the amount +of callus likely to be thrown out.</p> + +<p>Fractures of the ascending ramus and body were more frequent. They were +accompanied by considerable comminution, but all that I observed healed +remarkably well, and in good position, in spite of the fact that many of +the patients objected to wear any form of splint.</p> + +<p>The most special feature was the occurrence of notched fractures, +corresponding to the type wedges described in Chapter V. When these +fractures were at the lower margin of the bone, the buccal cavity +occasionally escaped in spite of considerable comminution, the latter +confining itself to the basal portion of the bone.</p> + +<p>When the base of the teeth, or the alveolus, was struck, a wedge was +often broken away, and from the apex of the resulting gap a fracture +extended to the lower margin of the bone.</p> + +<p>When fractures of the latter nature resulted from vertically coursing +bullets, much trouble often ensued. I will quote two cases in +illustration:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>82</b>) Wounded at Rooipoort. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), through the lower +lip; the bullet struck the base of the right lateral incisor +and canine teeth, knocked out a wedge, and becoming slightly +deflected, cut a vertical groove to the base of the mandible; +<i>exit</i>, in left submaxillary triangle. The bullet subsequently +re-entered the chest wall just below the clavicle, and escaped +at the anterior axillary fold. The appearance of these second +wounds suggested only slight setting up of the bullet; the +original impact was no doubt of an oblique or lateral +character.</p> + +<p>The injury was followed by free hæmorrhage and remarkably +abundant salivation (I was inclined to think that the latter +symptom was particularly well marked in gunshot fractures of +the body of the mandible), and very great swelling of the floor +of the mouth.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span></p> + +<p>The patient could not bear any form of apparatus, but was +assiduous in washing out his mouth, and made a good recovery, +the fragments being in good apposition.</p> + +<p>(<b>83</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), over the right malar eminence; the +bullet carried away all the right upper and lower molars, +fractured the mandible, and was retained in the neck.</p> + +<p>A fortnight later an abscess formed in the lower part of the +neck, which was opened (Mr. Pooley), and portions of the mantle +and leaden core, together with numerous fragments of the teeth, +were removed. The bullet had undergone fragmentation on impact, +probably on the last one (teeth of mandible), and still +retained sufficient force to enter the neck.</p></div> + +<p>This case affords an interesting example of transmission of force from +the bullet to the teeth, and bears on the theory of explosive action.</p> + +<p>In the treatment of fractures of the upper jaw, interference was rarely +needed. In the case of the mandible, a remark has already been made as +to the advisability of removing fragments when the neck of the condyle +has suffered comminution. The removal of loose fragments is necessary in +all cases in which the buccal cavity is involved. Experience in fracture +of the limbs has shown a tendency to quiet necrosis when comminution was +severe, in spite of primary union. This is no doubt dependent on the +very free separation of fragments on the entry and exit aspects from +their enveloping periosteum. In the case of the mandible, considerable +necrosis is inevitable, and much time is saved by the primary removal of +all actually loose fragments.</p> + +<p>A splint of the ordinary chin-cap type with a four-tailed bandage meets +all further requirements, but the patients often object to them. Cases +in which the fragments could be fixed by wiring the teeth were not +common, as the latter had so frequently been carried away. The usual +precautions as to maintaining oral asepsis were especially necessary.</p> + +<p>The results of fractures of the mandible were, in so far as my +experience went, remarkably good, as deformity was seldom considerable. +The absence of obliquity and the effect of primary local shock were no +doubt favourable elements, little primary displacement from muscular +action occurring.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span></p> + +<p>Wounds of the <i>cheek</i> healed readily, and the same was noticeable of the +lips. Wounds of the <i>tongue</i> healed with remarkable rapidity when of the +simple perforating type, often with little or no swelling or evidence of +contusion. At the end of a few days it was often difficult to localise +them.</p> + +<p>In connection with this subject a remarkable case which occurred at the +fighting at Koodoosberg Drift is worthy of mention, although the +projectile was a shell fragment and not a bullet of small calibre.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>84</b>) A Highlander was the unfortunate possessor of an entire +set of upper teeth set in a gold plate. A small fragment of a +shell perforated the upper lip by an irregular aperture, and +struck the teeth in such a manner as to turn the posterior edge +of the plate towards the tongue, which latter was cut into two +halves transversely through to the base.</p> + +<p>The patient asserted that the plate had been driven down his +throat, but nothing was palpable either in the fauces or on +external examination of the neck. He spoke distinctly, but +there was dysphagia as far as solids were concerned.</p> + +<p>On the second day swelling of the neck due to early cellulitis +developed, especially on the left side, and signs of laryngeal +obstruction became prominent. Chloroform was administered, but +on the introduction of the finger into the fauces, respiration +failed and a hasty tracheotomy had to be performed. No foreign +body was palpable with the finger in the pharynx.</p> + +<p>Tracheitis and septic pneumonia developed, and the man died of +acute septicæmia thirty-six hours later. Death occurred just as +the Division received marching orders, and no <i>post-mortem</i> +examination was made. As a result of palpation at the time of +the tracheotomy, the probabilities seemed against the presence +of the tooth plate in the pharynx, but the absence of positive +evidence scarcely allows the case to be certainly classed as +one of cellulitis and septicæmia secondary to wound of the +tongue.</p></div> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Wounds of the Neck</span></h3> + +<p>Wounds of the neck were not unfrequent and were of the gravest +importance; there can be little doubt that they accounted for a +considerable proportion of the deaths on the field. On the other hand, +the neck as a region offered<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span> some of the most striking examples of +hairbreadth escape of important structures. Consideration of a number of +the vascular lesions (see cervical aneurisms, p. 135) also shows +conclusively that in no region did the small size of the bullet more +materially influence the result, since no doubt can exist that all these +wounds would have proved immediately fatal if produced by projectiles of +larger calibre.</p> + +<p>In this place only a few general considerations will be entered into, as +most of the important cases are dealt with under the general headings of +vessels, nerves, and spine; but it is convenient to include here the few +remarks that have to be made concerning the cervical viscera.</p> + +<p>The wounds of the soft parts might course in any direction, but vertical +tracks from above downwards were rare. In point of fact, these occurred +only in connection with perforations of the head, and as vertical wounds +of the latter were received in the prone position, usually when the head +was raised, the necessary conditions for longitudinal tracks were seldom +offered. One case of a complete vertical track in the muscles of the +back of the neck has been already quoted (No. 69, p. 286).</p> + +<p>Tracks coursing upwards from the trunk were somewhat more frequent in +occurrence; thus a considerable number traversing the thorax were seen. +In such instances the aperture of exit was generally situated in the +posterior triangle, and some of the brachial nerves often suffered.</p> + +<p>The commonest forms of wound were the transverse or the oblique. A large +number of cases with such tracks will be found among the cases of injury +to the cervical vessels and nerves. In some instances the course was +restricted to the neck alone, in others the trunk or upper extremity was +also implicated.</p> + +<p>The favourable influence of the arrangement of the structures of the +neck, which allows of the ordinary displacement excursions necessary for +deglutition, respiration, and their cognate movements, was very strongly +marked. Thus in several cases the bullet traversed the neck behind the +pharynx and œsophagus without injuring either viscus, and the escape +of the main vessels and nerves was equally<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span> striking. In such wounds the +wedge-like bullet without doubt separated and displaced all these +structures, causing mere superficial contusion.</p> + +<p>In connection with the latter statement, the rarity of direct sagittal +wounds in the hospitals should be mentioned. This is probably to be +explained by the facts that wounds in the mid-line of the neck +implicated the cervical spinal cord, and that sagittal wounds +implicating the vessels were apt to lead more directly to the surface, +and thus external hæmorrhage was favoured. A few examples of cervical +tracks will suffice to illustrate these remarks:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>85</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Lee-Metford), below angle of scapula; <i>exit</i>, +centre of posterior triangle. Injury to the lung, and +hæmothorax. No damage to neck structures.</p> + +<p>(<b>86</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), over Pomum Adami; <i>exit</i>, below right +scapular spine. Median and musculo-spiral paralysis.</p> + +<p>(<b>87</b>) <i>Entry</i>, a large oval aperture through ninth right rib, +1/2 an inch external to scapular angle; <i>exit</i>, anterior border +of sterno-mastoid opposite Pomum Adami. Second entry, opposite +angle of mandible; exit, in centre of cheek.</p> + +<p>Wound of lung. Musculo-spiral paralysis still persisting at the +end of nine months.</p> + +<p>(<b>88</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 2 inches above left clavicle at margin +of trapezius; <i>exit</i>, 1 inch from sternum in left first +intercostal space. Contusion of brachial plexus, with mixed +signs, which disappeared in two months. No signs of vascular +injury.</p></div> + +<p>See also cases of cervical aneurism, &c.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the pharynx.</i>—I saw only three cases of wound of the +pharynx; in each the injury was in the nasal or buccal segment of the +cavity, and in each the soft palate was injured, in two instances the +wound being a small perforation.</p> + +<p>All three cases belong to the somewhat miraculous class. The first (89) +was the only one in which the wound gave rise to subsequent trouble. The +second was under the charge of Mr. Bowlby, and will no doubt be more +fully recounted by him, as interesting signs of injury to the cervical +cord were present. In the third the occipital neuralgia was the only +troublesome symptom.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span></p> + +<p>In both cases 90 and 91 the high position of the wound in the fixed +portion of the pharynx no doubt accounted for the absence of any +infective trouble.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>89</b>) <i>Wounds of the pharynx.</i>—<i>Entry</i> (Lee-Metford), +immediately below the tip of right mastoid process; the bullet +traversed the neck, entering the pharynx close to the right +tonsil, crossed the cavity of the pharynx and the mouth, +emerging through the left cheek. Great swelling of the fauces +and dysphagia persisted for some days after the injury, and +there was considerable hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p>Infection of the posterior portion of the track from the +pharynx resulted, and suppuration continued for some weeks: a +small sequestrum eventually needed to be removed from the tip +of the transverse process of the atlas.</p> + +<p>(<b>90</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), through mouth; the bullet pierced the +soft palate and the posterior wall of the pharynx, and passed +out between the transverse process of atlas and the occiput. No +serious pharyngeal symptoms.</p> + +<p>(<b>91</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), through the mouth, knocking out the left +upper canine and bicuspid teeth. Perforation of the soft palate +just to the right of the base of the uvula and the posterior +wall of the pharynx; <i>exit</i>, 1½ inch internal to and 1/2 an +inch below the tip of the right mastoid process. Hæmorrhage +persisted for half an hour, and the patient could not swallow +solids for a week. Great occipital neuralgia followed the +wound.</p></div> + +<p><i>Wounds of the larynx.</i>—I saw only one wound of the larynx (see No. 10, +p. 135). In this instance the thyroid cartilage was wounded on either +side at the level of the Pomum Adami. Transitory hæmorrhage and signs of +œdema were the only signs referable to the wound, but in addition the +bullet contused the left vagus and gave rise to temporary laryngeal +paralysis. The same course was observed in a second case of perforation +of the larynx of which I was told.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the trachea.</i>—The two cases recounted below are the only +tracheal injuries I met with; in one the œsophagus was also +implicated. This patient died from mediastinal emphysema. In the second +case the wide development of emphysema was prevented by the early +introduction of a tracheotomy tube.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>92</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), on the outer side of the right arm, +3½ inches below the acromion; <i>exit</i>, 3 inches below the tip +of the left mastoid process, through the sterno-mastoid. Thirty +six hours later there was very free hæmorrhage into the right +posterior triangle, emphysema at the episternal notch, +dysphagia, and complete obliteration of the cardiac area of +dulness. Respiration was rapid (40) and extremely noisy. Pulse +130, small and weak.</p> + +<p>A tracheotomy was performed (Mr. Stewart), but the patient died +an hour later. When the operation was performed a considerable +amount of mucus from the œsophagus was discovered in the +wound. The bullet had passed obliquely between trachea and +œsophagus, wounding both tubes.</p> + +<p>(<b>93</b>) <i>Entry</i>, at the centre of the margin of the left +trapezius; <i>exit</i>, in mid line of the neck over the trachea. +Dyspnœa was noted the next morning, which increased during a +journey in a wagon. On the third day the dyspnœa was more +troublesome and emphysema began to develop in the neck. A +tracheotomy was performed (Mr. Hunter), and the tube was kept +in for four days. No further trouble was experienced, and the +wound shortly closed, and the patient, a surgeon, returned to +his duties. Temporary signs of median nerve concussion and +contusion were noted.</p></div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII</h2> + +<h3>INJURIES TO THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN AND SPINAL CORD</h3> + + +<p>Every degree of local injury to the constituent vertebræ and the +contents of the spinal canal was met with considerable frequency. Pure +uncomplicated fractures of the bones were of minor importance, except in +so far as they exemplified the general tendency to localised injury in +small-calibre bullet wounds. Injuries implicating the spinal medulla, on +the other hand, were proportionately the most fatal of any in the whole +body to the wounded who left the field of battle or Field hospital +alive, and these cases formed one of the most painful and distressing +features of the surgery of the campaign.</p> + +<p>The prognostic gravity of any spinal injury depended upon two factors: +first, the obvious one of relative contiguity or direct implication of +the cord or nerves in the wound track; secondly, the degree of velocity +retained by the bullet at the moment of impact with the spine. +Observation of the serious ill effects produced by bullets passing in +the immediate proximity of large strongly ensheathed peripheral nerves +surrounded by soft tissue, such as those of the arm or thigh, would lead +one to expect that a comparatively thin-clad bundle of delicate nerve +tissue like the spinal cord, enclosed in a bony canal so well disposed +for the conveyance of vibrations, would suffer severely, and such proved +to be the case.</p> + +<p><i>Fractures in their relation to nerve injury</i> will be first dealt with, +and secondly injuries to the cord itself.</p> + +<p>Isolated fractures of the processes were not uncommon, the determination +of the injury to anyone being naturally dependent on the position and +direction taken by the wound track.</p> + +<p>For implication of the <i>transverse processes</i> sagittal wounds<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span> coursing +in varying degrees of obliquity were mainly responsible. Such injuries +might be unaccompanied by any nerve lesion. Thus a Boer received a +Lee-Metford wound at Belmont which passed from just below the tip of the +right mastoid process across the pharynx and through the opposite cheek. +No bone damage was at first suspected; suppuration in the neck, however, +followed infection from the pharynx, and when a sinus which persisted +was opened up later, a number of small comminuted fragments were found +detached from the transverse process of the axis. In other cases more or +less severe symptoms of nerve lesion were observed, varying from +transient hyperæsthesia, due to implication of the issuing nerves, to +symptoms of spinal hæmorrhage, such as are portrayed in the following:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>94</b>) A private in the Black Watch was wounded at Magersfontein +from within a distance of 1,000 yards. Among other wounds, one +track entered 1 inch to the right of the second lumbar spinous +process, and emerged 1 inch internal to the right anterior +superior iliac spine. There were signs of wound of the kidney, +and in addition, retention of urine, incontinence of fæces, +complete motor and sensory paralysis of the right lower +extremity, and total absence of all reflexes. Anæsthesia +existed over the whole area of skin supplied by the nerves of +the sacral plexus, hyperæsthesia over that supplied by the +lumbar nerves.</p> + +<p>On the tenth day subsequent to the injury, the hyperæsthesia in +the area of lumbar supply was replaced by normal sensation, +motor power began to be slowly regained in the muscles supplied +by the anterior crural and obturator nerves, and the patellar +reflex returned. At this time lowered sensation returned in the +area supplied by the sacral plexus, but no improvement in motor +power took place, and no control was regained over the bladder +and rectum.</p> + +<p>During the succeeding week some sciatic hyperæsthesia +developed, but on the twenty-eighth day the patient developed +secondary peritonitis from other causes and died on the +thirty-first. A fracture of the transverse process existed, but +unfortunately the spinal canal was not opened for examination +and no details can be given as to the condition of the cord. +(See case 201, p. 463.)</p></div> + +<p>Fractures of the <i>spinous processes</i>, or those involving both the +process and laminæ, were not uncommon. Isolated<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span> separation of the +spinous process was usually the result of wounds crossing the back +obliquely or transversely. Examples of this injury were numerous, +especially in the dorsal region, as being the most prominent, +particularly when the patients assumed the prone position when advancing +on the enemy.</p> + +<p>Cervical injuries, owing to the comparatively sheltered position of the +more deeply sunk spines, and from the fact that the head was usually +under cover of a stone or ant-heap, were less common; in one instance +hyperæsthesia was noted in one upper extremity as the result of a +crossing bullet having struck the fourth cervical spine. In a man +wounded at Paardeberg Drift the bullet entered at the centre of the +buttock, traversed the bones of the pelvis, and, leaving that cavity +above the crest of the ilium, crossed the spine to emerge in the +opposite loin. Suppuration occurred, and when the wound was laid open +the third and fourth lumbar spinous processes were found to be loosened, +but still connected to the surrounding soft parts. There were no nerve +symptoms in this case; these would not have been expected, since by the +time that the bullet had traversed the bones of the pelvis its velocity +must have been considerably lessened, even if high at the moment of +primary impact. In another case a dorsal spine, together with its +lamina, was separated and moveable; the only nerve symptoms were slight +pain and a crop of herpes on the line of distribution of the +corresponding intercostal nerve, the bullet having probably struck the +nerve in passing across the intercostal space. In one instance of a +retained bullet lying beneath the skin of the back, its passage between +two contiguous dorsal spines without fracture of either was determined +during an extraction operation.</p> + +<p>When the prone position was assumed by the men, more or less +longitudinal wounds in the course of the spine were naturally liable to +occur. These tracks assumed somewhat greater importance than the +transverse ones, because the injury to bone was more often multiple, and +the laminæ were frequently implicated. The relative importance of such +injuries was dependent on the velocity of the bullet and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span> depth at +which it travelled. As an instance of a more serious character the +following may be given:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>95</b>) In a Highlander wounded at Magersfontein, probably at a +range within 1,000 yards, the bullet entered at the right side +of the sixth cervical vertebra; tracking downwards, it loosened +the laminæ of the fifth and sixth dorsal vertebræ from the +pedicles, and separated the tip of the seventh spine. The +bullet was extracted from beneath the skin at the latter spot, +its force having been no doubt exhausted by the resistance of +the firm neural arches supported by the weight of the man's +body. Symptoms of total transverse lesion of the cord followed, +and the patient died at the end of fifty-four days. The bone +had not apparently been sufficiently depressed to exert +continuous pressure, but the cord was diffluent and actually +destroyed over an area corresponding with the fourth, fifth, +sixth, and seventh dorsal segments.</p></div> + +<p>I saw no instance of wound of the <i>neural arch</i> from a direct shot in +the back in any of our men, neither was I ever able to detect an injury +to the articular processes as a localised lesion.</p> + +<p>Injuries to the <i>centra</i> were very frequent, but differed +extraordinarily in their importance. Perforation by bullets travelling +at a relatively low grade of velocity, but still one sufficient to allow +them to pass through the body, produced in many instances no symptoms +whatever when the track did not lie in immediate contiguity to the +spinal canal or perforate it.</p> + +<p>In all the wounds which I had the opportunity of examining post mortem, +the fracture was of the nature of a pure perforation of the cancellous +tissue of the centrum, with no comminution beyond slight splintering of +the compact tissue at the aperture of exit. In one instance the bullet +passed in a coronal direction so close to the back of the centrum as to +leave a septum of only the thickness of stout paper between the track +and the spinal canal. In this case signs of total transverse lesion were +present. I never happened to meet with a case in which the canal was +encroached upon from the front by displaced bone. In some cases at the +end of six weeks there was difficulty in determining the position of the +openings, and section of the bone was necessary in order to assure +oneself as to the direction of the track.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span></p> + +<p>In some instances the centra were pierced in the coronal direction with +varying degrees of obliquity; in others the direction was more sagittal; +in two of the latter the bullet was retained in the spinal canal. The +tracks were sometimes confined to one vertebra, but often implicated +two. In others the bullet passed longitudinally through the thorax, +grooving or perforating one or more centra.</p> + +<p>The accompanying evidences of nerve injury varied from nil to those of +pressure or irritation of the nerve roots, transient signs of spinal +concussion, signs of contusion and hæmorrhage, or to evidence of total +transverse lesion. Instances of all these conditions will be quoted +under the heading of injuries to the cord or nerves.</p> + +<p><i>Signs of injury to the vertebræ.</i>—Separation of the spinous processes +was often indicated by slight deformity, either evident or palpable, +local pain, tenderness, mobility, and crepitus. In some cases these +local signs were reinforced by evidence of cord injury. Fractures +involving the laminæ differed merely in the degree to which the above +signs were developed. Fractures of the transverse processes were +generally only to be assumed from the position and direction of the +wounds, the assumption being sometimes strengthened in probability by +evidence of injury to the cord and nerves.</p> + +<p>Fractures of the centra were also frequently only to be assumed from the +direction of the wound tracks, and possibly from evidence of nerve +injury. When no paralysis supervened, interference with the movements of +the back, or pain, was so slight as to be inappreciable, especially in +the presence of concurrent injury to other parts, which was seldom +absent. I only once saw any angular deformity from this injury, and that +slight, and not apparent before the end of three weeks. In this +particular a very striking difference exists between injuries from +small-calibre bullets and larger ones such as the Martini-Henry. In the +only instance of Martini-Henry fracture of the spine that came under my +notice, the centrum was severely comminuted and deformity was obvious. +Still, as in so many particulars, the difference was only one of degree, +since comminution of the centra in gunshot wounds has always been +observed to be slight in nature<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span> compared with what is met with in the +compression fractures of civil life.</p> + +<p>A few words will suffice to dismiss the questions of diagnosis, +prognosis, and treatment of the above injuries. The diagnosis depended +on attention to the signs above indicated, the prognosis almost entirely +on the concurrent injury to the nervous system, which will be considered +later, and the treatment consisted in enforcing rest alone.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Injuries to the Spinal Cord accompanying Small-calibre Bullet Wounds of +the Vertebræ</span></h3> + +<p><i>Anatomical lesions.</i>—In introducing the subject of the nature of the +lesions of the spinal cord and membranes, I should again enforce the +statement that their character and degree, in comparison with the slight +accompanying bone damage, are pathognomonic of gunshot wounds, and that +these characters find their completest exemplification in injuries +produced by bullets of small calibre, endowed with a high grade of +velocity. Again, that the varying degrees of damage depend comparatively +slightly on the position of the bone lesion, apart from actual +encroachment on the canal, while the degree of velocity retained by the +bullet at the moment of impact is all-important. In no other way are the +divergent results to be explained which follow an apparently identical +injury, in so far as extent, position, and external evidence of damage +to the spinal column are concerned.</p> + +<p>Injuries to the nerve roots of the nature of concussion and contusion, +are dealt with in Chapter IX.</p> + +<p><i>Pure concussion</i> of the spinal cord may, I believe, be studied from a +better standpoint in the case of small-calibre bullet injuries than in +any others, since in many instances it is, I think, possible to exclude +any complications such as wrenches and strains of the vertebral column, +and ascribe the symptoms to the pure effect of extreme vibratory force +communicated to the cord by its enveloping bony canal. The condition +must be considered under the two headings of slight and severe.</p> + +<p>In <i>slight concussion</i> the usually transient effects of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span> injury, and +its happy tendency not to destroy life, place us in a state of +uncertainty as to the occurrence of anatomical changes, since no +opportunity of post-mortem examination occurred. The clinical condition +included under this term corresponds with that implied in 'spinal +concussion' in civil practice. One point of extreme interest, whether +the subjects of small-calibre bullet spinal concussion will in the +future suffer from the remote effects common to similar sufferers in +civil life from other causes such as railway collisions, still remains +for future determination. An ample field for such observations has at +any rate been created by the present war.</p> + +<p>In <i>severe concussion</i> a far more highly destructive action is exerted. +This condition may be followed by complete disorganisation of the cord, +accompanied or not by multiple parenchymatous hæmorrhages into its +substance. Either or both of these pathological conditions are produced +by the impact of the bullet with the spine, given a sufficiently high +degree of velocity, and it is difficult to separate clinically the +resulting symptoms. This is a matter perhaps of less importance, since +it stands to reason that a vibratory force, capable of rupturing the +spinal capillaries, would at the same time damage the nervous tissue.</p> + +<p>In speaking of concussion of this degree, it should be clearly +recognised that a general condition, such as is indicated by the use of +the term 'concussion of the brain,' is in no wise implied. The condition +is really far more nearly allied to one of contusion, a strictly +localised portion of the spinal cord undergoing the destructive process +which affects the segments below only in so far as it interrupts the +normal channels of communication with the higher centres.</p> + +<p>Case 102 is an instance of such a lesion, the post-mortem examination +showing clearly that the spinal canal was not encroached upon by the +bullet. The cord in this instance appeared little changed +macroscopically, and this fact was observed in other instances, both +during operations and post mortem.</p> + +<p><i>Contusion.</i>—This condition is very closely allied to the last. In +cases 101 and 103 the spinal canal was as little encroached upon as in +102, but the bullet struck the somewhat<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span> elastic neural arch in each +case, and post mortem an adhesion between the cord and the enveloping +dura opposite the point at which impact of the bullet was closest +suggests that, in spite of the escape of the bone from fracture, it may +have been momentarily depressed to a sufficient degree to contuse the +cord, or the latter may have suffered a <i>contre-coup</i> injury. For these +reasons the inclusion of the cases as instances of pure concussion is +not warranted. In both Nos. 99 and 100 the neural arch had actually +suffered fracture, and although the bone was not depressed or exercising +pressure at the time of the autopsies, it was no doubt driven in +temporarily at the moment of impact of the bullet.</p> + +<p>At the post-mortem examinations of injuries of this nature it was common +to find one to four segments of the spinal cord completely disorganised. +At the end of some five weeks, the common duration of life, the +structure of the cord was represented by a semi-diffluent yellowish +material, the consistence of which was so deficient in firmness as to +allow the partial collapse of the membranes covering the affected +portion, so as to exhibit a definite narrowing when the whole was held +up (see fig. 79). In such cases traces of extra- or intra-dural +hæmorrhage sometimes still persisted.</p> + +<p><i>Hæmorrhage.</i>—This occurred as surface extravasation and in the form of +parenchymatous hæmorrhages. I saw the former both in the extra-dural and +peri-pial forms, but never in sufficient quantity to exert a degree of +pressure calculated to produce symptoms of total transverse lesion. Here +again, however, it is difficult to speak with confidence since the +conditions which regulate the tension within the normal spinal canal are +so complicated and liable to variation, that it is very difficult to +estimate the effect of any given hæmorrhage discovered.</p> + +<p>My friend Mr. R. H. Mills-Roberts described to me one fatal case under +his care in the Welsh Hospital in which extra-dural hæmorrhage was so +abundant as, in his opinion, to have taken a prominent part in the +production of the paralytic symptoms.</p> + +<p>Examples of both extra- and intra-dural (peri-pial) hæmorrhage are +afforded by cases 99, 102, and 103; in none was it large in amount or +widely distributed. The condition was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span> probably also frequently +associated in varying degree with that to be immediately described +below.</p> + +<p><i>Intra-medullary hæmorrhage</i> (<i>hæmato-myelia</i>).—The importance of this +condition is lessened in small-calibre bullet injuries by the fact +already alluded to, that it is almost invariably accompanied by +concussion changes. In one instance in which death took place at the end +of eight days, partly as the result of concurrent injury, in a man in +whom signs of total transverse lesion of the cord were present, the +substance of the cord was found to be closely scattered over with +hæmorrhages of various sizes and extending for a longitudinal area of +some three inches.</p> + +<p>As to the frequency with which hæmorrhage into the substance of the cord +occurred, I regret to be unable to give an opinion. In the late +post-mortem examinations I witnessed, a yellow discoloration of the +softened cord was the only macroscopic evidence of hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p>Hæmorrhages of this nature may, however, account for the grave paralytic +symptoms in some cases of partial or total transverse lesion not due to +direct compression or laceration.</p> + +<p>The conditions of concussion, contusion, or hæmatomyelia were, I +believe, responsible for at least nine-tenths of the cases in which a +total transverse lesion was indicated by the symptoms. The extreme +importance of realising this fact and the rarity of the production of +symptoms by continuing compression both from the prognostic and the +therapeutic point of view is obvious.</p> + +<p>The analogous injuries termed generally in Chapter IX. nerve contusion, +although frequently accompanied by tissue destruction, may be followed +by reparative change, and are capable of complete or almost complete +spontaneous recovery; while the lesions in the spinal cord are +permanent, and complete recovery is only witnessed in the parts affected +by the remote pressure or irritation from blood extravasation, or in +those influenced by concussion.</p> + +<p>I include below short abstracts of all the cases of lesion of the spinal +cord which terminated fatally, in which I had the opportunity of +witnessing the post-mortem conditions. In a considerable proportion of +the cases at the end of six weeks<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span> the spinal cord was softened over an +area of from two to four segments in such degree as to have practically +lost all continuity. Although the autopsies were made on patients who +had died slowly and in summer weather, often twelve to sixteen hours +after death, I think it can be but fair to assume, when the consistency +of the remaining portion of the spinal cord is considered, that the +softening was only in slight degree if at all exaggerated by post-mortem +change. Again symptoms of secondary myelitis and meningitis had been +observed in some of the fatal cases prior to death.</p> + +<p>I had but one opportunity of observing a case in which a retained bullet +exercised compression, and none in which this was due to displaced bone +fragments. I also only once came across a case of complete section, but +no doubt both bone pressure and section may have occurred with greater +frequency amongst patients dying on the field or shortly after. The case +of section is illustrated in fig. 80. It will be noted that, although +the section is complete, the bullet lies to one side of the canal, and +hence the bullet, as fixed in its course by the bone of the centrum, +directly struck but half of the whole width of the cord.</p> + +<p>It was striking how little secondary change in the cord had occurred in +the neighbourhood of the spot of division. This well illustrates the +comparatively slight vibratory effect of a bullet travelling with a +degree of velocity insufficient to completely perforate the vertebral +column.</p> + +<p><i>Symptoms of injury to the spinal cord.</i>—In <i>slight spinal concussion</i> +these exactly resembled those of the more severe lesions, except in +their transitory nature. They consisted in loss of cutaneous +sensibility, motor paralysis, and vesical and rectal incompetence. The +phenomena persisted from periods of a few hours to two or three days, +return of function being first noticeable in the sensory nerves, and +often with modification in the way of lowered acuteness, or minor signs +of irritation, such as formication, slight hyperæsthesia or pain, +pointing to a combination with the least extensive degrees of +hæmorrhage; later, motor power was rapidly regained. The subjects of +such symptoms often suffered from weakness and unsteadiness in movement +for some days or weeks; a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span> sharp line of discrimination between such +cases and those described in the next paragraphs is manifestly +impossible.</p> + +<p><i>Spinal hæmorrhage.</i>—The symptoms of this condition developed +differently according to whether concurrent concussion existed. +Occasionally very typical instances of pure hæmorrhage were observed +with transient symptoms:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>96</b>) A private in the Yorkshire Light Infantry was wounded at +Modder River; the bullet entered between the eleventh and +twelfth ribs, just posterior to the left mid-axillary line, +emerging in the posterior axillary fold, at its junction with +the right side of the trunk. On the second day after the injury +the lower extremities became drawn up, the knees and hips +assuming a flexed position, and this was followed shortly by +the advent of complete motor and sensory paraplegia, +accompanied by retention of urine. Two days later, the patient +again passed water normally, and gradual and rapid return of +both sensation and motor power took place. At the end of +fourteen days no trace of the condition remained, and the +patient was shortly after sent home.</p></div> + +<p>The symptoms, however, were rarely so simple as in this example; it was +very much more common to meet with an admixture of signs of primary +concussion, or at any rate symptoms of radiation. The following is an +extreme but excellent example of more complicated and prolonged effects:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>97</b>) A lance-corporal of the Black Watch was wounded at +Magersfontein at a range of from 400 to 500 yards. The bullet +entered over the left malar bone 2½ inches from the outer +canthus, while the aperture of exit was 2¼ inches above the +inferior angle of the right scapula, 3/4 of an inch anterior to +its axillary margin.</p> + +<p>Very shortly after the injury complete motor and sensory +paralysis developed in both upper extremities, followed by the +development of a similar condition in the left lower limb, and +retention of urine and fæces, but the latter unaccompanied by +the marked abdominal intestinal distension so characteristic in +cases of total transverse lesion. The right side of the chest +continued to work well, but the intercostals of the left side +were paralysed. No disturbance of the normal action or +condition of the pupils was noted. After the first few days the +condition began to improve.</p> + +<p>Three weeks later, the chest was moving symmetrically and well, +sensation and motor power had returned in considerable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span> degree +in the left lower extremity, with marked increase in both the +plantar and patellar reflexes; sensation had returned in both +upper extremities, a slight amount of motor power was regained +in the right, but the left remained entirely flaccid and +incapable of movement.</p> + +<p>At the end of a month power was regained over both bladder and +rectum, some slight movement of the left thumb was possible, +and a certain degree of hyperæsthesia developed over the back +of the forearm.</p> + +<p>At the end of six weeks there was little further alteration, +but that in the direction of improvement. There was some +wasting of the muscles of the left upper extremity, and this +was most marked in the muscles supplied by the ulnar nerve.</p> + +<p>At the end of ten weeks the patient had been up some days; he +could stand and walk, but was unable to rise from the sitting +posture without help. The plantar and patellar reflexes were +much exaggerated, and there was ankle clonus, most marked in +the left limb. The right upper extremity was normal, but weak; +there was wrist-drop on the left side and the deltoid was +wasted and powerless; on the other hand the fingers could be +flexed, and although the elbow could not be, there were signs +of returning power in the biceps, and some movements of the +shoulder could be performed by the capsular muscles. It was +remarkable that common sensation was more acute in the left +than the right lower extremity, but I attributed this to the +remains of hyperæsthesia on the left side. The patient left for +home shortly after the last note.</p></div> + +<p>In both these cases the absence of marked hyperæsthesia or pain points +to medullary hæmorrhage (hæmato-myelia) as the pathological condition +produced by the injury. In this particular they contrast well with case +94 quoted on page 315, where the degree of both hyperæsthesia and pain +indicated a combination of pressure and irritation of the nerve roots by +surface hæmorrhage on the affected side. In case 97 the persistence for +four weeks of paralysis of the bladder and rectum suggested medullary +hæmorrhage in addition, while the return of patellar reflex in the +paralysed limb negatived the occurrence of an extensive destructive +lesion.</p> + +<p>In view of the extreme interest of these cases I will shortly detail one +other in which the cauda equina alone was affected.</p> + +<p>I must confess my inability to place the case definitely in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span> the +category either of concussion or medullary hæmorrhage. As so often +happened, both conditions probably took part in the lesion. The +immediate development of the primary symptoms is no doubt to be referred +to concussion, while the patchy nature of the prolonged lesion and +gradual recession of the symptoms point to the presence of hæmorrhages. +We find here the link most nearly connecting the spinal cord and the +peripheral systemic nerves. Such a case goes far to show that the +condition which I have in the next chapter often referred to as nerve +contusion may in fact be produced by an injury far short of actual +contact.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>98</b>) A trooper in the Imperial Yeomanry, while advancing in the +crouching attitude, was struck by a bullet from his left front, +at an estimated distance of 300 yards. The bullet traversed the +right arm anteriorly to the humerus, entered the trunk in the +line of the posterior axillary fold, 1½ inch below the level +of the nipple, crossed the thoracic and abdominal cavities, +deeply striking the lumbar spine, and finally lodged beneath +the skin over the venter of the left ilium. The skin was +broken, but the force of the bullet was not sufficient to cause +it to pass through, and it was later expressed from the wound +by the surgeon. The bullet was a Mauser, and not in any way +deformed, although it must at any rate have struck the spine +and perforated the ilium.</p> + +<p>Immediate paraplegia resulted, both sensation and motor power +were completely abolished, but there was no trouble either with +the bladder or rectum. No symptoms of injury to either thoracic +or abdominal viscera were noted.</p> + +<p>Three days after the injury sensation and some return of motor +power were observed in the left extremity, and some power of +movement in the toes of the right foot.</p> + +<p>During the next eight weeks steady but slow improvement took +place; during the last three weeks of this period he made the +voyage to England. Ever since the injury some elevation of +temperature was noted, a rise at night to 100° or at times to +102°; for this no definite cause was discovered. In the tenth +week the condition was as follows: The temperature has become +normal. The patient has lost flesh to a considerable extent +since the reception of the injury. The lower extremities are +much wasted, especially the peroneal muscles. Patellar reflexes +can be obtained, but the knee jerks are uncertain. Unevenly +distributed paralysis exists in both lower extremities. +Left—Sensation fairly<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span> good throughout. Quadriceps very weak; +does not react to electrical stimulation. Calf muscles act +fairly. Anterior tibial and musculo-cutaneous groups are +paralysed. Right—Quadriceps acts better than on left, muscles +below the knee paralysed, and in the same area there is +complete absence of sensation. The patient complains of +shooting pains in both legs, and there is some deep muscular +tenderness.</p> + +<p>Three weeks later an abundant crop of vesicles appeared over +the front of the right thigh and leg, above and below the knee. +Sensation in the limb at the same time returned to a +considerable degree, anæsthesia persisting on the outer aspect +of the thigh only.</p> + +<p>At the end of four months very considerable improvement had +taken place, but there was no return of motor power in the +right leg, or the muscles supplied by the peroneal nerve in the +left leg. There was some general œdema of the legs, +especially of the right, possibly in connection with the +herpetic eruption which was now disappearing. Muscular +tenderness had disappeared. There was also definite improvement +in the size and tone of the peroneal muscles, although no motor +power was regained.</p> + +<p>At the end of five months, slight gradual improvement was still +taking place, but the loss of power was nearly as extensive as +when the last note was taken. The skin of the right leg was +glossy, that of the left apparently normal. At times some +hyperæsthesia of the soles was noted, and the plantar reflex +was very brisk.</p> + +<p>The right anterior tibial and musculo-cutaneous groups of +muscles reacted to the strongest faradic current, not to any +galvanic current below 20-25 m.a., contraction very sluggish. +The same muscles in the left leg also reacted to the strongest +faradic current, but only locally, with no sort of effect on +the tendons. Similar contractions could be induced in the right +quadriceps, but none in the left (Dr. Turney).</p> + +<p>Appreciation of heat and cold applied to the skin was fair, +but, in the case of heat, distinctly slow in the right leg and +foot.</p> + +<p>At the end of seven months improvement was still taking place; +the patient could now stand, walk a little with crutches, and +even ascend and descend a staircase.</p></div> + +<p><i>Severe concussion, contusion, or medullary hæmorrhage +producing signs of total transverse lesion, and complete +transverse section.</i>—The symptoms of these conditions will be +taken together, because, with very slight variations, they may +be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span> considered as lesions of equal degree as to severity, bad +prognosis, and unsuitability for active interference.</p> + +<p>All were characterised by the exhibition of the same essential +phenomena, symmetrical abolition of sensation and motor power +on either side of the body, absence of any signs of irritation +in the paralysed area, and loss of patellar reflex. In a small +number of the cases of medullary hæmorrhage some return of +sensation was observed prior to death; in a still smaller, +traces of motor power, and in one or two irritability of the +muscles or feeble reflexes pointed to the fact that destruction +of the cord was not absolute. As abstracts of a series of cases +are appended on page 330, it is only necessary to add a few +remarks as to any slight peculiarities which seemed directly +dependent on the mode of causation.</p> + +<p>It may be first stated that these severe injuries were +accompanied by signs of a very high degree of shock. In fact, +the shock observed in them was more severe than in any other +small-calibre bullet injuries that I witnessed. The patients +lay still with the eyes closed, great pallor of surface, +sometimes moaning with pain, the sensorium much benumbed, or +occasionally early delirium was noted. The pulse was small, +often slow and irregular, and the respiration shallow. The +originally quiet state was often changed to one of great +restlessness of the unparalysed part of the body, with the +appearance of reaction.</p> + +<p>The degree of primary pain varied greatly, but as a rule it was +considerable; in some cases it was excruciating in the parts +above the level of the totally destructive lesion, and commonly +of the zonal variety. A hyperæsthetic zone at the lower limit +of sensation usually existed.</p> + +<p>In the majority of the cases pain must have depended on +meningeal hæmorrhage. In one of the cases related, positive +evidence was offered as to this particular by the autopsy, +although this was made as long as six weeks after the original +injury, since no other source of pressure or irritation was +discovered. When I first saw this patient some twenty-four +hours after the injury he was moaning with pain, although a +strong and plucky man; I hastened to give him an injection of +morphia, and assured him that it would relieve<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span> his suffering: +as I left I heard him say to his neighbour: 'That is no use; +they gave me three last night, and I was no better,' and his +remark proved true.</p> + +<p>In high dorsal and cervical injuries the temperature rose high, +in one case to 108° F.; I had no opportunity, however, of +observing the temperature in any case immediately before and +after death. During the hot weather the profuse sweating of the +upper part of the body contrasted very strongly with the dry +skin of the paralysed part.</p> + +<p>The heart's action was often particularly irregular in the +dorsal injuries, and the respiration slow and irregular; as +these cases, however, were often complicated by severe +concurrent injuries to internal organs, the irregularities +could hardly be ascribed to the spinal-cord lesion alone. In +cases of pure diaphragmatic respiration, the rate did not as a +rule exceed the normal of 16 or 20 to the minute, and it was +quite regular; this was noted soon after the injury and +persisted throughout the course of the cases. As is usually the +case, both respiration and the heart's action were most +embarrassed in the cases in which abdominal distension was a +prominent feature. In some of the neck cases the Cheyne-Stokes +type of respiration was very strongly marked.</p> + +<p>In cases of low dorsal injury intestinal distension was +extreme, and I think more troublesome than the same condition +as seen in civil practice. The distension was accompanied by +most persistent vomiting, continuing for days, and in the cases +that lived for some time severe gastric crises of the same type +occurred in some instances.</p> + +<p>Priapism was a common symptom; but, as is seen from the cases +quoted, was rarely due to any gross direct laceration of the +cord.</p> + +<p>Trophic sores were both early to develop, and extensive; +primary decubitus occurred in all the cases I saw, and steady +extension followed. In one case a remarkable symmetrical +serpiginous ulceration developed in the area of distribution of +the cutaneous branches of the external popliteal nerve on the +outer side of the leg.</p> + +<p>The paralysis in nearly every case was of the utterly flaccid +type, and wasting of the muscles was early and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span> extreme. This +was occasionally accentuated by the supervention of myelitis.</p> + +<p>Opportunities for making observations on the quantity of urine +secreted were not great, and I can offer no remark as to the +occurrence of polyuria. In one rapidly fatal case, however, +suppression of urine occurred.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>99</b>) <i>Lumbar region. Transverse lesion.</i>—Range under 1,000 +yards. Wound of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), over the seventh rib 1 inch +from the left posterior axillary fold; <i>exit</i>, over the centre +of the right iliac crest. Complete symmetrical motor and +sensory paralysis of lower extremities, entire abolition of +reflexes, retention of urine.</p> + +<p>On the ninth day there was some return of sensation in the +lower extremities, and a cremasteric reflex was to be obtained. +A large bedsore had developed over the sacrum. No further +change occurred in the lower extremities. The patient became +progressively emaciated and exhausted, cystitis persisted, the +bedsore deepened. The man eventually developed signs of a large +basal abscess in the left lung, and died on the forty-second +day.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i> a fracture of the first lumbar lamina was +discovered, with some splintering of the bone; the lumbar +spinous process was attached and in its normal position. +Opposite the centre of the cauda equina were the remains of a +considerable hæmorrhage, both extra- and intra-dural, the +nerves appearing somewhat compressed, but of normal +consistency. The muscles of the back were infiltrated with +putrid pus on both sides. A pulmonary abscess cavity the size +of a hen's egg occupied the upper part of the lower lobe of the +left lung. The kidneys were congested, and the bladder +thickened and chronically inflamed.</p> + +<p>(<b>100</b>) <i>Cervico-dorsal region. Total transverse lesion.</i>—Wound +of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), to the right of the sixth cervical +vertebra: the bullet was removed on the field from the left of +the seventh dorsal spinous process, which was somewhat +prominent. Complete motor and sensory paralysis extended +upwards to the third intercostal space; the breathing was +almost entirely diaphragmatic. Retention of urine. Entire +abolition of reflexes in lower limbs and trunk. Hyperæsthesia +was present in both upper extremities, with a zone of +hyperæsthesia around the chest. The patient suffered greatly +for some weeks from pain in the hyperæsthetic area, he +developed severe cystitis and later incontinence of urine. A +large trophic sacral bed-sore steadily increased in depth and +size.</p> + +<p>About ten days before death, which occurred on the fifty-third<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span> +day from exhaustion and septicæmia, the patient complained of +pains in his legs; but there was no return of sensation, +motion, or reflexes.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i>, the seventh dorsal spinous process was +found to be loose and the laminæ of the fifth, sixth, and +seventh vertebræ were separated from the pedicles, and somewhat +depressed on the left side. These laminæ were adherent to the +dura, as were also a few small separated bony spiculæ. There +was no sign of old hæmorrhage. The spinal cord was practically +gone between the levels of the fourth and seventh dorsal +vertebræ, and diffluent from myelitis up to the third cervical.</p> + +<p>(<b>101</b>) <i>Dorsal region; total transverse lesion.</i>—Wound of +<i>entry</i> (Mauser), in the left supra-spinous fossa of the +scapula; <i>exit</i>, between the eleventh and twelfth ribs of the +right side. Complete motor and sensory paralysis, with absence +of reflexes from mid-dorsal region downwards. Upper +intercostals working. Retention of urine, penis turgid. +Sensation perfect to lower extremity of sternum. Early trophic +sacral bed-sores developed and steadily increased in depth and +extent, slighter ones developed on the heels. The paralysis was +flaccid throughout. The patient gradually emaciated with fever, +and died on the seventy-eighth day.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i> the wound proved not to have penetrated +the thorax, and both the vertebral spines and laminæ were +intact, no trace of bony injury being discoverable. Opposite +the sixth dorsal vertebra, for a distance of 1½ inch, the +cord and dura were adherent, and over the same area the cord +was represented by soft custard-like material. There was no +sign of old hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p>(<b>102</b>) <i>Dorsal region; total transverse lesion; slight +extra-dural hæmorrhage.</i>—Wound of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), at the +posterior aspect of the right shoulder; <i>exit</i>, 2 inches to the +left of the spine below the ninth rib.</p> + +<p>Complete motor and sensory paralysis below the site of the +lesion, with absence of superficial and deep reflexes. +Retention of urine. Great abdominal distension, pain, and +vomiting. Bed-sores over the sacrum developed on the third day; +meanwhile the vomiting continued on and off for a week, and +very severe girdle pain persisted.</p> + +<p>One month later when seen at the Base hospital considerable +improvement had occurred. Sensation had returned in both lower +limbs; but flaccid paralysis persisted and both were wasted, +especially the left. There was no return of reflexes in the +lower<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span> limbs, the urine was passed in gushes, and the patient +was cognisant when these occurred. The sacral bed-sores were, +however, very extensive and becoming larger and deeper.</p> + +<p>At the end of the fifth week slight power was regained in the +flexors and abductors of the right thigh, and the same muscles +of the left limb could be made to contract feebly. Meanwhile +the patient suffered with severe fever, accompanied by frequent +rigors and profuse sweats; the bed-sore continued to extend, +and the urine was foul and contained pus.</p> + +<p>The patient continued in a similar condition, progressive +emaciation and exhaustion taking place, and at the end of six +weeks he died.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i> the bullet was found to have tracked +beneath the right scapula, entering the chest by the fifth +intercostal space and lacerating the right lung; thence it +entered the eighth dorsal centrum and tunnelled both this and +the ninth diagonally, to escape beneath the ninth rib. On +opening the spinal canal the tunnel was found to be separated +only by the compact tissue of the centrum from the cavity, +while a thin extra-dural hæmorrhage separated the dura from the +bones anteriorly. The spinal cord exhibited no sign of pressure +and was firm and continuous, but up to the lower limit of the +dorsal region there was septic myelitis and meningitis, the +result of pus having tracked up the canal from the sacral +bedsore. Suppurative cystitis and pyelitis were present. The +patient was the subject of an old urethral stricture which had +given rise to trouble during treatment.</p> + +<p>(<b>103</b>) <i>Dorsal region; total transverse lesion; slight +intra-dural hæmorrhage.</i>—Wound of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), below +spine of scapula, close to right axilla; <i>exit</i>, 2½ inches +to left of tenth dorsal spinous process.</p> + +<p>Complete motor and sensory paralysis below ensiform cartilage, +with well-marked hyperæsthetic zone around trunk. All reflexes +absent. Retention of urine. Incontinence of fæces. Bed-sores in +sacral region developed during the first two days, and +seventeen days later well-developed serpiginous trophic sores +developed on the outer side of each leg and continued to +increase slowly until death. The paralysis remained of the +absolutely flaccid variety. Great emaciation occurred, +accompanied by hectic fever, the temperature ranging from +normal to 102.5°. During the third week double pleurisy +developed.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i> no bone injury could be detected. The cord +and dura-mater were adherent over an area corresponding to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span> +fifth to the eighth dorsal vertebræ, and opposite the seventh +the cord was soft and of the consistence of butter. A small +intra-dural hæmorrhage was still evident below the main lesion, +not extensive enough to give rise to serious compression. +General adhesions in each pleura. Cystitis.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 383px;"> +<img src="images/fig79.jpg" width="383" height="450" alt="Fig. 79." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 79.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Appearance of Spinal Cord enclosed in membranes +in case 103 after removal from the canal. When the membranes were opened +a white custard-like substance took the place of the cord. Slight +evidence of extra-dural hæmorrhage existed</b></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>104</b>) <i>Dorsal region; section of cord; retained bullet.</i>—Wound +of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), in seventh right intercostal space, 4½ +inches from the dorsal spinous processes, oval in outline; +bullet retained.</p> + +<p>Complete motor and sensory paralysis, with absence of reflexes +below umbilicus. Retention of urine, incontinence of fæces. +Large sacral bed-sore developed rapidly. Right hæmothorax.</p> + +<p>The patient emaciated rapidly, and for the last fourteen days +the temperature ranged to 104°, the bed-sore steadily +increasing in size. Death occurred on the forty-second day.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i> a Mauser bullet was found embedded in the +centrum of the twelfth dorsal vertebra. The bullet was slightly +curved; its anterior extremity had passed across the spinal +canal, and wounding the dura posteriorly rested against the +left lamina. The plating of the mantle of the bullet was +stripped from half the area of the tip. The dura was not +adherent,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span> and the cord was softened for half an inch above the +point of section; above this it was normal, the vessels +coursing normally to the softened spot. Below the point of +section the cord was blanched, but offered no other macroscopic +evidence of disease. No evidence of either intra- or +extra-dural hæmorrhage was detectible.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 404px;"> +<img src="images/fig80.jpg" width="404" height="450" alt="Fig. 80." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 80.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Complete division of Spinal Cord. The bullet is +retained, and from its position can be seen to have struck the right +half of the cord only. The nickel plating of half of the tip of the +bullet is stripped off. Case No. 104</b></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>The right pleura contained a large quantity of dark cocoa-like +fluid. Extensive adhesions were present in both pleural +cavities. The spleen was much enlarged. At the base of the +bladder a large submucous hæmorrhage had occurred, the +blood-clot had assumed a dark orange colour, and on first +opening the viscus the appearance was that of a mass of fæces. +The mucous lining elsewhere was slaty grey, with small +hæmorrhages. The kidneys were large, but no abscesses or +pyelitis were present.</p> + +<p>(<b>105</b>) <i>Cervico-dorsal region; total transverse lesion.</i>—Wound +of <i>entry</i> (Mauser), opposite right sixth cervical transverse +process; <i>exit</i>, on left side of third dorsal spinous process. +Slight grasping power was present in the hands, and the patient +could hold his arms across his chest. Complete motor and +sensory paralysis, with absence of all reflexes below. The +pupils were moderately contracted. Retention of urine. On the +second day blebs appeared on each buttock, and the patient +complained of very severe pain in the neck: the temperature +rose to 103°, and on the third day he died suddenly. No +<i>post-mortem</i> examination was made.</p></div> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span></p> + +<p>I observed two similar cases in the Field Hospital at Orange River, the +patients dying on the third day; pain and high temperature were +prominent symptoms in both. In one patient early delirium was present.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>106</b>) <i>Dorsal region; Martini-Henry wound.</i>—Wound of <i>entry</i>, +oval, 1 inch ×3¼ inches; long axis obliquely crossing +infra-spinous fossa of right scapula; bullet retained +(Martini-Henry). Spine of third dorsal vertebra loose, and a +distinct thickening to its right side. Complete symmetrical +paralysis extending up to upper extremities. No sensation on +surface of trunk below cervical area. Respiration entirely +diaphragmatic. Retention of urine, penis turgid. Total absence +of reflexes, superficial and deep. Reddening of buttocks, but +no bullæ.</p> + +<p>General hyperæsthesia of upper extremities, with severe +spasmodic attacks of pain.</p> + +<p>On the third day an exploration was decided upon, in view of +the local deformity, and the severe pain in the upper +extremities. The third dorsal spine was found to be loose, as a +result of bilateral fracture of the neural arch; the bullet had +crossed the right limit of the spinal canal, and destroyed the +body of the vertebra, and passing onwards had entered the left +pleural cavity, into which air entered freely from the +operation wound.</p> + +<p>The patient was relieved from his pain by the exploration, and +lived four days. On the second day after operation, however, +the temperature rose to 107°, while on the last two days the +temperature was normal in the mornings, rising to 105° in the +evenings. No alteration resulted in the trunk symptoms.</p></div> + +<p><i>Diagnosis.</i>—The pure question of the fact of injury of the spinal cord +needs no discussion; but it is necessary to make some remarks on the +discrimination between concussion, contusion and hæmorrhage, meningeal +and medullary hæmorrhage, the latter condition and compression, and on +partial and complete severance of the cord.</p> + +<p>The sharp discrimination of cases of concussion from those of slight +medullary hæmorrhage was necessarily impossible. I think the only points +of any importance in diagnosing pure concussion were the transitory +nature of the symptoms, and the uniformity of recovery, without +persistence of any signs of minor destructive lesion. In medullary +hæmorrhage the tendency for a certain period was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span> towards increase in +gravity in the signs. It goes almost without saying that the latter +point was seldom accurately determined in patients struck on the field +of battle; these perhaps lay out for hours before they were brought in, +and when they were placed in the Field hospital the rush of work did not +usually allow the careful observation necessary to clear up this +difference in the development of the symptoms. Nevertheless it is +preferable to consider the cases in which transitory symptoms persist +for a period of hours, or even a couple of days, as instances of pure +concussion, unless the existence of this condition can be disproved by +actual observation.</p> + +<p>Extra-medullary hæmorrhage, accompanied by only slight encroachment on +the spinal canal, certainly results with some frequency from +small-calibre wounds. Some of the quoted cases show this decisively by +<i>post-mortem</i> evidence, others by such clinical signs of irritation as +pain and hyperæsthesia. I think its presence may also be assumed in +cases of total transverse lesion due to medullary hæmorrhage or severe +concussion, accompanied by well-marked pain and hyperæsthesia above the +level of paralysis. As affecting treatment, however, determination of +its presence is of small importance.</p> + +<p>The important conditions for discriminative diagnosis are those of local +compression, actual destructive lesion, whether from concussion changes, +contusion, or medullary hæmorrhage, and partial and total section of the +cord.</p> + +<p>First, with regard to compression of the cord, the possible sources are +three; (i) extra-dural hæmorrhage, which may, I think, be dismissed with +mention as rarely capable of producing severe symptoms. (ii) The +displacement of bone fragments. This is of less importance than in civil +practice, because an injury by a bullet of small calibre, capable of +seriously displacing fragments, has probably at the same time produced +grave changes in the cord. In the presence of severe immediate symptoms +we may tentatively assume that a simultaneous destructive lesion has +been produced. In such injuries pain, combined with a tendency to +improvement in the paralytic symptoms and return of reflexes, is the +only point in favour of bone pressure, unless considerable deformity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span> of +the spinal column can be detected by palpation or examination with the +X-rays.</p> + +<p>(iii) Pressure from the bullet. This is the most important form of +compression, because the mere fact of retention of the bullet is +evidence of a low degree of velocity, and therefore opposed to the +existence of the most severe form of intramedullary lesion. In a case of +apparent transverse lesion with retained bullet, shown to me at No. 3 +General Hospital by Mr. J. E. Ker, the pain was very severe, and so +greatly aggravated by movement that an anæsthetic had to be administered +prior to the renewal of some necessary dressings. The general condition +of this patient precluded a projected operation, and after death the +bullet was found to be pressing laterally upon a cord not materially +altered on macroscopic inspection. In the case of retained bullet +recorded (No. 104), the slight degree to which the severed ends of the +cord appeared altered has been already remarked upon.</p> + +<p>Beyond this we are helped by the position of the aperture of entry, and +its shape, as evidence of the direction in which the bullet passed, the +presence of pain, and positive proof may be obtained by examination with +the X-rays.</p> + +<p>Lastly, we come to the discrimination of total or partial section, +destruction by vibratory concussion or contusion, and severe +intramedullary hæmorrhage. Except in the case of partial section with +localised symptoms, which must be rare, I believe this to be impossible +from the primary symptoms, although some indication of possible +encroachment on the canal may be obtained from careful consideration of +the course of the wound, as evidenced by the position and shape of the +openings, the position of the patient's body at the time of reception of +the injury being taken into consideration. Later we may get some aid +from the possible improvement in the symptoms in the case of hæmorrhage. +In cases with signs of total transverse lesion, however, the +discrimination of the conditions is of little practical importance, +since either is equally unfavourable and unsuitable for surgical +treatment.</p> + +<p>In closing these remarks reference must be made to the occasional +occurrence of paraplegic symptoms of an apparently purely functional +nature. I saw these on one or two occasions,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span> of which the following is +a fair example. A man was wounded in the lower extremity and fell. When +brought into the hospital he complained of loss of power in the legs and +inability to straighten his back. No very definite evidence was present +of serious impairment either of motor or sensory nerves, and the man was +got up and walked with crutches. While moving about the hospital camp, +another man pushed him down, and the patient then became completely +paraplegic. He was placed in bed, and the next day moved his limbs +without any difficulty, and gave rise to no further anxiety.</p> + +<p><i>Prognosis.</i>—In slight concussion the importance of prognosis is as to +remote effects, and upon this no opinion can be given at the present +time. The same may be said concerning cases in which transient symptoms +followed the slighter degrees of surface and medullary hæmorrhage. In +the case of the latter, however, I think it would be rash to give a too +confident opinion as to the future non-occurrence of secondary changes.</p> + +<p>Severe concussion is probably irrecoverable.</p> + +<p>Meningeal hæmorrhage of either form is one of the slighter lesions, and +less dangerous, both as an immediate condition and as to the +probabilities of after trouble. None the less the possibilities of +secondary chronic meningitis, or chronic trouble from adhesions, must be +kept in mind.</p> + +<p>Cases of medullary hæmorrhage with incomplete signs are favourable in +prognosis, as far as life is concerned; as to complete recovery, +however, this is hardly possible; in many cases serious functional +deficiency at any rate will remain, while in others the healing of the +lacerated tissue and subsequent contraction can scarcely fail to +influence unfavourably an already imperfect recovery.</p> + +<p>I think it must be a rare occurrence for pressure from bone fragments to +be able to be regarded as a favourable prognostic condition, since in +the very large majority of cases the velocity of the bullet causing the +injury will have been such as to inflict irreparable damage on the cord. +Still, cases may occasionally be met with where the velocity has been +sufficiently low, or contact with the bone slight enough, to allow of +the comparative escape of the cord. In this relation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span> cases in which the +bullet is retained, especially if the symptoms of transverse lesion are +incomplete, may be regarded as relatively favourable.</p> + +<p>Cervical and high dorsal injuries, as in civil practice, offered the +worst prognosis. In cases in which symptoms of total transverse lesion +were present, as far as my experience went, it was, however, only a +matter of importance as to the prolongation of a miserable existence. +All the patients eventually died; those with higher lesions at the end +of a few days; the lower ones, at the completion on an average of six +weeks of suffering.</p> + +<p>The actual causes of death resembled exactly those met with in civil +practice, except in so far as it was more often influenced or determined +by concurrent injuries, a complication so characteristic of modern +gunshot wounds. Thus exhaustion, septicæmia from absorption from +suppurating bed-sores or from severe cystitis, secondary myelitis, and +pulmonary complications, carried off most of the patients.</p> + +<p><i>Treatment.</i>—The general treatment of the cases demanded nothing +special to military surgery, except in so far as it was modified by the +disadvantage to the patient of necessarily having to be transported, +often for some distance. The ill effects of this, particularly in cases +of hæmorrhage, are obvious, but in so far as fracture was concerned the +question of transport did not acquire the importance that it does in +civil practice, since the nature of the fractures and their strict +localisation did not render movement either painful or particularly +hurtful. It was indeed striking how little pain movement, made for the +purposes of examination, caused these patients. The treatment of +bed-sores, cystitis, or other secondary complications possessed no +special features.</p> + +<p>The importance of insuring rest in the early stages of the cases of +hæmorrhage is self-evident; hence, if the possibility exists of not +moving the patient, its advantage cannot be too strongly insisted upon. +Again, if transport is inevitable, the shorter distance that can be +arranged for the better. It should be borne in mind, also, that from the +peculiar nature of causation of the injuries, stretcher or wagon +transport for short distances is preferable to the vibratory movements +of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span> a long railway journey. Beyond this the administration of opium, and +in some cases the assumption of the prone position, are both useful in +the recent or possibly progressive stage of hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p>Lastly, as to active surgical treatment by operation. In no form of +spinal injury is this less often indicated, or less likely to be useful. +It is useless in the cases of severe concussion, contusion, or medullary +hæmorrhage which form such a very large proportion of those exhibiting +total tranverse lesion, and equally unsuited to cases of partial lesion +of the same character. Extra-medullary hæmorrhage can rarely be +extensive enough to produce signs calling for the mechanical relief of +pressure; the section of the cord cannot be remedied. In one case with +signs of total transverse lesion, in which a laminectomy was performed, +no apparent lesion was discovered, and this would frequently be the +case, since the damage is parenchymatous. The experience was indeed +exactly comparable to that which followed early exposure of the +peripheral nerves.</p> + +<p>Only three indications for operation exist. 1. Excessive pain in the +area of the body above the paralysed segment; operation is here of +doubtful practical use, except in so far as it relieves the immediate +sufferings of the patient.</p> + +<p>2. An incomplete or recovering lesion, when such is accompanied by +evidence furnished by the position of the wounds, pain, and signs of +irritation of pressure from without, or possibly palpable displacement +of parts of the vertebra, that the spinal canal is encroached upon by +fragments of bone.</p> + +<p>3. Retention of the bullet, accompanied by similar signs to those +detailed under 2.</p> + +<p>In both the latter cases the aid of the X-rays should be invoked before +resorting to exploration.</p> + +<p>Operation, if decided upon, in either of the two latter circumstances, +may be performed at any date up to six weeks; but if pressure be the +actual source of trouble, it is obvious that the more promptly operation +is undertaken the better for early relief and ulterior prognostic +chances.</p> + +<p>In only one case of the whole series I observed did it seem possible to +regret the omission of an exploration.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX</h2> + +<h3>INJURIES TO THE PERIPHERAL NERVE TRUNKS</h3> + + +<p>The occurrence of these injuries has undoubtedly increased in frequency +with the employment of bullets of small calibre, and no other class of +case more strikingly illustrates the localised nature of the lesions +produced by small projectiles of high velocity. Again, no other series +of injuries affords such obvious indications of the firm and resistent +nature of the cicatricial tissue formed in the process of repair of +small-calibre wounds, and in none is the advantage of a conservative and +expectant attitude so forcibly impressed upon the surgeon. Implication +of the nerves may be primary, or secondary to an injury which left them +originally unscathed.</p> + +<p><i>Nature of the anatomical lesions.</i>—In degree these vary in +mathematical progression, but the extent of the lesion is not always +readily differentiated by the early clinical manifestations, and again +the actual damage is not to be estimated by the gross apparent +anatomical lesion alone; but, in addition, consists in part in changes +of a less easily demonstrable nature, varying with the velocity with +which the bullet was travelling and the consequent comparative degree of +vibratory force to which the nerve has been subjected. In these +injuries, as in those of every part of the nervous system, the degree of +velocity appears to gain especial importance both in regard to the +general symptoms and the local effect on the functional capacity of the +nerve.</p> + +<p>This is perhaps a fitting place for the introduction of a few further +remarks as to the significance of the term 'concussion' in connection +with the injuries produced by bullets of small calibre, since the most +striking exemplification of the results following the transmission of +the vibratory force of the projectile<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span> is afforded by the behaviour of +the comparatively densely ensheathed and supported peripheral nerves.</p> + +<p>As already pointed out in Chapters VII. and VIII. the chief concussion +effects on the nervous tissue of the brain and spinal cord are of a +destructive nature, far exceeding those accompanying the injuries +designated by the same term seen in the ordinary accidents met with in +civil practice, and this damage is comparatively localised in extent.</p> + +<p>In the case of the peripheral nerves I have still employed the terms +'concussion' and 'contusion' to designate certain groups of symptoms and +clinical phenomena, but any sharp distinction between the two conditions +on a morbid anatomical basis is impossible. The results of severe +vibratory concussion may, in fact, be more generally destructive than +those of contusion, and the subsequent effects more prolonged. A certain +length of the affected nerve is apparently completely destroyed as a +conductor of impulses, the connective-tissue element alone remaining +intact. Under these circumstances a nerve, the subject of the most +serious degree of vibratory concussion, which, if cut down upon, may +exhibit no macroscopic change, may take a longer period to recover than +one in which the presence of considerable local thickening points to +direct contact with the bullet, with resulting hæmorrhage into the nerve +sheath and perhaps partial gross rupture of nerve fibres.</p> + +<p>The therapeutic and prognostic importance of the above remarks, if +correct, is obvious. The course of the nerve is preserved by its intact +connective-tissue framework, and ultimate recovery by a regeneration of +the nerve fibres is more likely to be complete, and will be just as +rapid, if nature be relied on and the nerve be left untouched by the +hand of the surgeon.</p> + +<p>It is, I think, undeniable that nerve trunks may escape severe or +irrecoverable injury by lateral displacement. The mere fact that the +trunk itself may be perforated by a slit in its long axis would suggest +the possibility of displacement of the whole structure, and this no +doubt occurred with some frequency. Displacement would naturally be most +frequent in the case of nerves, such as those of the arm, which run long +courses in comparatively loose tissue. In a remarkable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span> case already +narrated, an exploratory operation showed the musculo-spiral nerve in +the upper part of the arm to have been driven into a loop which +projected into, and provisionally closed, an opening in the brachial +artery.</p> + +<p>I. <i>Simple concussion.</i>—Anatomically, or histologically, no information +exists as to the changes which give rise to the often transitory +symptoms dependent on this condition. We are reduced to the same +theories of molecular disturbance and change which have been invoked to +account for similar affections of the central nervous system. The +causation of concussion is, however, materially influenced in its degree +by the velocity of flight of the bullet and consequent severity of the +vibratory force exerted. Hence actual contact of the bullet with the +nerves is not necessary for its production, as is seen in the temporary +complete loss of functional capacity in the limbs in many cases of +fracture, where the vibrations are rendered still more far-reaching and +effective as the result of their wider distribution from the larger +solid resistance afforded by the bone. The relative density and +resistance offered by the different parts of the bone acquire great +significance in this relation, since local shock due to nerve concussion +is far more profound when the shafts are struck than when the cancellous +ends furnish the point of impact.</p> + +<p>The form of concussion which most nearly interests us in this chapter is +that affecting single nerve trunks in wounds of the soft parts alone, +and here the passage of the bullet is, as a rule, so contiguous to the +nerve that there is difficulty in drawing a strict line of demarcation +between such cases and those dealt with in the next paragraph.</p> + +<p>II. <i>Contusion.</i>—Clinically this was the form of nerve injury both of +greatest comparative frequency and of interest from the points of view +both of diagnosis and prognosis.</p> + +<p>The seriousness of a contusion depends on two factors: first, the +relative degree of violence exerted upon the nerve, which is dependent +on the force still retained by the travelling bullet; and, secondly, on +the extent of tissue actually implicated. The range of fire at which the +injury was received determines the importance of the first factor; the +second varies<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span> with the degree of exactness with which the nerve is +struck, and on the direction taken by the bullet. Naturally transverse +wounds affect a small area; while an oblique or longitudinal direction +of the track may indefinitely increase the extent of injury to the nerve +trunk, and hence acquire prognostic significance in direct ratio to the +amount of tissue which needs to be regenerated.</p> + +<p>As to the actual anatomical lesion resulting in the cases which we +designated clinically as contusion I can give no information. On many +occasions when the symptoms were considered of such a nature as to +render an exploration advisable, no macroscopic evidence of gross injury +was obtained. It was therefore impossible to draw a definite line of +demarcation between such cases and those which we considered merely +concussion. It could only be assumed that the vibration transmitted to +the nerve had occasioned such changes as to destroy its capacity as a +conductor of impressions.</p> + +<p>In some cases the presence of a certain amount of interstitial blood +extravasation was suggested clinically by early hyperæsthesia and signs +of irritation; in others the paralysis was of such a degree as to lead +to the inference that a complete regeneration of the existing nerve +would be necessary prior to the restitution of functional capacity.</p> + +<p>In a certain proportion of the injuries the development of a distinct +fusiform swelling in the course of the nerve pointed to the existence of +considerable tissue damage, while in others this was evidenced +clinically by early signs of neuritis.</p> + +<p>III. <i>Division or laceration.</i>—The varying mechanical conditions +affecting the last class of injury play a similar rôle here. Thus the +degree of laceration depends on the direction of the wound track, and as +all lacerations are accompanied by contusion, the relative velocity +retained by the travelling bullet assumes the same importance.</p> + +<p>I saw every degree of injury to the trunks, from notching to complete +solution of continuity, and in some cases destruction and disappearance +of pieces from one to two or more inches in length. Such lesions as the +latter were most common in the forearm. In this segment of the limbs +tracks of varying degrees of longitudinal obliquity are readily +produced,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span> whether the patient be in the upright or prone position, +since the upper extremities are commonly in forward action whichever +position is assumed.</p> + +<p>The most peculiar form of injury consisted in perforation of the trunk +without gross destruction of its fibres, and without in many cases +prolonged or permanent loss of functional capacity. I cannot speak with +any confidence as to the comparative frequency of occurrence of this +form of injury, but judging by the analogous perforations of the +vessels, it is probably not uncommon in trunks large enough to allow of +its production. The trunk nerves of the arm, and the great sciatic +nerve, were probably the most frequent seats of such wounds. As, +however, a very short experience of the futility of early interference +in the case of nerve lesions warned me against exploration before a date +at which observations of this nature were unsatisfactory, I gained less +experience on this point than I could have wished.</p> + +<p>In the case of completely divided nerves the development of a bulbous +enlargement on the proximal end was constant, and very marked in degree. +I saw few cases in which primary effects could be certainly referred to +pressure or laceration by bone spicules, excepting in some fractures of +the humerus, and perhaps some injuries of the seventh nerve accompanying +perforating wounds of the mastoid process.</p> + +<p>IV. <i>Secondary implication of the nerves.</i>—This was a striking +characteristic in many at first apparently simple wounds of the soft +parts. In such cases it was due to implication of the contiguous trunk +in the process of cicatrisation, and its importance varied with the size +of the nerve in question. In the smaller sensory trunks it was often +evidenced by the occurrence of neuralgic pain, especially liable to be +influenced by climatic changes; in the larger, by signs of more or less +severe motor, sensory, and trophic disturbance. Musculo-spiral paralysis +from implication in, or pressure from, callus in cases of fracture of +the humerus was very frequent. This would naturally be expected from the +extreme degree the comminution of the bone often reached, and the +consequently large amount of callus developed.</p> + +<p>The effect of cicatrisation of the tissues surrounding the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span> nerves +varied somewhat according to the degree of fixation of the individual +nerve implicated. Thus if a nerve lay in a fixed bed some form of +circular constriction resulted; if, on the other hand, the nerve was +readily displaceable, the cicatrix often drew it considerably out of its +course; in either case symptoms corresponding with those of pressure +resulted.</p> + +<p><i>Symptoms of nerve lesion</i>.—These differed little in character from +those common to such injuries in civil practice, except in the relative +frequency with which they assumed a serious aspect. After all in civil +practice nerve concussion is most familiar to us in the degree common +after knocking the elbow against a hard object, and the same may be said +in regard to the allied injury of contusion. It is in small-calibre +bullet wounds alone that the occurrence of such severe and sharply +localised injury to deep parts as was observed is possible.</p> + +<p><i>Concussion</i>.—Temporary loss of function was often observed in the +limbs, corresponding to the distribution of one or more nerve trunks +when wound tracks had passed in their vicinity. Interference with +function sometimes amounted to loss of sensation alone: in others to +loss of both sensation and motor power. Such symptoms were of a +transitory character, lasting for a few days or a week; if both +sensation and motion were impaired, sensation was usually the first to +be regained. In these cases secondary trouble was not uncommon, since +the near proximity of the track to the originally affected nerve offered +every chance for implication of the latter in the resulting cicatrix. +This sequence was often observed, and its symptoms are described under +the heading of secondary implication below. Equally striking were the +instances of concussion in the case of the nerves of special sense and +their end organs, temporary loss of smell, vision, or hearing being not +uncommon, often passing off in the course of a few days with no apparent +ulterior ill-effect.</p> + +<p>One of the most interesting illustrations of the occurrence of +concussion was furnished by cases in which complete paralysis of a limb +rapidly cleared up with the exception of that corresponding to a single +individual nerve of the complex apparently originally implicated. +Instances of severe contusion<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span> or division of one nerve of the arm, for +instance, accompanied by transient signs of concussion of varying +degrees of severity in all the others, were by no means uncommon.</p> + +<p><i>Contusion</i>.—The symptoms of contusion were somewhat less simple, +since, in addition to lowering or loss of function, signs of irritation +were often observed. In the slighter cases irritation was often a marked +feature, as was evidenced by hyperæsthesia and pain combined with loss +of power. In cases in which pain and hyperæsthesia were primary +symptoms, these were often transitory. I will quote an illustrative case +which, though affecting the nerve roots, is characteristic of the +effects of slight contusion in the case of the nerve trunks in any part +of their course:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>107</b>) <i>Contusion of cervical nerve roots</i>.—Range probably +about 1,000 yards. Wounded at Belmont. Aperture of <i>entry</i> +(Lee-Metford), immediately posterior to the right fifth +cervical transverse process; <i>exit</i>, immediately anterior to +the space between the third and fourth left cervical transverse +processes. The movements of the neck were perfect, there was +neither pain nor difficulty in swallowing. Extreme +hyperæsthesia was present in both palms and down the front of +the forearms. The grip in either hand was weak, this being +possibly explained in part by the hyperæsthesia of the palms, +as all movements of the upper extremities could be made, +although not with full power. On the fourth day the condition +was much improved on the left side, and at the end of a week +the left upper extremity was normal; the right (side of entry, +and therefore exposed to greater force from the bullet) +improved more slowly, becoming normal only at the end of three +weeks.</p></div> + +<p>I observed an identical case of injury to the cervical roots, and many +similar instances in injuries of the nerve trunks of the limbs in which +the course was exactly parallel. In the more severe, pain was often +added to hyperæsthesia.</p> + +<p>In the most severe cases the signs corresponded in all particulars, +except in the early entire loss of reaction of the muscles to +electricity, with those of complete section. Loss of sensation and +motion was immediate, complete, and prolonged, the limbs being lowered +in temperature, flaccid, and powerless. General systemic shock was also +severe. In the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span> case either of plexus or multiple contusions, or where +the injury was more local, correspondingly complete signs were present +in the area supplied by the affected nerves.</p> + +<p>In the cases in which the contusion was not of extreme degree, +hyperæsthesia often developed as a later sign, and was probably due to +the irritation of hæmorrhage, when the sensory portion of the nerve +began to regain functional capacity. The date of appearance of the +hyperæsthesia varied from a few days to a week or later. It might then +persist for weeks or many months.</p> + +<p>In a few instances large blebs rose on the back of the hand, or patches +of vesicles appeared over the terminal distribution of the nerve, +pointing to early trophic changes.</p> + +<p>The period of recovery varied greatly; in some instances of very +complete paralysis, function was regained and became apparently normal +at the end of three or four weeks; in others, even after severe wasting +of muscles for weeks, rapid improvement occurred often suddenly, while +in some there was no apparent recovery at the end of months. In cases of +long-deferred improvement, wasting of the muscles became a very +prominent feature; but this without complete loss of reaction of the +muscles to electrical stimulation.</p> + +<p>Recovery of sensation usually preceded by some time that of motion, the +former often reappearing in some degree at an early date, and, even if +very modified in character, it formed a most useful and valuable aid +both in diagnosis and prognosis.</p> + +<p>When in a position allowing of direct examination, the contused portion +of the nerve sometimes developed a palpable fusiform thickening, +manipulation of which might give rise to formication in the area of +distribution—a favourable prognostic sign.</p> + +<p>Many of the cases bore a very marked resemblance in character to those +in which paralysis results from tight constriction of the limb, as in +the arm after the application of an Esmarch's tourniquet.</p> + +<p><i>Laceration.</i>—If incomplete, the signs corresponded very nearly to +those of severe contusion, since partial section is impossible without +the occurrence of the latter. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span> condition indeed was only to be +distinguished by the partial nature of the recovery, and even this +latter might be only more prolonged.</p> + +<p>The same remarks hold good with regard to perforation of the nerve +trunks; but, as regards function, these injuries are not so serious in +prognosis as very much more limited transverse divisions or mere +notching, and in some cases the disturbance of function was by no means +profound or prolonged.</p> + +<p>Absolute loss of reaction to electrical stimulus from above was the only +pathognomonic sign of actual section, unless the position of the nerve +was such as to allow of palpation, when the presence of a bulbous end at +once settled the difficulty. In many cases of superficial tracks with +division of such nerves as the long or short saphenous, the early +development of bulbs in the course of the trunks gave positive +information, and these were often observed.</p> + +<p><i>Traumatic neuritis.</i>—This was a common sequence of contusion of the +nerve itself, or of its subsequent inclusion in a cicatrix or callus. It +was evidenced by hyperæsthesia both superficial and deep, pain, +contracture, wasting of the muscles, local sweating, and the development +of glossy skin.</p> + +<p>Examples of this condition were seen in the case of nearly every nerve +in the body. In frequency of occurrence, degree of severity, and in its +selection of individual nerves considerable variation was met with. With +regard to the two former points, personal idiosyncrasy, and degree of or +peculiarity in the nature of the injury, are the only explanations I can +suggest. Perhaps in some instances exposure to wet or cold in the early +stages of the injury was of some import. Thus, I saw several severe +cases of musculo-spiral neuritis in men who were wounded during the +trying and wet march on Bloemfontein. I did not observe that suppuration +or wound complications seemed important explanatory moments, as most of +the cases occurred in wounds that healed rapidly.</p> + +<p>With regard to the question of selection; the same nerves that appear +particularly liable to suffer from idiopathic inflammations, toxic +influences, or to be the seat of ascending<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span> changes (e.g. ulnar, +musculo-spiral, and external popliteal), were those most often affected +by secondary neuritis. Many of the most severe cases I saw were in the +musculo-spiral nerve.</p> + +<p><i>Scar implication.</i>—The signs of this most commonly commenced with +neuralgia, or painful sensations when such movements were made as to put +the cicatrix on the stretch. Although such neuralgia might not be +constant, it was often observed to be troublesome when the patients were +exposed to cold in sleeping out at night, or to extra fatigue, as in +long marches. The results in many cases stopped at this point, but the +size and wide distribution of certain nerves rendered even such slight +symptoms of importance; while in others well-marked signs of neuritis +declared themselves, such as glossy skin, pain, muscular wasting, and +paralysis.</p> + +<p><i>Ascending neuritis.</i>—In a few cases I observed very remarkable +instances of ascending neuritis, after comparatively slight wounds. I +will quote three of these as illustrations and make no further remarks +as to the symptoms. It will be observed that one is a case of ulnar, +both the others of external popliteal, neuritis:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>108</b>) <i>Ulnar nerve: secondary ascending neuritis.</i>—Boer +wounded at Elandslaagte. Wound of hand, implicating anterior +two-thirds of third metacarpal bone. This bone, together with +the middle finger, was removed, and healing took place by +granulation slowly.</p> + +<p>The resulting gap allowed considerable overlapping of the +fingers, and shortening of the corresponding digit; the index +finger also became flexed as a result of destruction of the +extensor tendons. Three months later the man was still in +hospital in consequence of the tardiness with which the wound +had healed: at this time pain was noted, which became very +severe in the whole course of the ulnar nerve; superficial +hyperæsthesia and deep muscular tenderness developed, but no +wasting. Several crops of herpetic vesicles also developed over +the distribution of the radial nerve in the hand. This pain was +followed by spastic contracture, first of the ulnar fingers and +later of the wrist and elbow, which could only be straightened +by the application of considerable force. The limb was, +therefore, kept straight by the application of a splint; and +warm baths, and a blister applied over the course of the ulnar +nerve, were resorted to: under this<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span> treatment the condition +improved until the patient was well enough to be transferred as +a prisoner, and I saw him no more.</p> + +<p>(<b>109</b>) <i>Peroneal nerve branches.</i>—Wounded at Colenso. <i>Entry</i>, +at the anterior margin of the fibula 5 inches above the +external malleolus; the track crossed the anterior aspect of +the leg obliquely, to its <i>exit</i> 1 inch above the centre of the +ankle joint. Incomplete paralysis of the peronei muscles +followed, combined with progressive wasting of the whole limb, +which at the end of a month was marked, and then commenced to +improve.</p> + +<p>(<b>110</b>) In a second case the wound took a similar course in the +centre of the leg, crossing the line of the branches of the +musculo-cutaneous nerve. Motor paralysis of the peronei +followed, together with general lowering of tactile sensation +in the musculo-cutaneous area.</p></div> + +<p><i>Traumatic neurosis.</i>—In connection with the cases just quoted, mention +must be made of the fact that the functional element was often somewhat +prominent. The influence of this factor was not to be neglected in case +108; again, its presence was a feature in cases 132 and 134, of injury +to the sciatic nerve and of peripheral injury to the seventh nerve (p. +355). A remark has been made as to the occurrence of functional +paraplegia on p. 337. Again, in the case of the organs of special sense. +Case 66, of injury to the occipital lobes, showed that a mixture of +organic and functional phenomena might be a source of error, even in the +determination of the visual field in the subject of an undoubted +destructive lesion. On more than one occasion an injury was accompanied +by loss of the power of speech; thus a patient who received a slight +wound of the neck did not speak again until the application of a battery +by my colleague, Mr. H. B. Robinson. A patient was also for a short time +an inmate of No. 1 General Hospital, Wynberg, who had become deaf and +dumb as a result of the explosion of a shrapnel shell over his head. +This patient also did not recover his powers until he returned to the +mother-country.</p> + +<p>In many other cases of nerve concussion or contusion, the recovery of +power and sensation, or the disappearance of neuralgia or contractures, +was so sudden and rapid after prolonged continuance of the symptoms, as +to suggest a very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span> strong functional element in their origin. The +influence of the general shock to the nervous system received by the +patients had an important bearing on these phenomena, and their interest +from a prognostic point of view was very great.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Injuries to Special Nerves</span></h3> + +<p><i>Cranial nerves.</i>—It will be convenient first to make a few remarks +concerning the nerves of special sense.</p> + +<p><i>Olfactory.</i>—I observed temporary loss of smell on three occasions. In +two instances this accompanied transverse wounds of the bones of the +face in which the upper third of the nasal cavities was crossed; in the +third a track passing obliquely downwards from the frontal region passed +through the inner wall of the orbit, and crossed the nose at a lower +level. In view of the small area of the olfactory distribution which was +directly implicated, I was at first inclined to regard the loss of smell +as dependent on the presence of dried blood on the surface of the mucous +membrane, or on obstruction of the cavities from the same cause. Further +observation, however, appeared to show that it was due to concussion of +the branches of the olfactory nerve, since the loss of function +persisted when the cavities were manifestly clear.</p> + +<p>In all these cases we were confronted with the same difficulty which was +experienced both in lesions of sight and hearing, the determination as +to whether the concussion was of the branches or of the olfactory bulb. +When the symptom was the accompaniment of a fracture of the roof of the +orbit, the possibility of concussion of the olfactory lobe was manifest. +In all, again, it was difficult to say what part the accompanying +concussion of the branches of the fifth nerve took in the production of +the symptom. In all three cases mentioned the return of function was +gradual, but apparently fairly complete at the end of three weeks. In +one it was noted that at first the patient was conscious of an odour +before he was able to discriminate its actual nature; later he could +determine the latter readily.</p> + +<p><i>Optic.</i>—Some remarks concerning lesions of the optic nerve have +already been made under the heading of wounds of the orbit. Concussion +and contusion of the nerve both<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span> occurred, but I was unable to +differentiate between the effects of these on the nerve itself, apart +from the effects on the globe of the eye, which usually accompanied +wounds of the orbit.</p> + +<p>In some cases the nerve was directly divided in orbital wounds, and +either pressure on or division of the nerve in the intra-cranial portion +of its course, or as it traversed the optic foramen, was not uncommon.</p> + +<p><i>Auditory.</i>—Loss of hearing was also not infrequent; thus it +accompanied all three wounds of the mastoid process quoted under the +heading of the seventh nerve, also two cases of fracture of the +occipital bone near the ear quoted on p. 278. In all these instances it +was impossible to attribute the deafness to lesion of the nerve alone, +as the causative injury equally affected the internal ear, and in at +least two the bullet implicated the tympanum as well in its course. The +deafness was absolute in each case, and in none had any improvement +occurred at the end of nine months. Deafness was a symptom in a certain +number of the more severe cerebral injuries in which the course of the +bullet was not so near to the internal ear: probably some of these were +central in origin.</p> + +<p>I only once observed any interference with the sense of taste.</p> + +<p><i>Remaining cranial nerves.</i>—I have little to say regarding the <i>third</i>, +<i>fourth</i>, and <i>sixth</i> nerves. In the case of the third nerve, ptosis was +occasionally seen in wounds of the skull involving the roof of the +orbit, but the relative parts taken by injury to nerve and laceration or +fixation of muscle respectively, were usually hard to determine. Again, +the fourth and sixth nerves may have been damaged in some of the more +extensive orbital wounds, especially those in which the globe suffered +injury, but the signs under such circumstances were difficult to +discriminate, and the injury was of slight practical importance, in view +of the major injury to the globe itself.</p> + +<p><i>Fifth nerve.</i>—Concussion, contusion, or laceration of the different +branches of the three divisions of the fifth nerve were common in wounds +of the head, but most frequent in fractures of the upper or lower jaws. +Localised anæsthesia<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span> was common from one or other of these causes, but +for the most part transitory in the cases of contusion or concussion. I +saw no case of entire loss of function in any one division, symptoms +being mostly confined to certain branches, as the supra-orbital, the +temporo-malar, the dental branches of the second division, the +auriculo-temporal nerve, and the lingual, dental, and mental branches of +the third division. I did not observe any cases in which modification of +the special senses accompanied these injuries beyond those mentioned in +the remarks already made on the subject of anosmia, and one case in +which some modification of the sense of taste accompanied an injury to +the floor of the mouth. It was a matter of surprise, considering the +frequency with which subsequent neuritis was met with in the nerves +generally, that trifacial neuralgia in some form was not more often met +with. I never observed any serious case. Perhaps this is one of the +fields in which a longer after-period may increase our knowledge. +Lastly, I never observed motor paralysis in the case of the third +division, although sensory symptoms in some of the branches were common, +evident proof that injuries to the trunk were rare.</p> + +<p><i>Seventh nerve.</i>—Facial paralysis was most commonly observed in cases +of wound of the mastoid process, apart from central cortical facial +paralyses, of which several are quoted in the chapter on injuries of the +head. All the wounds of the mastoid process were, in addition, +accompanied by absolute deafness. I am sorry to be unable to give any +details as to the electrical condition of the muscles in these cases, +but I believe that in the great majority the paralysis was mainly the +result of nerve concussion, since the perforations were clean in +character and not obviously accompanied by comminution. Pressure from +hæmorrhage into the Fallopian canal may, of course, have been present, +and in some instances, particularly those in which the bullet traversed +the tympanic cavity, spicules of bone may have caused laceration. In +every case, however, all the branches were equally affected; the +paralysis was absolute, and in none did any improvement occur while the +cases were under my observation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span></p> + +<p>The following are a few illustrative examples:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>111</b>) Boer wounded at Belmont. <i>Entry</i>, immediately above +zygoma; the bullet passed through the temporal fossa, fractured +the neck of the mandible, traversed the mastoid process, and +emerged at the lower margin of the hairy scalp, 1 inch from the +median line. Facial paralysis was complete, and there was no +improvement at the end of ten weeks.</p> + +<p>(<b>112</b>) Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i>, at the posterior +border of the left mastoid process, 1/2 an inch above the tip; +<i>exit</i>, through the right upper lip at the junction of the +middle and outer thirds. There was considerable hæmorrhage from +the left ear. The injury was followed by complete deafness, and +facial paralysis, which showed no sign of improvement.</p> + +<p>There was complete anæsthesia over the area of distribution of +the third division of the fifth nerve; this improved rapidly, +and at the end of five weeks was hardly to be detected; neither +at that time could any impairment of power on the part of the +muscles of mastication be detected. No impairment of the sense +of taste was noted.</p> + +<p>(<b>113</b>) <i>Entry</i>, above the anterior extremity of the zygoma, +bullet retained. Primary hæmorrhage from ear. Complete facial +paralysis and deafness. Anæsthesia over distribution of +temporal branch of temporo-malar nerve, part of supra-orbital +area, auriculo-temporal nerve, and small occipital cervical +nerve. The muscles of mastication acted well. Ecchymosis below +the right mastoid process.</p> + +<p>(<b>114</b>) Wounded at Paardeberg. 300 yards. <i>Entry</i>, at the +posterior border of the right mastoid process, 3/4 of an inch +above the tip; <i>exit</i>, the inner third of the left upper +eyelid. (Eye destroyed.) Complete right facial paralysis; deaf, +on right side cannot hear tick of watch either held close or in +contact. Purulent otitis media.</p></div> + +<p>In this place I might mention two other cases of lesion of the seventh +nerve secondary to wound of peripheral branches. In one a patient was +struck by several fragments of lead from a bullet which broke up against +a neighbouring stone. These for the most part lodged in the skin over +the left orbicularis muscle, but one also lodged in the conjunctiva and +was removed. Some ten days later the patient complained that he could +not lift the upper lid. The levator palpebræ was normal, but spasm of +the orbicularis held the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span> eye firmly closed. The condition did not +improve, and the patient was invalided home. He recovered later.</p> + +<p>In another patient a bullet entered above the right zygoma and traversed +the orbits, without wounding the globes. At the time no want of power of +the muscles of the face was noted, but a year later there was evident +weakness of the whole of the muscles of the right side of the face, with +loss of symmetry.</p> + +<p>In the former case the functional element was strong, but in both an +ascending neuritis was probably present.</p> + +<p><i>Tenth nerve.</i>—The pneumogastric was implicated in many wounds of the +neck. I never observed an uncomplicated case, but laryngeal paralysis +was temporarily present in two of the cases of cervical aneurism in +which the wound crossed above the level of origin of the recurrent +laryngeal branch, while in two others the recurrent branch itself was in +close contact with the wall of the aneurism (p. 135). In all such cases +signs of concussion or contusion of the nerve would be expected, judging +from the similar results observed in the brachial nerves when the +neighbouring artery was implicated. The only obvious symptoms occurring, +however, were laryngeal paralysis and acceleration of the pulse. As the +latter symptom was often observed in the cases of arterio-venous +communication, wherever situated, and as the sympathetic nerve also lay +in close contiguity to the wound track, it was difficult to ascribe it +with certainty solely to the vagus lesion. In the two cases of high +vagus injury the laryngeal paralysis steadily improved, and at the end +of six months was apparently well; in the two others it persisted at the +end of three months and a year respectively.</p> + +<p>The nerve must have been very frequently damaged in wounds of the neck; +it is possible that this injury may have been an important factor in the +death of some of the patients with cervical wounds upon the field.</p> + +<p><i>Eleventh nerve.</i>—I append the only case of localised spinal accessory +paralysis I observed. This was one of my earliest experiences, and when +I examined the neck, in the Field hospital, I assumed from the +completeness of the sterno-mastoid and trapezius paralysis that the +nerve was severed.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span> The patient, however, made such a rapid recovery +that it became evident that the nerve had been contused only, and that +the recovery of function was not due, as is so often the case, to +vicarious compensation by the cervical supply to the muscles.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>115</b>) <i>Entry</i>, immediately to the right of the fourth cervical +spinous process; <i>exit</i>, at the anterior border of the left +sterno-mastoid opposite the angle of the mandible. The left +shoulder was depressed, the head inclined to the injured side. +There was evident spinal accessory paralysis, and marked +hyperæsthesia of the whole left upper extremity, most severe in +the circumflex area. The hyperæsthesia gradually disappeared in +a few days, and was clearly due to concussion and possibly +slight contusion of the cervical nerve roots. The spinal +accessory paralysis improved, so that the patient returned to +the front at the end of a month: when I saw him some four +months later the shoulders were held quite symmetrically.</p></div> + +<p>The <i>twelfth nerve</i> was occasionally damaged in wounds of the floor of +the mouth. I saw no case of permanent paralysis.</p> + +<p><i>Injury to the systemic nerves.</i> <i>Cervical plexus.</i>—Evidence of injury +to the superficial branches of the cervical plexus was not rare; thus I +saw cases of small occipital anæsthesia, and great occipital neuralgia, +but none of motor paralysis from injury to the deeper muscular branches. +I take it that the smallness of the branches, and the multiple supply +possessed by many of the muscles of the neck, would both take part in +rendering certain evidence of the injury of an individual motor nerve +rare.</p> + +<p><i>Brachial plexus.</i>—Injury to this plexus in the neck was common; the +main peculiarity observed was the partial nature of the damage +inflicted.</p> + +<p>Thus injury to a single nerve, or to a complex of two or more, was far +more common than one implicating the whole plexus. Again, while complete +paralysis might affect one set of nerves, another might simply exhibit +signs of irritation in the form of hyperæsthesia or pain.</p> + +<p>The wounds producing these injuries varied much in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span> direction; thus some +crossed the neck transversely, some were obliquely transverse, while +others took a more or less vertical course.</p> + +<p>These same remarks hold good in the case of the nerves of the arm. In +the upper half, especially, complex injury was not rare, while in the +lower third affection of individual nerves was more common. Another +important difference must be mentioned in regard to the upper and lower +segments of the course of the brachial nerves; they are not only more +widely distributed below, but also more fixed in position, a fact +antagonistic to the escape of the nerve by displacement and liable to +expose it to more severe contusion.</p> + +<p>The latter point holds good in the forearm also; here, individual +injuries often occurred.</p> + +<p>While at work in the Field hospital alone I gained the impression that +the musculo-spiral nerve would not retain the unenviable character of +being the most vulnerable nerve of the upper extremity, since the +chances of each individual nerve seemed about equal, putting the +question of the long course of the musculo-spiral nerve against the +humerus out of question. This expectation was, however, not confirmed, +since the musculo-spiral itself, if not primarily affected, was so often +the seat of secondary mischief in fractures of the humerus. The +posterior interosseous branch seemed to exhibit a similar vulnerability +to slight injuries, to be referred to later under the external popliteal +of the lower extremity. Again, in complex injuries of the brachial +plexus, or nerve trunks, the musculo-spiral branch rarely escaped being +a member, if not individually singled out.</p> + +<p>Of the <i>thoracic nerves</i> I have little to say. They must have been often +injured in the thoracic wounds, yet, as far as my experience went, +intercostal neuralgia was uncommon, or at any rate not a special +feature. One observation of interest, however, does exist; in the cases +in which the ribs were fractured by bullets travelling across them +within the thorax, pain was distinctly a prominent feature. This was no +doubt referable to the facts that in such instances the intercostal +nerves were especially liable to direct injury, and that this was often +multiple. On one occasion a crop of herpetic<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span> vesicles developed along +the course of a dorsal nerve in an injury implicating a single +intercostal space posteriorly.</p> + +<p><i>Lumbar plexus.</i>—Although not quite so well arranged to escape bullet +wounds as the thoracic nerves, the lumbar, by reason of their deep +position and the comparatively wide area they cover, together with the +rarity of wounds taking a sufficiently longitudinal direction to cross +the course of more than one or two branches, were also comparatively +rarely damaged. I never saw an uncomplicated case of anterior crural +paralysis, and rarely cruralgia. I think this is to be explained in two +ways: first, that the trunk course of the nerve is short; secondly, that +it lies in the inguinal fossa. The second fact is of importance, since +wounds in this region were in my experience responsible for a +considerable percentage of the deaths on the field or shortly +afterwards. Such deaths probably occurred from internal hæmorrhage from +the iliac arteries, and it was in such cases that the anterior crural +nerve stood in greatest danger of injury. I also never saw a case of +localised obturator paralysis. On the other hand, anæsthesia or +hyperæsthesia in the area of distribution of the lumbar nerves in the +groin, the external cutaneous and the long saphenous in the thigh, were +not uncommon. Hyperæsthesia developed in more than one case in which +injury to the psoas had led to hæmorrhage into the muscle sheath.</p> + +<p><i>Sacral plexus.</i>—The sacral plexus is far more liable to extensive +direct injury than either of the two preceding. Its cords are larger, +gathered up into a much smaller space, and more liable to injury, from +the fact that the slope in which they lie is more readily followed by a +bullet track. Again, the cords rest for a considerable portion of their +course on a bony bed, a particularly dangerous position in gunshot +wounds, since the nerves are not only exposed to the danger of direct +wound, or pressure from bony spicules, but also readily receive +transmitted vibrations secondary to impact of the bullet with the bone.</p> + +<p>None the less I had few occasions to observe extensive injuries of the +plexus. In one instance damage particularly affecting the lumbo-sacral +cord occurred, but this was complicated by signs of irritation of the +anterior crural<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span> and obturator nerves, as the result of retro-peritoneal +hæmorrhage and injury to the psoas muscle. Two cases in which the +sacro-coccygeal plexus suffered isolated injury on account of their +characteristic nature as gunshot injuries will be shortly quoted:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>116</b>) <i>Sacro-coccygeal plexus.</i>—<i>Entry</i>, at the junction of +the middle and posterior thirds of the left iliac crest; the +bullet passed obliquely downwards through the pelvis to lodge 3 +inches below the right trochanter major. Incontinence of soft +fæces persisted for five weeks, and retention of urine during +three weeks.</p> + +<p>This patient subsequently died on the homeward voyage, but I am +unable to say from what cause.</p> + +<p>(<b>117</b>) <i>Entry</i>, over third sacral vertebra; <i>exit</i>, 2 inches +from the median line, and 1½ inch above Poupart's ligament +on the anterior abdominal wall. Incontinence, with involuntary +passage of fæces, persisted during the first twenty-four hours, +and for two days the urine had to be withdrawn with a catheter. +No further signs of nerve injury were noted.</p></div> + +<p>The same explanation of the comparative rarity of injuries to the sacral +plexus that has been already given in the case of the anterior crural +nerve holds good—viz. that in a great many of the pelvic wounds +involving the plexus early death followed from the severity of the +concurrent injuries.</p> + +<p>Injuries to the great sciatic nerve outside the pelvis, or to one of its +constituent elements, on the other hand, formed one of the most familiar +of the nerve lesions. The wounds giving rise to these were of the most +diverse character; some crossed the buttock in a vertical, transverse, +or oblique direction; others travelled through the thigh in +corresponding directions, while a third series involved both buttock and +thigh.</p> + +<p>The size of the great sciatic nerve renders complete laceration by a +bullet of small calibre a matter almost of impossibility; hence complete +division may almost be left out of consideration in the case of this +nerve. On the other hand, partial division, perforation, and severe +contusion are each and all favoured by the same factor.</p> + +<p>With an extended thigh the nerve is in a state of comparatively slight +tension, and this may be still lessened if the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span> knee be flexed. This +factor, together with the density of the sheath of the nerve, favours +the possibility of displacement, and this occurrence is more likely in +the lower segment than in the upper, which is comparatively fixed in +position.</p> + +<p>Clinical experience appeared to illustrate the importance of these +anatomical factors, as the worst cases of sciatic injury that I saw were +in connection with wounds of the buttock or the junction of that segment +of the trunk with the thigh.</p> + +<p>The most striking observation with regard to the injuries of the great +sciatic nerve was the comparatively frequent escape of the popliteal +element and the severe lesion of the peroneal. This was so pronounced as +to amount to as high a proportion of peroneal symptoms as 90 per cent., +and often when the whole nerve was implicated the popliteal signs were +of the irritative, the peroneal of the paralytic type. When bullets +crossed the popliteal space, given wounds of equal severity in +corresponding degrees of contiguity to the respective nerves, the +peroneal element always suffered in greater degree. Again, the peroneal +nerve symptoms were more obstinate and prolonged, and instances of +ascending neuritis were more common than in the case of any other nerve +of the lower extremity, and the trophic wasting of muscles was more +marked.</p> + +<p>The peroneal nerve, therefore, acquires the same unenviable degree of +importance in the lower extremity enjoyed by the musculo-spiral in the +upper. Here, again, we are confronted with the fact that the peroneal +element of the great sciatic nerve is the more prone to idiopathic +inflammations or toxic influences, and hence we can only assume it to +possess a special vulnerability. The peroneal element is of course +somewhat the more exposed, as lying posterior; but it seems unreasonable +to assume that so large a proportion of the injuries can implicate the +posterior segment of the nerve as to make the startling difference in +the incidence of degeneration explicable. In this relation we may bear +in mind that the muscles supplied by this nerve suffer most in the +degeneration subsequent to anterior polio-myelitis, and again that in +cerebral hemiplegia or spinal-cord injuries they are the last to +recover. Unfortunately no explanation of these<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span> remarkable facts, so +forcibly impressed by the large series of cases with peroneal symptoms +seen in a short time, is forthcoming.</p> + +<p>I may dismiss the other branches of the sacral plexus in a few words. +The small sciatic was occasionally injured in its course in the buttock, +and the small saphenous in the leg. When either element of the latter +was injured, it was surprising how sharply the imperfections in the +anæsthesia corresponded with the composite character of the nerve.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Cases of Nerve Injury</span></h3> + +<p>The following cases are added mainly to give some idea of the +comparative frequency with which the individual nerves were injured, and +also to exemplify the more common forms of complex injury met with. +Circumstances, unfortunately, did not always allow of extended +observation at the time, and I have not been very fortunate in my +attempts to obtain subsequent information on this series since my +return. A certain amount of prognostic information is, however, +furnished by some of the records, and I am very much indebted to my +colleague, Dr. Turney, for help in this matter.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>118</b>) <i>Brachial plexus.</i>—<i>Entry</i>, 2 inches above the clavicle +at the anterior margin of the trapezius; <i>exit</i>, first +intercostal space, 1 inch from the sternal margin. Heavy dull +pain developed at once, extending down the upper extremity. A +fortnight later this pain still persisted; there was lowered +sensation in the ulnar area with formication, also lowered +sensation in the internal cutaneous area of distribution; +sensation in the lesser internal cutaneous area was normal. The +patient went home with the nerve symptoms well at the end of a +month.</p> + +<p>(<b>119</b>) <i>Brachial plexus injury.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. +<i>Entry</i>, at the anterior border of the sterno-mastoid opposite +the pomum Adami; <i>exit</i>, through the ninth rib below and 1/2 an +inch external to the scapular angle. Emphysema and considerable +blood extravasation developed in the posterior triangle of the +neck, also loss of power in the musculo-spiral distribution, +but no anæsthesia. At the end of the first fortnight there was +evident wasting of the muscles, but some power was returning in +the triceps. At the end of a month the man left for England, +with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span> fair power in the triceps, but well-marked wrist-drop. A +year later the wrist-drop still persisted.</p> + +<p>(<b>120</b>) <i>Plexus injury.</i>—Wound of <i>entry</i>, over pomum Adami; +<i>exit</i>, below scapular spine, about centre. Complete median and +musculo-spiral paralysis.</p> + +<p>(<b>121</b>) <i>Median, musculo-cutaneous, and musculo-spiral +nerves.</i>—The wound traversed the axilla from just beneath the +anterior fold; three weeks later a firm mass in the axilla +corresponded to the wound track. Hyperæsthesia developed in the +area of median distribution, with deep pain in the muscles. +There was rigidity of the biceps cubiti and slight wasting in +the radial extensors. The patient improved slowly, and +eventually was discharged and passed out of sight.</p> + +<p>(<b>122</b>) <i>Brachial nerves.</i>—Wounded at Paardeberg. Range 500 +yards. <i>Entry</i>, at the front of the arm, 2 inches below the +junction of the anterior axillary fold; <i>exit</i>, a little lower, +at the back of the arm, in the line of junction of the +posterior axillary fold.</p> + +<p>Considerable shock attended the primary injury; when reaction +had taken place, complete motor and sensory paralysis was noted +of the whole upper extremity, with the exception of some power +of movement of the posterior interosseous group of muscles. +Three weeks later the patient could extend the wrist, but +sensation was imperfect in the arm, and completely absent in +the forearm and hand. The track was now hard and palpable, but +there was no hyperæsthesia in any area; when the track was +manipulated slight formication in the hand was experienced. The +biceps and triceps were equally paralysed. There was no wasting +in any of the muscles.</p> + +<p>(<b>123</b>) <i>Brachial nerves.</i>—Wounded at Modder River. <i>Entry</i>, +through the anterior axillary fold at its junction with the +arm; <i>exit</i>, on the posterior wall of the thorax, 1/2 an inch +from the median line at a level with the angle of the scapula. +Complete musculo-spiral paralysis; hæmothorax. Three weeks +later, radial sensation returned; but the triceps was very +weak, and wrist-drop was complete. There was some wasting of +the muscles supplied by the median and ulnar nerves, and +complete obliteration of the radial pulse. A year later the +musculo-spiral paralysis still persisted.</p> + +<p>(<b>124</b>) <i>Musculo-spiral and median.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. +<i>Entry</i>, 3 inches below the anterior axillary fold, on the +inner aspect of the arm; track passed obliquely downwards +behind the humerus to a point on the outer aspect of the arm +1½ inch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span> below the level of the entry. The humerus escaped +injury. Musculo-spiral paralysis was complete; hyperæsthesia in +the distribution of the median followed some days later. One +month subsequently radial sensation had returned, and a feeling +of numbness had taken the place of the median hyperæsthesia. +The triceps and marginal muscles were much wasted, and only +interosseous extension was possible in the fingers.</p> + +<p>(<b>125</b>) <i>Brachial nerves.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> and +<i>exit</i>, in the upper third of the arm internal to the humerus. +Complete median paralysis, anæsthesia in the ulnar area, and in +the radial supply to the dorsum of the middle and ring fingers. +Could flex, extend, and adduct and abduct the wrist; some power +of flexion in index finger, in others none. The flexion of the +wrist was dependent on the ulnar supply to the muscles of the +forearm. No wasting of the interossei, skin normal except for a +large trophic blister on the dorsum of the hand. Little +improvement had taken place in this patient at the end of a +year.</p> + +<p>(<b>126</b>) <i>Brachial nerves.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. The wound +traversed the lower part of the upper third of the arm, +fracturing the humerus. Immediate complete loss of power in the +arm was experienced, together with loss of all sensation. Three +weeks later the humerus was united; the fracture was evidently +the result of passing contact, and not of direct impact. The +paralysis was still complete in the distribution of the median, +ulnar, and musculo-spiral nerves. There was considerable +wasting of the hand and forearm, and a good deal of thickening +in the lower third of the arm.</p> + +<p>Four months after the original injury, the nerves were explored +by Mr. Eve, who kindly gives me the following information. All +the nerves and vessels of the arm were united into one firm +bundle by cicatricial tissue. When dissected clear, the median +nerve was found to be thickened and enlarged for about 1½ +inch of its length; the ulnar was not completely freed, but was +found to be continuous and indurated; the musculo-spiral was +also intact, but at its entrance into the humeral groove a mass +of callus was felt. A sclerosed and thickened portion of the +median nerve 3½ inches in length was resected, also 1 inch +of sclerosed ulnar nerve, and both were sutured. The +musculo-spiral nerve was left for future exploration. A small +traumatic aneurism was found on the brachial artery, and the +vessel was ligatured above it.</p> + +<p>Ten months later no improvement in the median or ulnar nerves. +Electrical reaction present in musculo-spiral group of +muscles.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span></p> + +<p>(<b>127</b>) <i>Musculo-spiral.</i>—Transverse wound through arm posterior +to humerus. Slight suppuration. Triceps weakened only, complete +paralysis of radial extensors and posterior interosseous group. +Radial sensation lowered only.</p> + +<p>(<b>128</b>) <i>Musculo-spiral.</i>—<i>Entry</i>, 2 inches above and 1/2 an +inch behind the external humeral condyle; <i>exit</i>, at the inner +edge of the biceps, 1/2 an inch lower in the arm than the +entry. It is doubtful whether the paralysis was noted at first, +but a few days later complete posterior interosseous paralysis +and lowered radial sensation were remarked. No change except a +deepening of the anæsthesia, and the development of formication +on manipulation of the wound occurred, and at the end of three +weeks the nerve was exposed (Mr. Watson), and it was found that +a notch had been cut in its outer border, which had opened out +into a <b>V</b> shape. The margins of this notch were refreshed and +the gap closed. Ten days later radial sensation was fairly +good, but the motor symptoms remained unchanged. Nine months +later steady but very slow improvement was reported.</p> + +<p>(<b>129</b>) <i>Ulnar and musculo-cutaneous nerves.</i>—<i>Entry</i>, back of +forearm; the bullet passed between the bones and was retained +at the posterior aspect of the arm. Three weeks later the hand +was glossy and stiff, the fingers extended and adducted, the +thumb was held stiffly in the palm with no power of extension. +The forearm was held semiprone, and the elbow flexed by a rigid +biceps. Six months later the same position was maintained, but +the contracture disappeared under an anæsthetic.</p> + +<p>(<b>130</b>) <i>Median and posterior interosseous.</i>—<i>Entry</i>, over the +external margin of the radius at the centre of the forearm; +<i>exit</i>, at the inner margin of the olecranon 1½ inch below +the tip. Lowered cutaneous sensation in median distribution, +and loss of median flexion of wrist and fingers. Complete +wrist-drop. The triceps supinator longus and extensor carpi +radialis longior were perfect. Twelve days later the wrist +could be raised into a direct line with forearm, but there was +no change in the median symptoms. A week after this the +anæsthetic median area became hyperæsthetic both as to skin and +on deep pressure over the muscles.</p> + +<p>(<b>131</b>) <i>Sacral plexus. Great sciatic nerve.</i>—Wounded at Modder +River. <i>Entry</i>, in left loin; <i>exit</i>, at lower margin of +buttock. The wound was followed immediately by complete +peroneal paralysis, both motor and sensory. Fourteen days later +hyperæsthesia developed in the area of distribution of the +internal popliteal nerve, the superficial pain being greatest +in the sole; the muscles of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span> calf were also very tender on +manipulation. The pain increased, and at the end of twenty-four +days the patient's sufferings were so great that Mr. Thornton +cut down upon and exposed the nerve. It was found embedded in +firm cicatricial tissue close to the sciatic notch; this +compressed the nerve to such a degree that a waist was apparent +upon it.</p> + +<p>The nerve was freed and resumed its normal outline. For a few +days the patient was much relieved, but the neuralgia then +returned in greater intensity than ever. Morphia was injected +hypodermically, and other hypnotics employed, but with little +effect, the patient developing the hysterical condition so +common in the subjects of severe sciatica. Some five weeks +later a sudden improvement took place, the morphia was +decreased, and the patient became sufficiently well to return +to England, but there was still deep tenderness in the calf, +and well-marked hyperæsthesia of the sole.</p> + +<p>A year later the patient had been discharged from the Service, +but was earning his living in a shop. He walked fairly well, +but still with foot-drop, and complained of tenderness in the +sole. I am indebted to Dr. Turney for the following report on +the condition of the muscles.</p> + +<p>Calf muscles practically normal. In the anterior tibial and +peroneal groups the faradic irritability is much diminished, +that in the peroneus longus being the lowest of all. +Contraction can be induced in the extensor longus hallucis, +extensor longus digitorum, and peroneus brevis; but reaction is +doubtful in the case of the tibialis anticus and peroneus +longus.</p> + +<p>With the galvanic current contraction is sluggish, and the +irritability diminished. No serious changes are present except +in the peroneus longus. ACC > KCC at 10 <span class="smcap">m. a.</span></p> + +<p>(<b>132</b>) <i>Great sciatic.</i>—<i>Entry</i>, at outer aspect of the thigh, +just above the centre; <i>exit</i>, at the junction of the inner and +posterior aspects of thigh, about 2 inches lower. The wound was +produced by a ricochet bullet, and beyond the perforation of +the sciatic nerve the femur was fractured obliquely (see plate +XVI.). Hyperæsthesia of the sole was noted early, and when I +saw the patient three months later, there was wasting of the +muscles of the leg, and foot-drop, although he walked with a +stick.</p> + +<p>These symptoms persisted, and on his return to England an +exploration was made by Sir Thomas Smith, and the two fragments +of mantle seen in the skiagram were removed from the substance +of the sciatic nerve. Eight months after the injury, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span> +patient still walked with foot-drop; there was modified +sensation in the musculo-cutaneous area, and a feeling as if +the bones of the foot were uncovered when he walked. The +circumference of the affected leg was more than 1 inch less +than that of the sound one. Steady but slow improvement was +taking place.</p> + +<p>(<b>133</b>) <i>Great sciatic</i>.—In a third patient with a buttock +track, the symptoms were identical with those observed in case +131. In this an exploration showed that the nerve had been +perforated. Although the symptoms were never so severe as in +No. 131, yet recovery was very much slower and less complete, +the muscular weakness remained more marked, and the skin +exhibited more evidence of trophic lesion. Some contracture of +the knee and rigid foot-drop took place, and at the end of +twelve months the patient walked poorly with a stick. +Improvement is, however, continuing.</p> + +<p>(<b>134</b>) <i>Great sciatic</i>.—Wounded at Ladysmith. <i>Entry</i>, +immediately below left buttock fold; <i>exit</i>, at anterior aspect +of thigh, 3½ inches below Poupart's ligament. The left leg +was paralysed, and patient was sent down to the Base, where he +remained two months. The wound closed by primary union, the +paralysis improved, and the man rejoined his regiment. After he +had been in camp four days, his leg gave way, and he returned +to hospital, where he contracted enteric fever. Later, he was +sent home, and eight months after the reception of the injury +his condition was as follows:</p> + +<p>Left lower limb somewhat wasted, a diminution of 1 inch in the +circumference of the leg and 1/2 an inch in the thigh being +found. The patient walks with foot-drop, and the flexor muscles +of the knee are weak. On examination the peroneal muscles +reacted but sluggishly to faradic irritation. There is complete +anæsthesia of the foot to above the ankle, and up to the knee +tactile sensation and appreciation of pain were dulled. The +left plantar reflex was absent, the right slight, the left +patellar reflex was abnormally brisk. There was neither ankle +nor patellar clonus, and the other reflexes were present and +normal. The gait was spastic, and the patient was more troubled +by a contraction of the calf muscles, which prevented his +putting the heel to the ground, than by the foot-drop.</p> + +<p>Beyond these local phenomena there was marked tremor of the +upper extremities on any exertion, and slight lateral +nystagmus. The patient was not sure that this had not been +present ever since he recovered from the enteric fever, but it +was sufficiently marked to give rise to the suspicion of the +development of disseminated sclerosis.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span></p> + +<p>The patient was a hard-headed, sensible man. He remained in the +hospital under the care of Dr. Turney, to whom I am indebted +for notes of the case, forty-six days. During this period he +was treated by faradic electricity, and, with some checks, +notably the development of passive effusion into the left +knee-joint, and a fugitive attack of redness over the dorsum of +the foot, both suggesting trophic changes, steadily improved. +The anæsthesia became limited to the outer half of the leg, at +the end of one month was limited to the dorsum of the foot +only, and at the end of six weeks entirely disappeared. +Meanwhile the tendency to drawing up of the heel by the calf +muscles became less, and the gait improved. The man left the +hospital at the end of two months, very satisfied with his +condition, although the tremor of the hands was still present +in a lessened degree.</p> + +<p>(<b>135</b>) <i>External popliteal.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein, 250-300 +yards. <i>Entry</i>, at the outer side of the thigh, 5 inches above +the lower extremity of the external condyle; <i>exit</i>, at the +inner margin of the adductors, at a level 4 inches higher in +the thigh. The track crossed behind the femur. Complete +peroneal motor paralysis and anæsthesia, except in the hinder +part of the region supplied by the mixed external saphenous. +Slight hyperæsthesia of the sole. Improving at the end of three +weeks, but paralysis still nearly complete.</p> + +<p>(<b>136</b>) <i>External popliteal.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i>, +5 inches below the highest part of the right iliac crest, on +outer aspect of hip; <i>exit</i>, at the posterior margin of the +gracilis, 2 inches from the perineum. Complete peroneal +paralysis followed, which rapidly improved, and on the +twenty-second day was nearly well.</p> + +<p>(<b>137</b>) <i>Internal popliteal. Secondary anæsthesia</i>.—<i>Shell</i> +wounds of the right popliteal space. Wounded at Belmont. +Anæsthesia of the outer side of the calf, the leg and sole of +foot. No motor paralysis. As cicatrisation progressed, the +anæsthesia became more marked and was complete over the whole +of the external saphenous area.</p> + +<p>(<b>138</b>) <i>Internal popliteal.</i>—Wounded at Paardeberg. 400-500 +yards. <i>Entry</i>, about the centre of the outer half of the +patella; <i>exit</i>, at the centre of the calf, about 2 inches from +the popliteal crease. Five days after the injury severe burning +pain developed in the sole. A fortnight later the pain was much +less severe, but varied in degree with the heat of the weather, +being worse when cool. At this date, however, rubbing became +comforting.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span></p> + +<p>(<b>139</b>) <i>External popliteal.</i>—-Wounded at Magersfontein. +<i>Entry</i>, 1 inch above the upper end of the internal margin of +the patella; <i>exit</i>, at the margin of leg, just below the outer +tuberosity of the tibia. Complete peroneal paralysis followed +the injury. A month later the nerve was bared and found +slightly thickened. An improvement in cutaneous sensation +followed quickly, and a much slower improvement in the motor +power commenced.</p> + +<p>(<b>140</b>) <i>External popliteal nerve.</i>—Wounded at Beacon Hill. A +<i>bayonet</i> entered over upper quarter of fibula, and passed +between the bones of leg into the calf. An aneurismal varix of +the calf vessels developed, also incomplete peroneal paralysis. +The scar was raised from the nerve (Major Simpson, R.A.M.C.) +six weeks later, and at the end of a fortnight the power and +sensation were both much improved and the patient returned to +England.</p> + +<p>(<b>141</b>) <i>External popliteal.</i>—Wounded at Modder River. <i>Entry</i>, +1/2 an inch above the internal border of the patella; <i>exit</i>, +1½ inch from the head of the fibula and over that bone. The +wound was followed by peroneal paralysis. Six weeks later +sensation was still diminished in the anterior tibial and +musculo-cutaneous nerve areas, and marked foot-drop, little +improved, persisted. The patient came to England, and at the +end of twelve months is reported as very little improved.</p> + +<p>(<b>142</b>) <i>Anterior tibial.</i>—<i>Entry</i>, 1 inch in front and below +the external malleolus; <i>exit</i>, at the centre of the sole, just +anterior to the bases of the metatarsal bones. Wasting and +paralysis of extensor brevis digitorum.</p> + +<p>(<b>143</b>) <i>Small sciatic and small saphenous.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein. 200 yards. Two wounds: (i) <i>Entry</i>, below the +centre of the twelfth rib on the left side; <i>exit</i>, immediately +to the left of the buttock furrow at upper part, (ii) <i>Entry</i>, +in the right loin, midway between the last rib and iliac crest; +<i>exit</i>, just within the centre of the left buttock; the two +wounds crossed diagonally. Hyperæsthesia in area of +distribution of small saphenous and small sciatic nerves, which +rapidly improved.</p> + +<p>(<b>144</b>) <i>Lumbar plexus.</i>—Boer, wounded at Magersfontein. +<i>Entry</i>, eleventh interspace, posterior axillary line; <i>exit</i>, +tenth interspace, right mid-axillary line. Impaired sensation +in area of distribution of external cutaneous and crural branch +of genito-crural nerves. At the end of a fortnight anæsthesia +was less apparent, but a feeling of numbness persisted, which +soon disappeared.</p></div> + +<p><i>Prognosis and treatment.</i>—In considering the prognosis in cases of +nerve injury, several of the points already raised as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span> to the nature of +the lesion are of importance. Short of actual section, it may be broadly +stated that no lesion is too serious to render ultimate recovery +impossible.</p> + +<p>In cases in which the injury has been produced by a bullet fired at a +short range, or in which contact with the nerve has been close, the +return of functional activity is very slow. In such instances the +condition probably resembles that in which a divided nerve has been +sutured, with the additional disadvantage that a considerable portion of +the nerve, both above and below the point actually struck, has been +destroyed as far as the conduction of nervous impulses is concerned. +This may reasonably be concluded in the light of the evidence offered by +the injuries of the spinal cord, in which several segments usually +suffered if the velocity of the bullet was great, and also if the fact +is remembered that, when thickening takes place, a considerable length +of the nerve is usually implicated.</p> + +<p>Recovery is notably slow in the case of certain nerves, <i>e.g.</i> +musculo-spiral and peroneal, even when the injury has not been of +extreme severity. Again, these same nerves are apparently more seriously +affected by moderate degrees of damage than are others.</p> + +<p>As favourable prognostic elements we may bear in mind: low velocity on +the part of the travelling bullet, and with this a lesser degree of +contiguity of the track to the nerve. The early return of sensation is a +favourable sign, and in this relation the development of hyperæsthesia, +whether preceded by anæsthesia or no, points to the maintenance of +continuity of, and a moderate degree of damage to, the nerve. The early +return of sensation, even if modified in acuteness, was always a very +hopeful sign; also the production of formication in the area of +distribution of the nerve on manipulation of the injured spot. As in the +case of nerve injuries of every nature, the disposition and temperament +of the patient exerted considerable influence on the course of the +cases.</p> + +<p>Complete section of the nerves in these bullet wounds only obtained +special importance in two ways: first, in that a considerable portion of +the trunk might be shot away in oblique tracks, and, secondly, in that +very severe contusion<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span> might affect the nerve for a considerable +distance beyond the point actually implicated. In point of fact, +complete section when treated by suture was often more rapidly recovered +from than an injury in which only a portion of the width of a trunk was +divided. This was no doubt to be explained on the theory that the +contiguous portion of the nerve suffered less when tension and +resistance were lessened by complete severance of the cord.</p> + +<p><i>The treatment</i> of slight nerve contusion was simple; rest alone was +necessary, and in the course of hours or days paralysis was recovered +from. The symptoms were most troublesome in patients of a neurotic +temperament, or those who had suffered from severe systemic shock.</p> + +<p>In severe concussions and contusions the first care had to be devoted to +the discrimination of the lesion from that of division. A period of rest +then needed to be followed by one of massage and movement, to maintain +the nutrition of the muscles. In a considerable portion of the cases a +stage of neuritis had to be expected. In all cases, either of severe +concussion, contusion, or complete section, accompanied by the fracture +of a bone, especial care was necessary that the bandaging and fixation +of the limb were not sufficiently tight to add the dangers of muscular +ischæmia to those of the nerve injury already present.</p> + +<p>Neuritis, whether dependent on local injury, implication in the scar, +pressure from callus, or of the ascending variety, needed the same +treatment: rest, preservation of the limb from cold or damp, and the +local application of anodynes, as belladonna, or hot laudanum +fomentations. In some cases a general anodyne, as morphia, was +preferable; then always to be used with caution, as the patients soon +craved inordinately for it, and were unwilling to give it up. Later, +local blisters in the line of the nerve trunk, careful massage and +exercise when muscular and cutaneous tenderness had subsided, the +application of the continuous current to the nerves, and perhaps +faradisation of the muscles, were all useful.</p> + +<p>Splints were often temporarily required to resist contracture, or the +assumption of false positions; in either case<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span> they needed to be +frequently removed, and movement &c. made, in order to avoid any chance +of troublesome stiffness.</p> + +<p><i>Operative treatment.</i>—Early interference was only warranted by +positive knowledge that some source of irritation or pressure could be +removed; thus a bone spicule, or a bullet, or part of one, particularly +portions of mantles.</p> + +<p>In case of contusion the expiration of three months is the earliest date +at which any operation should be taken into consideration, and +interference is only then advisable if there is good prospect of freeing +the nerve from compressing adhesions. The two strongest indications for +operation are (1) signs pointing to the secondary implication of the +nerve in a cicatrix, especially when these are of such a nature as to +indicate local tension, fixation, or pressure; (2) the possibility of +the irritation being the result of the presence of some foreign body, +such as a bone spicule, or portions of a bullet mantle; in such cases +the X rays will often give useful help.</p> + +<p>With regard to the early exploration of cases of traumatic neuralgia, it +may be pointed out that when this was undertaken the results were as a +rule very temporary. In many cases in which the measure was resorted to, +either no macroscopic evidence of injury to the nerve was discovered, or +a bulbous thickening was met with of such extent as to make excision +inadvisable, even if it were considered otherwise the most suitable +treatment.</p> + +<p>Even when complete section of the nerve was assured by the absence of +any power of reaction to stimulation by electricity from above on the +part of the muscles, operation was better not undertaken until +cicatrisation had reached a certain stage. If done earlier than at the +end of three weeks, the sutured spot became implicated in a hard +cicatrix, and any advantage to be obtained by early interference was +lost. When partial division of a trunk was determined, the same date was +the most favourable one for exploration, the gap in the nerve being +freshened and closed by suture. There is little doubt, however, that in +some cases such injuries were recovered from spontaneously.</p> + +<p>In view of the uniformly bad results observed in the case of the seventh +nerve, I am inclined to think that the above<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span> rules might be tentatively +relaxed, and the nerve primarily explored by an operation resembling +that for mastoid suppuration. It is of course doubtful whether the +trouble does not generally result from the vibratory concussion alone; +but as this is not certain, and the operation would only have to be +performed on patients already permanently deaf, it might be worth while +at any rate opening the Fallopian canal with the object of relieving +tension. It is not probable that in any of the cases quoted much +splintering of the bone had occurred, as the wounds appeared to be of +the nature of pure perforations.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X</h2> + +<h3>INJURIES TO THE CHEST</h3> + + +<p>In regard to Prognosis wounds of the chest furnished the most hopeful +class of the whole series of trunk or visceral injuries. Cases of wound +of the heart and great vessels afforded the only exceptions to an almost +universally favourable course, both as regards life and the +non-occurrence of serious after-effects.</p> + +<p>This was mainly explicable on two grounds: first, the sharply localised +character of the lesion produced by the bullet of small calibre; and, +secondly, the fact that the lung, the most frequently injured organ, is +not materially affected by the grade of velocity with which the bullet +strikes. In point of fact, wounds of this organ probably afford an +instance in which high grades of velocity are distinctly favourable to +the nature of the injury, and this is possibly true in the case of +wounds of the chest-wall also.</p> + +<p>The significance of the calibre of the bullet in wounds of the chest is +evident. The late Mr. Archibald Forbes, in one of his letters from the +seat of the Franco-German war, remarked that in crossing a battlefield +it was easy to recognise the patients who had suffered a wound of the +lung from the fact that the whistle of the air entering and leaving the +chest was plainly audible. This was, indeed, not uncommonly the case in +wounds produced by the older bullets of large calibre, but with the +employment of the smaller projectile it has become an experience of the +past. Some evidence as to the comparative severity of wounds produced by +the larger forms of bullet was, moreover, afforded by the present +campaign, since Martini-Henry wounds were occasionally met with. Of some +instances observed by myself, in one, external hæmorrhage was a +prominent symptom; in another, a piece of lung<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span> was prolapsed from a +wound in the back, and twice I observed pneumothorax, an uncommon +sequela to wounds from bullets of small calibre.</p> + +<p>It may be remarked, however, that all these more serious injuries were +recovered from, also that when we consider that the patients were +comparatively young and healthy subjects, the favourable prognosis was +what might have reasonably been expected. When, as occasionally +happened, a patient of more mature years, with enlarged facial +capillaries, received a wound of the lung, the course was in no way so +favourable as that witnessed in the case of the younger men.</p> + +<p>In support of this opinion I may add that wounds from shrapnel and +fragments of shell also did remarkably well, although they sometimes +gave rise to more troublesome symptoms than did wounds produced by +bullets of the Mauser type. Again, these injuries as a whole were of +nothing like so serious a nature as the lacerations of the lung produced +by fractured ribs, which we commonly have to treat in civil practice, +and are not accustomed to regard as especially dangerous.</p> + +<p>It is also a striking fact that the most common and troublesome +complication of wounds of the chest, hæmothorax, was usually the result +of the wound of the chest-wall and not of the lung. I preface these +remarks to the detailed account of the thoracic injuries, because I +think the favourable course usually taken by patients with wounds of the +lung has been accorded somewhat greater prominence than the +circumstances warranted.</p> + +<p><i>Non-penetrating wounds of the chest-wall.</i>—Surface wounds were not +very common, and were chiefly of interest in so far as they illustrated +the very superficial course that may be occasionally taken by a bullet +without breach of the integument, and as sometimes affording opportunity +for the exercise of diagnostic skill when the track traversed the +axilla.</p> + +<p>The most common situation for tracks taking a long course on the surface +of the thoracic skeleton was the back. Such wounds were usually received +while the patients were prone on the ground; thus I might instance a +case in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span> which the bullet entered the posterior aspect of the shoulder 3 +inches above the spine of the scapula, passed downwards, pierced that +process, and emerged 2 inches below the inferior angle of the bone. +Wounds of a similar nature coursing in transverse and oblique +directions, and not implicating bone, were also seen. Those implicating +the vertebræ have been already dealt with. The scapular region was also +a favourite one for the lodgment of retained bullets, some resting in +the supra- and infra-spinatus muscles, others lying beneath the bone +itself.</p> + +<p>On the anterior aspect of the chest, bullets coming from the front +sometimes traversed and fractured the clavicle, and then took a short +course downwards, emerging over the ribs or sternum. Figure 81 +represents a particularly long track in this region. In other cases the +precordial region was crossed, but I never witnessed any serious effect +on the heart's action in any such injury at the time the patients came +under my notice.</p> + +<p>Wounds received with the arm outstretched and traversing the axilla +sometimes gave considerable trouble in excluding with certainty a +perforation of the thoracic cavity. Thus a bullet entered below the +centre of the right clavicle and emerged 2½ inches below, above the +angle of the scapula, at its axillary margin. The arm was outstretched +at the moment of the reception of the injury; but when the wound was +viewed with the limb placed alongside the trunk, it seemed almost +impossible that the chest cavity could have escaped. In some cases of +this kind the difficulty was at once cleared up by noting evidence of +injury to the axillary nerves.</p> + +<p>A word will suffice as to the treatment of these wounds. The only +special indication was to keep the scapula at rest for a sufficient +period. I have dealt with the anatomy of them at such length only +because in their extreme form they are so highly characteristic of the +nature of the injuries which may be produced by bullets of small +calibre.</p> + +<p><i>Penetrating wounds of the chest.</i>—Tracks crossing the thoracic cavity +in every direction were common. When the erect attitude was maintained, +frontal and sagittal wounds,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span> pure or oblique, were received; when the +prone position was assumed, longitudinal tracks, either purely or +obliquely vertical, were the rule. Experience of wounds of the latter +class was extensive in the present campaign, from the fact that so many +of the advances were made in prone or crawling attitudes. The vertical +and transverse tracks each possessed the special characteristic of +frequently implicating both the thoracic and abdominal cavities, but the +vertical were often prolonged into the neck, or even downwards through +the pelvis. The vertical wounds in addition sometimes exhibited one very +important feature, the fracture of several ribs from within, often at a +very considerable distance from the aperture of either entry or exit.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 353px;"> +<img src="images/fig81.jpg" width="353" height="450" alt="Fig. 81." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 81.—Superficial Track in anterior Wall of Trunk</span> +</div> + +<p><i>Characters of the apertures of entry and exit.</i>—As has already been +mentioned, the chest-wall was one of the situations in which the +aperture of entry was often large, and the oval form due to obliquity of +impact on the part<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span> of the bullet was particularly well marked. The exit +wounds were often smaller than those of entry, especially if the bullet +emerged by an intercostal space; even when the ribs were comminuted, the +fragments were, as a rule, too small to occasion more than a slightly +enlarged and irregular aperture. Taken as a class, however, and putting +aside explosive exit wounds, wounds of the chest afforded more numerous +examples of irregular outline and variation in size than were met with +in any other region of the body.</p> + +<p>When the tracks penetrated the broad upper intercostal spaces, an +interesting feature, due to the tense and rigid nature of the muscles +closing the intervals, and their large admixture of fibrous tissue, was +sometimes noticed. The bullet, especially if passing obliquely, was apt +to cut a slit in the muscles far exceeding in size the opening in the +overlying integument, with the result of leaving a palpable subcutaneous +defect. Under these circumstances the yielding spot was often noticed to +rise and fall with the movements of respiration, external palpation met +with an absence of normal resistance, and there was impulse on coughing.</p> + +<p><i>Fractures of the ribs.</i>—These injuries were produced in either +transverse or longitudinal coursing tracks, their special feature being +a sharp localisation of the lesion of the bone.</p> + +<p>In tracks crossing the chest transversely the injury to the ribs might +consist in notching, perforation, or complete solution of continuity, +sometimes with fine comminution. In the incomplete injuries some +importance attached to the localisation of the lesion to the upper or +lower border of the rib, in so far as the intercostal artery was +concerned. Comminution at the wound of entry was, as a rule, not so +extensive as at the aperture of exit, and in any case was less apparent, +since the fragments were driven inward. The wider comminution at the +exit aperture depends on the lesser degree of support afforded by the +thoracic coverings to the convex outer surface of the rib, and on the +fact that the velocity of the bullet has been lowered by its passage +through the opposite rib and the chest cavity.</p> + +<p>The splinters of comminuted ribs are small, and wide-reaching<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span> fissures +rare. These characters depend on the elastic nature of the resistance +offered by the curved rib to the passage of the bullet, which is +calculated to preserve the bone from the full force of impact, except at +the point actually impinged upon.</p> + +<p>Fractures of the ribs, produced from within by bullets taking a +longitudinal course through the thorax, were still more special in +character. They were also more important, as giving rise to troublesome +symptoms.</p> + +<p>In these, again, the degree of injury to the bones varied considerably. +In some cases the bones were merely grooved internally, without any +external deformity; in other cases a sort of green-stick fracture was +produced, accompanied by the projection of a tender salient angle +externally; in others complete solution of continuity was effected.</p> + +<p>Another feature of importance was the occasional implication of several +ribs. In this case the symptoms accompanying the injury were very much +more like those observed in the corresponding injuries resulting from +indirect violence seen in civil practice.</p> + +<p>Injuries to the <i>costal cartilages</i> closely resembled those to the ribs. +Perforation, bending from injury to the inner aspect, and comminution +were observed. The latter condition differed from the similar one seen +in the case of the ribs only in so far as the tougher consistence of the +cartilage did not lend itself to such free comminution, and the +splinters remained in great part attached. The nature of the fractures, +in fact, somewhat resembled that seen on breaking a piece of cane.</p> + +<p>I saw no fracture of the <i>sternum</i> except of the nature of a pure +perforation; these were not uncommon in the hospitals, either in the +upper or the extreme lower portions of the bone. Fractures in other +portions were no doubt usually associated with fatal injuries to the +heart. The openings were usually so small as to be difficult of +palpation, and I never had the opportunity of examining one <i>post +mortem</i>.</p> + +<p>Perforations of the body of the <i>scapula</i> were common, but they were of +little importance in symptoms or prognosis.</p> + +<p><i>Symptoms of fracture of the ribs.</i>—Fractures accompanying transverse +wounds of the chest were characterised by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span> insignificance of the +symptoms produced. Every common sign of fracture of the rib was in fact +absent. Neither pain, stitch on inspiration, nor crepitus, either +audible or palpable, was, as a rule, present. This absence of signs was +accounted for by the nature of the lesion: thus in perforations or +notchings there was no loss of continuity, while in the freely +comminuted fractures the loss of continuity was so absolute as to allow +no possibility of the main fragments rubbing together. Again, part of +the symptoms attending these injuries, as seen in civil practice, +depends upon contusion and laceration of the surrounding structures—a +condition precluded by the localised nature of the application of the +violence by a bullet of small calibre. In order to establish a +diagnosis, therefore, we were in many cases reduced to palpation, and +occasionally to direct examination of the wound.</p> + +<p>Fractures accompanying longitudinal tracks formed a class rather apart +in the matter of symptoms. In these mere groovings might also be +accompanied by no signs, or at the most by slight local pain and +tenderness. When, however, the grooving was sufficiently deep to be +accompanied by deformity, or a complete solution of continuity was +effected, the signs were often severe. The tender salient angle, or, in +the absence of this, a highly tender localised spot, often pointed to +the less severe injuries, and when the fractures were complete or +multiple, pain was a very prominent symptom, both constant and in the +form of inspiratory stitch. The severity of the pain was probably to be +in part ascribed to implication of the intercostal nerves, which in +these injuries was direct and often multiple. Again, severe contusion or +actual laceration of the nerves, with resulting anæsthesia, was less +common than when the bullet directly implicated the nerves in transverse +wounds. Free comminution and absolute solution of continuity were also +less common than in the fractures accompanying transverse wounds; hence +pain from rubbing of the fragments on inspiratory movement or palpation +was more common, and crepitus, either on auscultation or palpation, was +more often met with. Patients with this class of fracture often suffered +greatly from painful dyspnœa, and were unable to assume the supine +position.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>External hæmorrhage</i> of severity was rare from these thoracic wounds; +in many cases it did not amount to more than local staining of the +shirt; altogether I saw only one or two cases where any serious bleeding +occurred. Internal hæmorrhage into the pleura, in consequence of the +position of the intercostal arteries, was common, and often abundant; +this will be treated of under the heading of hæmothorax.</p> + +<p><i>Treatment of fractured ribs.</i>—Transverse wounds of the thorax, with no +symptoms of fractured ribs, needed to be dealt with as wounds of the +soft parts alone.</p> + +<p>In multiple fractures accompanying longitudinal tracks, bandaging or +strapping for the purpose of fixation was necessary to relieve pain. A +few fragments of bone sometimes needed primary removal, and occasionally +small sequestra were removed at a later date; but necrosis was rare, +unless some complication led to the development of a fistula.</p> + +<p>Retained bullets were occasionally met with in the chest wall. In such +cases the last remaining energy of the bullet often seemed to have been +spent in diving under the margin of a rib and turning longitudinally up +or down. Removal was sometimes necessary, either from the prominence +produced, the presence of pain, or the continuance of suppuration. Some +of the specimens removed offered interesting evidence of the capacity of +the ribs to withstand considerable violence from a bullet. These were +slightly bent, and marked by a half-spiral groove. I saw such bullets +removed from the thoracic and the abdominal wall, and the evidence +seemed rather against the groove having been produced prior to their +entrance into the body.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 195px;"> +<img src="images/fig82.jpg" width="195" height="350" alt="Fig. 82." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 82.—Spirally grooved Mauser Bullet</span> +</div> + +<p><i>Wounds of the diaphragm.</i>—Perforations of the diaphragm were very +frequent, and as a rule of small significance. When, however, the course +taken by the bullet was parallel with that of the slope of the +diaphragm, a more or less extensive slit was the result. I saw such a +wound still<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span> gaping, and 2 inches in length, in the body of a patient +who died three weeks after the infliction of a fatal abdominal injury.</p> + +<p>In several other obliquely transverse thoracic wounds there was reason +to assume the existence of similar slits. Certain signs were more or +less constant under these circumstances. These consisted in shallow +respiration, often accompanied by a groan or the slightest degree of +hiccough on inspiration, and considerable increase in respiratory +frequency. In one patient the respirations were at first 48, only +dropping to 36 some seventy hours after the reception of the injury. In +some of the cases in which the abdominal cavity was implicated, wound to +the diaphragm seemed a more likely explanation of early, frequent, and +painful vomiting than did visceral injury. The possibility of the later +development of diaphragmatic herniæ in some of these patients will have +to be borne in mind in the future.</p> + +<p><i>Visceral injuries.</i>—The frequent escape of the thoracic viscera from +injury, putting aside the lungs which fill so great a part of the +cavity, was very remarkable. I never saw a case in which I could assume +injury to any of the posterior mediastinal viscera, although such may +have occurred on the field of battle. An injury to the œsophagus, for +instance, would almost of necessity be accompanied by wound of either +one of the large vessels, even the thoracic aorta, or the spinal column. +I was somewhat surprised, however, to learn on enquiry from surgeons who +had seen a large number of the dead and dying on the field, that +thoracic wounds, putting aside those that directly implicated the heart, +were responsible for but a small proportion of the fatalities.</p> + +<p>The escape of the posterior mediastinal viscera, the great vessels, and +the heart, is, I believe, to be explained by the fact that all are +supported and held in position by the loose meshed mediastinal tissue, +which allows for their displacement after the manner observed in the +case of the vessels and nerves lying in the loose tissue of the great +vascular clefts.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the heart.</i>—Perforating wounds of the heart were probably +fatal in all instances, in spite of the fact that, in some patients who +survived, the position of wound apertures<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span> on the surface of the body +made it difficult to believe that the heart had not been penetrated. +(See cases below.)</p> + +<p>In the case of this organ, we must bear in mind its constant variations +in bulk, its elastic compressibility, and its variations in position in +systole and diastole. The variations in bulk and position would be +capable of explaining the escape of the organ from injury at some +particular moment, when a second shot apparently through the same wound +track might implicate it. Beyond this, reasoning from the case of +analogous hollow viscera, as the arteries or the intestine, a bullet +might readily score the surface of the heart without perforating its +cavity.</p> + +<p>Such accidents were observed. Thus, in a case examined by Mr. Cheatle, +the patient died of suppurative pericarditis, secondary to a wound of +which the external apertures had closed. In this patient both auricle +and ventricle were scored externally by the passage of the bullet.</p> + +<p>I am, however, disinclined to allow that many patients survived direct +blows on the heart, since I believe that in the majority if not in all +cardiac wounds the actual cause of death was not hæmorrhage, but sudden +stoppage of the heart's action. This is to be inferred from the fact +that severe external hæmorrhage did not occur; in some cases the shirt +was hardly stained, and in all death occurred in the course of a very +few minutes. Again, in none of the patients whom I saw who had received +possible wounds of the heart-wall were there evident signs of +hæmo-pericardium. In view of the difficulty of detecting this condition +from physical signs, this argument is naturally not of great weight, but +must be allowed.</p> + +<p>One or two death scenes from cardiac wound were described to me. In one +the patient muttered 'They have got me this time,' and died quietly; in +a second the patient's face became ghastly pale, he lay on his back with +the knees flexed, clutching the ground, gasping for breath, and died +only after some minutes of evident great agony. The absence of any +<i>post-mortem</i> details as to the condition of the heart in these injuries +is much to be regretted.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>145</b>) <i>Entry</i>, in the seventh left intercostal space, in the +posterior axillary line; <i>exit</i>, immediately below the ninth +costal cartilage, close to the position of the gall bladder.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span></p> + +<p>This track in all probability involved the diaphragm twice, +both lungs and pleuræ, and passed immediately beneath the +heart. The liver was also perforated, but the spleen and +stomach probably escaped as far as could be judged from the +symptoms. The patient afterwards developed a pneumo-hæmo-thorax +on the right side. The immediate symptoms were great distress +in breathing and rapid irregular pulse. The difficulty in +respiration was probably in part accounted for by the injuries +to the lung and diaphragm. The pulse remained from 112 to 120 +for three days, at first soft and hardly perceptible, later +very irregular, and dropping one every fifth or sixth beat; and +it seemed fair to attribute this to the shock to the nervous +mechanism of the heart. The patient recovered from the chest +injury.</p> + +<p>In some other patients in whom the track passed close below the +heart a disturbance of the pulse rate was noted, but this was +in some cases a slowing, not below 48, in others quickening to +100, with irregularity both in force and beat.</p> + +<p>(<b>146</b>) <i>Entry</i>, in the fourth right interspace, 3 inches from +the middle line; <i>exit</i>, in the seventh left interspace, in the +mid-axillary line. This wound was received at a distance of +500-600 yards, but the bullet penetrated both sides of a stout +silver cigarette case and some cigarettes before entering the +body. There were minor signs of pulmonary injury, 'coughing day +and night,' and slight discoloration of the sputum on three or +four occasions. The respirations were quickened to 32, and as +much as ten days after the injury the pulse only beat 48 to the +minute; it then rose to 56, but beat in a very deliberate +manner.</p></div> + +<p>In other cases the signs were almost nil.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>147</b>) <i>Entry</i>, in the fourth right intercostal space 3/4 of an +inch from the sternum; <i>exit</i>, in the sixth left interspace in +the posterior axillary line. This patient had no symptoms, +beyond quickening of the pulse to 100, and a 'feeling of +tightness at the heart.' He shortly returned to active duty.</p> + +<p>(<b>148</b>) <i>Entry</i>, situated in the third right interspace 3 inches +from the sternal margin; <i>exit</i>, in the fourth left space 2¾ +inches from the sternal margin. In this case the bullet without +doubt passed through the anterior mediastinum, and slight +injury to the lung was evidenced by transient hæmoptysis.</p></div> + +<p>Some remarks regarding wounds of the thoracic vessels have already been +made in Chapter IV., where instances of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span> injury to the innominate and +left subclavian arteries are recounted. The escape of the large trunks +was generally quite as astonishing as in other parts of the body, +especially in the superior mediastinum.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>149</b>) <i>Entry</i>, over the first right intercostal space beneath +the centre of the clavicle; <i>exit</i>, at left anterior axillary +fold. The great vessels must have been crossed here in +immediate contact, and considerable hæmorrhage from the wound +of entry caused great anxiety; this ceased spontaneously, +however, and, beyond transient hæmoptysis and a right +pneumo-thorax, no further trouble occurred.</p> + +<p>(<b>150</b>) <i>Entry</i>, in the ninth interspace, just anterior to the +anterior axillary line; <i>exit</i>, through the right half of the +sternum, 1/2 an inch below the upper border. No primary +hæmorrhage of importance followed, but I believe this patient +subsequently died. The wound was received at a range of within +fifty yards.</p></div> + +<p><i>Wounds of the lungs.</i>—Numerically, pulmonary wounds formed the most +important series of visceral injuries met with in the thorax, the +frequency of incidence corresponding with the proportionate sectional +area occupied by the organs. Although these injuries did well, and +needed little interference on the part of the surgeon, many points of +interest were raised by them.</p> + +<p>Thus the comparative importance of the wound in the chest-wall to that +in the lung itself, was scarcely what, without actual experience, would +have been expected, the former proving so very much the more important +element of the two.</p> + +<p>The question of velocity on the part of the bullet took a very secondary +position in these injuries. I saw a number of cases in which the +patients estimated the range at which they received their wounds as from +30 to 50 yards, and although some of the wounds were of a severe type, +the increased gravity depended rather on the injury to the chest-wall +than to that of the lung. If the bullet passed by the intercostal space, +avoiding the rib, I very much doubt if the relative velocity was of any +importance, further than from the fact that a sufficiently low degree to +allow of lodgment of the bullet was distinctly unfavourable.</p> + +<p>In view of the general lack of significance in these injuries it was +interesting to note how very definite was the ill effect of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span> early +transport on the after course. This depended on the frequent development +of parietal hæmothorax in patients who were not kept absolutely at rest.</p> + +<p>The tracks produced in the lungs by the bullets were very minute, and in +the few cases in which opportunity arose for their examination <i>post +mortem</i> some little time after the infliction of the wound, there was +great difficulty in localising them. The slight damage incurred by the +pulmonary tissue is due to its elasticity and non-resistent character.</p> + +<p>Pulmonary hæmothorax was distinctly rare. Reasoning from the analogous +wounds of the liver, tracks scoring the surface of these organs might be +much more to be feared than clean perforations. The elasticity of the +lung tissue, however, must make such lesions rare. In point of fact, +there is no reason why a perforation by a bullet of small calibre should +be much more feared than a puncture from an exploring trocar, and the +danger of the two wounds is probably very nearly the same.</p> + +<p>The only points of importance as to the particular region of the lung +traversed were the distance from the periphery as affecting the probable +size of the vessels injured, and perhaps the implication of the base or +apex of the organ respectively. I am under the impression that wounds in +the apical region were somewhat more liable to be followed by the +development of pneumothorax, and possibly hæmothorax, while wounds at +the base gained their chief importance from the frequency of concurrent +injury to the abdominal viscera. I had no experience of the immediate +results of wound of the great vessels at the root of the lung, but +assume that they led to speedy death.</p> + +<p><i>Symptoms of wound of the lung.</i>—I shall describe the whole complex +usually observed, although it is obvious that the wound of the +chest-wall is responsible for a large proportion of the signs.</p> + +<p>The majority of these injuries were accompanied by a certain degree of +systemic shock, and this was more marked in wounds received at a short +range. The shock was, however, rather to be attributed to the injury to +the chest-wall and thoracic concussion than to that to the lung itself. +I think it<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span> may also be stated that few patients were inclined to walk +or remain in the erect position after receiving these wounds; this +feature was also noted in horses in whom a bullet passed through the +lungs.</p> + +<p>The remarks made as to the pain accompanying fractures of the ribs apply +equally here. Pain was not a prominent symptom, except in so far as the +actual impact caused temporary suffering. It was striking how often +patients who received wounds through the arm prior to the same bullet +traversing the chest appreciated the chest wound only, yet the chest +might pass unnoticed when a still more sensitive part was struck later, +as has been already mentioned in the section on wounds in general.</p> + +<p>Dyspnœa was not a prominent primary symptom. The patients sometimes +had 'all the wind knocked out of them' at the moment of impact, but when +seen at the Field hospitals a short time later, the respirations were +shallow, but easy and regular, and only moderately quickened; thus 24 +was a not uncommon rate. Naturally if accumulation of blood in the +pleura began early and continued, these remarks do not hold good; and +again in some older men of full-blooded type and the subjects of +recurrent attacks of bronchitis, a considerable degree of pain, +dyspnœa, and even cyanosis was sometimes present soon after the +injury. The complication of wound of the diaphragm has already been +referred to in this relation.</p> + +<p>Local respiratory immobility of the thoracic parietes and consequent +asymmetry of movement were constant. This was especially a marked +feature when the upper part of the chest was implicated on one side +only. It rather corresponded, however, to the local shock observed in +wounds of the limbs than to the instinctive immobility accompanying +fractures of the ribs; since, as already explained, small-calibre bullet +wounds of the ribs are not necessarily painful on movement, and the sign +existed even when the bullet had passed by an intercostal space. This +sign was naturally a transitory one.</p> + +<p>Hæmoptysis was a fairly constant sign, but sometimes quite absent when +no doubt could exist as to the perforation of the lung. As a rule, a +considerable quantity of blood might be coughed up shortly after the +injury; but I never knew this to be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span> sufficient in amount to give rise +to any misgivings as to danger from the hæmorrhage. After the first +evacuation of blood from the wounded lung, the sign varied much; in the +majority of instances the patients continued to expectorate small +quantities of blood mixed with mucus, for some three or four days, the +blood gradually assuming a coagulated condition. Sometimes only the +primary hæmoptysis was noted, and still more rarely the expectoration of +clots was continued for a week, or even longer. This probably depended +partly on personal idiosyncrasy, partly on the size of the vessels which +had been implicated in the track.</p> + +<p>Cough was not commonly the troublesome symptom noted in the contused +wounds of the lung seen in civil practice accompanying fracture of the +ribs. Moist sounds were usually audible on auscultation, but in many +cases over a very limited area and only on the first few days.</p> + +<p>Cellular emphysema was distinctly rare, and usually limited in extent: +thus I saw it in the posterior triangle of the neck alone in an apical +wound; over about a third of the upper part of the thorax in another +wound through the second intercostal space, and in this case oddly +enough the emphysema was the only sign of injury to the lung; and very +occasionally widely distributed—in the latter case there were also +usually multiple fractures of the ribs. Neither issue of air from the +external wound nor frothy blood was ever seen with small-calibre wounds, +but I saw one instance in a case of Martini-Henry wound.</p> + +<p><i>Pneumothorax</i> was also rare. I saw pneumothorax three times out of +about half a dozen Martini-Henry wounds, but I do not think it occurred +as often in 100 small-calibre wounds. The Martini-Henry wounds all +recovered; but convalescence was very prolonged, and the same remark to +a less degree holds good in the small-calibre cases.</p> + +<p>That the slow recovery in cases of pneumothorax in the Martini-Henry +wounds was due mainly to the size of the opening in the thoracic +parietes was, I think, proved by the fact that in the small-calibre +bullet wounds, followed by the development of pneumothorax, the external +wounds were usually large and irregular in type; also, that in the only<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span> +pneumothorax which I saw produced during an extraction operation, the +air was very rapidly absorbed. In the latter case, however, there was +little reason to conclude that wound of the lung had occurred primarily, +and certainly no opening existed at the time the thorax was incised.</p> + +<p><i>Hæmothorax.</i>—This was the most frequent and also the most interesting +of the complications of wound of the chest. In 90 per cent. or more of +the cases, the hæmorrhage was of parietal source, and due either to +direct injury to the intercostal vessels by the bullet or to laceration +by spicules of comminuted ribs. For this reason, the passage of the +bullet whether by an intercostal space, or through a rib, provided the +wound was not at the posterior part of the space where the artery +crosses, was a point of considerable prognostic importance. Exclusion of +the lung as the source of hæmorrhage was, I think, amply justified by +the absence of continuous recurrent or progressive hæmoptysis in the +majority of the cases, and by the very small trace of injury found in +the lungs of patients who died some weeks after the injury. In such it +was difficult to discriminate the tracks at all. I only happened to see +one case where free hæmoptysis, during the course of development of a +hæmothorax, pointed to the lung as the source of the blood.</p> + +<p>Hæmorrhage into the pleural cavity occurred in some degree in a very +large proportion of the chest wounds, but it was especially interesting +to note how greatly its extent was influenced by the amount of transport +to which the patients were subjected in the early stages after the +injury. During the early part of the campaign, on the western side, I +saw a large number of chest wounds, and had I been asked my opinion as +to the relative frequency of occurrence of hæmothorax I should have +placed it at about 30 per cent. The patients in these early battles +needed little wagon transport, and when sent down to the Base travelled +in comfortable ambulance trains. After the commencement of the march +from Modder River to Bloemfontein, however, these conditions were +changed, and all the chest as other cases were exposed to the necessity +of three days and nights' journey to the Stationary hospitals and +afterwards to the long journey to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span> Cape Town. Of these patients, at +least 90 per cent. suffered with hæmothorax of varying degrees of +severity.</p> + +<p>In some cases, the least common, signs of considerable intra-pleural +hæmorrhage immediately followed the wound; in others, the accumulation +of blood was gradual, and only manifest in any degree at the end of +three or four days, when it became stationary if the patient was kept at +rest. In a second series the hæmorrhage was of the recurrent variety; +these cases differing little in character from those of slight +continuous hæmorrhage. In a third, the bleeding was definitely of a +secondary character, corresponding with one of the classes of secondary +hæmorrhage described in Chapter IV., and occurring on the eighth or +tenth day from giving way of an imperfectly closed wounded vessel. In +either of the two latter classes the development of the hæmothorax often +corresponded with a journey, or with allowing the patient to get up.</p> + +<p>The general course of these effusions was towards spontaneous absorption +and recovery. Coagulation of the blood took place early, the fluid serum +separated, and tended to undergo absorption with some rapidity, leaving +a small amount of coagulum at the base, which evidenced its presence for +many weeks by a persistence of a certain degree of dulness on +percussion. Early coagulation, I think, accounted for the usual absence +of gravitation ecchymosis as a sign.</p> + +<p>The course to recovery was sometimes broken by signs of slight pleuritic +inflammation, which, as affecting the amount of effusion, will be spoken +of under the heading of symptoms. In some cases the amount of blood was +so great as to necessitate means being taken for its removal; in these a +reaccumulation often took place. Occasionally an empyema followed in +cases thus treated.</p> + +<p>The nature of the blood evacuated on tapping varied much. In very early +aspirations unchanged blood was often met with, but clot sometimes made +evacuation difficult and necessitated a second puncture. In the tappings +done at the end of a week or more a dark porter-like fluid was common, +while when suppuration was imminent a brick-red-coloured grumous fluid +replaced normal blood. In the cases where early incision was resorted +to, blood both fluid and in clots<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span> was often mixed with a certain +proportion of lymph flakes, perhaps indicating the part taken by +inflammatory reaction to the irritation of the clot in producing the +rise of temperature.</p> + +<p><i>Symptoms of hæmothorax.</i>—In the more severe cases of primary bleeding +the symptoms did not, as a rule, reach their full height until the third +or fourth day after the injury. The patients then often suffered +severely. The pulse and temperature rose, and to general symptoms of +loss of blood were added: occasional lividity of countenance; severe +dyspnœa, accompanied by inability to lie on the sound side or to +assume the supine position; absence of respiratory movement on the +injured side; pain, restlessness, cough, and sometimes continuance of +hæmoptysis, small clots usually being expectorated.</p> + +<p>Accompanying these symptoms were the usual physical signs of fluid in +the pleura in differing degrees and combination. Dulness of varying +extent up to complete absence of resonance on one side, often +accompanied in the incomplete cases by well-marked skodaic resonance +anteriorly. Loss of vocal resonance, and fremitus; œgophony, tubular +respiration over the root of the lung or at the upper limit of the +dulness, and more or less extensive displacement of the heart. Obvious +increase in girth, fulness of the intercostal spaces, or gravitation +ecchymosis was rare. The latter was most common in instances in which +multiple fracture of the ribs existed (see fig. 83). I think the rarity +of the last sign must have been due to the early coagulation of the +blood, and its retention by the pleura, as I saw well-marked gravitation +ecchymosis in one or two cases of mediastinal hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p>The above complex of symptoms was common to all the cases, but in the +slighter ones they gave rise to little trouble, and cleared up with +great rapidity.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig83.jpg" width="450" height="446" alt="Fig. 83." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 83.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Gravitation Ecchymosis in a case of Hæmothorax, +accompanying fracture of three ribs from within. The influence of the +fractures on the development of the ecchymosis is shown by the linear +arrangement of the discoloration</b></p> + +<p>The most interesting feature was offered by the temperature, as this was +very liable to lead one astray. A primary rise always occurred with the +collection of blood in the pleura, this reaching its height on the third +or fourth day, usually about 102° F. in well-marked cases; it then fell, +and in favourable instances remained normal. In a large number of cases, +however, where the amount of blood was considerable, this was not the +case, the primary fall not reaching the normal, and a second rise +occurred which reached the same height as before or higher. The second +rise was accompanied by sweating, quickened pulse, and the probability +of the development of an empyema had always to be considered. I believe +in most cases this secondary rise was an indication of a further +increase in the hæmorrhage, for the dulness usually increased in extent, +and such rises were often seen when the patient had been moved or taken +a journey. Again, the temperature often fell to normal after +paracentesis and removal of the blood, to rise again with a fresh +accumulation, which was not uncommon. I have already mentioned the large +proportional incidence of hæmothorax observed in the patients who had +to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a></span> travel down from Paardeberg, and I might instance another case +related to me by Dr. Flockemann of the German ambulance, which was very +striking. A Boer, wounded at Colesberg, developed a hæmothorax which +quieted down, and he was removed to Bloemfontein; on arrival at the +latter place the temperature rose, and other signs of fever suggested +the development of an empyema; an exploring needle, however, only +brought blood to light. After a short stay at Bloemfontein the symptoms +entirely subsided, and the man was sent to Kroonstadt, when an exactly +similar attack resulted, again quieting down with rest.</p> + +<p>Similar recurrent attacks of hæmorrhage and fever occurred, however, in +patients confined to their beds without moving after the first journey. +Some temperature charts, in illustration of this point, are added to the +cases quoted later. The explanation of the recurrent hæmorrhages is, I +think, to be found in the reduction of the intra-thoracic pressure with +coagulation and shrinkage of the clot in the pleura in the patients kept +quiet in bed, while in the patients who had to travel it was probably +the result of direct mechanical disturbance.</p> + +<p>In many of these cases a pleural rub was audible at the upper margin of +the dulness with the development of the fresh symptoms. Whether this was +due to actual pleurisy or to the rubbing of surfaces rough from the +breaking down of slight recent adhesions which had formed a barrier to +the effusion, I am unable to say, but the signs were fairly constant. In +some instances the increase in the amount of fluid was, no doubt, due to +pleural effusion resulting from irritation from the presence of +blood-clot, or perhaps the shifting of the latter; in these the +secondary rise of temperature may well be ascribed to the development of +pleurisy.</p> + +<p>I am inclined to believe, however, that the primary rise of temperature +was similar to that seen when blood accumulates in the peritoneal cavity +as the result of trauma, and the secondary rises in most cases to those +which we saw so frequently accompanying the interstitial secondary +hæmorrhages spoken of in Chapter IV., and are to be explained on the +theory of absorption of a blood ferment. The secondary rises<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a></span> always +occurred with a fresh effusion, often of blood, occasioning an +extension, which broke down probable light adhesions and exposed a fresh +area of normal pleural membrane to act as a surface for absorption.</p> + +<p>It is, of course, manifest that the fever might also be ascribed to the +infection of the clot or serum from without, and in the first cases I +saw I was inclined to take this view, since we had in every case the +primary wounds of chest-wall, and possibly of lung, and in some the +addition of a puncture by an exploring needle between the first and +second rise. After a wider experience, however, I abandoned the +infection theory, as it seemed opposed by the very infrequent sequence +of suppuration. The effect of simple removal of the blood or serum was +also often so striking as to strongly suggest that it alone was +responsible for the fever. Exactly the same result, moreover, followed +evacuation of the interstitial blood effusions already mentioned +elsewhere.</p> + +<p>The common course of all the cases of hæmothorax was to spontaneous +recovery, the rapidity of the subsidence of the signs depending mainly +on the quantity of the primary hæmorrhage, and the occurrence of further +increases. The blood serum tended to collect at the upper limit of the +original blood effusion (as was often proved on tapping), and this was +first absorbed; the clot deposited on the pleural surface and at the +basal part of the cavity was, however, not absorbed with the same +rapidity. In the majority of the patients when they left the hospitals, +at the end of six weeks on an average, some dulness and deficiency of +vesicular murmur always remained, and the clot and the surrounding +surface, irritated by its presence, will, no doubt, be responsible for +permanent adhesions in many cases. That such adhesions do form in the +majority of cases I feel certain, as, although these patients when they +left the hospital were to all intents and purposes apparently well, few +of them could undertake sustained exertion without getting short of +breath, and sometimes suffering from transitory pain, and for this +reason it became customary to invalid them home.</p> + +<p>In a small proportion of the cases empyema followed; but I never saw +this in any case that had neither been tapped nor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span> opened, and I saw +only one patient die from a chest wound uncomplicated by other injuries. +This case was an interesting one of recurrent hæmorrhage followed by +inflammatory troubles:—</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/tempchart2.jpg" width="450" height="291" alt="Temperature Chart 2." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Temperature Chart 2.—Secondary Hæmorrhages in a case of Hæmothorax. Case No. 151</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>151</b>) The wound was received at short range, probably at from +100 to 200 yards. <i>Entry</i>, 1 inch from the left axillary margin +in the first intercostal space; <i>exit</i>, at the back of the +right arm 1½ inch below the acromial angle; both pleuræ were +therefore crossed. The patient expectorated at first fluid, +then clotted, blood in considerable quantity. When brought into +the advanced Base hospital on the third day, there were signs +of blood in the left pleura, cellular emphysema over the right +side of the chest, and signs of collapse of the right lung. The +temperature chart gives shortly the course of the case: the +right pneumo-thorax cleared up spontaneously, also the +emphysema; but the left pleura needed tapping to relieve +symptoms of pressure on four occasions, the 13th, 15th, 19th, +and 25th days respectively. On the first two occasions blood +was removed, on the third blood serum only, and on the last +pus. The patient was relieved after each aspiration; after the +third, the temperature fell to normal, the general condition +also improved, and he promised to do well. None the less, +reaccumulation took place, the evacuated fluid assumed an +inflammatory character, and an incision to evacuate pus was +eventually followed by death on the twenty-seventh day. The +amount of hæmoptysis throughout was considerable, and the case +was possibly one of pulmonary hæmothorax, as after death no +source of hæmorrhage<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span> could be localised in the intercostal +space. The track in the lung was almost healed, and although a +part of it allowed the introduction of a probe for about an +inch, it could be traced no further even on section of the +organ, and no special vessel could be located as the original +bleeding spot.</p></div> + +<p><i>Empyema.</i>—I may here add the little that I have to say on this +subject. During the whole campaign the single case of primary empyema +that I saw was the one recorded below, which deserves special mention as +illustrating the disadvantage of extracting bullets on the field. Under +the conditions which necessarily accompanied this operation the +ensurance of asepsis was impossible, and the additional wound no doubt +proved the source of infection.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>152</b>) <i>Entry</i>, at the posterior margin of the sterno-mastoid +muscle, 2 inches above the clavicle; the bullet came to the +surface beneath the skin over the fifth rib, in the nipple line +of the right side. There was never any hæmoptysis, but the +patient suffered with some dyspnœa throughout. After a three +days' stay in the Field hospital, where the subcutaneous bullet +was removed, the patient was transported by wagon and train to +the Base, a journey of about 600 miles.</p> + +<p>On the fifth day pus escaped from the extraction wound, and +when the case was examined at the Base, the temperature was +101°, the pulse over 100, the respirations 30, and the whole +side of the chest was dull, with the exception of a patch of +boxy resonance over the apex anteriorly. On the following day +the chest was drained, and a considerable amount of pus +evacuated, which was mixed with breaking-down blood-clot. A +fortnight later a second operation had to be performed to +improve the drainage, and the patient made a tedious recovery.</p></div> + +<p>The following case well illustrates the symptoms in a severe case of +hæmothorax, and empyema following aspiration:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>153</b>) The patient was wounded at Paardeberg at a range of from +500 to 700 yards. <i>Entry</i>, just to the left of the episternal +notch; <i>exit</i>, in the fifth left interspace posteriorly, midway +between the spine and vertebral margin of the scapula. A +quantity of bright blood was brought up at once, and later +blood was coughed up in clots.</p> + +<p>There was no great pain at the moment of the injury; the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a></span> man +again got up to the firing line, and later walked two miles to +the Field hospital without aid. He remained here a week, when +he was sent down to the Base, and during the first three days' +journey in the wagon he began to get worse. On the fourth day +cough began to be very troublesome.</p> + +<p>When he arrived at the Base, fifteen days after the original +injury, there was much dyspnœa; the temperature was 102°, +and the pulse 110. The left side of the chest was dull +throughout; an aspirating needle was introduced, and a pint of +very dark liquid blood drawn off. The whole of the blood was +not removed on account of the very severe cough and pain which +the evacuation occasioned. The man appeared to steadily improve +until three weeks later, when the temperature, which throughout +had been uneven, became consistently high, and signs of fluid +at the base increased. An aspirating needle was introduced, and +16 ounces of pus were drawn off. Two days later a piece of rib +was resected (Mr. Pegg) and another pint of pus evacuated. +After this, rapid improvement took place, and in ten days the +man was able to be up and dressed, although a small amount of +discharge still persisted. He eventually made an excellent +recovery.</p></div> + +<p>Secondary empyemata not uncommonly followed incision of the chest, or +excision of a rib for draining a hæmothorax. These operations in the +early part of the campaign were more freely undertaken on the +supposition that rise of temperature and other symptoms of fever pointed +to incipient breaking down of the clot. Subsequent experience showed +this not to be the case, and early operations for drainage ceased to be +undertaken. In these operations a primary difficulty was met with in +effectively clearing out the clot, a drain had to be left, and +suppuration occurred later in a considerable proportion. The +suppurations were most troublesome; local adhesions formed, and the pus +collected in small pockets, which were difficult to find and to drain, +and even when the collections seemed to have been successfully dealt +with at the time, residual abscesses often followed at a very late date. +Thus, I saw a case with a contracted chest and a fresh abscess the day +before I left Cape Town, in whom I had advised and witnessed an +operation for the evacuation of clot in the presence of signs of fever a +week after my arrival in the country, nine months previously. I saw +another case where general infection<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a></span> followed incision of a hæmothorax, +but the patient fortunately recovered.</p> + +<p>The question of <i>pleurisy</i> has already been mentioned in connection with +hæmothorax; it no doubt accounted for secondary effusion in some cases, +and beyond this I have nothing to add to what has been there said.</p> + +<p><i>Pneumonia</i> was rare; there were occasionally signs of consolidation, +but, I think, quite as often in the opposite lung as in the one injured. +I never saw a fatal case, and I am inclined to think that when it +occurred it was as often the result of cold and exposure as of the +injury to the lung. Abscess of the lung I only saw once, and that in a +case in which the injury to the chest was complicated by paraplegia from +spinal injury and septicæmia, and it was possibly pyæmic.</p> + +<p><i>Diagnosis.</i>—No difficulties special to small-calibre wounds were +experienced, except such as have been already dealt with. The only class +of case which frequently gave rise to difficulty was hæmothorax. Here +two points especially needed consideration. (1) <i>The source of the +hæmorrhage as parietal or visceral.</i> As has been already foreshadowed, +this was mainly to be decided by the amount and persistence of the +hæmoptysis, but naturally free hæmoptysis did not negative concurrent +parietal bleeding. Then the actual source of the bleeding other than +from the lung had to be considered; in the great majority of cases the +intercostal vessels were responsible, and attention to the course of the +tracks often allowed this to be definitely decided upon.</p> + +<p>A case included in the chapter on Injuries to the Blood Vessels (No. 5, +p. 127) is of great interest in this particular; in that instance +feebleness of the radial pulse, together with the position of the wound, +was a valuable indication of injury to the subclavian artery, but +weakened somewhat by the fact of retention of the bullet, and hence +uncertainty as to the exact course that it had taken, and as to whether +the bullet itself was not responsible for pressure on the vessel. Such +indications, however, should make one very chary of interference with a +hæmothorax, even with extremely urgent symptoms, in the light of our +present knowledge of the nature of the lesions to the great vessels<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a></span> +produced by small-calibre bullets, and their tendency to be incomplete.</p> + +<p>(2) <i>The imminence of suppuration or its actual occurrence.</i>—In most +cases it sufficed to preserve an expectant attitude, and in the +persistence or increase of symptoms, to have recourse to an exploratory +puncture as the best means of solution of the difficulty.</p> + +<p><i>Prognosis.</i>—The prognosis both as to life and as to subsequent +ill-effects was remarkably good; in many cases of uncomplicated injury +to the lung the patients rejoined their regiments at the end of a month +or six weeks. In the more serious cases complicated by the collection of +blood in the pleura, convalescence was more prolonged, and an average +time of six to eight weeks often elapsed before the patients could be +safely discharged from hospital. In the more serious a certain amount of +dulness always persisted at this time over the base of the lung, and the +chest was usually somewhat contracted on the injured side, with evidence +in the way of decreased vesicular murmur that the lung was still not +free from compression. With regard to the persistence of dulness on +percussion, it is well to bear in mind that a thin layer of blood +apparently produces as serious impairment of resonance as a much larger +quantity of serum. The signs appeared to favour the view that the space +necessary for the location of the hæmorrhage had been obtained at the +expense of the lung rather than by distension of the thoracic parietes, +and also, I think, denoted the presence of adhesions. Possibly they will +entirely disappear with the return of full excursion movements of +respiration, the latter being often still somewhat restricted when the +patients left hospital. All the patients with such signs were liable to +attacks of pain and shortness of breath on actual bodily exertion. I +happened to meet with an officer, the subject of a Lee-Metford wound of +the thorax, sustained five years previously, and he told me that he was +nine months before he could take active exercise without feeling short +of breath.</p> + +<p>As to the cases of hæmothorax and empyema which needed drainage, all did +well; but expansion of the lung was much less satisfactory than would +have been expected,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span> probably on account of especially firm adhesions. +The importance of concurrent injury I need hardly dwell on; but I might +add that perforation of one or both arms, the most common one, did not +materially affect the general statements above made.</p> + +<p><i>Treatment.</i>—In the early stages of the pulmonary wounds rest was the +all-important indication, and when this was assured few serious cases of +hæmothorax occurred. Beyond simple rest, the administration of opium +with a view to checking internal hæmorrhage was used with good effect. +The wounds needed simple dressing only.</p> + +<p>The treatment of hæmothorax at a later date, however, was of much +interest and difficulty. I think the following lines may be laid down +for guidance in such cases:—</p> + +<p>(i) Hæmothorax, even of considerable severity, will undergo spontaneous +cure. An early rise of temperature may be disregarded.</p> + +<p>(ii) Tapping the chest is indicated when pressure signs on the lung are +sufficiently severe to cause serious symptoms, and the removal of the +blood undoubtedly shortens the period of recovery, as well as relieves +symptoms.</p> + +<p>In such cases the collection of blood has usually been rapid and +continuous; hence a fresh hæmorrhage is always probable when the local +pressure has been removed. Tapping therefore should not necessarily mean +complete evacuation, and should be followed by careful firm binding up +of the chest, the administration of opium, and the most stringent +precautions for rest.</p> + +<p>(iii) Tapping may be needed as a diagnostic aid, and in such +circumstances as much fluid as can be removed should be evacuated with +the same precautions as mentioned in the last paragraph.</p> + +<p>(iv) Tapping may be indicated for the evacuation of serum expressed from +the blood-clot, or due to pleural effusion, on the same lines as in any +other collection of fluid in the pleural cavity.</p> + +<p>(v) Early free incision is, as a rule, to be steadfastly avoided. Some +cases already quoted fully illustrate its disadvantages.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a></span></p> + +<p>(vi) Cases in which an incision and the ligature of a parietal artery +are indicated are very rare. I never saw such a one myself.</p> + +<p>(vii) If a hæmothorax suppurates, it must be treated on the ordinary +lines of an empyema. In view of the constant formation of adhesions and +difficulty in drainage, a portion of a rib should always be resected in +order to ensure sufficient space for after-treatment. The cavities, as a +rule, are better irrigated, the usual precautions being taken where +there is any reason to fear that the lung is still in communication with +the cavity.</p> + +<p>Care in carrying out asepsis in tapping, which should be performed with +an aspirator, need hardly be more than mentioned. It will be noted that +in some of the cases quoted suppuration followed tapping, but it must be +remembered that in these the two primary wounds already existed as +possible channels of infection.</p> + +<p>Retained bullets of small calibre in the thoracic cavity were not +common, unless the lodgment had occurred in the bodies of the vertebræ. +I saw very few. Shrapnel bullets and fragments of shells, however, were, +in proportion to the frequency of wounds from such projectiles, more +commonly retained. The rules to be followed in such cases do not +materially deviate from those to be observed in the body generally.</p> + +<p>When the bullet is causing no trouble, and is lodged in either the bone +of the spine or the lung substance, no interference is advisable. When, +on the other hand, the bullet as viewed by the X-rays is seen to be in +the pleural cavity, and any symptoms of its presence exist, it may be +justifiable to remove it. I saw this done in one case for the removal of +a shrapnel bullet from the lower reflexion of the pleura on account of +fixed pain and tenderness complained of by the patient. The bullet, a +shrapnel, had perforated the arm, which the patient was sure was by his +side at the moment of injury, and the X-rays showed it to lie at the +bottom of the pleural cavity, where we assumed it had fallen. When, +however, the bullet was removed by Mr. Watson, he found that the fixed +pain and tenderness had been the result of a fracture of a rib from the +inner side, not involving loss of continuity; hence the actual<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a></span> +indication for the operation had been a delusive one, since the bullet +had not fallen, but expended its last force in injuring the rib. The +patient made an excellent recovery, and rejoined his regiment at the end +of six weeks. I saw several cases in which the bullet was lodged in +either the lung or bones of the spine do well with no interference. The +great disadvantage of primary removal in inducing an artificial +pneumo-thorax and in laying open a hæmothorax is obvious.</p> + +<p>In case of lodgment of the bullet in the lung, bearing in mind the +infrequency of untoward symptoms, the latter should be watched for prior +to interference.</p> + +<p>The following cases illustrate some typical instances of wound of chest +accompanied by the development of hæmothorax:—</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/tempchart3.jpg" width="450" height="230" alt="Temperature Chart 3." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Temperature Chart 3.—Primary Hæmothorax, with rise of +temperature. Secondary rise, with fresh effusion and pneumonia. +Spontaneous recovery. Case No. 154</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>154</b>) <i>Severe hæmothorax. Spontaneous recovery.</i>—Wounded at +Modder River at a distance of 30 yards. <i>Entry</i>, at the +junction of the left anterior axillary fold with the +chest-wall; <i>exit</i>, immediately to the left of the seventh +dorsal spinous process. The patient arrived at the Base with +signs of an extensive hæmothorax, accompanied by a temperature +which reached 102° on the fourth day, and on the evening of the +tenth 103°. The man was very ill, and an exploring needle was +inserted, by which about an ounce of blood was evacuated. The +signs of fluid in the left pleura were accompanied by those of +consolidation over the lower<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</a></span> fourth of the right lung, and the +sputa were rusty. Evidence of perforation of the left axillary +artery existed in feebleness of the radial pulse; and there was +musculo-spiral paralysis.</p> + +<p>After the preliminary puncture, the man refused any further +operative treatment, although a second rise of temperature +commenced on the fifteenth day, culminating in a temperature of +103.2° on the eighteenth. The further treatment of the patient +consisted in the ensurance of rest and the alleviation of pain. +A steady fall in the temperature extended over another three +weeks, together with diminution in the signs of fluid in the +pleura. At the end of seventy-four days the man was sent home, +some slight dulness at the left base, and contraction of the +chest sufficient to influence the spine in the way of lateral +curvature, being the only remaining signs.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/tempchart4.jpg" width="450" height="251" alt="Temperature Chart 4." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Temperature Chart 4.—Primary Hæmothorax. Secondary rise +of temperature, with increase in the effusion. Spontaneous recovery. +Case No. 155</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>155</b>) <i>Severe hæmothorax. Secondary effusion. Spontaneous +recovery.</i>—Wounded at Koodoosberg Drift, at a distance of 200 +yards. <i>Entry</i>, at angle of the right scapula; <i>exit</i>, at the +junction of the left anterior axillary fold with the +chest-wall. No signs of spinal cord injury. The patient was +brought in from the field twelve miles by an ambulance wagon on +the second day, and in crossing the Modder River he was +accidentally upset into the stream. For the first four days +there was no hæmoptysis, but for the succeeding nine days small +brightish red clots were expectorated. There was some +tenderness over the ribs from the fifth to the ninth in the +axillary line, and on the ninth day some gravitation ecchymosis +appeared over the same region. Cough<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a></span> was an early troublesome +symptom in this case, and when admitted to the Base hospital, +about the seventh day, there was evidence of fluid extending +about a third of the way up the back.</p> + +<p>On the tenth day after admission a pleural rub was detected at +the upper margin of the dulness, and the latter shortly +extended upwards over a little more than half the back. +Meanwhile, there was no further hæmoptysis, respiration was +fairly easy, 24 per minute, but accompanied by slight +dilatation of the alæ nasi, and the temperature, which had been +ranging from 99° to 100°, began to rise steadily, on the +fifteenth day reaching 102.5°. The patient refused even an +exploratory puncture, and was treated on the expectant plan. +The temperature slowly subsided, with a steady improvement in +the physical signs, and at the end of about ten weeks he left +for home with only slight dulness and incapacity for active +exertion remaining. (Now again on active service.)</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/tempchart5.jpg" width="450" height="382" alt="Temperature Chart 5." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Temperature Chart 5.—Hæmothorax, primary and secondary +rises of temperature, on each occasion falling on the evacuation of the +blood. Case No. 156</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>156</b>) <i>Severe hæmothorax. Recurrent secondary effusion. Tapping +on two occasions. Cure.</i>—The patient was wounded at +Paardeberg, and arrived at the Base on the eighteenth day. +<i>Entry</i>, below the first rib, just external to its junction +with the costal cartilage; <i>exit</i>, through the ninth rib, just +within the posterior axillary line. The whole right side of the +chest was dull, with signs of the presence of fluid, the heart +being displaced to the left. There was considerable distress; +the respirations averaged 40, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</a></span> pulse 100, and the +temperature reached 101.5° the first evening after arrival.</p> + +<p>On the nineteenth day the thorax was aspirated (Mr. Hanwell) +and 50 ounces of dirty red-coloured fluid, half clot, half +serum, were evacuated. Considerable relief was afforded; the +respirations became slightly less frequent; the heart returned +to a normal position, and distant tubular respiration was +audible. The temperature dropped to normal the third day after +evacuation of the fluid, but on the sixth day it again +commenced to rise, and meanwhile fluid again began to collect.</p> + +<p>On the twenty-sixth day a second aspiration resulted in the +evacuation of 35 ounces of bloody fluid in which flakes of +lymph were found. Three days later the temperature became +normal. The respirations fell to 22, and the patient made an +uninterrupted recovery.</p></div> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 443px;"> +<img src="images/tempchart6.jpg" width="443" height="450" alt="Temperature Chart 6." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Temperature Chart 6.—Wound of Lung. Secondary +development of Hæmothorax, with rise of temperature. Spontaneous +recovery. Case No 157</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>157</b>) <i>Moderate hæmothorax. Secondary effusion at the end of +twenty days. Spontaneous recovery.</i>—Wounded at Paardeberg; +range from 700 to 1,000 yards. <i>Entry</i>, in the centre of the +second right intercostal space, anteriorly; <i>exit</i>, at the +level of the sixth rib posteriorly, through the scapula, close +to its vertebral margin.</p> + +<p>The patient arrived at the Base on the sixth day; he said he +expectorated some blood at the end of about ten minutes after +being shot, and experienced a 'half-choking sensation.' A small +quantity of phlegm and occasional clots had been expectorated<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</a></span> +since. He had walked about a good deal; movement occasioned +cough, and he became 'blown' very rapidly.</p> + +<p>On admission there were signs of fluid in the lower third of +the pleural cavity, but no general symptoms beyond an evening +rise of temperature to an average of 99°. About the twentieth +day the temperature commenced to rise, and on the twenty-third +and four following evenings reached 102°. The fever was +accompanied by some distress, and a well-marked increase in the +physical signs of the presence of fluid in the chest. The pulse +rose to 96, and the respirations considerably above the average +of 24, which was at first noted. A strictly expectant attitude +was maintained, and the temperature steadily fell in a curve +corresponding to the rise, gradually reaching the normal at the +end of a week. The physical signs at the base steadily cleared +up, and at the end of six weeks the patient returned to England +convalescent.</p></div> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI</h2> + +<h3>INJURIES TO THE ABDOMEN</h3> + + +<p>Perhaps no chapter of military surgery was looked forward to with more +eager interest than that dealing with wounds of the abdomen. In none was +greater expectation indulged in with regard to probable advance in +active surgical treatment, and in none did greater disappointment lie in +store for us.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the solid viscera, it is true, proved to be of minor +importance when produced by bullets of small calibre; but wounds of the +intestinal tract, although they showed themselves capable of spontaneous +recovery in a certain proportion of the cases observed, afforded but +slight opportunity for surgical skill, and results generally deviated +but slightly from those of past experience. Such success as was met with +depended rather on the mechanical genesis and nature of the wounds than +upon the efforts of the surgeon, and operative surgery scored but few +successes.</p> + +<p>It is true that to the Civil Surgeon accustomed to surroundings replete +with every modern appliance and convenience, and the possibility of +exercising the most stringent precautions against the introduction of +sepsis from without, abdominal operations presented difficulties only +faintly appreciated in advance; but this alone scarcely accounted for +the want of success attending the active treatment of wounds of the +intestine when occasion demanded. Failure was rather to be referred to +the severity of the local injury to be dealt with, or to the operations +being necessarily undertaken at too late a date. Many fatalities, again, +were due to the association of other injuries, a large proportion of the +wound tracks involving other organs or parts beyond the boundaries of +the abdominal cavity.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</a></span></p> + +<p>The frequent association of wounds of the thoracic cavity with those of +the abdomen afforded many of the most striking examples of immunity from +serious consequences as a result of wound of the pleura. It must be +conceded that in a large number of such injuries only the extreme limits +of the pleural sac were encroached upon, yet in some the tracks passed +through the lungs, although without serious consequences. Under the +heading of injury to the large intestine a somewhat special form of +pleural septicæmia will be referred to.</p> + +<p>It may at once be stated that such favourable results as occurred in +abdominal injuries were practically limited to wounds caused by bullets +of small calibre, and that, although in the short chapter dealing with +shell injuries a few recoveries from visceral wounds will be mentioned, +I never met with a penetrating visceral injury from a Martini-Henry or +large sporting bullet which did not prove fatal.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the abdominal wall.</i>—It is somewhat paradoxical to say that +these injuries possessed special interest from their comparative rarity +of occurrence, since they were not of intrinsic importance. Their +infrequency depended on the difficulty of striking the body in such a +plane as to implicate the belly wall alone, and their interest in the +diagnostic difficulty which they gave rise to.</p> + +<p>In many cases the position of the openings and the strongly oval or +gutter character possessed by them were sufficient proof of the +superficial passage of the bullet; in others we had to bear in mind that +the position of the patient when struck was rarely that of rest in the +supine position, in which the surgical examination was made, and +considerable difficulty arose. Some superficial tracks crossing the +belly wall have already been referred to in the chapter on wounds in +general and in that dealing with injuries to the chest, in which the +above characters sufficed to indicate that penetration of the abdominal +cavity had not occurred. In other instances a definite subcutaneous +gutter could be traced, and often in these a well-marked cord in the +abdominal wall corresponding to the track could be felt at a later date. +Again, limitation to the abdominal wall was sometimes proved by the +position of the retained bullet, or sometimes by the presence in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</a></span> +track of foreign bodies carried in with the projectile. See case 160.</p> + +<p>Fig. 84 illustrates an example where the limitation to the abdominal +wall was evident on inspection. Here the division of the thick muscles +of the abdominal wall had led to the formation of a swelling exactly +similar to that seen after the subcutaneous rupture of a muscle, and two +soft fluctuating tumours bounded by contracted muscle existed in the +substance of the oblique and rectus muscles.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig84.jpg" width="450" height="337" alt="Fig. 84." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 84.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Wound of Abdominal Wall (Lee-Metford). Division +of fibres of external oblique and rectus abdominis muscles. Case 159</b></p> + +<p>The cases which presented the most serious diagnostic difficulty in this +relation were those in which the wound was situated in the thicker +muscular portions of the lower part of the abdominal and pelvic walls. +Such a case is illustrated in the chapter on fractures (see fig. 55, p. +191). I saw one or two such instances, in which only the exploration +necessary for treatment of the fracture decided the point. In many of +the wounds affecting the lateral portion of the abdominal wall the +question of penetration could never be definitely cleared up, as wounds +of the colon sometimes gave rise to absolutely no symptoms.</p> + +<p>In a certain proportion of the injuries the peritoneal cavity<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</a></span> was no +doubt perforated without the infliction of any further visceral injury, +and in these also the doubt as to the occurrence of penetration was +never solved.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>158</b>) <i>Wound of belly wall.</i>—Wounded at Modder River. <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), 2 inches below the centre of the left iliac crest; +<i>exit</i>, 1½ inch above and internal to the left anterior +superior iliac spine. The patient was on horseback at the time +of the injury and did not fall; he got down, however, and lay +on the field an hour, whence he was removed to hospital. +Probably the track pierced the ilium, and remained confined to +the abdominal wall. There were no signs of visceral injury.</p> + +<p>(<b>159</b>) Cape Boy. Wounded at Modder River. <i>Entry</i> (Lee-Metford), +immediately above and outside right anterior superior spine; +<i>exit</i>, 1½ inch below and to right of umbilicus. A +well-marked swelling corresponded with division of the fibres +of the oblique muscles and of the rectus, and on palpation a +hollow corresponding with the track was felt. The abdominal +muscles were exceptionally well developed (fig. 84).</p> + +<p>(<b>160</b>) Wounded at Magersfontein while lying prone. <i>Entry</i>, +irregular, oblique, and somewhat contused, over the eighth left +rib, in the anterior axillary line; <i>exit</i>, a slit wound +immediately above and to the left of the umbilicus. The bullet +struck a small circular metal looking-glass before entering, +hence the irregularity of the wound. The patient developed a +hæmothorax, but no abdominal signs; the former was probably +parietal in origin, secondary to the fractured rib, and the +whole wound non-penetrating as far as the abdominal cavity was +concerned.</p> + +<p>(<b>161</b>) Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 1½ inch +external to and 1/2 inch below the left posterior superior +iliac spine; <i>exit</i>, 1 inch internal horizontally to the left +anterior superior spine.</p> + +<p>No signs of intra-peritoneal injury were noted, but free +suppuration occurred in left loin; the ilium was tunnelled.</p> + +<p>The same patient was wounded by a Jeffrey bullet in the hand; +the third metacarpal was pulverised, although the bullet, which +was longitudinally flanged, was retained.</p> + +<p>(<b>162</b>) Wounded outside Heilbron. <i>Entry</i>, below the eighth right +costal cartilage; <i>exit</i>, below the eighth cartilage of the +left side. The wound of entry was slightly oval; that of exit +continued out as a 'flame'-like groove for 2 inches. A week +later the wound track could be palpated as an evident hard +continuous cord.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</a></span></p> + +<p><i>Penetration of the intestinal area without definite evidence of +visceral injury.</i>—This accident occurred with a sufficient degree of +frequency to obtain the greatest importance, both from the point of view +of diagnosis and prognosis, and as affecting the question of operative +interference. Amongst the cases reported below a number occurred in +which it was impossible to settle the question whether injury to the +bowel had occurred or not, and I will here shortly give what explanation +I can for the apparent escape of the intestine from serious injury.</p> + +<p>We may first recall the general question of the escape of structures +lying to one or other side of the track of the bullet. I believe that +there can be no doubt as to the accuracy of the remarks already made as +to the escape of such structures as the nerves by means of displacement, +and that the occurrence of such escapes is manifestly dependent on the +degree of fixity of the nerve or the special segment of it implicated. +The general tendency of the tissues around the tracks to escape +extensive destruction from actual contusion has also been referred to, +and is, I think, indisputable.</p> + +<p>If these observations be accepted, I think there can be no difficulty in +allowing that the small intestine is exceptionally well arranged to +escape injury. First of all, it is very moveable; secondly, it is so +arranged that in certain directions a bullet may pass almost parallel to +the long axis of the coils; thirdly, it is elastic, capable of +compression, and light, and hence offers but a small degree of +resistance to the passage of the bullet across the abdominal cavity.</p> + +<p>Certain evidence both clinical and pathological supports the contention +that the small intestine may escape injury from the passing bullet.</p> + +<p>First of all, the fact may be broadly stated that injuries to the small +intestine were fatal in the great majority of certainly diagnosed cases, +while, on the other hand, many tracks crossed the area occupied by the +small intestine without serious symptoms of any kind resulting. +Secondly, experience showed that when the bullet crossed the line of the +fixed portions of the large intestine the gut rarely escaped, and that, +although a considerable proportion of these cases recovered +spontaneously,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a></span> in a large number of them immediate symptoms, or +secondary complications, clearly substantiated the nature of the +original injury. As far as my experience went, however, I never saw any +instance in which an undoubted injury of the small intestine was +followed by the development of a local peritoneal suppuration and +recovery, a sequence by no means uncommon in the case of wounds of the +large intestine. Although, therefore, I am not prepared to deny the +possibility of spontaneous recovery from an injury to the small +intestine, under certain conditions which will be stated later, I +believe that in the immense majority of cases in which a bullet crossed +the small intestine area without the supervention of serious symptoms, +the small intestine escaped perforating injury.</p> + +<p>Beyond the clinical evidence offered above, certain pathological +observations support the view that the intestine escapes perforation by +displacement. Most of my knowledge on this subject was derived from the +limited number of abdominal sections I performed on cases of injury to +the small intestine, and may be summed up as follows.</p> + +<p>The small intestine may present evidence of lateral contusion in the +shape of elongated ecchymoses, either parallel, oblique, or transverse +to its long axis. These ecchymoses resemble in extent and outline those +which ordinarily surround a wound of the intestinal wall produced by a +bullet (see fig. 87, p. 418).</p> + +<p>The wall of the small intestine may be wounded to an extent short of +perforation, either the peritoneal coat alone being split, or the wound +implicating the muscular coat and producing an appearance similar to +that seen when the intestine is dragged upon during an operation, but +without so much gaping of the edges (see fig. 85, p. 416).</p> + +<p>I met with these conditions in association with co-existing complete +perforations of the small intestine, and in one case of intra-peritoneal +hæmorrhage in which no complete perforation was discoverable (No. 169, +p. 432).</p> + +<p>The implication and perforation of the small intestine are to some +extent influenced by the direction of the wound. A striking case is +included below, No. 201, in which a bullet passed from the loin to the +iliac fossa on each side of the body, approximately<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_413" id="Page_413">[Pg 413]</a></span> parallel to the +course of the inner margin of the colon, and I also saw some other +wounds in this direction in which no evidence of injury to the small +intestine was detected, and which got well. Again wounds from flank to +flank were, as a rule, very fatal; but I saw more than one instance +where these wounds were situated immediately below the crest of the +ilium, in which the intestine escaped injury (see case 171). A very +striking observation was made by Mr. Cheatle in such a wound. The +patient died as a result of a double perforation of both cæcum and +sigmoid flexure; none the less the bullet had crossed the small +intestine area without inflicting any injury.</p> + +<p>The sum of my experience, in fact, was to encourage the belief that, +unless the intestine was struck in such a direction as to render lateral +displacement an impossibility, the gut often escaped perforation.</p> + +<p>As a rule, the wounds of the abdomen which from their position proved +the most dangerous to the intestine were—</p> + +<p>1. Wounds passing from one flank to the other were very dangerous, as +crossing complicated coils of the small intestine, and two fixed +portions of the colon. This danger was most marked when the wounds were +situated between the eighth rib in the mid axillary line and the crest +of the ilium; above this level the liver, or possibly liver and stomach, +were sometimes alone implicated, and the cases did well. Again, when the +wounds crossed the false pelvis the patients sometimes escaped all +injury to viscera.</p> + +<p>2. Antero-posterior wounds in the small intestine area were very fatal +if the course was direct; in such the small intestine seldom escaped +injury.</p> + +<p>3. Wounds with a certain degree of obliquity from anterior wall to +flank, or from flank to loin, were on the other hand comparatively +favourable, as the small intestine often escaped, and if any gut was +wounded, it was often the colon.</p> + +<p>4. Vertical wounds implicating the chest and abdomen, or the abdomen and +pelvis, were on the whole not very unfavourable. For instance, when the +bullet entered by the buttock and emerged below the umbilicus, a number +of patients escaped fatal injury; this depended on the comparatively +good prognosis in wounds of the rectum and bladder. A good many +patients<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_414" id="Page_414">[Pg 414]</a></span> in whom the bullet entered by the upper part of the loin, and +escaped 1½ inch within the anterior superior spine of the ilium, also +did well. The same holds good when the wounds either entered or emerged +under the anterior costal margin of the thorax, either prior to or after +traversing the thorax.</p> + +<p>Wounds passing directly backward from the iliac regions were in my +experience very unfavourable; but I believe mainly as a result of +hæmorrhage from the iliac arteries.</p> + +<p><i>The occurrence of wounds of the abdomen of an 'explosive' +character.</i>—The vast majority of the abdominal wounds observed in the +Stationary or Base hospitals were of the type dimensions. A certain +number of the abdominal injuries which proved fatal on the field or +shortly afterwards were described as explosive in character, and were +referred by the observers to the employment of expanding bullets.</p> + +<p>A few words on this subject seem necessary, because it seems doubtful +whether such injuries could be produced by any of the forms of expanding +bullet of small calibre in use, unless the track crossed one of the +bones in the abdominal or pelvic wall. That this was sometimes the case +there is no doubt: thus I saw two cases in which the splenic flexure of +the colon was wounded, in which the external opening was large, and a +comminuted fracture of the ribs of the left side existed. One can well +believe that bullets passing through the pelvic bones might 'set up' to +a considerable extent, and although I never happened to see such a case, +an explanation of some of the wounds described by others might be found +in this occurrence.</p> + +<p>In instances in which the soft parts alone were perforated, I am +disinclined to believe that bullets of small calibre, either regulation +or soft-nosed, were responsible for the injuries. I had the opportunity +of examining two Mauser bullets of the Jeffreys variety which crossed +the abdomen and caused death. In the first (figured on page 94, fig. 40) +very little alteration beyond slight shortening had occurred. In the +second the deformity was almost the same, except that the side of the +bullet was indented, probably from impact with some object prior to its +entry into the body. In each case the bullet was of course travelling at +a low rate of velocity;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_415" id="Page_415">[Pg 415]</a></span> hence no very strong inference can be drawn +from either. In the case of the second specimen, which was removed by +Mr. Cheatle, a remarkable observation was made, which tends to throw +some light on one possible mode of production of large exit apertures. +This bullet crossed the cæcum, making two small type openings; but +later, when it crossed the sigmoid flexure, it tore two large irregular +openings in the gut. This might be explained on the ground that the +velocity was so small as only just to allow of perforation, which +therefore took the nature of a tear. I am inclined to suggest, as a more +likely explanation, that the spent bullet turned head over heels in its +course across the abdomen, and made lateral or irregular impact with the +last piece of bowel it touched. A slightly greater degree of force would +have allowed a similar large and irregular opening to be made in the +abdominal wall also.</p> + +<p>In this relation the question will naturally be raised as to how far the +explosive appearances may have been due to high velocity alone on the +part of the bullet. I am disinclined from my general experience to +believe that explosive injuries of the soft parts were to be thus +explained. On the other hand, I believe that the possession of a low +degree of velocity very greatly increased the danger in abdominal +wounds. I believe that the bowel was, under these circumstances, less +likely to escape by displacement, and was more widely torn when wounded; +again, that inexact impact led to increase of size in the external +apertures, and the bullet was of course more often retained.</p> + +<p>Mr. Watson Cheyne<a name="FNanchor_19_19" id="FNanchor_19_19"></a><a href="#Footnote_19_19" class="fnanchor">[19]</a> published a very remarkable instance of one of the +dangers of an injury from a spent bullet, in which, in spite of +non-penetration of the abdominal cavity, the small intestine was +ruptured in two places.</p> + +<p>I believe the majority of the wounds designated as explosive were the +result of the passage of large leaden bullets, either of the +Martini-Henry or Express type. The small opportunity of observing such +injuries in the hospitals of course depended on the fact that the +majority were rapidly fatal.</p> + +<p><i>Nature of the anatomical lesion in wounds of the intestine.</i>—The +openings in the parietal peritoneum tended to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_416" id="Page_416">[Pg 416]</a></span> assume the slit or star +forms, probably on account of the elasticity of the membrane. A diagram +of one of these forms is appended to fig. 89. In this instance the +opening in the peritoneum was made from the abdominal aspect, prior to +the escape of the bullet from the cavity, and on the impact of the tip, +the long axis of the bullet was oblique to the surface of the abdominal +wall.</p> + +<p>In the intestinal wall the openings varied in character according to the +mode of impact.</p> + +<p>In some cases the gut was merely contused by lateral contact of the +passing bullet. The result of this was evidenced later by the presence +of localised oval patches of ecchymosis. These were identical in +appearance with the patches shown surrounding the wounds in fig. 87.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig85.jpg" width="450" height="327" alt="Fig. 85." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 85.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Lateral Slit in Small Intestine produced by +passage of bullet. Slit somewhat obscured by deposition of inflammatory +lymph. (St. Thomas's Hospital Museum)</b></p> + +<p>More forcible lateral impact produced a split of the peritoneum, or of +this together with the muscular coat. Such a lateral slit is shown in +fig. 85, although the clearness of outline is somewhat impaired by the +presence of a considerable amount of inflammatory lymph.</p> + +<p>Fig. 86 exhibits a lateral injury of a more pronounced form. The bullet +here struck the most prominent portion of the under surface of the +bowel, and produced a circular perforation not very unlike one produced +by rectangular impact, except in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_417" id="Page_417">[Pg 417]</a></span> the lesser degree of eversion of the +mucous membrane. Here again the appearance is somewhat altered by the +presence of a considerable amount of lymph, but this is of less +importance in this figure because the lymph is localised to the portion +of the bowel in the immediate neighbourhood of the opening which had +suffered contusion and erasion.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig86.jpg" width="450" height="427" alt="Fig. 86." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 86.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Gutter Wound of Small Intestine caused by +lateral impact. Position of shallow portion of gutter indicated by +deposition of inflammatory lymph. Circular perforation. (St. Thomas's +Hospital Museum)</b></p> + +<p>Fig. 87, <span class="smcap">a b</span>, illustrates a symmetrical perforation of the small +intestine; the aperture of entry (<span class="smcap">a</span>) is roughly circular, and a ring of +mucous membrane protrudes and partially closes the opening. The aperture +of exit is a curved slit, again partially occluded by the mucous +membrane. The same amount of difference between the two apertures did +not always exist; in many cases both were circular, and apparently +symmetrical. Beyond this I have seen three apertures in close proximity, +two lying on the same aspect of the bowel, and the first of these was no +doubt an opening due to lateral impact similar to that seen in fig. 86. +In the recent condition little difference existed between the three +apertures.</p> + +<p>The localised ecchymosis surrounding the apertures is quite +characteristic of this form of injury, and is a valuable aid to finding +the openings during an operation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_418" id="Page_418">[Pg 418]</a></span></p> + +<p>Fig. 88 shows the interior of the same segment of bowel, as fig. 87. It +shows the localised ecchymosis as seen from the inner surface, here +rather more extensive from the fact that the blood spreads more readily +in the submucous tissue.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 270px;"> +<img src="images/fig87.jpg" width="270" height="450" alt="Fig. 87." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 87.—Perforating Wounds of Small Intestine.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b> A. +Entry; note circular outline and eversion of mucous membrane. B. Wound +of exit; curved slit-like character, eversion of mucous membrane. Note +the localised ecchymosis, more abundant round exit aperture. (St. +Thomas's Hospital Museum)</b></p> + +<p>It will be noted that the main feature of the form of injury is the +regular outline and the small size of the wounds. Another feature not +illustrated by the figures should also be mentioned. In the ruptures of +intestine with which we are acquainted in civil practice the wound in +the gut is almost without exception situated at the free border of the +bowel, but in these injuries it was just as frequently at the mesenteric +margin. The importance of this factor is considerable, since wounds +near<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_419" id="Page_419">[Pg 419]</a></span> the mesenteric edge are much more likely to be accompanied by +hæmorrhage, and thus the opportunity for diffusion of infection is +considerably multiplied, to say nothing of the danger from loss of +blood.</p> + +<p>Beyond these more or less pure perforations, long slits or gutters were +occasionally cut. I saw instances of these in the case of the ascending +colon, and in the small curvature of the stomach. The comparative fixity +of the portion of bowel struck is a matter of great importance in the +production of this form of injury.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 426px;"> +<img src="images/fig88.jpg" width="426" height="450" alt="Fig. 88." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 88.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>The same piece of Intestine as that shown in +fig. 87, laid open to show the ecchymosis on the inner aspect of the +Bowel. The two indicating lines lead to the openings, which appear +slit-like, and are sunk at the bottom of folds. (St. Thomas's Hospital +Museum)</b></p> + +<p>It may be well to add that, although the figures inserted are all taken +from small-intestine wounds, the nature of the wounds of the +peritoneum-clad part of the large intestine in no way differed from +them, except in so far as fixity of the bowel exposed it to a more +extensive wound when the bullet took a parallel course to its long axis.</p> + +<p>A more important point in the injuries to the large intestine was the +possibility of an extra-peritoneal wound. I saw several such lesions of +the colon, every one of which ended fatally. I became still more fully +convinced of the greater seriousness of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_420" id="Page_420">[Pg 420]</a></span> extra- to intra-peritoneal +rupture of this portion of the gut than I was when I expressed a similar +opinion in a former paper.<a name="FNanchor_20_20" id="FNanchor_20_20"></a><a href="#Footnote_20_20" class="fnanchor">[20]</a> It will be seen later that the results of +intra- and extra-peritoneal wounds of the bladder fully confirm this +view, as all extra-peritoneal injuries died, while many intra-peritoneal +perforations recovered spontaneously.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the mesentery.</i>—I had little experience of this injury; in +fact, case 169, on which I operated, was my sole observation. It stands +to reason, however, that injuries to the mesentery would be much more +frequent proportionately to wounds of the gut than is the case in the +ruptures seen in civil practice, since the whole area of the mesentery +is equally open to injury. Viewing the extreme danger of hæmorrhage into +the peritoneal cavity in these injuries, I should be inclined to expect +that a considerable proportion of those deaths from abdominal wounds +which took place on the field of battle were due to this source.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the omentum.</i>—Here, again, I am unable to express any +opinion, although the supposition that hæmorrhage from this source took +place is natural.</p> + +<p>Prolapse of omentum was comparatively rare, except in cases with large +wounds; it was apparently seen with some frequency among patients who +died rapidly on the field of battle. I only saw it twice, and on each +occasion in shell wounds. The wounds from small-calibre bullets were as +a rule too small to allow of external prolapse.</p> + +<p>Fig. 89, however, illustrates a very interesting observation. A patient +in the German Ambulance in Heilbron, under Dr. Flockemann, died as a +result of suppuration and hæmorrhage secondary to an injury to the +colon. At the autopsy a portion of the omentum was found adherent in the +wound of exit, but it had not reached the external surface. The chief +interest of the observation lies in the light it throws on the mechanism +of these injuries. It is impossible to conceive that a small-calibre +bullet coming into direct contact with the omentum could do anything but +perforate it. It, therefore, appears clear that in a displacement like +that figured, only lateral impact<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_421" id="Page_421">[Pg 421]</a></span> occurred with the omentum, which was +carried along by the spin and rush of the bullet into the canal of exit, +where it lodged.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig89.jpg" width="450" height="411" alt="Fig. 89." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 89.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Great Omentum carried by the bullet into an +exit track leading from the abdominal cavity. A. Outline of opening in +the peritoneum</b></p> + +<p><i>Results of injury to the intestine.</i> 1. <i>Escape of contents and +infection of the peritoneal cavity.</i>—I think there is little special to +be said on this subject. The escape of contents into the peritoneal +cavity was by no means free, unless the injury was multiple. Thus in one +case of injury to the small intestine, No. 166, on which I operated, +there was absolutely no gross escape until the bowel was removed from +the abdominal cavity, when the contents spurted out freely. In one case +of very oblique injury to the colon there was a considerable quantity of +fæcal matter in a localised space, but as a rule the ordinary condition +best described as 'peritoneal<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_422" id="Page_422">[Pg 422]</a></span> infection' from the wound was found. The +bad effect of anything like free escape was well shown in multiple +perforations; in these suppurative peritonitis rapidly developed and the +patients died at the end of thirty-six hours or less. A typical case is +quoted in No. 168.</p> + +<p>2. <i>Peritoneal infection, and general septicæmia.</i>—As is evident from +the results quoted among the cases, the degree which this reached varied +greatly. It may of course be assumed that in some measure it occurred in +every case in which the bowel was perforated, but it was sometimes so +slight as to be scarcely noticeable. This may be said to have been most +common in injuries to the large intestine. Wounds of the cæcum, +ascending and descending colon, the sigmoid flexure, or the rectum, were +sometimes followed by no serious symptoms, either local or general. +Again in these portions of the bowel the development of local signs, and +the later formation of an abscess, were by no means uncommon.</p> + +<p>In the case of the small intestine I never observed this sequence, and +the same may be said of the transverse colon, which in its anatomical +arrangement and position so nearly approximates to the small bowel. In +suspected wounds of these portions of the bowel either the symptoms were +so slight as to render it doubtful whether a perforation had occurred, +or marked signs of general peritoneal septicæmia developed, and death +resulted.</p> + +<p>The condition of the peritoneum in fatal cases varied much. In some a +dry peritonitis, or one in which a considerable quantity of slightly +turbid fluid was effused, was found. In others a rapid suppurative +process, accompanied by the effusion of large quantities of plastic +lymph, was met with. My experience suggested that the latter condition +was the result of free infection from multiple wounds of the gut, the +former the accompaniment of single wounds. Hence I should ascribe the +difference mainly to the extent of the primary infection.</p> + +<p>This is perhaps a suitable place to further discuss the explanation of +the escape of a considerable number of the patients who received wounds +of the abdomen, possibly implicating the bowel. Although this was not, I +think, so common an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_423" id="Page_423">[Pg 423]</a></span> occurrence as has been sometimes assumed, yet many +examples were met with. Several reasons have been advanced.</p> + +<p>(1) Great importance has been given to the fact that many of the men +were wounded while in a state of hunger, no food having been taken for +twelve or more hours before the reception of the injury. In view of the +well-proved fact in these, as in other intestinal injuries, that free +intestinal escape does not occur, and that it is usually a mere question +of infection, this explanation, in my opinion, is of small importance. +It might with far more justice be pointed out that many of these wounded +men were for them in the happy position of not having friends freely +dosing them with brandy and water after the reception of the injury, and +this was possibly an element of some importance.</p> + +<p>Some of the men did, however, drink freely, and in one case which +terminated fatally a comrade gave a man wounded through the belly an +immediate dose of Beecham's pills.</p> + +<p>(2) Mr. Treves has suggested that the effect of the severe trauma on the +muscular coat of the bowel is to cause a cessation of peristaltic +movement. This, as in the case of 'local shock' elsewhere, may no doubt +be of importance, and to it should be added the simultaneous cessation +of abdominal respiratory movements in the segment of the belly wall +covering the injured part. The occurrence of general cessation of +peristaltic movement is, however, to some extent opposed by the fact +that in a certain number of the cases early passage of motions was seen +just as happens in the intestinal ruptures seen in civil practice.</p> + +<p>I should be inclined to ascribe the escape from serious infection in +these injuries to the same cause which accounts for their comparative +insignificance in other regions—namely, the small calibre of the bullet +and consequent small size of the lesion: in point of fact to the minimal +nature of the primary infection. I very much doubt if any patient who +had more than one complete perforation of the small intestine got well +during the whole campaign. This opinion is, moreover, supported by the +fact that the prognosis was so far better in cases of injury to the +large than to the small intestine, in which former segment of the bowel +we have the advantages of a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_424" id="Page_424">[Pg 424]</a></span> position beyond the region in which +intestinal movement is most free, the unlikelihood of multiple injury, +and a drier and more solid type of fæcal contents.</p> + +<p>In the instances in which recovery followed perforating injuries without +any bad signs we can only assume a minimal infection, and sufficient +irritation and reaction on the part of the bowel to produce rapid +adhesion between contiguous coils, and thus provisional closure.</p> + +<p>The other mode of spontaneous recovery which I saw several times take +place in the injuries to the large bowel consisted in the limitation of +the spread of infection by early adhesions and the development of a +local abscess. The non-observance of this process in any case of injury +to the small intestine raises very great doubts in my mind as to the +frequent recovery of patients in whom the small intestine was +perforated.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Injuries To the Intestinal Tract</span></h3> + +<p>1. <i>Wounds of the stomach.</i>—A considerable number of wounds in such a +situation as to have possibly implicated the stomach were observed, and +of these a certain number recovered spontaneously. The only two +instances that came under my own observation are recorded below. It will +be noted that in each the special symptoms were the classic ones of +vomiting and hæmatemesis. In the first case blood was also passed per +anum, and in the second the diagnosis was reinforced by the escape of +stomach contents from the external wound.</p> + +<p>The second case was a surgical disappointment. No doubt the fatal issue +was mainly dependent on the fact that the external wound had to be kept +open to allow of the escape of the abundant discharge from the wounded +liver. In the absence of the hepatic wound, however, I believe it would +have been possible for this patient to have got well spontaneously, in +view of the firm adhesions which had formed around the opening in the +stomach, and the consequent localisation which had been effected. +Another unfortunate element in this case was the comminuted fracture of +the seventh costal cartilage, which maintained the patency of the +aperture of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_425" id="Page_425">[Pg 425]</a></span> exit. The latter point, however, was of doubtful importance +from this aspect, as the vent provided for the gastric and biliary +secretions may have been the safety-valve that had allowed localisation +to develop.</p> + +<p>I believe that the secondary hæmorrhage was the main element in robbing +us of a success in this case, and that this depended on the digestion of +the wound by the gastric secretion. The early troubles which arose in +the treatment of this patient well illustrate the difficulties by which +the military surgeon is at times met; but the patient was admirably +attended to and nursed by my friend Mr. Pershouse, and an orderly who +was specially put on duty for the purpose.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>163</b>) Wounded at Rensburg. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), in ninth left +intercostal space in posterior axillary line; <i>exit</i>, a +transverse slit 1/2 an inch in length to left of xiphoid +appendage. Patient was retiring when struck; he did not fall, +but ran for about 1,000 yards, whence he was conveyed to +hospital. He vomited half an hour after the injury (last meal +bread and 'bully beef,' taken two hours previously), and during +the evening three times again, the vomit consisting mainly 'of +dark thick blood.' He was put on milk diet, and not completely +starved; on the third day a large quantity of dark clotted +blood was passed per rectum with the stool, and this continued +for two days.</p> + +<p>Ten days after the injury the temperature was still rising to +100°, and did not become normal till the fourteenth day. The +pulse averaged 80. The abdomen, meanwhile, moved fairly well, +respirations 18 to 20. Some tenderness was present in the +epigastrium and towards the spleen. Resonance throughout. +Ordinary diet was now resumed, and beyond slight epigastric +pain on deep inspiration, no further symptoms were observed, +and the patient left for England at the end of the month. The +spleen may have been traversed in this patient, as well as the +lower margin of the right lung.</p> + +<p>(<b>164</b>*) Wounded at Enslin. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 3/4 of an inch from +the spine, opposite the eighth intercostal space; <i>exit</i>, +through the seventh left costal cartilage, 1 inch from the +median line. The patient was lying in the prone position when +shot: he vomited blood freely, and the bowels acted three times +before he was seen forty hours after the accident, each motion +containing dark blood.</p> + +<p>On the commencement of the third day the patient's expression +was extremely anxious, and he was suffering great pain.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_426" id="Page_426">[Pg 426]</a></span> Pulse +96, temperature 100°. Tongue moist, occasional vomiting, bowels +open yesterday. Has taken fluid nourishment since injury. The +abdomen moved with respiration, but was moderately distended, +especially in the line of the transverse colon; it was +tympanitic on percussion, there was no dulness in the flanks, +and only moderate rigidity of the wall on palpation. Frothy +fluid stained with bile and fæcal in odour was escaping from +the wound of exit, and the everted margins of the latter were +bile-stained.</p> + +<p>A vertical incision was carried downwards from the wound for 4 +inches. A rugged furrow was found on the under surface of the +left lobe of the liver; the stomach was contracted and firmly +adherent by recent lymph to the under surface of the liver and +the diaphragm. The transverse colon was much distended. On +separating the stomach a slit wound was found at the lesser +curvature, immediately to the right of the œsophagus. This +wound was closed with some difficulty with two tiers of +sutures; the cavity was mopped out, and then irrigated with +boiled water; a plug was introduced along the line of the +furrow in the liver, and the lower part of the abdominal +incision closed.</p> + +<p>The patient stood the operation well, and was removed to his +tent; during the day, however, two thunder showers occurred +during each of which water, several inches if not a foot deep, +rushed through the camp. After the second flood he was removed +to the operating room, the only house we had, and slept there. +The pulse rose to 120, and respiration to 26, and there was +pain, which was subdued by 1/3 grain of morphia, administered +subcutaneously. A fair amount of urine was passed, and the +bowels acted once, the motion containing blood.</p> + +<p>On the second day after operation there was some improvement; +the pulse still numbered 116, and the temperature was raised to +100°, but the belly moved fairly, and pain was moderate. +Abundant foul-smelling, bile-stained discharge came from the +wound when the plug was removed. Rectal feeding was +supplemented by small quantities of milk and soda by the mouth.</p> + +<p>The condition did not materially change, but on the fourth day +it was evident that the suturing of the stomach wound had given +way, and liquid food escaped readily when taken. The discharge +remained bile-stained and very foul. No extension of +inflammation to the general peritoneal cavity occurred, but it +was evident that the patient was suffering from constitutional +infection from the foul wound, the lower part of which opened +up somewhat<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_427" id="Page_427">[Pg 427]</a></span> after the removal of the stitches on the seventh +day. The wound was irrigated three times daily with 1-300 +creolin lotion, but remained very foul. The man slowly lost +strength, although escape from the stomach considerably +decreased. On the tenth day a sudden severe hæmorrhage +occurred, presumably from a large branch of the cœliac axis. +The bleeding was readily controlled by a plug, and did not +recur; but the patient rapidly sank, and died on the twelfth +day after the operation, and fourteen days after reception of +the injury. No <i>post-mortem</i> examination was made.</p></div> + +<p>2. <i>Wounds of the small intestine.</i>—These were comparatively common, +but offered little that was special either in their symptoms or the +results attending them. Wounds were met with in every part of the small +gut; but I saw no case in which an injury to the duodenum could be +specially diagnosed.</p> + +<p>As to the symptoms which attended these injuries, it is somewhat +difficult to speak with precision, and it must be left to my readers to +form an opinion as to how many of the cases recounted below were really +instances of perforating wounds. My own view is that in the majority of +the cases that got well spontaneously, the injury was not of a +perforating nature, and that for reasons which have been already set +forth. It will, however, be at once noted that in all the five cases in +which the injury was certainly diagnosed in hospital death occurred.</p> + +<p>The cases of injury to the small intestine are perhaps best arranged in +three classes.</p> + +<p>1. Those who died upon the field, or shortly after removal from it. In +these the external wounds were often large, the omentum was not rarely +prolapsed, and escape of fæces sometimes occurred early. Shock from the +severity of the lesion, and hæmorrhage, were no doubt important factors +in the early lethal issue in this class. Many of the injuries were no +doubt produced by bullets striking irregularly, by ricochets, by bullets +of the expanding forms, or by bullets of large calibre. As being beyond +the bounds of surgical aid, this class possessed the least interest.</p> + +<p>2. Cases brought into the Field, or even the Stationary hospitals, with +symptoms of moderate severity, or even of an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_428" id="Page_428">[Pg 428]</a></span> insignificant character, +in which evidence of septic peritonitis suddenly developed and death +ensued.</p> + +<p>3. Cases in which the position of the wounds raised the possibility of +injury to the intestine, but in which the symptoms were slight or of +moderate severity, and which recovered spontaneously.</p> + +<p>The whole crux in diagnosis lay in the attempt to separate the two +latter classes, and, personally, I must own to having been no nearer a +position of being able to form an opinion on this point, in the late +than in the early stage of my stay in South Africa. The advent of +peritoneal septicæmia was in many instances the only determining moment. +On this matter I can only add that, in civil practice, an exploratory +abdominal section is often the only means of determination of a rupture +of the bowel wall.</p> + +<p>With regard to the cases of suspected injury to the bowel which +recovered spontaneously, the symptoms were somewhat special in their +comparative slightness, and in the limited nature of the local signs. +Thus the pulse seldom rose to as much as 100 in rate, 80 was a common +average. Respiration was never greatly quickened, 24 was a common rate. +The temperature rarely exceeded 100°. Vomiting was occasionally severe, +but usually not persistent, ceasing on the second day. A good quantity +of urine was passed. As to the local signs, these again were of a +limited nature; distension did not occur, or was slight; movement of the +abdominal wall was only restricted in the neighbourhood of the wound, +the affected area amounted to a quarter, or at most half, the abdominal +wall, and rigidity was localised to a similar segment. Local tenderness +usually existed; but, as a rule, there was little or no dulness to point +to the occurrence either of fluid effusion or a considerable deposition +of lymph.</p> + +<p>Again many of the patients suffered with very slight symptoms of +constitutional shock, although there was considerable variation in this +particular.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>165</b>*) Wounded at Graspan, sustaining a compound fracture of +the fibula. While being carried off the field, a second bullet +(Lee-Metford) entered immediately outside the left posterior +superior<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_429" id="Page_429">[Pg 429]</a></span> iliac spine, perforated the pelvis, and emerged 1½ +inch within the left anterior superior spine. The patient was +then put down and left on the field ten hours; later he was +carried to shelter for the night, and arrived at Orange River +on the second day. He suffered with some pain in the abdomen, +especially during the journey in the train, but was not sick; +the bowels were confined.</p> + +<p>When seen on the third day at 6 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, some pain was complained +of in the abdomen, which moved freely in the upper part, but +was motionless below the umbilicus. No distension. Tenderness +around wound of exit and some rigidity. The bowels had acted +four times during the day; motions loose, dark brown, and +containing no blood. Face not anxious, eyes bright, temperature +102°. Pulse 96, regular, and of good strength. Tongue moist and +little furred.</p> + +<p>The abdomen was opened at 5 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> on the fourth day, as the +local signs had become more pronounced, and the patient had +passed a restless night in great abdominal pain. A local +incision was chosen, as the wound was presumably in the sigmoid +flexure. The sigmoid flexure was adherent to the abdominal wall +opposite the wound of exit, and a dark ecchymosed patch was +found, but no perforation could be detected. Foul pus and gas +escaped freely from the pelvis, but no wound of the large bowel +could be discovered here. On enlarging the incision upwards +three openings were found in a coil of jejunum, probably that +about five feet from the duodenal junction usually provided +with the longest mesentery. No fourth opening could be found. +The openings were circular, about 1/3 inch in diameter, clean +cut, with a ring of everted mucous membrane, and the wall of +the bowel in the neighbourhood was thickened. All three +openings were included within a length of 2½ inches. There +was no surrounding ecchymosis of the bowel wall. Very little +escaped intestinal contents were found in the situation of the +bowel. The latter had apparently been retracted upwards, and +lay to the left of the lumbar spine. The wounds were readily +closed by five Lembert's sutures, three crossing the openings, +and one at each end. The belly was then washed out with boiled +water and closed. The delay in finding the wounds due to the +mistaken impression that they would be found in the pelvis +materially prolonged the operation, which lasted an hour and a +half. The patient never rallied, and died seventeen hours +later. It is possible that a wound in the sigmoid flexure was +present which had already closed at the time of operation.</p> + +<p>(<b>166</b>*) Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), opposite<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_430" id="Page_430">[Pg 430]</a></span> +central point of left ilium; <i>exit</i>, 1½ inch above the +centre of the right Poupart's ligament. Vomiting commenced soon +after the injury, and this was continuous until the patient's +arrival in the Stationary hospital on the fourth day, when the +condition was as follows:—</p> + +<p>Face extremely anxious in expression. Temperature 101°, +sweating freely. Pulse 110, fair strength. Tongue moist. +Abdomen much distended, rigid, motionless, tympanitic +throughout. Bowels confined. No urine had been passed for +twenty-four hours, ℥ij in bladder on +catheterisation, clear, and containing no blood.</p> + +<p>Abdominal section. Median incision. A considerable quantity of +bloody effusion was evacuated. Intestine generally congested +and distended. No lymph. Two wounds were found in the ileum on +the opposite sides of one coil; the openings were circular, +with the mucous membrane everted. No escape of fæcal matter was +visible until the intestine was delivered, when intestinal +contents spurted freely across the room. The openings were +sutured with five Lembert's stitches. The bowel was punctured +in two places to relieve distension, and then returned into the +belly, after washing with boiled water.</p> + +<p>Four pints of saline solution were infused into the median +basilic vein, and 1/30 grain strychnine sulph. was injected +hypodermically.</p> + +<p>The patient did not rally, and died twelve hours after the +operation.</p> + +<p>(<b>167</b>*) Wounded at Graspan. <i>Entry</i> (Lee-Metford), midway +between the umbilicus and pubes; <i>exit</i>, 1 inch to the left of +the fifth lumbar spine. The patient was seen on the third day +in the following condition: in great pain, expression extremely +anxious, vomiting constantly. Pulse 150 running, respirations +48. Temperature 100°, sweating freely. Great distension, +rigidity, and general tenderness of immobile abdomen. No +improvement followed the administration of brandy and +hypodermic injection of strychnine 1/30 grain, and operation +was deemed hopeless.</p> + +<p>In the evening the patient was apparently dying. Face blue and +sunken and covered with sweat, eyes dull, speechless, pulse +imperceptible, restlessness extreme, bowels acting +involuntarily, no urine in bladder.</p> + +<p>The man was placed in a tent by himself, and to my surprise was +alive and better the next morning; the expression was still +anxious, but the face brighter and not sweating; the pulse +only<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_431" id="Page_431">[Pg 431]</a></span> numbered 100, but was very weak, and the hands and feet +were cold. The condition of the abdomen was unaltered, but the +thoracic respiration had decreased in rapidity from 48 to 28.</p> + +<p>His condition still seemed to preclude any chance of successful +intervention, but none the less life was retained until the +morning of the seventh day, the state alternating between a +moribund one and one of slight improvement. He was lucid at +times, although for the most part wandering, and was so +restless that no covering could be kept upon him. Vomiting was +continuous, so that no nourishment could be retained; the +bowels acted frequently involuntarily, and little or no urine +was passed. Meanwhile, the abdomen became flat, then sunken, an +area of induration and tenderness about 6 inches in diameter +developing around the wound of entry. Slight variations in the +pulse, and from normal to subnormal in the temperature, were +noted, and death eventually occurred from septicæmia and +inanition.</p> + +<p>(<b>168</b>*) Wounded at Driefontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), above the +posterior third of the left iliac crest, at the margin of the +last lumbar transverse process (probably through ilio-lumbar +ligament); <i>exit</i>, 1 inch below and to the left of the +umbilicus.</p> + +<p>The patient was wounded at 3 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, but not brought into the +Field hospital until 9 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span>, when the temperature of the tents +was below 28°F. He was considerably collapsed, suffering much +pain, and vomited freely. The abdomen was flat, but very +tender. Bowels confined. The column had to move at 5 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> the +next morning, when the temperature was still near freezing, and +during the day continuous fighting prevented any chance of +operation. The man steadily sank during the day, and died +thirty-six hours after the reception of the injury.</p> + +<p><i>Post-mortem condition.</i>—Belly not distended, dull anteriorly +in patches, and right flank dull throughout. When the belly was +opened, extensive adhesion of omentum and intestine enclosing +numerous collections of pus were disclosed, and on disturbing +the adhesions a large collection of turbid blood-stained fluid +was set free from the right loin. The great omentum was much +thickened and matted, with deposition of thick patches of +lymph; very firm recent adhesions also united numerous coils of +small intestine. The pus was fœtid, but no appreciable +quantity of intestinal contents was detected in it. The lower +half or more of the small intestine was injected, reddened, and +thickened. The wounds which were situated in the lower part of +the jejunum and ileum were multiple, and seven perforations +were detected;<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_432" id="Page_432">[Pg 432]</a></span> besides these the intestine was marked by +bruises, and some gutter slits affecting the serous and +muscular coats only. Considerable ecchymosis surrounded these +latter. The clean perforations were circular, less than 1/4 +inch in diameter, and for the most part closed by eversion of +the mucous membrane. Intestinal contents were not apparent, but +escaped freely on manipulation of the bowel.</p> + +<p>(<b>169</b>*) Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), over the +eighth rib in the anterior axillary line; <i>exit</i>, 1 inch to the +left of second lumbar spinous process, just below the last rib. +Vomiting commenced almost immediately after reception of the +injury, and the bowels acted frequently. This condition +persisted until the fourth day, when the patient was brought +down to Orange River, and the signs were as follows. +Considerable pain in left half of abdomen, pulse 110, fair +strength, temperature 101°. Some general distension of abdomen +with complete disappearance of hepatic dulness. Some movement +of right half of abdomen, left half immobile, dulness extending +from the flank as far forwards as linea semilunaris. An +incision was made in left linea semilunaris, and Oj blood +evacuated from the left loin. There was no lymph on the +intestines nor sign of inflammation. No perforation was +discovered in either stomach or intestine, but on two coils of +jejunum there were deep slits 3/4 inch long, extending through +both peritoneal and muscular coats. Beyond these wounds, on +other coils oval patches of ecchymosis, due to direct bruising, +were present. The peritoneal cavity was sponged free of all +blood and irrigated with boiled water; no bleeding point was +discovered, and the abdomen was closed.</p> + +<p>The next morning the patient was comfortable; temperature +100.2°, pulse 100. Tongue clean and moist; he vomited once +during the night.</p> + +<p>Some bloody discharge had collected in the dressing, and at the +lower angle of wound there was a local swelling, apparently in +the abdominal wall. The flank was resonant.</p> + +<p>During the afternoon the patient became faint, and when seen at +6 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> was in a state of collapse, in which he shortly died.</p> + +<p>Death was apparently due to renewal of the previous hæmorrhage. +No <i>post-mortem</i> examination was made.</p> + +<p>(<b>170</b>*) Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 1/2 inch to +the left of the second sacral spine; <i>exit</i>, immediately below +the left anterior superior iliac spine; the patient was +kneeling at the time, and the same bullet traversed his left +thigh in the lower<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_433" id="Page_433">[Pg 433]</a></span> third. When seen on the third day, the +lower part of the abdomen was motionless, tumid, and tender. +The bowels had been confined for three days; there had been no +sickness, and the tongue was moist and clean. Temperature 100°, +pulse 90, fair strength, respirations 38. The patient had once +had an attack of acute appendicitis, and he himself said he was +sure he now had 'peritonitis,' as he had pain exactly similar +in the belly to that he had suffered in his previous illness.</p> + +<p>No further signs, however, developed under an expectant +treatment, and he remained some two months in hospital, while +the wound in the thigh and a third injury to the elbow-joint +were healing.</p> + +<p>(<b>171</b>) <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at the highest point of the left crista +ilii; <i>exit</i>, through the right ilium, 2 inches horizontally +anterior to the posterior superior spine. Absolutely no +abdominal symptoms followed. The bowels were confined five +days, and then opened by enema. The patient complained of some +stiffness in the lumbo-sacral region, but the right +synchondrosis was no doubt implicated in the track.</p> + +<p>(<b>172</b>) Wounded at Paardeberg (range 800 yards). <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), 2 inches diagonally below and to the right of the +umbilicus; <i>exit</i>, not discoverable. For the first two days the +patient had to lie out with the regiment; on the fourth he was +removed to the Field hospital. During the first three days the +patient vomited (green matter) frequently, and the belly was +hard and painful; as biscuit was the only available food, no +nourishment was taken. The bowels acted on the second night. At +the end of a week the patient was sent by bullock wagon (three +days and nights) to Modder River, and then down to Capetown, +where he walked into the hospital on the thirteenth day, +apparently well.</p> + +<p>Two days later the temperature rose to 104°, and enteric fever +was diagnosed, no local signs pointing to the injury existing. +The patient made a good recovery.</p> + +<p>(<b>173</b>) Wounded at Colenso. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at junction of +outer 2/5 with inner 3/5 of line from right anterior superior +iliac spine to umbilicus; <i>exit</i>, at upper part of right great +sacro-sciatic foramen, in line of posterior superior iliac +spine. Advancing on foot when struck; he then fell and crept +fifty yards to behind a rock, where he remained seven and a +half hours. For two days subsequently he vomited freely; the +bowels acted nine hours after the injury, and then became +constipated. No further symptoms<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_434" id="Page_434">[Pg 434]</a></span> were noted, and at the end of +three weeks the abdomen was absolutely normal. The man is now +again on active service.</p> + +<p>(<b>174</b>*) Wounded at Modder River while retiring on foot. <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), at highest point of right iliac crest; <i>exit</i>, 2½ +inches to right of and 1/2 inch above level of umbilicus. The +injury was not followed by sickness, and the bowels remained +confined. During the first two days 'pain struck across the +abdomen' when micturition was performed.</p> + +<p>When the patient came under observation on the third day the +condition was as follows:—Complains of little pain, +temperature normal, pulse 72, respirations 24, tongue moist, +bowels confined. Rigidity of abdominal wall and deficient +mobility of nearly whole right half of belly, the whole lower +half of which moves little with respiration. No track palpable +in abdominal parietes. No dulness, no distension. The +temperature rose to 99.5° at night. On the fourth day the +bowels acted freely, the pulse fell to 60, the respirations +were 24, and the temperature normal.</p> + +<p>Tenderness and rigidity persisted in the right flank to the end +of a week, after which time no further signs persisted.</p> + +<p>(<b>175</b>*) Wounded at Modder River while lying on right side. Range +500 yards. Walked 400 yards after injury. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at +the junction of the posterior and middle thirds of the right +iliac crest; <i>exit</i>, 3 inches to right of and 1/2 inch below +the level of the umbilicus. The injury was followed by no signs +of intra-abdominal lesion; on the third day the temperature was +normal, pulse 80, and the tongue clean and moist. Some soreness +at times and tenderness on pressure were complained of, but the +man was discharged well at the end of one month.</p> + +<p>(<b>176</b>*) Wounded while doubling in retirement at Modder River. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), immediately above the junction of the +posterior and middle thirds of the left iliac crest; <i>exit</i>, 1 +inch below costal margin (eighth rib), 3 inches to the right of +the median line. The bullet was lying in the anterior wound, +whence it was removed by the orderly who applied the first +dressing on the field. The patient remained on the field seven +and a half hours, and when brought into hospital at once +commenced to vomit. The ejected matter, at first green in +colour, during the next forty-eight hours changed to a dirty +brown. Meanwhile, the abdomen was somewhat painful. When seen +on the third day he had ceased to vomit for three hours. The +face was slightly anxious, and the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_435" id="Page_435">[Pg 435]</a></span> patient lay on the ground +with the lower extremities extended. Temperature 99°, pulse 72, +fair strength. Respirations 32, shallow. Tongue moist, lightly +furred, bowels not open for four days. He slept fairly last +night. Abdomen soft, moving well with respiration, no +distension, slight tenderness below and to the right of the +umbilicus, and local dulness in right flank.</p> + +<p>The next day the pulse fell to 60 and the bowels acted, but +there was no change in the local condition. The man looked +somewhat ill until the end of a week, but was then sent to the +Base, and at the expiration of a month was sent home well.</p> + +<p>(<b>177</b>*) Wounded at Modder River. Two apertures of <i>entry</i> +(Mauser); (<i>a</i>) below cartilage of eighth rib in left nipple +line; (<i>b</i>) 2 inches below and 4½ inches to the left of the +median line. No exit wound discovered, and no track could be +palpated between the two openings, which were both circular and +depressed. When seen on fourth day there was tenderness in the +lower half of the abdomen, and the left thigh was held in a +flexed position. Respirations 20, respiratory movement confined +to upper half of abdominal wall. Pulse 70, temperature 99°. +Tongue moist, covered with white fur; bowels confined since the +accident; no sickness. The patient remained under observation +thirteen days, during which time pain and difficulty in +movement of the left thigh persisted, also slight tenderness in +the lower part of the abdomen; but at the end of a month he was +sent to England well, but unfit to take further part in the +campaign. I thought the bullet might be in the left psoas, but +it was not localised.</p> + +<p>(<b>178</b>*) Wounded at Modder River. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 3½ inches +above and 1½ inch within the left anterior superior iliac +spine; <i>exit</i>, 1½ inch to the right of the tenth dorsal +spinous process. The same bullet had perforated the forearm +just above the wrist prior to entering the abdomen. No local or +constitutional signs indicated either bowel injury or +perforation of liver. The man, however, was suffering from a +slight attack of dysentery, passing blood and mucus per rectum +with great tenesmus. He was sent to the Base at the end of a +week, and returned to England well three weeks later. He +attributed his dysentery to the wound, as the symptoms did not +exist prior to its reception; but as the disease coincided +exactly with what was very prevalent amongst the troops at the +time, I do not think there was any connection between it and +the injury.</p> + +<p>(<b>179</b>) Wounded near Thaba-nchu. <i>Entry</i>, over the centre of the +sacrum at the upper border of fourth segment; <i>exit</i>, 1½ +inch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_436" id="Page_436">[Pg 436]</a></span> above left Poupart's ligament, 2 inches from the median +line. Aperture of entry oval, with long vertical axis. Exit +wound a transverse slit, with slight tendency to starring (see +fig. 19, p. 58). One hour after being shot the patient vomited +once. There was some evidence of shock and considerable pain. +The bowels acted involuntarily simultaneously with the +vomiting, and incontinence of fæces and retention of urine +persisted for four days. The vomit was bilious in appearance; +no blood was seen either in it or the motions.</p> + +<p>Forty-six hours after the injury the condition was as follows: +Face slightly anxious and pale; skin moist, temperature 100.4°; +pulse 116, regular and of fair strength; respirations 24; +abdomen slightly tumid; tenderness over lower half, especially +on left side; the lower half moves little with respiration.</p> + +<p>Twenty-four hours later the patient had improved. He was +comfortable and hopeful; slept well with morphia 1/3 grain +hypodermically. Tongue moist, covered with white fur; has been +taking milk only, ℥ij every half-hour. No +sickness. Temperature</p> + +<p>99°. Pulse 104. Respirations 24. Abdomen flatter; general +respiratory movement; tenderness now mainly localised to an +area 2½ inches in diameter, to the left of the umbilicus, +above exit wound.</p> + +<p>The patient continued to improve, and on the fifth day +travelled six hours in a bullock wagon to Bloemfontein. Soon +after arrival his temperature was normal: pulse 80, +respirations 16, with good abdominal movement. Local tenderness +persisted in the same area, but was less in degree. Tongue +rather dry, bowels confined. Micturition normal. Two drachms of +castor oil and an enema were given.</p> + +<p>On the ninth day patient was practically well, except for +slight deep tenderness. He remained in bed on ordinary light +diet, but at the end of the third week he was seized by a +sudden attack of pain, the temperature rising to 103° and the +pulse to 140, the abdomen becoming swollen and tender. He was +then under the charge of Mr. Bowlby, who ordered some opium, +and the symptoms rapidly subsided. Although this wound crossed +the small intestine area, it is probable that the symptoms may +have been due to an injury of the rectum or sigmoid flexure.</p></div> + +<p>3. <i>Wounds of the large intestine.</i>—Injuries to every part of the large +bowel were observed, and spontaneous recoveries were seen in all parts +except the transverse colon, which,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_437" id="Page_437">[Pg 437]</a></span> as already remarked, is near akin +to the small intestine with regard to its position and anatomical +arrangement.</p> + +<p>The only case of perforation of the vermiform appendix that I heard of, +one under the care of Mr. Stonham, died of peritoneal septicæmia. +Several cases of recovery from wounds of the cæcum and ascending colon +are recounted below. The only points of importance in the nature of the +signs of these injuries were their primary insignificance, and the +comparative frequency with which <i>local</i> peritoneal suppuration followed +them. The absence of a similar sequence in some of the cases in which +wounds of the small intestine were assumed, was, in my opinion, one of +the strongest reasons for doubting the correctness of the diagnosis. It +is also a significant fact that injuries of the ascending colon—that is +to say, of the portion of the large bowel which perhaps lies most free +from the area occupied by the small intestine—were those which most +frequently recovered.</p> + +<p>The following cases afford examples of the course followed in a number +of injuries to the large intestine, and illustrate both the +uncomplicated and the complicated modes of spontaneous recovery.</p> + +<p>No. 180 affords a good example of an extra-peritoneal injury, and of the +especially fatal character of such lesions. This case was also one of my +surgical disappointments.</p> + +<p>Nos. 182, 183 are of great interest in several particulars. First, the +aperture of exit was large and allowed the escape of fæces, not a very +common feature in wounds not proving immediately fatal. Secondly, in +neither were any peritoneal signs observed. Thirdly, in each the exit +wound communicated with the pleura, and the patients died from +septicæmia mainly due to absorption from the surface of that membrane +(<i>Pleural septicæmia</i>).</p> + +<p>No. 190 is a most striking instance of spontaneous cure, since no doubt +can exist that both rectum and bladder were perforated.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>180</b>*) <i>Injury to the cæcum and ascending colon.</i>—Boer, +wounded at Graspan while sheltering behind a rock, lying on his +back.</p> + +<p><i>Entry</i> (Lee-Metford), in right thigh, 3 inches below and 1 +inch<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_438" id="Page_438">[Pg 438]</a></span> within anterior superior spine of ilium; <i>exit</i>, in back, +on a level with the fourth lumbar spinous process and 3 inches +from that point.</p> + +<p>Half an hour after the wound the patient commenced to suffer +severe stabbing pain; he lay on the field one hour; later he +was taken to a Field hospital, and on the second day was sent +by train a distance of twenty-five miles.</p> + +<p>When seen at the end of fifty hours the condition was as +follows. Face anxious, complexion dusky. Great abdominal pain, +especially about the umbilicus. Vomiting frequent and +distressing; bowels confined since the accident; tongue dry and +furred. Urine scanty. Pulse full and strong, 125; respirations, +entirely thoracic, 30.</p> + +<p>Abdomen generally distended and tympanitic, wall rigid and +motionless. Dulness in right flank, together with superficial +œdema and emphysema.</p> + +<p>Abdominal section fifty-three and a half hours after accident. +Incision in right linea semilunaris. Great omentum adherent to +ascending colon, which was covered with plastic lymph. Gas and +intestinal contents escaped from an opening at the line of +reflexion of the peritoneum from the ascending colon; +retro-peritoneal extravasation and emphysema extended the whole +length of the ascending colon and around duodenum, the wall of +the colon itself exhibiting subperitoneal emphysema. The colon +was freed and the rent sewn up with interrupted sutures. About +℥iv of foul fæcal fluid were evacuated from +loin, and a free counter-opening made. The opening in the ilium +by which the bullet had entered the abdomen was found at the +brim of the pelvis; the loin and peritoneal cavity were sponged +dry and flushed with boiled water; no lymph was seen on the +small intestine. A large gauze plug was inserted into the +posterior wound, one end of the plug being brought out of the +operation incision.</p> + +<p>During the succeeding six days progress was not unsatisfactory: +the abdomen became soft, moved with respiration, there was no +sickness, and the bowels acted. The pulse fell to 90, +respirations to 20, and the temperature did not exceed 102° F. +The wound suppurated freely, however, and although there were +no further signs of peritoneal septicæmia, it was evident that +general infection had taken place, and on the sixth day a +parotid bubo developed on the right side, which was opened.</p> + +<p>On the seventh day the patient suddenly commenced to fail +rapidly; vomiting was almost continuous—at first curdled milk, +later frothy watery fluid—and on the eighth day he died. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_439" id="Page_439">[Pg 439]</a></span> +abdomen remained soft, sunken, and flaccid, and death no doubt +resulted from general septicæmia rather than from peritoneal +infection, absorption taking place from the large foul cavity +behind the colon. As the cavity in part surrounded the +descending duodenum, this possibly accounted for the attack of +vomiting which preceded death.</p> + +<p>(<b>181</b>*) <i>Ascending colon.</i>—Wounded at Graspan while lying in +prone position. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), over ninth rib in line of +right linea semilunaris; <i>exit</i>, in right buttock, just below +and behind the top of the great trochanter.</p> + +<p>The injury was followed by little abdominal pain, but a strange +sensation of local gurgling was noted. The bowels acted as soon +as the patient reached camp, some hours after being wounded. +There was no sickness and nothing abnormal was noted in the +motions, except that they were loose and light-coloured.</p> + +<p>On the evening of the third day the patient came under +observation in the ambulance train for Capetown. He looked +somewhat anxious and ill, but he complained of little pain; the +temperature was 102°, pulse 88, fair strength, soft and +regular. There was local dulness, tenderness, and deficiency of +movement in the right iliac region. As it was night, he was +removed from the train and an operation was performed the next +morning.</p> + +<p>Prior to operation the condition was as follows: Pulse 84, +temperature 100°; respiration easy, 20. Tongue moist, but +thickly coated in centre. Abdomen moves fairly, and is +resonant, except in right lower quadrant. No distension. +Dulness, tenderness, and rigidity in right iliac region, marked +to outer side of cæcum. Entry wound nearly and exit quite +healed. Cannot flex right thigh. The following operation was +performed. Appendix incision, about ℥j of fæcal +fluid and fæces in a localised cavity on outer and anterior +aspect of cæcum evacuated; adhesions very firm. Cavity sloughy +throughout and cæcum covered with dull grey lymph. The opening +in the bowel was not localised, and it was considered wiser to +treat the case like one of perforation from appendicitis than +to run the risk of breaking down adhesions. A small awl-like +opening was found in the ilium with powdered bone at its +entrance leading to the wound of exit.</p> + +<p>The after-treatment of the case gave rise to no anxiety, but +healing of the resulting sinus was slow; fæcal-smelling pus +escaped for some days, and a number of small sloughs came away. +On the twelfth day the patient was sent down to Wynberg, where +he remained twelve weeks. A counter-incision was needed in the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_440" id="Page_440">[Pg 440]</a></span> +loin to drain the suppurating cavity three weeks after the +primary operation, and five weeks after the operation an escape +of gas and fæces took place from the anterior wound, while the +bowels were acting, as a result of a dose of castor oil. No +further escape of fæces occurred, and he left for England with +a small sinus only. No extension of inflammation into the +original wound track ever occurred, both openings and the canal +healing by primary union.</p> + +<p>The sinus remained open, and occasionally discharged for a +further period of six months, and then healed firmly; since +when the patient has been in perfect health.</p> + +<p>(<b>182</b>*) <i>Splenic flexure, descending colon.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), in sixth left intercostal +space in mid-axillary line; <i>exit</i>, in left loin, below last +rib, at outer margin of erector spinæ. The patient remained in +the Field hospital three days, during which time he exhibited +no serious abdominal symptoms, but during the journey to Orange +River (53½ miles) he was sick. He remained at Orange River +two days, and while there an enema was administered, producing +a normal motion. The abdomen was slightly distended; it moved +fairly, there was slight rigidity, but little tenderness. +Temperature 100.8°, pulse 120. No appearance of fæces in wound.</p> + +<p>When seen on the sixth day the condition was as +follows:—Patient cheerful and not in great pain. Temperature +99.2°; pulse 120; respirations 48, very shallow. Abdomen soft, +moving freely, no distension or general tenderness. Fluid fæces +escaping in abundance from the wound in loin. Redness of skin +and swelling below level of wound, and cellular emphysema +above. Fæcal-smelling fluid was also escaping from the thoracic +wound.</p> + +<p>The wound was enlarged, but the patient rapidly sank, and died +of septicæmia on the seventh day.</p> + +<p>(<b>183</b>*) An exactly similar case came under observation from the +battle of Modder River, except that the opening in the loin was +somewhat larger, and earlier and freer escape of fæces took +place from it. In this also fæcal matter passed freely into the +left pleural cavity, and fæcal matter was expectorated, while +there was an almost complete absence of abdominal symptoms. +Death occurred on the fourth day.</p> + +<p>No <i>post-mortem</i> examination was made in either case, but I +believe in both the extra-peritoneal aspect of the colon was +implicated and that the septicæmia was in great part due to +absorption from the pleural rather than the peritoneal cavity, +since in neither case were the abdominal symptoms a prominent +feature.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_441" id="Page_441">[Pg 441]</a></span></p> + +<p>(<b>184</b>) <i>Possible wound of cæcum.</i>—Wounded at Spion Kop. Bullet +(Mauser) perforated the right forearm, then entered belly. +<i>Entry</i>, 3 inches from the right anterior superior iliac spine, +in the line of the supra-pubic fold of the belly wall (a +transverse slit); <i>exit</i>, in right buttock, on a level with the +tip of the great trochanter and 2 inches within it. The wound +was received immediately after breakfast had been eaten. There +was retention of urine and constipation for three days, but no +sickness. Local pain and tenderness were severe, and at the end +of three weeks there was still local tenderness, slight +induration, and dragging pain on defæcation. The patient +returned to England at the end of a month well, except for +slight local tenderness.</p> + +<p>(<b>185</b>) <i>Possible wound of colon.</i>—Wounded at Paardeberg; range +200 yards. Walking at time. The bullet (Mauser) perforated the +left forearm, just below the elbow-joint. <i>Entry</i>, into belly 1 +inch anterior to the tip of the left eleventh costal cartilage; +no exit.</p> + +<p>The injury was followed by pain in the left half of the abdomen +and vomiting, which continued for two days. The bowels acted on +the third day; no nourishment was taken for two days, but a +small quantity of water was allowed. No further symptoms were +noted, and at the end of a fortnight the patient was well, +except for slight local tenderness. The bullet could not be +detected with the X-rays.</p> + +<p>(<b>186</b>) <i>Wound of cæcum</i>.—Wounded at Paardeberg. <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), 2 inches diagonally above and within right anterior +superior iliac spine; <i>exit</i>, immediately to the right of the +fifth lumbar spinous process; the patient was lying on his left +side when struck. A burning pain down the right thigh +immediately followed the accident, and lasted some days. There +was no sickness, the bowels were confined three days, and there +was pain across the back and down the thigh.</p> + +<p>On the tenth day he arrived at the Base, when he was lying on +his back suffering considerable pain. The temperature ranged to +101°. There was diarrhœa and cystitis, with a considerable +amount of pus in the urine, which was very offensive. A small +fluctuating spot existed on the back, just to the right of the +original exit wound which was firmly healed. The abdomen moved +fairly with respiration in its upper part, but was motionless +below, especially in the right iliac fossa; some induration was +to be felt here. The right thigh was kept flexed.</p> + +<p>During the next few days the pus disappeared from the urine,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_442" id="Page_442">[Pg 442]</a></span> +and with this change the induration in the right iliac fossa +increased. An incision (Mr. Gairdner) was made into the +fluctuating spot behind, and pus evacuated. The patient +recovered.</p> + +<p>(<b>187</b>) <i>Possible wound of cæcum.</i>—Wounded outside Heilbron. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), in the right loin, 2½ inches above the +iliac crest, at the margin of the erector spinæ; <i>exit</i>, 1½ +inch above and within the right anterior superior spine of the +ilium. There was little shock. The patient was brought six +miles in a wagon into camp, and slept comfortably with a small +morphia injection. Prior to the accident the patient was +suffering from diarrhœa, but afterwards the bowels were +confined. The next morning there had been no sickness and +little pain. The tongue was moist and clean, the pulse 80, the +respirations 24, the belly moved generally, although +inspiration was shallow; the temperature was 99°. Slight +tenderness in the belly to the inner side of the exit wound, +but no dulness.</p> + +<p>The patient was starved for the first thirty-six hours, a +little warm water then being allowed. No symptoms developed, +and a perfect recovery followed.</p> + +<p>(<b>188</b>) <i>Colon</i>, <i>liver</i>.—Wounded outside Heilbron. <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), midway between the last right rib and the crista +ilii; <i>exit</i>, below the eighth costal cartilage in nipple line. +There were no serious primary symptoms, but ten days after the +accident the temperature rose, swelling and pain developed in +the right loin, and on the fourteenth day a large tympanitic +abscess was opened (Dr. Flockemann, German Ambulance.) +Fæcal-smelling gas and pus were evacuated. There was no +extension of the abscess forwards. A week later the patient had +much improved, although there were evident signs of general +absorption, and the discharge from the abscess cavity was +abundant and very foul. On the thirteenth day a serious +hæmorrhage occurred from the loin wound, which was opened up, +but no evident source was discovered; hæmorrhage was repeated +the next day, and the man died.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i> examination a large quantity of +chocolate-coloured fluid was found free in the abdomen and +pelvis. A chain of small local abscesses was found surrounding +the ascending colon, and a larger one over the front of the +cæcum. The wall of the ascending colon was generally thickened, +and from this, in three places, openings with rounded margins +connected the abscess cavities with the lumen of the bowel. One +of the openings, larger than the others, was possibly the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_443" id="Page_443">[Pg 443]</a></span> +aperture of entry of the bullet; the others were apparently +spontaneous.</p> + +<p>At the anterior border of the right lobe of the liver an +abscess cavity existed in connection with the wound of the +liver, and this was continuous with the aperture of exit, +although not discharging. The aperture of exit was plugged by a +tag of omentum (see fig. 89). No obvious source of the +hæmorrhage was forthcoming, but it probably originated in one +of the large branches of the vena cava. The bullet had struck +the transverse process of the lumbar vertebra, but had not +given rise to any signs of spinal concussion.</p> + +<p>(<b>189</b>*) <i>Ascending colon.</i>—Wounded at Modder River. <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), midway between the tip of the tenth right rib and the +iliac crest. Bullet retained. A second wound existed over the +centre of the left sterno-mastoid, and the bullet here was also +retained and never localised. The patient stated that he +brought up blood at short intervals for half an hour +immediately after he was wounded. This might have been +explained by the wound in the neck, but no difficulty in +swallowing was noted. The bowels acted the day after he was +shot, and, except for some local tenderness and immobility, no +abdominal signs were noted. Three weeks later a swelling was +obvious to the right side of the umbilicus, and a tympanitic +abscess developed; this was opened, and a deformed Mauser +bullet extracted. Foul pus, but no fæcal matter, was evacuated, +and after discharging for a fortnight the wound closed, and the +man was sent home as 'well.' In this case I assumed a wound of +the ascending colon had occurred.</p> + +<p>(<b>190</b>*) <i>Rectum and bladder.</i>—Wounded at Graspan, while +retiring at the double. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 1 inch to the right +of the coccyx; <i>exit</i>, 1 inch above the junction of the middle +and outer thirds of left Poupart's ligament. The man suffered +with some pain in the abdomen, and for first two days with +retention of urine. The urine was drawn off with the catheter, +and contained blood. During the next five days micturition was +hourly or more frequent; gas was passed <i>per urethram</i>, and the +urine was very foul, containing evident fæcal matter. +Micturition continued frequent, with purulent cystitis for one +month. Local tenderness, pain, and immobility developed over +the lower quarter of the abdomen, extending to the right iliac +fossa. A local abscess pointed a little to the right of the mid +line, and 2 inches above the symphysis, and from this +foul-smelling pus, but no fæces, was discharged for three +months, during which period the surrounding dulness and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_444" id="Page_444">[Pg 444]</a></span> +induration gradually decreased and the sinus healed. When the +patient left for England there was still occasional slight +discharge from the original wound of entry, and there was +slight discomfort on micturition, but he was otherwise well.</p> + +<p>A year later the man had resumed active duty, and, except for +occasional pain on stooping, considered himself well.</p></div> + +<p>The following cases are appended as of some general interest. The first +two (191, 192) illustrate extra-peritoneal injuries to the rectum. In +neither did positive evidence exist of wound of the bowel, but the +symptoms in each rendered this accident probable. Case 193 is an +illustration of apparent escape of the anal canal in a wound in which +from the position of the external apertures this escape would have +appeared impossible.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the extra-peritoneal portion of the rectum, as a rule, +appeared to have a somewhat better prognosis than would have been +expected; in any case, the prognosis was far better than that obtaining +in wounds of the base of the urinary bladder. My experience on the +subject of these wounds was, however, limited to the two cases quoted.</p> + +<p>Case 194 is inserted as an example of the complicated nature of the +abdominal injuries not so very unfrequently met with. It illustrates +well the difficulty which may arise at any stage in the course of +treatment of an injury, in the certain determination or exclusion of +wound of a part of the alimentary canal.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>191</b>) Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), in the right +loin, immediately below the ribs in the mid-axillary line; +<i>exit</i>, about the centre of the left buttock, on a level with +the tip of the great trochanter. A second lacerated shell wound +of back was present. All the wounds suppurated. For the first +sixteen days following the injury all control was lost over the +anal sphincter, and bloody fæces, and later slime, constantly +escaped, but no fæcal matter ever escaped from the wound in the +buttock. There was no history of previous dysentery, and rectal +examination afforded no information. The buttock wound had to +be opened up, disclosing a tunnel in the ilium.</p> + +<p>The wounds granulated slowly with continuous suppuration, but +were healed, and the patient returned home at the end of +fourteen weeks, the bowels acting normally.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_445" id="Page_445">[Pg 445]</a></span></p> + +<p>(<b>192</b>) Wounded at Paardeberg. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at the junction +of the middle and posterior thirds of the left iliac crest; the +bullet was retained, and removed (Mr. Pegg) from the back of +the right thigh, 3 inches below the back of the great +trochanter. After the injury retention of urine followed, with +incapacity to control loose motions, though solid ones could be +retained. The retention was treated by catheterisation, which +was followed by cystitis. The power of micturition was slowly +recovered, and three weeks later he could pass water, at times +in a dribbling stream only; the cystitis had improved. The man +returned to England very much improved, but not quite well, at +the end of five weeks.</p> + +<p>(<b>193</b>) Wounded at Modder River. <i>Entry</i>, in the right buttock, +near the outer border at the upper part; <i>exit</i>, at the lower +part of outer border of left buttock. The line of the wound +exactly crossed the position of the anus, but no sign of injury +to the rectum could be discovered.</p> + +<p>(<b>194</b>) Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 1/2 inch +below the margin of the iliac crest, at the junction of its +middle and posterior thirds, and on a level with the fifth +lumbar spinous process; <i>exit</i>, below the cartilage of the +eighth rib, just within the left nipple line. Struck while +retiring; fell at once, and remained thirty hours on the field. +Patient stated that he vomited 'blood like coffee grounds' six +times while lying on the field, and twice after being brought +in. His bowels were confined for three days. His right lower +extremity was paralysed.</p> + +<p>On the fifth day there was considerable induration around the +wound of exit, and the upper half of the abdomen was immobile +and tender. The temperature rose to 100°, and the pulse was 96. +Shortly afterwards a similar condition was noted in the lower +half of the abdomen; the temperature continued to be raised and +the pulse quickened, when on the thirteenth day a considerable +quantity of pus was passed per rectum, and diarrhœa set in; +this continued for three days, with marked improvement in the +general symptoms. Micturition, which had been painful, became +normal; the pulse and temperature fell, and the expression +became less anxious. The patient continued to sleep badly, +however, and complained of pain.</p> + +<p>At the end of the third week he still looked ill, but was +easier. Temperature normal in the morning, 100° in evening, +pulse 80. Tongue thickly furred, but moist. Still on milk diet; +appetite bad; bowels irregular.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_446" id="Page_446">[Pg 446]</a></span></p> + +<p>The abdomen moved little in the lower half, induration +persisted in the left iliac fossa, the left thigh continued +flexed, and resonance was impaired to the left of the +umbilicus.</p> + +<p>At the end of six weeks a distinct hard swelling in two parts, +separated by a resonant area, was noted to the left of the +umbilicus and in the left iliac fossa. The abdomen moved +fairly, and there was little tenderness over the swelling. +During the next week the swelling appeared to increase and to +fluctuate; at the same time the temperature again began to rise +to 100° and 101° at eve. The swelling was taken to be a +localised peritoneal suppuration, and an incision was made over +it; but this led down to a free peritoneal cavity, with a +tumour pressing up from the posterior abdominal wall. The wound +was therefore closed, and a fresh extra-peritoneal incision +made, immediately above Poupart's ligament, when the swelling +proved to be a large retro-peritoneal hæmatoma. As the cavity +extended into the pelvis and up to the level of the costal +margin, it was deemed wise only to evacuate a part of the +blood-clot. The origin of the bleeding was not determined, and +the wound was closed and healed by first intention. The man +continued to improve, and left for home five weeks later.</p> + +<p>This patient has continued to improve since his return, but the +left thigh is still somewhat flexed.</p></div> + +<p><i>Prognosis in intestinal injuries.</i>—This was of a most discouraging +character compared with the prognosis in abdominal injuries as a whole. +The cases were of two classes, however: those that died within +twenty-four hours, and those that died at the end of from three days to +a week.</p> + +<p>Cases falling into the first category are obviously of little importance +from the point of view of surgical treatment. Many of them died from the +widespread nature of the injury, and the shock produced by it; others +from hæmorrhage from the large abdominal vessels. It is unlikely that +any could have been saved, even under the most satisfactory conditions.</p> + +<p>In the following small table, therefore, I have included only the cases +which have been already quoted, which survived long enough to be +amenable to surgical treatment, and which were for some days under my +own observation. Some of them, in fact almost all, I watched until they +were either convalescent, or died, and in six I performed operations.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_447" id="Page_447">[Pg 447]</a></span></p> + +<p>I am aware, and have short details of the histories of eight patients +wounded in the same battles who died prior to the termination of the +first thirty-six hours; but these are not included, for the reason +stated above, and also because I am uncertain whether all the injuries +were produced by bullets of small calibre.</p> + + +<div class='center'> +<table border="1" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary=""> +<tr><td align='center'>Viscous wounded</td><td align='center'>Number of cases</td><td align='center'>Localised Secondary suppuration occurred</td><td align='center'>Recovered</td><td align='center'>Died</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Stomach certain</td><td align='center'>2</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>1</td><td align='center'>1</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Stomach possible</td><td align='center'>1</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>1</td><td align='center'>—</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Small intestine certain</td><td align='center'>5</td><td align='center'>0</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>5</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Small intestine possible</td><td align='center'>10</td><td align='center'>0</td><td align='center'>10</td><td align='center'>—</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Large intestine certain</td><td align='center'>8</td><td align='center'>4<a name="FNanchor_21_21" id="FNanchor_21_21"></a><a href="#Footnote_21_21" class="fnanchor">[21]</a></td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>4</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Large intestine possible</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>—</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Bladder certain</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>1</td><td align='center'>2</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Bladder possible</td><td align='center'>1</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>1</td><td align='center'>—</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Liver</td><td align='center'>6</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>6</td><td align='center'>—</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Kidneys</td><td align='center'>6</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>4</td><td align='center'>2</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Spleen</td><td align='center'>3</td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>2</td><td align='center'>1</td></tr> +<tr><td align='center'>Total</td><td align='center'>49<a name="FNanchor_22_22" id="FNanchor_22_22"></a><a href="#Footnote_22_22" class="fnanchor">[22]</a></td><td align='center'>—</td><td align='center'>34</td><td align='center'>15</td></tr> +</table></div> + +<p>Included in the above table are thirty instances of intestinal injury, +and these are divided up according to the segment of the intestinal +canal implicated, and also as to whether the perforation was certain, or +only assumed from the position of the external apertures and the +presence of abdominal symptoms of a noticeable grade.</p> + +<p>From this analysis it appears clear—</p> + +<p>1. That wounds of the stomach have a comparatively good prognosis, and +that they may recover spontaneously. It is true that only two examples +are included in my table; but I was at various times shown patients with +similar injuries and histories, and a number of cases which have been +published appear to substantiate the opinion. From our experience of the +occasional spontaneous recovery of gastric perforations from disease, I +think we might be prepared to expect that the stomach would offer a +comparatively favourable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_448" id="Page_448">[Pg 448]</a></span> seat for these wounds. It may be pointed out, +however, that hæmatemesis, the main feature in the symptoms pointing to +wound, is by no means direct proof of more than contusion.</p> + +<p>2. That perforating wounds of the small intestine are very fatal +injuries; every patient in whom the condition was <i>certainly</i> diagnosed +died.</p> + +<p>3. That in the cases in which a perforation was inferred from the +position of the external apertures and the symptoms, not one patient +suffered from the secondary complications—<i>e.g.</i> local peritonitis and +suppuration, which were common in the case of the large intestine, and +which we are accustomed to see after perforation from disease. This +renders the occurrence of actual perforation in the majority of the +cases a matter of very grave doubt.</p> + +<p>If spontaneous recovery does take place after this injury, it is only in +cases in which the wounds are single, and slight in character.</p> + +<p>4. That in eight cases in which perforation of the large intestine was +certain, four recoveries took place; but in each instance suppuration +occurred. I am, however, quite prepared to believe that perforation may +have occurred in some or all of the other four cases included as +'possible,' provided the wounds were intra-peritoneal.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the cæcum and ascending colon are those which have the best +prognosis, and after these of the rectum. The comparatively good +prognosis in these parts is what would be expected, on account of their +greater fixity, and lesser tendency to be covered by the small +intestine.</p> + +<p>An extra-peritoneal wound of any of these portions of the bowel is more +dangerous than an intra-peritoneal, and more likely to give rise to +septicæmia.</p> + +<p>Of the cases included in my table eighteen of the possible intestinal +injuries were observed among the wounded of the four battles of the +Kimberley relief force. These cases I saw early and followed to their +termination, and I believe the list contains the great majority of all +the patients who received intestinal wounds in those battles. On inquiry +I could not learn of others from the officers of the Field hospitals; +but no doubt<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_449" id="Page_449">[Pg 449]</a></span> some patients died before their reception into hospital, +and some may have been overlooked; again, I know of two cases in which +death took place within the first week, but which went direct to the +Base and did not come under my observation. These exceptions being made, +we have a fairly complete series, from which some deductions may be +drawn. The cases included are marked with an asterisk.</p> + +<p>Of the eighteen cases, eight or <b>44.4</b> per cent. died. These were made up +as follows:—Stomach, one case; this patient died at the end of fourteen +days, as a result of secondary hæmorrhage and septicæmia. It was +complicated by a severe wound of the liver and also one of the lung.</p> + +<p>Small intestine, four certain cases; all died, two after operation in +the stage of septicæmia, and one after operation from recurrent +hæmorrhage, possibly from the mesentery. Of the other six cases one can +only say that the position of the wounds was such as to render wound of +the intestine possible, and that all suffered with abdominal symptoms of +some severity.</p> + +<p>Large intestine. Of six cases in which wound was certain, three died, +one after operation. One recovered after operation, two recovered with +local peritoneal suppuration. In one case the injury could only be +returned as possible.</p> + +<p>In connection with this subject I have received permission from Mr. +Watson Cheyne to quote the statistics published by him<a name="FNanchor_23_23" id="FNanchor_23_23"></a><a href="#Footnote_23_23" class="fnanchor">[23]</a> concerning +the abdominal wounds observed after the fighting at Karree Siding, on +March 29, which are as follows:—</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>'The number of the wounded was 154, and in fifteen it was +considered that the abdominal cavity had been penetrated. Of +these patients, five had already died within twenty-four to +twenty-eight hours after the injury, and I saw ten who were +still alive. Of these nine were left alone, and four died +within the next twenty-four or thirty-six hours; five were +still alive when I left Karee on Sunday afternoon, April 1. On +one I operated, but he died on April 2.</p> + +<p>The Karee statistics are really the only complete ones which I +have as yet been able to obtain. The following are the notes of +the cases above alluded to.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_450" id="Page_450">[Pg 450]</a></span></p> + +<p>Besides the five cases of abdominal wounds which had already +died, and of which I could get no complete details, the +following ten are cases which I saw from twenty-four to thirty +hours after they were shot:—</p></div> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Cases From the Action at Karee</span></h3> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Case I.</span>—The point of entrance was 2 inches to the right of the +umbilicus, and the bullet was found lying under the skin far +back in the left loin. The patient was pulseless, and there was +much rigidity of the abdomen, tenderness, and vomiting. He died +a few hours later.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case II.</span>—The bullet, coming from the side, had entered the +abdomen 4 inches below and behind the right nipple. There was +no exit wound. The patient had been vomiting a good deal, but +not any blood; the abdomen was very rigid and tender. He was +obviously very ill, and died the next morning. The bullet had +probably perforated the liver and <i>stomach</i>.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case III.</span>—There was a large wound above the right anterior +iliac spine (probably the point of exit), and a small opening +behind and near the spine on the same side. There was great +tenderness and rigidity of the abdomen. He died a few hours +later.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case IV.</span>—In this case there was a transverse wound of the +abdomen, the bullet having entered on the right side in the +middle of the lumbar region and passed out on the left side, +rather higher up and further back. All the symptoms of acute +peritonitis were present. The patient died the next morning.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case V.</span>—The bullet had entered the anterior end of the sixth +intercostal space on the left side, and was found lying under +the skin over the seventh intercostal space on the right side +and about 2 inches further back. He had vomited blood on the +previous day. The bullet may have perforated the <i>stomach</i>. The +epigastrium was somewhat tender, but there were no marked +symptoms. On April 1 he was going on well.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case VI.</span>—The place of entrance of the bullet was 1 inch in +front of the right anterior superior spine, and of exit behind +the left sacro-iliac synchondrosis. There was much hæmorrhage +at the time. His condition when I saw him was fair, and there +was no marked abdominal tenderness. On April 1 his morning +temperature was 101°. There were no signs of general +peritonitis, and his condition was good.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case VII.</span>—The bullet had entered from behind, about the tip of +the twelfth rib on the left side, and had left about the middle +of the epigastrium, and rather to the left of the middle line.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_451" id="Page_451">[Pg 451]</a></span></p> + +<p>Vomiting was still going on, but not of blood. There was much +tenderness and rigidity of the abdomen, and he was almost +pulseless. On April 1 his general condition was better, but the +abdomen was very rigid and tender. (Subsequently died.)</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case VIII.</span>—The point of entrance of the bullet was about 2 +inches from the anterior end of the seventh left intercostal +space, and of exit rather lower down and further back on the +right side. The patient said that he had vomited brown fluid +after the injury. There was much abdominal pain, but his +general condition was fair. On April 1 there was still much +pain, but his general condition was good.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case IX.</span>—The bullet had entered about 1½ inch in front of +the anterior inferior spine on the right side, had gone +directly backwards, and had come out in the buttock. The +patient, however, suffered very little. On March 31 there was +slight tympanites and tenderness in the right iliac fossa. The +bowels acted well, and no blood was passed. On April 1 he was +very well, and it was considered very doubtful if any viscus +was wounded.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Case X.</span>—The point of entrance was in the middle of the right +buttock, a little above the level of the trochanter; the exit +was through the anterior abdominal wall in the right semilunar +line at the level of the umbilicus. The patient was decidedly +ill; the abdomen was a good deal distended, and pressure on it +caused an escape of gas through the anterior opening. There was +a good deal of abdominal tenderness and rigidity. I opened the +abdomen outside the right linea semilunaris, and found a +perforation in the anterior wall of the <i>ascending colon</i>, +without any adhesions around, which was easily stitched up. The +posterior opening was found about 2 inches lower down, with a +piece of omentum firmly adherent to it and completely closing +it. As the patient was in a bad state, I thought it better, +instead of excising the piece of intestine beyond the holes or +tearing off the omentum, to leave the wounds alone, merely +cleaning out the peritoneal cavity as well as I could and +arranging for free drainage. He rallied from the operation very +well, and for twenty-four hours it looked as if he might get +better; but he gradually got worse and died on April 2.'</p></div> + +<p>The above statistics are particularly valuable, as they give the +incidence of abdominal injuries compared with those in general in one +definite battle. This amounted to the high number of 15 in 154 or <b>9.74</b> +per cent. wounded. I am inclined to think that this is a higher +proportion than the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_452" id="Page_452">[Pg 452]</a></span> average of the campaign, and that more of the men +must have been exposed in the erect position than was ordinarily the +case during the fighting.</p> + +<p>The statistics also show that 33.33 per cent. of the patients with +abdominal injuries died within from twenty-four to twenty-eight hours, +and that the percentage of deaths had risen to 73.33 per cent. at the +end of the third day. These numbers again seem high, but in this +relation it may be noted that, as a small force only was present, and as +all the patients were together, Mr. Cheyne had unusually good +opportunities for seeing all the cases.</p> + +<p>One other point is doubtful from the report, and that is what percentage +of the wounds were caused by bullets of small calibre. In one case it is +definitely stated that the wound was large, and in the second that gas +escaped from the wound; both of these may have been instances in which a +large bullet, or some expanding form, had been employed, and there is no +doubt that the use of such projectiles was more common at this stage of +the campaign than it was earlier.</p> + +<p><i>Treatment of injuries to the intestine.</i>—Some general rules for the +immediate treatment of all cases may be laid down. First, the patients +must be removed with as little disturbance as possible, and absolute +starvation must be insisted upon. If the patients be suffering from +severe shock, hypodermic injections of strychnine should be +administered, or possibly some stimulant by the rectum.</p> + +<p>After a battle, when these cases may be brought in in considerable +number, they should be collected and placed in the same tent. The +objection to congregating a number of severely wounded patients together +must be disregarded in the face of the manifest advantage of being able +to treat all alike in the matter of feeding. After the battles of the +Kimberley relief force, Surgeon-General Wilson, at my request, had all +the abdominal cases placed in a large marquee, where we were able to +carefully watch the whole of the patients from hour to hour, and little +chance existed for any indiscretion on the part of the patients in the +way of eating or drinking.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_453" id="Page_453">[Pg 453]</a></span></p> + +<p>If possible, the patients should be kept absolutely quiet until they are +evidently out of danger. A week's stay at Orange River sufficed for this +object in the cases referred to. The avoidance of transport is +manifestly of extreme prognostic importance.</p> + +<p>When feeding is commenced at the end of twenty-four or thirty-six hours, +it must be in the form at first of warm water, then milk administered in +tea-spoonfuls only.</p> + +<p>In doubtful cases the use of morphia must be avoided.</p> + +<p>Operative treatment is required in a certain number of the cases, but in +the majority of instances we are met with the extreme difficulty that in +a very large proportion of the occasions upon which these wounds are +received an exploratory abdominal section is not warranted in +consequence of the conditions under which it has to be performed.</p> + +<p>A word must be added as to these difficulties; they are in part purely +of an administrative nature, partly surgical. After a great battle the +wounded are numerous, and amongst them a very considerable proportion of +the wounds and injuries are of such a nature as to do extremely well if +promptly dealt with, and each of these makes small demands on the time +of the staff. Abdominal operations, on the other hand, are +unsatisfactory from a prognostic point of view, and their performance +requires much time and the assistance of a considerable number of the +men, who are obliged to neglect the treatment of the more promising +cases for those of doubtful issue. This difficulty, although not +surgical in its nature, is nevertheless a practical one of great +importance and appeals strongly to the Principal Medical Officers in +charge of the arrangements. It is only to be avoided by an increase of +the staff, which is not likely to be made except on very special +occasions.</p> + +<p>Other difficulties are purely surgical. First, the difficulty of +diagnosing with certainty a perforating lesion. In the presence of the +fact that many incomplete lesions follow wounds crossing the intestinal +area, and that these give rise to modified symptoms, I believe this +determination to be impossible without the aid of an exploratory +incision. Here we are met with the remaining surgical +difficulties—disadvantages such as the absence of sufficient aid to the +operating<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_454" id="Page_454">[Pg 454]</a></span> surgeon, difficulties connected with the temperature, wind, +and dust, and as to the subsequent treatment of the patient. Again +difficulty in obtaining the most important adjunct, suitable water, or +indeed any water in a sufficient quantity.</p> + +<p>It is of course obvious that conditions may exist in which all these +troubles may be avoided. Again, the practical difficulty adverted to +above does not come in the way when a single man happens to sustain an +abdominal wound on the march. Under such circumstances an exploration +may be not only justifiable, but obligatory, and the general rules of +surgery must be followed rather than such incomplete indications as are +suggested below.</p> + +<p>My own experience led me to the following conclusions:</p> + +<p>1. A wound in the intestinal area should be watched with care. In the +face of the numerous recoveries in such cases, habitual abdominal +exploration is not justified, under the conditions usually prevailing in +the field.</p> + +<p>2. The very large class of patients excluded by this rule from operation +leads us to a smaller and less satisfactory number to be divided into +two categories:</p> + +<p>Patients who die during the first twelve hours. The whole of these are +naturally unfit for operation, and their general condition when seen +often precludes any thought of it.</p> + +<p>Patients with very severe injuries, as evidenced by the escape of fæces, +or with wounds from flank to flank or taking an antero-posterior course +in the small intestinal area. These patients die, and the majority of +them will always die whether operated upon or not. The undertaking of +operations upon them is unpleasant to the surgeon, as being unlikely to +be attended with any great degree of success, whence the impression may +gain ground that patients are killed by the operations. None the less, I +think these operations ought to be undertaken when the attendant +conditions allow, and it is from this class of case that the real +successes will be drawn in the future. The history of such injuries, +after all, corresponds exactly with what we were long familiar with in +traumatic ruptures in civil practice, and now know may be avoided by a +sufficiently early interference. The whole question here is one of time, +and this will always be the trouble in military work.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_455" id="Page_455">[Pg 455]</a></span></p> + +<p>3. The expectant attitude which is obligatory under the above rules in +doubtful cases, brings us face to face with a large proportion of +patients in the early or late stage of peritoneal septicæmia. These +cases run on exactly the same lines as those in which the same condition +is secondary to spontaneous perforation of the bowel, in which we +consider it our duty to operate, and in which a definite percentage of +recoveries is obtained. Hence another unpleasant duty is here imposed +upon the surgeon. Two such cases on which I operated are recounted +above, and although I cannot say they give much encouragement, I should +add that in the only one I left untouched, I regretted my want of +courage for the five days during which the patient continued to carry on +a miserable existence.</p> + +<p>4. The treatment of the cases in which an expectant attitude is followed +by the advent of localised suppuration presents no difficulty; simple +incision alone is needed, and healing follows.</p> + +<p>As a rule this is a late condition. In one case of injury to the +ascending colon recounted above, however, considerable local escape of +fæces had occurred, and a successful result was obtained by a local +incision on the third day without suture of the bowel. In this case I +believe the wound in the bowel to have been of the nature of a long +slit, but the surrounding adhesions were so firm as to render any +interference with them a great risk, and a successful result was +obtained at the cost of a somewhat prolonged recovery. I am convinced +that the best course was followed here. (No. 131.)</p> + +<p>When the suppuration was of a less acute character, it was generally +advisable to allow the pus to make its way towards the surface before +interference.</p> + +<p>5. Cases of injury to the colon in which the posterior aspect is +involved should be treated by free opening up of the wound, and either +by suture of the bowel or else its fixation to the surface. I operated +on one such case, and although the patient eventually died on the eighth +day, from septicæmia, he certainly had a chance. Two cases where the +opening looked so free that one almost thought the wound could be +regarded as a lumbar colotomy did badly; in both infection of the +pleura<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_456" id="Page_456">[Pg 456]</a></span> took place, besides extension of suppuration into the +retro-peritoneal areolar tissue. In the future I should always feel +inclined to enlarge such wounds and bring the bowel to the surface.</p> + +<p>As regards actual technique the majority of the wounds are particularly +well suited to suture; three stitches across the opening and one at +either end of the resulting crease sufficed to close the opening +effectively. The openings in the small intestine were not as a rule +difficult to find, on account of the ecchymosis which surrounded them. +From what I have seen stated in the reports given by other surgeons, +there seems to have been more difficulty in discovering wounds in the +large gut. Under ordinary circumstances the only instruments specially +needed are a needle and some silk. At my first two operations, as my +instruments had gone astray, the wounds were readily closed by a needle +and cotton borrowed from the wife of a railway porter.</p> + +<p>If aseptic sponges or pads are not available, boiled squares of ordinary +lint may be employed for the belly, and towels wrung out of 1 to 20 +carbolic acid solution used to surround the field of operation. Whenever +there is any likelihood of the necessity for operations, water boiled +and filtered should be kept ready in special bottles.</p> + +<p>When septic peritonitis was already present, the ordinary procedure of +dry mopping, followed by irrigation, was necessary, before closing the +belly.</p> + +<p>The after-treatment should be on the usual lines as to feeding, &c.</p> + +<p>I am unaware to what degree success followed intestinal operations +generally during the campaign. I saw only one case in which the small +intestine had been treated by excision and the insertion of a Murphy's +button in which a cure followed: this case was in the Scottish Royal Red +Cross hospital under the care of Mr. Luke. I heard of two cases in which +the large intestine was successfully sutured, and of one other in which +recovery followed the removal of a considerable length of the small +bowel for multiple wounds.</p> + +<p>In concluding these most unsatisfactory remarks, I should add that the +impressions are those that were gained as the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_457" id="Page_457">[Pg 457]</a></span> result of the conditions +by which we were bound in South Africa, and which might recur even in a +more civilised region. Under really satisfactory conditions nothing I +saw in my South African experience would lead me to recommend any +deviation from the ordinary rules of modern surgery, except in so far as +I should be more readily inclined to believe that wounds in certain +positions already indicated might occur without perforation of the bowel +when produced by bullets of small calibre; and further in cases where I +believed the fixed portion of the large bowel was the segment of the +alimentary canal that had been exposed to risk, I should not be inclined +to operate hastily.</p> + +<p>A careful consideration of the whole of the cases that I saw leaves me +with the firm impression that perforating wounds of the small intestine +differ in no way in their results and consequences when produced by +small-calibre bullets, from those of every-day experience, although when +there is reason merely to suspect their presence an exploration is not +indicated under circumstances that may add a fresh danger to the +patient.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the urinary bladder.</i>—Perforating wounds of the bladder are +the injuries nearest akin to those we have just considered, but a great +gulf separates them, in so far as the escape of a few drops or even a +considerable quantity of normal urine does not necessarily mean +peritoneal infection. The difference in this particular was very +forcibly demonstrated in my experience, since an uncomplicated +perforation of the bladder in the intra-peritoneal portion of the viscus +proved to be an injury that not infrequently recovered spontaneously, I +believe in a considerable proportion of the cases.</p> + +<p>I include only one such case in my list because it was the only example +which happened to be under my personal observation during its whole +course, but from time to time I was shown several others in which the +position of the external apertures and the transient presence of +hæmaturia left little doubt as to the nature of the injury. The case +recounted above, No. 190, is of especial interest, since the patient +recovered from an injury which involved both the bladder and a fixed +portion of the large intestine in contact with its posterior surface.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_458" id="Page_458">[Pg 458]</a></span></p> + +<p>In another, No. 194, a transient inflammatory thickening pointed to a +local inflammation of a non-infective character, since no suppuration +ensued, and this may have been a case of extra-peritoneal wound; on the +other hand, the bladder may have entirely escaped injury. In wounds of +the portions of the viscus not clad in peritoneum, as a rule, a very +different prognosis obtains. Two typical cases are related, which I +believe fairly represent the general results which follow when the +bladder is either wounded behind the symphysis or at the base. The first +case, No. 195, exemplifies a very characteristic form of wound when +small-calibred bullets are concerned. The bullet, taking a course more +or less parallel to that of the wall of the viscus, cut a long slit in +its anterior wall. This bullet in its onward passage comminuted the +horizontal ramus of the pubes, and lodged in the thigh. Into the latter +region the greater part of the extravasated urine escaped. I think the +history of this case fully shows that I made a blunder in not performing +a proper exploration, instead of contenting myself with an incision in +the thigh. My only excuse was that the patient at the time I saw him was +in a very collapsed state, and a severe grade of abdominal distension +suggested that septic peritonitis was already in an advanced stage. In +point of fact, the patient at once improved, sufficiently so to be able +to undergo a second exploration at a later date by Mr. Hanwell at the +Base, only dying of septicæmia at the end of twenty-one days. Even a +free supra-pubic vent might, I believe, have given him a chance of life.</p> + +<p>When the perforation was at the base of the bladder, however, the +prognosis was very bad, and, as far as I know, not a single patient +escaped death. The increase of risk in an extra-peritoneal wound of this +viscus is indeed very great, while an intra-peritoneal perforation may +be considered an injury of lesser severity, provided the urine be of +normal character.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>194</b><i>a</i>) <i>Possible wound of the bladder.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), immediately above the +symphysis pubis; <i>exit</i>, in the buttock, behind the tip of the +left great trochanter. The man was struck while advancing, and +fell, thinking at the time 'that he was struck in the foot.' He +lay twelve hours on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_459" id="Page_459">[Pg 459]</a></span> the field, and passed water for the first +time when the bearer removed him. During the next two days he +passed urine only twice, and no blood was noticed. The bowels +acted on the evening of the third day. When seen on the fourth +day he complained of aching pain in the lower part of the +belly, and a concentric patch of tender induration extended for +about 1½ inch around the wound. The abdominal wall was +moving well. The tongue was clean and moist. There was no blood +in the urine, and micturition was not frequent. Temperature +99.4°. Pulse 80, good strength. The patient was then sent to +the Base. At the end of seventeen days there was still a little +tenderness in the left iliac fossa; but the man was otherwise +well, and at the end of a month he was sent home.</p> + +<p>(<b>195</b>) <i>Extra-peritoneal wound of the bladder.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), at the fore part of the right +buttock. No exit. The patient was seen on the third day. He had +an expression of extreme anxiety, and complained of very great +pain in the abdomen and thigh. The abdomen was greatly +distended and tympanitic, and the left thigh and groin were +very much swollen and œdematous, with some redness of +surface. Temperature 100°, pulse 120. No sickness, tongue +moist, bowels confined. Retention of urine. The condition of +the patient was very grave; but he was anæsthetised, clear +urine was withdrawn from the bladder by catheter, and an +incision was made into the thigh just below the inner third of +Poupart's ligament, where fluctuation was evident. Two pints of +bloody urine were evacuated, and when a finger was introduced +it passed over a fracture of the pubes into the pelvis, but not +into the peritoneal cavity. In view of the patient's condition +it was not thought wise to proceed further, and he somewhat +improved later, and was sent to the Base. Loss of power in the +right lower extremity pointed to injury to the anterior crural +nerve.</p> + +<p>On the patient's arrival at Wynberg there were signs of local +peritonitis in the lower half of the abdomen, and all his urine +was passed from the wound in the left thigh. Some days later +this wound was enlarged to allow of the freer exit of pus, and +a fragment of bone was removed. The wound granulated healthily, +but the man steadily emaciated and lost ground, with signs of +chronic septicæmia, and he died on the twenty-first day. At the +<i>post-mortem</i> examination a transverse wound of the anterior +wall of the bladder behind the pubes, below the peritoneal +reflexion, was found gaping somewhat widely, and 2 inches in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_460" id="Page_460">[Pg 460]</a></span> +length. There was little sign of previous peritonitis. The +retained bullet was discovered beneath the femoral vessels in +the left thigh.</p> + +<p>(<b>196</b>) <i>Extra-peritoneal perforation of the bladder.</i>—Wounded +at Paardeberg. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 3 inches above the left tuber +ischii; <i>exit</i>, above the symphysis, immediately over the right +margin of the penis. The patient was retiring to fetch +ammunition when shot. Urine was noted to escape from both +apertures the day after, and this continued until he was sent +down to the Base on the fourteenth day. The patient was then +considerably emaciated, complained of great pain, especially +down the left thigh (sciatic nerve), the temperature averaged +100°, the pulse 80, tongue clean and moist, bowels acted +regularly, no sign of injury to the rectum. He was taking food +fairly, but was very sleepless. Urine was passed per urethram, +and also escaped by both wounds. The abdomen was flaccid and +sunken, respiratory movements being confined to the upper half.</p> + +<p>As there was evidence of considerable infiltration in the +buttock, the original entry wound was enlarged, and a catheter +was tied into the bladder. Little change occurred in the +symptoms and the local condition, urine and pus continued to +escape freely from the posterior wound, and the patient +gradually sank, dying on the thirty-eighth day. At the +<i>post-mortem</i> examination the peritoneum was found intact and +unaltered, but there was extensive pelvic cellulitis around the +bladder, a large slough and some pus lying in the cavum Retzii. +An aperture of entry still open existed in the centre of the +anterior wall of the bladder, and a patent exit opening at the +base of the trigone. The bullet had passed out of the pelvis by +the great sciatic notch.</p></div> + +<p>The above remarks and cases sufficiently set forth the prognosis in +these injuries. For the intra-peritoneal lesions an expectant plan of +treatment may be followed by uncomplicated recovery. Mention has already +been made of a case in which a Mauser bullet was retained in the bladder +and was subsequently passed per urethram. In such a case a cystotomy +would be indicated were the bullet discovered in the viscus.</p> + +<p>As to extra-peritoneal injuries it is difficult to lay down guiding +lines. I believe the ideal treatment would be a supra-pubic cystotomy +and drainage of the bladder by a Sprengel's pump apparatus, such as we +employ at home. Under these circumstances, with the possibility of +keeping the bladder actually<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_461" id="Page_461">[Pg 461]</a></span> empty, I believe good results might be +obtained. Certainly drainage of the bladder by a catheter tied in proved +worse than useless, and I very much doubt whether a simple supra-pubic +opening would give any better results under the circumstances under +which a patient has to be treated in a Field hospital.</p> + +<p>Cases might, however, occur in which oblique passage of the bullet cuts +a groove and makes a large opening in the peritoneum-clad portion of the +viscus. Under satisfactory conditions a laparotomy would be here +indicated. I take it that this condition would most probably be +accompanied by retention of bloody urine, which fact would arouse +suspicion.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Injuries to the Solid Abdominal Viscera</span></h3> + +<p><i>Wounds of the kidney.</i>—Tracks implicating the kidneys were of +comparatively common occurrence. As uncomplicated injuries they healed +rapidly, and without producing any serious symptoms beyond transient +hæmaturia.</p> + +<p>The nature of the lesion appeared to vary with the direction of the +wound. In many cases a simple puncture no doubt alone existed, an injury +no more to be feared than the exploratory punctures often made for +surgical purposes. In other cases the wounds may have been of the nature +of notches and grooves.</p> + +<p>Two of the cases recounted below were of a more severe variety; in one +(No. 201) both kidneys were implicated by symmetrical wounds of the +loin, and in the case of the right organ a transverse rupture was +produced, which was followed by the development of a hydro-nephrosis, +and later by suppuration. This injury was probably the result of a wound +from a short range, as the patient was one of those wounded in the early +part of the day at the battle of Magersfontein. It was complicated by a +wound of the spleen and an injury to the spinal cord producing +incomplete paraplegia accompanied by retention of urine. The last +complication was responsible for the death of the patient, since +ascending infection from the bladder led to the development of +pyo-nephrosis and death from secondary peritonitis.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_462" id="Page_462">[Pg 462]</a></span></p> + +<p>Case 202 is an instance of a transverse wound of the upper part of the +abdominal cavity; it is impossible to say what further complications +were present. The early development of a tympanitic abscess suggested an +injury to the colon, but this was not by any means certain. The +condition of the kidney was very likely similar to that in the last +case, but the ultimate recovery of the patient left this a matter of +doubt. The case was also one dependent on a short-range wound, since the +patient, one of the Scandinavian contingent, was wounded at +Magersfontein during close fighting.</p> + +<p>The common history of the symptoms after a wound of the kidney was +moderate hæmorrhage from the organ, persisting for two to four days. In +one of the cases recounted below the hæmaturia was accompanied by the +passage of ureteral clots, but this was not a common occurrence.</p> + +<p>For the sake of comparison I have included one case of wound of the +kidney from a large bullet, in which death was due to internal +hæmorrhage. In this instance the injury was a complex one, the lung +certainly, and the back of the liver probably, being concurrently +injured. None the less if the same track had been produced by a bullet +of small calibre I believe the injury would not have proved a fatal one. +I never saw such free renal hæmorrhage in any of the Mauser or +Lee-Metford wounds.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>197</b>) <i>Wound of right kidney.</i>—Wounded at Modder River while +lying in the prone position; retired 100 yards at the double +with his company, and walked a further 1½ mile. There was +very slight bleeding. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), in the tenth right +intercostal space in the mid-axillary line; <i>exit</i>, in eleventh +interspace, 2 inches from the spinous processes. Cylindrical +blood-clots, 3 inches in length, were passed on the first two +occasions of micturition after the accident, and the urine +contained blood. For four days he could only lie on the wounded +side. When seen on the third day the urine was normal, and +there were no signs of injury to either thoracic or abdominal +viscera. He returned to England well at the end of a month.</p> + +<p>(<b>198</b>) <i>Wound of right kidney.</i>—Wounded at Modder River while +kneeling to dress another man's wound. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), in the +seventh right intercostal space in the nipple line; <i>exit</i>,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_463" id="Page_463">[Pg 463]</a></span> 1 +inch to the right of the twelfth dorsal spine. The man was +carried off the field, and during the first day vomited +frequently. For two days there was blood in his urine, and he +passed water four to five times daily. He returned to duty at +the end of three weeks.</p> + +<p>(<b>199</b>) <i>Wound of the left kidney.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. +<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 2 inches to the left and 1 inch below the +left nipple. No exit. Lying in prone position when struck. +Bloody urine was passed at normal intervals for four days, when +the hæmaturia ceased. No thoracic signs, and no other sign of +abdominal injury. There was tenderness in the left loin below +the twelfth rib for some days, possibly over the position of +the bullet, but the latter was neither localised nor removed.</p> + +<p>(<b>200</b>) <i>Wound of the right kidney.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein +while retiring on his feet. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), immediately to +the right of the second lumbar spinous process; bullet retained +and lay beneath margin of ninth right costal cartilage. The man +passed urine containing blood twelve times during the first +day, and hæmaturia continued until the evening of the third +day. On the third day the belly was tumid and did not move +well; there was no dulness in the right flank. Pulse 120, fair +strength. Temperature 99°. Respirations 20. Tongue moist, +bowels confined for four days. The fifth day the pulse fell to +76, and the bowels were moved by an enema. Great tenderness +over bullet. The tenderness persisted over the bullet and also +in the right flank until the tenth day, when the bullet was +removed. At the end of a month the patient returned to England +well but during the third week there was occasionally blood in +the urine.</p> + +<p>(<b>201</b>) <i>Wound of both kidneys (rupture of right) and +spleen.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), (<i>a</i>) 1 +inch to right of second lumbar spinous process; (<i>b</i>) above +angle of left ninth rib: <i>exits</i>, (<i>a</i>) 1 inch internal to +right anterior superior iliac spine; (<i>b</i>) in seventh +intercostal space in mid-axillary line. The wound on the right +side gave rise to a lesion of the lumbar bulb (see p. 315), and +the patient suffered throughout with retention. There was +complete paralysis of the right lower extremity, both motor and +sensory. For ten days there was hæmaturia, and very severe +cystitis developed, while the patient suffered with severe +abdominal pain. The cystitis persisted, also retention, which +gradually gave way to dribbling, while irregular rise of +temperature and tenderness in the loins pointed to ascending +inflammation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_464" id="Page_464">[Pg 464]</a></span> in the ureters. The patient gradually lost +ground, and a month later suddenly developed signs of +peritonitis, severe vomiting, distension, and dulness in the +right flank; and in two days he died.</p> + +<p>At the <i>post-mortem</i> examination the following condition was +found:—On the right side general pleural adhesions, recent +lymph over ascending colon and cæcum, ࡍvj of bloody fluid in a localised cavity +between colon, kidney, stomach, and liver. Lower quarter of +right kidney in half its width separated from main part of +organ, yellow in colour, and enveloped in disintegrating clot. +Blood-staining of psoas sheath; no injury to vertebral column +or to bowel detected.</p> + +<p>On the left side recent pleural adhesions and consolidation of +base of lung, rent of diaphragm; spleen soft and disorganised +and presenting a yellow cicatrix at its upper end, and at +antero-external aspect of left kidney was a soft yellow +puckered spot about the size of a florin, dipping 3/4 of an +inch into the organ, which was otherwise healthy, beyond +congestion. The capsules of both kidneys were adherent, but +there was no sign of suppuration.</p> + +<p>(<b>202</b>) <i>Wound of right kidney. Traumatic +hydronephrosis.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> +(Lee-Metford), in the eleventh intercostal space in the +posterior axillary line; <i>exit</i>, in the tenth right interspace, +in mid axillary line. The patient was in the prone position +when struck, and lay on the field from 5 <span class="smcap">a.m.</span> until 6 <span class="smcap">p.m.</span> +There was no sickness, and the bowels did not act. When seen on +the fourth day he was cheerful, but in some pain. The abdominal +wall moved well, but was rigid; there was some general +distension, and very marked local distension of the gastric +area extending across to the right, so that a depressed band +extended between the upper and lower parts of the belly. There +was marked local dulness in the right flank, which did not +shift on movement; the abdomen was elsewhere tympanitic. Tongue +furred, bowels confined; there has been no sickness, and no +hæmatemesis. Urine normal, and in good quantity. Temperature +100°. Pulse 84, good strength. There was impairment of +sensation in the area of distribution of the external cutaneous +and crural branch of the genito-crural nerves.</p> + +<p>On the sixth day the bowels acted, after the administration of +℥j of sulphate of +magnesia, and the distension was much lessened, although the +belly retained its unusual appearance. The dulness in the flank +was unaltered. Temperature 100.8°, pulse 92.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_465" id="Page_465">[Pg 465]</a></span></p> + +<p>A week later the man was much improved, suffering no pain. +Temperature ranged from 99 to 100°, and the pulse about 80. The +abdomen was normal in appearance, except for general prominence +of the right thorax in the hepatic area.</p> + +<p>During the third week a large tympanitic abscess developed at +the aperture of exit, and this was opened (Mr. S. W. F. +Richardson) through the chest, and a large collection of +foul-smelling pus, but no fæcal matter, evacuated. The patient +again improved, but a fortnight later a swelling and apparent +signs of local peritonitis developed in the right inguinal and +lower umbilical and lumbar regions. An incision made over this, +however, disclosed a normal peritoneal cavity and was closed.</p> + +<p>At the end of ten weeks the patient was sent to the Base +hospital; a large firm swelling was then evident, extending +from the liver to the inguinal region, and nearly to the median +line. This gradually increased until it filled half the belly; +it was at first thought to be a retro-peritoneal hæmatoma +(similar to that described in case 194), but it became quite +soft and fluctuating, and was then tapped, and ℥50 of blood-stained fluid, which proved to be urine, were +removed. The urine rapidly reaccumulated, and the cavity was +then laid freely open. Urine continued to discharge in large +quantity for two months, the man meanwhile remaining well, and +passing a somewhat variable daily quantity of urine (℥xxiv-℥lx).</p> + +<p>At the end of six months the wound had healed, and the man was +serving as an orderly in the hospital.</p> + +<p>(<b>203</b>) <i>Wound of right kidney and lung.</i>—Wounded near +Paardekraal, while crawling on hands and knees. <i>Entry</i> +(Martini-Henry, or small bullet making lateral impact), just +above the right nipple, opening ragged and large, bullet +retained. There was very severe shock, accompanied by vomiting, +but no hæmatemesis. Later there was some hæmoptysis. Pulse 120, +respirations 48.</p> + +<p>Twenty-four hours later the vomiting had ceased; the patient +had passed a restless night, in spite of an injection of +morphia. He lay on his right side, pale and collapsed, but +answered questions and was quite collected. Pulse +imperceptible, respirations 56; the abdomen moved freely. The +urine had been passed twice, and was chiefly blood. The patient +died shortly afterwards, apparently mainly from internal +hæmorrhage, although restlessness was not a prominent feature. +As the Column was on the march no autopsy was possible.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_466" id="Page_466">[Pg 466]</a></span></p> + +<p>The treatment of uncomplicated wounds of the kidney consisted in the +ensurance of rest, either alone, or with the administration of opium if +the hæmaturia was severe. The after-treatment in the event of the +development of hydronephrosis is on ordinary lines. Tapping, or incision +followed by extirpation of the injured viscus, if the less severe +procedures failed. I never saw a case where renal hæmorrhage suggested +the removal of the kidney as a primary step, and much doubt whether such +a case is likely to be met with, as the result of a wound from a bullet +of small calibre.</p> + +<p><i>Wounds of the liver.</i>—Wounds of the liver were, I believe, responsible +for more cases of death from primary hæmorrhage than those of the +kidney. I heard of a few cases in which this occurred, although I never +saw one. Case 204 is of considerable interest as illustrating the result +of an injury to one of the large bile ducts. Putting the deaths from +primary hæmorrhage on one side, the prognosis in hepatic wounds was as +good as in those of the kidneys. A few fairly uncomplicated cases are +quoted below, but wounds of the liver occurred in connection with a +large number of other injuries both of the chest and abdomen, and except +in the case of wound of the stomach, recorded on page 425, No. 164, and +in case 188, I never saw any troublesome consequences ensue.</p> + +<p><i>Nature of the lesions.</i>—I never saw any case of so-called explosive +lesion of the liver, such as have been described from experimental +results; this may have been due to the fact that such patients rapidly +expired, but such were never admitted into the hospitals.</p> + +<p>The most favourable cases were those in which a simple perforation was +effected; such were usually attended by a practical absence of symptoms, +unless a large bile duct had been implicated, when a temporary biliary +fistula resulted.</p> + +<p>Biliary fistulæ were, however, much more common when the bullet scored +the surface of the organ. One such case is recounted under the heading +of injuries to the stomach, No. 164. Here a deep gaping cleft with +coarsely granular margins extended the whole antero-posterior length of +the under surface of the left lobe, and the escape of bile was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_467" id="Page_467">[Pg 467]</a></span> free. +This was the nearest approach to one of the so-called explosive injuries +I met with.</p> + +<p>Case 207 is an example of a superficial injury from a bullet possibly of +small calibre in which a superficial groove was followed by temporary +escape of bile, and it is of interest to note a very similar condition +in a shell injury (No. 210) recorded on p. 477.</p> + +<p>Although both these cases recovered, I think notching and superficial +grooving must be considered much more serious injuries than pure +perforation. (See case 188, p. 442.)</p> + +<p>The symptoms observed in these injuries have been already indicated in +the above description of the nature of the lesions. They consisted in +the pure perforations of practically nothing, in the grooves or the +perforations implicating a large duct in the escape of bile. In two of +the cases in which a biliary fistula was present transient jaundice was +noticed.</p> + +<p>In many cases the accompanying wound of the diaphragm gave rise to much +discomfort; again, in the transverse wounds the action of the heart was +often affected by the local cardiac shock accompanying the injury. In +one case in which the colon was at the same time wounded (No. 188), an +abscess formed at the site of the hepatic wound, as might have been +expected.</p> + +<p>As uncomplicated injuries, these wounds were little to be feared. Except +as a source of hæmorrhage in rapidly dying patients, I never heard of a +fatality. As a complication of other injuries, however, the wound of the +liver, as has been shown, was sometimes of importance. It was remarkable +in case 204 how little trouble the biliary fistula gave rise to, +although the bile was discharged across the pleural cavity.</p> + +<p>The treatment consisted in rest, and morphia in the cases of suspected +progressive hæmorrhage, or in the presence of great pain. In cases where +bile was escaping, it was important to ensure a free vent for the +secretion.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>204</b>) <i>Wound of liver. Biliary fistula.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> (Lee-Metford), below the seventh rib, in +the left nipple line; <i>exit</i>, through the eighth rib, in the +mid axillary line on the right side. The patient lay for +seventeen hours on the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_468" id="Page_468">[Pg 468]</a></span> field, during which time the bowels +acted once, but there was no sickness. The bowels then remained +confined. When seen on the third day the abdomen was normal and +the chest resonant throughout on both sides; bile to the amount +of some ounces escaped from the wound on the right side. +Suffering no pain; temperature 99°, pulse 100. The bowels acted +freely the following day.</p> + +<p>During the next fortnight there was little change; ℥ii-iij of bile escaped daily, and there +was occasional diarrhœa. At the end of that time, however, +the temperature rose; there was local redness and evidence of +retention of pus. The wound was therefore enlarged, some +fragments of rib removed, and a drainage tube inserted. After +this the temperature fell, and for the next two months the +patient suffered little except from the discharge from the +sinus; this persisted for three months, becoming less in amount +and less bile-stained, the fistula eventually closing in the +fourteenth week, when the patient was sent home on parole.</p> + +<p>(<b>205</b>) <i>Wound of liver</i>.—<i>Entry</i> (Mauser), 1 inch below and to +the left of the ensiform cartilage; <i>exit</i>, in the sixth right +intercostal space, just behind the posterior axillary line. The +trooper was sitting bolt upright on his horse at the time; both +were shot and fell together. 'Stitch' on coughing or laughing +was the only sign noted after the accident; this rapidly +subsided.</p> + +<p>(<b>206</b>) <i>Wound of the liver.</i>—Wounded at Magersfontein. <i>Entry</i> +(Mauser), through the seventh left costal cartilage, 1 inch +from the base of the ensiform cartilage; <i>exit</i>, below the +twelfth rib 2 inches to the right of the lumbar spines. The +patient lay on the field some hours and was brought in at night +very cold, and suffering with much shock. No signs of abdominal +injury developed, but the pulse remained as slow as 66 for some +days, and there was some pain and stiffness about back and +sides, or on taking a deep breath. These signs persisted some +days, but no others developed, and in six weeks the patient +returned to duty.</p> + +<p>Some three months later this patient suffered from a short +severe attack suggesting local peritonitis, but he again +returned to duty.</p> + +<p>(<b>207</b>) <i>Wound of the liver.</i>—Wounded at Tweefontein. <i>Entry</i>, +in eighth intercostal space in right mid axillary line; <i>exit</i>, +1½ inch below the point of the ensiform cartilage, 1/2 an +inch to the right of the mid line. The wounds were large, and +although the impact had been oblique, they were possibly +produced by a Martini-Henry or Guedes bullet.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_469" id="Page_469">[Pg 469]</a></span></p> + +<p>On the second day bile began to escape from the exit aperture, +and this together with a little pus continued to be discharged +for a week, when the wound rapidly healed up. The only symptom +which occasioned any trouble was a stitch on inspiration, +probably attributable to the wound of the diaphragm. There was +no fracture of the rib.</p> + +<p>(<b>208</b>) <i>Wound of the liver.</i>—Wounded outside Heilbron at a +range of fifty yards. <i>Entry</i> (Mauser), in the tenth right +interspace 2 inches to the right of the dorsal spines; <i>exit</i>, +through the gladiolus, immediately to the right of the median +line, and just above the junction with the ensiform cartilage. +There was considerable shock on reception of the injury, and a +great feeling of dizziness. Continuous vomiting set in and +persisted for the first two days, then became occasional, and +ceased only at the end of a week. There was also occasional +hiccough, and stitch on drawing a long breath. The respiration +was shallow and rapid. The bowels acted twice shortly after the +injury.</p> + +<p>The pulse was rapid and small, and a week after the injury was +still above 100. The abdomen was then normal and moving +symmetrically, and the respiration fairly easy. There were no +signs of chest trouble, but some mucous expectoration. A slight +icteric tinge existed. The patient made a good recovery.</p></div> + +<p><i>Wounds of the spleen.</i>—Uncomplicated wounds of the spleen were +necessarily rare, and beyond this the strict localisation of a track to +the spleen is not a matter of great ease. None the less the spleen must +have been implicated in a considerable number of the wounds crossing the +chest and abdomen. I know of only one case in which a wound which +crossed the splenic area caused death from hæmorrhage, and of this I can +give no details, as I never saw the patient. In this instance, however, +a wound of the spleen was diagnosed after death from the position of the +wounds. The patient continued to perform his duty as an officer in the +fighting line for at least an hour after being struck, and then died +rapidly apparently from an internal hæmorrhage.</p> + +<p>In case No. 201, included amongst the renal injuries, a wound of the +spleen existed, but had given rise to no symptoms, and at the time of +death, some three weeks later, was cicatrised. The only other assertion +of importance that I can make is,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_470" id="Page_470">[Pg 470]</a></span> that, as far as I could judge, wounds +of the spleen from bullets of small calibre were not, as a rule, +accompanied by hæmorrhage, since I never saw a case in which dulness in +the left flank suggested the presence of extravasated blood, and in no +case that I saw was there any history of general symptoms pointing to +the loss of blood.</p> + +<p>This is only to be explained by our similar experience with regard to +wounds of the liver unaccompanied by puncture of main vessels, and +perhaps hæmorrhage is still less to be expected in the case of the +spleen, in consequence of the contractile muscular tunic with which the +organ is provided.</p> + +<p>I can quote no case of certain injury to the spleen, except that already +referred to discovered at a <i>post-mortem</i> examination, but many wounds +were observed in positions of which the following may be taken as a +type. <i>Entry</i>, through the seventh left costal cartilage, 3/4 of an inch +from the sternal margin; <i>exit</i>, 2½ inches from the left lumbar +spines at the level of the last rib.</p> + +<p>As an instance of the doctrine of chances I might quote the position of +the wound in the patient who lay in the next bed. Both patients were +wounded while fighting at Almonds Nek. <i>Entry</i>, through right seventh +costal cartilage, 3/4 of an inch from the sternal margin; <i>exit</i>, 1½ +inch from the lumbar spines, at the level of the last right rib.</p> + +<p>In neither of these cases did anything except the position of the +external apertures point to the infliction of visceral injury.</p> + +<p><i>General remarks as to the prognosis in abdominal injuries.</i> The +prognosis in each form of individual visceral injury has been already +considered, but a few points affecting these injuries as a class should +perhaps be further considered.</p> + +<p>First, as to the influence of range on the severity of the injuries +inflicted; I am not able to confirm the greater danger of short range, +except in so far as there is no doubt that more shock attends such +injuries, and possibly some of the most severely wounded were killed +outright as a direct consequence of the greater striking force of the +bullet.</p> + +<p>Among the cases in which but slight effects were noted, however, many +were said to have been hit within a range<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_471" id="Page_471">[Pg 471]</a></span> of 200 yards, as for instance +the two injuries quoted under the heading of wounds of the spleen.</p> + +<p>I personally saw no cases in which explosive injuries of the solid +viscera were to be ascribed to this cause.</p> + +<p>Secondly, as to the immediate prognosis in all abdominal injuries, the +ensurance of rest and limitation as far as possible of transport were of +the highest importance, either in the case of wound of the alimentary +canal, or in wounds of the solid viscera in which hæmorrhage was a +possible result.</p> + +<p>Thirdly, as to the later prognosis in these injuries; very few men are +fit to resume active service without a prolonged period of rest. In +spite of the insignificance of the primary symptoms, or of the +favourable course taken by the injuries, active exertion was almost +always followed for some months by the appearance of vague pains and +occasionally by indications of recurrent peritoneal symptoms, pointing +to the disturbance of quiescent hæmorrhages, or of adhesions. Wounds of +the kidney are apparently those least liable to be followed by trouble.</p> + +<p>Lastly, the prognosis was influenced in the case of many of the viscera +by coexisting injury to other organs or parts.</p> + +<p>For instance, at least thirty per cent. of the abdominal wounds were +complicated by wound of the thorax; and in the lower segment of the +abdomen injury to the extra-peritoneal portions of the pelvic organs was +common.</p> + +<p>Both the immediate and ultimate prognosis were influenced greatly by +this fact.</p> + +<p>As to the individual injuries:</p> + +<p>1. Wounds in the intestinal area, except in certain directions, often +traverse the abdomen without inflicting a perforating injury on the +bowel.</p> + +<p>2. If the alimentary canal is perforated, injuries in certain segments, +even if perforating, may be followed by spontaneous recovery. I should +say the prognosis from this point of view is best in the ascending +colon, then in the rectum; after these most favourable segments, I +should place the others in the following order: stomach, sigmoid +flexure, descending colon. As to perforating wounds of the transverse<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_472" id="Page_472">[Pg 472]</a></span> +colon and small intestine, I believe spontaneous recovery to be very +rare.</p> + +<p>3. Wounds of the solid viscera generally, usually heal spontaneously, +and give no trouble unless one of the great vessels has been injured. I +include in this category all organs except the pancreas, of wounds of +which I had no experience.</p> + +<p>4. Wounds of the bladder, if of the nature of pure perforations in the +intra-peritoneal segment, often heal spontaneously.</p> + +<p>5. As a rule, injuries to the organs in their intra-peritoneal course +have a far better prognosis than those which implicate the organs in +their uncovered portions.</p> + +<p>6. The small calibre of the bullet is alone responsible for the +favourable results observed.</p> + +<p>7. The danger or otherwise of an intestinal injury depends mainly on +mechanical conditions; for instance, the fixity of the ascending colon, +and its comparative freedom from a covering of small intestine capable +by movement of diffusing any infective material, account chiefly for +such favourable results as are seen when that segment of the bowel is +implicated.</p> + + +<h3><span class="smcap">Wounds of the External Genital Organs</span></h3> + +<p>Wounds of the <i>scrotum</i> were not uncommon, especially in connection with +perforations of the upper part of the thigh. They offered no special +feature, beyond the common tendency of every-day experience to the +development of extensive ecchymosis.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the <i>testicles</i> I saw on several occasions. I remember only +one out of some half-dozen in which castration became necessary. I was +told of one case, for the accuracy of which I cannot vouch, in which +destruction of one testicle was followed by an attack of melancholia, +culminating in the suicide of the patient.</p> + +<p>Wounds of the <i>penis</i> also occurred, but as a rule were unimportant. I +append a case, however; in which the penile urethra was wounded, which +is of some interest.</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>209</b>) Wounded at Heilbron. Range 1,500 yards. <i>Entry</i>, 2½ +inches below the right anterior superior iliac spine; the +bullet traversed the groin superficially in the line of +Poupart's ligament,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_473" id="Page_473">[Pg 473]</a></span> emerged, and crossed both penis and +scrotum. The trooper was in the saddle when struck, and the +penis probably somewhat coiled up. Three wounds were found, one +at the junction of the penis and scrotum which opened the +urethra, a second one about 3/4 of an inch along the under +surface of the penis, and a third on the left side of the base +of the prepuce. A considerable amount of œdema and +ecchymosis of the scrotum developed, but no extravasation of +urine. A catheter was kept in the urethra for some days, and +the opening eventually closed by granulation.</p></div> + +<p>I only once saw a patient with an injury to the deep urethra; in this +case concurrent injury to other pelvic organs led to death on the third +day. As a good many of the patients with pelvic wounds died rapidly, the +accident may have been more common than my experience would suggest.</p> + +<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_19_19" id="Footnote_19_19"></a><a href="#FNanchor_19_19"><span class="label">[19]</span></a> <i>British Med. Journal</i>, May 12, 1900, i. 1195.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_20_20" id="Footnote_20_20"></a><a href="#FNanchor_20_20"><span class="label">[20]</span></a> 'On Traumatic Rupture of the Colon.' <i>Annals of Surgery</i>, +vol. xxx. 1899, p. 137.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_21_21" id="Footnote_21_21"></a><a href="#FNanchor_21_21"><span class="label">[21]</span></a> Two of these died.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_22_22" id="Footnote_22_22"></a><a href="#FNanchor_22_22"><span class="label">[22]</span></a> The cases of injury to the solid viscera are those only +which happen to be quoted in the text, and give no idea of relative +mortality.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_23_23" id="Footnote_23_23"></a><a href="#FNanchor_23_23"><span class="label">[23]</span></a> <i>British Medical Journal</i>, May 12, 1900, vol. i. p. 1194.</p></div> +</div> + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_474" id="Page_474">[Pg 474]</a></span></p> + +<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII</h2> + +<h3>ON SHELL WOUNDS</h3> + + +<p>The title of this work hardly allows of its conclusion without a brief +mention of the shell wounds observed during the campaign.</p> + +<p>As already pointed out, these formed but a very small proportion of the +injuries treated in the hospitals, and beyond this they possessed +comparatively small surgical interest, since, as a rule, the features +presented were those of mere lacerated wounds, while the more severe of +the cases which survived only offered scope for operations of the +mutilating class so uncongenial to modern surgical instincts.</p> + +<p>The fatal wounds consisted in extensive lacerations resulting in the +destruction of the head or limbs, the laying open of the abdominal or +thoracic cavities, or the production of visceral injuries beyond the +possibility of repair. Of such injuries no further mention will be made.</p> + +<p>A very great variety of shells was employed during the campaign, +especially on the part of the Boers, and the frontispiece gives some +idea of these. The photograph was taken by Mr. Kisch after the relief of +Ladysmith. For the want of more extended knowledge I shall confine +myself to the description of a few injuries caused by two classes of +large shell, those of the Vickers-Maxim or 'Pom-pom,' and two varieties +of shrapnel.</p> + +<p>The large shells employed may be divided into classes according to the +metal used in their construction, and the nature of the explosive with +which they were filled. These details are of some surgical import, +because they affect the nature of the fragments into which the shells +are broken up.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_475" id="Page_475">[Pg 475]</a></span></p> + +<p>Fragments of shells constructed with cast iron and burst with powder, +and also of forged steel exploded with lyddite, are depicted in fig. 90.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 353px;"> +<img src="images/fig90.jpg" width="353" height="450" alt="Fig. 90." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 90.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>A, B, D. Fragments of 200 lb. forged Steel +Howitzer Shell exploded by lyddite. C. Fragment of Cast-iron Shell +exploded by powder. B exhibits transverse markings which might be +mistaken for the lines seen in the Boer segment shells, but which really +correspond to the area of fixation of the copper driving band</b></p> + +<p>Examination of fragment C of a cast-iron shell exploded by powder shows +the characteristic granular fracture, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_476" id="Page_476">[Pg 476]</a></span> edges, although sharp, yet of +a comparatively rounded nature. The fragment is also heavier for its +surface measurement, as the metal is thicker than that seen in the +remaining fragments, although the cast-iron shell was of a much smaller +calibre than the steel one. The lesser degree of penetrative power, and +increased capacity to contuse, possessed by such fragments are obvious.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">a</span> <span class="smcap">b</span> and <span class="smcap">d</span> are fragments of a large forged steel howitzer shell exploded +by lyddite, such as were cast by our guns. The photograph well shows the +more tenacious structure of the metal in the incomplete longitudinal +fissuring exhibited, while the margins are of a sharp knifelike +character, well calculated to penetrate or, in the case of superficial +injuries, to produce wounds of a more sharply incised character than the +cast-iron shell. Fragments <span class="smcap">a</span> and <span class="smcap">b</span> also show an appearance suggestive of +partial fusion, characteristic of high explosive action, in the turning +of the prominent margins.</p> + +<p>The larger fragments of such shells were responsible for the most +serious mutilating injuries, while small fragments sometimes caused +comparatively simple perforating wounds. I remember a fragment of the +fused character not larger than a small nut which had perforated the +front of the thigh of a Boer, and lodged near the inner surface of the +femur. Removal of the fragment was followed by a free gush of +hæmorrhage. When the wound was opened up an opening was found in the +external circumflex artery, hæmorrhage from which had been controlled by +the impaction of the piece of shell. As an example of the cutting power +of sharp fragments of shell I might instance the case of another Boer in +whom light passing contact had been made by the missile. A gaping +incised wound extended from above the angle of the scapula down to the +outer surface of the buttock. The wound involved the latissimus dorsi, +and the external and internal oblique muscles of the abdomen. The +separate muscular layers were sharply defined in the lateral parts of +the floor of the wound, and remained so for some time during the gradual +contraction of the large granulating surface produced. The degree of +contusion was in fact slight, while the incised character was strongly +marked.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_477" id="Page_477">[Pg 477]</a></span></p> + +<p>In some cases the fragments merely struck the soldiers on the flat +without producing any wound. In one such case a blow upon the +epigastrium was, according to the patient, followed by the vomiting of a +considerable amount of blood. A fluid diet was ordered, and no further +ill effects were noted. The following case illustrates an oblique blow +of a perforating character, which was nevertheless recovered from.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig91.jpg" width="450" height="417" alt="Fig. 91." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 91.—Various portions of Brass Percussion and Time +Fuses</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>210</b>) <i>Shell-wound of abdomen. Injury to liver.</i>—Wounded at +Paardeberg by a fragment of shell. Aperture of entry, a ragged +opening in the median line. The fragment of shell was retained +over the ninth costal cartilage in the nipple line. The wound +bled freely, but the man was taken into camp, and then four +miles on to the hospital, where he was anæsthetised and the +fragment<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_478" id="Page_478">[Pg 478]</a></span> extracted. The wound of entry was at the same time +enlarged, cleansed, and partly sutured. The patient vomited +once after the anæsthetic, and the bowels remained confined for +three or four days after the injury. The extraction wound +healed readily, but a considerable amount of slimy, +bile-stained discharge was still escaping from the ragged +entrance wound on the man's arrival at the Base on the +fourteenth day. The abdomen was then normal in appearance, and +as to physical signs, except for a tympanitic note over the +hepatic area to the right of the wound. The temperature was +normal, the pulse 90, the tongue clean, and the bowels were +acting. At the end of four weeks pleurisy, with effusion, +developed on the right side; the chest was aspirated and +℥xx of clear serum drawn off. The man then +rapidly improved; the bile-stained discharge ceased at the end +of five weeks, and a small granulating wound eventually closed +at the end of two months, when the man returned to England.</p></div> + +<p>Fig. 91 is inserted to illustrate the multifarious nature of the +fragments into which the component parts of shells may break up. The +pieces are for the most part of brass, and formed parts of either time +or percussion fuses.</p> + +<p>Fig. 92 represents the one-pound Vickers-Maxim shell in its actual size. +The wounds produced by this shell are of some interest, since the +Vickers-Maxim may be said to have been on trial during this campaign. +The general opinion seems to have been to the effect that the moral +influence produced by the continuous rapid firing of the gun and the +attendant unpleasant noise were its chief virtues. A considerable number +of wounds must, however, have been produced by it, which, if not of +great magnitude and severity, were, at any rate, calculated to put the +recipients out of action, and these wounds, moreover, were slower in +healing than many of the rifle-bullet injuries.</p> + +<p>The shell is so small that it was said to occasionally strike the body +as a whole, and perforate. I was shown a case in which a wounded officer +was confident that an entire shell had perforated his arm. The entry +wound was at the outer part of the front of the forearm, the exit at the +inner aspect of the arm, just above the elbow. Two ragged contused +wounds existed, which healed slowly, but no serious nervous or<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_479" id="Page_479">[Pg 479]</a></span> vascular +injury had been produced. Although it is probable that only a fragment +perforated in this case, it is of interest in connection with the +following.</p> + +<p>In a case shown to me by Sir William Thomson in the Irish Hospital at +Bloemfontein, an entire shell had passed between the left arm and body +of a trooper, perforating the haversack, as also a non-commissioned +officer's notebook contained within it, without exploding. The only +injury sustained by the trooper was a contusion on the inner aspect of +the elbow-joint, with slight signs of contusion of the ulnar nerve. The +case is of some importance, as showing that a comparatively resistent +body can be perforated without necessary explosion on the part of the +shell; hence the possibility of a similar perforation of the soft parts +of the body.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 197px;"> +<img src="images/fig92.jpg" width="197" height="450" alt="Fig. 92." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 92.—Unexploded 1-lb. Vickers-Maxim Shell. (Actual +size)</span> +</div> + +<p>Fig. 93 is of a number of fragments of Vickers-Maxim shells, and it was +by such that the great majority of the wounds were produced.</p> + +<p>Wounds from fragments of these shells were, indeed, not at all rare. +They were met with on any position; but, as far as my experience went, +they were more common on the lower extremities than in other parts of +the body, if the sufferers were in the erect position when wounded. I +saw a good many wounds in the neighbourhood of the knee, some of which +implicated the joint. When the injuries were received by patients in the +lying or crouching positions, any part of the body was equally likely to +be affected, or, again, the presence of large stones or rocks in the +vicinity might determine the scattering of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_480" id="Page_480">[Pg 480]</a></span> flying fragments at a +more dangerous height than when the shells burst from contact with the +actual ground.</p> + +<p>The relation of one or two examples of wounds from pom-pom fragments may +not be without interest, the more so as they illustrate the favourable +influence of a low degree of velocity on the part of a projectile. I saw +three wounds produced by the percussion fuses of these shells, an +experience which shows that they were not very uncommon.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig93.jpg" width="450" height="345" alt="Fig. 93." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 93.</span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>Fragments of Vickers-Maxim 1-lb. Shells. The +centre fragment of the lower row is the point of a steel armour-piercing +shell; although unsuitable for the purpose, they were occasionally +employed in the field by the Boers</b></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>211</b>) <i>Perforating shell-wound of abdomen.</i>—Wounded at +Magersfontein by the fuse screw of a small shell +(Vickers-Maxim). Aperture of entry ragged, roughly circular, +and 2 inches in diameter, with much-contused margins situated +in the median line, nearly midway between the ensiform +cartilage and umbilicus. The screw was lodged in the abdominal +wall at the margin of the thorax, just outside the left nipple +line. The aperture of entry was cleansed by Major Harris, +R.A.M.C., who determined the fact that penetration of the +peritoneal cavity had occurred, and removed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_481" id="Page_481">[Pg 481]</a></span> the fuse (see fig. +94) by a separate incision. The patient made an uneventful and +uninterrupted recovery, the wound healing by granulation and +leaving little weakness of the abdominal wall. He returned to +England at the end of five weeks.</p></div> + +<p>In a second case the fuse, together with a fragment of the iron case, +entered the buttock by a ragged opening. The fragment of iron escaped by +an exit aperture of about the same size. When the patient arrived at the +Base some days after the injury, a hard body was felt in the wound, and +on exploration the fuse was found and removed.</p> + +<p>In a third case the fuse struck the side of the foot below the outer +malleolus and comminuted the astragalus, and then passing forwards +lodged beneath the extensor tendons of the toes. The wound was explored +at the time of the injury and some fragments of bone removed; +considerable cellulitis supervened, and the fuse was only discovered +some days later when the patient came under the care of Sir W. Thomson +in the Irish Hospital in Pretoria. It was there removed, together with +some more fragments of bone, and the wound slowly granulated. The +patient then returned to England, when the wound rapidly healed after +the removal of some further necrosed fragments of cancellous tissue. The +astragalus had been reduced to a mere shell of compact tissue, and the +convexity of the articular surface was altogether lost. The deformity, +together with the formation of adhesions in the ankle-joint, led to the +development of a firm anchylosis.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 235px;"> +<img src="images/fig94.jpg" width="235" height="300" alt="Fig. 94." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 94.—Pom-pom Percussion Fuse, exact size</span> +</div> + +<p>My friend Mr. Abbott removed a similar fuse from the substance of the +lung after the lapse of nine months, the patient having developed an +empyema, and a chronic fistula, which rapidly closed after the removal +of the foreign body.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_482" id="Page_482">[Pg 482]</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 403px;"> +<img src="images/plate25.jpg" width="403" height="600" alt="PLATE XXV" title="" /> +<span class="caption"><a name="PLATE_XXV" id="PLATE_XXV">PLATE XXV.</a></span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Oblique Fracture of the Humerus caused by a Fragment of a Vickers-Maxim +or Pom-pom Shell</span></p> + +<p>The entire absence of comminution is very striking<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_483" id="Page_483">[Pg 483]</a></span></p></div> + +<p>I will add one further case, that illustrated by plate XXV. In this a +fragment of a pom-pom shell entered the outer aspect of the right +shoulder to escape on the inner aspect of the arm, just below the +confines of the axilla. An oblique, non-comminuted fracture of the +humerus resulted, which in spite of moderate suppuration united well in +the course of six weeks. The case is of particular interest as +illustrating the nature of the fracture to be expected when the velocity +retained by the missile is low.</p> + +<p>The above instances show that such peculiarities as belong to wounds +produced by pom-pom shells depend on the comparatively small size and +weight of the fragments, and on the small degree of impetus with which +they are propelled.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig95.jpg" width="450" height="427" alt="Fig. 95." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 95.—Boer Segment Shell, or Shrapnel. </span> +</div> + +<p class="center"><b>The large +fragment is a piece of the case, the smaller are two of the pieces of +iron packed within</b></p> + +<p>Fig. 95 illustrates a form of shrapnel employed by the Boers, the case +of which is of cast metal arranged in definite segments, while the +interior is filled with small fragments of iron so shaped as to pack in +concentric layers. As to the wounds produced by the contained fragments +I have no experience, since I never saw one of the pieces of iron +removed. This no doubt depended in part on the very unsatisfactory +practice made by the Boers with shrapnel generally. Even when they fired +English shrapnel, the shells were, as a rule, exploded far<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_484" id="Page_484">[Pg 484]</a></span> too high to +cause any serious danger to the men beneath. I saw on one occasion a +large number of shrapnel shells exploded over a body of Imperial +Yeomanry, but as a result of the great height at which all the shells +were exploded, not a single casualty resulted.</p> + +<p>The segment casing of the shell, however, I several times saw removed +from the body. The fragment shown in fig. 95 was removed from the +buttock of a man after one of Lord Methuen's early battles. It may be +remarked that the buttock is rather a common, and also a favourable, +seat for shell wounds with retention of the fragment. This no doubt +depends on the fact that the buttock is one of the few superficial +regions in which sufficient depth of tissue exists for the retention or +the passage of so large an object as a fragment of shell.</p> + +<p>Fig. 96 is of a number of leaden shrapnel bullets from our own shells. A +normal undeformed bullet, such as was the usual cause of wounds, is +shown at the left-hand upper corner. The remainder show common forms of +deformity caused by striking on the ground or against rocks. I attribute +small importance to the deformed bullets, as I never saw one removed, +and it is probable that a ricochet shrapnel bullet would rarely retain +sufficient force to penetrate. The lower fragments are inserted to +illustrate a fact that would scarcely have been assumed, that these +bullets on impact occasionally suffer a fracture of a somewhat +crystalline nature. The occurrence of this gross form of fracture is of +some interest in relation to the extreme fragmentation sometimes +undergone by the hardened leaden cores of the small-calibre bullets.</p> + +<p>A considerable number of wounds from leaden shrapnel bullets were met +with among our own men, as well as among the Boers. The wounds possessed +little special interest, except from the fact that the bullets were +often retained. I saw bullets in the chest on several occasions, also in +the abdomen, pelvis, the neighbourhood of joints, and in the limbs.</p> + +<p>I saw one patient who had suffered no less than six perforating wounds +as the result of the bursting of one shrapnel shell.</p> + +<p>I will here quote one case of interest as completing the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_485" id="Page_485">[Pg 485]</a></span> various forms +of perforating wound of the abdomen met with during the campaign.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 450px;"> +<img src="images/fig96.jpg" width="450" height="390" alt="Fig. 96." title="" /> +<span class="caption">Fig. 96.—Normal, Deformed, and Fractured Leaden Shrapnel +Bullets</span> +</div> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>(<b>212</b>) <i>Perforating shrapnel-wound of abdomen.</i>—Boer wounded at +Graspan. Aperture of <i>entry</i> (shrapnel), opposite eighth left +costal cartilage, 1 inch external to nipple line. The opening +was circular, and surrounded by an area of ecchymosis 4 inches +in diameter; <i>exit</i>, 4½ inches above and to the right of the +umbilicus. Patient was at first in a Boer ambulance, and only +seen by me on the ninth day. At that date he was dressed and +walking with a gauze pad and bandage over the wounds. From the +exit wound, which was 1 inch in diameter, protruded a piece of +sloughing omentum, the margin of the wound being everted and +raised over a circular indurated area.</p> + +<p>It was thought best to allow the sloughing omentum, which was +very foul, to separate spontaneously, and then to return the +stump. At the end of three weeks, however, the slough had not +only separated, but the stump had retracted, and only a small +granulating surface was left, which healed spontaneously.</p></div><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_486" id="Page_486">[Pg 486]</a></span></p> + +<p>I have little to say regarding the treatment of shell wounds. The +mutilating injuries, if not of a fatal character, necessitated treatment +of a corresponding nature to the damage. In all such cases the general +rules of surgery indicate the lines to be followed.</p> + +<p>In the case of shrapnel wounds the bullets were often better removed; +but when in dangerous positions, as sunk deeply in the chest, abdomen, +or pelvis, they were best left, unless some very special indication for +removal existed. Large fragments of shell always demanded removal.</p> + +<p>In conclusion I will only make the further remark, that shell wounds, +with the exception of clean leaden shrapnel tracks, always suppurated.</p> + +<p>I make this closing statement with the view of emphasising the influence +exerted on the aseptic course of modern rifle wounds by the small +calibre of the bullet, since both bullet and shell wounds were exposed +to the same surrounding conditions.</p> + + + +<hr style="width: 65%;" /> +<h2><a name="INDEX" id="INDEX"></a>INDEX</h2> + + +<p> +Abdomen, injuries to, <a href='#Page_407'>407</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">General prognosis in, <a href='#Page_470'>470</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Abdominal wounds:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Explosive, <a href='#Page_414'>414</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Non-perforating, <a href='#Page_409'>409</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Perforating, <a href='#Page_411'>411</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Abscess of the brain, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a><br /> +<br /> +Acetabulum, fracture of, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a><br /> +<br /> +Acetylene light, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a><br /> +<br /> +Ambulance:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Foreign, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Trolly (McCormack-Brook), <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wagons, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Amputations:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Effect of transport on, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">for fracture, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Aneurisms:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Effect of rest on, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Gangrene after, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Traumatic, <a href='#Page_122'>122</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">False, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">True, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_127'>127</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Aneurismal varix:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Arm and forearm, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Effect on circulation, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Carotid, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Femoral, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mode of development, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Popliteal, <a href='#Page_147'>147</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis in, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Signs of, <a href='#Page_131'>131</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Anosmia, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a><br /> +<br /> +Antrum, wounds of, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a><br /> +<br /> +Aphasia:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Amnesic, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ataxic, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Functional, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Arterial hæmatoma, <a href='#Page_123'>123</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis in, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Arteries:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Compression by cicatrices, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Contusion of, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Division of, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Perforation of, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Arterio-venous aneurism:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Arm and forearm, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cervical, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Femoral, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Leg, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Popliteal, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Biliary fistula, <a href='#Page_467'>467</a><br /> +<br /> +Bladder:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wounds of, <a href='#Page_443'>443</a>, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Extra-peritoneal, <a href='#Page_458'>458</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Intra-peritoneal, <a href='#Page_457'>457</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Retained bullet in, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Bones. See Fractures<br /> +<br /> +Bowlby, Mr.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Retained bullets in joints, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wound of pharynx, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Brain:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Abscess of, <a href='#Page_287'>287</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cerebral irritation, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Compression of, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Concussion of, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Effect of ricochet on, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Explosive injury of, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Frontal injuries, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fronto-parietal injuries, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Occipital injuries, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parietal injuries, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis in cerebral injuries, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment, <a href='#Page_289'>289</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Bread, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br /> +<br /> +Buck wagon, <a href='#Page_21'>21</a><br /> +<br /> +Bullets:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Characters directly affecting wounds:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Aseptic nature, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Calibre, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Composition of, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Deformities of, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fragmentation, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Length, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mantles of, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Penetration, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Revolution, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ricochet, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Shape, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Stability, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Striking force, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Velocity of flight, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Weight, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Effect of resistance of bones on, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Retention of, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Indications for removal of, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in bladder, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>, <a href='#Page_460'>460</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in chest, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a>, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in nasal fossa, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in or near joints, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in skull, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a>, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a>, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>, <a href='#Page_284'>284</a>, <a href='#Page_298'>298</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">in spinal canal, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Reversal of, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Varieties of:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Determination of, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Expanding, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Explosive, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Guedes, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Krag-Jörgensen, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Jeffreys, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Large leaden, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lee-Metford, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mark IV., <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mauser, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Soft-nosed, <a href='#Page_93'>93</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tampered, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tweedie, <a href='#Page_94'>94</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Waxed, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Cauda equina, injury to, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a><br /> +<br /> +Cellulitis, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a><br /> +<br /> +Cervical nerve roots, injury to, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Plexus, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Cheatle, Mr. G. L.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Entry and exit wounds, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">First field dressing, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wound of heart, <a href='#Page_383'>383</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">" " intestine, <a href='#Page_413'>413</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Cheek, wounds of, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a><br /> +<br /> +Chest, injuries to, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Character of wounds, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Influence of small calibre of bullet on, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Martini wounds, <a href='#Page_374'>374</a>, <a href='#Page_388'>388</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Non-penetrating wounds, <a href='#Page_375'>375</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Penetrating wounds, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Cheyne, Mr. W. W., F.R.S.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Abdominal wounds, <a href='#Page_449'>449</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spent bullets, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_449'>449</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Civil surgeons, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a><br /> +<br /> +Climate, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a><br /> +<br /> +Comparison of South African with other campaigns, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a><br /> +<br /> +Compression of brain, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spinal cord, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Concussion of brain, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Eye, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Joints, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Nerves, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spinal cord, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Contour wounds, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a><br /> +<br /> +Contusion:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Nerves, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spinal cord, <a href='#Page_316'>316</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Costal cartilages, fractures of, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a><br /> +<br /> +Cox, Dep. Insp.-Gen.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Case of varix, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Day, Mr. J. J.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fractures of the skull, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Deadliness of modern weapons, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a><br /> +<br /> +Diaphragm, wounds of, <a href='#Page_381'>381</a><br /> +<br /> +Displacement of structures by the bullet, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Abdomen, <a href='#Page_411'>411</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Nerves, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Vessels, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Viscera, <a href='#Page_310'>310</a>, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a>, <a href='#Page_411'>411</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Drink, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br /> +<br /> +Dust, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bacteriology of, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Empyema, <a href='#Page_394'>394</a>, <a href='#Page_396'>396</a><br /> +<br /> +Enteric fever, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a><br /> +<br /> +Epilepsy, traumatic, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a><br /> +<br /> +Equipment of foreign ambulances, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Surgical, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Erysipelas, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a><br /> +<br /> +Expanding bullets, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a><br /> +<br /> +Explosive bullets, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a><br /> +<br /> +Explosive wounds:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of abdomen, <a href='#Page_414'>414</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of fractures, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of head, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of leg, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of soft parts, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of thigh, <a href='#Page_197'>197</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Eye, injuries to, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a><br /> +<br /> +Facial paralysis:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cortical, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>-277</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Peripheral, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></span><br /> +<br /> +First field dressings, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a><br /> +<br /> +Flies, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a><br /> +<br /> +Flockemann, Dr.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hæmothorax, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Injury to abdomen, <a href='#Page_420'>420</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Fractures:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Course of healing of, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Explosive wounds in, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">into joints, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a>, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Limb bones, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Local shock in, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Long bones, types of, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Longitudinal, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Notch, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Oblique, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Perforating, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Stellate, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Transverse, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Wedge, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Osteomyelitis in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pom-pom fractures, <a href='#Page_483'>483</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis, general, in, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Special features of, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Special bones:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Acetabulum, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Carpus, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Clavicle, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Femur, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fibula, <a href='#Page_219'>219</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Humerus, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Jaws, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Malar, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Mastoid process, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Metacarpus, <a href='#Page_185'>185</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Metatarsus, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Orbital walls, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Patella, <a href='#Page_215'>215</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Pelvis, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Radius, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Ribs, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Scapula, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Skull:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Base, <a href='#Page_262'>262</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Glancing, <a href='#Page_254'>254</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Gutter, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Perforating, deep, <a href='#Page_245'>245</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Superficial, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 3em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_293'>293</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Spine, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sternum, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tarsus, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tibia, <a href='#Page_217'>217</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Short and flat bones, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Suppuration of soft parts in, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Symptoms of, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">General, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Femur, <a href='#Page_205'>205</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Leg, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Upper Extremity, <a href='#Page_135'>135</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Variation in character during the campaign, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Fractures in Franco-German war (Sir W. MacCormac), <a href='#Page_167'>167</a><br /> +<br /> +Fragmentation of bullets, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a><br /> +<br /> +Fuses of shells, wounds by, <a href='#Page_481'>481</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Gangrene:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Acute traumatic, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">After ligature of main vessels, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Genital organs, wounds of, <a href='#Page_472'>472</a><br /> +<br /> +Guedes rifle, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a><br /> +<br /> +Gutter wounds:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of bladder, <a href='#Page_458'>458</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of bones, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of intestine, <a href='#Page_417'>417</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of joints, <a href='#Page_231'>231</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of liver, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of pelvis, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of scalp, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of skull, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of soft parts, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Hæmarthrosis, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a><br /> +<br /> +Hæmorrhage, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Control by bullets, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 5em;">by loop of nerve, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Deaths from, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fever dependent upon, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Internal, <a href='#Page_116'>116</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Interstitial, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Primary, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Recurrent, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Secondary, <a href='#Page_117'>117</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Hæmorrhoids, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a><br /> +<br /> +Hæmothorax, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a>, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Behaviour of blood in, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Course of, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>, <a href='#Page_394'>394</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Diagnosis of, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Effect of transport on, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Empyema after, <a href='#Page_394'>394</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pleuritic effusion in, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis in, <a href='#Page_399'>399</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Recurrent bleeding in, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Parietal, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a>, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pulmonary, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a>, <a href='#Page_389'>389</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Symptoms of, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Temperature in, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Head, injuries to, <a href='#Page_241'>241</a><br /> +<br /> +Health of the troops, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br /> +<br /> +Heart, wounds of, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in neighbourhood of, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Hemianopsia, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Altitudinal, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lateral, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Hospitals:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Field, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Foreign, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">General, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Improvised, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Indian Field, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Stationary, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Varieties of, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Hospital ships, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tents, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Trains, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Hydronephrosis, <a href='#Page_464'>464</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Impact, irregular, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a><br /> +<br /> +Instruments, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a><br /> +<br /> +Intestine, injuries to:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Diagnosis of, <a href='#Page_428'>428</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Difficulties of operation, <a href='#Page_453'>453</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Indications for operation, <a href='#Page_454'>454</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lateral contusion, <a href='#Page_416'>416</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis, <a href='#Page_446'>446</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment, <a href='#Page_452'>452</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wounds of, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Extra-peritoneal, <a href='#Page_419'>419</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Large intestine, <a href='#Page_436'>436</a>, <a href='#Page_444'>444</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Results of, <a href='#Page_421'>421</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Small intestine, <a href='#Page_427'>427</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Irregular wounds, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a><br /> +<br /> +Itinerary, <a href='#Page_2'>2</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Jam, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br /> +<br /> +Jaws, fractures of:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lower, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Upper, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Jenner, L. L., bacteriology of dust, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a><br /> +<br /> +Joints, injuries to, <a href='#Page_225'>225</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Arterial wounds in, <a href='#Page_121'>121</a>, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Classification of, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Course after, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fractures into, <a href='#Page_228'>228</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Signs and symptoms, <a href='#Page_232'>232</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Suppuration of, <a href='#Page_233'>233</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment, general, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Joints, retained bullets in or near, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a><br /> +<br /> +Joints, special:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ankle, <a href='#Page_239'>239</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Elbow, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hand, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hip, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Knee, <a href='#Page_238'>238</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Shoulders, <a href='#Page_236'>236</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tarsus, <a href='#Page_240'>240</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Ker, J. E., cases of aneurism, <a href='#Page_152'>152</a><br /> +<br /> +Kidney, wounds of, <a href='#Page_461'>461</a><br /> +<br /> +Krag-Jörgensen rifle, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Laminectomy, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a>, <a href='#Page_340'>340</a><br /> +<br /> +Larynx, wounds of, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a><br /> +<br /> +Leaden bullets, <a href='#Page_95'>95</a><br /> +<br /> +Lee-Metford rifle, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a><br /> +<br /> +Lewtas, Col. I. M. S., cases of aneurism, <a href='#Page_144'>144</a><br /> +<br /> +Lightning stroke, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a><br /> +<br /> +Liver, wounds of, <a href='#Page_466'>466</a><br /> +<br /> +Local shock, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in fractures, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Lower jaw, fractures of, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a><br /> +<br /> +Lungs, wounds of, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Diagnosis, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Effect of velocity on, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis, <a href='#Page_399'>399</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Retained bullets in, <a href='#Page_401'>401</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Symptoms of, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_400'>400</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Lyddite shells, <a href='#Page_475'>475</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +MacCormac, Sir W.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Aneurism, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fractures, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Malar bone, fractures, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a><br /> +<br /> +Mandible, fractures, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a><br /> +<br /> +Mantles, stability of, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a><br /> +<br /> +Martini-Henry rifle, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wounds by, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Mastoid process, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a><br /> +<br /> +Mauser rifle, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a><br /> +<br /> +Meat, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br /> +<br /> +Mediastinal wounds, <a href='#Page_382'>382</a>, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a><br /> +<br /> +Mesentery, wounds of, <a href='#Page_420'>420</a><br /> +<br /> +Mills-Roberts, Mr. H. R.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spinal hæmorrhage, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></span><br /> +<br /> +'Modders, the,' <a href='#Page_9'>9</a><br /> +<br /> +Mortality, general, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">amongst officers, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in battles of Kimberley Relief Force, <a href='#Page_12'>12</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Nasal <i>fossæ</i>, bullet in, <a href='#Page_244'>244</a><br /> +<br /> +Neck, wounds of, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a><br /> +<br /> +Nerves, injuries to, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Concussion, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a>, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Contusion, <a href='#Page_343'>343</a>, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Displacement of, <a href='#Page_342'>342</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Laceration, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Perforation, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis in, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Scar, implication of, <a href='#Page_345'>345</a>, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Section, <a href='#Page_344'>344</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Symptoms of, <a href='#Page_346'>346</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_371'>371</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Velocity in relation to, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Nerves, special:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Cranial:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fifth, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Fourth, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Eighth, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Eleventh, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Olfactory, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Optic, <a href='#Page_352'>352</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Seventh, <a href='#Page_354'>354</a>, <a href='#Page_372'>372</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sixth, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Tenth, <a href='#Page_356'>356</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Third, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Twelfth, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Spinal:</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Brachial, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Cervical, <a href='#Page_347'>347</a>, <a href='#Page_357'>357</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Lumbar, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sacral, <a href='#Page_359'>359</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Sacro-coccygeal, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Thoracic, <a href='#Page_358'>358</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Neuritis:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ascending, <a href='#Page_350'>350</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Peripheral, <a href='#Page_355'>355</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Traumatic, <a href='#Page_349'>349</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Neurosis, traumatic <a href='#Page_351'>351</a><br /> +<br /> +Nose, wounds of, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_348'>348</a><br /> +<br /> +Nurses, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Officers, mortality among, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a><br /> +<br /> +Olecranon, fracture of, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_237'>237</a><br /> +<br /> +Omentum, wounds of, <a href='#Page_420'>420</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prolapse of, <a href='#Page_420'>420</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Operations:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Difficulties of, <a href='#Page_35'>35</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in field, <a href='#Page_296'>296</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in Field hospitals, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Orbit, wounds of, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis and treatment of, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Osteomyelitis in fractures, <a href='#Page_174'>174</a><br /> +<br /> +Outfit, surgical, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Pain in wounds, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a><br /> +<br /> +Paraplegia, functional, <a href='#Page_337'>337</a><br /> +<br /> +Penetration of bullets, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a><br /> +<br /> +Penis, wounds of, <a href='#Page_472'>472</a><br /> +<br /> +Peritoneal infection, <a href='#Page_412'>412</a><br /> +<br /> +Pharynx, wounds of, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a><br /> +<br /> +Pleural septicæmia, <a href='#Page_437'>437</a><br /> +<br /> +Pleurisy, <a href='#Page_390'>390</a>, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a><br /> +<br /> +Pneumonia, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_398'>398</a><br /> +<br /> +Pneumo-thorax, <a href='#Page_388'>388</a><br /> +<br /> +Pom-pom shells, <a href='#Page_478'>478</a><br /> +<br /> +Portland Hospital, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a><br /> +<br /> +Psychical disturbance, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Rain, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a><br /> +<br /> +Range of fire:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Difficulty of judging influence on mortality, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Rectum, wounds of, <a href='#Page_443'>443</a>, <a href='#Page_444'>444</a><br /> +<br /> +Removal of wounded from the field, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a><br /> +<br /> +Respiration in spinal injuries, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a><br /> +<br /> +Retained bullets. See Bullets<br /> +<br /> +Reversed bullets, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a><br /> +<br /> +Revolution of bullet, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a><br /> +<br /> +Ribs, fractures of, <a href='#Page_377'>377</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Signs of, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Ricochet, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Effect on wound type, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lee-Metford, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mauser, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Within body,</span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Abdomen, <a href='#Page_415'>415</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Skull, <a href='#Page_249'>249</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Rifles:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Bore, <a href='#Page_41'>41</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Guedes, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Krag-Jörgensen, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lee-Metford, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Martini-Henry, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mauser, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Modern principles of, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Trajectory, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Varieties employed, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a></span><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Scalp wounds, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a><br /> +<br /> +Scapula, fractures of, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a><br /> +<br /> +Scrotum, wounds of, <a href='#Page_472'>472</a><br /> +<br /> +Septic disease, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a><br /> +<br /> +Septicæmia:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">General, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in enteric fever, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Peritoneal, <a href='#Page_421'>421</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pleural, <a href='#Page_437'>437</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Shells, <a href='#Page_474'>474</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Varieties of, <a href='#Page_475'>475</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Vickers-Maxim, <a href='#Page_478'>478</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Lyddite, <a href='#Page_476'>476</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Shrapnel, <a href='#Page_483'>483</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Shell wounds:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of abdomen, <a href='#Page_480'>480</a>, <a href='#Page_485'>485</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Proportionate occurrence of, <a href='#Page_11'>11</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Shell fuse wounds, <a href='#Page_481'>481</a><br /> +<br /> +Ships, hospital, <a href='#Page_24'>24</a><br /> +<br /> +Shock:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">General, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Local, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Shrapnel, <a href='#Page_483'>483</a><br /> +<br /> +Simla, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a><br /> +<br /> +Skull. See Fractures<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fractures independent of gross brain lesion, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">with brain lesion, <a href='#Page_248'>248</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Spinal column:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Injuries to, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Fractures of centra, <a href='#Page_317'>317</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Spinous processes, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 2em;">Transverse processes, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Spinal cord, injuries to, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Compression by bullets, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Concussion, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Contusion, <a href='#Page_320'>320</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Diagnosis, <a href='#Page_335'>335</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hæmato-myelia, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Section of, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Shock accompanying, <a href='#Page_328'>328</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Signs of, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Transport of, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Spinal hæmorrhage:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Epidural, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hæmato-myelia, <a href='#Page_322'>322</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Peri-pial, <a href='#Page_321'>321</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Spleen, wounds of, <a href='#Page_469'>469</a><br /> +<br /> +Splints:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Aluminium, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Field cane, <a href='#Page_209'>209</a>, <a href='#Page_221'>221</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hodgen's, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wire gauze, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Sternum, fractures of, <a href='#Page_379'>379</a><br /> +<br /> +Stevenson, Col. W. F.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Local shock, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Explosive wounds, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Stokes, Sir W.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment of aneurism, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Stomach, wounds of, <a href='#Page_424'>424</a><br /> +<br /> +Stonham, Mr. C.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wound of vermiform appendix, <a href='#Page_437'>437</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Sunstroke, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a><br /> +<br /> +Suppuration of wounds, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in fracture, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Synovitis, vibration, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Temperature of air, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">in blood effusions, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_391'>391</a>, <a href='#Page_393'>393</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Tents, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a><br /> +<br /> +Testicle, wounds of, <a href='#Page_472'>472</a><br /> +<br /> +Tetanus, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a><br /> +<br /> +Thirst, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a><br /> +<br /> +Thomson, Sir W.:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pom-pom wounds, <a href='#Page_479'>479</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Wound of nose, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Thoracic vessels, wounds of, <a href='#Page_384'>384</a><br /> +<br /> +Tonga, the, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a><br /> +<br /> +Tongue, wounds of, <a href='#Page_309'>309</a><br /> +<br /> +Trachea, wounds of, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a><br /> +<br /> +Traction engines, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a><br /> +<br /> +Trains, hospital, <a href='#Page_23'>23</a><br /> +<br /> +Trajectory, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a><br /> +<br /> +Transport:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">after battles, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of wounded men from field, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of wounded of the Kimberley Relief Force, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of chest injuries, <a href='#Page_386'>386</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of fractures, <a href='#Page_176'>176</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">of spinal injuries, <a href='#Page_339'>339</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Traumatic aneurism. See Aneurism<br /> +<br /> +Traumatic epilepsy, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a><br /> +<br /> +Traumatic gangrene, <a href='#Page_34'>34</a><br /> +<br /> +Traumatic neurosis, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a><br /> +<br /> +Treves, Mr. F.: on cessation of intestinal peristalsis, <a href='#Page_423'>423</a><br /> +<br /> +Trolly (McCormack-Brook), <a href='#Page_19'>19</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Upper jaws, <a href='#Page_306'>306</a><br /> +<br /> +Urethra, wounds of, <a href='#Page_472'>472</a><br /> +<br /> +Urinary Bladder. See Bladder<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Varix. See Aneurismal varix<br /> +<br /> +Vegetables, <a href='#Page_7'>7</a><br /> +<br /> +Veldt sores, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a><br /> +<br /> +Velocity of bullet:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Circumstances influencing, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Initial, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Remaining of various rifles, <a href='#Page_49'>49</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Velocity, influence of:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on fractures of long bones, <a href='#Page_163'>163</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on fractures of short and flat bones, <a href='#Page_168'>168</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">on wounds of abdomen, <a href='#Page_414'>414</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 6em;">of chest, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 6em;">of joints, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a>, <a href='#Page_230'>230</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 6em;">of lungs, <a href='#Page_385'>385</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 6em;">of nerves, <a href='#Page_341'>341</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 6em;">of skull, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 6em;">of spine, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Vermiform appendix, wounds of, <a href='#Page_437'>437</a><br /> +<br /> +Vibration synovitis, <a href='#Page_226'>226</a><br /> +<br /> +Vickers-Maxim shell, <a href='#Page_478'>478</a><br /> +<br /> +Vomiting in spinal injuries, <a href='#Page_329'>329</a><br /> +<br /> +<br /> +Wagons:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ambulance, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Buck, <a href='#Page_22'>22</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Ox, <a href='#Page_20'>20</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Warfare, deadliness of, <a href='#Page_40'>40</a><br /> +<br /> +Water in South Africa:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Character of, <a href='#Page_8'>8</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Transport of, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a></span><br /> +<br /> +Waxed bullets, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a><br /> +<br /> +Wobble, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_251'>251</a><br /> +<br /> +Wounded men, removal from the field, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a><br /> +<br /> +Wounds, general:<br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Aperture of entry, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Aperture of exit, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Climate, influence on, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Clinical, course of, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Contour tracks, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Direct nature of tracks, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Directions of tracks, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Displacement of structures, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Explosive exit wounds, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Foreign bodies in, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">First field dressing, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Hæmorrhage, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Irregular types of, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Mode of healing, <a href='#Page_72'>72</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Multiple character, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Nature of tracts, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Pain, <a href='#Page_103'>103</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Prognosis, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Psychical disturbance, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Shock, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Small bore, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Superficial tracts, <a href='#Page_65'>65</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Suppuration, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_78'>78</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Symptoms, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Tracks, nature of, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a></span><br /> +<span style="margin-left: 1em;">Treatment, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a></span><br /> +</p> + +<hr style='width: 45%;' /> + +<p class="center"> +PRINTED BY<br /> +SPOTTISWOODE AND CO. LTD., NEW-STREET SQUARE<br /> +LONDON<br /> +</p> + + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Surgical Experiences in South Africa, +1899-1900, by George Henry Makins + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SURGICAL EXPERIENCES *** + +***** This file should be named 21280-h.htm or 21280-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/1/2/8/21280/ + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Josephine Paolucci and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +https://gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at +https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at https://pglaf.org + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit https://pglaf.org + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including including checks, online payments and credit card +donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. + + +</pre> + +</body> +</html> diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig1.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig1.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..718bc18 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig1.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig10.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig10.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e5eddcf --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig10.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig11.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig11.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f710e17 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig11.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig12.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig12.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9bbb363 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig12.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig13.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig13.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1dc60e5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig13.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig14.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig14.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b5a8561 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig14.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig15.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig15.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bea32cd --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig15.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig16.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig16.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8e0d308 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig16.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig17.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig17.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e17bf73 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig17.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig18.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig18.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e1bcabb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig18.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig19.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig19.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..132303d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig19.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig2.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig2.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1751086 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig2.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig20.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig20.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a156fe2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig20.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig21.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig21.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5692a7f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig21.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig22.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig22.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ad46b32 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig22.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig23.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig23.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7de3c1f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig23.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig24.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig24.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d407395 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig24.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig25.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig25.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eac132a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig25.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig25a.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig25a.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..80da3af --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig25a.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig25b.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig25b.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3496c90 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig25b.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig26.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig26.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c6697f7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig26.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig27.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig27.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b912e0a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig27.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig28.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig28.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a709396 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig28.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig29.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig29.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..86b992e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig29.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig3.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig3.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..53ac970 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig3.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig30.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig30.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3e63a15 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig30.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig31.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig31.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f12d52b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig31.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig32.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig32.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..acd78d8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig32.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig33.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig33.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2a8462f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig33.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig34.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig34.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b300a8b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig34.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig35.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig35.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bf80854 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig35.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig36.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig36.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b6da03d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig36.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig37.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig37.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fa62e96 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig37.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig38.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig38.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7f5a06e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig38.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig39.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig39.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e2c6e4e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig39.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig4.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig4.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b093417 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig4.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig40.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig40.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fbfa693 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig40.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig41.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig41.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..91cbb3b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig41.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig42.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig42.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fef5805 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig42.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig43.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig43.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..46d4a8b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig43.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig44.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig44.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..56564ca --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig44.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig45.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig45.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e7bdbd7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig45.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig46.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig46.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..375afae --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig46.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig47.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig47.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4fc0775 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig47.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig48.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig48.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..62125ab --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig48.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig49.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig49.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..daa64f4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig49.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig5.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig5.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..846c283 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig5.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig50.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig50.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8642e8d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig50.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig51.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig51.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f0d79c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig51.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig52.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig52.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..85fd8e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig52.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig53.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig53.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..40d4568 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig53.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig53a.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig53a.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dfcc1a2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig53a.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig54.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig54.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4d01731 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig54.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig55.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig55.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..caeaa76 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig55.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig55a.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig55a.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..76355bd --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig55a.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig56.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig56.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..afddeaa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig56.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig57.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig57.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b6f162 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig57.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig58.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig58.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b770227 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig58.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig59.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig59.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..56b5bc8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig59.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig6.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig6.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9da1100 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig6.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig60.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig60.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d6fd268 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig60.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig61.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig61.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3bc5091 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig61.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig62.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig62.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..23c2925 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig62.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig63.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig63.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b549a35 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig63.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig64.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig64.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..57d8729 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig64.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig65.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig65.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d98dd47 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig65.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig66.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig66.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a516c7e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig66.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig67.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig67.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c5455a9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig67.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig68.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig68.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1b5ffbb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig68.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig69.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig69.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c09942b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig69.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig7.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig7.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3e9f599 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig7.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig70.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig70.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7bdbbf7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig70.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig71.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig71.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2cc41ac --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig71.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig72.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig72.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..14de73b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig72.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig73.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig73.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9052d95 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig73.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig74.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig74.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f6d3e2a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig74.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig75.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig75.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..50e1a01 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig75.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig76.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig76.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f157884 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig76.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig77.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig77.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..aa7761d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig77.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig78.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig78.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..47cb7d0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig78.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig79.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig79.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1923c27 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig79.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig8.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig8.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..382ce74 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig8.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig80.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig80.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..71d7f7a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig80.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig81.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig81.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6ac31c7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig81.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig82.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig82.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9e6d820 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig82.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig83.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig83.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5832014 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig83.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig84.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig84.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..beb5201 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig84.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig85.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig85.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ba31a7b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig85.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig86.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig86.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ef7617d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig86.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig87.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig87.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..20415cd --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig87.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig88.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig88.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..55c1276 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig88.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig89.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig89.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1adf09c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig89.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig9.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig9.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..46ac754 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig9.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig90.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig90.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b60b1e3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig90.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig91.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig91.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e525325 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig91.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig92.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig92.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..44786c5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig92.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig93.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig93.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a5720f2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig93.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig94.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig94.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fc20861 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig94.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig95.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig95.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..83d11f6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig95.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/fig96.jpg b/21280-h/images/fig96.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fdbef8c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/fig96.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/frontispiece.jpg b/21280-h/images/frontispiece.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ede20a3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/frontispiece.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate1.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate1.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..31cfa92 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate1.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate10.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate10.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..30538ea --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate10.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate11.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate11.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c4cf204 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate11.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate12.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate12.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..559e0c2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate12.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate13.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate13.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5fb220f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate13.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate14.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate14.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..73b694d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate14.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate15.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate15.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b2fd316 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate15.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate16.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate16.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fae2fc0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate16.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate17.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate17.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b762514 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate17.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate18.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate18.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1b80b08 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate18.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate19.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate19.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1f497e9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate19.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate2.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate2.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ec0ed46 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate2.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate20.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate20.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..129e2ab --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate20.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate21.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate21.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9a2c4c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate21.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate22.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate22.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5f1bc30 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate22.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate23.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate23.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9a02e51 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate23.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate24.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate24.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..50bcd81 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate24.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate25.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate25.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e4e846f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate25.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate3.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate3.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8208c05 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate3.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate4.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate4.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..037ed29 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate4.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate5.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate5.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..88e0050 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate5.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate6.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate6.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..016f077 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate6.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate7.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate7.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6945ca9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate7.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate8.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate8.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ef52eb9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate8.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/plate9.jpg b/21280-h/images/plate9.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cfa967a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/plate9.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/tempchart1.jpg b/21280-h/images/tempchart1.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..31bd250 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/tempchart1.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/tempchart2.jpg b/21280-h/images/tempchart2.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..52074fa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/tempchart2.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/tempchart3.jpg b/21280-h/images/tempchart3.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..57bc309 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/tempchart3.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/tempchart4.jpg b/21280-h/images/tempchart4.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1c204e7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/tempchart4.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/tempchart5.jpg b/21280-h/images/tempchart5.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5b7aa27 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/tempchart5.jpg diff --git a/21280-h/images/tempchart6.jpg b/21280-h/images/tempchart6.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ca8754c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-h/images/tempchart6.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/f001.png b/21280-page-images/f001.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..02c67ec --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f001.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f002.png b/21280-page-images/f002.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bab252a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f002.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f003.png b/21280-page-images/f003.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..13899c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f003.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f004.png b/21280-page-images/f004.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f9b58c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f004.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f005.png b/21280-page-images/f005.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9ddf355 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f005.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f006.png b/21280-page-images/f006.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b8bab7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f006.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f007.png b/21280-page-images/f007.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..388a33f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f007.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f008.png b/21280-page-images/f008.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8d02a3c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f008.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f009.png b/21280-page-images/f009.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a525307 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f009.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f010.png b/21280-page-images/f010.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..48a9518 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f010.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f011.png b/21280-page-images/f011.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b5becb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f011.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f012.png b/21280-page-images/f012.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1af703e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f012.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/f013.png b/21280-page-images/f013.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e9fecb2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/f013.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p001.png b/21280-page-images/p001.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c9b96d3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p001.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p002.png b/21280-page-images/p002.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..980a6b7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p002.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p003.png b/21280-page-images/p003.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..be7215a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p003.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p004-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p004-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a2fe0c4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p004-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p004.png b/21280-page-images/p004.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a1c266a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p004.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p005-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p005-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..280240d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p005-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p005.png b/21280-page-images/p005.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..df08ebf --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p005.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p006-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p006-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6368209 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p006-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p006.png b/21280-page-images/p006.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6a5f7a2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p006.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p007-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p007-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4555b43 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p007-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p007.png b/21280-page-images/p007.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4f98c07 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p007.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p008.png b/21280-page-images/p008.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..399e36f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p008.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p009.png b/21280-page-images/p009.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..633f08d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p009.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p010.png b/21280-page-images/p010.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0582839 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p010.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p011.png b/21280-page-images/p011.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b639f0f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p011.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p012.png b/21280-page-images/p012.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..45f01a8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p012.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p013.png b/21280-page-images/p013.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..19d500c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p013.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p014.png b/21280-page-images/p014.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..877fcfa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p014.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p015.png b/21280-page-images/p015.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d252b27 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p015.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p016.png b/21280-page-images/p016.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3f6fa36 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p016.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p017.png b/21280-page-images/p017.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c1e1491 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p017.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p018.png b/21280-page-images/p018.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ecb5b5d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p018.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p019-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p019-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4bf5325 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p019-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p019.png b/21280-page-images/p019.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..40b9066 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p019.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p020-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p020-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f67de26 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p020-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p020.png b/21280-page-images/p020.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dbccd45 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p020.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p021-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p021-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..66aa1fa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p021-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p021.png b/21280-page-images/p021.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f9d58b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p021.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p022-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p022-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e7441f2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p022-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p022.png b/21280-page-images/p022.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4ef14cf --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p022.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p023.png b/21280-page-images/p023.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bd23c7c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p023.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p024-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p024-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a408c94 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p024-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p024.png b/21280-page-images/p024.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3375fb2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p024.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p025-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p025-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0b36e1f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p025-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p025.png b/21280-page-images/p025.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1c81409 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p025.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p026.png b/21280-page-images/p026.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c99a21b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p026.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p027.png b/21280-page-images/p027.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a27734c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p027.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p028.png b/21280-page-images/p028.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..59b3a40 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p028.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p029.png b/21280-page-images/p029.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..31eb63f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p029.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p030.png b/21280-page-images/p030.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..47b99c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p030.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p031.png b/21280-page-images/p031.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7a22b50 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p031.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p032-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p032-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6fe01d2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p032-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p032.png b/21280-page-images/p032.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a3f9dd5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p032.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p033-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p033-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ee13f35 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p033-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p033.png b/21280-page-images/p033.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e692d12 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p033.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p034.png b/21280-page-images/p034.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e1faab5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p034.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p035-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p035-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..37c6531 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p035-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p035.png b/21280-page-images/p035.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9d00af6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p035.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p036.png b/21280-page-images/p036.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cdb57f3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p036.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p037.png b/21280-page-images/p037.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..56024d8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p037.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p038.png b/21280-page-images/p038.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b7a5ed4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p038.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p039.png b/21280-page-images/p039.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cc41b39 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p039.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p040.png b/21280-page-images/p040.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d14a5e8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p040.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p041.png b/21280-page-images/p041.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..69ea3f4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p041.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p042.png b/21280-page-images/p042.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2dd8d0d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p042.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p043.png b/21280-page-images/p043.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9ff47df --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p043.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p044.png b/21280-page-images/p044.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8845533 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p044.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p045.png b/21280-page-images/p045.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cae7d9e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p045.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p046.png b/21280-page-images/p046.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..04b935c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p046.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p047-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p047-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..85b60ff --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p047-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p047.png b/21280-page-images/p047.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4eb6e10 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p047.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p048.png b/21280-page-images/p048.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cf5b1cd --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p048.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p049.png b/21280-page-images/p049.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..51dfe69 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p049.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p050.png b/21280-page-images/p050.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..51cb262 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p050.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p051-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p051-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8beed23 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p051-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p051.png b/21280-page-images/p051.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6d136db --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p051.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p052.png b/21280-page-images/p052.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3c434fb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p052.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p053.png b/21280-page-images/p053.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..be9b5e4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p053.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p054.png b/21280-page-images/p054.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..399f039 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p054.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p055.png b/21280-page-images/p055.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d465ac9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p055.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p056.png b/21280-page-images/p056.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2f00276 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p056.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p056a-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p056a-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2c5927b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p056a-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p056b-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p056b-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dac581d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p056b-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p057-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p057-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f8dc71b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p057-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p057.png b/21280-page-images/p057.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9d82d35 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p057.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p058-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p058-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d318ad6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p058-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p058.png b/21280-page-images/p058.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ee127f3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p058.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p059.png b/21280-page-images/p059.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..33812cf --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p059.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p059a-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p059a-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9d95ff9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p059a-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p059b-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p059b-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f2c748e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p059b-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p060.png b/21280-page-images/p060.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dbc1bb3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p060.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p061-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p061-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2776f51 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p061-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p061.png b/21280-page-images/p061.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fe519a0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p061.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p062-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p062-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..77033b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p062-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p062.png b/21280-page-images/p062.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8711df3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p062.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p063.png b/21280-page-images/p063.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6f4c1fb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p063.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p064-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p064-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6252ccc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p064-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p064.png b/21280-page-images/p064.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b1d2024 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p064.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p065-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p065-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a32b2e1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p065-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p065.png b/21280-page-images/p065.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bc12739 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p065.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p066.png b/21280-page-images/p066.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..55aa646 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p066.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p067.png b/21280-page-images/p067.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fb5f62f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p067.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p068.png b/21280-page-images/p068.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a5d9553 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p068.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p069.png b/21280-page-images/p069.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f6b698f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p069.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p070.png b/21280-page-images/p070.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2074fe4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p070.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p071.png b/21280-page-images/p071.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b8491c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p071.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p072-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p072-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0f49c04 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p072-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p072.png b/21280-page-images/p072.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..45d56fb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p072.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p073.png b/21280-page-images/p073.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e665648 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p073.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p074-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p074-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fce2c0d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p074-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p074.png b/21280-page-images/p074.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c99831c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p074.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p075.png b/21280-page-images/p075.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..56bf58c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p075.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p076-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p076-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..da2550a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p076-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p076.png b/21280-page-images/p076.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..923a292 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p076.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p077-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p077-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..53a30cc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p077-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p077.png b/21280-page-images/p077.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..be2bbe6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p077.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p078.png b/21280-page-images/p078.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e748c42 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p078.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p079.png b/21280-page-images/p079.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7978ff3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p079.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p080.png b/21280-page-images/p080.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..629bc87 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p080.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p081.png b/21280-page-images/p081.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eaeb2fe --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p081.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p082-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p082-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b6008e2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p082-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p082.png b/21280-page-images/p082.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fa24175 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p082.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p083-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p083-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bf7739c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p083-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p083.png b/21280-page-images/p083.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..77dcf38 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p083.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p084-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p084-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..657ca14 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p084-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p084.png b/21280-page-images/p084.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b8a85b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p084.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p085-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p085-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fa65bd5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p085-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p085.png b/21280-page-images/p085.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..baa9a56 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p085.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p086.png b/21280-page-images/p086.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..952562b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p086.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p086a-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p086a-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7180d9d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p086a-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p086b-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p086b-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..aea2ab4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p086b-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p087-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p087-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5daef00 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p087-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p087.png b/21280-page-images/p087.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..568b05e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p087.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p088-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p088-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dfe2ee3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p088-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p088.png b/21280-page-images/p088.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6b1e1e1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p088.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p089-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p089-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d18e9b8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p089-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p089.png b/21280-page-images/p089.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..57e0d15 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p089.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p090-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p090-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bff4165 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p090-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p090.png b/21280-page-images/p090.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..af93ac7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p090.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p091-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p091-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..63c1a5e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p091-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p091.png b/21280-page-images/p091.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4c78faa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p091.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p092.png b/21280-page-images/p092.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..256d867 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p092.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p092a-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p092a-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ad21ca4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p092a-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p092b-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p092b-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2eabc65 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p092b-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p093-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p093-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ad42dbb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p093-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p093.png b/21280-page-images/p093.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9eb1bd5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p093.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p094.png b/21280-page-images/p094.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d238b21 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p094.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p094a-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p094a-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d76c85c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p094a-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p094b-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p094b-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8cf9cad --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p094b-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p095-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p095-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f2aff38 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p095-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p095.png b/21280-page-images/p095.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e153920 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p095.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p096.png b/21280-page-images/p096.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..37f7b69 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p096.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p097.png b/21280-page-images/p097.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1dd6fe1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p097.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p098.jpg b/21280-page-images/p098.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fd239fb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p098.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p099.png b/21280-page-images/p099.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b49d80e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p099.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p100-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p100-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0e8de1c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p100-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p100.png b/21280-page-images/p100.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3585c7c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p100.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p101.png b/21280-page-images/p101.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a696bbb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p101.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p102-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p102-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a0af511 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p102-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p102.png b/21280-page-images/p102.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a9f7f0a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p102.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p103.png b/21280-page-images/p103.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..328d8df --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p103.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p104.png b/21280-page-images/p104.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..336dde9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p104.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p105-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p105-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..93f938e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p105-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p105.png b/21280-page-images/p105.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..27d1ff1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p105.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p106.png b/21280-page-images/p106.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fb2174b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p106.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p107.png b/21280-page-images/p107.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1d99d07 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p107.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p108.png b/21280-page-images/p108.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..469258b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p108.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p109.png b/21280-page-images/p109.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a119307 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p109.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p110.png b/21280-page-images/p110.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f451631 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p110.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p111.png b/21280-page-images/p111.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b64c9d1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p111.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p112.png b/21280-page-images/p112.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f3b3c29 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p112.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p113.png b/21280-page-images/p113.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fcc00d6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p113.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p114.png b/21280-page-images/p114.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f2f8555 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p114.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p115.png b/21280-page-images/p115.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e7ba387 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p115.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p116.png b/21280-page-images/p116.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..32bbb54 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p116.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p117.png b/21280-page-images/p117.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b375a2b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p117.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p118.png b/21280-page-images/p118.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5f45383 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p118.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p119-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p119-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..44eda56 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p119-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p119.png b/21280-page-images/p119.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dfdaba1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p119.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p120.png b/21280-page-images/p120.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7fc20c7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p120.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p121.png b/21280-page-images/p121.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..27a1f8c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p121.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p122.png b/21280-page-images/p122.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f348e27 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p122.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p123.png b/21280-page-images/p123.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..191c682 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p123.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p124.png b/21280-page-images/p124.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4936a10 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p124.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p125.png b/21280-page-images/p125.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2b67511 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p125.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p126.png b/21280-page-images/p126.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5675adb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p126.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p127.png b/21280-page-images/p127.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..129d844 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p127.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p128.png b/21280-page-images/p128.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..56f7bae --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p128.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p129.png b/21280-page-images/p129.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6765912 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p129.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p130.png b/21280-page-images/p130.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4ccd3f1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p130.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p131.png b/21280-page-images/p131.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f1aa506 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p131.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p132.png b/21280-page-images/p132.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9933c12 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p132.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p133.png b/21280-page-images/p133.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..63709e1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p133.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p134.png b/21280-page-images/p134.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2d7fa79 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p134.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p135.png b/21280-page-images/p135.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..65217f9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p135.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p136.png b/21280-page-images/p136.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..809699f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p136.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p137.png b/21280-page-images/p137.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a887c18 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p137.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p138.png b/21280-page-images/p138.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0845f26 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p138.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p139.png b/21280-page-images/p139.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dcf8e08 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p139.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p140.png b/21280-page-images/p140.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..79cf64d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p140.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p141.png b/21280-page-images/p141.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..43626ca --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p141.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p142.png b/21280-page-images/p142.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8f92707 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p142.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p143.png b/21280-page-images/p143.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..37fcf46 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p143.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p144.png b/21280-page-images/p144.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c42aefa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p144.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p145.png b/21280-page-images/p145.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e1ab9b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p145.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p146.png b/21280-page-images/p146.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9c37b98 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p146.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p147.png b/21280-page-images/p147.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d71331e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p147.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p148.png b/21280-page-images/p148.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..574dcd6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p148.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p149.png b/21280-page-images/p149.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e979723 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p149.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p150.png b/21280-page-images/p150.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..aa81d84 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p150.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p151.png b/21280-page-images/p151.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0d514a6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p151.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p152.png b/21280-page-images/p152.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3c0352c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p152.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p153.png b/21280-page-images/p153.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8615749 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p153.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p154.png b/21280-page-images/p154.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..12f0962 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p154.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p155.png b/21280-page-images/p155.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6561f19 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p155.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p156.jpg b/21280-page-images/p156.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ec812f2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p156.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p157.png b/21280-page-images/p157.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..332f706 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p157.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p158.jpg b/21280-page-images/p158.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5fa874f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p158.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p159-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p159-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8750b29 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p159-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p159.png b/21280-page-images/p159.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b0753cf --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p159.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p160.png b/21280-page-images/p160.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..65cfc07 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p160.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p161-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p161-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..428c15a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p161-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p161.png b/21280-page-images/p161.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..68d9462 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p161.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p162-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p162-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8f99770 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p162-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p162.png b/21280-page-images/p162.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7d29c7b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p162.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p163.png b/21280-page-images/p163.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8ed365c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p163.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p164-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p164-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..91299bc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p164-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p164.png b/21280-page-images/p164.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b8eae2f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p164.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p165.png b/21280-page-images/p165.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5451cfa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p165.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p166.png b/21280-page-images/p166.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..78a144d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p166.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p167.png b/21280-page-images/p167.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..41225f4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p167.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p168.png b/21280-page-images/p168.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ad52136 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p168.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p169-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p169-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f300f55 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p169-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p169.png b/21280-page-images/p169.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..788ed8c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p169.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p170.png b/21280-page-images/p170.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1e81591 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p170.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p171.png b/21280-page-images/p171.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b0d7d52 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p171.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p172.png b/21280-page-images/p172.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3a5e6c2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p172.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p173.png b/21280-page-images/p173.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dccab4c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p173.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p174.png b/21280-page-images/p174.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9ac423b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p174.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p175.png b/21280-page-images/p175.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0fa9582 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p175.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p176.png b/21280-page-images/p176.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5a3ccb4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p176.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p177.png b/21280-page-images/p177.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b8a76de --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p177.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p178-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p178-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..79a91ed --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p178-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p178.png b/21280-page-images/p178.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..da35ed1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p178.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p179.png b/21280-page-images/p179.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..62e6b2b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p179.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p180-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p180-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0c58c70 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p180-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p180-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p180-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9d28046 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p180-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p180.png b/21280-page-images/p180.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0a68751 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p180.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p181.png b/21280-page-images/p181.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2ada499 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p181.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p182-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p182-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1f351c5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p182-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p182.png b/21280-page-images/p182.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8cbfad6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p182.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p183.png b/21280-page-images/p183.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..788e622 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p183.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p184-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p184-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dbaf984 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p184-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p184.png b/21280-page-images/p184.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b2a2ff4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p184.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p185.png b/21280-page-images/p185.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e1d5847 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p185.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p186-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p186-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8adf3f2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p186-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p186.png b/21280-page-images/p186.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0a66806 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p186.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p187-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p187-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..07eeb46 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p187-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p187.png b/21280-page-images/p187.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..715a5c5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p187.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p188-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p188-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ffd60dd --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p188-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p188.png b/21280-page-images/p188.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..252ca51 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p188.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p189.png b/21280-page-images/p189.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..91ac08d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p189.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p190-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p190-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fba5799 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p190-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p190.png b/21280-page-images/p190.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9391156 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p190.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p191-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p191-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5c5b615 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p191-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p191.png b/21280-page-images/p191.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..62e88c9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p191.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p192-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p192-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bad66ea --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p192-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p192.png b/21280-page-images/p192.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8891341 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p192.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p193.png b/21280-page-images/p193.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2a9c2ac --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p193.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p194-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p194-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f8db3a1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p194-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p194.png b/21280-page-images/p194.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bba0ffc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p194.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p195.png b/21280-page-images/p195.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7ef039a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p195.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p196-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p196-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c49670c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p196-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p196.png b/21280-page-images/p196.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..84ce349 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p196.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p197.png b/21280-page-images/p197.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e4cd2b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p197.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p198-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p198-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a4e0bfb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p198-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p198.png b/21280-page-images/p198.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1655cda --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p198.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p199.png b/21280-page-images/p199.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f502908 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p199.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p200-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p200-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..80937c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p200-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p200-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p200-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eb4e814 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p200-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p200.png b/21280-page-images/p200.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d93c5ee --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p200.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p201.png b/21280-page-images/p201.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..10ca2a1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p201.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p202-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p202-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8f81e30 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p202-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p202.png b/21280-page-images/p202.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6a6b0a9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p202.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p203.png b/21280-page-images/p203.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cd79252 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p203.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p204-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p204-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d14817e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p204-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p204.png b/21280-page-images/p204.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f305be1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p204.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p205.png b/21280-page-images/p205.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a5c2be4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p205.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p206-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p206-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a00b880 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p206-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p206.png b/21280-page-images/p206.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..29977e2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p206.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p207.png b/21280-page-images/p207.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..66be3dc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p207.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p208-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p208-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e345803 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p208-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p208.png b/21280-page-images/p208.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a7b5ab3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p208.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p209-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p209-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..89d12eb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p209-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p209.png b/21280-page-images/p209.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d063109 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p209.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p210-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p210-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..77377b5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p210-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p210.png b/21280-page-images/p210.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2b8bc63 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p210.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p211.png b/21280-page-images/p211.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1bed703 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p211.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p212-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p212-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d045f61 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p212-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p212.png b/21280-page-images/p212.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9cb66a6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p212.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p213.png b/21280-page-images/p213.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b2f917a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p213.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p214-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p214-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8a55986 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p214-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p214.png b/21280-page-images/p214.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e64eb29 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p214.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p215.png b/21280-page-images/p215.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1c64a68 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p215.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p216-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p216-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..250d92d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p216-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p216.png b/21280-page-images/p216.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8d46b52 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p216.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p217.png b/21280-page-images/p217.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..07d30da --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p217.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p218-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p218-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..330bc9c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p218-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p218.png b/21280-page-images/p218.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4e5aa62 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p218.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p219-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p219-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..502466d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p219-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p219.png b/21280-page-images/p219.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d01f4d5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p219.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p220-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p220-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d55fd5e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p220-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p220.png b/21280-page-images/p220.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0c04206 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p220.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p221.png b/21280-page-images/p221.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..58b4de3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p221.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p222-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p222-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0230f62 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p222-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p222.png b/21280-page-images/p222.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..68cddc6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p222.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p223.png b/21280-page-images/p223.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3b4c160 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p223.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p224.png b/21280-page-images/p224.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cfc3c69 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p224.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p225.png b/21280-page-images/p225.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4bcc931 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p225.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p226.png b/21280-page-images/p226.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1ac7171 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p226.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p227.png b/21280-page-images/p227.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..58c8fa1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p227.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p228.png b/21280-page-images/p228.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f9748fd --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p228.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p229.png b/21280-page-images/p229.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8a6c9c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p229.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p230.png b/21280-page-images/p230.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d094b46 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p230.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p231.png b/21280-page-images/p231.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6ca4769 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p231.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p232.png b/21280-page-images/p232.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ab29190 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p232.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p233.png b/21280-page-images/p233.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f450c2b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p233.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p234.png b/21280-page-images/p234.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..34617e9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p234.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p235.png b/21280-page-images/p235.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cfe179d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p235.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p236.png b/21280-page-images/p236.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..be5e27c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p236.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p237-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p237-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c7baf71 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p237-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p237.png b/21280-page-images/p237.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cda1a1d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p237.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p238.png b/21280-page-images/p238.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fb7c816 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p238.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p239.png b/21280-page-images/p239.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3f7dedf --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p239.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p240.png b/21280-page-images/p240.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..91a2785 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p240.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p241.png b/21280-page-images/p241.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c5e680a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p241.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p242.png b/21280-page-images/p242.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ebe7f59 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p242.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p243.png b/21280-page-images/p243.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f61dd8b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p243.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p244-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p244-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..346a380 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p244-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p244.png b/21280-page-images/p244.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ff8dd9f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p244.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p245-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p245-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..840cd30 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p245-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p245.png b/21280-page-images/p245.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fe0463e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p245.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p246.png b/21280-page-images/p246.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..37b8e1f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p246.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p247.png b/21280-page-images/p247.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e2de3d3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p247.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p248.png b/21280-page-images/p248.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d4c1469 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p248.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p249.png b/21280-page-images/p249.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4ee15c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p249.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p250.png b/21280-page-images/p250.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..65d3970 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p250.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p251.png b/21280-page-images/p251.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4c83fe4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p251.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p252-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p252-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4723e51 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p252-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p252.png b/21280-page-images/p252.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5456ee6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p252.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p253-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p253-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..093f588 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p253-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p253.png b/21280-page-images/p253.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..92e55c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p253.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p254.png b/21280-page-images/p254.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7893f59 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p254.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p255-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p255-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cbef6a4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p255-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p255.png b/21280-page-images/p255.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cae53b7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p255.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p256-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p256-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bd99670 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p256-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p256.png b/21280-page-images/p256.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..55516bf --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p256.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p257-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p257-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e016f18 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p257-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p257.png b/21280-page-images/p257.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9da3051 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p257.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p258-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p258-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ed7f7cf --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p258-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p258.png b/21280-page-images/p258.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e731676 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p258.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p259-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p259-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..820b0c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p259-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p259.png b/21280-page-images/p259.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9eecfd6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p259.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p260.png b/21280-page-images/p260.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..989a737 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p260.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p260a-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p260a-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2c10fef --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p260a-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p260b-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p260b-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..171e6dc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p260b-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p261.png b/21280-page-images/p261.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5fc7964 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p261.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p261a-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p261a-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..44ca09a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p261a-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p261b-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p261b-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d72afc3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p261b-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p262.png b/21280-page-images/p262.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7612ada --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p262.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p263.png b/21280-page-images/p263.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..606f6bc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p263.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p264.png b/21280-page-images/p264.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..71881ea --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p264.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p265.png b/21280-page-images/p265.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..db3af83 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p265.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p266.png b/21280-page-images/p266.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9c3a242 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p266.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p267.png b/21280-page-images/p267.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0bf5dfc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p267.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p268.png b/21280-page-images/p268.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d5bfd7f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p268.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p269.png b/21280-page-images/p269.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3afea19 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p269.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p270.png b/21280-page-images/p270.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1daec19 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p270.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p271.png b/21280-page-images/p271.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..079bd83 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p271.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p272.png b/21280-page-images/p272.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f769cf2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p272.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p273.png b/21280-page-images/p273.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..27c9dba --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p273.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p274.png b/21280-page-images/p274.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1f164bd --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p274.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p275.png b/21280-page-images/p275.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e8562e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p275.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p276.png b/21280-page-images/p276.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5a3beab --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p276.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p277.png b/21280-page-images/p277.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..258d2f1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p277.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p278.png b/21280-page-images/p278.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..56cbbaa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p278.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p279.jpg b/21280-page-images/p279.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7e99569 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p279.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p280.png b/21280-page-images/p280.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c74632b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p280.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p281.jpg b/21280-page-images/p281.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ac840b7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p281.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p282.png b/21280-page-images/p282.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..641aea7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p282.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p283.jpg b/21280-page-images/p283.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..158b5a6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p283.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p284.png b/21280-page-images/p284.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e30cc0d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p284.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p285.png b/21280-page-images/p285.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2adc9b6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p285.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p286.png b/21280-page-images/p286.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..332fdf8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p286.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p287.png b/21280-page-images/p287.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..44f7320 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p287.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p288.png b/21280-page-images/p288.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..49296e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p288.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p289.png b/21280-page-images/p289.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f304fda --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p289.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p290.png b/21280-page-images/p290.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0188246 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p290.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p291.png b/21280-page-images/p291.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..52cd315 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p291.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p292.png b/21280-page-images/p292.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a7f3d77 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p292.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p293.png b/21280-page-images/p293.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ac10243 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p293.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p294.png b/21280-page-images/p294.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e8ebbba --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p294.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p295.png b/21280-page-images/p295.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a9ed8e6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p295.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p296.png b/21280-page-images/p296.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..85eba99 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p296.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p297.png b/21280-page-images/p297.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9fcb83f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p297.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p298.png b/21280-page-images/p298.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f7a65c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p298.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p299.png b/21280-page-images/p299.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..054e353 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p299.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p300.png b/21280-page-images/p300.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b37791b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p300.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p301.png b/21280-page-images/p301.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2f9c554 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p301.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p302.png b/21280-page-images/p302.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..116f585 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p302.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p303.png b/21280-page-images/p303.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..25fe3d0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p303.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p304.png b/21280-page-images/p304.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..02cf689 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p304.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p305.png b/21280-page-images/p305.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..afa5bef --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p305.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p306.png b/21280-page-images/p306.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5da575f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p306.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p307.png b/21280-page-images/p307.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bb1b128 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p307.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p308.png b/21280-page-images/p308.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b2875f1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p308.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p309.png b/21280-page-images/p309.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ee5e88d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p309.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p310.png b/21280-page-images/p310.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a892565 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p310.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p311.png b/21280-page-images/p311.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5d97072 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p311.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p312.png b/21280-page-images/p312.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bfb527a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p312.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p313.png b/21280-page-images/p313.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0d8e8a2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p313.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p314.png b/21280-page-images/p314.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7420c5b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p314.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p315.png b/21280-page-images/p315.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4e23ae8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p315.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p316.png b/21280-page-images/p316.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2c651ac --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p316.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p317.png b/21280-page-images/p317.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3672c53 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p317.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p318.png b/21280-page-images/p318.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7ae46c2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p318.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p319.png b/21280-page-images/p319.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8bb4d23 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p319.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p320.png b/21280-page-images/p320.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3e96841 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p320.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p321.png b/21280-page-images/p321.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b4d9640 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p321.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p322.png b/21280-page-images/p322.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..15f06cc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p322.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p323.png b/21280-page-images/p323.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5962a6f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p323.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p324.png b/21280-page-images/p324.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9e27488 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p324.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p325.png b/21280-page-images/p325.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cb8c3b6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p325.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p326.png b/21280-page-images/p326.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d35c305 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p326.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p327.png b/21280-page-images/p327.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..de0b6da --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p327.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p328.png b/21280-page-images/p328.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..823389f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p328.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p329.png b/21280-page-images/p329.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f6ce1b4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p329.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p330.png b/21280-page-images/p330.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dc10a90 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p330.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p331.png b/21280-page-images/p331.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..50f6d66 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p331.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p332.png b/21280-page-images/p332.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..52f2d5c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p332.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p333-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p333-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fd13705 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p333-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p333.png b/21280-page-images/p333.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8192edd --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p333.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p334-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p334-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..46dffe0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p334-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p334.png b/21280-page-images/p334.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d32dc58 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p334.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p335.png b/21280-page-images/p335.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f5fb9e1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p335.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p336.png b/21280-page-images/p336.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..04c65b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p336.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p337.png b/21280-page-images/p337.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9cdf1b9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p337.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p338.png b/21280-page-images/p338.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b05ce43 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p338.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p339.png b/21280-page-images/p339.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7771411 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p339.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p340.png b/21280-page-images/p340.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fde3cc4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p340.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p341.png b/21280-page-images/p341.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b38db3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p341.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p342.png b/21280-page-images/p342.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f559227 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p342.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p343.png b/21280-page-images/p343.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e8e54f0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p343.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p344.png b/21280-page-images/p344.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e3e2ca0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p344.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p345.png b/21280-page-images/p345.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..21dc0b1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p345.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p346.png b/21280-page-images/p346.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..20e043f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p346.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p347.png b/21280-page-images/p347.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eb93b2d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p347.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p348.png b/21280-page-images/p348.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6714f9e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p348.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p349.png b/21280-page-images/p349.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5172db1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p349.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p350.png b/21280-page-images/p350.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b788cf2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p350.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p351.png b/21280-page-images/p351.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5545a7f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p351.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p352.png b/21280-page-images/p352.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2877d01 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p352.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p353.png b/21280-page-images/p353.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ae89707 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p353.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p354.png b/21280-page-images/p354.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..af21ae5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p354.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p355.png b/21280-page-images/p355.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4f41c95 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p355.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p356.png b/21280-page-images/p356.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..abc1b26 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p356.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p357.png b/21280-page-images/p357.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b8960cc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p357.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p358.png b/21280-page-images/p358.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5b2e5c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p358.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p359.png b/21280-page-images/p359.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..62f9d38 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p359.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p360.png b/21280-page-images/p360.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..de99916 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p360.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p361.png b/21280-page-images/p361.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..187c6c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p361.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p362.png b/21280-page-images/p362.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0877f67 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p362.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p363.png b/21280-page-images/p363.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7b0bf10 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p363.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p364.png b/21280-page-images/p364.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8336bb6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p364.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p365.png b/21280-page-images/p365.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..80526b7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p365.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p366.png b/21280-page-images/p366.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e4a06b7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p366.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p367.png b/21280-page-images/p367.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cb719af --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p367.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p368.png b/21280-page-images/p368.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e6fafa5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p368.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p369.png b/21280-page-images/p369.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8a94963 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p369.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p370.png b/21280-page-images/p370.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..abf0788 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p370.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p371.png b/21280-page-images/p371.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c12a190 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p371.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p372.png b/21280-page-images/p372.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..55704c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p372.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p373.png b/21280-page-images/p373.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a084f4a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p373.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p374.png b/21280-page-images/p374.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2a4c899 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p374.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p375.png b/21280-page-images/p375.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7b14527 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p375.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p376.png b/21280-page-images/p376.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..da017ed --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p376.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p377-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p377-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..03e7944 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p377-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p377.png b/21280-page-images/p377.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ab11f85 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p377.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p378.png b/21280-page-images/p378.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..61e0ba9 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p378.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p379.png b/21280-page-images/p379.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..baf3619 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p379.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p380.png b/21280-page-images/p380.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3dd60c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p380.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p381-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p381-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..eee909b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p381-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p381.png b/21280-page-images/p381.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6b6c9ac --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p381.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p382.png b/21280-page-images/p382.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d66e0e7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p382.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p383.png b/21280-page-images/p383.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0864856 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p383.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p384.png b/21280-page-images/p384.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b46a958 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p384.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p385.png b/21280-page-images/p385.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..682575c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p385.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p386.png b/21280-page-images/p386.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..83bbd3b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p386.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p387.png b/21280-page-images/p387.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0dd422b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p387.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p388.png b/21280-page-images/p388.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..707470b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p388.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p389.png b/21280-page-images/p389.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5e88aec --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p389.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p390.png b/21280-page-images/p390.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5092a08 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p390.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p391.png b/21280-page-images/p391.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4e00a62 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p391.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p392-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p392-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9550a83 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p392-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p392.png b/21280-page-images/p392.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..51ad9d8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p392.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p393.png b/21280-page-images/p393.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cb17af5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p393.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p394.png b/21280-page-images/p394.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..696f5af --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p394.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p395-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p395-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..62c6cf3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p395-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p395.png b/21280-page-images/p395.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dd0028f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p395.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p396.png b/21280-page-images/p396.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1793496 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p396.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p397.png b/21280-page-images/p397.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..670562e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p397.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p398.png b/21280-page-images/p398.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7310a27 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p398.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p399.png b/21280-page-images/p399.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5cf6d7e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p399.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p400.png b/21280-page-images/p400.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..31c980e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p400.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p401.png b/21280-page-images/p401.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e80e306 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p401.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p402-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p402-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ae4d582 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p402-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p402.png b/21280-page-images/p402.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..bc675d4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p402.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p403-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p403-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9d4b225 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p403-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p403.png b/21280-page-images/p403.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..082bf9d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p403.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p404-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p404-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5a4b424 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p404-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p404.png b/21280-page-images/p404.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e0eab66 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p404.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p405-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p405-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fac8b27 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p405-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p405.png b/21280-page-images/p405.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..14adf62 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p405.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p406.png b/21280-page-images/p406.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6f94986 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p406.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p407.png b/21280-page-images/p407.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0ada3a4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p407.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p408.png b/21280-page-images/p408.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..36afdd4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p408.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p409-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p409-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ddf51ee --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p409-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p409.png b/21280-page-images/p409.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..57cbc06 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p409.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p410.png b/21280-page-images/p410.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..aefe96b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p410.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p411.png b/21280-page-images/p411.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..94feb00 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p411.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p412.png b/21280-page-images/p412.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d88e4fc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p412.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p413.png b/21280-page-images/p413.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b5c48e2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p413.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p414.png b/21280-page-images/p414.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2fe558f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p414.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p415.png b/21280-page-images/p415.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f00afe8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p415.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p416-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p416-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6289944 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p416-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p416.png b/21280-page-images/p416.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9d164d6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p416.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p417-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p417-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..252f1b0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p417-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p417.png b/21280-page-images/p417.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9b1b6db --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p417.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p418-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p418-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9a95f26 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p418-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p418.png b/21280-page-images/p418.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a61ef22 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p418.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p419-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p419-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9561a00 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p419-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p419.png b/21280-page-images/p419.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ca7e51b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p419.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p420.png b/21280-page-images/p420.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2595896 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p420.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p421-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p421-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..052db93 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p421-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p421.png b/21280-page-images/p421.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..816ebb8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p421.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p422.png b/21280-page-images/p422.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3c692e3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p422.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p423.png b/21280-page-images/p423.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..65d9758 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p423.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p424.png b/21280-page-images/p424.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2f0f111 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p424.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p425.png b/21280-page-images/p425.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fe365b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p425.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p426.png b/21280-page-images/p426.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c79ac98 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p426.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p427.png b/21280-page-images/p427.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3f2c731 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p427.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p428.png b/21280-page-images/p428.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2d7a54c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p428.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p429.png b/21280-page-images/p429.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fadeb7f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p429.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p430.png b/21280-page-images/p430.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..30dd9ce --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p430.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p431.png b/21280-page-images/p431.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f43e4b5 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p431.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p432.png b/21280-page-images/p432.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6ada769 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p432.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p433.png b/21280-page-images/p433.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4fec4a2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p433.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p434.png b/21280-page-images/p434.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..95781f8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p434.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p435.png b/21280-page-images/p435.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..017144c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p435.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p436.png b/21280-page-images/p436.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..06d7c79 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p436.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p437.png b/21280-page-images/p437.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f274c5e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p437.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p438.png b/21280-page-images/p438.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c8ac9e3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p438.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p439.png b/21280-page-images/p439.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..578d662 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p439.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p440.png b/21280-page-images/p440.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b96bb13 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p440.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p441.png b/21280-page-images/p441.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..78112b2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p441.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p442.png b/21280-page-images/p442.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..618bff0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p442.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p443.png b/21280-page-images/p443.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..f748f48 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p443.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p444.png b/21280-page-images/p444.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9ad6d1d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p444.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p445.png b/21280-page-images/p445.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4185d61 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p445.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p446.png b/21280-page-images/p446.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..65f84c8 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p446.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p447.png b/21280-page-images/p447.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..330626a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p447.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p448.png b/21280-page-images/p448.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..ea40219 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p448.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p449.png b/21280-page-images/p449.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3a27dd4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p449.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p450.png b/21280-page-images/p450.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..016b856 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p450.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p451.png b/21280-page-images/p451.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1c3375a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p451.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p452.png b/21280-page-images/p452.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7627d19 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p452.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p453.png b/21280-page-images/p453.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..81a7220 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p453.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p454.png b/21280-page-images/p454.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..8e40414 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p454.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p455.png b/21280-page-images/p455.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..5189515 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p455.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p456.png b/21280-page-images/p456.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..456a1d4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p456.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p457.png b/21280-page-images/p457.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d19c881 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p457.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p458.png b/21280-page-images/p458.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..7a7e464 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p458.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p459.png b/21280-page-images/p459.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..67df8fa --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p459.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p460.png b/21280-page-images/p460.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4eb5b22 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p460.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p461.png b/21280-page-images/p461.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..761b94e --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p461.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p462.png b/21280-page-images/p462.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..148b305 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p462.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p463.png b/21280-page-images/p463.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c4e5284 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p463.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p464.png b/21280-page-images/p464.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..00fc8bb --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p464.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p465.png b/21280-page-images/p465.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1adca3f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p465.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p466.png b/21280-page-images/p466.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3bd837a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p466.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p467.png b/21280-page-images/p467.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..2714805 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p467.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p468.png b/21280-page-images/p468.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1ed1445 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p468.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p469.png b/21280-page-images/p469.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e6473c6 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p469.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p470.png b/21280-page-images/p470.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..396807d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p470.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p471.png b/21280-page-images/p471.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..df202c3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p471.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p472.png b/21280-page-images/p472.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..67368b0 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p472.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p473.png b/21280-page-images/p473.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..4b227f2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p473.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p474.png b/21280-page-images/p474.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b858210 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p474.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p475-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p475-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..9e8d646 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p475-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p475.png b/21280-page-images/p475.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6e35889 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p475.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p476.png b/21280-page-images/p476.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..079d04d --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p476.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p477-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p477-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..fc11397 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p477-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p477.png b/21280-page-images/p477.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..23f5b09 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p477.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p478.png b/21280-page-images/p478.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c1951e2 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p478.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p479-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p479-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6a1fbfc --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p479-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p479.png b/21280-page-images/p479.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..330381f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p479.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p480-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p480-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6b4ec9c --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p480-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p480.png b/21280-page-images/p480.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..cdf29ad --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p480.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p481-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p481-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1cbaa0f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p481-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p481.png b/21280-page-images/p481.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..1efe251 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p481.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p482-insert.jpg b/21280-page-images/p482-insert.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..345a295 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p482-insert.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p482.png b/21280-page-images/p482.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..82ea968 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p482.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p483-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p483-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..48c2df3 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p483-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p483.png b/21280-page-images/p483.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..6fd054f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p483.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p484.png b/21280-page-images/p484.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..d66140f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p484.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p485-image.jpg b/21280-page-images/p485-image.jpg Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..dc0c48b --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p485-image.jpg diff --git a/21280-page-images/p485.png b/21280-page-images/p485.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..03c65c1 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p485.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p486.png b/21280-page-images/p486.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..c5be90f --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p486.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p487.png b/21280-page-images/p487.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..406cfe4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p487.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p488.png b/21280-page-images/p488.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..b2c023a --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p488.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p489.png b/21280-page-images/p489.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a87f2a7 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p489.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p490.png b/21280-page-images/p490.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..3b96844 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p490.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p491.png b/21280-page-images/p491.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..0026650 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p491.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p492.png b/21280-page-images/p492.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..a8b6716 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p492.png diff --git a/21280-page-images/p493.png b/21280-page-images/p493.png Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..e8e47fe --- /dev/null +++ b/21280-page-images/p493.png diff --git a/21280.txt b/21280.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7126491 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280.txt @@ -0,0 +1,19451 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Surgical Experiences in South Africa, +1899-1900, by George Henry Makins + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Surgical Experiences in South Africa, 1899-1900 + Being Mainly a Clinical Study of the Nature and Effects + of Injuries Produced by Bullets of Small Calibre + +Author: George Henry Makins + +Release Date: May 3, 2007 [EBook #21280] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SURGICAL EXPERIENCES *** + + + + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Josephine Paolucci and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + +[Illustration: FRONTISPIECE. + +Photo, H. KISCH Ladysmith. Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, +Ltd.] + + + + +SURGICAL EXPERIENCES + +IN + +SOUTH AFRICA + +1899-1900 + +BEING MAINLY A CLINICAL STUDY OF THE NATURE AND EFFECTS OF INJURIES +PRODUCED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE + + +BY + +GEORGE HENRY MAKINS, F.R.C.S. + +SURGEON TO ST. THOMAS'S HOSPITAL, LONDON +JOINT LECTURER ON SURGERY IN THE MEDICAL SCHOOL OF ST. THOMAS'S HOSPITAL +MEMBER OF THE COURT OF EXAMINERS OF THE ROYAL COLLEGE OF +SURGEONS OF ENGLAND, AND LATE ONE OF THE CONSULTING SURGEONS +TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN FIELD FORCE + + +LONDON +SMITH, ELDER, & CO., 15 WATERLOO PLACE +1901 + + + + +TO + +SURGEON-GENERAL W. D. WILSON + +PRINCIPAL MEDICAL OFFICER TO THE SOUTH AFRICAN FIELD FORCE + +THE MEMBERS OF THE ROYAL ARMY MEDICAL CORPS +EMPLOYED IN SOUTH AFRICA + +AND TO THE + +CIVIL SURGEONS TEMPORARILY ATTACHED TO THAT CORPS + +These Experiences are Dedicated + +AS AN EXPRESSION OF APPRECIATION +OF THE INVARIABLE KINDNESS AND SYMPATHY EXTENDED +TO THE AUTHOR +WITHOUT WHICH THE BOOK COULD NOT +HAVE BEEN WRITTEN + + + + +PREFACE + + +A word of explanation is perhaps necessary as to the form in which these +experiences have been put together. The matter was originally collected +with the object of sending a series of articles to the _British Medical +Journal_. Various circumstances, however, of which the chief was the +feeling that extending experience altered in many cases the views +adopted at first sight, prevented the original intention from being +carried into execution, and the articles, considerably expanded, are now +published together. + +As to the illustrative cases introduced in support of various statements +made in the text, only those have been chosen from my notes which were +under my own observation for a considerable time, and many of these have +been brought up to date since my return to England. I have, as a rule, +avoided the inclusion of cases seen cursorily, and few simple ones have +been quoted since their character is sufficiently indicated in the text. +These remarks seem necessary since the mode of selection has resulted in +the inclusion of a number of cases of exceptional severity, and any +attempt to draw statistical conclusions from them would be most +misleading. + +The first two chapters have been added with a view to affording some +information, first, as to the conditions under which a great part of the +surgical work was done, and, secondly, as to the mechanism and causation +of the injuries, which would not readily be at hand in the case of the +general surgical reader. For much of the information contained in +Chapter II. I must express my indebtedness to the work of MM. Nimier and +Laval, so frequently quoted. + +The only other object of this Preface is to express my thanks to the +many who have aided me in the task of amplifying the observations on +which the articles are founded, and I think no writer ever received more +sympathetic and kindly help in such particulars than the author. + +My first thanks, those due to the Members of the Royal Army Medical +Corps, I endeavour to express by the dedication of this volume. Any +attempt to make individual acknowledgment to either the Members of the +Service, or to the Civil Surgeons temporarily attached, would be +impossible. I have, however, tried to associate the names of many of +those in charge of cases in the recital of histories and treatment +throughout. + +My thanks are not less due to the Military Heads of Departments at the +War Office, who have helped me in the collection of details as to the +subsequent course of many of the cases described, and in the acquisition +of information regarding the weapons and ammunition treated of. I should +particularly express my gratitude to Colonel Robb, of the +Adjutant-General's Department, and Colonel Montgomery, of the Ordnance +Department. + +I am greatly indebted to my former colleague Mr. Cheatle for two of the +illustrations of wounds, and for permission to quote some of his other +experience, and to Mr. Henry Catling, to whose skill I owe the majority +of the skiagrams of the fractures under my observation at Wynberg and +elsewhere. + +I must also express my thanks to Mr. Danielsson and his artist, Mr. +Ford, for the trouble they have taken in converting my rough sketches +into the illustrations contained in the volume. + +Lastly, my warmest gratitude is due to my friends, Mr. Cuthbert Wallace, +who has read some of my chapters, and to Mr. F. C. Abbott, who has read +the whole book for the press and suggested many improvements and +modifications. + +47 CHARLES STREET, BERKELEY SQUARE, W. + +_February_ 1901. + + + + +CONTENTS + + + PAGE +CHAPTER I + +INTRODUCTORY + +Itinerary--Surgical outfit--Personal transport--General health of the +troops--Climate--Consideration of the number of men killed and +wounded--Transport of the wounded--Vehicles--Trains--Ships--Hospitals 1 + + +CHAPTER II + +MODERN MILITARY RIFLES AND THEIR ACTION + +General type--Calibre, length, and weight of +bullet--Velocity--Trajectory--Revolution--Varieties of rifle in common +use by the Boers--Penetration--Comparison of bullets--Use of +wax--Comparative efficiency of different types 40 + + +CHAPTER III + +GENERAL CHARACTERS OF WOUNDS INFLICTED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE + +Type wounds--Nature of external apertures--Direct course of wound +track--Multiple wounds--Small bore and sharp localisation of +tracks--Clinical course--Mode of healing--Suppuration--Wounds of irregular +type--Ricochet--Mauser bullet--Lee-Metford bullet--Expanding bullets--Altered +bullets--Large sporting bullets--Symptoms--Psychical disturbance and +shock--Local shock--Pain--Haemorrhage--Diagnosis--Prognosis--Treatment 55 + +CHAPTER IV + +INJURIES TO THE BLOOD VESSELS + +Nature of lesions; contusion, laceration, perforation--Results of +injuries--Primary haemorrhage--Recurrent haemorrhage--Secondary +haemorrhage--Treatment of haemorrhage--Traumatic aneurisms--Arterial +haematoma--True traumatic aneurism--Aneurismal varix and varicose +aneurism--Conditions affecting development--Effects of aneurismal varix +or varicose aneurism on the general circulation--Prognosis and treatment +of aneurismal varix--Prognosis and treatment of varicose +aneurism--Gangrene after ligation of arteries 112 + + +CHAPTER V + +INJURIES TO THE BONES OF THE LIMBS + +Nature of wounds--Explosive wounds--Types of fracture of shafts +of long bones--Stellate, wedge, notch, oblique, transverse, +perforating--Fractures by old types of bullet--Lesions of the short and +flat bones--Special character of the symptoms in gunshot fracture, and +of the course of healing--Prognosis--Treatment--Special fractures--Upper +extremity--Pelvis--Lower extremity 154 + + +CHAPTER VI + +INJURIES TO THE JOINTS + +General character--Vibration synovitis--Wounds of +joints--Classification--Course and symptoms--General treatment--Special +joints 225 + + +CHAPTER VII + +INJURIES TO THE HEAD AND NECK + +Anatomical lesions--Scalp wounds--Fracture of the skull without evidence +of gross lesion of the brain--Fractures with concurrent brain +injury--Classification--General injuries--Effect of ricochet--Vertical +or coronal wounds in frontal region--Glancing or oblique wounds of any +region--Gutter fractures--Superficial perforating fractures--Fractures +of the base--Symptoms of fracture of the skull, with concurrent injury +to the brain--Concussion--Compression--Irritation--Frontal +injuries--Fronto-parietal and parietal injuries--Occipital +injuries--Forms of hemianopsia--Abscess of the brain--General +diagnosis--General prognosis--Traumatic epilepsy--General +treatment--Wounds of the head not involving the brain--Mastoid +process--Orbit--Globe of the eye--Nose--Malar bone--Upper +jaw--Mandible--Wounds of the neck--Wounds of the pharynx, larynx, and +trachea 241 + + +CHAPTER VIII + +INJURIES TO THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN AND SPINAL CORD + +Fractures in their relation to nerve injury--Transverse +processes--Spinous processes--Centra--Signs of fracture of +the vertebra--Injuries to the spinal cord--Effects of high +velocity--Concussion, slight, severe--Contusion--Haemorrhage, +extra-medullary, haematomyelia--Symptoms of injury to the spinal +cord--Concussion--Haemorrhage--Total transverse lesion--Diagnosis of form +of lesion--Prognosis--Treatment 314 + + +CHAPTER IX + +INJURIES TO THE PERIPHERAL NERVES + +Anatomical lesions--Concussion--Contusion--Division or +laceration--Secondary implication of the nerve--Symptoms of nerve +injury--Traumatic neuritis--Scar implication--Ascending +neuritis--Traumatic neurosis--Injuries to special nerves--Cranial +nerves--Cervical, brachial, lumbar, and sacral plexuses--Cases of nerve +injury--General prognosis and treatment 341 + + +CHAPTER X + +INJURIES TO THE CHEST + +Non-penetrating wounds of the chest wall--Penetrating wounds, special +characters of entrance and exit apertures--Fracture of the ribs, +symptoms, treatment--Wounds of the diaphragm--Wounds of the +heart--Wounds of the lung, symptoms--Pneumothorax--Haemothorax-- +Empyema--Diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment of haemothorax--Cases +of haemothorax 374 + + +CHAPTER XI + +INJURIES TO THE ABDOMEN + +Introductory remarks--Wounds of the abdominal wall--Penetration of +the intestinal area without definite evidence of visceral injury--Wounds +of explosive character--Anatomical characters of intestinal wounds--Wounds +of the mesentery---Wounds of the omentum--Results of intestinal +wounds, faecal extravasation, peritoneal infection, septicaemia--Reasons +for the escape of severe injury in wounds traversing the +abdomen--Wounds of the stomach--Wounds of the small intestine--Wounds +of the large intestine--Prognosis in intestinal injuries--Treatment +of intestinal injuries--Wounds of the urinary bladder--Wounds +of the kidney--Wounds of the liver--Wounds of the spleen--General +remarks on the prognosis in abdominal injuries--Wounds of +the external genital organs--Wounds of the urethra 407 + + +CHAPTER XII + +ON SHELL WOUNDS + +Varieties of shells employed--Large shells--Wounds produced by different +varieties--Pom-Pom shells--Wounds produced by fragments and +fuses--Shrapnel--Boer segment shells--Leaden shrapnel bullets--Treatment +of shell wounds 474 + + +INDEX OF CONTENTS 487 + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + + +_PLATES_ + +VARIETIES OF AMMUNITION COLLECTED AT LADYSMITH _Frontispiece_ + + 1. SECTION OF MAUSER APERTURE OF ENTRY _To face p._ 73 + + 2. SECTION OF MAUSER APERTURE OF EXIT 76 + + 3. PUNCTURED FRACTURE OF CLAVICLE 162 + + 4. COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF SHAFT OF HUMERUS 180 + + 5. COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF HUMERUS ACCOMPANIED BY AN + EXPLOSIVE EXIT 182 + + 6. COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF HUMERUS DUE TO OBLIQUE IMPACT 184 + + 7. SAME FRACTURE HEALED 186 + + 8. LOW VELOCITY FRACTURE OF HUMERUS WITH RETAINED + BULLET 188 + + 9. LOCALISED FRACTURE OF HUMERUS SHOWING FRAGMENTATION OF + THE BULLET 190 + +10. WEDGE-SHAPED FRACTURE OF THE RADIUS 192 + +11. FRACTURE OF THE METACARPUS, SHOWING FRAGMENTATION OF + THE BULLET 194 + +12. FINELY COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR 196 + +13. THE SAME FRACTURE HEALED 198 + +14. STELLATE 'BUTTERFLY' FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR 200 + +15. LATERAL IMPACT OF BULLET, WITH COMMINUTION OF + THE FEMUR 202 + +16. RECTANGULAR IMPACT OF BULLET, WITH HIGHLY OBLIQUE + LINE OF FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR 204 + +17. PUNCTURED FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR WITH EXIT + BONE-FLAP 206 + +18. FRACTURED PATELLA 208 + +19. OBLIQUE COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA 210 + +20. TRANSVERSE FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA 212 + +21. PUNCTURE OF THE TIBIA, WITH AN OBLIQUE FISSURE 214 + +22. NOTCHED FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA 216 + +23. PUNCTURED FRACTURE OF THE FIBULA 218 + +24. THE SAME FRACTURE, LATERAL VIEW 220 + +25. VICKERS-MAXIM FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS 482 + + +_IN THE TEXT_ + +FIG. PAGE + 1. LINEN HOLD-ALL WITH INSTRUMENTS 4 + + 2. INSTRUMENT HOLD-ALL ROLLED FOR PACKING 5 + + 3. TIN WATER-BOTTLE FOR EMERGENCY OPERATIONS 6 + + 4. BUGGY ON THE VELDT 7 + + 5. MCCORMACK-BROOK WHEELED STRETCHER CARRIAGE 19 + + 6. INDIAN TONGA 20 + + 7. SERVICE AMBULANCE WAGON 21 + + 8. BUCK-WAGON LOADED WITH WOUNDED MEN 22 + + 9. INTERIOR OF A WAGON OF NO. 2 HOSPITAL TRAIN 24 + +10. P. & O. HOSPITAL SHIP 'SIMLA' 25 + +11. TYPE OF GENERAL HOSPITAL 32 + +12. TYPE OF TORTOISE TENT HOSPITAL 33 + +13. SINGLE TORTOISE HOSPITAL TENT 35 + +14. FIVE TYPES OF CARTRIDGE IN COMMON USE DURING THE WAR 47 + +15. SECTIONS OF FOUR BULLETS TO SHOW RELATIVE THICKNESS + OF MANTLES 51 + +16. ENTRY AND EXIT MAUSER WOUNDS 56 + +17. GUTTER WOUND OF SHOULDER 56 + +18. OBLIQUE GUTTER EXIT WOUND 57 + +19. OVAL ENTRY, STARRED EXIT WOUNDS 58 + +20. CIRCULAR ENTRY, SLIT EXIT WOUNDS 59 + +21. CIRCULAR ENTRY, STARRED EXIT WOUNDS 59 + +22. ENTRY AND EXIT WOUNDS IN SIX SUCCESSIVE SPOTS MADE + BY SAME BULLET 61 + +23. FOUR SUCCESSIVE ENTRY AND EXIT WOUNDS OF SAME + BULLET 62 + +24. SUPERFICIAL ABDOMINO-THORACIC TRACK 64 + +25. SUPERFICIAL LINEAR ECCHYMOSIS OF THIGH 65 + +25_a_. SECTIONS OF MAUSER ENTRY AND EXIT WOUNDS 74 + +25_b_. PROLAPSED OMENTUM 77 + +26. SECTIONS OF FOUR BULLETS 82 + +27. NORMAL MAUSER BULLET 83 + +28. FOUR MAUSER RICOCHETS 84 + +29. MAUSER RICOCHET, DISC FORM 85 + +30. FISSURED MAUSER MANTLE 86 + +31. MAUSERS DEFORMED BY IMPACT ON FEMUR 86 + +32. APICAL MAUSER RICOCHET 87 + +33. SPIRAL RICOCHET 88 + +34. NORMAL LEE-METFORD BULLET 89 + +35. APICAL LEE-METFORD RICOCHETS 90 + +36. " " " 91 + +37. FOUR TYPES OF SOFT-NOSED BULLETS 92 + +38. 'SET-UP' SOFT-NOSED LEE-METFORD BULLETS 92 + +39. FLATTENED, SOLID-BASED MANTLE FROM RICOCHET 93 + +40. MAUSER BULLET, JEFFREYS-TWEEDIE MODIFICATION 94 + +41. SECTION OF MARK IV. AND SOFT-NOSED MAUSER 94 + +42. TAMPERED BULLETS 95 + +43. LARGE LEADEN SPORTING BULLETS 98 + +44. EXPLOSIVE WOUND OF BACK 100 + +45. DEAD MEN ON FIELD OF BATTLE 102 + +46. FLATTENED LEADEN CORES FROM MANTLED BULLETS 105 + +47. EXPLOSIVE EXIT WOUND OVER FRACTURED ULNA 156 + +48. EXPLOSIVE EXIT WOUND OVER FRACTURED HUMERUS 158 + +49. EXPLOSIVE EXIT AND ENTRY WOUNDS OF LEGS 159 + +50. TYPES OF GUNSHOT FRACTURE 161 + +51. LOWER END OF FRACTURED FEMUR 164 + +52. OBLIQUE PERFORATION OF FEMUR, SEPARATION OF FRAGMENT + AT EXIT APERTURE IN BONE 169 + +53. GUTTER FRACTURE OF HEAD OF HUMERUS 178 + +53_a._ DIAGRAM OF 'BUTTERFLY' TYPE 180 + +54. WIRE GAUZE SPLINT 187 + +55. GUTTER FRACTURE OF PELVIS 191 + +55_a_. DIAGRAM OF 'BUTTERFLY' TYPE 200 + +56. CANE FIELD SPLINT FOR LOWER EXTREMITY 209 + +57. TUNNEL FRACTURE AT SURFACE OF TIBIA 219 + +58. CANE FIELD SPLINT FOR LEG 222 + +59. SKIAGRAM OF INJURY TO INTERPHALANGEAL JOINT 237 + +60. SKIAGRAM OF BULLET IN NASAL FOSSA 244 + +61. DIAGRAM OF APERTURE OF ENTRY INTO CRANIUM 245 + +62. APERTURE OF ENTRY INTO FRONTAL BONE 252 + +63. FRAGMENT OF INNER TABLE DISPLACED FROM OPENING SEEN + IN FIG. 62 253 + +64. GUTTER FRACTURE OF FIRST DEGREE IN PARIETAL BONE 255 + +65. DIAGRAM OF GUTTER FRACTURES 256 + +66. GUTTER FRACTURE OF SECOND DEGREE IN PARIETAL BONE 257 + +67. DIAGRAMS OF GUTTER FRACTURES 258 + +68. SUPERFICIAL PERFORATING FRACTURE OF PARIETAL REGION 259 + +69. DIAGRAM OF SUPERFICIAL PERFORATING FRACTURE 260 + +70. FRAGMENT FORMING FLOOR OF TEMPORAL GUTTER FRACTURE 260 + +71. SCALE OF EXTERNAL TABLE IN LOW VELOCITY INJURY OF + FRONTAL BONE 261 + +72. FRONTAL PERFORATION, APERTURE OF EXIT 261 + +73. VISUAL FIELD IN OCCIPITAL INJURY 279 + +74. " " " 279 + +75. " " " 281 + +76. " " " 281 + +77. " " " 283 + +78. " " " 283 + +79. CONTUSED SPINAL CORD 333 + +80. DIVIDED SPINAL CORD 334 + +81. SUPERFICIAL TRACK IN ANTERIOR BODY-WALL 377 + +82. SPIRALLY GROOVED BULLET 381 + +83. ECCHYMOSIS IN FRACTURED RIBS WITH HAEMOTHORAX 392 + +84. SUBCUTANEOUS DIVISION OF ABDOMINAL MUSCLES 409 + +85. LATERAL INCOMPLETE WOUND OF SMALL INTESTINE. SLIT + FORM 416 + +86. LATERAL PERFORATION OF SMALL INTESTINE. GUTTER FORM 417 + +87. ENTRY AND EXIT WOUNDS IN A TRANSVERSE PERFORATION OF + INTESTINE 418 + +88. INNER ASPECT OF PIECE OF INTESTINE SHOWN IN FIG. 87 419 + +89. IMPACTION OF OMENTUM IN EXIT WOUND OF ABDOMINAL WALL 421 + +90. FRAGMENTS OF LARGE SHELLS 475 + +91. FRAGMENTS OF PERCUSSION AND TIME FUSES 477 + +92. COMPLETE 1-LB. POM-POM SHELL 479 + +93. FRAGMENTS OF EXPLODED POM-POM SHELLS 480 + +94. PERCUSSION FUSE FROM 1-LB. POM-POM SHELL 481 + +95. FRAGMENTS OF BOER SEGMENT SHELLS 483 + +96. NORMAL AND DEFORMED LEADEN SHRAPNEL BULLETS 485 + + +_TEMPERATURE CHARTS_ + +1. CASE OF AXILLARY HAEMATOMA, BLOOD TEMPERATURE 119 + +2. CASE OF HAEMOTHORAX WITH RECURRENT HAEMORRHAGES 395 + +3. PRIMARY AND SECONDARY RISES OF TEMPERATURE IN HAEMOTHORAX, + RECOVERING SPONTANEOUSLY 402 + +4. SECONDARY RISE OF TEMPERATURE IN HAEMOTHORAX 403 + +5. FALLS OF TEMPERATURE IN HAEMOTHORAX FOLLOWING PARACENTESIS 404 + +6. SECONDARY HAEMOTHORAX, SPONTANEOUS FALL OF TEMPERATURE 405 + + + + +SURGICAL EXPERIENCES + +IN + +SOUTH AFRICA + + + + +CHAPTER I + +INTRODUCTORY + + +The following pages are intended to give an account of personal +experience of the gunshot wounds observed during the South African +campaign in 1899 and 1900. For this reason few cases are quoted beyond +those coming under my own immediate observation, and in the few +instances where others are made use of the source of quotation is +indicated. It will be noted that my experience was almost entirely +confined to bullet wounds, and in this respect it no doubt differs from +that of surgeons employed in Natal, where shell injuries were more +numerous. This is, however, of the less moment for my purpose as there +is probably little to add regarding shell injuries to what is already +known, while, on the other hand, the opportunity of observing large +numbers of injuries from rifle bullets of small calibre has not +previously been afforded to British surgeons. + +I think the general trend of the observations goes to show that the +employment of bullets of small calibre is all to the advantage of the +men wounded, except in so far as the increased possibilities of the +range of fire may augment the number of individuals hit; also that such +variations as exist between wounds inflicted by bullets of the +Martini-Henry and Mauser types respectively, depend rather on the form +and bulk of the projectile than on any inherent difference in the nature +of the injuries. Thus in the chapter devoted to the general characters +of the wounds, it will be seen that most of the older types of entry +and exit aperture are produced in miniature by the small modern bullet, +and that the main peculiarity of the deeper injuries is the frequent +strict localisation of the direct damage to an area of no greater width +than that crossed by narrow structures of importance such as arteries or +nerves. + +It is to be regretted that I am unable to furnish any important +statistical details, but incomplete numbers, such as are at my disposal, +would be of little value. In view, however, of the considerable interval +which must elapse before the Royal Army Medical Corps is able to arrange +and publish the large material which will have accumulated, it has +seemed unwise to defer publication until the completion of a report +which will deal with such matters thoroughly. + +It may be of interest to premise the opportunities which I enjoyed of +gaining experience during the campaign. I arrived in South Africa on +November 19, 1899; two days later I proceeded to Orange River with +Surgeon-General Wilson, and on the day three weeks after leaving home +performed some operations in the field hospitals on patients from the +battle of Belmont. I remained at Orange River during the three next +engagements, Graspan, Enslin, and Modder River, and on the day of +Magersfontein I went forward to the Field hospitals at Modder River, +arriving during the bringing in of the patients from the field of +battle. I returned to Orange River with the patients and remained there +a further period of three weeks, during which time the patients were +gradually transferred to the Base hospitals at Wynberg. At Christmas I +followed the patients down to the base, and thus was able to observe the +course of the cases from their commencement to convalescence. I remained +at Wynberg six weeks, during which time a number of cases from the +neighbourhood of Rensburg and some from Natal were received. On February +7, I left Wynberg, following Lord Roberts up to my old quarters at +Modder River, where I saw a few wounded men brought in from the +engagements at Koodoosberg Drift. On Lord Roberts's departure for +Bloemfontein he requested me to return to Wynberg to await the wounded +who might be sent down from the fighting which might occur during his +advance. I therefore had the disappointment of seeing the start of the +army, and then returning to Wynberg, where I remained for another six +weeks in attendance at Nos. 1 and 2 General Hospitals. + +During this period a very large number of the wounded from Paardeberg +Drift and other battles were sent down and treated, after which surgical +work began to flag. + +On April 14, I was recalled to the front and journeyed to Bloemfontein, +where I stayed three weeks, making one journey out to the Bearer Company +of the IX. Division at the Waterworks. + +On May 4, I left Bloemfontein with Lord Roberts's army, and shortly +after joined the IX. Division, with which I journeyed until the +commencement of June, seeing a good deal of scattered work in the field +and Field hospitals, and in the small temporary improvised hospitals in +the towns of Winberg, Lindley, and Heilbron. Early in June I left +Heilbron with Lord Methuen's division, and spent the next four weeks +with this division in the field. Thence I journeyed to Pretoria and +Johannesburg, seeing a small number of wounded in each town, and on July +10, with Lord Roberts's consent, I started for home, visiting a number +of the hospitals in the Orange River Colony and Natal on my way down to +Cape Town. During the movements briefly recorded above, which absorbed a +period of nine months, my time was fairly evenly divided between Field, +Stationary, and Base hospitals; hence I had opportunities of observing +the patients in every stage of their illnesses, and in all some +thousands of men came under my notice. + +[Illustration: FIG. 1.--Linen Holdall with surgical instruments] + +My departure for the seat of war was rather hurried, hence my surgical +equipment was not of an extensive nature. It may be of interest, +however, to shortly recount what it consisted in, since it proved an +ample one, and yet was carried in a small satchel. The plan of selection +adopted consisted in carefully going through the equipment of the +British Field Hospital, and then adding such other instruments as seemed +to me likely to be useful. With few exceptions, therefore, designed to +meet emergencies, my set of instruments formed a supplement to the +actual necessities carried by the Service hospitals, and was as +follows:--4 trephines, Horsley's elevator, brain knife and seeker. 2 +pairs of Hoffman's and 1 pair of Lane's fulcrum gouge forceps, 3 bone +gouges, 1 pair straight 1 curved necrosis forceps, 1 pair bone forceps. +1 Wood's 1 Horsley's skull saws, 18 Gigli's saws with an extra handle, +and two Podrez' directors for the same. 1 set Lane's bone drills, +broaches, screw-drivers, and counter-sink with eight ounces of screws: +silver patella wire, and 1 pair Peter's bone forceps. 2 aneurism +needles, 1 bullet probe, 1 pair Egyptian Army pattern bullet forceps. 4 +Lane's and 3 pairs Makins's bowel clamps, Nos. 3 4 and 5 Laplace's +bowel forceps, 6 Murphy's buttons, 1 pair Morris's retractors, 6 dozen +intestine needles, 2 Macphail's needle-holders, Nos. 4 5 6 Thomas's +slot-eyed needles, 1 mouth gag, 1 Durham's double raspatory, 3 strong +plated raspatories, 1 pair tongue forceps, 1 tracheal dilator, 1 pair +hernia needles, 1 hernia and 1 ordinary steel director, 1 transfusion +set with metal funnel, and a stock of Messrs. Burroughes and Wellcome's +compound saline infusion soloids. 1 antitoxin syringe. 6 scalpels, 2 +blunt-pointed curved bistouries, 6 forcipressure forceps, 1 pair Jordan +Lloyd's retractors, 1 pair ordinary retractors, 2 pairs of forceps, 3 +pairs of Scissors, 1 skin-grafting razor and roll of perforated tin +foil, 1 metal pocket case, and 1 hypodermic syringe with tabloids. A +stock of silkworm gut, horsehair and silk ligatures, the latter prepared +and sterilised for me by Miss Taylor, the Theatre Sister at St. Thomas's +Hospital. Some pairs of McBurney's india-rubber, and cotton-thread +operating gloves. + +[Illustration: FIG. 2.--Instrument Holdall rolled] + +The instruments were packed in sets in small linen holdalls suggested +and made by Messrs. Down Bros., who also devised my satchel. In the +light of the experience gained I should have preferred a tin case to the +satchel, as it never needed to be carried on horseback. + +For dressings I trusted entirely to the Royal Army Medical Corps, and at +my request Colonel Gubbins, R.A.M.C., sent out to the Cape a quantity +of sterilised sponges and pads made by Messrs. Robinson & Co. Ltd. of +Chesterfield, which fully met all requirements in this direction. + +[Illustration: FIG. 3.--Tin Water-bottle for the march (Military +Equipment Company)] + +This equipment was superfluous at the Base hospitals, but when in the +field with the troops proved very useful. In the early part of the +campaign I was able to do all my travelling by train, but later I +travelled by road only. I received the greatest kindness and help in +this particular. General Sir William Nicholson, Chief Director of +Transport, provided me with a buggy, a pair of horses, and a driver, and +Prince Francis of Teck, the Chief Remount Officer, selected a pony +suitable to my equestrian powers. The buggy proved a very great success; +the box seat carried my instruments and dressings, the front a 4-gallon +tin water-bottle for emergency operations, and the rear shelf my +personal belongings. The water-bottle was lent to me by the Portland +Hospital. (Fig. 3.) + +The cart was able to cross any drifts or dongas, and when an engagement +was in progress was able to accompany the Ambulance wagons, so that I +had all my necessaries on the spot, even at the first dressing station. +In point of fact when with the Highland Brigade, on some occasions, we +did all necessary operations on the spot during the progress of +fighting; a most useful performance, since fighting on several days did +not cease till dark, and the evenings were much too cold to allow of +operations being done with safety to the patients. The great advantage +of the buggy was its lightness and smallness. On one occasion it +accompanied me between 500 and 600 miles without a single accident, +beyond the fact that one night I was relieved of both my horses by some +troopers whose own were worn out. + +[Illustration: FIG. 4.--My Buggy on the veldt at Bloemfontein. (Photo by +Mr. Bowlby)] + +With regard to the general health of the troops as subjects of surgical +wounds, I suppose a better class of patient could scarcely be found. The +men were young, sound, well set and nourished, and hard and fit from +exercise in the open air. Beyond this, in spite of the scarcity of +vegetables, a certain amount of fruit, rations of jam, and lime juice +made any sign of scurvy a rare occurrence--I never saw a case during the +whole of my wanderings. The meat was good, especially in the early part +of the campaign, when it was for the most part brought from Australia +and New Zealand, and we enjoyed the two collateral advantages of getting +plenty of the ice which had been used for the preservation of the meat, +in the camps, and the still greater one of having no butchers' offal to +need destruction or prove a source of danger. When bread was to be got +it was fairly good, and the biscuit was at all times excellent. Except +on the advance from Modder River to Bloemfontein, as far as I could +judge, no large bodies of the men ever really suffered from shortness of +food, and then only for a few days. Drink was a more serious problem: in +the early days beer was to be got at the canteens, but with the increase +of numbers and difficulties of transport this ceased to be the case, and +water was the sole fluid available. This was often muddy, and the +soldiers would take very little care what they drank unless under +constant supervision; hence a great quantity of very undesirable water +was drunk. None the less I think the water was more often the cause of +sand diarrhoea than of enteric fever. A large quantity of fluid was by +no means a necessity if the men would only have exercised some +self-control. During the first week I spent at Orange River, I drank +lime juice and water all day, but after that time, by a very slight +amount of determination, I thoroughly broke myself of the habit, and +drank at meal-times only. Most of the men however emptied their +water-bottles during the first hour of the march, and the rest of the +day endured agony, seizing the first opportunity of drinking any filthy +water they met with. When, for instance, we camped near a vlei, and the +General took the greatest care that the mules and horses should be +watered at one spot only, in order to preserve the cleanliness of the +rest of the pool, the men would often go and fill their water-bottles +amongst the animals' feet rather than take the trouble to walk the few +necessary yards round. In such particulars they needed constant +supervision. + +The climate on the western side was a great element no doubt both in the +general healthiness of the men and in the general good results seen in +the healing of wounds. The days were often hot; thus even in November at +Orange River the thermometer registered 115 deg.F. in the single bell tents, +but on the other hand the nights were cool and refreshing. The air was +very pure and exceedingly dry, while the constant sunshine not only kept +up the spirits, but also proved the most efficient disinfector of any +ground fouled to less than a serious extent. Dust was our principal +bugbear; and when a camp had been settled for a few days, flies; both of +these evils increasing rapidly as the stay on any one spot was +prolonged. My personal experience of rain was small, but I was twice in +camp, once at Orange River and once at Bloemfontein, when very heavy +rain fell, and this was sufficient to make the camps terribly +uncomfortable for a few days. + +Under these conditions, as might be expected, until the outbreak of +enteric fever the health of the men was remarkably good, minor ailments +alone prevailing. One of the most troublesome of these was diarrhoea, +which gained the appellation of 'the Modders,' already a classical name +as far as South Africa is concerned. This most frequently, I think, +depended on errors of diet, combined with the swallowing of a large +amount of sand with the food as dust, and in the water drunk. Cases of +severe dysentery, however, were also not very uncommon. Rheumatic pains +were a common ailment, which, considering the dryness of the atmosphere, +would hardly have been expected. Continued fever of a somewhat special +type was not uncommon, and was sometimes spoken of under the name of the +district, sometimes as veldt fever--of this I will say nothing, as +others better fitted to point out its peculiarities will no doubt deal +with it. Enteric fever, our chief scourge, I will pass over for the same +reason. I might, however, remark from the point of view of one not very +experienced in this disease, that in a large number of the fatal cases I +happened to see, the actual cause of death seemed to me to be septicaemia +from absorption from the mouth. The mouths were unusually bad, even +allowing for the often insufficient cleansing that was able to be +carried out, and I was inclined to attribute these in some degree to the +dryness of the atmosphere, which very quickly and effectively dried up +the mucous membrane of the mouth in patients not breathing through the +nose, and encouraged the formation of large cracks. Pneumonia was rare, +and this was rendered the more striking from the comparatively large +number of men who contracted the disease on board ship on the voyage out +from England. + +As will be gathered from the above, medical disease seldom called for +the aid of the surgeon. Abdominal section was occasionally considered in +cases of perforation in enteric fever, and was, I believe, a few times +performed, but as far as I know without success. It was also proposed to +treat some of the severe dysentery cases by colotomy, but I never saw +the method tried. As far as I was concerned I never met with a case of +either disease I thought suitable for the treatment. I saw one case in +which an abscess of the liver had followed an attack of enteric, which +had been successfully treated by incision, and a few cases of tropical +abscess which probably came into the country were also subjected to +operation. Some cases of appendicitis, as would be expected, also needed +surgical treatment. In a few instances empyema followed influenza, and a +few cases of mastoid suppuration had to be dealt with. + +Of surgical diseases the one most special to the campaign, although not +of great importance, was the veldt sore. This was a small localised +suppuration most common on the hands and neck, but sometimes invading +the whole trunk, more particularly the lower extremities however, when +the covered parts of the body were attacked. The sores were no doubt the +result of local infections; they reminded me most of the sores seen on +the hands of plasterers, and I think there is no doubt the dust was +responsible for them. I think piles were somewhat more prevalent than +they should have been among the men, but this was probably dependent on +the strain involved in defaecation in the squatting position, since the +soldiers were for the most part regularly attentive to the calls of +nature. + +I saw a good many cases of lightning stroke, and some were fatal. +Sunstroke was not common, and, considering the heat, it was very +remarkable how little the men suffered from this condition. This was no +doubt in part attributable to the absence of the possibility of getting +alcoholic drinks, but it is not common for any one in South Africa to +suffer in this way, probably as a result of the continuous nature of the +sunshine. + +In spite of the labours of hospital surgeons at home, it was rather +instructive to see the number of men who suffered with hernia, +varicocele, and varicose veins to a sufficient degree to necessitate +going to the base. The experience quite sufficed to explain the trouble +which is taken to prevent men with these complaints entering the +service. + + +GENERAL CONSIDERATION OF THE NUMBER OF MEN KILLED AND WOUNDED + +I will now pass to the question of the proportionate frequency with +which the men were killed or wounded during the present campaign. I +propose to take only one series of battles, with which I was personally +acquainted throughout, to illustrate this point. This seems the more +satisfactory course to follow, since the number of casualties is still +undergoing continuous gradual increase, and besides this the warfare has +assumed a peculiar and irregular form, statistics from which scarcely +possess general application. + +The battles included, those of the first Kimberley Relief Force, were +fought under fair average conditions as to the nature of the ground. In +the first two the defending enemy occupied heights, in the two following +the ground advanced over by our men was comparatively even; thus at +Modder River there was only a gradual slope upwards, and at +Magersfontein the advanced trenches of the Boers were only slightly +above the level of the ground over which the advance was made. At the +same time, at the latter battle a great number of the Boers engaged were +on the sides of the hill well above the advanced trenches. In no case +were the Boers in such a position as to have to fire upwards, to them a +considerable advantage. It must also be noted that throughout the Boers +were able to rest their rifles; hence the fire should have been at any +rate of an average degree of accuracy. In the advances of our own men, +anthills and stones were practically the only cover to be obtained, and +little or no help was given by variations in the general surface. All +these points seem to favour a large proportional number of hits on the +part of the riflemen. I very much regret that I am unable to say what +was the proportional number of shell wounds among the men hit, but I can +say with some confidence that among the wounded it was not as great as +ten per cent. I should be inclined to place it as low as five per cent. +Again, I cannot fix the proportionate occurrence of wounds from bullets +of large calibre such as the Martini-Henry, but this was certainly not +large. I think if ten per cent. is deducted to represent the number of +hits from either of these forms of projectile, that we may fairly assume +the remaining 90 per cent. of the wounds to have been produced by +bullets of small calibre. The numbers of the opposing forces were +probably fairly even. + +Taking all these circumstances together, and bearing in mind that our +army was always in the position of having to make frontal attacks on men +well protected in strong positions, I think it must be allowed that a +fair idea should be possible of the effectiveness of the modern weapons. +Only one circumstance, one inseparable from any fighting with the Boers, +seems to affect the numbers in an important manner. This consists in the +fact that the Boer rarely fights to the bitter end, hence the greater +proportion of his hits are obtained at long distances. + + +TABLE I + ++---------------------+--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| | Number | | | | |Percentage of| +| | of | | | | | killed and | +| | troops |Killed|Wounded|Missing|Total| wounded to | +| | engaged| | | | |number of men| +| | | | | | | engaged | ++---------------------+--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +|_Belmont:_ | | | | | | | +| Officers | 297 | 3 | 23 | 0 | 26 | 8.75 | +| Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | +| and men | 8,396 | 55 | 206 | 4 | 265 | 3.15 | +| +--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| Total | 8,693 | 58 | 229 | 4 | 291 | 3.34 | +| | | | | | | | +|_Graspan:_ | | | | | | | +| Officers | 326 | 3 | 7 | 0 | 10 | 3.06 | +| Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | +| and men | 8,213 | 18 | 163 | 7 | 188 | 2.29 | +| +--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| Total | 8,539 | 21 | 170 | 7 | 198 | 2.31 | +| | | | | | | | +|_Modder River:_ | | | | | | | +| Officers | 335 | 3 | 19 | 0 | 22 | 6.56 | +| Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | +| and men | 9,856 | 67 | 377 | 18 | 462 | 4.68 | +| +--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| Total | 10,191 | 70 | 396 | 18 | 484 | 4.74 | +| | | | | | | | +|_Magersfontein:_ | | | | | | | +| Officers | 379 | 18 | 48 | 2 | 68 | 17.94 | +| Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | +| and men | 11,068 | 148 | 669 | 101 | 918 | 8.29 | +| +--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ +| Total[1] | 11,447 | 166 | 717 | 103 | 986 | 8.43 | ++---------------------+--------+------+-------+-------+-----+-------------+ + +Table I. gives the number of men engaged, and also that of the killed +and wounded at each of four battles. Table III. shows for comparison the +relative number of killed and wounded in some former campaigns while +older forms of weapon were in use. + +With regard to the numbers in Tables I. and II. it should be at once +said that they are only to be regarded as approximate, since they do not +exactly tally with those officially reported in the 'Times' at a later +date. Sources of error may, however, have crept into both, and as there +is little difference in the gross numbers, I have preferred to retain +the series compiled by Major Burtchaell, R.A.M.C., as Table II. contains +interesting information as to the proportionate number of men who died +during the first 48 hours, after being wounded. + + +TABLE II + +SHOWING PROPORTION OF MORTALITY AMONGST MEN HIT, (_a_) ON THE FIELD, +(_b_) DURING THE FIRST FORTY-EIGHT HOURS + +---------------------+-------+------+------+------+-------+---------------- + |Number |Total | | Died | | Percentage + | of |number| |within| | mortality + -- |troops |of men|Killed|forty-| Total +-------+-------- + |engaged| hit | |eight | |To men |To force + | | | |hours | | hit |employed +---------------------+-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- +_Belmont_: | | | | | | | + Officers | 297 | 26 | 3 | 3 | 6 | 23 | 2.02 + Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | + and men | 8,396 | 265 | 55 | 8 | 63 | 23.77 | 0.75 + +-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + Total | 8,693 | 291 | 58 | 11 | 69 | 23.71 | 0.79 + | | | | | | | +_Graspan_: | | | | | | | + Officers | 326 | 10 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 40[2] | 1.22 + Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | + and men | 8,213 | 188 | 18 | 3 | 21 | 11.17 | 0.25 + +-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + Total | 8,539 | 198 | 21 | 4 | 25 | 12.62 | 0.29 + | | | | | | | +_Modder River_: | | | | | | | + Officers | 335 | 22 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 18.18 | 1.19 + Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | + and men | 9,856 | 462 | 67 | 9 | 76 | 16.45 | 0.77 + +-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + Total |10,191 | 484 | 70 | 10 | 80 | 16.53 | 0.78 + | | | | | | | +_Magersfontein_: | | | | | | | + Officers | 379 | 68 | 18 | 4 | 22 | 32.35 | 5.80 + Non.-com. officers | | | | | | | + and men |11,068 | 918 | 148 | 20 | 168 | 18.30 | 1.51 + +-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + Total |11,447 | 986 | 166 | 24 | 190 | 19.26 | 1.66 +---------------------+-------+------+------+------+-------+-------+-------- + +The high death rate among the officers will at once arrest attention, +but this has been noticed in other campaigns, particularly in the +Franco-German war. It is mainly attributable to the circumstance that +the officers, as leading, are always in the front and most exposed +position. I much doubt whether at the end of the campaign the entire +abandonment of distinctive badges will be found to have had any very +important result in decreasing the relative number of casualties as +between officers and men. At close quarters distinctive uniform is no +doubt a danger, but at the common ranges of 1,000 yards and upwards the +enemy's fire is rather directed to cover a zone than to pick out +individuals. + +The especially high mortality among the officers at the battle of +Graspan was attributable to the casualties among the naval officers, and +the men of the brigade suffered most severely also. + +It will be noted that the most expensive battles were those of Belmont +and Magersfontein. + +If the numbers of the men actually taking part in the fighting in these +battles as given in Table I. are massed, we get an approximate total of +12,420.[3] + +Of this number, 1,959 or 15.06 per cent. were reported as killed, +wounded, or missing. Thus: killed, 315 or 2.53 per cent.; wounded, 1,512 +or 12.17 per cent.; missing, 132 or 1.06 per cent. Reference to Table +III. shows that these percentages almost exactly correspond with those +obtaining in the entire Crimean campaign, and are greater than those +observed in the German army during the entire Franco-German campaign. + +The mortality statistics given in Table II. are of great interest, +since to those dying on the field are added all men dying within the +first 48 hours in the Field hospitals. From the surgical point of view +these men all received mortal injury, and are therefore properly +included among the fatalities. Their inclusion, moreover, makes an +appreciable difference in the percentage proportion of mortal injuries +to wounds. Thus, if the numbers are massed (omitting the 'missing'), we +find that in the four battles 1,827 men were hit, of whom 315, or 17.24 +per cent., were killed. Among the wounded carried off the field, +however, 49 received mortal injuries, and if these are added to the 315, +we find that the proportion of mortal injuries reaches 19.92 per cent. + + +TABLE III[4] + ++-----------------------+---------+---------+--------+---------+----------+ +| | | | 1871. | 1877. | 1899. | +| | 1815. | 1854. | Franco-| Russo- | Kimberley| +| | Waterloo| Crimean | German | Turkish | Relief | +| | (English| War | War | War | Force | +| | troops) | (English| (German| (Russian| (English | +| | | troops) | troops)| troops) | troops) | ++-----------------------+---------+---------+--------+---------+----------+ +| Number of troops | | | | | | +| engaged | 36,240 | 97,864 | 887,876| 300,000 | 15,748 | +| | | | | | | +| Number of killed | 1,759 | 2,775 | 17,570| 32,780 | 315 | +| Percentage | 4.85 | 2.81 | 1.97| 10.92 | 2 | +| | | | | | | +| Number of wounded | 5,892 | 12,094 | 96,189| 71,268 | 1,512 | +| Percentage | 16.25 | 12.35 | 10.83| 23.75 | 9.60 | +| | | | | | | +| Number of missing | 807 | -- | 4,009| -- | 132 | +| Percentage | 2.19 | -- | 0.45| -- | .83 | ++-----------------------+---------+---------+--------+---------+----------+ +| Total killed, | | | | | | +| wounded, and missing | 8,458 | 14,849 | 117,768| 104,050 | 1,959 | +| Percentage | 23.31 | 15.17 | 13.26| 34.68 | 12.43 | ++-----------------------+---------+---------+--------+---------+----------+ + +The proportion of men killed to those wounded was as follows: killed +315, wounded 1,512, or 1 to 4.8. If we add to the men killed on the +field of battle the 49 dying in the next 48 hours, the proportion of +fatalities is increased to 1 to 4.15. The higher of these proportions is +certainly the surgically correct one. + +With regard to the general accuracy of the numbers given above, a +comparison of those published for the campaign up to September 15, 1900, +is of value, as the two series substantially tally. Thus, up to that +date, 17,072 men were hit, and of these 2,998 were killed. The +proportion killed to wounded was therefore 1 to 4.69. + +If it be borne in mind that of the wounded men included in Table I., 1.5 +per cent. died later in the Base hospitals, the percentages are almost +identical. + +Table III. is inserted with a view to instituting a comparison between +the number of casualties in the present and earlier campaigns. + +For the purposes of this table it is necessary to take the approximate +number of men at Lord Methuen's disposal, irrespective of their active +participation in the fighting. + +The result of this addition to the total is to show that the percentage +of men killed and wounded was slightly lower than in the Crimean war, +and nearly corresponded with that observed in the Franco-German +campaign. + +As it has been shown that our numbers correspond in general with those +of the whole war up to September 15, 1900, there can be little doubt +that the same ratios will be maintained to the close of the campaign. + +On the face of the numbers, therefore, there is little ground for +assuming that the change in the nature of the weapons has materially +influenced the deadliness of warfare at all. This is capable of +explanation on the ground that in the Crimea the battles were fought at +much closer quarters, and hence the weapons of the time were as +effective, or more so, than the present ones. That this increased +distance between the combatants will always counterbalance the increased +deadliness of the weapons in the future is more than probable, since the +range of effectiveness has been increased both in rifle and in artillery +fire. In the present campaign the effect of the latter was very +noticeable, since the Boers were, as a rule, quickly displaced by shell +fire, unless they were in especially favourable positions, and this +although no great number of men was hit by the projectiles. Under these +circumstances, except on some occasions, neither side derived all the +advantage from the increased shooting powers of their rifles which might +have been expected. To a lesser degree this will probably always be the +case in the future. + +In connection with these remarks, however, I would point to column 4 of +Table III., as showing how difficult it is to draw definite deductions +from any particular set of numbers alone. This column shows that in the +Russo-Turkish War of 1877 all the percentages were practically doubled +or more, and in the case of the number of men killed on the field of +battle, the number was nearly five times as great as either in the +Crimea or the present campaign. The explanation here depends on the race +of men and their tenacity in resistance alone. In the case of either +nation death in battle is little feared, and slight inclination to avoid +it exists. When the theory of war held by the Boer--_i.e._ going out to +shoot an enemy without incurring risk of being yourself shot--is borne +in mind, the special circumstances attending the present campaign are +sufficiently obvious to need little further remark. A future campaign in +which the combatants are as equally well armed, but each side stands to +the last, will probably give very different results. + +It is unfortunate that no details can be given as to the influence of +range in altering the relative numbers of killed to wounded. It may be +stated, however, that in no instance did the percentage of killed to +wounded reach 25 per cent. At the battle of Magersfontein it amounted to +19.26 per cent., at Colenso to 17.97 per cent., and at both these +engagements there is little doubt that a considerable number of the men +were hit within a distance of 1,000 yards. When the distances were very +short the injuries were frequently multiple; and this character was a +more common source of danger than increase of severity in the individual +wounds received at a short range. + +A short consideration of the circumstances especially influencing the +ultimate mortality amongst the wounded subsequent to the reception of +the injury is here necessary, although I shall be obliged to make my +remarks as short as possible. The subject is best treated of under the +two headings of Transport and Hospital Accommodation. + +_Transport._--The importance of transport is felt from the moment of the +injury till the time of arrival of the patient in the mother country. To +the surgeon it is of the same vital importance as the carrying of food +for the troops is to the combatant general. + +(_a_) Removal of the wounded from the field of battle. My experience was +opposed to hurried action in this matter, although it is necessary to +gather up the wounded before nightfall if possible. As a rule wounded +men should not be removed from the field of battle under fire, at any +rate when the troops are in open order at a range of 1,000 yards or +more. I saw several instances in which mortal wounds were incurred by +previously wounded men or their bearers during the process of removal, +while it was astonishing how many scattered wounded men could lie out +under a heavy fire and escape by the doctrine of chances. The erect +position and small group necessary to bear off a wounded man at once +draws a concentrated fire, if fighting is still proceeding. + +As to the best and quickest method of removing the patients to the first +dressing station, there were few occasions when this was not more +satisfactorily done by bearers with stretchers than by wagons. The +movement was more easy to the wounded men, and, as a rule, time was +saved. Over rough ground the wagons travel slowly, and patients with +only provisional splints were shaken undesirably. A stretcher party in +my experience easily outstripped the wagon unless a road or very smooth +veldt existed. A larger number of men is of course required, but I take +it that on the occasion of a great war men are both more easily obtained +and fed than are transport animals. From what I have been able to learn, +both the Indian dhoolie-bearers and the hastily recruited Colonial +bearer companies were most successful in the removal of the large number +of wounded men from the field of Colenso. I had several opportunities of +comparing the two methods on a smaller scale during the fighting in +Orange River Colony, and felt very strongly in favour of the stretcher +parties. + +For removal of patients from one part of a hospital to another, or +sometimes in loading trains, &c., great economy of men, and increased +comfort to the patients, may be attained by the use of some form of +ambulance trolly. + +I append an illustration of what seemed to me the simplest and best I +came across among several in use in South Africa. The description +beneath is by Major McCormack, R.A.M.C., its inventor (fig. 5). + +When wagons were necessary or preferable, the Indian Tongas (fig. 6), +presented by Mr. Dhanjibhoy, were most useful; they carried two men +lying down, the same number as the big service wagon, and were drawn by +two ponies only. Although somewhat highly springed, the vehicle is so +well arranged and padded, that the occupants are seldom hurt by striking +against the sides with rough jolting, unless quite helpless. I +occasionally made long journeys in this vehicle with much comfort. + +[Illustration: FIG. 5.--The McCormack-Brook Wheeled Stretcher Carriage. +It consists of an under-carriage built up of two light wheels with steel +spokes and rims with rubber tyres and ball bearings; on the axle are two +light elliptic springs, to which is attached a transverse seat for the +stretcher-carrier proper. This is securely bolted on to the seat, and +consists of two pieces of hard wood, suitably worked, and forming an +angle frame. On the bottom side the stretcher poles rest, and the sides +of the L formed by the carrier proper prevent most effectually any +jerking or turning of the stretcher when once it has been laid in the +carrier. The carrier is about thirty inches long, but can be increased +to any length desired. It has been found that this length is admirably +suited for all purposes. To prevent the stretcher from any lateral or +upward movement, two buttons with tightening screws are attached to the +top of the carrier on each side. When the stretcher is laid on the +carrier the screws are tightened and the stretcher is held rigid. + +Two iron supports are provided, one at each end and on opposite sides of +the carrier. These are lowered when it is desired either to place the +stretcher on the carriage or remove it therefrom, which can be effected +in a second. The carriage meanwhile remains perfectly still. When the +carriage is in motion the iron supports are turned up, and lie along the +respective sides of the carrier, where each rests in a small clip. The +great object of this stretcher carriage has been to obtain mobility, +strength, and lightness combined with efficiency and a ready and easy +means of transport for sick and wounded, no matter where a patient has +to be transported from. The loaded stretcher and wheeled carriage can be +readily handled by one man on good roads, and by two men in rough +country. The springs prevent any jar being felt by the patient on the +stretcher.] + +(_b_) For the longer journeys to the Field or Stationary hospitals, the +service wagon and other transport vehicles came into use, particularly +the South African ox-wagon. + +[Illustration: FIG. 6--Indian Tonga on the march. (Photo by Mr. Bowlby)] + +The service wagon (fig. 7) is a heavy four-wheeled vehicle, drawn by ten +mules. The good construction of the wagon was amply proved by the manner +in which it stood the hard wear and tear of the present campaign. It is, +however, very heavy, and in comparison with its size affords very small +accommodation. Two lying-down patients and six sitting is its entire +capacity. Some modified patterns were in use, notably those with the +Irish and Imperial Yeomanry Field Hospitals, capable of carrying four +lying-down cases, the men being arranged in two tiers. Major Hale, +R.A.M.C., made a very successful trek from Rhenoster to Kroonstadt with +some of these, carrying twice the regulation number of lying-down cases +in his wagons. Some modification in the mode of fixation is, however, +necessary to increase the security of the stretchers of the upper +series. + +A really satisfactory wagon, combining both strength and comfort, still +remains to be devised. + +[Illustration: FIG. 7.--Service Ambulance Wagon, the six front mules +removed. + +(Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +During the later stages of the campaign, a very large number of patients +were transported by the South African ox- or mule- (buck) wagons. +Although not of prepossessing appearance, and unprovided with any sort +of springs, these vehicles were far from unsatisfactory. The ox-wagon +consists of a long simple platform, 19 ft. 2 in. in length, 4 ft. 6 in. +in width, from the sides of which a slanting board rises over the wheels +for the posterior two-thirds. These bulwarks increase the actual width +to 6 ft. 6 in., which corresponds with the gross width occupied by the +wheels. One third is covered by a small hood 5 ft. 6 in. in height +erected on wooden stave hoops. The latter was often absent in transport +wagons. The two hind wheels are large, the fore somewhat smaller. They +are attached to very heavy wooden cross-beams bearing the axles, and the +two beams are connected by a longitudinal bar, continuous with the +duessel boom or pole. This latter bar is in two sections, the connection +of which allows considerable play in the long axis and serves to break +the jolts occurring when either pair of wheels passes over uneven spots +on the ground. When some sacks of oats or hay were spread over the +floor the wounded men travelled comparatively comfortably in these +wagons, the great distance between the fore and hind wheels tending to +minimise the jolting. The principal objection to them was the slow pace +of the oxen, and the fact that to obtain the greatest amount of work +from these animals a major part of the journey must be performed during +the night. The ox-wagon carries, with comfort, four lying-down cases on +stretchers, or six without stretchers; or twenty sitting-up cases. + +[Illustration: FIG. 8.--South African Wagon, loaded with patients, and +mule transport. (Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +The mule- or buck-wagon, which is of the same class but smaller, can +only accommodate two stretchers, four lying-down men without stretchers, +or 12-14 sitting-up cases. As a rule, the wagons were loaded with +recumbent cases in the centre, while more slightly wounded men sat +around, and were able to give help to those lying down when needed. The +wagons can be covered with canvas throughout. + +The steady even pace of the oxen is a great advantage, and I was often +surprised to see how well men bore transport in these wagons, who seemed +utterly unfit to be moved had it not been an absolute necessity. A very +large number of the wounded from Paardeberg Drift were transported to +Modder River in them. + +One other advantage of these wagons, the possibility of converting them +into an excellent laager, is not to be underrated. Any one who saw the +comfortable encampment which a naval contingent on the march made by +massing the wagons with intervals covered by macintosh sheets, could at +once appreciate their capabilities for a long trek. + +Traction engines were, as far as I know, never employed as a means of +transporting the sick. The tendency of these heavy machines to stick in +the mud and to break down bridges is so well known that it hardly needs +mention. Putting these disadvantages on one side, with a supply of fuel +ensured, and such roads as are afforded by a civilised country, a great +future is probably before this means of transport for the wounded. A +large number of patients might be carried at an even pace, and the camps +would be saved all the trouble and worry of the transport animals. + +_Trains._--In many cases in Natal, and in a few instances on the western +side, the wounded men were able to be transferred from the first +dressing station directly into the trains. Space will not allow me to +describe any of those in use, but the accompanying illustration shows +the general arrangement of the beds in Nos. 2 and 3 trains (fig. 9). The +carriages were converted from ordinary bogie wagons of the Cape +Government Railway stock under the supervision of Colonel Supple, +R.A.M.C., P.M.O. of the Base at Cape Town. Each train was provided with +accommodation for two medical officers, two nursing Sisters, orderlies, +a kitchen, and a dispensary, and each carried some 120 patients. The +trains were under the charge of Major Russell, R.A.M.C., and Dr. Boswell +(and later other civilian medical officers) and of Captain Fleming, +R.A.M.C., D.S.O., and Mr. Waters, and carried many thousand patients +from all parts of the country to the Base and Station hospitals. They +were most admirably worked, and seemed to offer little scope for +improvement except in minor details. To them much of the success in the +treatment of the wounded who had to traverse the immense distances +incident to South Africa must be attributed. I made many pleasant +journeys in each of them. Later, two additional trains, Nos. 4 and 5, of +a similar nature, were added. Two trains, No. 1, and the Princess +Christian train, which I was not fortunate enough to see, performed +similar duties for Natal. + +[Illustration: FIG. 9.--Interior of one of the Wagons of No. 2 Hospital +Train] + +_Hospital Ships._--These were numerous and some especially well +arranged. Fig. 10 is of the 'Simla,' a P. & O. vessel which was +admirably adapted to the requirements of a hospital ship. On her main +deck some 250 patients were accommodated in a series of wards all on the +same level, which much lightened the difficulties of service usually +experienced. During the present campaign the abundance of transport +vessels rendered the transhipment of patients to England a matter of +comparative ease, and good vessels were always available. Considering +the constant transhipment of invalids from India and our other colonial +possessions, it would seem advisable that, in place of having to +hurriedly improvise hospital ships, the Government should possess two or +three hospital ships of the 'Simla' type. It is true this would deprive +our naval transport officers of a duty which in this war was performed +with extraordinary celerity and success; thus the 'Simla' was fitted in +seven days, and sailed with a cargo of invalids ten days after her +arrival at Durban; but on the other hand it would ensure that really +suitable vessels were always provided. + +[Illustration: FIG. 10.--P. & O. Hospital Ship 'Simla' in Durban +Harbour] + +To give some idea of the amount of work contingent on the transport of +wounded men from an army of some 15,000, fighting its way against +continued opposition, I will quote the approximate number of men moved +during Lord Methuen's advance from Orange River to Magersfontein. (The +number of men actually present at each battle is shown in Table I., p. +12.) + +Belmont, the first battle, was fought on November 23. + +_November 24._--No. 2 hospital train removed 152 cases to the Stationary +Field hospitals at Orange River, then returned and loaded up with 130 +more. Some of the most severe cases in the latter were detrained at +Orange River, and the remainder were taken direct to Wynberg (591-1/2 +miles). + +The division marched, and the battle of Graspan was fought during the +day. + +_November 26._--A train of specially constructed trucks brought 90 of +the less severe cases, including 20 Boers, to Orange River. + +_November 27._--The division marched, and in the morning No. 3 hospital +train removed 80 severe cases from the Field hospitals direct to +Wynberg. + +_November 28._--Battle of Modder River. + +_November 29._--339 patients, including a few sick, and some wounded +Boers, were sent down to Orange River in open trucks with impromptu +shelters made with rifles and blankets. + +Later, 97 severe cases were sent down in ordinary carriages, of which +some had doors sawn out to admit lying-down patients. + +_December 10._--The division marched, and on the next day the battle of +Magersfontein was fought. + +_December 11._--Nos. 2 and 3 trains were loaded up during the night and +early morning of the 12th, in part from the Field hospitals, in part +directly from the Ambulance wagons. During the day of the 12th, No. 3 +train made three journeys to Orange River, and No. 2 was sent direct to +Wynberg. + +In all some 800 patients needed transport; they were picked up by 10 +ambulance wagons and 5 buck wagons for slighter cases and the two bearer +companies sent out from Modder River. On the 12th Lord Methuen sent out +a number of bearers with stretchers, and at 12 noon all the wounded were +collected, but many had lain out through the night. The bearers had to +retire under a shell fire kept up by the Boers as long as our army was +within range of their position. + +Four Field hospitals were present, but only that of the IX. Brigade at +Modder River was so situated as to be of general use. This hospital, +under the command of Major Harris, R.A.M.C., did an immense amount of +work most expeditiously and with great success. + +The nature of the advance on Kimberley necessitated the evacuation of +the Field hospitals with extreme promptitude, as the troops were in +constant action, and the arrangements for this were carried out with +great success by Colonel Townsend, the P.M.O. of the First Division. + +The amount of fighting far exceeded anything that had been expected, and +the Stationary hospitals on the lines of communication at Orange River +and De Aar were unable to cope with the number of severe cases thrown on +their hands, with the constant possibility of new arrivals. Hence a +number of severe cases had to be sent direct to Wynberg. + +This experience strongly illustrated the necessity of possessing +Stationary hospitals of greater mobility and a higher degree of +equipment than the service at present possesses. In these a large number +of severe cases could have been retained, and only the slighter ones +exposed to the fatigue and general disadvantage of transport. In South +Africa very special difficulties existed in the length of the line of +communication, the single line of rails, and the absence of any source +of supply within 500 to 600 miles; but in any other country mobile +Stationary hospitals, although more easily equipped, would be equally +valuable. + +The difficulties of transport experienced in the advance of the +Kimberley Relief Force were many times multiplied in that upon +Bloemfontein, since the whole of the severely wounded men had to be sent +back thirty to forty miles to the railway. The ambulance accommodation +on the occasion of this march, although, if untouched, proportionately +smaller than that possessed by Lord Methuen, was reduced to one-fifth to +meet the exigencies of warfare. Beyond this the equipment transport of +the Field hospitals was reduced from four ox-wagons to two, and the +Scotch cart was cut off, only two ox-wagons and the two water-carts +being allowed. This greatly hampered the Field hospitals on the march, +and when they arrived at Bloemfontein and had to undertake the work of +Stationary hospitals, their efficiency was seriously impaired. Again, on +the advance from Bloemfontein to Kroonstadt many of the Field hospitals +were unable to accompany their respective divisions, not alone on +account of the number of patients remaining in them, but also because +the mule transport had been otherwise employed for military purposes. + +The transport of the ambulances and hospitals stands in a very special +position. As far as my experience went, neither ambulances nor hospitals +were ever taken or retained by the Boers, and consequently the transport +animals originally devoted to this purpose should have been held sacred +to it. + +_Hospitals._--Accommodation for the wounded was provided under canvas in +the Field hospitals, also in the large General hospitals. Beyond this +iron huts were erected in many of the Base and Station hospitals. At +Capetown, Maritzburg, and Ladysmith barrack huts were modified and +equipped as hospitals, and in towns such as Bloemfontein, Kimberley, and +Johannesburg large civil hospitals were at our disposal. Beyond these +sources of accommodation, churches, schools, public institutions, and +private houses were made use of in the smaller towns. + +As to the broad question of canvas _v._ buildings, experience amply +showed that in a climate such as is possessed by South Africa, canvas +affords the greater advantages. The hospitals are more mobile, more +readily extended, and the more healthy. Except under unusual conditions +of rain and dust, the patients did excellently in the tents. + +Rain and dust were occasionally most troublesome, especially when +combined with wind. I once saw a whole hospital, fortunately unoccupied, +levelled to the ground in the course of some twenty minutes. Under such +circumstances iron huts present advantages, and were on many occasions +utilised with much success. They are readily erected, and it would have +been a considerable improvement if a number of them had been ready for +use at the earliest part of the campaign. Except in the matter of +weight, they possess in a considerable degree the advantage of mobility +possessed by canvas, and in addition they offer much more protection +from the weather. On the other hand, they are more liable to become +unhealthy from prolonged use. + +Churches and public institutions were mainly troublesome from the +necessity of having to improvise sanitary arrangements, and sometimes +the disadvantage of the collection of a large number of men in one +chamber could not be avoided. None the less I cannot look back without +admiration on the temporary hospitals established in the Raadzaal at +Bloemfontein, and the Irish hospital in the Palace of Justice in +Pretoria. + +The State schools in the smaller towns of the Orange River Colony also +afforded excellent accommodation as small temporary hospitals. + +Private houses, possessing the disadvantages of ill-adapted construction +and the necessity of a considerably increased staff to work them, were +on the whole little used as hospitals. The scattered farmhouses +occasionally afforded shelter to very severely wounded men. In most of +the country I traversed, however, the farms were so wide apart as to be +of little use in this respect; and again, under the special +circumstances, patients left in them might have to be abandoned to the +enemy. + +The chief interest during the campaign centred in the working of the +Field and General hospitals. + +Two types of Field hospital were employed, one the Home, the other the +Indian. The latter differs from the Home in that in it the bearer +company is attached and consists of Indian natives, and that the +hospital is separable into four sections in place of two only. + +The amalgamation of the Field hospital and bearer company into one unit +is much to be desired in the Home service, both for economy of working +and the more equal distribution of duties to the medical officers +engaged. Again the divisibility of the hospital into four sections is +also an advantage. It allows of the advance or the leaving of sections, +in the case of either small expeditions or the presence of a number of +severely wounded men unfit to travel. As far as I could judge, it +necessitates very small addition to the present equipment, and is in +every way desirable. + +As to the working of the Field hospitals in the present campaign, it +was universally acknowledged to possess a very high degree of +excellence. The equipment, with small exceptions, proved equal to the +demands made upon it. The mobility of the camps was proved again and +again, and the rules governing their administration evidenced by their +effectiveness the care and experience which have been bestowed on the +organisation of the hospitals. + +It is difficult for any one who has not had an opportunity of observing +the actual amount of work performed in the Field hospitals either to +appreciate the storm and stress following an important engagement when +the wounded men are first brought in, or the demands that are made on +the powers of the medical officers in charge. To a civilian the first +feeling is one of impotence, followed by an attempt to see no further +than the case under immediate observation, and to nurture the conviction +that the work is to be got through if it is only stuck to. I gathered +that this first impression was absent in the minds of the officers in +charge of the Field hospitals, as work commenced at once, and was +carried on without intermission during the persistence of daylight, in +the winter often by the aid of lanterns, and eventually the huge task +was accomplished. In early days at Orange River work commenced at 4 +A.M., and was steadily continued until 6 P.M. or later, and this state +of things persisted sometimes for many days together. + +The officers of the Field hospitals, the bearer companies, and those +doing regimental duty carried out their duties with a calmness and +efficiency which not only impressed observers like myself, but also +excited the admiration of our German colleagues sent by their government +to observe the working of the British system. + +I saw on several occasions the German and Dutch ambulances, and was much +struck by the excellence of their equipment. In some details there was +much to be learned from them, especially in the matter of appliances, +dressings, and instruments. The Dutch ambulance I saw at Brandfort had a +complete installation of acetylene gas, which was carried, gasometer and +all, in one Scotch cart. They were, however, really designed to fill the +combined position of our Field, Stationary, and General hospitals, and +when it became necessary for them to move about frequently, the inferior +mobility they possessed in comparison with our own Field hospitals was +at once demonstrated. + +The large General hospitals of 500 beds were a great feature in the +campaign. Although designed and organised some time since, the present +was the first occasion on which they have come into general use, and +they may be said to have actually been on trial. The organisation of +these hospitals proved itself excellent, and in the case of the best of +them left little to be desired. + +In some cases the accommodation was temporarily strained enormously, and +the number of patients was extended beyond more than three times the +regulation limit. The additional patients were then accommodated in +marquees and bell tents, according to the nature of their diseases. +Under these circumstances the working of the hospitals was difficult, +and the officers both of the R.A.M.C. and the civilian surgeons were +placed at a great disadvantage. + +My space does not allow me to give any description of the general +arrangement of these hospitals, but I would suggest that a certain +number of them should be so modified as to increase their mobility and +allow of their being more readily utilised as Stationary hospitals. + +During the whole campaign it seemed to me that the Stationary hospitals +(that is to say, the hospitals necessary to receive patients when the +Field hospitals were rapidly evacuated), were those in which some +increased uniformity of organisation was most needed. + +It scarcely needs to be pointed out that this is the most difficult link +of the whole hospital chain to be uniformly well organised and equipped. +It is needed at short notice, and often for a short period, and it is +difficult to maintain a regular staff of officers ready for any +emergency without keeping a certain number of men idle. + +The conversion of Field hospitals to Stationary purposes is undesirable, +as the troops move with only a regulation number of the former, which +under ordinary circumstances is the minimum that may be necessary. + +Stationary hospitals as individual units are undesirable for the reasons +above given. + +[Illustration: FIG. 11.--Type of a General Hospital (No. VIII. +Bloemfontein) extended by use of bell tents in the distance. (Photo by +Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +The difficulty might be met by increasing the mobility of a certain +number of the General hospitals, by making them divisible into five +sections, each of which should be able to move independently, and to the +last of which should be attached the heavy part of the equipment, such +as the iron huts for operating and X-ray rooms, kitchens, store sheds, +&c. The tents might also be lightened by the substitution of the +tortoise tent for the service marquee. The tortoise tent is lighter (360 +as against 500 lbs.), easily pitched and moved, and holds at least two +more patients with ease. The capabilities of this tent were amply proven +during its use by the Portland, Irish, and other civil hospitals +attached to the army. It withstood wind and weather, the former better +than the service marquee. Figs. 11 and 12 show the appearance of camps +composed of the two varieties. I must admit a warm preference for the +appearance of the service pattern, but I think it is indubitable that +the other is the more useful. + +Given the possibility of division of a General hospital in this manner, +single sections could readily be sent up the lines of communication to +serve as Stationary hospitals at various points behind the advance of +the troops, and on the cessation of active need, the sections could be +reunited at any point to form an advanced Base hospital. The sections +could be kept in touch throughout by visits from the officer of the +lines of communication. This would appear a ready means of providing +well-organised Stationary hospitals at short notice, and would save the +disadvantage of a definitely separate series. + +[Illustration: FIG. 12.--Type of Tortoise Tent Hospital. Portland +Hospital, Bloemfontein. (Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +Such hospitals might have been used on many occasions when the transport +of an entire General hospital was an impossibility. The service, +moreover, has some experience in this direction, since at one time No. 3 +General Hospital was divided into two definite sections. + +Bearing in mind the extreme readiness and promptitude with which the +officers during the present campaign extended the accommodation of +either Field or General hospitals, one of such sections as are proposed +might readily be made far more capacious than its regulation number +would suggest. + +My duties being entirely in connection with the service hospitals, I did +not become intimately acquainted with any of the volunteer hospitals +which did such excellent service, except the Portland, to the staff of +which I was indebted for much hospitality and kindness. This hospital +was practically of about the capacity proposed for the above-mentioned +sections, and the report of its work will no doubt furnish many points +of detail as to equipment, &c., which may be useful. + +The general results of the surgical work done during the campaign were +excellent, and taken as a whole the occurrence of any severe form of +septic disease was unusual. + +Pure septicaemia, especially in connection with abdominal injuries, +severe head injuries and secondary to acute traumatic osteo-myelitis, +was the form most commonly seen. Pyaemia with secondary deposits was +uncommon, and often of a somewhat subacute form; thus I saw several +patients recover after secondary abscesses had been opened, or the +primary focus of infection removed. The only really acute case of joint +pyaemia I heard of, developed in connection with a blistered toe followed +by cellulitis of the foot. + +Cutaneous erysipelas I never happened to see, and really acute +phlegmonous inflammation was rare. + +I may mention the occurrence of acute traumatic gangrene in two cases. +This developed in each instance with gunshot fracture of the femur; in +one amputation was performed, and the process extended upwards on to the +abdomen. The cases occurred with the army in the field in the +neighbourhood of Thaba-nchu and not in a stationary hospital. + +Acute traumatic tetanus occurred only in one instance to my knowledge. +In this case the primary injury was a shell wound of the thigh, and the +patient developed the disease and died within ten days. + +To the civil surgeon the performance of operations, and the dressing of +severe wounds at the front, proved on occasions a somewhat trying +ordeal. + +When operations were necessary in the field, during the daytime, it was +often possible to perform them in the open air, provided tolerable +protection could be obtained from the sun. A number of cases were so +operated upon during the march of the Highland Brigade from Wynberg to +Heilbron, and gave excellent results, the patients deriving considerable +benefit from the early cleansing and closure of the wounds. + +[Illustration: FIG. 13.--Tortoise Hospital Tent. Portland Hospital. +(Photo by Mr. C. S. Wallace)] + +In camp, in the Field, or Stationary hospitals, the difficulties were +often much greater. The operations were necessarily performed under +shelter for reasons of privacy. In the tents the draught carrying the +dust from the camp was one of the commonest troubles. The exclusion of +dust was impossible, and it not only found its way into open wounds, but +permeated bandages with ease. Often when a bandage was removed, an even +layer of dust moistened by perspiration covered the whole area included +with a coating of mud. Again, in dust storms a similar layer of mud +sometimes covered the whole of the exposed parts of the bodies of +patients lying on the ground in the tents. + +It is of some interest to remark with regard to this dust, that Dr. L. +L. Jenner lately kindly examined a specimen collected at Modder River +after the camp had been more than two months established, and discovered +no pathogenic organisms in it. As a period of seven months had elapsed +since this dust was collected, the fact is of no practical import, +beyond showing that, if such organisms had existed, at any rate they +were not of a resistent nature. + +Insects, particularly common house-flies, were an intolerable pest at +times. In a fresh camp they were sometimes not abundant, but after two +or three days they multiplied enormously. Not only hospital tents, but +living and mess tents, swarmed with them, the canvas appearing +positively black at night. Even when dressing a wound, without unceasing +passage of the hand across the part, it was impossible to keep them from +settling, and during operations the nuisance was much greater. + +Storms of rain were occasionally as troublesome as, though perhaps less +harmful than, those of dust. On one occasion a whole Field hospital was +flooded only a few hours after a number of important operations had been +performed, and the patients were practically washed out of the tents. It +was somewhat remarkable that none of the men suffered any serious ill as +a result. + +At times the temperature was sufficiently high to make either dressing +or operating a most exhausting process to the surgeon. The heat of the +day was not on the whole so disadvantageous from the point of view of +the operator, as the cold of the nights during the winter in Orange +River Colony. On one or two occasions serious operations had to be left +undone, as it was only possible to consider them in camp, where, as we +arrived at night only, the temperature was too low to justify the +necessary exposure. + +Water for use at operations was often a great difficulty. Even at Orange +River, where, though muddy, the water was wholesome, it was impossible +to get water suitable for operations unless it had previously gone +through the complicated processes of precipitation by alum, boiling, and +filtration. At Orange River a small room in the house of one of the +railway servants was obtained and fitted as a rough operating room by +the Royal Engineers. The necessary utensils were provided by Colonel +Young, Commissioner of the Red Cross Societies. Here a stock of prepared +water was kept for emergencies. + +The remaining difficulties mainly consisted in those we are familiar +with in civil practice, such as the securing of suitable assistance in +the handling of instruments and dressing, when the rush of work was very +great. + +At the Base hospitals accommodation for operating in properly equipped +rooms obviated many of the difficulties above referred to. + +In concluding this introduction I should sum up in a few words my +experience of the general working of the hospital system during my stay +in South Africa. + +The excellence of the Field hospitals for their purpose has been already +alluded to, and, as far as I could ascertain, won the confidence and +approval of patients, military commanders, and civilians such as myself. + +The Stationary hospitals (by which I intend to indicate those receiving +the patients directly from the Field hospitals before the establishment +of advanced Base hospitals), as already indicated, were not in my +opinion so perfectly conceived or organised. The requirements of these +are, however, far greater than those of the Field hospitals, and they of +all others are dependent on the possession of facilities for rapid +transport. In South Africa the difficulties of supplying them were +enormous, and no doubt the conditions of the campaign in this, as so +many other particulars, were novel and unusual. None the less the +experience gained will no doubt be utilised in the future. With regard +to the extravagant criticisms levelled at the Field hospitals serving as +Stationary hospitals at the time of the early period of the occupation +of Bloemfontein, it may be pointed out that the only proper ground for +comparison was not between the patients at Bloemfontein and those in +hospital at the base, but between the men in hospital and those in the +field at that time, since the conditions were equally adverse to both. +Besides, it must not be forgotten that a large proportion of the +patients, at that time, were really comfortably housed in the Raadzaal +and other buildings, the preparation of which entailed a very great +amount of both labour and resource. + +The difficulties experienced at that time will, it is hoped, go far +towards securing greater facilities and rights of transport to the Royal +Army Medical Corps in the future. As a civilian, one cannot but +recognise that the conditions of modern warfare are much altered from +those of the past. Prisoners are well cared for and kindly treated, the +sick and wounded are respected by both sides, and except in the actual +horrors of fighting the condition of the soldier is a happier one. Under +these circumstances the limitation of the transport facilities of a +department so closely concerned with the well-being of all, and which +has been organised on a most moderate scale, must soon become a +tradition of the past in civilised armies. + +As to the efficiency of the organisation of the General hospitals, +either at the advanced or actual base, I have already testified. +Naturally the working of these hospitals varied with the personal +equation of the officer in charge of them, but as a whole the service +has every reason to be proud of their success. As far as surgical +results are concerned, and with these I had special acquaintance, the +success of the hospitals was amply demonstrated. + +Adverse criticism was not however wanting, and often expressed in the +strongest terms by persons totally unacquainted with hospital methods, +and apparently unconscious that such excellence as is exhibited in a +London hospital is the result of continuous work and development for +some centuries, and that such institutions are worked by committees and +staffs of permanent constitution. + +The proportion of female nurses employed in these hospitals underwent +steady increase from the commencement of the campaign, and the immense +value of the nursing reserve was fully proved. There is no doubt that in +Base hospitals the actual nursing should always be entrusted to women. + +The demands of the campaign necessitated the employment of a large +number of civil surgeons in the various hospitals. These gentlemen +accommodated themselves with true British aptitude to the conditions +under which they were placed, and in all positions their sterling work +contributed in no small degree to the success that was attained. + +One class of hospital still remains for mention. I refer to the +improvised hospitals prepared in the Boer towns prior to the British +occupation. They were met with in all the smaller towns, and also in the +larger ones such as Johannesburg and Pretoria. + +The Burke hospital in Pretoria, started by a private citizen and his +daughter, and the Victoria hospital in Johannesburg, presided over by +Dr. and Mrs. Murray, were two of the largest, but each and all deserve +due recognition. + +I am sure that many of our wounded officers and men who were cared for +in these hospitals while prisoners in the hands of the Boers, will never +lose their sense of gratitude to those inhabitants who spared no effort +to render their position as happy as possible under the circumstances; +and the existence of these hospitals was no small boon to the service +when called upon to take charge of the sick and wounded therein +contained. + +I cannot close this chapter without recognition of the immensity of the +task which has fallen on the Royal Army Medical Corps in the treatment +of the sick and wounded during the course of the campaign and full +appreciation of the manner in which that task has been met. The strain +thrown upon this department of the service, originally organised for the +needs of an army less than half the magnitude of that eventually taking +the field, was incalculably great, and the medical profession may well +be proud of the efforts made by its military representatives to do the +best possible work under the circumstances. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[1] 3,328 men of the IX. Brigade present are not included, as they never +came into action. + +[2] The high mortality was due to deaths amongst the officers of the +Naval Brigade. + +[3] To obtain this total the numbers of killed, wounded, and missing, +after the three earlier battles, have been massed, and added to the +total number of men known to have taken part in the battle of +Magersfontein. The inaccuracy dependent on the fact that some of the men +reported as wounded or missing in the earlier battles had already +returned to their regiments, and are included in the total of 11,447, +must be disregarded. + +[4] Numbers quoted from Fischer, _Handbuch der Kriegschirurgie_, vol. i. +p. 22, 1882. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +MODERN MILITARY RIFLES AND THEIR PROJECTILES IN RELATION TO INJURIES +PRODUCED BY THEM ON THE HUMAN BODY + + +Before proceeding to the actual description of the wounds inflicted by +modern military rifles, it is necessary to prefix a few remarks on the +mechanism and mode of production of these injuries. + +Recent tendency in the construction of military rifles has been in the +direction of reduction of bore, and a corresponding one in the calibre +of the bullet, the resulting loss of weight in the latter as an element +in striking power being compensated for by the attainment of an +augmentation of velocity in the flight of the projectile, and a +comparatively flat trajectory. + +Changes in this direction have endowed the weapons with increase both in +range and accuracy of fire; while the greater rapidity with which +magazine rifles can be discharged and, in consequence of reduction in +weight, the greater number of cartridges which can be carried by each +man, also form important factors in the possible deadliness of warfare +at the present day. None the less the experience of the present campaign +has scarcely justified the early prognostications expressed as to a +great increase in the number and severity of wounds amongst the +combatants.[5] This comparative immunity is to be explained mainly on +two grounds. The increased distance which for the most part separated +the two bodies of men, a feature no doubt accentuated by the mode of +warfare adopted by the Boer, and his strong sense of the folly of close +combat on equal terms, tended to efface one of the chief characters, +velocity of flight, on the part of the projectile. The want of +effectiveness of the small-calibre bullet as an instrument of serious +mischief also kept down the mortality. + +Since the year 1889 the calibre of the bullet in our own army has been +reduced from that of the Martini-Henry (.450 in.) to one of .309 in. in +the Lee-Metford, and a consequent reduction in weight from 480 to 215 +grains. To allow of the satisfactory assumption of the more complicated +rifling by the more rapidly projected bullet, the lead core has been +ensheathed in a mantle of denser metal. The bullet itself is of an +original calibre (.309 in.) somewhat exceeding the bore of the rifle +barrel (.303 in.), in which way a species of 'choke' is obtained and +deep rifling of the surface ensured. Beyond this the comparative +transverse and longitudinal measurements and shape have been altered in +order to maintain weight, preserve a proper balance during flight, and +increase the power of penetration. These alterations with slight +differences in detail embody the general principles that underlie the +construction of each of the weapons adopted by European nations. It will +be well here to consider the influence of each alteration from the point +of view of the surgeon. + +_Calibre._--The effect of the diminution of calibre is (_a_) to reduce +the area of impact of the bullet on the part impinged upon, and hence to +lower the degree of resistance offered by the tissues; this to a certain +extent tends to neutralise the augmented striking force resulting from +the increased velocity of flight. (_b_) To limit considerably the +destructive powers of the bullet, as a smaller area of tissue is exposed +to its action. (_c_) To allow of the production of very 'neat' injuries +and the frequent escape of important structures, also the production of +remarkably prolonged subcutaneous tracks in positions where such would +be regarded as scarcely possible, and in point of fact were impossible +with the older and larger projectiles. + +_Length._--The comparative increase in length of the bullet is, from the +surgical point of view, only of material importance in increasing the +weight and therefore the striking power, and in so far as it is a +mechanical necessity for the flight of the projectile on an axis +parallel to its long diameter, and so tends to ensure impact on the +body by the tip of the bullet. This latter is, however, surgically +favourable as ensuring a smaller wound. + +_Weight._--The decrease in weight must be regarded on the whole as +altogether to the advantage of the wounded individual, since it cannot +be considered to be entirely compensated for by the resulting increased +velocity of flight, unless the range of fire is moderately close. + +_Shape._--The ogival tip and general wedge-like outline, while +decreasing the aerial resistance to and increasing the power of +penetration possessed by the bullet, at the same time allow the escape +of some structures by displacement, while others are saved from complete +destruction by undergoing perforation. Beyond this the sharper the tip, +the smaller is the area of the body primarily impinged upon, the less +the resistance offered to perforation, and to some degree the less the +destruction of surrounding tissues. + +_Increased velocity of flight._--This multiplies the striking force, and +compensates in part for decrease in volume and weight of the bullet. It +is customary to speak of the velocity as 'initial' and 'remaining.' +Initial velocity is the term employed to express the velocity at the +time of the escape of the bullet from the barrel; this is also +designated as 'muzzle velocity.' 'Remaining velocity' expresses that +obtaining during any subsequent portion of the flight of the projectile. + +The greatest initial velocity is obtained with the use of bullets of the +smallest calibre, but this is not of the practical importance which +might be assumed, since the remaining velocity of flight of such +projectiles falls more rapidly than that of those of slightly greater +mass. Thus, although there may be a difference of a hundred metres per +second in initial velocity between two rifles of calibres varying from +6.5 to 8 millimetres (.303-.314 in.), at the end of 1,000 metres the +discrepancy is greatly reduced, while at 2,000 metres it hardly exists. +Under such circumstances the projectile of greater weight and volume, as +possessing the greater striking force, is considerably the more +formidable of the two. This is the more important if it be allowed, as I +believe to be the case, that velocity _per se_ is of no practical import +in the case of wounds of the soft parts of the body, which after all +form the preponderating number of all gunshot injuries. The effect of +the higher degrees of velocity differs, however, with the amount of +resistance met with on the part of the body; hence its serious import is +well exemplified when parts of the osseous skeleton are implicated, +although even here considerable variations exist, dependent upon the +structure of that part of the bone actually involved. The most obvious +ill effect of injuries from bullets travelling at high rates is seen in +the case of the various parts of the nervous system, and here it is +undeniable. High velocity and striking force are also responsible for +the prolonged course sometimes taken by bullets through the body. + +The actual degree of velocity, as judged by the range of fire at which +an injury is received and the resulting injury, is very hard to estimate +on account of the many and varying factors which enter into its +determination. The mere recital of some of these will suffice to make +this evident. + +1. Quality of the individual cartridge employed, as to loading, the +materials employed, and their condition. + +2. The condition of the rifle as to cleanliness, heating, and the state +of the grooves of the barrel. + +3. The angle of impact of the bullet with the part injured. + +4. Resistance dependent on the weight of the whole body of the man +struck, or of an isolated limb. + +5. Special peculiarities of build in the individual struck, such as +thickness and density of the integument and fasciae, strength and +thickness of the bones, &c. + +6. State of tension of the muscles, fasciae, and ligaments at the moment +of impact, and fixity or otherwise of the part of the body struck. + +7. The degree of wind, temperature, and hygroscopic conditions of the +atmosphere. + +These form some of the more important points which have to be taken into +consideration, in addition to a mere calculation of the actual distance +from which a wound has been received from a particular rifle, and taken +with the unsatisfactory nature of the evidence as to the latter, which +is usually alone obtainable, it is clear that definite assumptions are +scarcely possible. In a great number of cases I came to the conclusion +that the only indisputable evidence of low velocity was the lodgment of +an undeformed bullet. There is little doubt, moreover, that the general +tendency of wounded men was to minimise the range of fire at which they +were struck, and again that in the majority of cases in this campaign it +was quite impossible to determine whence any particular bullet had come, +since the enemy was seldom arranged in one line, but rather in several. +Again, smokeless powder was generally employed. Beyond this, in some +cases where there was no doubt of the short distance from which the +bullet was fired, the wounds were due to 'ricochet' of portions of +broken-up bullets. The following instance well illustrates this. A +sentry fired five times at two men within a distance of six paces, +knocking both down. One man received a severe direct fracture of the +ilium, the bullet entering between the anterior superior and inferior +iliac spines and emerging at the upper part of the buttock. The entry +and exit apertures were large but hardly 'explosive,' as a subcutaneous +track four to five inches long separated them. Besides this both men had +other lesser injuries; thus in the second two perforating wounds of the +arm existed. The latter were not unlike type Lee-Metford wounds, and +were regarded as such until a few days afterwards when a hard body was +felt in the distal portion of one track and removed. This proved to be a +part of the leaden core only, and the similar wound had no doubt been +produced by a like fragment, the bullet having broken up on striking the +stony ground. + +_Trajectory._--The comparative flatness of this depends on the +construction of the rifle and the propulsive force employed, and varies +as does velocity with the nature, excellence, and amount of the +explosive, the correctness of the principles upon which the bullet is +devised, and the mechanical perfection of its manufacture. Its +importance naturally consists in the manner in which it affects the +possibility of covering objects on a wide area of ground and thus +creating a broad 'dangerous zone.' A bullet fired on level ground from +any one of three of the rifles referred to later (Lee-Metford, Mauser, +Krag-Joergensen), sighted to 500 yards and fired from the shoulder in +the standing position, will cover some part of an erect man of average +height during the whole extent of its flight. A body of men within that +distance is therefore in a position of extreme peril in the face of a +good shooting enemy. + +The importance of a flat trajectory is progressively lost, however, with +any rifle, as the weapon is gradually sighted to greater distances. Thus +when sighted to 2,000 yards the bullet from the Lee-Metford rifle rises +174 feet, and a whole army might comfortably be situated over a +considerable area within that distance. The importance of flatness of +trajectory is also influenced by the nature of the ground occupied by +the combatants. Thus when the area to be covered consists in ground +first rising then falling from the rifleman, the trajectory will become +more or less parallel to the surface crossed, and the 'dangerous zone' +will be correspondingly increased in extent. On the other hand, when the +ground slopes away from the rifleman the rise of the projectile is +exaggerated, and reaches its most limited capacity of covering an +intervening space when the flight crosses a hollow. + +_Revolution of the bullet._--It only remains in this place to say a few +words concerning the revolution imparted to the bullet by the rifling of +the barrel. This ensures the flight of the projectile on a line parallel +to its long axis, and notably increases its power of penetration. + +Both these properties of the flight are to the advantage of the wounded, +since, as already mentioned, the more exactly the impact corresponds to +a right angle with the skin, the more limited will be the area of +contusion, even if it be of the most severe character, while to the +twist of the bullet must be ascribed a not inconsiderable part in the +explanation of the ready and neat perforations of narrow structures +which are frequently produced. + +It has been pointed out that the Lee-Metford bullet turns on its own +axis once in a distance of ten inches, while the Mauser revolves once in +a distance of eight and eleven-sixteenths inches; hence not more than at +most two revolutions are made in tracks crossing the trunk, and not more +than half a full revolution in the perforation of a limb. None the +less, no one can deny the influence of the one half turn of supination +in entering a perforating tool of any description, both as preventing +splintering, and in preserving the surrounding parts from damage. + +Beyond this, the spiral turn of the bullet, by diverting a part of the +transmitted vibrations into a second direction, must, in the case of +wounds of the body, help to throw off contiguous structures, and while +those that are in actual contact are more severely contused, the +surrounding ones suffer somewhat less direct injury. It must be borne in +mind, also, that rapidity of revolution does not fall _pari passu_ with +that of velocity of flight, but that the former undergoes a +comparatively slighter diminution until the bullet is actually spent. +Hence, the influence of revolution is felt, however low the velocity may +be, provided sufficient striking force is retained to enter the body. A +word must be added here as to the surface of a discharged bullet; this, +in taking the rifling of the barrel, becomes permanently grooved. The +depth of the groove differs with the variety of rifle. In the +Lee-Metford the grooves are deep (.009), in the Mauser slightly less so +(.007), but the surface of both bullets is comparatively roughened when +revolving in the body, and this circumstance, since the projectile +exactly fits its track, may influence the degree of the surface +destruction of tissue, and somewhat aid in the clean perforation of +bone, since a little bone dust is always found at the entrance aperture +of a canal in cancellous bone. + +During the campaign many varieties of rifle projecting bullets of widely +differing calibre were employed by the Boers, many of whom as sportsmen +preferred the rifle to which they were accustomed to a regulation +weapon, and an illustration of a large variety of bullets from +cartridges which I collected from arsenals and camps is given below (p. +96). The great majority of the men, however, were armed with +small-calibre weapons of some sort, and as the wounds produced by these +are of chief interest at the present day, I shall say little of any +others, beyond an occasional reference to Martini-Henry rifle wounds +which may be considered to represent approximately those made by large +leaden sporting bullets. + +[Illustration: FIG. 14.--Type Cartridges in common use during the war. +From left to right: Martini-Henry, Guedes, Lee-Metford, (Spanish) +Mauser, Krag-Joergensen] + +The most important, as the most frequently employed, rifles projecting +small-calibre bullets were the Krag-Joergensen, Mauser, Lee-Metford, and +Guedes, given in the order of increase of calibre (from 6.5 to 8 +millimetres, or .254-.314 in.) in the bullets. As to the seriousness of +wounds produced by these there is little to choose, differences in +character being only those of degree. Such differences depended on the +area of tissue implicated, corresponding with the calibre of the +particular bullet, the comparative weight of the bullet, and the degree +of velocity of flight maintained at the moment of impact. When, however, +any of these bullets have been exposed in their flight to influences +capable of causing deformity of their outline and symmetry, +peculiarities of construction and in the composition of the metals +employed in their manufacture may materially alter the character of the +wounds produced and revolutionise a classification founded purely on the +relative weight, calibre, and degree of velocity with which each is +endowed. + + +TABLE I + +[Transcriber's note: table split to fit on page.] + ++-------------------+----------------+------------------+----------------+ +| | Martini-Henry | Guedes | Lee-Metford | ++-------------------+----------------+------------------+----------------+ +|Calibre of rifle | .45 in. | .314 in. | .303 in. | +|Number of grooves | 7 | 4 | 7 | +|One twist in | 22 in. to right|9.85 in. to right | 10 in. to left | +|Muzzle velocity | 1,300 f.s. | 1,988 f.s. | 2,000 f.s. | +|Sighted to | 1,450 yds. | 2,600 paces | 2,800 yds. | +|Weight of cartridge| 758 grains |464.05 grains[6] | 416-1/2 grains | +|Weight of bullet | 480 grains | 244 grains | 215 grains | +|Length of bullet | 1.250 in. | 1.250 in. | 1.250 in. | +|Calibre of bullet | .450 in. | .315 in. | .309 in. | +|Charge of powder | 85 grains | 20-23 grains | 31-1/2 grains | +| | (black powder) | (nitro- | (cordite) | +| | | smokeless) | | +|Nature of alloy | -- | Mantle: Mild | Cupro-nickel | +| used for mantle | | steel, greased | | +| of bullet | | | | +|Thickness of | -- | -- | Mark II. bullet| +| mantle | | | | +|Tip | -- | .031 | .036 | +|Sides .984 from tip| -- | .011 | .015 | ++-------------------+----------------+------------------+----------------+ + ++-------------------+---------------+--------------------+---------------+ +| | Lee-Enfield | Mauser | Krag- | +| | | | Joergensen| ++-------------------+---------------+--------------------+---------------+ +|Calibre of rifle | .303 in. | .276 in. | .254 in. | +|Number of grooves | 5 | 4 | 4 | +|One twist in |10 in. to left |8-11/16 in. to right| 8 in. to left | +|Muzzle velocity | 2,000 f.s. | 2,262 f.s. | 2,309 f.s. | +|Sighted to | 2,800 yds. | 2,187 yds. | 2,406 yds. | +|Weight of cartridge| 416-1/2 grains| 384.5 grains | 372.1 grains | +|Weight of bullet | 215 grains | 173.3 grains | 156.4 grains | +|Length of bullet | 1.250 in. | 1 in. | 1.250 in. | +|Calibre of bullet | .309 in. | .280 in. | .260 in. | +|Charge of powder | 31-1/2 grains | 38.0 grains | 36 grains | +| | (cordite) | (smokeless) |(nitro | +| | | | -smokeless) | +|Nature of alloy | Cupro-nickel | Mantle: Steel |Mantle: Mild | +| used for mantle | | with alloy of | steel coated | +| of bullet | | copper on | with copper | +| | | surface | nickel, the | +| | | | composition of| +| | | | the latter | +| | | | being that of | +| | | | the cupro- | +| | | | nickel of the | +| | | | Lee-Enfield | +| | | | bullet | +|Thickness of |Mark II. bullet| -- | -- | +| mantle | | | | +|Tip | .036 | .031 | .022 | +|Sides .984 from tip| .015 | .015 | .015 | ++-------------------+---------------+--------------------+---------------+ + +Some particulars of the four rifles and their projectiles are collated +in Table I., to which is added the corresponding information regarding +the Martini-Henry for the purposes of comparison. + + +TABLE II.--PENETRATION + +The penetration of the Martini-Henry and the Lee-Metford or Lee-Enfield +rifle with Mark II. bullet is as follows: + + +Martini-Henry 15-1/2 in. of 1 in. deal boards 19 in. of sand + 1 in. apart containing 15 per + cent. of moisture + +Lee-Metford {Mark II.} 42 in. of 1 in. deal boards 60 in. of sand +Lee-Enfield {bullet } 1 in. apart containing 15 per + cent. of moisture + +The penetration of bullets of .314 calibre differs little from that +possessed by the Lee-Metford or Lee-Enfield, of which the muzzle +velocities are very little lower, with Mark II. bullet. The Belgian +Mauser perforates 55 inches of fir-wood at 12 metres distance. With +regard to the penetration of bullets of smaller calibre that of the +Roumanian Mannlicher (.256) may be taken as typical. When fired into a +sand butt at 25 yards the bullet enters 9 inches and then breaks up. + +The comparative size of the different cartridges is shown in fig. 14. + +The general remarks already made as to the effect of weight, calibre, +and velocity sufficiently explain the importance of the particulars +given in this table, but it will be noted that the Lee-Metford rifle is +inferior to both the Krag-Joergensen and Mauser rifles in the initial +velocity transmitted to its bullet. The tendency to equalisation, in +this particular, when the remaining velocity is considered, has been +mentioned; but it may be of interest if I quote from Nimier and Laval[7] +the scale on which the decrease in velocity takes place in the case of +the three weapons. + + +METRES PER SECOND + ++---------------------+-------------+--------+----------------+ +| | Lee-Metford | Mauser | Krag-Joergensen | ++---------------------+-------------+--------+----------------+ +| | | | | +| Initial velocity | 630 | 718 | 720 | +| Remaining velocity: | | | | +| At 100 metres | 574 | 699 | 718 | +| At 1,000 metres | 249 | 264 | 269 | +| At 2,000 metres | 159 | 165 | 165.9 | +| | | | | ++---------------------+-------------+--------+----------------+ + +Giving full importance to the effects of velocity as a factor in the +severity of the injuries produced, when the large proportion of wounds +received at distances above 1,000 yards is borne in mind, we see how +rapidly the superiority of the smaller projectiles is lost. This loss, +even in the early stages, is probably more than made up for in the case +of the Lee-Metford, when the superiority in weight, calibre, and +bluntness of extremity as contributing to striking force is taken into +consideration. + +The striking force (kinetic energy) of a bullet is indicated by the +following formula: F = 1/2 mv.^{2}; that is to say, the striking force +is equal to half the weight of the bullet multiplied by the square of +the velocity. + +In point of fact, with unaltered regulation bullets I was never able to +determine any very material difference between the wounds produced, +further than that the wounds of entry and exit in the soft parts tended +to correspond with the calibre of the particular bullet concerned. +Although the immense majority of the wounds which came under my notice +were caused by the Mauser bullet, yet I saw some hundreds of wounded +Boers and a good many of our own men wounded by Lee-Metford bullets, in +the latter case no doubt by some of the sporting varieties. The only +cases that I can call to mind or have noted as exhibiting a superior +wounding power in the Lee-Metford bullet are some injuries to bone. Thus +I saw a considerable number of clean perforations of the patella +produced by Mauser bullets, while the only two Boers whom I saw with +injured patellae had suffered transverse fractures. Again, I have a +lively recollection of an old Boer who had suffered a fracture of the +middle third of the femur, in the thigh of whom, with small apertures of +entry and exit, a cavity of destroyed tissue, five inches across, was +found beneath the fascia lata at the distal side of the fracture. I +cannot however say that I did not observe many equally severe injuries +to the femur produced by Mauser bullets in our own men, and as far as +fractures of the skull went, a somewhat crucial test, among the men +brought off the battlefield alive, I never saw any difference in +severity whatever. + +[Illustration: FIG. 15.--Sections of four Bullets to show relative shape +and thickness of mantles. + +From left to right: 1. Guedes; regular dome-shaped tip; mild steel +mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; at sides of body 0.3 mm. 2. +Lee-Metford; ogival tip; cupro-nickel mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; +gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 3. Mauser; pointed dome tip, steel +mantle plated with copper alloy; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; gradual +decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 4. Krag-Joergensen; ogival tip as in +Lee-Metford; steel mantle plated with cupro-nickel; thickness at tip 0.6 +mm.; gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. The measurements of the sides +are taken 2.5 cm. from the tip. Note the more gradual thinning in the +Lee-Metford mantle.] + +These points of comparison having been made, it only remains to consider +one other point, that of the relative stability of the bullets. This is +a matter of the greatest importance as regards the regularity or +otherwise of the wounding power of the projectile, and, as far as my +experience went, I believe the Mauser to far exceed the Lee-Metford in +instability of structure. + +The core of all four bullets is composed of lead hardened by a certain +admixture of tin or antimony, but the mantle differs in composition, +thickness both general and in different parts of the bullet, mode of +fixation, and consequently in its power of resistance to violence. + +Fig. 15 gives an exact representation of the relative thickness of the +mantles, and shows the general tendency to a thickening of the mantle at +its upper extremity, designed to increase both the stability and +striking power of the projectile. It will be noted that in general +stoutness the Lee-Metford stands first, as the case increases gradually +in thickness from base to apex. + +Beyond this it must be noted that the Lee-Metford is the only one of the +four that is ensheathed with a mantle composed of a definite alloy, this +consisting of 80 parts of nickel and 20 of copper. Two of the remaining +bullets, the Mauser and Krag-Joergensen, are ensheathed with steel +covered with a thin coating of an alloy of copper or cupro-nickel, to +take the rifling of the barrel, while the third has a plain steel mantle +which is covered with a layer of wax to take the place of the nickel +used in the manufacture of the two others. It is interesting to mention +here that the Boers evidently found the copper alloy coating +insufficient for its purpose, or at any rate not satisfactory in +preserving the weapon from the ill-effects consequent on the friction +between the steel case and the rifling of the barrel, as at about the +middle of the campaign they began to use their bullets waxed, as in the +case of the Austrian Mannlicher; hence the legend of the poisoned +bullets which caused such a sensation for a short period amongst the +uninitiated. It is possible also that the additional layer of wax was +necessitated by the wearing of the barrel. + +The wax employed for the Mauser bullets was not originally green. Mr. +Leslie B. Taylor informs me that it is probably paraffin wax, the green +colour depending on the formation of verdigris from the copper alloy +with which the steel envelopes are plated. This completely corresponds +with my own experience, since on the bullets in my possession the green +colour, originally pale, has steadily increased in depth. Many old +leaden bullets I found in the Boer arsenals were also waxed, but in this +case no alteration in colour had taken place. The Guedes bullets, which +are cased in mild steel, become somewhat brown with exposure from a +similar oxidation or rusting of the surface. + +As far as my experience went, however, the steel casing has an important +surgical bearing beyond the mere question of wear and tear on the rifle +barrel. That it possesses elasticity and capability of bending is +obvious, and in a later chapter, devoted to irregular wounds, several +illustrations of such deformities are given; but when it strikes stone I +believe it splits and tears with very much greater freedom than the +cupro-nickel mantle of the Lee-Metford. At any rate, I never came across +Lee-Metford bullets deformed to the same degree as Mauser bullets, +either when removed from the body, or as ricochet projectiles on the +field of battle. For this reason, therefore, provided the fighting takes +place on stony ground, I believe the Mauser bullet and others ensheathed +in steel to be much more dangerous surgically than those encased in +cupro-nickel. I fancy this would be equally the case even if the mantles +were of exactly the same thickness. + +The layer of copper alloy on the steel mantles is also a physical +characteristic worthy of mention. This very readily chips off in a +manner similar to that we are accustomed to see with nickel-plated +instruments. This may be due to the compression into the grooving of the +rifle, or as the result of passing impact of the bullet with an obstacle +previous to entering the body or contact with a bone within it. Small +scales of metal set free in one of these ways are seen in a very large +proportion of Mauser wounds, and although they are so small as usually +to be of little importance, the presence of such in, for instance, the +substance of one of the peripheral nerves which has been perforated +cannot be considered a desirable complication. + +To recapitulate, it would appear that at mean ranges, both in striking +force and as regards the area of the tissues affected, the Lee-Metford +is a superior projectile to the Mauser, in spite of the greater initial +velocity possessed by the latter. On the other hand the comparative ease +with which the Mauser bullet undergoes deformation either without or +within the body, so ensuring more extensive injury and laceration, +renders it the less desirable bullet to receive a wound from when not in +its normal shape and condition. + +I can say little about the remaining two rifles. The Krag-Joergensen was +little used, and beyond pointing out its capacity to inflict very neat +individual injuries, in which it must surpass even the Mauser, I can +only add that I had no opportunity of forming an opinion as to the +danger dependent on the great initial velocity imparted to the bullet. +The Guedes rifle has been included in the table because it approximates +in bore to the other three. Its bullet is of the same calibre as the +Austrian Mannlicher, one of the most powerful military rifles in use, +and it was used to a considerable extent during the war by the Boers.[8] +As to its capabilities, it appeared an inferior weapon, since want of +velocity and striking power of the bullets was indicated by the number +of these which were retained in the body, and by the fact that I never +saw one extracted that had undergone any more serious deformation than +some flattening on one side of the tip. On the other hand wounds of the +soft parts occasioned by it were only to be distinguished from Mauser +wounds by their slightly greater size, and at a short range of fire the +weight and volume of the bullet made it a dangerous projectile. + +The question of deformed bullets will be again referred to at length in +the section on wounds of irregular type, and a number of type specimens +are there figured and described (p. 76). In the same chapter will be +found illustrations of a number of sporting bullets of small calibre, as +well as of large calibres in lead, found in the Boer arsenals and camps. +I have placed them in that position as mainly of interest in connection +with the occurrence of large and irregular wounds (see figs. 42 and 43, +pp. 95 and 98). + +The small sporting bullets were mostly of the Mauser (.276), Lee-Metford +(.303), or Mannlicher (.315) calibre. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[5] See tables, pp. 12, 13, 15, Chapter I. + +[6] The weights are from cartridges brought home. The charge of powder +was small and variable. + +[7] H. Nimier and E. Laval, _Les Projectiles des Armes de Guerre_, p. +20. F. Alcan. 1899. + +[8] Mr. Leslie B. Taylor informs me that this rifle is a discarded +Portuguese regulation pattern, with which a copper-ensheathed soft-nosed +bullet was originally employed. For the purposes of the present campaign +a modified cartridge was constructed. Examination of some specimens in +my possession showed the charge of powder to be very small. (Table I. p. +48.) + + + + +CHAPTER III + +GENERAL CHARACTERS OF WOUNDS PRODUCED BY BULLETS OF SMALL CALIBRE + + +The effects of injuries inflicted by bullets of small calibre may be +divided into two classes: + +1. Direct or immediate destruction of tissue. + +2. Remote changes induced by the transmission of vibratory force from +the passing projectile to neighbouring tissues or organs. + +Those of the first class will be mainly considered in this chapter; the +remote effects will be dealt with under the headings devoted to special +regions. + +In dealing with the wounds as a whole I shall first describe those of +uncomplicated character as type injuries, and deal with those possessing +special or irregular characters separately. + + +TYPE WOUNDS + +1. _Nature of the external apertures._--The apertures of entry and exit +in uncomplicated cases are very insignificant, but the size naturally +varies slightly with that of the special form of bullet concerned. As +will be shown moreover, the difference in size is the only real +distinguishing characteristic in many cases between wounds produced by +the modern bullet of small calibre and those resulting from the use of +the older and larger projectiles of conical form. I have been very much +struck on looking over my diagrams of entry, and especially exit, wounds +to find that they reproduce in miniature most of those figured in the +History of the War of the Rebellion; some of these diagrams are +reproduced in this chapter. + +_Aperture of entry._--The typical wound of entry with a normal +undeformed bullet varies in appearance according to whether the +projectile has impinged at a right angle or at increasing degrees of +obliquity, or again, to whether the skin is supported by soft tissues +alone, or on those of a more resistent nature such as bone or cartilage. + +[Illustration: FIG. 16.--Mauser Entry and Exit Wounds. A, entry in +buttock; circular opening filled with clot and crossed by a tag of +tissue. B, exit in epigastrium near mid-line; irregular slit form, with +well-marked prominence. Specimens hardened in formalin immediately after +death; the resulting contraction has slightly exaggerated the +irregularity of outline of the entry wound] + +[Illustration: FIG. 17.--Gutter Wound of outer aspect of shoulder, +caused by a normal Mauser, which subsequently perforated a man's leg. At +the central part the gutter was 3/4 in. deep a few days after the +injury] + +When the bullet impinges at a right angle the wound is circular, with +more or less depressed margins, and of a diameter, corresponding to the +size of the bullet occasioning it, from a quarter to a third of an inch. +The description 'punched out' has been sometimes applied to it, but it +would be more correct to reverse the term to 'punched in,' since the +appearance is really most nearly simulated by a hole resulting from the +driving of a solid punch into a soft structure enveloped in a denser +covering. The loss of substance, moreover, in the primary stage is not +actually so great as appears to be the case, fragments of contused +tissue from the margin being turned into the opening of the wound track. +The true margin therefore is not sharp cut, and the nature of the line +differs somewhat according to the structure of the skin in the locality +impinged upon. Thus the granular scalp and the comparatively homogeneous +skin of the anterior abdominal wall will furnish good examples of the +nature of the slight difference in appearance. From the first the margin +is also often somewhat discoloured by a metallic stain, similar to that +seen when a bullet is fired through a paper book. This ring is, however, +narrow, and not likely to be noticeable when the bullet has passed +through the clothing. In any case it is subsequently obscured by the +development of a narrow ring of discoloration due to the contusion. This +latter varies in width, and still later a halo of ecchymosis half an +inch or more in diameter surrounds the original wound. + +[Illustration: FIG. 18.--Oblique Exit Gutter. Diagram enlarged to actual +size from case shown in fig. 24, p. 64.] + +With increasing degrees of obliquity of impact more and more pronounced +oval openings of entry result, culminating in an actual gutter such as +is seen in fig. 17. + +In all oval openings the loss of substance is more pronounced at the +proximal margin, while the wound is liable to undergo secondary +enlargement at the distal margin, since in the former the epidermis is +mainly affected, while in the latter the epidermis is spared as an +ill-nourished bridge, the deeper layers of the skin suffering the more +severely. When the wound occurs in regions, such as the chest-wall or +over the sacrum, where the skin is firmly supported, the oval openings +are often very considerable in size, reaching a diameter at least double +that of the circular ones. In the case of the oval openings the +depression of the margins is not such a well-marked feature as in wounds +resulting from rectangular impact of the bullet, since the distal margin +is really lifted. + +[Illustration: FIG. 19.--Oval Entry Wound over third sacral vertebra. +Exit wound, anterior abdominal wall. Slightly starred variety. Diagram +made on second day] + +_Aperture of exit._--The wound of exit in normal cases offers far more +variation in appearance than that of entry, this variation depending on +several circumstances: first, the want of support to the skin from +without, and such other factors as the degree of velocity retained by +the travelling bullet, the locality of the opening, and the density, +tension, and resistance offered by the particular area of skin +implicated. + +When the range has been short and the velocity high, it is often +difficult to discriminate between the two apertures. Both may be +circular and of approximately the same size, and the only distinguishing +characteristic, the slight depression of the margin of the wound of +entrance, may be absent if any time has elapsed between the infliction +of the injury and examination by the surgeon. One very strong +characteristic if present is the general tendency of the margins, and +even the area surrounding the exit wound itself, to be somewhat +prominent. Fig. 16 shows this point, although the wound from which it +was drawn had been produced thirty-six hours before death. The specimen +was then hardened in formalin and still preserves its original aspect. +This character is, however, more frequently displayed in wounds received +at mean, or longer, ranges. In wounds produced by bullets travelling at +the highest degrees of velocity it is often absent. + +[Illustration: FIG. 20.--Circular Entry back of arm; exit (bird-like) in +anterior elbow crease] + +[Illustration: FIG. 21.--Circular Entry over patella. Starred exit of +elongated form in popliteal crease] + +When the range of fire has been greater and the velocity retained by the +bullet lower, slit wounds are common, or some of the slighter degrees of +starring. Actual starring I never saw, but reference to figs. 20 and 21 +will show a tendency in this direction, also a close resemblance to the +starred wounds resulting from perforations by large leaden bullets. +Such wounds, I believe, are usually the result of a somewhat low degree +of velocity. + +Slit exit wounds may be vertical or transverse (fig. 20) in direction, +and the production of these is dependent on the locality in which they +are situated, the thickness, density, and tension of the skin, and the +nature of the connection of the latter with the subcutaneous fascia in +the locality. Thus in wounds of different parts of the hairy scalp, so +little variation exists in the relative density and structure of the +skin, that, in spite of the want of external support at the aperture of +exit, it is often difficult to discriminate offhand the two apertures, +if neither bone nor brain debris occupies that of exit. + +If, however, a wound crosses from side to side a region such as the +thigh where well-marked differences exist in the subjacent support, +thickness, and elasticity of the skin implicated in the apertures, the +wound of entry, if in the thick skin of the outer aspect, was usually +circular, while the exit in the thin elastic skin of the inner aspect +was either slit-like or starred. The difficulty in laying down any +general rule as to the occurrence of circular or slit apertures of exit +in any definite region is, however, great, as may be seen by reference +to the accompanying diagrams taken from two patients wounded at +Paardeberg (figs. 22 and 23). + +In fig. 22 the bullet entered the outer and posterior aspect of the left +buttock, crossed the limb behind the femur, and emerged at the inner +aspect by a vertical slit: the bullet then entered the scrotum by a +vertical slit, and emerged by a typical circular aperture; re-entered +the right thigh by a transverse slit aperture, and, striking the femur +in its further course, underwent deformation, and finally escaped by an +irregular aperture 3/4 of an inch in diameter. The occurrence of exit +slits in the adductor region is common, and to be explained by the +tendency of the comparatively thin elastic skin to be carried before the +bullet; the slit entry in this position must, I suppose, be explained by +the comparatively slight support afforded by the underlying structures, +which are often in a condition of hollow tension. The scrotal wounds are +perhaps more difficult to account for, but in this case the fact of the +distal aperture being directly supported by the right thigh is a ready +explanation of the circular exit, while the skin corresponding to the +slit entry was no doubt carried before the bullet, and finally gave way +in the line of a normal crease. + +[Illustration: FIG. 22.--Entry and Exit Wounds in both thighs and +scrotum. From right to left: 1. Circular entry in left buttock behind +trochanter. 2. Vertical slit exit in adductor region. 3. Slit entry in +scrotum (probably inverted before bullet broke the surface, and then a +slit occurred in a normal crease). 4. Circular exit in scrotum (here +supported by surface of right thigh). 5. Transverse slit entry in right +adductor region. 6. Irregular 'explosive' exit, the bullet having set up +on contact with the front surface of the femur, but without having +caused solution of continuity of the bone.] + +In fig. 23 all the wounds are circular except the final exit, which was +irregular as a result of the bullet in this case also having struck the +femur in the second thigh. Considerable variation also exists in the +size of the circular apertures; this illustrates the secondary +enlargement often occurring in such wounds, and most marked at the +apertures of entry, as the more contused. Both diagrams were made from +patients eight days after the reception of the wounds. + +[Illustration: FIG. 23.--Wound of both Thighs. First and second entry +typical circular wounds. First exit a small circular wound; the bullet +'set up' on contact with the femur without causing solution of +continuity of the bone, and second exit is irregular and large. + +This diagram is of considerable interest when compared with fig. 22. I +believe the comparative regularity in the wounds to have been due to a +higher degree of velocity of flight on the part of the bullet] + +Lastly, vertical or transverse slits may be looked for with considerable +confidence in situations in which transverse oblique or vertical folds +or creases normally exist in the skin, and depend on the lines of +tension maintained by the connection of the skin in these situations to +the underlying fascia. Thus I saw well-marked transverse and vertical +slits in the forehead corresponding with the creases normally found +there, and in this situation I noted some slit entries. Transverse +slits were common in the folds of the neck, the flexures of the joints +(fig. 20), and the anterior abdominal wall either in the mid line or in +creases like those stretching across from the anterior superior iliac +spines. Again they were seen in the palms and soles, but here more +readily tended to assume the stellate forms. Vertical slits are less +common; they occurred with the greatest frequency in the posterior +axillary folds. + +Oval apertures of exit are far less common than those of entry, since +the most common factor for the production of an oval opening, bony +support, is never present. In long subcutaneous tracks, or very +superficial wounds, they are however sometimes met with and may +terminate in a pointed gutter (see figs. 18 and 24). + +The greatest modifications in the appearance and nature of the apertures +of entry are dependent on previous deformation of the bullet, when all +special characteristics are lost, and it becomes impossible to form any +opinion as to the type of bullet concerned. These modifications are +naturally far more common in the aperture of exit, since the bullet so +often acquires deformity in the body as the result of impact with the +bones. Further remarks on this subject will be found with the +description and comparison of the various bullets on p. 81. + +[Illustration: FIG. 24. Superficial Thoracico-abdominal Track. Small +entry: discoloration of surface over costal margin from deep injury to +skin; well-marked 'flame' gutter exit (see fig. 18)] + +2. _Direct course taken by the wound track._--This character primarily +depends on the velocity with which bullets of small calibre are made to +travel, and on the small area of the tissues upon which they operate. In +this relation the degree of velocity retained by the bullet is often of +minor importance, provided it be sufficient to penetrate the body. Fired +within a distance of 2,500 yards there is little doubt that a bullet of +the Lee-Metford, Mauser, or Krag-Joergensen types, passes straight +between the apertures of entry and exit when these are of the type +outline, even when the bones are implicated. By reason of the small size +of the projectiles, their shape, and the spin and velocity transmitted +to them, there is no reason why at a sufficiently short range they +should not traverse the body from the crown of the head to the sole of +the foot. The necessary conditions of position and distance for such an +injury are obviously not often obtained, but it may be pointed out that +the Belgian Mauser rifle at a distance of five yards is capable of +driving a bullet 55 inches or nearly five feet into a log of pine-wood. +Many examples of long tracks will be referred to later, but the +following instances may be of interest in this relation. A bullet +entering at the occipital protuberance traversed the muscles of the +neck, passed through the thoracic cavity, fractured the bodies of the +third and fourth and grooved the seventh and eighth dorsal vertebrae, +grooved the seventh and eighth and fractured the ninth and tenth ribs, +traversed the muscles of the back and finally lodged against the ilium; +the whole length of this track measured some 25 inches. Again, at the +battle of Belmont a Mauser bullet entered the pelvis of a horse just +below the anus, and traversed the entire trunk before emerging from the +front of the chest: it may be of interest to mention that this animal +was alive and moving about the next day, but I am sorry I can give no +further information regarding his fate. + +[Illustration: FIG. 25.--Superficial Track on external surface of Thigh. +Local discoloration of skin five weeks after reception of injury] + +The possibility of contour tracks travelling around the walls of the +chest or abdomen has therefore rarely to be considered, except in +occasional instances where the bullet fired from a long range has +impinged against a bone and is retained in the body. The small volume of +the bullets, however, allows the production of very prolonged direct +subcutaneous tracks in the body wall, in positions where they would be +manifestly impossible with projectiles of larger calibre. + +Figs. 24 and 25 illustrate wounds of this nature. In the case figured in +fig. 24 the bullet entered over the third rib in a vertical line above +the right nipple; it then coursed obliquely down, crossing the seventh +costal cartilage, and finally emerged 3 inches above the umbilicus. +Where the track crossed the prominence of the thoracic margin the skin +was so thinned as to undergo subsequent discoloration, while a distinct +groove was evident there on palpation. In some similar cases I have seen +the central part of the track secondarily laid open as a result of the +thinning of the skin and consequent sloughing due to the interference +with its vitality. + +Short of sloughing, the skin may show signs of alteration of vitality +for a long period after the injury; thus fig. 25 depicts the condition +seen in a superficial wound of the thigh five weeks after the injury. +The line of passage of the bullet between the two openings was still +clearly visible as a dark red coloured streak. Grooves in such cases are +generally readily palpable in the early stages, while later the want of +resistance is replaced by the readily felt firm cord representing the +cicatrix. These points are of much importance in discriminating between +perforating and non-perforating wounds of the abdomen, and are again +referred to in that connection. + +The direction of the tracks obviously depends on the attitude assumed by +the patient at the moment of impact of the bullet and the direction +whence the firing has proceeded. The frequent assumption of the prone +position during the campaign led to the occurrence of a large proportion +of longitudinal tracks in the trunk, or trunk and head, which will be +referred to later. Certain battles were in fact strongly characterised +by the nature of the wounds sustained by the men. Thus at Belmont and +Graspan, where some rapid advances were made in the erect attitude, +fractured thighs were proportionately numerous, while at Modder River, +where many of the men lay for a great part of the day in the prone +position, glancing wounds of the uplifted head, of the occipital region, +or longitudinal tracks in the trunk and limbs were particularly +frequent. I very much regret that the material at my disposal does not +allow me to add some remarks as to variation in the nature of the +wounds according to whether they were received from an enemy firing from +a height or from below, but it is possible that some information on this +subject may be forthcoming when the returns of the Service are made up, +since it is naturally of great importance as to the effect of trajectory +in the proportionate occurrence of hits. + +3. _Multiple character of the wounds._--The same conditions responsible +for the length and directness of the tracks, account for the frequently +multiple character of the wounds implicating either the limbs or +viscera--thus, lung, stomach, liver; neck, thorax, abdomen; abdomen, +pelvis, thigh. Also for the frequent infliction of two or more separate +tracks by the same bullet--thus, arm and forearm with the elbow in the +flexed position; both lower extremities; both lower extremities, penis +or scrotum; leg, thigh, and abdomen, with a flexed knee; upper extremity +and trunk, and more rarely one upper and one lower extremity. Again, it +was remarkable how often the same bullet would inflict injuries on two +or more separate men, not unfrequently dealing lightly with the first +and inflicting a fatal injury on the second, or vice versa. The small +calibre of the bullet, moreover, allows of the neatest and most exact +multiple injuries. Thus in a patient who was crawling up a kopje on all +fours, the flexed middle digit of the hand was struck. The bullet +entered at the base of the nail, first emerged at the distal +interphalangeal flexor fold, re-entered the metacarpo-phalangeal fold, +and finally emerged from the back of the hand between the third and +fourth metacarpal bones. + +4. _Small 'bore' of the tracks, and tendency of the injury to be +localised to individual structures of importance._--Here we meet with +the most striking characteristic of the injuries, and evidence that +reduction of calibre affects more strongly the nature of the lesion than +does any other element in the structure of the modern rifle. The +diameter of the track slightly exceeds that of the external apertures, +probably as a result of the more ready separability of the elements of +the structures perforated than exists in the skin. The calibre, +moreover, tends to be fairly even throughout when soft structures only +are implicated, though local enlargements result wherever increased +resistance is met with. Thus a strong fascia may offer such resistance +as to increase locally the bore of the track, and in this particular the +state of tension of the fascia when struck will affect the degree of the +enlargement. The most striking instances of local enlargement of the +track are of course seen when a bone lies in the course of the bullet, +but we must here bear in mind the introduction of a new element--the +propulsion of comminuted fragments together with the bullet itself. In +cases of fracture the distal portion of the track is in consequence many +times larger than the proximal. The most striking examples of small even +tracks are seen, on the other hand, in punctures of the elastic and +practically homogeneous lung tissue, where the wounds are extremely +small. + +On transverse section of the track the gross amount of actual tissue +destruction occupies a lesser area than that corresponding to the +diameter of the bullet. The destructive action of the projectile is in +fact exerted mainly on the tissues directly lying in its course, the +track being opened up during the rush of the passage of the bullet, +partly as a result of its wedge-like shape and partly as a result of the +throwing off of the tissues forming the walls of the track by a +diversion of a portion of the force in the form of spiral vibrations +dependent on the revolution of the bullet. Again, the opening out of the +tissues may be aided by the direction taken by the first and strongest +as well as the simplest series of vibrations transmitted, which would +assume the shape of a cone of which the point of impact forms the apex. + +The escape from actual destruction by structures lying in the immediate +neighbourhood of the track is indeed often surprising, but not perhaps +so astonishing as the perforation of long narrow structures such as the +peripheral nerves and vessels, without irreparable damage to the parts +remaining, and this although the structures themselves may be of a +diameter not exceeding that of the bullet itself. The capacity of these +projectiles to split such structures as tendons was already well known +before our experience in this campaign, but the injuries to the nerves +and vessels of the same character came as a surprise to most of us. The +lateral displacement of tissues seems to bear a strong resemblance to +what is seen on the passage of an express train, when solid bodies of +considerable weight are displaced by the draught created without ever +coming into contact with the train itself. The tendency to lateral +displacement is still more strongly exhibited when dense hard structures +such as bone are implicated. Here the fragments at the actual points of +impact on the proximal and distal surfaces of a shaft are driven +forwards, while the lateral walls of the track in the bone are simply +comminuted and pushed on one side without loss of continuity with their +covering periosteum. + +The extension of this form of displacement to a degree amounting to a +so-called explosive character in the case of the soft tissues, even when +the bullet passed at the highest degrees of velocity, was, however, +never witnessed by me, and I very much doubt the existence of a +so-called 'explosive zone' so far as wounds of the soft parts are +concerned. On the contrary, I am inclined to believe that the highest +degrees of velocity are favourable to clean-cut neat injuries of the +soft tissues. I saw a large number of type wounds of entry and exit +inflicted at a range of under fifty yards. + +5. _Clinical course of the wounds._--The tendency of simple wounds such +as are above described to run an aseptic course was very marked, and, +given satisfactory conditions, deep suppuration and cellulitis were +distinctly rare. It may also be confidently affirmed that when +suppuration did occur, with apertures of entry and exit of the normal +small type, this was always the result of infection from the skin, or +infection subsequent to the actual infliction of the wound. The +infrequency of suppuration depended on the aseptic nature of the injury, +the smallness of the openings, the small tendency of the track to weep +and furnish serous discharge in any abundance, the comparative rarity of +the inclusion of fragments of clothing or other foreign bodies, and +possibly in some degree on the purity and dryness of the atmosphere, +which favoured a firm dry clotting of the blood in the apertures of +entry and exit, and consequent safe 'sealing of the wound.' + +As to the aseptic nature of the injury, it will be well to first +consider the question of the sterility of the bullet. Putting laboratory +experiments on one side, the large experience of this campaign seems to +prove to absolute demonstration that, bearing in mind the very large +proportion of instances of primary union in simple tracks, the surgeon +has nothing to fear on the part of the bullet itself. This is the more +striking when we remember that these bullets shortly before their +employment were carried in a dirty bandolier, and freely handled by men +whose opportunities of rendering either their hands or implements +aseptic were as bad as it is possible to conceive. + +Several explanations are to hand, but none of them conclusive. Two must, +however, be shortly considered. First, the surface of the bullet, except +its tip and base, is practically renewed by passage through the barrel. +Secondly, there is the question of the heat to which it is subjected. As +far as cauterisation of the tissues is concerned, this question has been +practically settled in the negative, since actual determinations of the +heat immediately after the moment of impact have been made, and again it +has been shown that butter is not melted, and that neither gunpowder nor +dynamite is exploded, by firing bullets through small quantities of +those materials. Again, the absence of any sign of scorching of the +clothes of the wounded is strong evidence against the possibility of any +considerable heat being applied to the tissues of the body; while +another observation, although of less importance as affecting spent +bullets only, that bullets, which have perforated the body but lie +between the skin and the clothing, leave no sign of cauterising action +on either, may be mentioned. None the less, the sources of heating while +the bullet is passing from the barrel are many and obvious. Thus there +is the heat consequent on explosion of the powder, the warm state of the +barrel itself when the rifle has been fired a few times consecutively, +and the heat resulting from the force and friction essential to the +propulsion of the bullet through the barrel. Again, bullets covered with +wax before their introduction into the barrel retain no trace of this +when they have been fired, although at any rate the portion covering +the tip is not exposed to friction on the part of the rifle, and lastly +the base of the bullet has no other explicable reason for its +innocuousness than subjection to a certain degree of heat. While not +claiming any cauterising action on the tissues by the bullet, I should +therefore still be inclined to allow the probability of the heat to +which the surface of the bullet is exposed exerting a cleansing action +on the projectile. In regard to this point it is interesting to bear in +mind that shots from an ordinary gun seldom or never give rise to +infection. + +Foreign bodies were rarely carried into the wounds with the bullet. I +saw several instances in which portions of the metal of cigarette cases +and of cartridge cases when the bullet had perforated cartridges in the +wounded man's bandolier, and in one instance small pieces of glass from +a pocket mirror, must have been carried in without any obvious ill +effect. Fragments of clothing, on the other hand, in every case caused +suppuration: clothing was not often carried in, the khaki linen was +perforated with a clean aperture, most commonly a slit; but the thick +woollen kilts of the Highlanders, and thick flannel shirts, occasionally +furnished fragments. The introduction of large pieces of clothing is a +sure proof of irregularity of impact on the part of the bullet. The +frequency with which portions of cloth were introduced from the kilt was +one of the strongest surgical objections to its retention as a part of +the uniform on active service. + +Retained bullets themselves remained as foreign bodies in a certain +number of cases. I cannot say that suppuration never followed the +retention of a bullet, since in two of the instances where I saw such +removed they lay in a small cavity containing at any rate a 'purulent +fluid.' In one of these the bullet was a Martini-Henry, and in both the +bullet had been imbedded for some weeks, and had certainly not +occasioned a primary suppuration of the wound. + +The favourable influence of the pure and dry nature of the atmosphere in +this campaign must certainly not be underrated, and in support of this +influence I think I may say, from the experience of cases that I saw +coming from Natal where the climate and surroundings were not so +favourable as on the western side, that suppuration was more common and +more severe in the moister atmosphere. + +Putting aside all the above remarks, however, I am inclined to think +that a general tendency to primary union and the absence of suppuration +will always be a feature of wounds from bullets of small calibre, and +that this favourable tendency is attributable to certain inherent +characters of the injuries. Of these the nature and small size of the +openings, the dry character of the lining of the track due to +superficial destruction and condensation of the tissue forming its wall, +the small disposition to prolonged primary haemorrhage, and the absence +of any great amount of serous exudation during the early stages of +healing are the most important. + +A mechanical factor of great importance also exists in the spontaneous +collapse and automatic apposition of the walls of the track. This +closure is rendered additionally effective in many cases by the +interruption of the continuous line in the wounded tissues consequent on +alteration in the position of the parts traversed when an attitude of +rest is assumed by the injured part. The indisposition to suppuration +and the apparent unsuitability of the tissue lining the track for the +development and spread of infecting organisms are well illustrated by +several observations. Thus, even if the bullet be thoroughly aseptic, +the fragments of destroyed skin driven into the track by the bullet can +scarcely be free from organisms; yet these seldom give rise to trouble. +Again, if for any reason a deep portion of a track becomes infected and +suppurates, there is no tendency for the spread of infection along the +line of wounded tissue, but rather for the development of a local +abscess, pointing in the ordinary direction of least resistance, +irrespective of the course originally taken by the bullet. + +[Illustration: PLATE I. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +G. L. CHEATLE. + +Mauser Wound of Entrance, a little more than 48 hours after infliction. +About 12/1. + +Section of the entry segment of an aseptic Mauser wound removed a little +over forty-eight hours after its infliction. Magnified twelve diameters. + +The margins of the opening are still sloping and depressed, indicating +the originally 'punched-in' nature of the aperture. A thin stratified +layer of epidermis completely closes it. No scab remains. + +The wound track is occluded by an effusion of lymph, commencing +organisation of which is shown under a higher magnifying power by the +presence of leucocytes near the margin of the bounding tissue, and some +giant cells. The effusion of lymph occupies a slightly wider area +immediately beneath the papillary layer of the skin, then narrows, and +broadens again as the subcutaneous fascia is reached, indicating the +effect of resistance in widening the area of damage. + +The subcutaneous connective tissue bounding the track shows little sign +of alteration beyond a general slight tendency of the lines of structure +to deviate in the direction of the passage of the bullet. + +No haemorrhage is apparent beyond a small collection of blood situated +immediately beneath the new layer of epidermis at the left-hand corner +of the opening. + +Range probably within 800 yards. Seat of wound, abdominal wall a highest +point of iliac crest.] + +Fig. 25 (_a_), A (plate I.) represents a section carried across an +aseptic aperture of entry. The specimen was removed by Mr. Cheatle from +a patient who died forty-eight hours after reception of the injury. It +shows well the small amount of gross destruction suffered by the +subcutaneous tissue, and the rapid repair which follows, since +macroscopically the track is scarcely discernible. Reference to plate I. +shows the remarkable fact that even at this early date considerable +progress towards definite healing has occurred, and a thin layer of +stratified epidermis covers the original opening. The question may be +raised whether the origin of this epidermal layer is not in part a +floating up of the margins of the main aperture. + +During the course of healing some variation takes place in the +appearance of the apertures, especially that of entry. This, at first +contracted, later becomes somewhat relaxed, while in many cases a small +halo of ecchymosis develops around it. The blood-clot occupying its +centre now contracts, the margins rapidly become approximated +centripetally, and a small circular dark spot only remains, which is +later replaced by a small red cicatrix. The dark central spot under +these circumstances consists of the contused margin of the wound in the +skin, and a small proportion of blood-clot which finally comes away as a +small dry scab. When slight local infection occurs in place of simple +contraction and dry scabbing, the process is prolonged, the contused +margin separates by granulation, the clot in the opening breaks down, +and a small ulcer of somewhat larger proportions than the original wound +remains and takes some days to heal. + +[Illustration: FIG. 25 (_a_).--_A._ Wound of entry 48 hours after +reception. _B._ Wound of exit, 7-1/2 days after reception. 1. Skin. 2. +Subcutaneous fat carried into the lips of the wound by the bullet. 3. +Infected blood extravasation in subcutaneous tissue. Exact size. (See +plates I. and II.)] + +The aperture of exit in simple wounds of the soft parts sometimes heals +even more rapidly than that of entry, and if of the slit form may be +almost invisible at the end of ten days or a fortnight, actual primary +union having taken place as after a simple small incision. Larger or +irregular exit apertures, however, take a longer period to close than +entry wounds, and this is most often observed when the bullet has +undergone deformation within the body, or bone fragments have been +driven out with the bullet. + +Fig. 25 (_a_), B (plate II.) represents a section of an infected exit +aperture from a patient who died seven and a half days after its +infliction. Two main points of interest are at once apparent: 1. The +carrying forwards of the subcutaneous fat into the lips of the skin +wound by the bullet. This illustrates the manner in which lightly +supported structures are carried forward by the bullet, and throws some +light on the mode by which vessels and nerves may escape by a process of +displacement. This figure may be compared with fig. 25 (_b_) which shows +a tag of omentum similarly carried forward by a bullet crossing the +abdominal cavity and plugging the exit wound. 2. The second feature of +interest is the amount of haemorrhage into the subcutaneous tissue. In +this respect the contrast between the exit and entry apertures is +marked, since in the latter haemorrhage is scarcely apparent. The +presence of such haemorrhages is explained by the same dragging action as +the extrusion of the fat, and is of course dependent on consequent +rupture of small vessels. It is of importance as predisposing the exit +wound to more easy infection, and it accounts for the persisting +subcutaneous induration more often detected beneath healed exit than +entry apertures. Again, it suggests that the presence of blood in the +deeper parts of the tracks may be the determining cause of the indurated +cords often replacing them. + +[Illustration: PLATE II. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +G. L. CHEATLE. + +Mauser Wound of Exit, 7-1/2 days after infliction. Healing delayed by +Infection. About 12/1. + +Section of the exit segment of a Mauser wound, removed seven and a half +days after infliction. Magnified twelve diameters. + +The healing process has been delayed by infection. + +There is no attempt at closure by a layer of epidermis, and the margins +are not depressed. + +The wound track is narrower than that seen in the entry wound plate I., +and completely occluded by a plug of the subcutaneous fat which has been +carried forward by the bullet in its passage. A small wedge-shaped plug +of lymph indicates the position of the actual track at its termination. + +Dragging on the surrounding tissue consequent on the extrusion of the +plug of fat has ruptured some capillaries, and given rise to +considerable extravasation of blood, which is seen as a darker layer in +the deepest portion of the wound. + +Comparison of this plate with the exit wound depicted in fig. 16, p. 56, +explains the nature of the tags of tissue there seen to protrude from +the convex opening. + +Range 800 yards. Seat of wound, abdominal wall below 9th costal +cartilage.] + +_Pari passu_ with the closure of the external openings, healing of the +track takes place, but this is not always so rapid a process as is +apparently the case. In many instances the closure, and even definite +healing, of the external wounds is complete long before the track has +actually healed, even though it be contracted up to complete closure as +far as any cavity is concerned. This is well seen in many cases in which +the exit opening is large as a result of deformation of the bullet, or +the passage of bone splinters in conjunction with it; here, in spite of +absence of all suppuration, the track may remain patent for many weeks. +This may point to infection, but the tardiness in actual consolidation +corresponds with what we are well acquainted with in the case of all +aseptic wounds when a slough has to separate or become absorbed, and it +is therefore only what might be reasonably expected when we remember +that every such bullet track is lined by a thin layer of damaged tissue. + +[Illustration: FIG. 25 (_b_).--Great Omentum carried by the bullet into +an exit track leading from the abdominal cavity. A. Outline of opening +in the peritoneum] + +When fully healed, the points of entry and exit are so insignificant as +to be less obvious than ordinary acne scars, and later are often hardly +visible, but for a considerable period they are often more palpable than +apparent. This depends upon the induration of the line of cicatrix +corresponding to the course of the original track which is adherent to +the two points. The induration is indeed so marked as to occasionally +give rise to the suspicion that a foreign body such as a fragment of +lead or of the mantle of the bullet has been enclosed during the healing +of the wound. + +In the deeper portions of the tracks the extreme density of the cicatrix +is a factor of great prognostic importance, since if it implicates +muscles, tendons, vessels, or nerves, impairment of movement, +circulatory disturbance, or signs of neuritis or nerve pressure are +often witnessed. Thus, for instance, a track traversing the calf, will +more or less tie the whole thickness of the structures perforated at one +spot, and the apertures of entry and exit may be visibly retracted when +the muscles are put in action with consequent pain and stiffness to the +patient. Such pain and stiffness form some of the most troublesome +after-consequences of many simple wounds. It is remarkable for how long +a period after the healing of the wound and resumption of active duty +the patients suffer from pain in and radiating from the locality of the +wound, when fatigued or suffering from stiffness from the prolonged +retention of one attitude or exposure to cold. The cords, however, +eventually completely disappear, and the cicatrices become moveable. The +effects of secondary pressure on the vessels and nerves are considered +under the headings devoted to those structures. + +_Suppuration._--While the occurrence of deep suppuration or septic +phlegmon was rare, local suppuration of the apertures of entry and exit +was seen in a considerable proportion of the wounds. This was referable +to infection from the skin itself, or to infection from without +subsequent to the infliction of the injury. Infection from the skin, +difficult to obviate at all times, is especially likely to occur in +wounds the first dressing of which is often delayed, and which happen to +men sweating freely into clothes the condition of which is at least +undesirable for contact with a recent wound. Beyond this, the first +dressing materials, removed from a soiled tunic by possibly a comrade or +a stretcher-bearer, are scarcely above reproach of the probability of +containing septic organisms themselves. Again, once applied, the +exigencies of the situation often necessitate an amount of movement +fatal to the retention of the dressing over the wound, and a second +opportunity of infection arises before the patient comes into the hands +of the surgeon in the Field hospital. + +The general tendency of such suppurations when they occurred in +uncomplicated flesh wounds was to remain superficial, either involving +the contused margin of the cutaneous opening and the plug of blood-clot +occupying it, and resulting in a slight enlargement of the wound only, +or at most involving the subcutaneous tissue and not extending into the +deep planes of the trunk or limbs. In either case a slight delay in +healing was the most serious result, while constitutional signs of +infection were either absent or of the slightest nature. The same +indisposition to spread by the track was equally noted when a deep +portion became infected from, for instance, the intestine in a belly +wound. + +Wounds of irregular type, however, such as those caused by ricochet +bullets, or accompanying severe fractures, or those caused by fragments +of larger projectiles, often suppurated freely in spite of exposure to +no more unsatisfactory surrounding conditions than the wounds of small +bore. This appears to show conclusively that the first element in the +general slight consequences of small-bore wounds is their calibre, and, +secondly, that increase of velocity on the part of the bullet, while it +in some measure compensates for the loss of volume in the projectile, on +the other hand reacts in favour of the wounded in so far as the injuries +it effects on the soft tissues are ill suited to the development of +septic organisms in the parts. + +_Retained bullets._--These were met with more frequently than might have +been expected, but I can give no idea as to their proportional +occurrence, since so many of the slighter injuries never came under my +observation. Experience, however, showed that the bullets of large +calibre and low velocity employed during the campaign were far more +commonly lodged in proportion to the frequency of their use. Thus I saw +a considerable number of Martini-Henry, Snider, large leaden sporting +bullets, and shrapnel retained. Again, among the bullets of smaller +calibre, the Guedes 8-mm. bullet, which travels at a comparatively low +rate of velocity and with moderate spin, was far more frequently lodged +than the Lee-Metford or Mauser in comparison with the number of Guedes +rifles in use. + +Bullets of small calibre were, however, also retained with some degree +of frequency, either as the result of striking at a long range, or in +such a direction as to need to traverse a large segment of the body +before escaping, or as striking large or several bones, or making some +irregular form of impact: the last was a not infrequent explanation of +lodgment, especially when a bone lay in the course of the track. +Ricochet bullets naturally were especially likely to be retained, both +on account of the low velocity with which they often travel and the +irregularity of their surface with consequent loss of penetrating power. + + +WOUNDS OF IRREGULAR TYPE + +Many of the wounds met with deviated so greatly in appearance and +general characters from what has been described above as to afford +little or no evidence of having been inflicted by small-calibre bullets, +and before describing these it is necessary to give a short account of +the circumstances which are responsible for such departures from the +common type. In the case of the wound of entry, the simplest +explanations are lateral impact on the part of the cylindro-conoidal +projectile, due to the position of the part struck or the direction in +which the bullet has been fired, wobbling on the part of the bullet due +simply to loss of velocity and force in flight, or to turning of the +bullet by impact with an obstacle to its course (ricochet) which may +amount to actual reversal of the striking end. As a rule, in such cases +the size of the aperture of entry exceeds that of exit, and in a large +proportion the bullet is retained within the body. + +Of these explanations that of the 'wobble' needs some passing notice. In +its simplest form it depends merely on loss of velocity of flight on the +part of the bullet, the centre of gravity of which lies behind its +middle; hence a tendency to turn over and over is acquired. As a result +of this, either the side of the tip, the side of the bullet, the side of +the base, or the base itself may form the portion of the projectile +which comes into contact with the body. The tendency to wobble is +naturally greatly increased in ricochet bullets, since the contact, if +lateral, serves to check the spin on which the bullet depends for its +flight on an axis parallel to its long diameter. The first effect of +wobbling is to increase the size and interfere with the regularity of +outline of the wound of entry; but it also acts in a more serious +manner, since the increase of the area of impact augments the resistance +offered by the body; therefore the degree of damage to the tissues is +accentuated and becomes greater than it would be from a bullet +travelling at the same rate on its normal axis. Hence the wounds are +both large and severe, or if the velocity is very low, the projectile is +especially likely to be retained. + +Actual reversal of the bullet usually only slightly enlarges the +aperture of entry, but injuries to cancellous bone are apt to be more +severe when the bullet enters in this manner, or again it is often +retained. I saw several such cases during the campaign. + +Another form of wobble is suggested by Nimier and Laval,[9] of which I +can offer no experience. They suggest that, as rotation slows, the +bullet may on impact wobble like a top before it ceases to spin. +Probably the power of penetration possessed by a bullet wobbling in this +manner would not be very great, but its effect would mainly be altered +in the direction of an abnormal increase in the size of the aperture of +entry, or possibly in the degree of comminution in fractures. + +It is probable that some of the more serious wounds observed were merely +the result of unusual forms of impact with normal flight on the part of +the bullet. The majority, however, depended, in the case of the wound of +exit, on deformation of the bullet within the body, or the propulsion of +bone fragments with it, and, when both apertures were affected, to +previous ricochet on the part of the projectile. + +It is here necessary to give a short account of the more common +deformities met with, and to refer to the special characters possessed +by different types of bullet of small calibre which may affect the ease +with which deformity is produced, and the degree to which it is commonly +carried. The effect of ricochet is to lower the velocity of flight, and +at the same time to effect certain alterations of form in the bullet. +These with rectangular impact in the case of bullets travelling at a low +degree of velocity consist in a bending and deformation of the tip; in +the higher degrees, of bending, shortening, extensive destruction, or +complete fragmentation. If the bullet makes lateral impact, only +widening and flattening result, often with the escape of the lead core +from the mantle. That a ricochet bullet may travel a considerable +distance is shown by the following observations quoted from Nimier and +Laval.[10] + +[Illustration: FIG. 26.--Sections of four Bullets to show relative shape +and thickness of mantles. + +From left to right: 1. Guedes; regular dome-shaped tip; mild steel +mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; at sides of body 0.3 mm. 2. +Lee-Metford; ogival tip; cupro-nickel mantle; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; +gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 3. Mauser; pointed dome tip, steel +mantle plated with copper alloy; thickness at tip 0.8 mm.; gradual +decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. 4. Krag-Joergensen; ogival tip as in +Lee-Metford; steel mantle plated with cupro-nickel; thickness at tip 0.6 +mm.; gradual decrease at sides to 0.4 mm. The measurements of the sides +are taken 2.5 cm. from the tip. Note the more gradual thinning in the +Lee-Metford mantle.] + +Up to a distance of 1,700 to 1,800 metres the bullet may make several +ricochet bounds. When the bullet strikes first at short distances (as +600 metres), it may make several bounds of from 300 to 400 metres: at +moderate distances (as from 600 to 1,200 metres), bounds of 200 to 300 +metres; and at distances above 1,200 metres, bounds of 100 to 200 +metres. The length of the ricochet bounds depends on the angle of impact +of the bullet with the ground, the nature of the slope of the latter, +and the velocity of the bullet. + +Putting aside the question of calibre and volume of the bullets we are +concerned with, I believe the most important variations as serious +effects of ricochet depend on the relative thickness and the composition +of the mantles. Fig. 26 illustrates the relative thickness of the +mantles in the Krag-Joergensen, Mauser, Lee-Metford, and Guedes bullets. +Given an equal degree of force and velocity on the part of the bullet at +the moment of impact, the assumption is justifiable that the thinner +mantles would tear or burst more readily in direct ratio to their +relative thinness. I believe this assumption to be borne out by my own +experience of the common deformities that occurred; but the great +relative frequency with which Mauser bullets came under my observation, +and the difficulty of forming any estimate of the velocity and force +retained by any particular bullet at the moment of impact, make it +impossible for me to express myself with the confidence which I should +wish. + +[Illustration: FIG. 27.--Normal Mauser Bullet] + +The second condition which influences the nature and degree of the +deformities depends on the relative tenacity or brittleness peculiar to +the metal employed in the manufacture of the mantles. In the case of the +Lee-Metford this consists of an alloy of 80 parts of nickel with 20 of +copper. The Krag-Joergensen and Mauser are ensheathed in steel plated +with cupro-nickel, and the Guedes has a plain steel envelope coated with +wax. + +Both as a result of experience in the field gained from ricochet +bullets, and in the hospitals from bullets which had undergone +deformation within the body, I am under the firm impression that the +thin nickel-plated steel envelope of the Mauser bullet splits more +readily than the thicker and more tenacious cupro-nickel envelope of the +Lee-Metford, that the direction of the ruptures is more purely +longitudinal, and the fissuring itself more extensive and complete. + +I append below a series of deformities observed in Mauser bullets, some +of which were collected on the field of battle, but all of which were +familiar to me in bullets removed from the bodies of patients, except +the complete disc shape shown in fig. 29. They correspond with specimens +of which I made sketches at the time of removal from the body, but which +I had not the heart to retain in view of the natural wish of the +patients to keep them as mementoes of their wounds. + +[Illustration: FIG. 28.--Four common types of lateral Mauser Ricochet +Bullets. + +From left to right: 1. Slipper form; slight broadening and turning of +tip. 2. More pronounced degree of form 1, with laceration of the mantle +opposite the shoulder of the bullet. This is the weakest spot, for two +reasons: the alteration in curve at this position, and the junction of +the thickened point of the mantle with the thinner sides. 3. Lateral +ricochet involving nearly whole length of bullet. Rupture of mantle from +broadening of core opposite shoulder. 4. Similar lateral ricochet with +extensive longitudinal rupture of mantle, the latter being turned out +and forming a cutting 'flange.'] + +Slight indentations and deviations from strict symmetry of form of such +degree as not seriously to influence the outline and nature of the +apertures were very common. Beyond these one of the most frequent +primary deformities was that we familiarly spoke of as the 'slipper +form' (No. 1, fig. 28). This results from light glancing contact of the +tip with a hard body: in it the mantle of the bullet is rarely +fractured, and the deformity itself is of slight importance, except in +so far as it may influence the direction of the wound track, which +acquires a tendency to be curved. The tip of the bullet is slightly +flattened and turned up, down, or to one side, according to the point +struck. I saw this deformity frequently, both with Lee-Metford and +Mauser bullets. Nos. 2, 3, and 4 are more pronounced degrees of the same +type of deformity, accompanied by more or less extensive fissuring of +the mantle. No. 4 illustrates the turning out of the longitudinally +fissured mantle in such a way as to make a cutting flange. I have seen +such bullets removed, and the variety is of some importance as +materially increasing the cutting capabilities of the bullet, and +augmenting its area of destructive action. No. 5, fig. 29, is the only +form I have not seen removed, but such a bullet would account for some +of the long irregular gutter wounds observed, if it retained sufficient +velocity to strike with any force. + +[Illustration: FIG. 29.--'Disc'-shaped Lateral Ricochet. This form is of +little practical importance, as the velocity retained by the bullet is +low, and no perforating power would be retained. It is inserted +separately in order to complete the series, shown in fig. 28.] + +Fig. 30 illustrates complete longitudinal fissuring of the mantle. Such +mantles are common, and still more so are the opened-out sheets such as +is shown still attached in fig. 29. Free mantles are often very numerous +on stony ground, but are of little importance, since I never saw +fragments of them removed or impacted. They probably travel a very short +distance after their formation, and if they did strike would possess +little power of penetration. The freed leaden cores do, however, +sometimes enter the body, and some of the specimens removed have been +referred to the use of expanding bullets. In all the Mauser specimens +the longitudinal direction of the fissuring of the mantle is striking. + +[Illustration: FIG. 30.--Ruptured Mauser Mantle, to illustrate the +tendency to complete longitudinal fissuring] + +Fig. 31 represents bullets removed from the body and illustrates types +of deformity due to impact with the bones. The deformity resembles in +some degree that of the mushroomed lead cores, and also indicates that +the shoulder of the cased bullet is its weakest point. Each specimen +exhibits shortening and widening without fracture of the mantle, the +latter being simply thrown into folds; both bullets were lodged in the +thigh after fracturing the femur. The localisation of injury to the fore +part of the bullet, and the fact of expansion, allow us to infer that +the degree of velocity retained on impact with the bone was +comparatively low, and that neither bullet had been exposed to very +severe strain. + +[Illustration: FIG. 31.--Two retained Mauser Bullets which had produced +comminuted fractures of the femur of moderate severity. Each has given +way at the shoulder, but the mantle has developed creases without +rupture, and the bullets are correspondingly bent. Both bullets were +travelling at a moderate if not low degree of velocity] + +Fig. 32 is also of a retained bullet in which the fore part of the +mantle is very extensively fissured and the core set free. In this the +mantle has suffered severely and the leaden core to a less extent. As an +apical ricochet it corresponds with the Lee-Metford shown in fig. 36. + +[Illustration: FIG. 32.--Apical Ricochet Mauser Bullet (see text). The +'mushrooming' of the core is moderate, but the destruction of the +anterior part of the mantle very considerable] + +The deformity found in fig. 32 I met with both in retained bullets and +also in those which had been fired into sand or anthills. The particular +specimen figured was removed from the thigh of a patient wounded at the +battle of Belmont. An irregular entry wound was situated over the +internal tuberosity of the tibia, while a large fluctuating haematoma +existed in the lower third of the thigh, at the upper part of which a +hard elongated body was palpable. As was so often the case with internal +haemorrhages, the patient's temperature rose high, and on the third day +the haematoma was incised by Major Coutts, R.A.M.C. The core of the +bullet was then found in the blood cavity near the surface, but on +introduction of the finger a second body was discovered entangled in the +quadriceps muscle, and this proved to be the tattered mantle. I saw +similar deformity produced within the body by a bullet, which, entering +by a small type aperture in the left ala of the nose, struck the margin +of the right malar bone, and lodged beneath the latter. The similarity +of this bullet to that seen in the ricochet in fig. 32 was exact. The +form is of great importance both on account of the degree of laceration +it effects in the track, the presence of two foreign bodies in the +wound, and from the fact that it can be produced by making the bullet +travel through sand or antheaps, since both the former in the shape of +sandbags and the latter in their natural state so often formed the cover +to men during the campaign. Bullets of 6.5 mm., such as the +Krag-Joergensen, with steel envelopes apparently break up with great ease +in sand. + +Fig. 33 shows a form not uncommon when the bullet comes into contact +with the ribs. It is produced in bullets travelling at a low rate of +velocity and striking by their side. I several times met with it when +the bullet was retained, and also without fracture of the rib. In some +variety it might occur after impact with any narrow margin of bone, and +some importance attaches to the form, since it affords evidence as to +the ease with which alterations in symmetry can be produced in Mauser +bullets. Again its bent outline favours deviation in the further course +of the bullet subsequent to impact with the bone, a result which I +observed on more than one occasion. + +[Illustration: FIG. 33.--Grooved Mauser removed from anterior abdominal +wall after crossing the ribs. I saw several such removed from the +thoracic wall, and am inclined to attribute the grooving to impact with +the margin of the ribs] + +Lastly, the question of actual spluttering or breaking up of the bullets +must be considered. It is extraordinary into how many fragments either a +Lee-Metford or a Mauser bullet may break up if it strike a hard body +while travelling at a high rate of velocity. Fragmentation is exhibited +in the skiagram forming the subject of plate XI. p. 194. It is somewhat +remarkable how often this occurred when the short hard bones of the +metacarpus were struck. With regard to the casing, the separation of +small scales of the nickel plating has already been referred to; +reference to the skiagrams, plates IX. and XVI., shows how readily the +whole thickness of the mantle breaks up into small fragments, even when +the bullet is travelling at moderately low degrees of velocity, and +this I believe to be a special characteristic of the thin +cupro-nickel-plated steel mantles. + +Any variety of cased bullet, however, when it strikes against a stone, +hard ground, or a bone, may be broken into innumerable fragments. The +leaden fragments occasionally show a simple fractured surface, such as +is illustrated on a larger scale by the broken shrapnel bullets shown in +fig. 96, p. 485. More commonly, however, the fragments, if of any size, +appear torn, and if small, are mere spicules. These if of lancet shape +often bury themselves in the skin only, while larger ones may penetrate +deeply or even perforate. Thus, of a group of three officers standing +near a stone on which a bullet struck, all were spattered about the +face; most of the fragments lodged in the skin, but one perforated the +concha of the ear and bruised the mastoid area, while others caused +small jagged cuts. In another instance, both thighs of the patient were +spattered after perforation of the clothes, and a large fragment lodged +beneath the skin of the penis. A case in which larger fragments +perforated and simulated type wounds has already been referred to on p. +44. + +[Illustration: FIG. 34.--Normal Lee-Metford Bullet] + +The above remarks apply, for the most part, to Mauser bullets only, +because my experience of that projectile was far wider than of the +Lee-Metford. The only deformed Lee-Metford bullets that I saw removed +from the body were of the 'slipper' variety, exactly corresponding to +the similarly altered Mausers, and with no fissuring of the mantle. I +saw none so freely deformed as the Mausers depicted in figs. 28, 29, 31, +and 32. + +In spite of diligent search on several battlefields, I was unable to +collect many forms of Lee-Metford ricochet, although I found many +undeformed bullets. I insert here, therefore, some illustrations I +obtained through the kindness of Colonel Hopton, Director of the School +of Musketry at Hythe, which are of interest, and in some degree +substantiate the impression I formed in South Africa as to the greater +stability of the Mark II. Lee-Metford bullet (fig. 34). I am aware that, +as meeting a smooth target at right angles, some of these are not +strictly comparable to the Mauser bullets forming the subjects of the +preceding illustrations, which struck stones, and these mainly by their +sides (if we except figs. 31 and 32), but they sufficiently exhibit the +characters on which I wish to insist. That they support my opinion is +the more probable as, with the exception of the type included above, I +am under the impression that the large majority, if not all, of the +Mauser bullets which struck stones fairly with their tips were broken to +pieces, otherwise I must have met with some among the immense number +which I saw. On the top of Tabanyama, for instance, the whole ground was +littered at the time of my visit with shattered mantles and leaden +cores, deformed almost past recognition. + +[Illustration: FIG. 35.--Apical Lee-Metford Ricochets. From Hythe +targets. Tendency of cupro-nickel envelope to tear in transverse +direction] + +The specimens depicted in figs. 35 and 36 indicate--(1) a greater +malleability on the part of the mantle; thus in fig. 35 the cupro-nickel +is obviously hammered and flattened out, while the fissures are neither +numerous nor extensive. (2) Both bullets exhibit transverse tearing of +the mantle, a common feature in Lee-Metford ricochets, of which I could +offer other examples, but which I less often observed in Mauser +bullets. (3) Tear is the term best expressing the nature of the +fissures, while fracture more nearly expresses the nature of the +fissures in the Mauser mantles. (4) Fig. 36 shows a mushroomed core and +split mantle, which may be compared with the similarly deformed Mauser +depicted in fig. 31. I think the variation in appearance is +characteristic, the fissuring of the mantle being much less extreme, +while the leaden core is normal at its base in consequence of the +support afforded by the more tenacious cupro-nickel mantle. With regard +to complete splitting of the mantles, however, I must add that free +Lee-Metford mantles are often found from bullets fired at the target or +elsewhere, and Nimier and Laval figure numerous forms.[11] + +[Illustration: FIG. 36.--Apical Lee-Metford Target Ricochet. Well-marked +'mushrooming' of core. 'Torn' nature of the fissures in the mantle and +limited extent. Compare with fig. 32] + +_Expanding bullets._--The wounds resulting from perforation with +deformed regulation bullets, such as are described above, differ for the +most part by deviation from the type appearances, and a tendency to take +a less favourable course on account of their increased size and of the +greater degree of laceration of the tissues accompanying them. I must +now pass on to the consideration of the forms of bullet especially +likely to occasion those wounds spoken of as 'explosive' in character, +and my remarks on these must be prefaced by a short description of the +varieties which were in use during the campaign. + +[Illustration: FIG. 37.--Four Soft-nosed Bullets from Boer trenches. + +From left to right: 1. Mauser (.275); small amount of core exposed. 2. +Lee-Metford (.303). 3. Lee-Metford, with larger amount of exposed core, +also cupped apex. This is probably the most effective of these forms. 4. +Mannlicher (.315)] + +These consisted in soft-nosed bullets of the Mauser and Lee-Metford +patterns, Tweedie and Jeffreys modifications of the Lee-Metford and +Mauser, several soft-nosed bullets of a slightly larger calibre, mostly +old Mauser or Mannlicher types, and a large variety of sporting leaden +bullets of larger calibre and volume. Figs. 37 and 43. + +With regard to the various soft-nosed bullets of small calibre, I will +first advert to a feature common to all, which consists in a solid base +to the mantle. In the regulation whole-cased bullets the leaden core is +inserted from the base, and the edge of the mantle is then so turned +over for fixation purposes as to leave the central portion of the lead +exposed. The position of the exposed portion of the core is therefore +reversed in the two varieties. The small experience I had the +opportunity of obtaining was all to the effect that the solid base +considerably increases the stability of the mantle, and I never saw the +latter seriously torn in any specimen either collected on the field or +removed from the body. + +[Illustration: FIG. 38.--Two Soft-nosed Lee-Metford Bullets (see text). +1. Removed from forearm. 2. Removed from beneath skin of back after it +had perforated the scapula. In both the velocity retained was no doubt +low, and neither encountered great resistance] + +Fig. 38, 1, represents a soft-nosed Lee-Metford removed from just below +the lesser sigmoid cavity of the ulna, after it had perforated the +elbow-joint. The soft nose appears to have been torn, and separated by +impact with the bone, but the mantle is little altered. There can be +little doubt, however, that the bullet was travelling at a comparatively +low rate of velocity, since it was retained in the forearm, whence its +various parts were removed by Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C. I picked up a +number of similarly deformed bullets on the field. No. 2 represents a +soft-nosed Lee-Metford which perforated the scapula from the front; the +bullet was retained, hence again velocity cannot have been very high, +and the comminution was slight. If it had passed out, a large exit wound +would, however, have resulted. + +[Illustration: FIG. 39. Soft-nosed Lee-Metford Mantle. Lateral ricochet. +Illustrating effect of solid base in maintaining the stability of the +mantle] + +Fig. 39 represents a type of ricochet sometimes found on the field. In +spite of a considerable amount of violence which has caused the escape +of the core, the fissuring of the mantle is comparatively slight. In +point of fact, the casing is, as a rule, preserved from the severe +violence it suffers when complete, by the flattening and turning over of +the soft nose. I am sorry I cannot append an illustration of a damaged +soft-nosed Mauser, but I am of opinion that those used during the +campaign were not of a very dangerous nature on account of the small +amount of lead exposed. To gain the full advantage of the soft nose at +least a third of the core should be exposed. No. 3, fig. 37, of a +Lee-Metford, probably represents the most effective form of such +bullets. I am inclined to think these bullets as a class, however, are +not more dangerous to the wounded man than the regulation Mauser fired +at short range, if the latter either comes into contact with bone or +suffers ricochet. + +The Tweedie and Jeffreys bullets come under a somewhat different +category. In the Tweedie the top of the bullet is sawn off in such a +manner as to flatten the tip and widen the surface of direct impact, and +to expose the leaden core over a small area. The general principle of +the flat tip resembles that of the French Lebel bullet. In the Jeffreys +modification the mantle is sawn down for about half the length of the +whole mantle, the slits neither reaching tip nor base. I seldom saw +these bullets removed, but they were used to a considerable extent. Fig. +40 illustrates one of Mauser calibre in the possession of Mr. Cuthbert +S. Wallace. It perforated the abdomen, producing fatal injuries, but the +only alteration in outline consists in slight bulging and shortening. +This specimen, however, manifestly suffered but slight resistance. A +somewhat general impression existed that a number of severe injuries had +been produced by the Jeffreys bullets, but it was a matter of +conjecture, as few of them were removed. A weekly illustration appears +in the advertisement sheet of the 'Field,' showing the deformity of some +of them shot into animals, which bear a strong resemblance to the Mauser +figured earlier (fig. 31), and which we have seen can be produced in the +human body by contact of a regulation fully cased bullet with a bone +like the malar. A tendency on the part of the longitudinal slits to +become caught in the rifling of the barrel militates against the use of +this bullet. + +[Illustration: FIG. 40.--Jeffreys modification of Mauser. The bullet is +in the possession of Mr. C. S. Wallace. It perforated the abdomen and +caused death. The bullet is only slightly shortened by bulging at the +shoulder] + +[Illustration: FIG. 41.--1. Section of Mark IV. Lee-Metford. Note +thickness of mantle and exposed core at base. 2. Soft-nosed Mauser. Note +solid base. Short pattern] + +Fig. 41 represents sections of the soft-nosed Mauser, and the British +Mark IV. bullet, and shows the different method of closure of the base. +If the former remarks on the influence of the closed base in maintaining +the stability of the bullet be correct, Mark IV. should be a very +destructive bullet. I have no experience of its use, but I am inclined +to think that here, as elsewhere, the thickness and resistance of the +cupro-nickel mantle would endow it with considerable stability, unless +it met with very great resistance. + +[Illustration: FIG. 42.--Types of Bullets tampered with by the Boers in +the trenches. 1 and 3. Cross-cut tips, Martini-Henry and Lee-Metford. 2. +Groove cut at base of exposed tip of Lee-Metford. Another modification +of the Martini-Henry consisted in boring it longitudinally and inserting +a wooden plug] + +In connection with the subject of soft-nosed bullets, I should mention +that the Boers occasionally extemporised various modifications of them, +such as are shown in fig. 42, with intent to increase the wounding power +of the projectiles. I am unable, however, to give any information as to +the effects produced by these, and I do not think they were often +employed. The illustrations are from cartridges found in trenches which +had been occupied for some time by the Boers, who had no doubt used +their spare time in exercising their ingenuity on the bullets. + +'Explosive' bullets of small calibre were also said to have been +employed; with regard to these I can only say that I never met with any +example of a hollow bullet containing explosive material. + +One officer in a Colonial corps who spoke freely about them, told me he +had 'sawn' them in half and found the cavities, but the method of +investigation he had employed seemed against the presence of any +fulminant in the body of the bullets. Others based their statements on +the fact that they had frequently heard the bullets burst in the air; +but this is probably to be explained by the breaking up of regulation +bullets on impact with stones, which makes a smart crack like a small +explosion. + +A clip of soft-nosed Mauser cartridges, in which a copper centre to the +bullet suggested a percussion-cap, was sent home to the War Office. +Colonel Montgomery has kindly furnished me with the following report on +the bullet: + +'The bullet contains no explosive matter, it is fitted with a hollow +copper tube in the nose, similar to the ordinary "Express" bullet. The +envelope is made with a solid base, which is possible in this bullet +owing to the core being inserted from the front.' + +One cannot help feeling some astonishment at the strong feeling that has +been exhibited regarding the use of expanding bullets of small calibre, +both at the Hague Conference and during this campaign, when the +Martini-Henry, a far more dangerous and destructive missile in its +effects at moderate ranges, is allowed to pass muster without notice. + +Lastly, we come to bullets of large calibre unprovided with a mantle. +The Martini-Henry is practically representative of all these, but I +append a photograph of some twenty out of thirty varieties which came +into my possession during searches amongst captured ammunition. Some of +these were provided with a copper core to facilitate 'setting up,' +others were cupped at the top, and others flattened, to increase the +resistance on impact. I can say little about them except that I believe +some of the forms were responsible for a considerable proportion of the +most severe injuries we met with, in some of which a large and regular +entry made their use certain, while a considerable proportion of them +were retained. In the case of the viscera their power of doing serious +damage was very striking compared with that of the bullets of small +calibre. As with the small sporting bullets I think their use was often +due to the fact that the sporting Boer preferred to use the weapon he +was accustomed to rather than his military weapon. + +A considerable number of the Boers were armed with Martini-Henry rifles, +and this was particularly the case with small bodies of men, rather than +with the larger commandos fighting regular engagements. The Transvaal +Government, moreover, had Martini-Henry rifles made as late as 1898. The +Martini-Henry bullet was responsible for some of the worst fractures +that came under my notice, but it is of interest to remark that its +capability to do damage did not satisfy some of the Boers, who cut them +as is shown in fig. 43. I cannot say what the effect of this manoeuvre +was, although it may have accounted for some of the wounds of the calf +such as are mentioned below. + +Some odd missiles were met with during the campaign; thus, at Ladysmith, +I was told ball bicycle bearings were at one time in use amongst the +Boers. + +_Anatomical characters of wounds of irregular type._--It will be seen +from the above that in dealing with wounds of irregular type we have to +consider those due to irregular impact of normal regulation bullets, to +bullets deformed by contact with bone, to ricochet bullets, and lastly +to bullets of the expanding type. + +No further mention of those due to irregular impact is needful beyond +what has already been said under the heading of wobbling, except to +point out that, given a fair degree of velocity, these injuries may +assume an actual explosive character, especially in the case of skull +fractures. The description of extensive wounds accompanying comminuted +fractures finds its most appropriate place under the heading of injuries +to the bones, and will be there considered (Chapter V. p. 155). + +'Explosive' exit apertures are, however, described as occasionally +occurring in injuries involving the soft parts only. I saw no cases +substantiating this belief, but several were described to me as having +been met with in abdominal injuries, which terminated fatally at an +early date. + +[Illustration: FIG. 43.--Four Soft-nosed Bullets of small calibre shown +in fig. 37. Twenty large-calibre leaden carbine and rifle bullets from +cartridges found in Boer arsenals. These were not very extensively used, +but specimens of most varieties were at times removed from our wounded +men. It will be noted that some are of great weight, and a large +proportion either cupped or flattened at the apex to increase area of +impact and consequent resistance. The 'express' bullet with a copper +core is included in this series. It is worth remarking that all the +bullets of this nature in the Pretoria Arsenal were waxed, and that the +wax retained its white colour on the lead.] + +I still, however, incline to the opinion that the bullet in these cases +had come into contact with some bone, or was one of the larger varieties +of projectile. A few cases of wound of the calf did, however, come under +my observation which presented fairly typical 'explosive' characters +without evidence of solution of continuity of the bones. I will shortly +recount two of them. In the first the exit opening was very large and on +the outer aspect of the limb in the upper third. The bullet had +apparently passed between the bones. Secondary haemorrhage from the +anterior tibial artery necessitated exploration of the wound and +ligature of the vessel (Mr. Carre). When the wound was thus laid open no +injury to the bones could be detected, but I do not consider that it +could be actually excluded. In the second case a wound traversed the +calf transversely, just above the centre; the exit aperture was large +and ragged. Deep suppuration occurred, and the wound had to be laid +open, when a fracture of the tibia without solution of continuity was +discovered. I also saw one or two wounds of the buttock in which very +large exit apertures were present with small entry openings; in these +again it was impossible to exclude passing contact of the bullet with a +part of the pelvic wall. Unfortunately in all these cases it is +impossible to obtain the bullet responsible for the injury. In this +relation I append a diagrammatic illustration of a peculiar wound shown +to me by Mr. Hanwell. In this case a typical small entry wound was +situated at the outer margin of the left erector spinae muscle in the +loin. The bullet had taken a subcutaneous course of not more than +three-quarters of an inch, while the exit opening was a long shallow +wound measuring 4-1/2 in. in length by 1-1/2 in. width. (Fig. 44.) + +The wound was stated to have been received at a distance of from fifty +to a hundred yards. I think we can scarcely assume that impact with the +margin of the erector spinae could have resulted in 'setting up' of the +bullet, while an irregular tongue of skin at the point where the wound +crossed the spines of the lumbar vertebrae did suggest possible bony +contact. That the latter must have been of the slightest nature is +evident, as no signs of concussion of the spinal cord were noted. I +should rather be inclined to compare this case to one of gutter wound +quoted on p. 56, and to assume that the bullet passed so closely +beneath the surface as either to entirely sever the skin, or at any rate +to allow it to give way on flexion of the back on movement. + +[Illustration: FIG. 44.--Small Circular Entry, large 'explosive' skin +wound of back. Track only an inch or less in length (see text)] + +On the ground of the observations made in the foregoing pages it will be +gathered that the opinion I formed was against either the very free use +or the great wounding power of so-called expanding bullets of small +calibre. I believe that a great number of the injuries which were +attributed to the employment of these missiles were produced either by +ricochet regulation bullets of small calibre, or by large leaden bullets +of the Martini-Henry type. + +_Symptoms._--I very much doubt whether the general symptoms observed as +the result of wounds from bullets of small calibre differ in more than +slight degree from those described when larger bullets were regularly +employed. Great variation was met with, but I do not think a diminution +in serious results in this direction corresponding to the comparatively +limited nature of the direct injury to the organs or tissues can be +affirmed. It is true that the immediate symptoms in many patients were +amazingly slight, but after all, this has always been a feature of +gunshot injuries on the field of battle and cannot be assigned a +position of distinctive importance. + +1. _Psychical disturbance and shock._--Some remarkable instances of +psychical disturbance were observed, and although perhaps in no way +influenced by the calibre of the projectile, they seem worthy of note in +this place. Thus a patient wounded over the cervical spine and who +suffered later with a slight degree of spinal concussion emitted an +involuntary shriek like that of a wounded hare on being struck; another +(Martini wound), after receiving a wound of the chest, lost all sense of +his surroundings for a considerable period, and occupied himself in +attempts to write on a white stone lying near him on the veldt; then +suddenly realising his position he was greatly bewildered in trying to +account for his own action. A similar instance of preoccupation is +probably offered by the dead man in the accompanying photograph (fig. +45), whose arms, forearms, and hands had evidently been in play until +the actual moment of death. Again the influence of the psychical state +on the actual occurrence of shock was often illustrated by the mental +condition of the wounded after a battle; thus after the battles of +Belmont and Graspan the patients came into hospital in excellent +spirits, and minimised their injuries in the wish of rapidly regaining +the front; while after the battle of Magersfontein the men were +depressed and miserable, shock was more pronounced, and their sufferings +were undoubtedly greater. + +On the whole, however, shock was by no means a prominent symptom in the +small-bore injuries of soft parts, and was possibly less than when +larger bullets were the rule, and again it was often remarkably slight +after the infliction of serious visceral injury. Still shock was +observed in a considerable proportion of the patients, and its +occurrence appeared to vary under very much the same conditions as +obtain in civil practice. Grades of severity depended on individual +idiosyncrasy, on the degree of excitement or preoccupation at the moment +of injury, and to a certain degree on the range of fire at which the +injury was received. + +[Illustration: FIG. 45.--Note position of head, neck, and forearms in +upper figure] + +The last is the only special factor, and as far as my observation went +it was one of considerable importance. When the soft parts only were +affected, even high velocity did not produce much effect; but when to a +flesh wound a severe bone fracture or injury to any part of the nervous +system was added, shock might be severe or profound. The question of +shock dependent on visceral injury will be considered in succeeding +chapters, but it may be well to state here that the most severe shock +appeared to follow injuries to the central nervous system especially to +the spinal cord, fracture of the larger bones, and wounds of the +abdominal and thoracic viscera, the latter especially when the cardiac +neighbourhood was encroached upon: hence the severity depended almost +solely on the importance of the part injured and the degree of damage +inflicted. I never observed instances of entire absence of shock in +visceral injuries, unless the range of fire had been an especially long +one. + +To these remarks on constitutional shock I should add a few on the +'local shock' exhibited by the actual part of the body struck. The +phenomena were of a severity I was quite unacquainted with in civil +practice, and apparently were attributable to the local vibration +transmitted to the whole structure of a limb or part of the trunk. In +many fractures, and in some wounds of the soft parts alone, without the +direct implication of any large nerve trunk, the loss of functional +capacity of the limb was complete, and this condition persisted for +hours or even days. + +2. _Pain._--As an initial symptom the occurrence of pain varied greatly +with the idiosyncrasy of the patient, and according to the circumstances +under which the wound was received. Some individuals are remarkably +insensitive, and in these the fact of a wound being a gunshot injury in +no way altered their habitual insensibility, but in persons of what may +be termed the normal type in this particular great differences were +observed. + +When a wound was received in the full excitement of battle during a +rapid advance, pain was often slight, or so trifling in degree that it +was almost unnoticed; many patients did not realise that they had been +struck until a second wound, possibly implicating a bone or some +specially sensitive structure, was superadded. In such instances the +pain was often described as 'burning' in character, or even likened to a +'sting from an insect.' Occasionally the pain was referred to a distant +part; thus a man struck in the head first felt pain in the great toe, +and another struck in the abdomen also felt pain in his foot only. Again +in some multiple injuries, pain was only felt in the more sensitive of +the regions implicated; thus a patient in whom a bullet (Martini) +traversed the arm and chest emerging in the neck to again enter the chin +and comminute the mandible, only felt pain in the chin and first +realised that he had been wounded elsewhere when he undressed. A +striking instance of the entire absence of initial pain was afforded by +a man shot through the buttock, the bullet then traversing the abdomen: +this patient remained unaware that he had been hit until on undressing +he found blood in his trousers and exclaimed: 'Why I have got this +bloody dysentery!' None the less his internal injuries were sufficiently +severe to lead to death during the next thirty-six hours. + +Although initial pain might be slight or absent, practically all the +patients complained of some of varying severity at the end of an hour +after reception of the wound. + +In a large proportion of the wounded, however, pain was more or less +severe from the first, and this was especially the case when the men had +been exposed to fire for some hours behind inadequate 'cover.' The most +common descriptions under these circumstances were that they felt as if +they had been struck by 'a brick,' 'a ton of lead,' or 'a +sledge-hammer.' + +3. _Haemorrhage._--This question is fully treated under the heading of +injuries to the blood-vessels. It will suffice here to say that +haemorrhage was rarely of a dangerous nature so far as life was +concerned, unless the large visceral vessels or those in the walls of +serous cavities were concerned, when death was often rapid. From limb +wounds, even when the largest trunks were implicated, the general +tendency was to spontaneous cessation of the haemorrhage. Consequently, +except these patients were seen on the field, one seldom had to deal +with serious bleeding. None the less, the condition of the patients' +clothes bore testimony to a free rush immediately after the injury, and +pools of blood were occasionally found where patients had lain. In +nearly all cases the rush of the bullet determined the initial flow of +the blood from the exit wound, and this aperture usually furnished any +haemorrhage of importance. + +_Diagnosis._--The only diagnostic point which it is necessary to +consider in this chapter is the determination of the nature of the +bullet which has caused the particular injury under observation, and +this is more a matter of interest than importance. + +The primary indication lies in the size of the aperture of entry, which +naturally varies with the calibre of the bullet employed, and the +difference, except in the case of large projectiles, is not always +easily determined, unless we can be sure that the impact of the bullet +was at right angles. In the latter case it is possible to distinguish +even between, for instance, a Lee-Metford and a Mauser wound, if the +resistance likely to be offered by the part struck is kept in mind. A +ricochet bullet, on the other hand, may upset all our calculations, if +size alone be taken as an indication; but here the irregularity of the +wound often serves to exclude one of the larger varieties as the cause. +The appearances of the exit wound are less useful in determining the +nature of the bullet employed, as irregularities of outline are so much +more common whatever projectile may have emerged; but examination of +this wound often gives us useful information as to the existence of an +injury to the bones not involving loss of continuity. + +[Illustration: FIG. 46.--Two flattened Leaden Cores to illustrate means +of determination of nature of bullet. Note ring at base. The right-hand +bullet is probably a 'man-stopping' revolver bullet; it flattened +against bone] + +Other information beyond that furnished by the external wounds may be +gleaned from the presence of fragments of lead in the wound; these, if +unaccompanied by portions of casing, afford some presumptive evidence of +the use of an unsheathen bullet, especially if found on the fractured +surface of the bones; but it must be borne in mind that in the case of +ricochet bullets the leaden core often perforates when entirely freed +from its mantle. Pieces of the mantle again may give useful information +both from examination of their thickness and composition. Lastly a naked +core nearly always retains the marking on its base corresponding to the +turning over of the mantle, this not being likely to suffer impact +calculated to efface the groove. When this groove existed the employment +of any of the soft-nosed bullets used in this campaign might be safely +excluded (fig. 46). + +_Prognosis._--The question of general mortality amongst the wounded has +already been considered (Chapter I. p. 11), and it has been shown, +putting aside those dying at once on the field, or during the first +twenty-four hours, that the mortality was a low one. Some other points +specially dependent on the nature of the injury are, however, worthy of +mention in this place. First, it has been shown, with a slight +reservation as to when a wound can be considered definitely sound, that +if suppuration did not occur, healing was rapid, and that many men with +slight wounds were back with their regiments in the course of a very few +days. Again, that suppuration when it did occur tended to be local in +character; none the less, if it was at all extensive, it often proved +very prolonged and difficult of treatment, while residual abscesses +after apparent healing were not uncommon. In connection with this +subject I may quote from Colonel Stevenson[12] an observation that limbs +the subject of marked local shock are especially liable to furnish +septic discharges. Parts the subject of local shock when infected show a +lesser degree of vitality and power of resistance to the spread of +infection than do normal ones, and if infected do badly. I think I +convinced myself of this on many occasions, and also of the fact that +cases of fracture in which this condition was marked were slow in +consolidating. Again I am inclined to think that the bad results which +sometimes followed the tying of the limb arteries were also consequent +on lowered vitality, and possibly vaso-motor disturbance due to the +effects of the exquisite vibratory force to which the nerves had been +subjected. On this account I was never anxious to hurry operations in +such cases, unless obviously necessary at the moment. + +The larger question of general nervous breakdown as the result of +injuries from bullets of small calibre is at present hardly capable of +an answer, and is so complicated by the co-existence of concurrent +mental anxiety, exposure, &c., that a definite answer will always be +difficult. I think there is already sufficient evidence, however, to +suggest that the remote effects of many of these injuries may be far +more serious than we expected at the moment, especially in the direction +of sclerotic changes in the nervous system. + +_Treatment_.--In view of the remarks on the treatment of special +injuries contained in succeeding chapters, I shall confine myself here +to the question of the treatment of wounds of the soft parts alone. + +This consisted during the campaign in the primary application of the +regulation first field dressing by one of the wounded man's comrades, an +orderly, or less commonly an officer or a medical man. This dressing is +composed of a piece of gauze, a pad of flax charpie between layers of +gauze, a gauze bandage 4-1/2 yards long, a piece of mackintosh +water-proof, and two safety pins, enclosed in an air-tight cover. Mr. +Cheatle,[13] in insisting on the importance of an immediate antiseptic +dressing in the field, recommends the following. A paste contained in a +collapsible tube, made up in the following proportions: Mercury and zinc +cyanide grs. 400, tragacanth in powder gr. 1, carbolic acid grs. 40, +sterilised water grs. 800; sufficient bicyanide gauze and wool for the +dressing of two wounds, a bandage, and four safety pins; the whole +enclosed in a mackintosh bag. The paste possesses the advantage over any +liquid or powder, that it can be applied in any position of the body to +severe wounds, and its application in the open air is not interfered +with by draughts of wind. Mr. Cheatle used a similar preparation with +success during the campaign. + +On arrival at the Field hospital, or in some cases at the station of the +bearer company, the wounds were then commonly dressed as follows: The +parts around the wound were cleansed with an antiseptic lotion, either +solution of perchloride of mercury 1 in 1,000, or 2-1/2 per cent. +solution of carbolic acid. The wound itself was then cleansed, and a +dressing of double cyanide of mercury and zinc applied. This was covered +with a pad of wool and secured with a bandage. The gauze was usually +wrung out in the lotion before application as a precaution against +previous contamination, and the moistening was also useful as helping to +ensure the dressing from subsequent displacement. It was early +recognised that the drier the dressing the better, and hence anything +like a mackintosh layer was carefully avoided. In some instances, +antiseptic powders were employed, but they did not find much favour, and +because they tended to favour slipping of the dressing, and to prevent +the adhesion of the gauze dressing to the wound, they were certainly not +desirable when there was any necessity for the patient to travel. In the +absence of reliable water the use of antiseptic lotions was obligatory, +and such is likely to be the case in most campaigns; in the present one, +filtration of the thick muddy water was impossible, without a +considerable expenditure of time, which could only be obtained when the +hospitals were fairly stationary. I very much preferred carbolic acid +lotions. + +The wound having been once cleansed, or rather the surroundings of the +wound, the drier the surface was kept the better; hence a too heavy or +impervious dressing was not satisfactory; in point of fact, I think some +of the slighter wounds in which all the dressings slipped off, and in +which there was less consequent chance of the dressing being moistened +with the sweat of the patient, did as well as any. + +I do not think the bicyanide gauze, absorbent wool, and common open-wove +bandages, together with a good supply of nail brushes, soap, and +carbolic acid for the primary disinfection of the skin and the external +wound, are to be greatly bettered at the present day as materials for +the first permanent dressing of cases in the field. The wound itself +should be carefully shielded during the preliminary cleansing of the +skin by a firmly applied antiseptic pad, and then the dressing applied +as above described. The one desirable improvement is some mode of +ensuring the dressing being kept in good position, and for this some +form of adhesive covering for the gauze and wool should be devised. When +the atmosphere is such as to allow of rapid drying, thin moistened +book-muslin bandages would be preferable to the plain open-wove ones. +The one period of danger is that of transport, and when that is over, +the dressing in Stationary or Base hospitals should give no trouble. + +As a rule the wounds themselves need no interference, but in some +instances either the exit or entrance wounds may be in undesirable +positions for purposes of asepsis, when a large opening may seem safer +closed and actually sealed. I saw this method tried in a few cases, but +without much success. It is one which might be of much use in Base +hospitals if the patients were brought directly into them, but in the +Field hospitals, in face of the rush with which the first dressings have +to be done, I think it is seldom applicable, and consider the +interference with the wound as rather likely to increase the danger of +infection than to decrease it. + +Dressings should not be too frequent; two should suffice for simple +wounds with type forms of entry and exit; there is little discharge and +usually no bleeding: hence the more the dry scab form of healing can be +simulated the better. When a dressing needs changing from fouling of its +outer parts, it is preferable to cut round the adherent part of the deep +layers and apply some fresh gauze over the central scab rather than to +remove it. One point should be kept in mind: the first dressing in the +Field hospital seals the fate of the wound as to the chances of primary +union, and hence too much care is impossible with it. + +Operations in the Field hospitals were proportionately not numerous, and +they should be kept down in number, as far as possible. At the same time +such operations as are necessary are mostly of capital importance, such +as the treatment of fractures of the skull, abdominal section, the +ligature of arteries, and amputations. Of these only the first and last +classes occur with any degree of frequency. In order to be prepared for +these a stock of filtered water which has been boiled, and some special +sterilised sponges, should be at hand if possible, also some small +towels which can be wrung out in antiseptic lotion. If sterilised +sponges are not to be had, wool pads wrung out in carbolic lotion must +be substituted. + +Primary amputations bore transport badly. I saw few sent down from the +front within a few days of their performance in which the flaps did not +slough, or worse consequences ensue. On the other hand, if the first +fortnight could be tided over at the front, they did well enough. The +head cases on the other hand bore movement fairly well, provided only +that asepsis was ensured. + +Retained bullets are rarely suitable for removal in the rush of the +first work of a Field hospital after an engagement. A short delay is of +no importance, and ensures their being removed safely if necessary. With +regard to the broad question of the advisability of removing them at +all, it may be laid down that they should not be interfered with unless +some obvious reason exists. Those most commonly calling for removal are +as follows: 1. Bullets lying immediately beneath the skin or quite +superficially in any region, or those which, although they have produced +an exit opening, yet lie within the body. 2. Those which lie at the +bottom of an infected track, or cause secondary suppuration. 3. Those +causing pressure on important structures, particularly nerves. 4. Those +which interfere with the movements of joints when lodged in the bones or +soft tissues in close proximity, or those which lie within the articular +cavity itself. Bullets sunk in the great body cavities or in positions +difficult of access should never be interfered with. Retained bullets +sometimes give rise to unexpected surprises; thus in a man with a +retained bullet in the pelvis no steps for its removal were taken. +During the man's voyage home on a transport he had an attack of +retention of urine. As a catheter would not pass, he was placed in a +warm bath, and shortly after passed a Mauser bullet per urethram, and +thus saved himself a cystotomy. + +One word may be added as to the treatment of shock when severe. Quiet in +the supine position, and the administration of a small amount of +stimulant, was usually all that was required. Hypodermic injections of +strychnine sulph. grs. 1/30 to 1/10 were useful, and in some severe +cases, especially where operations were needed, saline infusions with a +small amount of stimulant were made into the veins, either at the elbow, +or in amputation cases into one of the large veins exposed. + +The treatment of haemorrhage is dealt with in Chapter IV. + +The after treatment of simple wounds needs little comment, but bearing +in mind what has been said as to the definite healing of the internal +portion of the tracks, it will be obvious that in parts such as the +thigh or calf, care was needed as to not commencing active work at too +early a date. On the other hand, a too long period of absolute rest is +also to be deprecated. The best results were obtained by careful +movement and massage, commenced after the first week or ten days, +according to the appearance presented by the external wound, followed by +a gradual resumption of active movement. It was a striking fact that +some of the patients suffering from such wounds took longer to become +apparently well than many of those who had suffered visceral injuries. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[9] _Loc. cit._ p. 31. + +[10] _Loc. cit._ p. 100. + +[11] _Loc. cit._ pp. 54, 55. + +[12] _Wounds in War_, p. 83. Longmans & Co. 1897. + +[13] A First Field Dressing, _Brit. Med. Jour._ 1900, vol. ii. p. 668. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +INJURIES TO THE BLOOD VESSELS + + +The small calibre of the modern bullet, and its tendency to take a +direct course, naturally favour the occurrence of more or less +uncomplicated wounds of the large vascular trunks, and both the nature +of these wounds and the results which follow them are in some respects +most characteristic. + + +NATURE OF THE LESIONS + +1. _Contusion or laceration without perforation._--(_a_)The vessel may +be struck laterally, the injured portion then forming a part of the +bounding wall of the wound track, or (_b_) one or more layers of the +vessel wall may be destroyed over a limited area. Given primary union, +these conditions are only of importance in so far as subsequent +contraction of the lumen of the vessel may result from implication in +the neighbouring cicatrix. One of the most striking features of the +wounds as a whole was seen in the hair-breadth escapes of the large limb +vessels with no subsequent ill effects, and such injuries were seen in +every situation. + +In a certain proportion of wounds in close proximity to large vessels, +however, a diminution of the normal calibre of the arteries was +observed, either shortly after the injury or later in the advanced +stages of cicatrisation. As an example of early obstruction, the +following may be related. A Mauser bullet passed from the inner side of +the thigh across the neck and great trochanter of the femur beneath the +femoral vessels, and probably struck and grooved the bone, since the +aperture of exit was large and irregular, some 3/4 of an inch in +diameter. One week later no pulse was palpable in either anterior or +posterior tibial arteries at the ankle, and pulsation which was strong +in the common femoral artery was very weak in the superficial femoral. +Slight fulness existed in the hollow of Scarpa's triangle, but not +sufficient to make any serious difference in the contour of the two +limbs. No thrill or abnormal murmur was discoverable. There was no +oedema of the limb, which was also normal in temperature. The patient +was kept at rest in the supine position for three weeks, during which +time the tibial pulses gradually returned. Three weeks later he was +invalided home, the pulses, however, still remaining considerably +smaller than normal. + +In the advanced stages of cicatrisation narrowing of the lumen of the +trunk vessels was far from uncommon, especially in cases of wounds of +the arm crossing the course of the brachial artery; in many of these the +radial pulse was diminished almost to imperceptibility. How far this +condition may prove permanent there has been little opportunity of +judging; nor as to the possible ultimate weakening of the vessel wall +and the development of a secondary aneurism has time allowed the +acquisition of experience. In the light of the observation of so many +cases in which large vessels were wounded without the occurrence of +severe haemorrhage, either primary or secondary, it is impossible to be +certain whether some of the cases of arterial obstruction were not +secondary to perforating lesions of the vessels. + +Pressure on, or minor lesion of the vessel was sometimes evidenced by +the development of a murmur, as in the following case. A Mauser bullet +entered immediately within and below the left coracoid process, and +emerged at the back of the arm at its inner margin, 2-1/2 inches above +the junction of the right posterior axillary fold. During the first week +dysphagia and some pain and soreness in the episternal notch, with pain +and difficulty of respiration, were noticed. Eight weeks later no +trouble with the pharynx or oesophagus remained, but a short sharp +systolic murmur was audible over the first part of the left axillary +artery, which could be extinguished by pressure on the subclavian; the +radial pulse was normal.[14] + +When primary union failed or was prevented by infection and +suppuration, lesions, although incomplete, of the vessel coat naturally +frequently gave rise to secondary haemorrhage. + +2. _Perforation of the vessels._--(_a_) This may be oblique or +transverse to the long axis of a trunk; when the vessel is impinged upon +laterally, an oval or circular notch, as the case may be, is produced; +or (_b_) the bullet may strike more or less in the centre of the vessel, +perforating both in front and behind, while lateral continuity is +maintained; (_c_) beyond these degrees a vessel may, of course, be +completely divided. Cases of notching of the vessel will be referred to +under the heading of traumatic aneurism; those of perforation under that +of aneurismal varix and varicose aneurism, the perforations in these +cases affecting a parallel artery and vein. + + +RESULTS OF INJURY TO THE VESSELS + +1. _Haemorrhage._--The fact that haemorrhage was not a prominent feature +in the wounds received during this campaign can scarcely be regarded as +an experience confined to injuries caused by bullets of small calibre. +The same observation was often made in the case of larger bullets in old +days, and the absence of severe haemorrhage has previously been regarded +as a special characteristic of gunshot wounds. None the less, as high a +proportion as 50 per cent. of deaths occurring on the field in earlier +days has been ascribed to this cause. + +Unfortunately no new facts can be furnished on this point, although a +few cases of rapid death from primary haemorrhage will be found recounted +under the heading of visceral injuries. Beyond these the general +evidence offered by observations on men brought in from the field with +vascular injuries, was opposed to the frequent occurrence of death from +haemorrhage, at any rate of an external nature. This subject will be +dealt with under the classical three headings of primary, recurrent, and +secondary haemorrhage. + +_Primary haemorrhage._--A marked distinction needs to be drawn between +external and internal haemorrhage. External haemorrhage from the great +vessels of the limbs, or even of the neck, proved responsible for a +remarkably small proportion of the deaths on the battlefield. This +statement may be made with confidence, since it is not only my own +experience, but coincides with what I was able to glean from many +medical officers with the Field bearer companies. It is, moreover, +supported by the facts that cases in which primary ligature had been +resorted to were extremely rare at the Base hospitals, while, on the +other hand, traumatic aneurisms and aneurismal varices of any one of the +great trunks of the neck and limbs were comparatively common. Again, +primary amputation for small-calibre bullet wounds, except when +complicated by severe injury to the bones, was so rare as to render more +than doubtful the frequent occurrence of severe primary haemorrhage on +the field. Only one case of rapid death due to bleeding from a limb +artery was recounted to me. In this a wound of the first part of the +axillary artery proved fatal in the twenty minutes occupied by the +removal of the patient to the dressing station. The amount of haemorrhage +in many instances was no doubt checked by the application of pressure at +the time of the first field dressing; but it can scarcely be argued that +such dressings as were applied were of sufficient firmness to control +bleeding from such trunks as the brachial, femoral, or carotid arteries. + +The spontaneous cessation of haemorrhage is rather to be ascribed to the +special method of production and the consequent nature of the wound. The +lesions were the result of immense force strictly localised in its +application, which might well induce very complete and rapid contraction +of the vessel wall; while the track in the soft parts was not only +narrow, but also lined by a thin layer of tissue possibly so devitalised +superficially as to specially favour rapid coagulation of the blood. +Beyond this the tracks were often sinuous when the position of the limb +at the time of reception of the injury was replaced by one of rest. The +influence of mere narrowness of the track is illustrated by classical +experience in the development of aneurismal varices after stabs by +knives or bayonets; and in the injuries under consideration the frequent +development of large interstitial haemorrhages into the tissues of the +limbs indicated that blood does not readily travel along the wound +track. It was noteworthy that when haemorrhage did occur it was most free +from, or often limited to, the wound of exit. This is due to the +direction of the active current set up by the rush of the bullet through +the tissues. The mechanical factor is, no doubt, the most important. + +Control of primary haemorrhage from a wounded vessel by the impaction of +a foreign body was of much less frequent occurrence than appears to have +been the case with the older bullets. I saw a case in which, on removal +of a fragment of shell (Mr. S. W. F. Richardson), very free haemorrhage +occurred from a wound of one of the circumflex arteries of the thigh, +but not a single one in which a similar result followed the extraction +of a bullet of small calibre. The comparative infrequency of retention +of modern bullets is probably one of the main elements in this relation. +A very curious instance of provisional plugging of a wound in the upper +part of the brachial artery by an inserted loop of the musculo-spiral +nerve was related to me by Mr. Clinton Dent. This instance must, I +think, be regarded as an accident definitely dependent on the size and +outline of the bullet and on the nature of the force transmitted by it +to neighbouring structures. + +While, however, deaths from external primary haemorrhage were rare, a +considerable number resulted from primary internal haemorrhage. In some +of these, injury to the largest trunks in the thorax or abdomen led to +an immediately fatal issue; in others wounds of the large visceral +arteries, as of the lungs, liver, or mesentery, were scarcely less rapid +in their results. In such cases the potential space offered by the +peritoneal or pleural cavities favours the ready escape of blood from +the wounded vessel, while the tendency of the blood effused into serous +cavities to rapid coagulation is notably slight. Beyond this the +comparative deficiency in direct support afforded by surrounding +structures to vessels running in the large body cavities is also an +important element in their behaviour when wounded. + +These remarks receive support from the observation that few, if any, +patients survived an injury to the external iliac vessels within the +abdomen, while the remarkable instances of escape from fatal haemorrhage +from large vessels recorded below (cases 1-19) indicate that the mere +size of a wounded vessel is not to be regarded as the sole factor in +prognosis. + +_Recurrent haemorrhage_ was occasionally met with both in the case of the +limb and trunk vessels. In the limbs it often necessitated ligature of +the artery. I saw several cases in the lower extremity where recurrent +haemorrhage on the second or third day was treated by ligature of the +femoral or popliteal artery, and it also occurred during the course of +development of one of the carotid aneurisms recounted below. On two +occasions I saw rapid death follow recurrent abdominal haemorrhage; in +one I was standing in a tent when a man who had been wounded the day +before suddenly exclaimed: 'Why, I am going to die after all.' The +appearance of the man was ghastly, and on examining the abdomen it was +found greatly distended, and with dulness in the flanks; the patient +expired a few minutes later. Another example of recurrent abdominal +haemorrhage is related in case 169, p. 432. + +_Secondary haemorrhage._--In simple wounds of the soft parts by +_small-calibre bullets_ this was decidedly rare. In wounds complicated +by fractures of the bones, especially when they exhibited the so-called +'explosive' character, secondary haemorrhage was not uncommon, and this +not necessarily in conjunction with infection and suppuration. + +In the chapter on fracture some remarks will be found on the +prolongation of healing often observed in the exit portion of the wound +track, which is explained by the well-known fact that, given an aseptic +condition of the wound, sloughs of tissue separate very slowly. +Secondary haemorrhage in these cases is due to lesions of the vessel +short of perforation, but severe enough to so lower the vitality that +local gangrene of the wall occurs. In such instances haemorrhage most +usually occurred on the tenth to the fourteenth day, but occasionally +still later. In one instance of ligature of the anterior tibial artery +for such haemorrhage three-quarters of the whole lumen of the vessel had +been devitalised. The resemblance of some cases of secondary haemorrhage +of this class to those occasionally observed after amputation, and due +to accidental non-perforative injury of the artery at the time of +operation above the point of ligature, was very striking. + +In other cases secondary haemorrhage was the result of perforation of the +vessel by a sharp spicule of bone, but in the large majority sepsis and +suppuration were the cause. Naturally therefore the accident was +commoner in the more severe kinds of wound, and in those caused by +_large_ bullets or fragments of shell. The symptoms in nearly all cases +were the classical ones of repeated small haemorrhages followed by a +sudden copious gush. + +The forms of secondary haemorrhage, however, which afforded most interest +were the interstitial and the internal, mainly on account of the scope +they allowed for diagnosis. + +Characteristic examples of internal secondary haemorrhage are furnished +by cases of chest injury accompanied by haemothorax and fully dealt with +under that heading (Chapter X.). Cases of interstitial secondary +haemorrhage are also described under the heading of traumatic aneurism +and abdominal injuries (No. 194, p. 445). It therefore suffices here +merely to remark on the diagnostic difficulties the condition gave rise +to. These mainly depended upon the elevation of general bodily +temperature by which the haemorrhage was often accompanied. Further +evidence of the condition was furnished by the development of local +swellings, or physical signs indicative of the collection of fluid in a +serous cavity. These signs developed rapidly, and the rise of +temperature was sudden and decided enough to suggest commencing +suppuration. In several cases incisions were made under the supposition +that this had already occurred. + +The fever accompanying blood effusions was generally a somewhat special +feature in the wounds of the campaign. At first bearing in mind that in +every case a track, even if closed, led from the surface to the effused +blood, one was disposed to suspect an infection of the clot of a +somewhat innocuous nature. The absence of subsequent suppuration, +however, was definitely opposed to this view, and suggested that the +fever resulted from absorption of some element of the blood, possibly +the fibrin ferment, or some form of albumose. A pronounced illustration +was in fact afforded of the evanescent rise of temperature usually the +accompaniment of simple fractures in the case of the limbs, and of the +more marked rise not uncommon in cases of traumatic blood effusion into +the peritoneal cavity, or when the pleurae or joints were the seats of +the mischief. In the case of interstitial haemorrhages I only remember to +have seen fever of such marked continued type in the subjects of +haemophilia with recent effusions, although one is of course acquainted +with it in a less pronounced form as a result of haemorrhage into +operation wounds. + +In primary interstitial haemorrhages a similar continued rise of +temperature was also common, and I cannot perhaps better illustrate its +character than by the brief relation of two instances. + +In a patient wounded at Kamelfontein the bullet entered four inches +below the acromion, pierced the deltoid, splintered the humerus, and +crossed the axilla. A large blood extravasation developed in the axilla, +accompanied by cutaneous ecchymosis extending halfway down the arm. +There was no perceptible pulsation in either the brachial or radial +artery, but the limb was warm. There was partial paralysis of the parts +supplied by the ulnar and musculo-spiral nerves and complete loss of +power and sensation in the area of distribution of the median nerve. Six +months later the radial pulse was still absent in this patient, but +there was no sign of the development of an aneurism. + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 1.--Axillary Haematoma. Shows range of +temperature during process of absorption and consolidation without +suppuration] + +The accompanying temperature chart is characteristic. The blood +effusion gradually gained in consistency and underwent steady diminution +in size. No suppuration occurred. + +The median paralysis was found to be accompanied by the inclusion of the +nerve in a sort of foramen of callus, when the patient was explored at a +later date by Mr. Ballance. + +In a patient wounded at Paardeberg, a Mauser bullet entered by the left +buttock, pierced the venter ilii, traversed the pelvis, and emerging at +the brim of the latter, crossed the back, fractured the spine of the +fourth lumbar vertebra, and escaped below the twelfth right rib. The +track suppurated where it crossed the back, but the man did well until +the twentieth day, when a swelling developed in the left iliac fossa and +the general temperature rose to 102 deg.. An abscess was at once suspected +and the swelling incised by Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C. A large +subperitoneal haematoma only was discovered, and evacuated. The +temperature at once fell and the after progress was uneventful, the +wound healing by primary union. + + +TREATMENT OF HAEMORRHAGE + +_Primary._--No deviation from the ordinary rules of surgery should be +necessary in the majority of cases, but in a certain number the +conditions are so unusual that the special considerations must be taken +into account. The natural tendency to spontaneous cessation of primary +haemorrhage in small-calibre wounds is the first of these. Experience has +shown that often mere dressing, or at any rate slight pressure, suffices +to efficiently stanch immediate bleeding. Although, however, immediate +control is to be obtained by such means, the cases of traumatic aneurism +of every variety related in the next section show that the ultimate +result is in many such cases by no means satisfactory. + +Under these circumstances it may be said that the classical rule of +ligation at the point of injury should never be disregarded. Against +this, however, certain objections may be at once raised; thus in many +cases both artery and vein need ligature, a consideration of much +importance in the case of such vessels as the carotid and femoral +arteries. Again in many of the injuries to the popliteal artery the +wound directly communicated with the knee joint, a complication which, +while it may be disregarded in civil practice, must take a much more +important place in the circumstances under which many operations in +military surgery are performed. + +On the whole, it seems clear that the military surgeon must be guided by +circumstances, since it may be far better to risk the chances of +recurrent haemorrhage, or the development of an aneurism or varix, all of +which are amenable to successful treatment later, than those of gangrene +of a limb or softening of the brain. As a general rule, therefore, on +the field or in a Field hospital, primary ligature of the great vessels +is best reserved for those cases only in which haemorrhage persists, +while in those in which spontaneous cessation has occurred, or in which +bleeding is readily controlled by pressure, rest and an expectant +attitude are to be preferred. + +A word must be added as to the objections to distant proximal ligature +for primary or recurrent haemorrhage. In some situations this may be +unavoidable, and it is sometimes successful, but none the less it is +opposed to all rules of good surgery and a most uncertain procedure. It +leaves the patient exposed to all the risks attendant on the employment +of simple pressure. In one case which I saw, the third part of the +subclavian artery had been ligatured for axillary bleeding; secondary +haemorrhage, as might have been expected, occurred, and that as late as +five weeks after the operation. In another case ligature of the femoral +artery for popliteal haemorrhage was followed by the development of a +traumatic aneurism in the ham. + +_Secondary._--In secondary haemorrhage the treatment to be adopted +depends upon the nature of the case. When the wound is aseptic, and +bleeding the result of the separation of sloughs, local ligature is the +proper treatment, and this was often successfully adopted, especially in +the case of such arteries as the tibials. In septic cases, on the other +hand, it is usually far better if possible to amputate, unless the +general state of the patient and the local conditions are especially +favourable. + +When neither amputation nor direct local ligature is practicable, +proximal ligature may be of use. Sometimes this may be obligatory in +consequence of the difficulties attendant on direct local treatment. I +saw a few cases successfully treated in this manner: in one the common +carotid was tied (Mr. Jameson) for haemorrhage from an arterial haematoma +in connection with the internal maxillary artery. Although ligature of +the external carotid would perhaps have been preferable, the result was +excellent. When even this expedient is impracticable, local pressure is +the only resort. + +Lastly, as to the treatment of secondary interstitial blood effusions, I +believe the best initial treatment is the expectant. If interference is +needed, it is much more likely to be satisfactory the more chronic the +condition has become, since the source of the bleeding may be impossible +to discover. I never saw a patient's life endangered by the amount of +such haemorrhage, but if this should seem to be likely, local treatment +is of course unavoidable. In several cases quoted below, incision and +evacuation were followed by excellent results; in any such operation too +much care to ensure asepsis is impossible. + + +TRAUMATIC ANEURISMS + +The experience of the campaign fully bears out that of the past as to +the steady increase of the number of aneurisms from gunshot wounds in +direct ratio to diminution in the size of the projectiles employed. +Every variety of traumatic aneurism was met with, and most frequently of +all, perhaps, aneurismal varices and varicose aneurisms. While so +experienced a military surgeon as Pirogoff could say, in 1864, that he +had never seen a case of aneurismal varix, every young surgeon lately in +South Africa has met with a series. Again, although the condition is a +well-known one, it has been rather in connection with civil life; for +the great majority of recorded cases were the result of stabs or +punctured wounds such as are liable to be received in street brawls, or +as a result of accidents with the tools of mechanics. Thus of ninety +cases collected by K. Bardeleben in 1871, only 12 or 13.33 per cent. +were the result of gunshot wound. + +_False traumatic aneurism or arterial haematoma._--This condition was met +with comparatively frequently, and bears a very close relation to that +already described under the heading of interstitial haemorrhages. The +latter might almost have been included here, since the difference +between the two conditions depended merely on the size of the vessels +implicated. The exact correspondence in the period of development of +some of the arterial haematomata, and of the occurrence of the aseptic +form of secondary haemorrhage, also explains the pathology of the two +conditions as identical; except that in the former the effused blood is +retained in the tissues, while in the latter it escapes externally. The +history of these cases was uniform and characteristic. A wound of the +soft parts, or sometimes a fracture, was accompanied by a certain degree +of primary interstitial haemorrhage, which might or might not have been +associated with external bleeding. A haematoma resulted in connection +with the wounded vessel, the general tendency in the effusion being to +coagulation at the margins and subsequent contraction. Meanwhile the +opening in the artery became more or less securely closed by the +development of thrombus, and possibly by retraction of the inner and +middle coats of the vessel. With the return of full circulatory force as +shock passed off, or with the resumption of activity and consequent +freer movement of the limb, the temporary thrombus became washed away. +The newly formed wall of soft clot bounding the effusion proved +insufficient to withstand the full force of the blood pressure, and +extension of the cavity resulted. In the more rapidly developing +haematomata, temporary pressure by the effused blood on the bleeding +vessels was also, no doubt, a common explanation of temporary cessation +of increase in size. + +A diffuse soft fluctuating swelling, sometimes accompanied by pulsation, +but oftener without, developed, and not uncommonly diffusion was +accompanied by some discoloration of the surface and elevation of the +general temperature. Such arterial haematomata commonly developed from +ten days to three weeks after the original wound. A few examples will +suffice. + + (1) A patient wounded at Elandslaagte was sent down to Wynberg. + The antero-posterior wound in the upper third of the arm was + healed, but a month after the injury a large fluctuating + arterial haematoma developed in the axilla and upper third of + the arm. This was incised (Colonel Stevenson) and a wound of + the axillary artery in its third part discovered, and the + vessel ligatured. The patient made an excellent recovery. + + (2) A patient received a wound at Doornkop which traversed the + calf in an obliquely antero-posterior longitudinal direction. + Three weeks later a soft fluctuating swelling developed at the + inner margin of the tendo Achillis occupying the lower third of + the leg. Neither pulsation nor murmur was detected. There was + anaesthesia in the area of distribution of the posterior tibial + nerve. No tendency to further increase was observed, and + operation was postponed. The temperature was normal. + + (3) An Imperial Yeoman was struck at Zwartskopfontein at a + range of one hundred yards. The man rode four miles on his + horse after being hit, but the horse then fell and rolled over + him twice. The man was treated successively in the Van Alen, + Boshof, and Kimberley Hospitals, and from the last he was sent + to Wynberg which place he reached on the twenty-third day. When + admitted into No. 2 General Hospital the wounds of type form + and size (_entry_, in posterior fold of axilla; _exit_, 1-1/2 + inch below junction of anterior fold with arm) were healed. The + whole upper arm was swollen and discoloured, while an indurated + mass extended along the line of the vessels into the axilla. + This was considered a blood effusion; it was not obviously + distensile, and pulsation was very slight. The brachial radial + and ulnar pulses were absent. A fluctuating swelling was + present along the anterior border of the deltoid. There were + some signs of nerve contusion, but no paralysis, beyond tactile + anaesthesia in the area of distribution of the median nerve. + + Four days later little alteration had been noticed beyond a + tendency to variation in firmness of the different parts of the + swelling. On the thirty-first day considerable enlargement was + observed. This enlargement, together with continued rise of + temperature, aroused the suspicion of suppuration, and an + exploratory puncture with a von Graefe's knife was made by + Major Lougheed, R.A.M.C., after consultation with Professor + Chiene. Blood clot first escaped, followed by free arterial + haemorrhage. The incision was enlarged while compression of the + third part of the subclavian was maintained; a large quantity + of clot was turned out, and an obliquely oval wound half an + inch in long diameter was found in the axillary artery. + Ligatures were applied above and below the opening between the + converging heads of the median nerve. The veins were not + damaged. The wound healed by first intention. On the twelfth + day a feeble radial pulse was perceptible, and shortly + afterwards the man left for England, diminished median tactile + sensation being the only remnant of the original symptoms. + + (4) A private of the 2nd Rifle Brigade was struck while + doubling at Geluk, at a range of one hundred yards. The Mauser + bullet entered four inches above the upper border of the left + patella, internal to the mid line of the limb, and escaped in + the centre of the popliteal space. The man lay in a farmhouse + during the night and bled considerably from both wounds. He did + not fall when struck, but could not walk. He was sent to No. 2 + General Hospital in Pretoria. On arrival there the external + wounds were scabbed over, and a large tumour existed beneath + the entrance wound. There was much discoloration from + ecchymosis, but no pulsation could be detected. The posterior + tibial pulse was good. At the end of ten days pulsation became + marked both in the front of the limb and in the popliteal + space. There were no symptoms of nerve injury. On the + thirteenth day an Esmarch's bandage was applied and Major + Lougheed laid the tumour open opposite the opening in the + adductor magnus. Much clot was removed, and both artery and + vein, which were found divided in the adductor canal, were + ligatured. + + The foot remained very cold for the first twenty-four hours, + but otherwise progress was satisfactory, the wound healing by + first intention. No pulsation was palpable in the tibials at + the end of a month. + +For the last two cases I am very much indebted to Major Lougheed. I am +glad to include them, as they illustrate one or two points of special +importance. No. 3 shows the tendency to variation in the tension and +firmness of the tumours, the tendency to primary contraction of the sac, +followed by diffusion, and the rise of temperature often accompanying +the latter occurrence. This is of great interest in relation to the +similar rise of temperature seen with the increase of haemorrhage in +cases of haemothorax. For purposes of comparison, the progress may well +be considered alongside of that in the case related on p. 119, in which +the wounded vessel was probably also the main trunk itself. + +No. 4 differs from any of the others in depending on a complete division +of a large artery and vein. The development of the haematoma was +consequently more rapid and continuous. Another point of interest was +the maintenance of pulsation in the tibial vessels, in spite of complete +solution of continuity in the parent trunk. That this was independent of +the collateral circulation seems evident from its complete disappearance +and slowness of return after ligation of the wounded vessels. + +_Prognosis and treatment._--The treatment in these cases is sufficiently +obvious, and consists in direct incision and ligature of the wounded +vessels. The cases related show the success with which this procedure +was attended, since uniformly good results were obtained. When possible, +an Esmarch's tourniquet should be applied in the case of the lower limb. +In the upper, compression of the subclavian is necessary during +interference with axillary haematomata, combined with direct pressure on +the bleeding spot after the clot has been removed. In the case of the +arm, digital compression is always to be preferred, in view of the +well-known danger of damage to the brachial nerves from the tourniquet. + +Proximal ligature is always to be avoided. It is inadequate, and proved +more dangerous as far as the vitality of the limb was concerned, the +latter point probably depending on the interference with the collateral +circulation by pressure from the extravasated blood, which is unrelieved +by the operation. I know of at least two cases of gangrene which +occurred consecutively to proximal ligature of the femoral artery for +this condition. + +_True traumatic aneurisms._--The cases met with differed so little from +those seen in ordinary civil practice, that but slight notice of them is +necessary. They differed from the last variety mainly in the more +localised nature of the tumour, the greater firmness of its walls, and +the more pronounced expansile pulsation. The development of this form of +aneurism was probably influenced by several circumstances, such as the +more complete rest secured for the patient, the locality in the limb as +affecting movement of the spot in the vessel actually wounded, the size +of the opening in the vessel, and the degree of support afforded by +surrounding structures. (Examples are furnished by cases 6-9.) + +Under the influence of rest, all that I saw tended to contract and +become firmer, and they so far resembled spontaneous aneurisms as to be +readily cured by proximal ligature of the artery. The ideal treatment no +doubt consists in local incision and ligature on either side of the +wounded spot, with or without ablation of the sac. The choice of direct +or proximal ligature in any case depends on the position of the +aneurism, and the ease with which the former operation can be carried +out. In all these cases a very great advantage in the localisation and +diminution of the tumours was gained by postponing interference until +they became stationary. I need scarcely add that any evidence of +diffusion indicated immediate operation. The preference of direct or +proximal ligation will probably, to a certain extent, always depend on +the personal predilection of the surgeon, but while proximal ligature +has often given good immediate results during this campaign, it cannot +be with certainty decided whether the patients are definitely protected +from the dangers of recurrence. + +Reference to cases 7 and 9 as illustrating the possible spontaneous cure +of traumatic aneurisms is of great interest. + +I saw a number of cases successfully treated by proximal ligature; also +a number where continuous improvement followed rest, and which were sent +home for further treatment. None of these demand any special mention. + +One case of a very special nature, which terminated fatally, is of great +interest:-- + + (5) In a man wounded at Belmont the bullet entered the second + left intercostal space and was retained in the thorax. He was + sent directly to the Base and came under the care of Mr. + Thornton at No. 1 General Hospital, Wynberg. Signs of wound of + the lung developed in the form of haemoptysis and left + haemothorax. The left radial pulse was almost imperceptible. + + The entry wound did not close by primary union, and three weeks + later an incision was made into the chest in consequence of the + presence of fever, progressive emaciation, and weakness. + Breaking down blood clot was evacuated: general improvement + followed, and the radial pulse increased considerably in + volume. + + A fortnight later sudden severe haemorrhage occurred from the + external wound, and the man rapidly collapsed and died. At the + post-mortem a traumatic aneurism the size of an orange was + found in connection with an oval wound in the first portion of + the left subclavian artery which admitted the tip of the + forefinger. + +This case is noteworthy as an illustration of the magnitude of an artery +which can be wounded without leading to rapid death from primary +haemorrhage, even when in communication with a serous sac, and still more +as emphasising the importance of weakening of the radial pulse as a sign +in connection with a wound of the upper part of the chest on the left +side. It is somewhat surprising that this sign was not marked in two +cases (Nos. 13 and 14, p. 140) recorded below, in which the innominate +and right carotid arteries respectively were probably perforated. + + (6) _Traumatic popliteal aneurism._--Wounded at Modder River. + _Entry_ (Mauser), over centre of tibia 1 inch above the + tubercle. _Exit_, about centre of popliteal space. No + haemorrhage of any importance occurred from the wound, but there + was a typical haemarthrosis, which subsided slowly. Twelve days + after the injury a pulsating swelling the size of a hen's egg, + to which attention was drawn on account of pain, was noted in + popliteal space. The pulsation extended upwards in the line of + the artery some 3 inches. The limb was placed on a splint and + treated by rest, and a month later the aneurism had decreased + to one half its former size, the wall having greatly increased + in firmness. Pulsation was easily controlled by pressure above + the tumour; there was no thrill present, but a high-pitched + bellows murmur. The patient was sent home on February 1. + +When admitted at Netley the patient came under the care of Major Dick, +R.A.M.C., who ligatured the popliteal artery on the proximal side by an +incision in the line of the tendon of the adductor magnus. The aneurism +then consolidated. + + (7) _Traumatic popliteal aneurism._--Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_ (Mauser), centre of patella. _Exit_, centre of + popliteal space; the knee was bent at the time it was struck. + There was considerable primary external haemorrhage, and so much + blood collected in the knee-joint that it was aspirated. On the + eighth day secondary haemorrhage occurred from the exit wound + and the femoral artery was tied in Hunter's canal. No further + haemorrhage occurred, but at the end of three weeks feeble + pulsation was palpable in the popliteal space, suggesting an + aneurism; the latter decreased and the patient was sent home + apparently well. + + (8) _Traumatic axillary aneurism._--Wounded at Karree. The + bullet entered 2-1/2 inches below the acromial end of the right + clavicle and emerged over the 9th rib in the posterior axillary + line. The Mauser bullet was found in the patient's haversack. + Both apertures were of the slit form, and healed per primam. + Three weeks later at Wynberg a large arterial haematoma which + pulsated was noted in the axilla. Signs of injury to the + musculo-spiral nerve were also observed. The tumour altered + little, but a fortnight later Major Burton, R.A.M.C., cut down + upon it through the pectorals. The aneurism was of the third + part of the axillary artery, and a ligature was applied at the + lower margin of the pectoralis minor. The wound healed by + primary union and the aneurism rapidly shrank. The patient left + for England a month later; the musculo-spiral paralysis was + improving. I am indebted to Major Burton for the notes of this + case. + + (9) _Traumatic popliteal aneurism._--Wounded in Natal. _Entry_ + (Mauser), immediately above head of fibula. _Exit_, immediately + inside semi-tendinosus tendon at level of central popliteal + crease. Fulness but no pulsation was noted at end of three + weeks; seven days later pulsation was evident, and an aneurism + the size of a pigeon's egg, with firm walls, became localised + and palpable. It gave rise to no symptoms, and patient refused + operation during the three weeks he remained in hospital. The + aneurism continued to contract, and the patient was sent home. + The aneurism has since spontaneously consolidated. + +_Aneurismal varix and varicose (arterio-venous) +aneurism._--Uncomplicated cases of aneurismal varix, as might be +expected, were less common than those in which the arterio-venous +communication was accompanied by the formation of a traumatic sac. The +initial lesion accountable for each condition was, however, probably +identical, and dependent on the passage of a bullet of small calibre +across the line of large parallel arteries and veins. Thus, obliquely +coursing antero-posterior wounds of the neck produced carotid and +jugular varices; vertically coursing tracks laid the subclavian vessels +in communication; antero-posterior tracks the brachial, popliteal, and +lower part of the femoral; and transverse tracks, the vessels of the +calf and forearm. Given an arterial wound, the mode of development of +the aneurismal sac in no way differs from that of the ordinary +traumatic variety; the main point of interest, therefore, is to seek an +explanation of the causes which may restrict the ultimate result to the +formation of a pure aneurismal varix. The explanation is possibly to be +found in some of the following circumstances. + +_Size, position, and symmetry of the vascular wound._--It seems scarcely +necessary to insist on the calibre of the projectile, since this alone +determined the frequency of these conditions, but it must be borne in +mind that in the diameter of the bullets, classed as of small calibre +during this war, a range of from 6.5-8 mm. existed. In the case of both +the Krag-Joergensen and Mauser, the shape of the bullet also was better +adapted to pure perforation of the vessels. I saw no case of +arterio-venous communication in which a larger bullet than one of the +four types chosen had been responsible for the primary injury, but a +difference of 1-1/2 mm. in calibre in the small projectile might well +determine the division, the pure and symmetrical perforation of the two +vessels, or the giving way of one side, so that they were deeply notched +instead of perforated. + +Such positive evidence as was afforded by operation as to the exact +condition of the vessels in two cases of femoral arterio-venous aneurism +was, that in either case a clean perforation existed. + +It is improbable that notching of the two vessels can primarily produce +a pure varix, although it may result in the formation of an +arterio-venous aneurism, especially if the bullet should have passed +between the two vessels in such a way as to notch the contiguous sides. +It is impossible to say, in any given case, what the result of secondary +contraction of a sac produced in this manner may be in the determination +of the ultimate relation of the vessels. In many of the cases clinically +designated pure varix, the remains of such a sac may still actually +persist. In the case also of pure perforation of the vessels, it is +difficult to believe that a localised blood cavity has not originally +existed. Given complete division of the vessels, as far as my experience +went, arterial haematoma was the uniform result. + +Under these circumstances I am inclined to believe that a symmetrical +perforation of both vessels is the most common precursor of either +condition; that the pure varix is the rarer and less likely result, and +that its formation is dependent mainly on certain anatomical conditions. +The most important of these conditions are the proximity and degree of +cohesion of the two vessels, the comparative spaciousness or the +opposite of the vascular cleft, and the degree of support afforded by +surrounding structures. + +Thus, the close proximity of the popliteal artery and vein, together +with the particularly firm adhesion which exists between the vessels, +probably favours the formation of a varix; again, a varix more readily +forms if the femoral artery and vein are wounded in Hunter's canal than +if the injury is situated high in Scarpa's triangle, where the vessels +lie in a large areolar space. The passage of a bullet between an artery +and vein may perhaps produce either condition, but wide separation of +the two vessels, as for instance of the subclavian artery and vein, +renders an aneurismal sac almost a certainty. These suggestions seem +borne out by the cases recounted below, since the pure varices are one +femoral, one popliteal, and one axillary. I cannot include the calf and +forearm cases, as the existence of a small sac could not be disproved. + +To these anatomical factors certain others must be added. In most cases +a false sac exists at first, which tends to undergo contraction and +spontaneous cure, as is observed in some of the ordinary traumatic sacs. +This history of development is moreover supported by the observation +that proximal ligature of the artery usually converts an arterio-venous +aneurism into an aneurismal varix. The process is no doubt favoured by +cleanness and small size of the perforation, moderation in the amount of +primary haemorrhage, the tone and resistance of the surrounding tissues, +special points in the circulatory force and condition of the blood, and +the possibility of maintaining the part at rest after the injury. + +Aneurismal varix, when pure, was evidenced by the presence of purring +thrill and machinery murmur alone. In none of the cases I saw was pain +or swelling of the limb present. In one popliteal varix, slight +varicosity of the superficial veins of the leg was present, but it was +not certain that the development of this was not antecedent to the +injury, as the patient did not notice it until his attention was drawn +to its existence. In none of the cases under observation in South Africa +had enough time elapsed for sufficient dilatation of the artery above +the point of communication to give rise to any confusion from this cause +as to the presence of a sac. + +When an arterio-venous sac has once formed, clinical observation shows +that the general tendency is towards extension in the direction of least +resistance. This direction of course varies with the situation of the +aneurism, and also with the nature of the wound track. + +Speaking generally the direction of least resistance in a typically pure +perforation is towards the vein. Initial flow of blood from the wounded +artery is naturally favoured towards the potential space afforded by a +canal occupied by blood flowing at a lower degree of pressure. The +partial collapse of the vein dependent on the wound in its wall also +probably helps in determining the initial flow in its direction. +Examples are afforded by the carotid aneurisms (cases 10, 11, and 14), +and here it must be borne in mind that the outer limits of the cervical +vascular cleft are those least likely to offer resistance to extension +of the sac. In each the aneurisms mainly occupied the exit segment of +the track; this is the general rule, as in the case of external +haemorrhage, and is determined by the same cause. + +The latter rule however finds exceptions when the entry segment is so +situated as to cross a region of lesser resistance, and case 12 +illustrates this point with regard to the cervical vascular cleft. +Examples of the tendency to spread in the anatomical direction of least +resistance are also offered by the cases of aneurism at the root of the +neck, where extension was into the posterior triangle. + +The further clinical history and signs are as follows. A local swelling +is found, usually at first diffuse, often commencing to develop with +cessation of the external haemorrhage. It increases, for the first few +days maintaining its diffuse character. If near the surface, it may be +superficially ecchymosed. At the end of this time a tendency to +localisation, as evidenced by increasing firmness and more definite +margination, takes place, and this is followed by general contraction +and rounding off of the tumour. The latter process may be continuous, +and eventually the sac may become small and stationary or ultimately +disappear and a pure varix be the result. The latter is only likely to +be the case under the most satisfactory of the conditions enumerated +above. Occasionally an opposite course may be followed, and fresh +extension take place, as evidenced by enlargement of the tumour, +disappearance of sharp definition, softening, and pain. The natural +termination of such cases in the absence of interference would no doubt +be rupture, and possibly death in some positions, loss of the limb in +others. The former I never saw. + +_Purring thrill._--This, the pathognomonic sign of either condition, was +always present in the fully developed stage, and is probably present +from the first unless a temporary thrombosis obstructs the vascular +openings. It was noted as early as the third day in case 13. In many of +the other patients it was palpable only with the subsidence of the +primary swelling attendant on the injury. In some of the forearm and +calf aneurisms, and in some of the popliteal, it was only discovered by +accident some weeks even after the injury, but this often because no +serious vascular lesion had been suspected. The thrill was widely +conducted, often apparently superficial on palpation, and much more +pronounced with light than with forcible digital pressure. + +In case 10 the _visible_ vibration in consonance with the thrill when +the vein was exposed during the operation of ligature of the carotid was +a novel experience to me. + +_Murmur._--The typical 'bee in the bag,' or 'machinery' murmur was +present in every case, and was often very widely distributed, especially +over the thorax. (Cases 13, 14, and 20.) + +In all three carotid cases the murmur was troublesome, being audible to +the patient at night when the head was rested on the side corresponding +to the aneurism. + +_Expansile pulsation._--Pulsation in combination with the existence of a +tumour is the main feature in the diagnosis between the conditions of +pure varix and varicose aneurism. It was not always existent or +prominent in the earliest stages, probably from temporary blocking of +the artery, or from the diffuse and irregular nature of the cavity +offering conditions unsuitable to the satisfactory transmission of the +wave. When localisation had occurred it was always present. + + +EFFECTS OF ANEURISMAL VARIX OR VARICOSE ANEURISM ON THE CIRCULATION + +(_a_) _General._--The most striking feature in these injuries is the +remarkable effect of the disturbance to the even flow of the circulation +on the heart. This first struck me in two of the cases of carotid +arterio-venous aneurism recorded below (Nos. 10 and 11). In these I was +inclined at first to attribute the rapid and irritable character of the +pulse solely to injury to the vagus, as in each laryngeal paralysis +pointed to concussion or contusion of the nerve. The pulse reached a +rate of 120-140 to the minute. This disturbance was not of a transitory +nature, for in the two cases referred to the rapid pulse persists, in +spite of entire recovery of the laryngeal muscles, and the fact that in +one case the aneurismal sac has been absolutely cured, and in the second +only a small sac remains, in each as a result of proximal ligature of +the carotid artery. In the former a varix still exists, and at the end +of seven months the pulse is still over 100. In the latter, in which a +sac is still present, the pulse rate varies from 110 to 130. In each +case the condition has now existed twelve months. My attention once +directed to this point, I noted a similar acceleration of the pulse in +the case of these aneurisms elsewhere; thus in a femoral aneurism the +rate was 120, and in an axillary varix of twenty years' standing which +came under my observation the pulse rate varied from 110 to 120, +according to the position of the patient. Unfortunately I had not +directed my attention to this point in the early series of cases which +came under observation. + +It will be remarked in cases 13 and 14 that at the expiration of a year +the pulse rate was still high, but these again are cervical aneurisms +each in contact with or near the vagus. + +In a case of aneurismal varix of the femoral artery of three years' +standing, which was under the charge of Mr. Mackellar, the pulse rate +was normal. In this instance great dilatation of the vessels had +occurred. + +These observations raise the interesting question whether the irritable +circulation which has been classically considered one of the +predisposing causes of spontaneous aneurism should not rather be +regarded as a result of the condition. + +(_b_) _Local._--In none of the cases of varix was the period of +observation long enough to allow me to determine the development of +dilatation of the arterial trunk above the point of obstruction. This, +however, is the common sequence, and no doubt will occur in those +patients who resume active occupation without operation. + +The effects of either condition on the distal circulation were +remarkably slight. The distal pulses were little, if at all, modified in +strength or volume, and signs of venous obstruction, if present at +first, disappeared with much rapidity. In one case (No. 15) of a large +arterio-venous popliteal aneurism there was considerable swelling of the +leg, but in this case the sac was large and situated at the apex of the +space, and no doubt exercised external pressure on the vein. + +In the case of the carotid aneurisms, especially that probably on the +internal carotid, transient faintness was a symptom in the early stages +of the case. All three of the cases recorded here, however, had been the +subjects of very free haemorrhage, either primary or recurrent. + + (10) _Carotid arterio-venous aneurism._--Wounded at Paardeberg. + _Entry_ (Mauser) to the right side of the Pomum Adami, _exit_ + at anterior margin of left trapezius, two inches below the + angle of the jaw. There was some haemorrhage at the time from + the exit wound, but no haemoptysis; about four hours later, + however, in the Field hospital bleeding was so free that an + incision was made with the object of tying the common carotid. + During the preliminary stages of the operation bleeding ceased + and the wound was closed without exposing the vessel. The + patient remained a week in the Field hospital, and then made a + three day and night's journey in a bullock waggon to Modder + River (40 miles), and fourteen days later he was transferred to + the Base hospital at Wynberg, when the condition was as + follows. Operation and bullet wounds healed. Considerable + extravasation of blood in the posterior triangle. Beneath the + sterno-mastoid in the course of the bullet track, swelling, + thrill and pulsation over an area 1-1/2 inch wide in diameter. + Loud machinery murmur audible to the patient when the left side + of the head is placed on the pillow, and widely distributed on + auscultation. The left eye appears prominent, but the pupils + are normal and equal in size. Voice weak and husky, and there + is cough. Laryngoscopic examination showed the cords to be + untouched, but some swelling still persisted. No headache, but + giddiness is troublesome at times. Pulse 100, regular but + somewhat irritable. + + The patient was kept quiet in the supine position for a month, + and during this time the condition in many ways improved. The + voice improved in strength, the pulse steadied, falling to 80, + the prominence of the left eye disappeared, and all the blood + effusion in the posterior triangle became absorbed. Meanwhile + the aneurism contracted at first, until it became oval in + outline, with a long axis of 2 inches by 1-1/2 broad extending + in the line of the wound track, but mainly situated in the exit + half. During the last fortnight, however, it remained quite + stationary in size, and as it showed no further signs of + diminution in spite of the favourable conditions under which + the patient had been placed, it was considered best to try to + ensure its consolidation by a proximal ligature. Thrill had + become slightly less pronounced, and was less evident to the + patient himself, but was otherwise unchanged. The probabilities + in this case seemed rather in favour of wound of the internal + carotid artery, and it was decided to bare the upper part of + the common carotid, follow up the main trunk, and if possible + apply the ligature to the internal branch. On April 12, 61 days + after the injury, the classical incision for securing the + common carotid was made, and the sterno-mastoid slightly + retracted. It was found that the sac of the aneurism extended + over the bifurcation of the artery, reaching to the wall of the + larynx. The omo-hyoid muscle was therefore divided, and the + artery ligatured beneath, in order to ensure against any + interference with the sac. Some difficulty was met with, for on + opening the vascular cleft the vein was exposed and found to + completely overlie the artery: although it was on the left side + of the neck, the position of the vein was so completely + superficial that there seemed no doubt that it had been + displaced by the development of the aneurismal sac. A striking + appearance was noted on exposure of the vein, the coats of + which vibrated visibly, quivering in exact consonance with the + palpable thrill. On tightening the silk ligature all pulsation + ceased in the aneurism, and the vibratory thrill in the vein + became much lessened. + + The patient made a good recovery, only disturbed by a slight + attack of vomiting, and at the end of a week the wound had + healed, and pulsation in the aneurism had completely ceased. + The thrill persisted as before. + +Six months later, a small sac still exists beneath the sterno-mastoid. +The pulse still reaches 110-120 in pace. The purring thrill is very +slight. The condition gives rise to little or no trouble. Pulsation is +strong in the external carotid artery, there is little in the common +carotid. The voice is strong and good. This aneurism is either at the +bifurcation of the common carotid, or on the immediate commencement of +the internal carotid. Ligature of the external carotid will probably +cure it. + + (11) _Arterio-venous aneurism, probably affecting both + carotids._ Wounded at Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), at dimple + of chin immediately below mandibular symphysis. _Exit_, at + margin of right trapezius, the track crossing the carotids + about the level of normal bifurcation. The patient was lying on + his back with the head down when struck. Some haemorrhage from + the exit wound occurred at the time, and later on the way to + Jacobsdal this was so profuse as to be nearly fatal. A + considerable haemorrhage also occurred on the tenth day. The + patient made the journey to Modder River safely, and was then + under the charge of Mr. Cheatle. A large diffuse pulsating + swelling developed on the right side of the neck, with + well-marked thrill and machinery murmur. During the next three + weeks the swelling steadily contracted, and the patient was + sent down to the Base one month after receiving the wound, when + the condition was as follows. There is no evidence of any + fracture of the jaw. On the right side of the neck a large + aneurism fills the carotid triangle, extending from the + mid-line backwards to the margin of the trapezius, and from the + level of the top of the larynx upwards to the margin of the + mandible. The wall is fairly firm, pulsation is both visible + and palpable, and a well-marked thrill and machinery murmur are + present. The latter annoys him by its buzzing when the head + rests on the right side. The pupils are equal. Pulse somewhat + irritable, about 100. The voice is weak and husky, and there is + difficulty in swallowing solids. The actual swelling is + somewhat remarkable in outline, on the one hand following up + the course of the external carotid and facial arteries, and on + the other extending backwards in the line of the wound track + towards the exit. The patient was kept on his back with + sandbags around the head during the next fortnight. For the + first eight days such change as occurred was in the direction + of localisation and contraction, but during the last six, + evident extension occurred both backwards and downwards; this + extension was accompanied by severe pain in the cutaneous + cervical nerve area of the neck. The larynx became pushed over + 3/4 of an inch to the left of the median line, and the + extension beneath the sterno-mastoid downwards raised a doubt + as to whether the common carotid could be exposed without + encroaching on the walls of the sac. Owing to indisposition I + had not been able to see the patient for some days, but now, + after consultation with Major Simpson and Mr. Watson, it was + decided that the best plan would be to expose and tie the + common carotid as high as could be safely done. The operation + was performed six weeks after the injury, and somewhat to our + surprise offered little difficulty. The carotid was exposed at + the upper border of the omo-hyoid, only a small amount of + infiltration having occurred in the vascular cleft. No + dilatation of the jugular was noticeable, and when a silk + ligature was applied to the artery all pulsation was + controlled, and the thrill in the vein disappeared completely. + The after progress was satisfactory, but four days later the + wound was dressed, as the patient's temperature had risen above + 100 deg.. The tumour was consolidated: no pulsation could be felt, + but there was little apparent diminution in its size. A loud + blowing murmur was audible, especially at the posterior part of + the swelling. + + On the morning of the fifth day the patient mentioned that he + again heard the whirr during the night. There had been no sign + of any cerebral disturbance and the pupils had remained equal + throughout. + + A week after the operation the stitches were removed, there was + evidence of some blood clot in the lower part of the wound, and + this later liquefied and was let out on the eleventh day. At + that time a slight bubbling thrill could be felt at the upper + part of the tumour, also slight pulsation in the line of the + external carotid and at the most posterior part of the sac. The + latter was much contracted, diminished in size and apparently + solid, so that it was hoped that such pulsation as existed was + communicated. Ten months later, no trace of the aneurismal sac + exists. Neck normal, except for purring thrill. Voice strong + and good. Pulse 100. Following his usual work. + + (12) _Carotid arterio-venous aneurism_.--Wounded at Paardeberg. + Aperture of _entry_ (Mauser), at the posterior border of the + left sterno-mastoid, 1 inch above the clavicle; _exit_, near + the posterior border of the right sterno-mastoid, 2 inches from + the sterno-clavicular joint. The injury was followed by very + free haemorrhage, mainly from the wound of entry, some 'quarts' + of blood escaping; at any rate his clothes were saturated. The + voice was hoarse and weak, and there was much difficulty in + swallowing; for the first twenty-four hours he could swallow + nothing, but gradual improvement took place. The patient was + carried two miles to the Field hospital, and three days later + travelled 36-40 miles in a bullock waggon to Modder River. + Thence he travelled to Orange River 55 miles by train on the + next day. A swelling was first noted when the wound was dressed + some seven days after the injury. No evidence was ever existent + of gross damage to either trachea or oesophagus beyond the + initial dysphagia. The hoarseness of voice due to left + laryngeal paralysis slowly improved, and was probably the + effect of concussion or contusion of the left recurrent + laryngeal nerve. During the patient's stay at Orange River a + large pulsating swelling with a strong thrill developed. This + was at first diffuse, but under the influence of rest it + steadily contracted and localised. During this period the + patient was seen several times by Mr. Cheatle, who noted + considerable temporary enlargement of the thyroid gland. + + At the end of eight weeks he had been allowed up some days, and + travelled 570 miles to Wynberg. The aneurism was about 1-1/2 + inch in diameter, smooth and rounded, extending just beneath + the left clavicle and nearly the whole width of the + sterno-mastoid, but well defined in all directions. There was + well-marked expansile pulsation, purring thrill along the + jugular vein and over the tumour, and loud machinery murmur + widely diffused along the whole neck and into the thorax. The + voice was still weak and husky, but there was no dysphagia or + dyspnoea. The left pupil was larger than the right. + + The patient acquired enteric fever at Wynberg and when + convalescent was sent to Netley, whence he returned home. The + aneurism caused little discomfort. It may possibly have been of + the inferior thyroid artery. + + (13) _Innominate arterio-venous varix_.--Wounded at Modder + River. _Entry_ (Mauser) posterior margin of left + sterno-mastoid, close above the clavicle. _Exit_ in anterior + axillary line one inch below the right anterior axillary fold. + Soon after the injury a considerable amount of blood was + coughed up, and occasional haemoptysis persisted for the next + four days. The patient was moved from the Field hospital by + train to Orange River, a journey of 55 miles and some four + hours' duration, on the fourth day. When examined there was + slight fulness over an area roughly circular and about 2-1/2 + inches in extent, of which the sterno-clavicular joint lay just + within the centre. Over this area there was faint pulsation + with a strongly marked thrill and loud systolic bruit. The + radial pulses were even, the right pupil larger than the left. + No pain, and no dyspnoea. The right eye was partially closed, + but could be opened by the levator palpebrae superioris. The + patient was shortly afterwards sent to the Base, and when seen + there twenty-five days after the injury, there was little + change in the condition except that the fulness had + disappeared, the thrill was more marked, and a typical + machinery murmur transmitted along both carotid and subclavian + arteries had developed. There was no headache and the man + himself did not notice the bruit. Evidence of mediastinal + haemorrhage existed in the presence of subcutaneous + discoloration of the abdominal wall, below the ensiform + cartilage and extending slightly over the costal margin of the + thorax. In the absence of an aneurismal swelling, or of the + development of any further symptoms, the patient was sent home + to Netley in January. + +I saw this patient in Glasgow a year later. He was employed as a +lamplighter, and was able to do his work well, only complaining of +attacks of shortness of breath on exertion. He said these were apt to +come on each evening about 6 P.M. The pulse was 100 when the erect +position was maintained, and 84 to 88 in the sitting posture. The right +pupil was still dilated, reacting for accommodation but little to light. +The palpebral fissure was normal in size and there was little, if any, +diminution in strength of the right radial pulse. + +On inspection no pulsation was visible; in fact, the pulsation of the +normal left subclavian was more apparent in the posterior triangle of +that side. The sterno-mastoid was prominent, also the sternal third of +the clavicle. On firm pressure some pulsation was palpable beneath the +sterno-mastoid, but no definite evidence of the presence of a sac could +be detected. Purring thrill and machinery murmur were still present, but +the former was slight, and palpable only with the lightest pressure. The +machinery murmur had ceased to be audible to himself, and was by no +means loud or very widely distributed. + +The condition had, in fact, steadily improved, and become far less +obvious. The prominence of the sterno-mastoid and clavicle still present +was difficult of explanation, except on the theory of an injury to the +bone, or that an aneurismal sac had consolidated spontaneously. + + (14) _Arterio-venous aneurism, root of right carotid._--Wounded + at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), centre of right + infra-spinous fossa. _Exit_, 3/4 of an inch above clavicle, + through point of junction of the heads of the right + sterno-mastoid muscle. Range 200-300 yards. When wounded the + man ran two hundred yards to seek cover. There was no serious + external haemorrhage, but the injury was followed by some + difficulty in swallowing, and haemoptysis, which lasted for the + first two days. The right radial pulse was noted to be smaller + than the left, and weakness in flexion of the fingers, with + hyperaesthesia in the ulnar nerve distribution, was observed. + The right pupil was also noted to be larger than the left. + + The patient was sent down to the Base, and on the twenty-fourth + day the condition was as follows. A pulsating swelling existed + extending 1-1/4 inch upwards beneath the right sterno-mastoid, + from the mid line of the neck backwards to the centre of the + posterior triangle, and downwards over 2 inches of the first + intercostal space, which latter was dull on percussion. There + was some evidence of a bounding wall, but it was thin and the + tumour was soft and yielding. A loud machinery murmur was + audible over the tumour, over nearly the whole extent of the + thorax, and in the distal vessels as far as the temporal + upwards, and the brachial as far down as the bend of the elbow. + The murmur was audible to the patient with his ears closed. + Over the swelling a strong thrill was palpable; this extended + some little distance into the distal vessels and felt + remarkably superficial. It was particularly evident in the line + and course of the anterior jugular vein, and appeared to be + extinguished by local pressure. Although readily felt in the + posterior triangle, it was impalpable on deep pressure in the + suprasternal notch, a fact which seemed in favour of localising + the aneurismal varix to the subclavian artery and vein. The + right pulse was good, although smaller than the left, and was + said to have improved in volume. The right pupil was slightly + larger than the left, but reacted normally. There was no pain + or difficulty in swallowing. Weakness in power of flexion of + the fingers persisted, and there was some impairment of + sensation in the area of distribution of the ulnar nerve. + + Three weeks later no material change had occurred, except that + the swelling was perhaps softer and the thrill more + superficial, and at the end of two months the patient was sent + to England. + +I saw this patient a year later in Glasgow, when the condition was as +follows. He was living at home, and out of employment. He complained of +shortness of breath on exertion, and said that when he mounted stairs he +felt 'as if his heart were going to leave him.' The heart's apex beat in +the sixth interspace in the nipple line, and the precordial dulness was +somewhat increased. The pulse numbered 80 to 84. The muscles supplied by +the ulnar nerve were very weak, but not much wasted, and ulnar sensation +was imperfect. + +The aneurism had considerably altered in form and outline; its walls +were dense and firm; it extended 2-1/2 inches upwards in the line of the +carotid artery, beneath the sterno-mastoid, but projected beyond the +posterior border of that muscle. The larynx was displaced 1/2 an inch to +the left of the median line; the voice was still husky, although much +stronger than it was; the anterior jugular vein was dilated. The purring +thrill was very superficial, and chiefly palpable over the subclavian +vessels. The machinery murmur was still loud, but much less widely +distributed than before; it was still audible to the patient when he lay +on his right side. + +This case was of much interest from the diagnostic point of view. When I +first saw the patient I considered the injury to have implicated the +innominate vessels. Later, from the facts that the thrill was +imperceptible in the episternal notch, and that the main part of the +tumour was situated in the posterior triangle, that the wound was of the +root of the right subclavian vessels. + +It now appears that, at any rate, the root of the right carotid is the +artery implicated. + +In spite of the continued existence of a large aneurism, the +localisation of the sac, which had taken place, was very striking, +considering that the man had been walking about freely, and living an +ordinary life, except that he had undertaken no work. + + (15) _Popliteal arterio-venous aneurism_.--Wounded at + Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), at lower margin of patella. + _Exit_, at centre of back of thigh. Perforation of lower end of + femur. The patient was lying down with crossed knees when the + injury was received. Much oedema of the foot and leg followed + the injury, and on the third day a thrill was discovered. Three + weeks later there was still some swelling of the calf, the + posterior tibial pulse was imperceptible, the anterior very + small. An aneurism was palpable at the inner part of the top of + the popliteal space, about the size of a pigeon's egg; a strong + thrill was to be felt, especially when the knee was flexed, and + with this expansile pulsation and a loud machinery murmur. The + entry wound was firmly healed; the exit still furnished + blood-stained serous discharge. The synovial cavity of the knee + was distended and doughy on palpation. During the next three + weeks the aneurism contracted considerably and the patient was + sent home. + + When admitted to the Herbert Hospital the patient complained + chiefly of pains in the foot and leg. The aneurism was cured by + ligation of the vein above and below the communication and + proximal ligature of the popliteal artery.[15] + + (16) '_Femoral arterio-venous aneurism._--A private of the West + Yorkshire Regiment was hit on February 11, 1900, at Monte + Christo by a bullet which passed through the inner border of + his right thigh above its middle. On arrival at Woolwich the + patient was found to have a varicose aneurism at the upper end + of Hunter's canal. On May 31 the femoral artery was ligatured + just above its communication with the vein, and as this stopped + all pulsation in the vein, it was decided to postpone ligature + of the latter to a subsequent occasion, if it should ever be + necessary; such a procedure would, it was thought, interfere + less with the circulation of the limb, and would therefore be + less likely to be followed by gangrene, which is so frequent a + result of high ligature of the femoral. But a few days after + the operation the foot became cold and mummified, and there + was no alternative but to amputate the limb through the + condyles of the femur. From this operation the patient made a + good recovery, and when discharged there was no sign of an + aneurism of the vein.' + +Case 16 is quoted from a paper in the _Lancet_ by Lieut.-Colonel Lewtas, +I.M.S. It illustrates a result with which I became acquainted in three +other instances not under my own observation. + + +ANEURISMAL VARICES + + (17) _Axillary._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ (Mauser), at + inner margin of front of left arm, just below level of junction + of axillary fold. _Exit_, at about centre of hollow of axilla. + A month later when the wound was healed a typical thrill and + machinery murmur were noticed. The latter was audible down to + the elbow and upwards into the neck. The radial pulse appeared + normal. No swelling or pulsation existed. At the end of three + months the condition was unaltered; the patient said he noticed + nothing abnormal in his arm, except that it was sometimes 'sort + of numb' at night. + + (18) _Popliteal._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), + in centre of popliteal space. _Exit_, about centre of patella, + which latter was cleanly perforated. Three weeks later the + typical thickening of the knee-joint following haemarthrosis was + present, also a well-marked thrill and machinery murmur in the + popliteal vessels with no evidence of a tumour. The leg was + normal except for slight enlargement of the internal saphenous + vein and its branches, probably independent of the arterial + lesion. + + (19) _Femoral._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 7 + inches below left anterior superior iliac spine. _Exit_, at + inner aspect of thigh. One month later slight fulness without + pulsation was discovered on the inner side of the femoral + vessels just above the level of the wound track. Some + blood-staining still remained in the fold between the scrotum + and thigh. Machinery murmur and a well-marked thrill, most + palpable to the inner side of the superficial femoral artery, + were noted. No further symptoms developed and the patient was + sent home. + +_Prognosis and treatment._--No one can help being struck with the +disinclination shown by the older surgeons to interference in cases of +either aneurismal varix or varicose aneurism, even after the time that +ligation of the vessels had become a favourite and successful operation. +The objections lay in the technical difficulties of local treatment, and +the danger of gangrene after proximal ligature. Modern surgery has +lightened the difficulties under which our predecessors approached these +operations, but none the less the experience in this campaign fully +supports the objections to indiscriminate and ill-timed surgical +interference, as accidents have followed both direct local and proximal +ligature. + +In _pure varix_ no doubt can exist as to the advisability of +non-interference in the early stage, in the absence of symptoms. This is +the more evident when we bear in mind that a stage in which an +aneurismal sac exists can seldom be absent. In many cases an expectant +attitude may lead to the conviction that no interference is necessary, +especially in certain situations where the danger of gangrene has been +fully demonstrated. In connection with this subject I cannot help +recalling the first case of femoral varix that ever came under my own +observation. I discovered the condition accidentally in a man admitted +into the hospital for other reasons. The patient remarked: 'For heaven's +sake, sir, do not say anything about that. I have had it many years, and +it has never given any trouble. If it is known, I shall be worried to +death by people examining it.' + +None the less it must be borne in mind that beyond enlargement of the +vein dilatation of the artery above the seat of obstruction does occur, +and gives trouble in some situations. Again the disturbance of the +general circulation already adverted to shows that the existence of this +condition is sometimes of importance in its influence on the cardiac +action. + +Under these circumstances the treatment varies with regard to the +vessels affected, and the degree of disturbance the condition gives rise +to. + +With regard to locality, experience appears to have shown clearly that +communications between the carotid arteries and jugular veins usually +give rise to so little serious trouble that, in view of the grave nature +of the operation and its possible after consequences on the brain, +interference is as a rule better avoided. I should, however, be +inclined to draw a distinction between operations on the common and +internal carotid arteries in this particular, and should regard varix of +the latter vessel and the internal jugular vein as especially +undesirable for interference. + +The vessels at the root of the neck are probably to be regarded from the +same point of view, as to surgical interference. + +The arteries of the upper extremity are the most suitable for operation, +and the axillary may perhaps be the vessel in which interference is most +likely to be useful. In this relation it may be of interest to include +here a case of a man who took part in the campaign when already the +subject of an aneurismal varix of the axillary artery. + + (20) Twenty years previously the patient suffered a punctured + wound of the left axilla from a pencil. A varix developed, but + was only discovered by accident ten years later. The patient + was seen by several surgeons, and treatment was discussed; the + balance of opinion was, however, in favour of non-interference, + and nothing was done beyond giving injunctions as to care in + the use of the limb. Up to the time of discovery of the varix + no inconvenience had been felt, although the patient was of + athletic habits. Subsequently, the patient himself was positive + that a swelling existed, but he pursued his usual work. In + 1899-1900 he took part in the operations in South Africa as a + combatant, and during this time was subjected to very hard + manual work. During this he was seized with sudden pain in the + left side of the head and neck, and in consequence invalided. + No restriction in the movements of the upper extremity, and no + subcutaneous ecchymosis developed, but the patient was positive + as to the tumour having greatly enlarged. + + Four months later the condition was little altered. A pulsating + swelling 1-1/2 inch broad existed along the line of the upper + two-thirds of the axillary artery, and along the subclavian in + the neck, rising some 1-1/2 inch into the posterior triangle. + Pulsation was visible; the murmur was audible when sitting + beside the patient, and widely distributed over the whole + chest, the neck, and upper extremity on auscultation. The pulse + rate varied with the mental condition of the patient, which was + excitable, between 96 and 120. There was neuralgic pain in the + neck and scalp, and down the distribution of the brachial + plexus. The pupils were equal, but flushing of the face and + profuse sweating followed any exertion. I concluded the tumour + in this case to be mainly due to dilatation of the trunk above + the point of obstruction on account of its outline, the absence + of any restriction of movement in the upper extremity, and the + non-occurrence of subcutaneous ecchymosis at the time of the + attack of severe pain. Difficulties arose as to undertaking any + active form of treatment for this patient, which, to be + satisfactory, needed an antecedent period of absolute rest, and + he passed from my observation. I think, however, operation by + ligature above and below the communication would have been + possible. The case affords a good example of the course the + condition may sometimes take if precaution is neglected. + +The vessels of the arm or forearm may in almost all cases be interfered +with, but in many instances an absence of any serious symptom renders +operation unnecessary. + +With regard to the femoral varices, I would refer to the remarks below, +and those on the treatment of varicose aneurism as indicating that a +certain amount of caution should be exercised in interfering with them. + +The same remarks in a lesser degree apply to the popliteal vessels. In +the leg the tibials may readily and safely be attacked, but it may be +mentioned that the widespread and diffused nature of the thrill may in +some cases give rise to considerable difficulty in sharp localisation of +the varix to either of the vessels, or to any particular spot in their +course. In one case in my experience the posterior tibial was cut down +upon, when the varix was probably peroneal in situation. + +The operation most in favour consists in ligation of the artery above +and below the varix, the vein remaining untouched. Even this operation, +however, in two cases of femoral varix failed to effect more than a +temporary cessation of the symptoms, although the ligatures were placed +but a short distance from the communication. Failure is due to the +presence of collateral branches, which are not easy of detection. Even +when the vessels lie exposed, the even distribution of the thrill +renders determination of the exact point of communication difficult, and +the difficulty is augmented by the temporary arrest of the thrill +following the application of a proximal ligature to the artery. A +successful case is reported by Deputy Inspector-General H. T. Cox, R.N., +in which the ligatures were placed 1/2 an inch from the point of +communication.[16] Single ligation, or proximal ligature, is useless. + +If the vein cannot be spared, excision of a limited part of both vessels +may be preferable, particularly in those of the upper extremity. + +Proximal ligation of the artery combined with double ligature of the +vein, as adopted in case 15 by Colonel Lewtas for a varicose aneurism, +might offer advantages in some situations. + +Given suitable surroundings and certain diagnosis, the ideal treatment +of this condition, as of the next, is preventive--_i.e._ primary +ligation of the wounded artery. Many difficulties, however, lie in the +way of this beyond mere unsatisfactory surroundings. It suffices to +mention the two chief: uncertainty as to the vessel wounded, and the +necessity of always ligaturing the vein as well as the artery in a limb +often more or less dissected up by extravasated blood, to show that this +will never be resorted to as routine treatment. + +_Arterio-venous aneurism._--Many of the remarks in the last section find +equal application here, but in the presence of an aneurismal sac +non-intervention is rarely possible or advisable. In the early stages +the proper treatment in any case consists in placing the patient in as +complete a condition of rest as possible, and affording local support to +the limb by a splint, preferably a removable plaster-of-Paris case. +Should no further extension, or, what is more likely, should contraction +and diminution occur, it will be well to continue this treatment for +some weeks at least. + +When the aneurism has reached a quiescent stage the question of further +treatment arises, and whether this should consist in local interference +or proximal ligature. The answer to this mainly depends on the size and +situation of the vessels concerned. To take of the cases above described +the five instances in which the cervical vessels were the seat of the +aneurism. In No. 13 the symptoms appeared fairly conclusive of the +injury being to the innominate artery and vein, or possibly innominate +artery and jugular vein. Fortunately the aneurismal sac in this case was +small and showed a tendency to decrease, but in any case no interference +would have been justifiable. I think a similar opinion was unavoidable +in No. 14, probably affecting the root of the right carotid. Here under +any circumstances interference would have been most hazardous. The +position of large aneurism made the route of approach to the wounded +spot necessarily through the sac, exposing the patient to the double +danger of immediate haemorrhage and of entrance of air into the great +veins. Nos. 10, 11, and 12 fall into the same category, except that in +No. 11 the immediate indication for interference was extension. In each, +ligature of the artery above and below the point of communication would +have necessitated so near an approach to the sac which must remain in +communication with the vein as to have entailed injury to the latter, +when both artery and vein must have been ligatured, probably risking +serious cerebral trouble. In No. 11 I believe both the external and +internal carotids were implicated; in No. 10 I believe the internal +alone, close to its origin. The operation of proximal ligature ensured +primary consolidation of the sac in both cases 10 and 11, but left the +thrill unaltered, except in so far as it was temporarily weakened. It, +in fact, converted these cases from arterio-venous aneurisms into pure +aneurismal varices. In No. 10 a sac subsequently redeveloped. No. 12 +stood on a different basis. No operation was done for him in South +Africa, but the first portion of the carotid might have been ligatured +in the episternal notch, or by aid of removal of a part of the sternum, +and a second ligature placed above the sac. Here a ligature above and +below the communication would have been comparatively easy. + +As a general rule proximal ligature is to be reserved for those cases +alone in which double ligature is either impracticable or inadvisable, +and it can only be expected to convert a varicose aneurism into the less +dangerous condition of aneurismal varix. + +In the case of arterio-venous aneurisms in the limbs the possibilities +of treatment are enlarged, and here the alternatives of (_a_) local +interference with the sac and direct ligature of the wounded point, +(_b_) simple ligature above and below the sac, (_c_) proximal ligature +(Hunterian operation), come into consideration. + +Direct incision of the sac is suitable, and the best method of treatment +for aneurisms in the calf, forearm, and probably arm. Several cases in +the two former situations were successfully treated by this method. On +the other hand, the only case I saw in which a proximal ligature had +been applied for an arterio-venous aneurism of the leg resulted most +unsatisfactorily. The sac in the calf suppurated at a later date, and +for many weeks the escape of small quantities of blood from the +remaining sinus kept up the fear of a severe attack of secondary +haemorrhage until the sinus closed. + +In the case of femoral and popliteal aneurisms the method of Antyllus is +often unsuitable. A case of arterio-venous aneurism of the femoral +artery quoted in the _Lancet_[17] will illustrate the difficulty which +may be met with in determining the actual bleeding point in the +irregular cavity laid open. In any case the necessary ligature of both +artery and vein is a serious objection to the direct method either in +the thigh or ham, and more particularly if adopted before the damage +dependent on the dissection of the limb by extravasated blood has been +repaired. + +Proximal ligature (Hunterian) even, offers dangers under these +circumstances. In one case with which I became acquainted, it was +followed by gangrene, necessitating amputation. The lesion in this +instance was a perforating one of the femoral artery and vein. + +For either femoral or popliteal arterio-venous aneurisms ligature of the +artery above and below the aneurism is the best and safest treatment. In +view of the healthy state of the vascular wall in most of these cases, +the advantage of placing the ligatures as near to the wounded spot as +can be managed without interference with the sac is afforded. A number +of popliteal cases treated in this way did perfectly. In the femoral +cases a considerable period of rest to allow of consolidation of the +sac, and readjustment of the circulation, should always be allowed to +elapse. + +In the case of popliteal arterio-venous aneurisms a number were +successfully treated by proximal (Hunterian) ligature, and by single +ligature immediately above the sac. In a considerable proportion of the +latter both artery and vein were tied. This was apparently the result of +the difficulty of isolating the vessels in the tangled mass of clot and +cicatricial tissue surrounding them, and is a strong argument against +too early interference. The late Sir William Stokes expressed himself as +in favour of ligature of the artery in Hunter's canal, combined with +that of the great anastomotic branch, and quoted some successful cases +to me. I have grave doubts, however, whether the varix can often be +permanently cured by this operation. + +I can give no useful statistics on this subject, but with regard to the +popliteal aneurisms I may state that in three instances gangrene of the +leg followed early operative interference in the popliteal space. + +My own opinion on this subject is strong, and to the effect that none of +these operations should be undertaken before a period of from two to +three months after the injury, unless there is evidence of progressive +enlargement. In every case which came under my own observation +progressive contraction and consolidation took place up to a certain +point under the influence of rest. When this process has become +stationary, and the surrounding tissues have regained to a great extent +their normal condition, the operations are far easier, and beyond this +more likely to be followed by success. + +It appears to me that one argument only can be raised against the above +opinion, viz. the possibility of healing of the recent wound in the +vessels when the force of the circulation is lowered by proximal +ligature. Such experience as that quoted from Sir W. Stokes and two of +Mr. Ker's cases, mentioned below, support this possibility, but in all +the reported results were recent. Against them I can only advance my +knowledge of several mishaps following early operation. + +In concluding these observations on injuries to the arteries and +aneurisms, a few general remarks as to the occurrence of gangrene after +operation must be added. This was not uncommon, and in the main was no +doubt attributable--(1) to the lowering of the vitality of the +surrounding tissues by creeping blood extravasation, and sometimes to +actual pressure by the extravasation on the vessels necessary for the +establishment of the collateral circulation. (2) To the frequency with +which both artery and vein required to be ligatured. + +Beyond these common causes, however, others must be advanced, dependent +on the general and local condition of the nervous system in these cases. +In general mental state many of the patients were much shaken, and in +others the condition spoken of as local shock in a former chapter had +been marked. In a third series obvious individual nerve lesions were +co-existent with those to the vessels. Beyond this a fourth nervous +element of unknown quantity, the effect of the form of injury on the +vaso-motor nerves accompanying the great vessels, must be taken into +consideration. + +I believe all these factors were of importance, since it appeared to me +that gangrene occurred more often than I should have expected. In one +case which I have heard of, gangrene followed a very slight injury to +the foot in a patient who had apparently made an excellent recovery +after ligature of the femoral artery. + +The nervous factor seems another element in favour of reasonable delay +in active interference with traumatic aneurisms of the above varieties +in the absence of threatening symptoms. + +It is worthy of remark that no case of gangrene due to aneurism came +under my notice, except subsequently to operation. + +Since the above chapter was written, my friend, Mr. J. E. Ker, has sent +me his experience in the treatment of four aneurisms, which is of such +interest that I insert it as an addendum. + +_Arterial haematomata._--(1) Popliteal, treated by local incision. Both +artery and vein completely divided. Ligature of the four ends. Cure. +(2) Traumatic aneurism of upper third of forearm. Treated by rest and +pressure by bandage. On the eighth day pulsation and bruit ceased +spontaneously, and the remains of the sac steadily consolidated until +the man's discharge on the twenty-sixth day. + +_Arterio-venous aneurisms._--(1) At junction of brachial and axillary +arteries. Proximal ligature. Cure. (2) Arterio-venous aneurism at the +bend of the elbow. Ligature of the brachial at the junction of the +middle and lower thirds of the arm. Cure. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[14] The murmur is still present at the expiration of one year, but no +other change. + +[15] Lieut.-Colonel Lewtas, I.M.S. See _Lancet_, 1900, vol. ii. p. 1073. + +[16] _Lancet_, 1900, vol. ii. p. 1074. + +[17] Sir W. MacCormac, _Lancet_, vol. i. 1900, p. 876. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +INJURIES TO THE BONES OF THE LIMBS + + +Injuries to the bones of the limbs formed a very large proportion of the +accidents we were called upon to treat, and afforded as much interest as +any class, since they possessed many special features. I shall hope to +show, however, as in some of the other injuries, that these features +differed only in degree from those exhibited by injuries from the old +leaden bullets of larger calibre, although with few exceptions they were +of a distinctly more favourable character. + +It is of considerable interest to note that, taking the fractures as a +whole, there was a somewhat striking change in their nature during the +earlier and later portions of the campaign. In the earlier stages I +think there is no doubt that punctured fractures were proportionately +more common than in the later, when comminuted fractures were much more +often seen. There was, I believe, a source of error in this opinion, as +far as I myself was concerned, in that the first cases I saw were at +Capetown and had come from Natal. There is no doubt that the punctured +fractures were earlier fit to travel, and hence a larger number of them +found their way to the Base hospitals at a period when the comminuted +fractures were still in the Field or Stationary hospitals. I do not, +however, rely on the cases seen at Capetown alone for my opinion, as +while at the front I saw the same large proportion of clean punctures in +the early engagements of the Kimberley relief force. + +I am inclined to attribute the change to two reasons: first, I believe +that the use of regulation weapons was more universal in the earlier +part of the war, while later, as more men were engaged, the +Martini-Henry came more into evidence, and the Boers took more freely +to the use of sporting rifles and ammunition. Another element also in +the less clean punctures of the short and cancellous bones was probably +the less accurate and hard shooting of the Mauser rifles as they became +worn; the bullets seemed to evidence this by the comparative shallowness +of their rifle grooves, which, I take it, would mean less velocity and +accuracy in flight. This would be of importance, since the clean +puncture of cancellous bone was no doubt favoured by a high rate of +velocity. + +The special features of the fractures caused by the small-calibre +bullets were: (1) The nature of the exit wound, which in a certain +proportion of the cases exhibited the so-called 'explosive' character. +(2) The presence, in a marked degree in the severe cases, of the +condition spoken of in Chapter III. as 'local shock.' (3) The striking +contrast of clean perforation and extreme comminution in different +cases. (4) The occasional occurrence of fractures of a very high degree +of longitudinal obliquity. (5) The rarity of any that could be termed +transverse fractures. (6) The general tendency of longitudinal fissuring +when it occurred to stop short of the articular extremities of the +bones. + +It will perhaps be most convenient to consider first the explanation of +the development of the so-called explosive apertures, and then to pass +on to a general consideration of the types of fracture commonly met +with, before proceeding to the description of the injuries to the +separate bones. + +_Explosive wounds in connection with fractures._--The aperture of entry +in these injuries presented little or no deviation from the normal, +unless it was due to the passage of ricochet bullets, when it might be +very irregular, but usually not of great size. + +[Illustration: FIG. 47--(21) 'Explosive' Exit Wound of Forearm over +margin of ulna. Note creased tongue of skin originally covering whole +wound. The entry wound was a small typical circular one] + +The aperture of exit offered special features beyond simple increase in +size. First of all, as in the small type wounds, the actual extent of +destruction of the skin was small, this having been projected outwards +by the passing bullet and then either burst or torn by the bullet and +accompanying bony fragments. Fig. 47 well illustrates this feature. A +triangular tongue of skin was lifted by the passing bullet and probably +by the lower end of the upper fragment of the fractured ulna; through +the resulting opening a mass of soft tissues and bone fragments, bound +together by an infiltration of coagulated blood, was extruded, +separating the lateral lips of the aperture, while the original tongue +has shortened and retracted up to the top of the wound. + +The small extent of skin actually destroyed is an important element in +the rapid contraction often seen in these wounds when they progress +favourably. Thus the large wound portrayed in fig. 48 contracted to +one-fourth its original size ten days after the diagram and measurements +were made. The large mass of protruded tissue was often most striking +when a muscle such as the biceps in fig. 48 had been divided; but the +herniae were more persistent when the mass projected in regions where +tendons formed a large integral constituent, as at the wrist or lower +third of the forearm. The protruding tissues naturally consisted of many +varieties, according to what lay in the track of any particular wound. + +It should be added that for 'explosive' features to reach their +strongest development, it is necessary that the bone affected should lie +near the surface of the body; hence the most characteristic explosive +wounds were met with in the forearm or leg, over the metacarpus or +metatarsus, or in the arm. In the thigh, on the other hand, where the +femur in a great part of its course not only lies deeply, but is also +protected by particularly strong and resistent skin and fascia, another +type of wound was met with. The explosive exit aperture, although large, +was still only moderate in extent, sometimes, as in the front of the +lower third, exposing a somewhat angular large track walled by the +divided quadriceps extensor cruris. In other cases, on introducing the +finger through a moderate exit opening on the inner aspect of the thigh, +a large cavity, sometimes 4 or 5 inches in diameter, was discovered, +full of clot and shreds of destroyed tissue and lined by a layer of +similar material. In either of these latter cases the fractured bone +ends were situated too deeply to take part in the actual laceration of +the skin, while the force transmitted to the bone fragments, although +sufficient to cause them to widely destroy the first soft tissues met +with, did not suffice to cause them to burst or lacerate the skin +widely. + +[Illustration: FIG. 48.--(22) 'Explosive' Exit Wound of front of Arm. +Wound actual size eight days after its infliction. The prominences in +the upper and lower parts correspond with the lacerated biceps. The dark +crater led down to the fracture. In another week the wound had +contracted to half the size. The entry aperture was a normal circular +one. The arm a year later was used in the patient's employment as a +hammer-man.] + +With regard to the theories of the production of these phenomena, that +of the transmission of a part of the force of the bullet to the +comminuted fragments, which thus themselves acquire the characters of +secondary projectiles, seems quite adequate.[18] Examination of any of +the skiagrams in which considerable comminution has taken place, shows +that the fragments are carried forward and perforate the tissues distal +to the fracture. + +[Illustration: FIG. 49.--'Explosive' Wounds of Legs. Large irregular +entry (1 x 3/4 in.). First exit (2 in.) roughly circular. Second entry +wound, produced by bone fragments driven out of left leg, very large and +irregular (5 x 3-1/2 in.). The measurements were taken eight days after +infliction of the wounds. The right limb was amputated later for +secondary haemorrhage] + +Fig. 49, although a poor delineation of the actual condition, shows well +the possible action of projected fragments, even after they have been +driven from the wound. In this case either a large or a ricochet bullet +entered on the outer aspect of the upper third of the left tibia; it +produced a severe comminuted fracture, the fragments from which, +together with the deformed bullet, then struck and perforated the upper +third of the right tibia. A large irregular entry wound 5 inches in +transverse diameter was produced in the second limb together with a +comminuted fracture of the bone. The right limb had eventually to be +amputated for secondary haemorrhage, but I am unacquainted with the later +history of the patient. + +The mode of displacement of the lateral fragments when a wide shaft such +as that of the femur is struck, throws some light on that of the +displacement of soft tissues such as the component parts of a perforated +nerve or artery. The bullet, passing through, expends the chief part of +its energy in driving before it the fragments produced in its direct +course, while a minor part of the energy is expended on displacing the +lateral fragments, which are pushed to either side without becoming +separated from their periosteal attachment. The appearance, in fact, +somewhat suggests what might be expected were a small charge of dynamite +introduced into the centre of a small tunnel made across the shaft of +the bone. Examination of some of the skiagrams also illustrates another +point of interest, viz. that a certain degree of recoil on the part of +the bone results from the blow, since in many of them portions of the +mantle of the bullet and bone fragments are seen in that portion of the +track proximal to the fractured bone. + +The importance of 'setting up' of the bullet is at once evident in +relation to the production of wounds of an explosive type in connection +with fractures of the bones. There can be no doubt that a considerable +number of the most severe injuries we saw were produced by the various +soft-nosed or expanding forms of bullet, also that others of an equally +serious nature were produced by Martini-Henry or large leaden sporting +bullets. Allowing for this, however, I think a considerable proportion +were the result of deformation from bony impact, or ricochet deformities +external to the body acquired by regulation Mauser bullets, and I think +these bullets can be quite as formidable as any of the sporting +varieties met with. The soft-nose varieties of small calibre may not set +up enough to cause severe injury, while the large leaden bullets often +flatten out so completely as to lose all penetrating power. As far as +my impressions went, the small soft-nosed bullets needed to be +travelling at a very considerable rate of velocity to be dangerous. In +the form of soft-nose Mauser employed, the soft-nose was too short to +allow of as successful a mushrooming of the bullet as often occurred +with the regulation projectile, because, as already explained, the +mantle acquires increased stability from its closed base. + + +FRACTURES OF THE SHAFTS OF THE LONG BONES + +_Types of fracture._--The common types of fracture of shafts of the long +bones are illustrated diagrammatically in fig. 50. Of the whole series +comminuted fractures were by far the most frequently met with, while the +various wedge-shaped forms were the most strongly characteristic of the +special form of injury in which we are interested. + +[Illustration: FIG. 50.--Five Types of Fracture: A. Primary lines of +stellate fracture; wedges driven out laterally and pointed extremities +left to main fragments. B. Development of same lines by a bullet +travelling at a low degree of velocity; suppression of two left-hand +limbs and substitution of a transverse line of fracture; a spurious form +of perforation. See plate XXIII. C. Typical complete wedge. See plate +VII. D. Incomplete wedge; impact of bullet, lateral or oblique, and two +left-hand lines seen in A are suppressed. E. Oblique single line, one +right and one left hand line seen in A, suppressed. The influence of +leverage from weight of the body probably acts here. Compare plates XVI. +and XXI.] + +[Illustration: PLATE III. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(23) SPURIOUS PERFORATION OF CLAVICLE + +Range unknown, probably either mean or long. + +The bullet entered from the front, grooved the under surface of the +acromial end of the clavicle with increasing depth, and eventually +perforated the posterior margin of the bone, raising the compact tissue +in an angular manner. + +The commencement of an incomplete groove extending from the anterior +margin is seen, resembling the groove of the humerus, fig. 58.] + +1. _Stellate comminuted fractures._--A shows the primary nature of the +lesion in all comminuted fractures of compact bone, consisting in the +production of a number of radiating fissures, which assume a stellate +form of which the point of impact corresponds to the centre. B shows an +incomplete development of this form, the fragments being simply +displaced laterally with slight loss of substance, so as to simulate a +real punctured fracture. An illustration of this fracture produced by a +bullet travelling at a low degree of velocity is seen in plate XXIII., +which also shows the unaltered bullet lying in close proximity to the +injured fibula. + +The degree of comminution in these fractures depends first on the range +of fire and consequent striking force retained by the bullet, a high +degree of velocity producing extreme comminution of compact bone. The +severity of the latter again may be influenced by the measure of +resistance dependent on the density and brittleness of any individual +bone, or on the possession of the same characters as a special property +by the tissues of the man struck. Thus plate IV. shows a fracture of the +humerus produced by a bullet shot from a short range, and the fragments +are comparatively large and of even dimensions, while plate XIV. shows +extreme comminution of the portion of the femur exposed to direct +impact, with elongated large fragments at the sides of the track. Plate +XIX. shows less extreme comminution and less separation of the +fragments, and was probably produced by a bullet from a longer range of +fire. + +The separation of elongated lateral fragments is a special feature, and +best marked when the portion of bone struck is considerably wider than +the bullet, as in the case of the shaft of the femur. These fragments +correspond in the method of their production to those seen in the wedge +fractures described below, while their separation leaves a pointed +extremity to either segment of the shaft. This fracture in its purest +type is, I believe, spoken of as the 'butterfly fracture.' + +With regard to the spread of the fissures in the long axis of the bone +into neighbouring articulations I think fractures produced by bullets of +small calibre differ considerably from those produced by larger +projectiles, in that their general tendency is not to extend beyond the +commencement of the cancellous bone forming the joint end. This is +perhaps capable of explanation on several grounds: first, the smaller +area of impact results in the assumption of a strongly marked stellate +figure, the radiating fissures of which rapidly reach the lateral limits +of the shaft, producing a solution of continuity in the bone which +interrupts the continuance of the action of the wedge represented by the +bullet. Secondly, the small size of the wedge itself is opposed to the +wide separation of the parts directly implicated, which is necessary for +the continued progress of the process of fissuring, and again the +rapidity of passage minimises the period during which the force is +exerted. It is in these points that I believe the chief differences +between the modern and old gunshot fractures find their explanation, +since with the larger bullets fractures extending from some distance +into the joints were a somewhat special feature. In addition it is +probable that the alteration in structure at the junction of the shafts +with the cancellous ends also tends to check the regular extension of +the fissures, as a similar limitation is illustrated even in some +fractures by Snider bullets. Fig. 51 of the lower end of the femur +illustrates a not uncommon lower limit to a comminuted injury in this +region. + +[Illustration: FIG. 51.--Lower end of Femur. From Case needing +amputation. It shows the usual tendency of the fissures to stop short of +the articular ends of the long bones] + +The degree and nature of the comminution also vary with the directness +of impact on the part of the bullet. The more nearly this approaches at +a right angle, the more severe is the local comminution, but probably a +lesser area of the shaft is implicated. Plate V. shows an example of +this: all trace of continuity is lost, a wide gap separates the bone +ends, while the fragments themselves have been for the most part driven +altogether out of the wound. Oblique impact, on the other hand, may +widen the comminuted area at the point of impact, while, if the bullet +retains sufficient force and regularity of outline, it may then travel +'cutting its way' through the remainder of the bone in an oblique +direction. It will be of course recognised that the exact impact of the +bullet depends not alone on the direction of the projectile, but also +on the nature of the slope offered by the surface of bone struck. + +2. _Wedge fractures._--This form (C and D, fig. 50) is equally +characteristic of gunshot injury with pure perforation; it is met with +in two varieties. C illustrates the more strongly marked type; in it the +bullet makes passing lateral impact with the shaft, and from the point +struck radiating fissures extend to the opposite margin, so that a +wedge-shaped piece of bone often secondarily comminuted is separated +from the remainder of the shaft; see plate X. of the radius. + +The second variety, D, is an incomplete development of the stellate +fracture in which the fissures pass to one margin of the bone only. The +explanation of this variation is probably to be sought in the direction +of impact on the part of the bullet, since the main fissure is often +accompanied by secondary lines which run a somewhat parallel course to +the main one, and suggest the dispersion of the force in the form of +concentric waves. Such fractures were most strongly marked in the tibia, +the breadth of the surfaces of this bone presenting especially +favourable conditions for their production. + +3. _Notched fractures._--These may be a slight degree of the form of +wedge fracture last described; such a one is depicted in plate XXII. +where a portion of the spine of the tibia has been carried away by a +passing bullet. Other notched fractures approximate themselves more +nearly to perforations, the notch being a groove secondary to the +opening up of such a track as is shown in the illustration of a +perforation of the lower third of the shaft of the tibia (fig. 57 on p. +219). Notching or grooving is naturally much more common in the +cancellous portions of bones. + +4. _Oblique fractures._--These also occur in two varieties: the first +has been already alluded to; in it the bullet actually cuts an oblique +track in the bone; the main line of fracture is often considerably +comminuted, usually at the proximal end of the track (see plates XV. and +XIX.). + +The second variety (E, fig. 50) is less common; in it two of the main +limbs of the simple stellate figure are suppressed, while the remaining +two form a continuous line from one margin of the shaft to the other, +the point of impact lying approximately in the centre of the line of +fracture. Such a fracture is illustrated by the skiagram of a femur in +plate XVI. in which the bullet traversed the soft parts transversely at +the level of the centre of the fracture, which was 9 inches in length. +In another case the line of fracture occupied the lower third of the +femur, passing from the inner border of the shaft, the lower end of the +upper fragment was formed by the compact tissue forming the outer wall +of the external condyle. This latter perforated the vastus externus and +lay beneath the skin; as it could not be disentangled, an incision was +made over it, and the fragments when reduced were screwed together by +Mr. S. W. F. Richardson. In neither fracture was there any comminution. +Such fractures most nearly resemble the oblique or spiral ones met with +in civil practice as the results of falls. In all the instances I +observed the patients were supported on the lower extremities at the +time of the accident, and one can only assume that a twist of the trunk +consequent on the fall of the body diverts the most forcible vibrations +resulting from the impact of the bullet into one line, and thus produces +a solution of continuity of a simple oblique nature. In both the cases +mentioned above the bullet was probably travelling at a low degree of +velocity; in the first it was a ricochet and was retained. I never saw +one of these fractures in the upper extremity. + +Plate XXI. affords an excellent example of this mechanism. The patient +was standing when struck, and then fell backwards. An incomplete fissure +7 inches in length is seen to extend from an otherwise pure perforation +of the shaft of the tibia. + +5. _Transverse fractures._--Throughout these were of very rare +occurrence. Plate XX. illustrates a pure transverse fracture produced by +passing contact of a bullet probably fired at a distance not exceeding +400 yards, and which subsequently struck the fibula plumb and produced +considerable comminution. No fissure extended into the ankle-joint. +Comminutions such as that illustrated by plate V. more or less simulated +transverse fractures, but I saw no examples of transverse tracks +comparable to the oblique ones described above 'cut through' the shaft +of a bone. + +6. _Perforations._--Although these were common in cancellous bone, they +were comparatively rare in the compact shafts. I saw, however, complete +pure perforations of the shafts of the tibia, femur, clavicle, and other +bones. These perforations were, I believe, always the result of low +degrees of velocity, and they took the place of simple transverse +fractures of the 'cut' variety. The apertures of entry and exit in the +bones resembled in character those seen in the soft parts, or in the +bones of the skull in low-velocity injuries (see figs. 71 and 72, p. +261). The entry was more or less cleanly cut, while at the exit a plate +of bone was raised, and either separated or turned back on a hinge by +the bullet (fig. 52), (plate XVII.) Such a projecting hinged fragment +was sometimes a source of some trouble; thus in a case of +postero-anterior perforation of the lower third of the shaft of the +femur, the long exit fragment projected into the substance of the +quadriceps extensor muscle, and interfered with flexion of the +knee-joint. Fig. 57 of a superficial tunnel of the lower third of the +tibia is especially interesting as bringing such injuries of the long +bones into line with fractures of the flat bones of the skull, such as +are illustrated in fig. 68, p. 259. + +Plate XXI. affords an excellent example of perforation of the shaft of +the tibia, although complicated by the secondary fissure. + +Plates XXIII., VIII., and III., of the fibula, humerus, and clavicle, +exhibit examples of what may be called spurious perforations of the +shafts of bones, since comminution or loss of continuity accompanies all +three. + +Subsequently to writing the above paragraphs, I took the opportunity of +re-examining the magnificent series of gunshot fractures collected +during the Franco-German campaign by Sir William MacCormac, and +afterwards presented by him to the museum of St. Thomas's Hospital. + +The close approximation in type between the main features in these and +those in the fractures produced by the modern bullet is very striking. +In the case of the shafts of the long bones, the same stellate, oblique, +wedge-shaped, and even perforating injuries are illustrated on a coarser +scale. In a specimen of a patella, a perforation of the lower half, +implicating also the tendon of the quadriceps muscle is, though large, +almost as pure as a Mauser perforation. + +The difference in the nature of the lesions of the bones is seen to be, +firstly, one of pure magnitude, corresponding to the size of the large +Snider bullet by which they were produced. Thus the fragments generally +are larger, and occupy a wider area of the shafts, the first character +depending on the lesser degree of velocity of the bullet, the latter on +its volume and weight. Fine comminution, however, the most striking +feature of the modern injury, is throughout absent. + +The effect of the larger size of the wedge provided by the bullet in +increasing the length of secondary longitudinal fissures is well marked, +and for the same reason the perforations are usually accompanied by +fissures of considerable extent. It is interesting to note, however, +that even in the case of the large bullets, and the special tendency +shown by them to cause the extension of fissures into the joints, one or +two specimens still show that these fissures incline to stop short when +the point of junction between the portion of the shaft occupied by the +medullary canal and that built on a foundation of cancellous tissue is +reached. + + +LESIONS OF THE SHORT AND FLAT BONES + +The above types of fracture are those common to the shafts of the long +bones, but the difference in structure of the articular ends and the +short and flat bones endows lesions of these with somewhat different +characters, the nature of which varies between grooving, perforation, +and great comminution. + +The most typical injury consists in the production of a clean +perforation of the cancellous bone; this was common both in the +articular ends and in the short bones. The tunnel differed little in +character from those already described, a tendency always existing to +the lifting of a lid of compact tissue at the exit end of the track. + +For the production of the cleanest forms of injury I believe high rates +of velocity were distinctly favourable, although I am unable to maintain +this statement by proof in the case of injuries received at the shortest +ranges of fire. When the velocity was lower, yet with force still +sufficient to produce a perforating injury, the separation of an +extensive scale of bone at the exit aperture was a marked feature not +seen in perforations produced by higher degrees of velocity. Fig. 52, of +a perforation of the lower end of the femur, well exhibits this feature; +but it must be borne in mind in this case that the illustration is not a +pure one, both shaft and epiphysis taking part in the walls of the +track, and the exit opening is in the former, where a thicker layer of +compact bone exists than would cover any epiphysis, and hence the +fragment is larger. I use the example, however, because it so forcibly +illustrates the effect of increased resistance on the part of the bone +struck in widening the area of the lesion. When the track was entirely +limited to the articular ends the small amount of damage at either +aperture was shown by clinical evidence in the rarity of subsequent +limitation of joint movements due to bony deformity. + +[Illustration: FIG. 52.--Oblique perforation, implicating both epiphysis +and diaphysis. Large fragment detached at exit aperture. Caused by a +bullet travelling at a low rate of velocity. Compare with figs. 71 and +72 of a skull fracture. The dotted lines indicate the course of the +track] + +Again, it was rare for fissuring to extend from these tunnels to the +articular surfaces; thus many instances could be given of perforation of +the head of the humerus, the olecranon, or the femoral condyles, in +which no evidence of joint fissure was discoverable. The slight amount +of resistance offered by the cancellous ends was also clinically +illustrated by the absence of severe synovial effusions when they were +struck. When the joint cavity was not crossed, slight effusion only +resulted, while in the case of fractures of the femoral shaft great +effusion into the knee-joint, resulting from the forcible vibration +transmitted to the limb, was a common feature, even when the point +fractured was situated above the centre of the bone. Again, when the +joint cavity was crossed a moderate degree only of haemarthrosis was the +most common result. + +With regard to the implication of joints, either primary or secondary, +in connection with fractures of the articular ends, I am inclined to +place the lesions of the upper end of the tibia in a more important +position than those of any other bone. Evidence of this implication was +in my experience more frequent here than in any other situation. This +may in part be attributable to the complexity of structure of this +epiphysis, and perhaps more correctly to the influence of its irregular +outline in favouring lateral forms of impact on the part of the bullet +and consequent increase in the area of damage. + +Next to tunnelling, grooving was the most common form of injury to the +short bones. In the case of superficial tracks the compact tissue might +be considerably comminuted, but not, as a rule, over a width greatly +exceeding the calibre of the bullet. + +Comminution and crushing of a single or several bones were rare in +proportion to the occurrence of similar injuries produced by +Martini-Henry or large leaden bullets. When the condition was produced +by bullets of small calibre, I believe it was in the majority of cases +the result of irregular impact on the part of the projectile. In support +of this view it may be added that such injuries were most common in the +bones of the tarsus, bones especially liable to be struck by ricochet +bullets. + +It was generally believed that bullets travelling at a very high degree +of velocity were liable to cause severe comminution of the short bones, +but I never saw any cases supporting this opinion; in point of fact, all +the short-range lesions of this nature that I saw were of the clean +perforating variety. I believe that this is capable of satisfactory +explanation on the ground of the thin character of the layer of compact +tissue which for the most part ensheaths the short bones; this decreases +the resistance offered to the bullet and so tends to localise the +lesion. This statement may be supported by two observations with regard +to the long and flat bones. First, if the shaft of a long bone be hit +above the junction of diaphysis and epiphysis, the cancellous tissue in +and extending from the medullary cavity is pulverised, and examination +of fragments from such fractures gives the impression of the inner +aspect having been scraped clean. Secondly, I saw one fracture of the +ilium produced by a bullet taking a course between its compact layers +for 3 inches from the notch between the anterior superior and anterior +inferior spines; the bone to the extent of 2-1/2 square inches was +pulverised, the cancellous tissue blown away as dust, and the compact +tissue only represented by scales still adhering by their periosteum to +the muscles attached to the two surfaces of the bone. This injury was +produced from a rifle fired at five yards distance, and was an extreme +example; but, on the other hand, it illustrates only what we are +thoroughly well acquainted with in the case of flat bones, such as those +of the cranium, where the compact element is abundant in comparison with +the cancellous, and the resistance offered to the bullet is consequently +great. + +Some remarks on transverse fractures of the patella will be found under +the heading devoted to that bone. + +Lesions of the flat bones are considered at some length in Chapter VII., +which deals with injuries to the head, and their special features are +there described; some further remarks on these injuries will be found +under the headings of the individual bones. + +_Special characters of the symptoms observed, and of the course of +healing of the fractures._--Peculiarities in the initial signs may be +rapidly passed over. The first depended on the large number of lesions +of the bone which were unaccompanied by loss of continuity. In the case +of perforations attention to the course of the track, external +palpation, and possibly the detection of bone dust in the aperture of +exit, were usually sufficient to indicate injury to the bones. When +these did not suffice the introduction of a probe would usually set the +question at rest; but this is always to be avoided if possible, as +adding a fresh item of risk to the wound. The X rays were not always to +hand, and are not always capable of giving reliable information in the +matter of perforations, although very useful in detecting grooves or +notching. The latter injuries are those in which information as to the +condition of the bones is often of most interest in view of the +characters of the external wounds. + +Fractures with solution of continuity were, as a rule, easy of +detection, but the relative prominence of the classical signs varied +somewhat from what we are accustomed to see in civil practice. + +The first striking peculiarity noted in comminuted fractures of the long +bones was the degree of local shock; the limbs were often quite +powerless, the muscles flaccid, and common sensation lowered. This was +of importance in two ways; firstly, shortening of the limb was often +absent as a sign, and, secondly, pain was sometimes not at all +pronounced even when the patient was moved. The primary absence of +shortening, even persisting for the first two or three days, was a +phenomenon always important to bear in mind, as it affected the degree +of extension needed in the treatment of the fracture, which, if +sufficient at the moment, often proved quite inadequate with the return +of tone in the muscles. Secondly, abnormal mobility was usually strongly +marked, and this sometimes without very definite crepitus, as a result +of the fine nature of the comminution and the displacement of the small +fragments. + +During the course of healing some other peculiarities are worthy of +mention. First of all, union was tardy and often not strong. On the +other hand, an abundance of provisional callus was common, which formed +large swellings apt to implicate neighbouring nerves, and sometimes to +interfere with the movements of joints. The slowness of healing was +particularly noticeable in those cases where the degree of local shock +had been marked, and was probably to some extent dependent on +disturbance of the general nutrition of the tissues of the affected +limb. Beyond this, however, it was in many cases a direct result of the +degree of comminution and displacement of the fragments, which +necessitated the formation of a large amount of provisional callus, and +time for the proper consolidation and contraction of the same. In many +cases a large ball-like mass of callus surrounding the fragments was +developed, into which the actual ends of the broken bone only dipped, +and hence union was weak and insecure. As to those cases in which the +wounds closed by primary union, we must bear in mind in this relation +the tardy union often observed in civil practice, when the irritation of +suppuration and consequent inflammation are absent. + +Another peculiarity of a similar nature was the occasional late necrosis +of fragments; the wounds apparently healed well, only to break down +weeks or months later for the discharge of a sequestrum. Such cases were +quite distinct from those in which primary suppuration had occurred. I +saw one or two instances in fractures of the humerus, the trouble +arising with commencing use of the limb, and I suppose that fragments +which suffered death at the time of the injury had been enclosed, and +only caused irritation as foreign bodies when the muscles again came +into action. In the absence both of evident necrosis and suppuration, +however, in some cases the exit portion of the track in the soft parts +was extremely slow in healing. Although no discharge beyond a small +quantity of blood-tinged serum escaped, the wounds remained open for +many weeks, even when the fracture consolidated well. I ascribed this to +slow separation of aseptic sloughs, a point which has already been +mentioned under the heading of wounds in general. + +Superabundance of callus, as far as I had an opportunity of judging, +comparatively seldom gave rise to permanent mechanical trouble. This was +no doubt due to the infrequency of extension of the comminuted fractures +beyond the junction of diaphysis and epiphysis. + +Lastly, with regard to suppuration, only a small proportion of the +fractures, accompanied by the presence of large wounds, escaped +infection. When infection did occur, the results offered some special +features dependent on the small relative amount of damage to the soft +tissues, compared with that suffered by the bone. In an ordinary +compound fracture, such as we meet with in civil practice, whether the +result of direct or indirect violence, a considerable amount of +contusion or laceration, as the case may be, accompanies the injury to +the bone. The result of this is a widespread effusion of blood into the +limb, which tears and strips up the various layers of soft parts, and +opens up the way to the spread of infection, often into the whole +length of the segment of the limb affected. In fractures produced by +bullets of small calibre, even when the exit portion of the track is +large, the injury to the soft parts is far more localised, except in +extreme cases, while the bone itself is the tissue which has suffered +the most severe violence and contusion. When infection occurred, its +spread corresponded with this anatomical feature of the lesion, and the +bone itself and its immediate neighbourhood suffered the most severely. + +At the present day one is naturally not very familiar with a large +series of suppurating compound fractures, but during my whole experience +I have never seen so many cases of what might be regarded as fairly pure +instances of acute osteo-myelitis. The symptoms corresponded with the +main seat of the suppuration; only moderate swelling of the limbs +occurred, this mainly consisting in soft superficial oedema; often +there was no redness, and fluctuation was difficult to determine. At the +same time symptoms of constitutional infection, such as continued fever, +rapid pulse, restlessness, loss of strength, progressive anaemia, and +emaciation, were marked. Pyaemia, as evidenced by secondary deposits, +was, however, rare; I only saw two cases, both in fractures of the +femur; in both recovery followed secondary amputation. + +_Prognosis._--This depended almost entirely on the nature of the injury +to the soft parts; given moderate injury to these, and the preservation +of the wound from infection, scarcely any degree of injury of the bones +precluded recovery, even if this were slow and prolonged. The existence +of perforations scarcely increased to an important extent the gravity of +a wound of the soft parts alone; in fact, this injury could not be +regarded as more severe than an ordinary surgical osteotomy, putting the +risks of infection of the wound under the special circumstances on one +side. + +With regard to the functional results, these depended on the degree of +comminution; when this was extreme, union was slow and for a time weak, +and shortening was often considerable, but a fair result was as a rule +obtained. + +Suppuration and osteo-myelitis were the dangerous features when they +occurred; still, even in the presence of these, I never saw a fatal +result in an upper extremity fracture, although in the lower extremity +a considerable mortality followed fractures both of the leg and thigh, +the deaths being most commonly from septicaemia, or from a combination of +this with secondary haemorrhage. + +_Treatment._--The general treatment was of a simple character. The +perforations may be at once dismissed, since nothing more was needed +than what has been already described under the heading of wounds of the +soft parts. Again, with regard to the co-existence of vascular injury, +or injury to the soft parts generally, the ordinary rules guiding us in +civil practice were followed. + +The first point of importance, and needing consideration in the +treatment of severely comminuted fractures, was as to whether in these +it was better simply to try to obtain union of the wound with as little +disturbance as possible, or to anaesthetise the patient and explore the +wound, removing such fragments as were free or widely displaced. I think +the answer to this question depends entirely on the nature of the +external wounds. If these be of the small type forms, or if the exit +aperture is, at any rate, of only moderate size, a strictly conservative +attitude is the better when the risk of making an exploration under the +circumstances is borne in mind, the more so as an exploration, to be +safe and useful, ought to be done at once. If the exit wound is of the +large or explosive type, on the other hand, there is no doubt that the +best results are to be obtained by early exploration and the removal of +all loose fragments. I saw several excellent results obtained in this +way, even when the patients had to undergo the risk of transport +shortly, in some cases the very next day, after the operation. The loose +fragments are an immediate source of danger, and later may interfere +with the healing of the fracture, even if suppuration does not occur. In +all the cases that I saw the exit wound was dressed, but left freely +open, and I do not think any attempt to close it should ever be made. + +The question of operative fixation rarely needs consideration; it +occasionally happens, however, that oblique fractures, such as one +mentioned on p. 166, are met with, in which screwing or wiring of the +bone ends is advisable. What has been said above as to fractures, +accompanied by loss of continuity, applies equally to cases of severe +wedge-fracture, where many loose fragments exist. + +As to the disinfection of the limb, primary cleansing, mainly by soap +and water, of course precedes the exploration, and when the latter has +been carried out a second cleansing and disinfection, preferably with +spirit and carbolic acid lotion, are imperative. + +Immobilisation is a more difficult problem. In practised hands +plaster-of-Paris splints answer most requirements except in the case of +the thigh; but the splints take time to apply and also to set firmly, +and, as sometimes needing frequent removal, are not altogether suitable +for Field hospital work. Of all the splints I saw in use, I think the +best were wire splints, and the Dutch cane folding splints for the thigh +and leg (figs. 56, 58); wire-gauze splints with steel at the margins +(fig. 54), or strips of ordinary cardboard applied with some variety of +adhesive bandage for the arm and forearm; and plain wooden of various +lengths for any situation. + +A question of constant difficulty was that of frequency of dressing; in +a Stationary or Base hospital this is not difficult, as the same surgeon +has the patient continuously under his charge, and can readily decide as +to the proper moment for the renewal of the dressing. When the patient +is, however, being moved from the Field to the Stationary hospital, and +thence to the Base, a constant succession of surgeons has the case in +hand for short periods, the movements during transport disturb the +fixity of the dressing, and, in consequence, dressings are apt to be far +more frequent than is advisable. This question raises the larger one of +the advisability of _any_ transport beyond what may be an actual +necessity. There is only one answer to this. No fractures of the thigh +or leg, and few of the arm, can be transported for any distance without +material disadvantage. The risks attendant on disturbance of the +fracture and tissue injury, septic infection as a result of slipping of +the dressing and the impracticability of efficiently renewing it, far +more than counterbalance any advantage to be gained from the superior +comforts available at a Base hospital. For these reasons, if possible, +all fractures of the arm, thigh, or leg should be kept at a Stationary +hospital for a period of three or more weeks, and, as far as splints and +appliances are concerned, these should be as numerous and complete as at +a Base hospital. I have had a useful set made of aluminium. A word will +be added later as to the splints suitable for different regions of the +body. + +The necessity for _primary amputation_ chiefly depends on the nature of +the injury to the soft parts, less commonly on the extent of the injury +to the bones, and should be decided on exactly the same lines as in +civil practice. So-called intermediate amputations are always to be +avoided if possible; the results were consistently bad, and the +operation should only be undertaken in cases of severe sepsis where +little can be hoped from it, or for secondary haemorrhage. When the +operation could be tided over until the septic process had settled down +and localised itself, secondary amputation gave very fair results. In +either intermediate or secondary amputation for suppurating fractures, +it was necessary to bear in mind the special likelihood of the existence +of extensive osteo-myelitis. If this condition affected the upper +fragment, an amputation was of little use unless the whole bone was +removed, as septic infection continued and brought about a fatal issue, +or a fresh amputation was required in order to obtain a stump that would +heal. + + +SPECIAL FRACTURES + +_Upper Extremity._--Fractures of the _scapula_ were not uncommon, but +were mostly of the perforative variety; thus perforations both of the +spine in longitudinal wounds of the back, and of the ala in perforating +wounds of the thorax, were tolerably frequent. They possessed little +practical interest; as a rule, the openings were not large, and the most +unexpected feature was the small interference with the movements of the +bone on the chest wall that resulted. It might be assumed that +comminuted fragments would project into the muscles and cause both pain +and interference with movement; but neither was the case. I saw grooving +of the crest of the spine, but never happened to meet with a fracture +of the acromion process. Many axillary tracks passed in the closest +proximity to the coracoid, but this again I never saw separated. One +practical point of importance with regard to the scapula was the +frequency with which bullets lodged in the venter, or the firmly +bound-down muscles of the supra- and infra-spinous fossae. These retained +bullets often gave rise to remarkably little trouble in this situation; +thus I have a skiagram of a shrapnel bullet lying in the deepest part of +the subscapular fossa, which did not inconvenience its possessor. + +[Illustration: FIG. 53. Head of Humerus, showing broken perforation. The +roof forms a hinged covering to a groove.] + +Every variety of _fracture of the clavicle_ was met with, even +perforation of the most compact portion of the shaft; comminuted, wedge, +or notched fractures were, however, the more common, and were +accompanied by the development of very large masses of provisional +callus during the process of healing. An interesting skiagram is +reproduced in plate III., which shows a compound form of injury to the +clavicle. The bullet has passed obliquely beneath the acromial end, +rising to perforate the posterior compact margin, and producing one of +the diamond-shaped openings sometimes occurring in compact bone with the +passage of bullets at a low rate of velocity. No case of perforation of +the subclavian vein by comminuted fragments of the clavicle came under +my notice. + +_Fractures of the humerus_ of every variety were common, and I think +when the statistics of the campaign are published, it will be shown that +the humerus was the most frequently injured individual bone in the whole +body. I remember to have seen thirteen fractures of the shaft of the +humerus in one pavilion alone at Wynberg after the battle of Paardeberg. + +Perforations of the upper articular extremity were common, and as a rule +gave rise to wonderfully little trouble in the shoulder-joint. The outer +aspect of the head of the humerus is a common situation for the +production of a special form of broken canal or groove (fig. 53). The +slope from the greater tuberosity to the shaft naturally favours the +production of the injury in this position. + +I saw only one case in which a vertical fissure extended from a fracture +of the shaft into the shoulder-joint; in this case the transverse +solution of continuity was at the upper part of the middle third of the +bone. Skiagram, plate IV., illustrates a well-marked stellate +comminution of the shaft with large fragments. Plate V. shows extreme +comminution with fragments blown out of the wound. Two plates, Nos. VI. +and VIII., illustrate well the difference resulting from the oblique +passage of a bullet at high and low rates of velocity respectively. In +both cases good results were obtained; in the more severe the resultant +mass of ensheathing callus was very large, temporarily interfered with +flexion of the elbow-joint, and consolidation was very slow (see plate +VII.). The patient was wounded at Belmont in November 1899, but he was +able to row at the end of the summer of 1900, although very prolonged +suppuration occurred, and the elbow movements became practically normal. +Plate IX. illustrates a transverse track, the bullet having undergone +considerable injury during its passage through the bone, as evidenced by +the presence of fragments both of mantle and lead in the limb. This +might be called an example of transverse fracture, and illustrates the +nearest approach to one seen when the bone is struck fairly plumb. + +[Illustration: PLATE IV. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(24) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS + +Range about '300 yards.' + +The wound track took a directly antero-posterior course. Impact +rectangular. The musculo-spiral nerve was completely divided. + +The plate affords a good example of the so-called 'butterfly' fracture. +Two long doubly wedge-shaped lateral fragments, and pointed extremities +to both main fragments, are shown. + +The fracture healed well, with the deposition of a large mass of +provisional callus. The musculo-spiral nerve was united by suture some +three months later.] + +Plate VIII. exhibits an oblique fracture of the lower part of the shaft +produced by a bullet passing at a low rate of velocity. It does not +widely differ from a perforation, and the illustration possesses some +further interest as showing the deviation of a bullet likely to occur +when a bone lies in its course. Although the velocity with which this +bullet was travelling must have been very low, when the bone had been +traversed the deviation in its course was slight. A few bony fragments +from the compact tissue of the posterior surface of the humerus have +been carried into the distal portion of the track. + +Fractures of the various prominences of the lower articular extremity +were not uncommon, but deviated little from the types with which we are +familiar in civil practice; the after results were good, both as to +union and movement of the elbow. + +Explosive wounds of the soft parts were not infrequent in the arm, and +fig. 48, p. 158, exhibits an extreme example. The humerus in respect of +depth of covering, however, comes between the femur and the bones of the +leg and forearm; hence such injuries were not so easily produced as in +the latter segments of the limbs. + +In connection with the subject of fractures of this bone, one word must +be added as to the occurrence of the most characteristic of its +complications, musculo-spiral paralysis. This was frequent in every +position of the fracture, and came on either immediately, or, at a +subsequent period, as a result of callus irritation or pressure. Its +frequency is only what would be expected when the nature of the fracture +is considered, but the chief interest of the condition lay in the +difficulty of certainly detecting it in the initial stages of the cases; +this depended on the fact that in many of them the local shock to the +limb was so severe that the function of the whole of the muscles was +lowered, or in some cases, although the musculo-spiral was the nerve +chiefly affected, the other large trunks had also suffered concussion or +contusion. In consequence of this difficulty the actual localised +paralysis often only became evident at the end of a week, or even more, +when there was difficulty in deciding as to whether the paralysis was +primary or due to secondary trouble. In the fracture illustrated by +skiagram, plate IV., the nerve suffered complete division, and was +united some three months later, improvement in the symptoms being very +slow. The latter was a common experience, and although not unusual in +civil practice, I think it is more marked in these injuries as a result +of the more widespread character of the nerve lesion. + +[Illustration: PLATE V. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(25) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS + +Range '50 yards.' Velocity extreme. + +Impact somewhat oblique. The bullet entered anteriorly about 3 inches +above the elbow crease. The wound of exit was on the inner aspect of the +arm and explosive in character; it still measured 4 inches by 2 inches +three weeks after the injury was received. + +The wounds suppurated locally, but at the end of six weeks fair union of +the bone had taken place and the wound of exit had contracted to a +sinus. The musculo-spiral nerve was concussed, but not divided. + +The skiagram was taken three weeks after the reception of the injury. + +Comparison with plate IV. demonstrates the effect of high velocity in +free comminution of the bone, the sharper radiation of the stellate +lines of fracture, and the propulsion of bone fragments.] + +The _bones of the forearm_ were also often fractured. The principal +peculiarity of these fractures was the common localisation of the injury +to one bone, which is readily seen to be probable. + +Each bone offered some special features dependent on its structural +character and anatomical position. In the case of the _ulna_, pure +perforation of the olecranon process, without obvious evidence of +implication of the elbow, was seen on several occasions. The other +important feature with regard to this bone depends on its subcutaneous +position, which accounted for the frequency with which highly developed +explosive exit wounds were met with. One is figured in the general +section (fig. 47, p. 156). This, however, is a very slight instance +compared with what was often seen in the upper and middle thirds of the +bone, where the lateral soft parts often protruded as a much larger +tumour, the particular illustration being mainly designed to show the +nature of the injury to the skin. The _radius_, as more deeply placed in +the upper part of its course, was less often the seat of such +well-marked explosive injuries; but when the lower end was struck this +character was sometimes very striking: thus in a track passing +antero-posteriorly through this bone, the whole lower end appeared +shattered, all the tendons at the back of the wrist being implicated in +the protruding mass, while the bone itself seemed shortened, so that the +hand took up the position common in Colles's fracture. It was found +impossible to place the bone in good position; nevertheless the patient +retained his hand, which is still of use in writing. + +Plate X. is a good example of a high-velocity injury in which lateral +contact with the radius has produced local comminution, some slight +injury to the casing of the bullet, and the separation of a large wedge. +The case from which this was taken also illustrated well one of the +chief troubles of such fractures of the forearm; the degree of +splintering resulted in the formation of a large mass of callus, which +for a time rendered any degree of pronation and supination impossible. + +[Illustration: PLATE VI. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(26) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS + +Range '250 yards.' + +Impact oblique. Wound of entry 1 inch below the insertion of the +deltoid; exit, on inner aspect of arm at a slightly lower level. The +bullet probably struck the bone laterally, and drove out the central +fragment. + +Prolonged suppuration resulted, but the humerus healed well, and good +movement of the elbow was preserved. + +The effect of oblique impact together with high velocity is well +illustrated. Had the resistance been greater, as in the case of the +femur, a nearer resemblance to the effect seen in plate XV. would have +been the result.] + +Of _fractures of the hand_ I have little to say. In the case of the +_carpus_, the slight degree of resistance offered by the bones rendered +injuries of an explosive character rare. I never saw one. Fractures of +the _metacarpus_, on the other hand, presented exactly the opposite +features. The density of these small bones was well illustrated by the +frequency with which the bullet suffered injury, even amounting to +fragmentation, and the great comminution they themselves suffered. The +breaking up of the bullet in these fractures was a curious feature, +which may perhaps be explained by the tendency of the distal part of the +limb to be driven in the course of the bullet, with the result of +somewhat lengthening the period of contact of the projectile, or more +probably by somewhat frequently occurring irregular impact. Plate XI. is +a good example of an injury of this nature of moderate severity. The +soft parts suffered much in these injuries, the tendons were torn and +lacerated at the moment, and were very apt to acquire more or less +permanent adhesion. This latter condition was sometimes to be improved +by the removal of bone fragments, and I have freed tendons from actual +clefts in the bones where they had been carried in by the bullet. In +some cases very great deformity of the digits, due to shortening, +developed, even when no fragments were removed beyond those blown away +by the bullet. + +One form of injury of some interest was multiple fracture of the +phalanges produced by a bullet travelling in a course parallel to the +length of the rifle when pointed by the patient. Occasionally several +digits were lost. + +_Treatment of fractures of the upper extremity._--The general lines of +this have already been foreshadowed in the general section, the remarks +as to transport being applicable to all serious fractures of the shaft +of the humerus, and this is the only one of the bones of the upper +extremity on which anything special need be said, as the treatment of +all the other fractures exactly coincides with that of ordinary civil +practice. + +[Illustration: PLATE VII. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(26_a_) CONDITION OF THE SAME FRACTURE SHOWN IN PLATE VI., A YEAR AFTER +ITS PRODUCTION + +The ensheathing callus is still very abundant, but less so than at an +earlier date. No trouble with the musculo-spiral nerve was noted, but +residual abscesses occurred from time to time in connection with the +fracture.] + +[Illustration: FIG. 54.--German Wire Gauze Splint on steel wire +foundation. + +(German Ambulance, Heilbron)] + +The treatment of wounds should be on the lines already laid down: +thorough cleansing, and then an attempt to seal. In severely comminuted +fractures, however, the exit wound may be of very large size, and then +frequent dressings are necessary. Loose fragments, by which those freed +from their periosteal connections are meant, need removal. The question +which most interested me was the best method of fixation. This needs to +be sufficient to effect immobility, but on the other hand in many cases +the weight of the arm as a means of extension is very valuable. Some of +the most successfully treated cases that I saw were fixed by means of +simple strips of pasteboard, applied moist, and fixed with an adhesive +bandage. Ordinary book-muslin bandages are as good as anything for this +purpose, as they can be reinforced by a stronger form outside them. +Where necessary, an angular piece of cardboard can be applied on the +inner aspect, or a wooden angular splint may be substituted, if it is at +hand; but in this case most of the advantage of the weight of the arm as +a means of extension is lost. The cardboard cases possess the great +advantage of being readily cut off and reapplied much as is done with +plaster of Paris. During the period in which dressing may be necessary I +believe this form of splint is as good as can be got for use in Field +hospitals, the only point needing care being to ensure that the +bandaging is not too tight. It is much more reliable than are ordinary +splints if transport is unavoidable, and is much lighter and less +irksome to the patient. With such strips of cardboard, a few of the +gauze splints (fig. 54), and a few angular and wooden splints, I believe +a Field hospital is fully equipped for the treatment of any fractures of +the upper extremity. + +[Illustration: PLATE VIII. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(27) OBLIQUE FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS OF THE NATURE OF A PERFORATION + +Range more than '1,000 yards.' + +The distance was probably much greater, as the bullet was retained and +undeformed, and the comminution of the bone was very slight. The wound +of entry was just below the elbow. + +The bullet has cut its way through the inner half of the humerus, +producing little comminution and mere solution of continuity of the bone +without displacement] + +_Fractures of the pelvis._--These, as a rule, were of so slight a nature +as to form a very insignificant part of the entire injury with which +they were associated, or when uncomplicated they were of little more +importance than simple wounds of the soft parts. The very great majority +were of the simple perforating type. I had the opportunity of examining +three at the brim of the pelvis, these all passing in a downward +direction. The openings were of about the same calibre as the bullet, +and at their entrance was a small amount of bone dust such as would be +found at the entry hole of a gimlet. It was these that made me consider +the possibility of the rifle grooves having some part in the ease with +which certain perforations are made. Of a large number of cases in which +bullets traversed the ilium, the openings in the bone, as a rule, were +with difficulty palpated. I must say that I was astonished that I never +met with an instance of an extensive stellate fracture in the case of +the ilium. Such may have occurred in some of the cases fatal on the +field or shortly afterwards, but I never came across one in the +hospital. It says much for the combined density and toughness of the +human pelvis. + +Comminuted fractures were, however, occasionally met with when the +bullet passed in a track parallel to the plane of the bone. One such of +an unusual character has already been mentioned on p. 171. A still more +interesting form, and one highly characteristic of flat bone injuries, +is shown in fig. 55. The patient, a man wounded at Modder River, was +struck at a range of 300 to 400 yards. The bullet entered over about the +centre of the ilium and emerged in the anterior abdominal wall about 2 +inches above the anterior-superior spine. As there was some doubt as to +penetration of the abdomen, and as the exit wound was of considerable +size, the wound was explored, an anaesthetic having been given. A +clean-cut track in the bone was discovered which allowed the middle +finger to be placed in it. There was little splintering of either inner +or outer table of the bone beyond the width of the track, but plates of +each table adhered on the one side to the origin of the gluteus medius, +and on the other to the iliacus, the latter muscle being somewhat widely +separated from the venter ilii by effused blood. There was no +perforation of the abdominal cavity. + +[Illustration: PLATE IX. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(28) LOCALISED COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS + +Range '100 yards.' + +The entry and exit wounds were on the front and back aspects of the arm, +about 3 inches above the elbow. + +Fragmentation of the mantle of the bullet has occurred. It will be noted +that the fragments are lodged in both the proximal and distal segments +of the track. This may indicate that the bullet was damaged prior to +entry, or the recoil of fragments. I incline to the latter view. The +skiagram was taken a fortnight after the injury. + +The large median fragment carried forwards, and the small degree of +comminution, suggest the decrease of resistance and prolongation of +impact by carriage back of the arm when struck. + +The fracture is one of the nearest approaches to a transverse cleft that +I met with. + +The plate may well be compared with No. XII., where the effect of +increased resistance in augmenting the degree of comminution is seen.] + +Lesser degrees of the same kind of injury amounting to grooving of the +surface or notching of the crest of the ilium were not uncommon, and the +occasional large character of exit openings in buttock wounds pointed to +contact of travelling bullets with other parts of the external pelvic +wall. + +[Illustration: FIG. 55.--Clean Gutter Fracture of the Ilium (range +placed by patient at 300 yards. Highland Brigade, Magersfontein). The +gutter was clean cut, and admitted the forefinger. The inner and outer +tables of the bone were in part blown out of a large irregularly +circular exit opening about 1-1/2 in. above the crest of the ilium. The +cancellous tissue was probably entirely blown out. Plates of the outer +and inner tables still remained connected by their periosteum to the +deep aspects of the iliacus and gluteus medius muscles. The peritoneal +cavity was not opened. The patient did well. Compare with the gutter +fractures of the skull shown in figs. 64, 66.] + +Certain portions of the pelvis were subject to more severe comminution; +thus in one case in which the bladder was wounded, a very much +comminuted fracture of the horizontal ramus of the pubes was produced by +a bullet which subsequently lodged in the thigh behind the femoral +vessels. In this case the track was so oblique as to have necessitated +almost pure lateral impact on the part of the bullet; hence the form of +injury was nearly allied to the comminutions of the ilium already +described. + +[Illustration: PLATE X. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd + +(29) Wedge-shaped Fracture of the Radius + +Range 'a few yards.' + +The officer shot the man, his assailant, with a revolver. The entry +wound was on the posterior aspect of the forearm at the junction of the +middle and lower thirds. The exit wound was on the anterior aspect of +the forearm, 1 inch below the elbow crease, and of moderate size. + +Some fine fragmentation of the mantle of the bullet is indicated, and +very fine comminution of the bone. The fracture healed well, but the +resulting mass of callus at the end of three months prevented any +movements of pronation or supination.] + +I never observed a fracture of the floor of the acetabulum by a bullet +which had entered from the back of the pelvis, although tracks entering +by the great sciatic notch were not infrequent. I saw one case in which +a bullet which traversed the upper part of the shoulder and emerged at +the axilla entered a second time an inch behind and above the anterior +superior spine, and split off a layer of the outer table of the ilium of +the extent of two square inches, which involved the upper portion of the +rim of the acetabulum. No displacement upwards of the femur resulted; +but external rotation was accompanied by crepitus. The wound suppurated, +and some general infection resulted, but six weeks later there was no +evidence of fluid in the hip-joint, the limb was adducted and slightly +rotated outwards, and some movement in each direction could be made +without causing any great amount of pain. I can say nothing of the +further course of this case, as I neglected to take the patient's name. + +I saw one or two instances of perforation of the sacrum. One is +mentioned in the chapter on injuries to the abdomen, in which a central +puncture at the level of the fourth vertebra was accompanied by +temporary incontinence of faeces. + +Fractures of the _femur_ were fairly numerous and formed one of the most +serious classes of case we had to treat, as well as one of the most +fertile sources of mortality in the Base hospitals. In spite of the last +observation, however, it is probable that the results in this campaign +will be far better than in any previous war, both as to the smaller +proportion in which amputation was needed and as to recovery. + +[Illustration: PLATE XI. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(30) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE SECOND METACARPAL BONE + +Large fragments of the mantle of the bullet. + +Fragmentation of the bullet was comparatively common when the metacarpal +bones were struck, also free comminution of a somewhat coarser variety +than that seen when bones offering greater resistance were struck. + +This may be a result of the more frequent lateral impact of the bullet +on these small bones.] + +In spite of a considerable experience, I never saw a case of perforation +of either the head or neck of the thigh bone. I saw numerous tracks +emerging at the side of the femoral vessels and entering at the buttock +or vice versa, but never one accompanied either by effusion into the +hip-joint or impairment of movement. Considering the regularity with +which haemarthrosis occurred when the other joints were crossed, and also +the nature of the compact tissue of the neck of the femur, which must +have ensured some splintering, I do not think I can have overlooked an +injury of this nature. No doubt also the escape of the neck of the bone +was explained in some of the cases by the fact that the injuries were +received while the hip-joint was in a position of flexion, the bullet +passing over the neck of the femur. In two cases of extensive +comminution of the upper third of the femur that I saw, the fissures +stopped short at the inter-trochanteric line anteriorly, but in one of +them a large angular fragment was torn out of the posterior surface of +the neck. + +Excepting transverse fracture every form was met with in the shaft, +although I saw only two instances of perforation. One has been already +alluded to and was situated in the broadening portion of the lower +third, the bullet taking an antero-posterior course. The second is seen +in plate XVII. + +Plate XII. shows an instance of extreme comminution of the upper third +accompanied by the presence of two typical elongated fragments. The +course taken by the bullet was almost directly antero-posterior, and the +wounds were of moderate size even in the case of the exit one. This +seems to preclude the possibility of the injury having been produced by +a ricochet bullet, while the fact of perforation and escape of the +bullet in spite of the serious damage suffered by the mantle points to +the injury having been produced at a short range of fire. The patient +himself owns to being quite unable to give any estimate of the distance. +Although no suppuration occurred, this fracture was very slow in +consolidating, and the free comminution with consequent inaccurate +apposition led to the development of four inches shortening of the limb. +The skiagram was taken about six weeks after the occurrence of the +injury, a few days after I first saw the patient; I have, however, had +the opportunity of seeing a second skiagram taken some four months +later. This is of considerable interest, as throwing light on the mode +of union of such fractures. The two elongated fragments in the later +skiagram are widened to three times their original breadth, and form +buttresses on either side of the point of union, while the irregular +ends of the shaft are rounded off, and the mass of fine fragments behind +is consolidated. Beyond this the second skiagram shows that the upper +fragment, apparently intact in the first, was really split +longitudinally, and therefore was far less useful as a point of support +than might have been assumed from the earlier skiagram, plate XIII. The +case illustrates well the chief difficulty in the treatment of such +fractures: that of maintaining the fragments in line, since absolutely +no help is received from the apposition of the two ends, and artificial +traction alone must be relied upon. + +[Illustration: PLATE XII. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(31) HIGHLY COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE UPPER THIRD OF THE SHAFT OF THE +FEMUR + +Range 'short.' + +Impact fairly direct. The wounds were of moderate size and at nearly the +same level. The exit wound near the buttock fold was of moderate size, +and presented no special features. + +Considerable fragmentation of the bullet occurred. The comminution of +the bone is very fine, suggesting high velocity, and great resistance by +the bone. The skiagram was taken five weeks after the injury was +received, and at that time no union had occurred. + +Reference to plate XIII. will explain more fully the difficulty +experienced in maintaining this fracture in position. The upper fragment +is seen to be split into fragments, beyond the separation of the long +splinter on the inner side; hence no aid was to be obtained from the +apposition of the ends. About 2 inches of the shaft were actually +pulverised; the fine fragments seen in a mass to the inner side of the +bone in the exit portion of the back, eventually formed a large mass of +callus, and the fracture united, with considerable shortening.] + +Plate XIV. offers a good contrast; the fracture here presents a typical +stellate form, and a good result without shortening was readily +obtained. I assume that the difference in character of these two +fractures depended mainly on the rate of velocity with which the bullet +was travelling, since it passed fairly directly across the limb in each. +I think it is clear, however, that the bullet struck the femur rather +nearer the centre of the width of the shaft and therefore more directly, +in the more severe injury. + +This brings me to the question of explosive exit wounds in the thigh. In +spite of the great tendency to comminution of the shaft, these were rare +in a severe form. This depended simply on the depth and thickness of the +coverings of the bone, and, as already mentioned, although the skin +openings were often comparatively small, a large cavity or area of +destroyed soft tissues may be contained within the limb. I do not think +I ever saw an exit wound in the thigh exceeding 1-1/2 inch in diameter. + +The oblique fracture illustrated by plate XVI. has been already referred +to, and the influence of the weight and movement of the trunk on its +production has been considered. + +Plate XV. illustrates an obliquely comminuted fracture of another +character. The bullet has here been stripped of its mantle, which has +undergone fragmentation, but the leaden core is little altered in shape. +This is of much interest, since it shows that the bullet struck the bone +by its side. The effect of such lateral impact on the part of the +projectile is well shown: there is great bone comminution of a less +regular character than usual, and the bullet is retained. Retention in +this case was probably not a result of low velocity of flight, but of +the increased resistance offered by the broad area of bone struck, and +the check exerted on the axial rotation of the bullet by the lateral +contact. + +[Illustration: PLATE XIII. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(31_a_) THE FRACTURE SHOWN IN PLATE XII., SIX MONTHS AFTER RECEPTION OF +THE INJURY + +The amount of callus furnished around the loose fragments is very +striking. + +The upper end of the bone is shown to have been divided into at least +two fragments, hence one of the difficulties of maintaining the ends in +apposition. The stoppage of the fissuring short of the epiphysis is +characteristic.] + +Slighter injuries to the femur in which the shaft was chipped or grooved +without loss of continuity were not uncommon, and showed well the +capacity of the bone to withstand the lateral shock transmitted by small +bullets. Two figures inserted in the chapter on wounds in general (figs. +22, 23, pp. 61, 62) are of cases in which, from the appearance of the +wound of exit, the bullet probably underwent deformation, or was so +deflected as to escape on a considerably altered axis. Beyond the nature +of the exit wound in the case depicted in fig. 22, some thickening +beneath the femoral vessels denoted bone injury, but unfortunately no +skiagram was taken. + +I saw no case in which a transverse fracture of the shaft accompanied +such injuries, but am under the impression that, if they had been +produced by bullets of greater volume and weight, transverse solution of +continuity would have been more common. In point of fact, no case of +pure transverse fracture of the femur ever came under my notice. + +The diagram depicted in fig. 51, p. 164, is from a sketch made of the +lower end of a femur in which a severely comminuted fracture followed by +suppuration necessitated an amputation of the thigh, performed by Major +Lougheed, R.A.M.C. It is inserted as an illustration of the tendency of +the fissures to stop short above the actual articular extremities of the +bones. In this case the comminution was extreme and accompanied by the +usual long lateral fragments, one of which measured five inches in +length and might well have extended into the knee-joint had that been an +ordinary occurrence. + +Perforations of the lower extremity of the bone were very common. These +were sometimes transverse and limited to the articular extremity itself, +or the same limitation occurred to the antero-posterior tracks. These +were the slightest forms of injury, putting on one side incomplete +tunnels and grooves on the surface of the bone. With regard to the +latter, however, when they invaded the joint cavity the injury was +liable to be more severe than a complete perforation, in consequence of +the projection of comminuted fragments into the joint cavity near the +line of reflection of the synovial capsule and ulterior interference +with freedom of movement. + +[Illustration: FIG. 55_a_.--Diagram of 'Butterfly' type.] + +[Illustration: PLATE XIV. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(32) TYPICAL STELLATE (BUTTERFLY) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR + +Range 'short.' + +Wounds small, impact direct, very little fine comminution. The bone +united without shortening of the limb.] + +Other tracks took a direction of longitudinal obliquity, and then +implicated both epiphysis and diaphysis. Fig. 52, p. 169, shows an +example, and also the peculiarity likely to be assumed by the exit +aperture in the bone, especially if the bullet was travelling at a low +rate of velocity, a considerable plate of the compact bone being driven +out. In some cases these oblique tracks involved both femur and tibia. +They will be referred to again under the heading of injuries to the +joints, and some remarks will also be found there regarding the synovial +effusion so often occurring into the knee-joint in cases of fracture of +the shaft of the bone. + +It may be of interest to insert here a few remarks as to the clinical +characteristics of fractures of the femur. First with regard to the +primary signs and symptoms. A very considerable degree of general or +constitutional shock usually accompanied them, and this was perhaps more +constant than in the case of any other injury in the body. This was, +moreover, no doubt increased by the unfavourable conditions in which +patients on the field of battle are situated in regard to transport. +When the patients were brought into hospital some delay in the primary +treatment was often necessary until reaction took place. Local shock to +the part was also a prominent feature. Abnormal mobility was very free +in the badly comminuted cases. Crepitus was often loose, and of 'the bag +of bone' variety. The result of local shock and consequent flaccidity of +the muscles was to reduce the development of primary shortening; in some +cases of severe comminution this was practically nil during the first +day or two, when, with return of tone in the muscles, it sometimes +became very considerable. Swelling of the limb was often very great, and +vascular injury definitely far more common than in the fractures of +civil practice, in consequence, no doubt, not only of the number and +sharpness of the fragments, but also of the force with which they were +driven into the surrounding tissues. The exit segment of the track was +out of all proportion in size to the entry, as a result of the +propulsion of bone fragments through it. This often made the closure of +the exit wound a very protracted event, the track continuing to +discharge a small quantity of bloody serum and fragments of necrosed +tissue for many weeks. + +[Illustration: PLATE XV. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(33) COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE FEMUR + +Range 'short.' + +Normal entry wound of slightly oval form. + +Oblique lateral impact on the part of the bullet, the mantle of which +burst into numerous fragments. The bullet is seen to the inner side of +the shaft, almost devoid of its mantle, and little deformed at the tip. +The comminution of the upper portion of the fracture is very fine; the +bullet has merely cut its way down the lower portion, and one or two +long fragments are separated. The skiagram shows well the result of +lateral impact by the side of the bullet. + +Compare this plate with No. VI. as illustrating lesser resistance, and +No. VIII. as illustrating the effect of lower velocity.] + +In a large proportion of the cases which were transported for any +distance suppuration occurred; this must have been the case in at least +60 per cent. of the fractures. Suppuration was of the character already +described in the general section, affecting particularly the bone +itself, and accompanied by very marked signs of general infection. + +_Prognosis in fractures of the femur._--As regards mortality fractures +in the upper third of the bone proved one of the most formidable +injuries which came under treatment. Suppuration was common, at least 60 +per cent. of the wounds becoming infected. This depended on several +reasons, often inseparable from the injuries, or from their treatment in +Field hospitals: such as (1) the exit wound being situated in the +dangerous region of the thigh; (2) ineffective dressing and fixation; +(3) the impossibility of ensuring primary cleansing and removal of +detached fragments of bone; (4) the necessity of the early transport of +patients to the Stationary or Base hospitals, often for great distances; +(5) the comparatively long period that often had to elapse before the +opportunity of doing the first efficient dressing arrived. + +Fractures in the middle and lower thirds of the bone were more easy to +treat successfully, but these also added to the list both of amputations +and fatalities. + +Punctured fractures of the lower articular extremity were usually of +little importance, as they progressed without exception, as far as my +experience went, favourably. + +I can give no idea of the general results obtained during the whole +campaign, but I am able to state the results of the fractures of the +shaft treated at No. 1 General Hospital during my stay in South Africa. +Thirty-two cases of fracture of the shaft of the bone came under +treatment, and of these 6 or 18.7 per cent. needed amputation, and of +the whole number 5 or 15.6 per cent. died. To emphasise the satisfactory +nature of these figures I need only quote the results attained in the +American War of the Rebellion; mortality in upper third, 46 per cent.; +middle third, 40.6 per cent.; lower third, 38.2 per cent. + +[Illustration: PLATE XVI. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(34) OBLIQUE FRACTURE OF THE SHAFT OF THE FEMUR + +Range '300 to 400 yards.' + +Aperture of entry just above the centre of the outer aspect of the +thigh. Exit, about 2 inches lower, at the junction of the inner and +posterior aspects. The bullet was retained just within the wound, and +when removed the mantle fell off in two parts. The leaden core was +mushroomed. The bullet had passed through another soldier previous to +entering the patient's thigh. Only two small fragments of the mantle +were retained, as seen in the skiagram. These were in the substance of +the great sciatic nerve, and were subsequently removed by Sir Thomas +Smith. + +It is difficult to determine how the bone was struck; reference to plate +XXI. would suggest that the shaft may have been perforated, but no +evidence of this remains in the skiagram taken, which was five months +later. + +The patient was standing at the moment of reception of the injury, and +the obliquity of the fracture no doubt depended on his fall and the +resulting influence of the weight of the body. The length of the +fracture cleft was 9 inches.] + +I need hardly dwell upon the difference between the nature of the +injuries received in the American War of the Rebellion and in the +present campaign, as in the former the old large bullets were employed, +and shell injuries are possibly included; but I ought to add in this +relation, that the numbers quoted from No. 1 General Hospital included, +to my knowledge, at least three severe Martini-Henry wounds. + +The first element for a favourable prognosis is a small wound, and +opportunity for an efficient primary treatment of the same; the second +the absence of necessity for transport of the patient. With regard to +the second of these requirements, we were unfortunately situated in +South Africa, and the majority of the cases which did badly were moved +during the first few days and for a distance of between five and six +hundred miles. On the other hand, as a rule, the external wounds were +small. + +As to functional result, the fractures did well. I think an average of +an inch and a half would well cover the shortening, and in many the +length was little altered. Considering the serious nature of many of +these fractures, this was good. + +_Treatment._--In all punctured fractures of the lower extremity, +dressing of the wounds like uncomplicated ones and a short period of +immobilisation were all that was necessary. In oblique fractures, and +those with slight comminution, closure of the wound by dressings, after +it had been carefully cleansed, was all that was necessary prior to +applying the splints for immobilisation. + +[Illustration: PLATE XVII + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. (35) PERFORATION OF +THE SHAFT OF THE FEMUR. FLAP OF BONE RAISED AT THE APERTURE OF EXIT IN +THE POPLITEAL SURFACE OF THE SHAFT. + +Range 'over 1,000 yards.' + +Compare with fig. 52, p. 169.] + +In the highly comminuted fractures a more radical treatment was +indicated, especially if the exit wound was large. In these, after +careful preliminary cleansing of the limb, the wounds, especially the +exit aperture, needed exploration and, if necessary, enlargement, and +all free splinters needed removal. If interference with the entry wound +could be avoided, this was always preferable, as it was rare for this +not to heal by primary union unless free suppuration occurred. Under +Field hospital conditions I think the exit wound should never be +sutured, whatever its situation; and in the present campaign, where +carbolic acid lotion was freely used, this step was manifestly +inadvisable, in view of the abundant serous discharge always to be +expected when this disinfectant has been employed. Except in cases +manifestly infected at the time of exploration, the use of drainage +tubes or plugs is not to be recommended. I would point out also that in +the majority of cases it is quite hopeless to attempt to make the entry +wound the safety-valve for drainage, as its natural tendency, even if +enlarged, is to heal, while the condition of the tissues in the exit +segment of the track usually renders primary union an impossibility. + +The wound having been dealt with, the next indications were for the +reduction of deformity, immobilisation of the limb, and the provision of +a proper degree of extension. As to the reduction of the fracture, this +was always a matter of ease, needing only slight axis traction. The +provision of efficient means of extension and immobilisation was a very +different matter. These questions had to be considered under two sets of +conditions: (1) when it was possible to keep the patient at rest in the +hospital he was first deposited in; (2) when it was necessary for him to +be transported for a considerable distance, probably not less than 500 +miles. + +When transport is a necessity, the best method of immobilisation is the +application of breeches of plaster of Paris, and a long outside splint. +The latter we often had excellently made on emergency by the Ordnance +Department or the Royal Engineers. A perineal band is the only form of +extension possible under these circumstances. The Dutch ambulances were +provided with a very excellent emergency splint for cases of fractured +thigh, which is illustrated in fig. 56. I think something of this kind +should be carried in one of the ambulances going on to every field of +battle, as being far more suitable than a long outside splint for hasty +and inaccurate application. This splint, fixed with some kind of firm +bandage, is an excellent temporary one for use during transport. + +[Illustration: PLATE XVIII. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(36) OBLIQUELY TRANSVERSE FRACTURE OF THE PATELLA + +Range 'short.' + +The entry and exit wounds were small, and a distinct grooving from loss +of substance of the bone was palpable superficial to the actual cleft of +the fracture.] + +[Illustration: FIG. 56.--Dutch Cane Field Emergency Splint for Thigh or +Lower Extremity. (Dutch Ambulance, Winberg)] + +In cases which can be treated at a Stationary hospital near at hand, a +long outside splint supplemented by plaster breeches, and a well-applied +American extension, is a very good method of treatment, the only point +to bear in mind being frequent examination of the position of the limb +to ensure the extension being efficient. As already mentioned, the +shortening in the primary stages is often slight and easily combated, +but in many of these cases if examined in a few days the limbs are found +to have shortened considerably, principally as a result of recovery of +tone by the muscles, and the absence of any help from the resting of the +two fragments end to end. The weight, therefore, has often to be +progressively increased and the fracture readjusted if necessary. +Although this method of treatment is satisfactory in cases with a small +wound, it is very troublesome to carry out, even when a bracket is +inserted opposite the wound, when frequent dressing is necessary, as is +generally at first the case when the wounds are large. For this purpose +a much more satisfactory method is the use of Hodgen's splint. This +allows of automatic adjustment of the degree of extension, and the +dressing of the wound without interference with the position of the +fracture. A continuous many-tailed bag is preferable to the strips +usually employed for the suspension of the limb, as more easily +adjustable and as offering a more even support to the limb. + +[Illustration: PLATE XIX. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(37) OBLIQUE COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA + +Range '600 yards.' + +The entrance wound was large and the exit also. The fracture may have +been caused by a Mannlicher (8 mm.) soft-nosed bullet, or possibly a +ricochet. The fragmentation is somewhat coarse at the periphery, but +very fine in the track of the bullet. Several fragments of the mantle +are visible. + +The fracture affords a good example of obliquity due to cutting by the +bullet, and contrasts well with those due to rectangular impact such as +are shown in plates IV. and XIV.] + +While at Orange River, in conjunction with Major Knaggs, R.A.M.C., and +Mr. Langmore, we treated several cases of fracture of the shaft of the +femur by this method. The splints were made for us by the Ordnance +Department, while the Royal Engineers erected a kind of gallows for us +down the centre of a commissariat marquee in order to avoid the risk of +using the tent poles for suspension. The patients were then ranged on +each side of the tent in two rows so that the pull of the two sets of +limbs opposed each other on the gallows from which they were suspended. +Although these patients had to lie on the ground, they were really +comfortable compared with those treated with long outside splints, and +the results obtained were very good: in three cases which I had the +opportunity of measuring later the bones were in good position and the +shortening was less than one inch. + +I have no doubt whatever that Hodgen's splint is by far the best method +of treating all cases of fractured thigh in the Stationary field +hospitals; and, more than this, I believe it is the only practicable and +efficient one. It can be applied without the use of an anaesthetic +without causing undue suffering to the patient, it allows of ready +change of the dressing, it is comfortable and permits considerable range +of movement on the part of the patient, it is as efficient with patients +lying on the ground as in a bed, it keeps the limb in good position and +allows of constant inspection on this point, and it is the only method +which provides satisfactory extension without constant readjustment. + +[Illustration: PLATE XX. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson Ltd. + +(38) TRANSVERSE FRACTURE OF THE TIBIA, COMMINUTED FRACTURE OF THE FIBULA + +Range '300 yards.' + +Wound of soft parts nearly transverse, entry on tibial aspect. The +bullet crossed and grooved the posterior aspect of the tibia, but struck +the fibula full. This is the only instance of a transverse cleft which +came under my notice. + +The wound suppurated, and a number of fragments of the fibula needed +removal; hence the amount of callus present.] + +Cases in which operative fixation is indicated are rare, but a few +oblique fractures may be treated with advantage in this manner if the +conditions surrounding the patient admit of it. Screwing is generally +preferable to wiring. + +Lastly, we come to the cases in which primary amputation is necessary. I +may say at once that I saw no case of wound from a bullet of small +calibre in which this was indicated, and only one shell injury in which +it was performed. I believe with small bullets that injury to the main +blood-vessels is almost the only indication which is likely to be met +with, and this by no means always indicates an amputation. First of all +the question arises as to whether the wound in the vessel is caused by a +bone fragment or by the bullet itself; reference to the chapter on +blood-vessels would seem to prove that a bullet wound is by no means a +necessary indication for amputation. Given favourable conditions, it +might be treated locally by ligature at the time, while if haemorrhage is +not proceeding, developments should be awaited before proceeding to +amputation. In the case of bone fragment punctures, secondary haemorrhage +is a more likely indication for amputation than primary. + +Broadly, it may be laid down that very extensive injury to the soft +parts is the only indication for primary amputation beyond primary +haemorrhage, and it may be added that the condition is rare with wounds +from small-calibre bullets. If a primary amputation is necessary the +observations as to the transport of fractured thighs are equally +applicable. I never saw a primary amputation do well that was moved +during the first week; sloughing of flaps or haemorrhage followed as a +rule, and often death. + +Intermediate amputations were indicated in cases of septic infection and +those of haemorrhage; they seldom did well, and should be avoided if +possible. Secondary amputations for sepsis or haemorrhage were attended +by fair results, but I can give no statistics. Unless extensive +osteo-myelitis is evident, or very widespread cellulitis of the limb +exists, I am strongly of opinion that the amputations when the fractures +are above the middle of the thigh should be through the fracture, and +not at the hip-joint, even if a subsequent secondary operation is +risked. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXI. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(39) PERFORATION OF THE SHAFT OF THE TIBIA, AND INCOMPLETE OBLIQUE +FISSURE EXTENDING FROM THE LOWER PART OF THE OPENING TO THE CREST OF THE +BONE. + +Range medium. Entry and exit wounds at same level. + +The patient was standing when struck, and fell backwards, his rifle +falling at the same time and striking the shin. The fibula is intact. + +The perforation indicated by the well-marked translucent spot is small. + +The forking of the lower extremity of the cleft suggests the starting of +the fissure from above. The fissure comes to the surface at the seat of +election, but its position may possibly have been determined by the blow +from the falling rifle. + +The backward fall of the patient clearly explains the mechanism of +production of the fissure, and throws light on the production of an +oblique fracture such as shown in plate XVI.] + +_Fractures of the patella._--Punctured fractures of the patella were +common with direct impact of the bullet; these were often difficult to +palpate, and were only to be certainly diagnosed by attention to the +direction of the track, and the development of haemarthrosis. I saw at +least three or four in which the bullet, in addition to traversing the +knee-joint, injured the popliteal vessels. I have notes of one case in +which a bullet traversed the soft parts from above downwards and scored +a vertical groove on the surface of the patella; this was readily +palpable, but produced no solution of continuity. In several cases the +margin of the patella was notched by a passing bullet. + +I never saw a case of stellate fracture, and by this my experience in +the case of the ilium was confirmed. + +On two occasions I saw pure transverse fractures of the bone; in each +the wound was produced by a Lee-Metford bullet. This is of some interest +as denoting that the greater volume and weight, in conjunction with the +blunter tip, of the Lee-Metford may produce more severe injury to the +bones than the Mauser. I believe this to be the case, given an equal +degree of velocity on the part of the bullet at the moment of impact; +but it is probable that the position of the patella with regard to the +condyles of the femur when struck is of far greater importance in +relation to the production of transverse fractures. The skiagram +represented in plate XVIII. shows an obliquely transverse fracture, +which in this instance resulted from a crossing bullet, which grooved +the surface of the bone. + +With regard to the two cases of transverse fracture above referred to, I +may add that one occurred in a youth under twenty, and a good result was +obtained by treatment with splints, and later by massage. In the second +the patient was a man over fifty, who had received other injuries. The +wound over the patella healed and some union had occurred, when the +patient fell and burst both the bone union and the skin cicatrix. +Secondary suppuration of the knee-joint, necessitating an amputation of +the thigh, followed, but the patient made a good recovery. The third +case also did well. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXII. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, +Ltd. + +(40) NOTCH FRACTURE OF THE CREST OF THE TIBIA + +Range 'short.' + +The raising of the margins of the notch suggests a perforation. Compare +with figs. 51 and 57 in the text.] + +The treatment of these injuries differed in no way from that adopted in +civil practice, given satisfactory surroundings. Suture might be +indicated in some cases of transverse fracture, but this would only be +necessary if the fragments were widely separated. The punctured +fractures needed treatment as for simple wounds, combined with a short +period of rest and pressure for the condition of haemarthrosis. It was +important not to prolong the period of rest beyond a week or ten days if +the effusion was slight, in view of possible ulterior interference with +range of movement in the knee-joint. + +_Fractures of the tibia._--Some remarks have already been made regarding +fractures of the head of the tibia, and the importance of the +overhanging prominent margins in the production of somewhat irregular +injuries (p. 170). Putting these peculiarities on one side, the +cancellous ends are subject to the type forms of injury; thus +perforations either of the head of the bone or the malleolus were common +injuries. The fractures of the shaft also deviated from the type in so +far as the broad flat surfaces in the upper two thirds of the bone +rendered it especially liable to the results of lateral impact, and to +the production of the extreme wedge-shaped types of fracture. Plate +XXII. illustrates the different result of a bullet striking the dense +and strong spine at a low rate of velocity, a notch only resulting. If, +on the other hand, the lateral surfaces were struck, a wedge with the +base corresponding to the posterior surface was the most common injury, +the spine in many cases remaining intact and maintaining the continuity +of the bone. Wedge-shaped fractures of this bone were apt to show +multiple secondary wave fissures concentric with the main line, and +consequently free comminution. I saw several examples, the loose +fragments being remarkably numerous. Plate XIX. is an example of an +oblique fracture produced by a bullet which has ploughed across the +bone, displacing large fragments anteriorly, but finely comminuting the +bone in its course, and leaving small fragments of the mantle on its +way. Plate XX. is an example of the rare condition of transverse +fracture. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXIII + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(41) SPURIOUS PERFORATION OF THE FIBULA + +Moderate range, 'about 1,000 yards.' + +The injury was caused by an 8 mm. bullet, which entered base foremost +and lodged in the calf. The fracture is really an incomplete stellate +form, two well-marked transverse fissures extending from the point +struck. The position of the bullet suggests its entry into the limb base +foremost, and as it is retained low velocity may be assumed.] + +This fracture was produced by a bullet travelling at a high rate of +velocity, which struck the posterior surface of the tibia, and caused a +grooving, accompanied by a horizontal fissure through the whole +thickness of the bone; later it struck the fibula more directly, and +produced an ordinary comminuted fracture two inches above the malleolus. +Perforations of the shaft were far more common than in the case of the +femur, and I saw them in every part of the length of the bone (plate +XXI.). Fig. 57 illustrates a form of peculiar interest as showing the +gradual transition of the tunnel to the groove, and also as bringing +fractures of the long bones into line with such fractures of the flat +bones of the skull as are depicted in fig. 68. + +[Illustration: FIG. 57.--(42) Perforation of lower third of Tibia, +showing lifting and fissuring of the compact roof of the tunnel. Compare +with fig. 68, p. 259, of a fracture of the cranial vault.] + +_Fractures of the fibula_ offered no special features of importance. Any +form might occur. The plate No. XXIII. is of interest as showing a +spurious form of perforation, and also the primary form of displacement +of the fragments in stellate fractures. It was produced by a reversed +ricochet, but undeformed, bullet, still seen in position in the +skiagram; the bullet only possessed sufficient force to perforate the +bone, and then appears to have turned on its transverse axis. The +following plate, No. XXIV., is inserted to show the depth at which the +bullet lay, and its distance from the surface of the tibia, which +appears in the first plate to be nil. It is also of interest as showing +the ease with which a false impression may be obtained from a single +picture, as, beyond a spot of transparency, no obvious injury to the +fibula, and certainly no displacement, is discernible. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXIV. + +Skiagram by H. CATLING. + +Engraved and Printed by Bale and Danielsson, Ltd. + +(41_a_) This skiagram is inserted to show the depth at which the bullet +lay from the surface. It is also interesting to note the insignificance +of the fracture of the fibula from this aspect. Without the second +skiagram the injury might have passed for a simple perforation or a +transverse fracture.] + +Fractures of the bones of the leg possessed an unenviable degree of +importance. First, on account of the very severe injuries to the soft +parts that often accompanied them, without an apparently correspondingly +serious damage to the bone. Secondly, on account of the frequency with +which the vessels were implicated in these injuries to the soft parts, +either by the bullet or bone fragments. Beyond this, fracture of either +articular end of the tibia was certainly more frequently followed by +troublesome joint complications than occurred in the case of any other +bone. + +In the matter of 'explosive' injuries, I think more were seen in the +calf of the leg than in any other part of the body, and this often +without solution of continuity of the bones, and sometimes without +evidence even of contact of the bullet with either tibia or fibula. Some +remarks on this subject have already been made in the chapter on wounds +in general, and some sources of fallacy exposed. I believe that in +practically all these so-called explosive injuries the wound was either +caused by a ricochet, or a bullet which deformed with great ease on bony +contact during its progress through the limb. A considerable number of +the wounds which were referred by the men to the use of expanding +bullets were probably the result of the use of Martini-Henry or large +leaden sporting bullets, and evidence of this was often forthcoming on +examination of the entry wounds. In other cases the irregularity of the +opening plainly pointed to ricochet of a small bullet as the explanation +of the character of the injury. The greater frequency of ricochet +injuries in the leg and foot when the men were standing is readily +understood. + +Concurrent injury to the vessels of the leg was common, but primary +haemorrhage, as was the case generally, usually ceased spontaneously. The +importance of injury to the vessels was rather in view of secondary +haemorrhage, which occurred with some frequency, and I think more +commonly from the anterior than the posterior tibial vessels, usually +occurring at the end of a week or ten days, and naturally most +frequently in cases which suppurated. + +_Prognosis and treatment in fractures of the leg._--In fractures of the +leg, except those of extreme severity, almost any form of splint +sufficed to maintain the bones in position, but for field purposes the +Dutch cane splint (fig. 58, p. 222) was certainly very convenient. For +later use in cases that needed frequent dressing, a wooden back splint, +with a foot-piece, or, if obtainable, a Neville's splint with a +suspension cradle, was the best. Where the wounds were small and +frequent dressing was not required, nothing was so good as plaster of +Paris, especially when transport was a necessity. + +[Illustration: FIG. 58.--Dutch Cane Field Emergency Splint for Leg] + +In cases with large wounds suppuration was very frequent, and in +connection with this secondary haemorrhage, or in the case of fractures +near the articular ends, especially the upper, joint suppuration. The +treatment of these cases varied: in many an amputation was the best or +only treatment advisable; but I several times saw good results follow +ligation of the anterior tibial artery for secondary haemorrhage, even +when suppuration existed, and occasional good results after incision +and drainage of joints if the infection was not of the most acute form. + +Primary amputation was rarely needed for any case of injury from a +bullet of small calibre, since it was only necessary either in the case +of injury to both main arteries, and this was rare, or in cases of very +extensive injury to the soft parts. I saw many of the latter make fair +results when treated conservatively, even though the condition seemed +almost hopeless at first sight. All the primary amputations that I saw +were either for shell or large bullet injuries. A word may be inserted +here as to the weight that ought to attach to nerve injuries in this +relation. From the experience gained elsewhere it is clear that we +should attach little importance to these unless the divided nerves are +actually in sight, as far as deciding on amputation is concerned. On the +other hand, there is little doubt that the presence of concurrent nerve +injury, be it only concussion or contusion, exerts an important ulterior +influence on the healing of the wound, whether the part be amputated or +not. Amputation flaps in such cases possess a very considerably lowered +degree of vitality. + +Secondary amputations were often needed for sepsis, and on the whole did +very well; both for the same cause and for haemorrhage intermediate +amputations had occasionally to be performed; the results of these, as +elsewhere, were bad. + +_Fractures of the tarsus._--Wounds of these short bones were as a rule +of slight importance, given fairly direct impact on the part of the +bullet. They then consisted of either simple perforations or surface +grooving. A single bone might be implicated or several might be +tunnelled; in the latter case the implication of the joints very +considerably influenced the prognosis, since the addition of the joint +injury caused much more prolonged weakening of the foot. + +Wounds of the foot were common from the fact that when the men lay out +in the prone position, the foot was often the part least protected by +the cover chosen, and particularly the heel. In these circumstances the +os calcis was the bone most frequently implicated, and that by tracks +taking an oblique course downwards from the leg to the sole. Again the +foot was often struck by ricochet bullets, as a result of its position +when the erect attitude was assumed. The latter fact was of much +importance with regard to the nature of the injury sustained by the +bones, as under these circumstances the mode of impact was irregular, +and consequently comminution was often produced. + +The behaviour of the different bones of the tarsus varied somewhat. On +the whole the prognosis in cases of injury to the os calcis was the +best, since the injury was more often individual and did not implicate +any joint, and also because of the comparatively regular architecture of +the bone. In the smaller bones concurrent injury to a joint was more +frequent. In the astragalus the central hard core extending upwards from +the interosseous groove, as increasing resistance, I think accounted for +the fact that comminution was more marked in this bone than in any +other. The effect of wound of bones of the tarsus in producing a certain +degree of laxity in the mediotarsal joint resulting in a slightly flexed +position of the fore part of the foot and some projection of the head of +the astragalus did not seem to me easy of explanation, but it occurred +with some regularity. + +The injuries to the _metatarsus_ corresponded so nearly to those already +spoken of in the case of the metacarpus that they need no further +mention. They were less common, however, and I am under the impression +that fragmentation of the bullet was not such a marked feature, probably +on account of the lower degree of density of the bones, and their +greater fixity of position. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[18] Col. W. F. Stevenson. _Loc. cit._ p. 69. + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +INJURIES TO THE JOINTS + + +Until recent times gunshot injuries of the joints formed a class +entailing the gravest anxiety to the surgeon, both in regard to the +selection of primary measures of treatment and in the conduct of the +after progress of the cases. The external wounds were severe, +comminution of the bones was great, and retention of the bullet within +the articulation was not uncommon. Operative surgery therefore found a +large field in the extraction of bullets, removal of bone fragments, +excision of the joints, or even amputation of the limbs. + +The introduction of bullets of small calibre has robbed these injuries +of much of the importance they possessed in earlier days and during the +present campaign direct clean wounds of the joints were little more to +be dreaded than uncomplicated wounds of the soft parts alone. No more +striking evidence of the aseptic nature of the wounds, and the harmless +character of the projectile as a possible infecting agent, than that +offered by the general course of these injuries in this campaign, is to +be found in the whole range of military surgery. + +The aseptic nature of the wounds, and the slight and localised character +of the bone lesions, have in fact justified the opinion previously +expressed by Von Coler, that these injuries in the future would be less +feared than fractures of the diaphyses of the bones. + +Not less important than the localised character of the bone lesion +itself is the fact that the accompanying wounds of the soft parts retain +the small or type forms. Thus I occasionally observed more troublesome +results from minor shell wounds in the neighbourhood of joints, but not +implicating the synovial cavity, than in actual perforating injuries +produced by bullets of small calibre. + +_Vibration synovitis._--Before proceeding to the consideration of wounds +of the joints, a short account is necessary of a condition of some +importance which is, I believe, more or less special to injuries from +bullets of small calibre travelling at high rates of velocity. This +condition, if not novel, at any rate excited little comment in the +descriptions of the older forms of injury, although this may have +depended on the more serious nature of the primary local lesions +accompanying wounds from the larger bullets, among which it formed a +comparatively unimportant element. + +The condition referred to was the occurrence of considerable synovial +effusion into the joints of limbs in which the articulation itself was +primarily untouched. These effusions sometimes occurred even when the +soft parts alone were perforated, especially when the wounds were +situated above or below the knee-joint. They were apparently the direct +result of vibratory concussion of the entire limb dependent on the blow +received from the bullet. + +The effusions were most strongly marked in cases of fractures of the +diaphyses, although this was more noticeable in some situations than +others. Thus with fractures of the shaft of the femur anywhere below the +junction of the upper and middle thirds of the bone, and in some cases +even higher, effusion into the knee-joint was very common, and sometimes +extreme. On the other hand, similar effusions into the hip-joint were +less marked, since I failed to determine their existence in the majority +of cases. I am inclined to ascribe this to the different anatomical +arrangement of the two joints, particularly to the fact that the head of +the femur is included in a bony cup, into the hollow of which it is +accurately fixed by the resilient cotyloid fibro-cartilage. The latter +by its firm grasp of the head allows of little play in the joint; hence +vibrations are conveyed directly to the acetabulum in continuous waves, +and rocking of the articular surfaces is prevented. Beyond this no doubt +the difficulty of detecting small effusions in this joint is an element +which must be taken into consideration. + +I do not think that wrenches of the knee-joint in the act of falling +can be suggested as an explanation of the frequency of effusions into +that articulation, since the fractures of the femur were not always +received while the erect position was maintained, and effusion was most +marked when the diaphysis was the part affected, the latter point +illustrating the greater resistance offered by compact bone. Again, when +fracture had taken place, the solution of continuity rendered the +directly injured point the most mobile, and tended to prevent lateral +strain from falling on the joints. + +Effusion into the knee or ankle, or sometimes both joints, was common in +fractures of the shaft of the tibia. + +In the articulations of the upper extremity the condition was also +common, but somewhat less marked than in the lower limb. Effusions into +the shoulder or elbow occurred. In the former these were less striking; +again, perhaps, as a result of the difficulty of detecting small +effusions in this situation. The elbow was to a certain extent protected +by the possession of a degree of fixity somewhat resembling that already +mentioned in the case of the hip-joint, although here depending on the +conformation of the bones alone. I think this explained the absence of +free effusion in many cases of fracture of the humeral shaft, but when +the latter affected the lower third effusion into the elbow was usually +abundant. + +The lighter weight and greater mobility of the upper extremity as a +whole, as decreasing the resistance to the bullet, were also probably an +element in the fact that these effusions were less severe than those in +the joints of the lower limb. + +The nature of the effusions was apparently simple, since they were +rapidly reabsorbed, and little thickening of the synovial membrane +remained to suggest either a marked degree of inflammation, or the +deposition of blood-clot on the inner aspect of the same. + +The only treatment indicated was a short period of rest, accompanied in +the early stages by pressure and slight fixation, followed later by +massage and movement if necessary. + +Before dismissing this subject, I should like to particularly emphasise +the fact, that in the cases described there was no reason to suspect the +extension of fissures from the point of fracture in the shafts into the +articular ends of the bones. This was as far as possible excluded by +clinical examination, and in the cases where wounds of the soft parts +only were present, the rapid return of the patients to active duty, with +absence of remaining joint trouble, negatived the possibility of such +fractures. + +I only saw one case in which a longitudinal fracture actually extended +for any considerable distance into a neighbouring joint. In this a +comminuted fracture occurred just above the centre of the shaft of the +humerus. At the time of examination and putting up of the fracture there +was considerable swelling of the whole arm, and nothing special was +noticed about the shoulder-joint. Three weeks later, however, when the +fracture was consolidating, difficulty in abduction of the shoulder was +noted, and the arm could not be placed closely in contact with the +trunk. There was no evident displacement of the head of the humerus +forwards. A skiagram, which I much regret I have not been able to +insert, showed that a longitudinal fissure extended from the seat of +fracture upwards in such a manner as to divide the upper fragment into +two parts, of which the outer bore the greater tuberosity, the inner the +articular surface of the head. The latter fragment had become somewhat +displaced downwards, and had united in such a manner that the head +rested on the lower part of the glenoid cavity. Abduction of the limb +therefore brought the greater tuberosity into contact with the acromion +process, and movement was checked. This case passed out of my +observation shortly afterwards, and I have no knowledge of the final +result as to movement. + +Fractures of the bony processes surrounding the elbow-joint, and of the +malleoli of the tibia and fibula, were not infrequent, but offered no +special features. + +One other form of injury indirectly affecting the joints is perhaps +worthy of mention, but I observed it only once, and that in the case of +the shoulder, the only joint where it is likely to be marked. I refer to +the displacement of the head of the humerus by the force of gravity, +when the circumflex nerve is injured. In the instance I refer to, a +fracture of the surgical neck of the humerus was accompanied by +complete motor paralysis of the deltoid and very rapid wasting of the +muscle. Circumflex sensation was impaired, but not absent at the time +the condition of the muscle was noted--a favourable prognostic sign of +much importance. At the end of five weeks, when the fracture of the bone +was consolidated, the head of the humerus had dropped vertically at +least an inch, but could be replaced with ease. Shortly afterwards an +improvement in the condition of the muscle commenced, and with this the +head of the humerus was gradually raised. This patient later recovered +his power in great part, but not completely. + +In a few cases bullets lodged in the neighbourhood of joints in such +positions as to limit movement by mechanical impact with the bones. Thus +I saw one case in which a bullet lay between the radius and ulna just +below the lesser sigmoid cavity; in another the bullet lay in front of +the ankle-joint, and limited the possibility of flexion; and in a case +related to me by Mr. Bowlby, a bullet was removed by him from the wall +of the acetabulum where it was tightly fixed in the substance of the +bone. In two other cases I saw bullets lying deeply on the anterior +surface of the hip capsule and so limiting flexion. In all such cases +the indication for removal of the bullet was sufficiently strongly +marked. + + +WOUNDS OF THE JOINTS + +These may be divided into several classes, varying much in comparative +severity, and in prognostic importance. + +1. The comparatively rare instances in which a wound implicated a joint +cavity, without accompanying lesion of any bone. + +2. Perforating wounds in which the bullet was retained within the +articular cavity. These were also rare. + +3. Wounds of the joints accompanied by grooving of the articular +extremities of the bones. + +4. Complete perforating tracks through the articular ends of the bones, +crossing the joint cavity in various directions. + +5. Comminuted fractures of the terminal parts of the diaphyses extending +into joints. + +Of these several classes, the first was of the least prognostic +importance. In the absence of bone injury the wounds usually healed +without any obvious ill effect beyond the transient effusion into the +joints of a mixture of blood and synovial fluid. When suppuration of the +wound in the soft parts occurred, however, the remarks made as to the +injuries classed under the third heading also apply here in a lesser +degree. + +With regard to the retention of the bullet, in the case of bullets of +small calibre this was a distinctly rare occurrence. I never happened to +see an instance of retention of either a Mauser or Lee-Metford bullet in +an articulation. It is only possible with bullets practically spent, or +travelling at a very low rate of velocity and making irregular impact. + +The influence of both volume and velocity of flight was well illustrated +by my own small experience of retained bullets. In one case a +Martini-Henry was found impacted between the femoral condyles, having +slipped in beneath the margin of the patella. It caused a semiflexed +position to be assumed by the joint, and was removed by Mr. Brown in No. +1 General Hospital at Wynberg. The second instance I saw in the Portland +Hospital at Bloemfontein in a patient of Mr. Bowlby's. The bullet was a +Guedes, a form which has been already described as possessing low +velocity and deficient power of penetration; beyond this, in the +particular instance irregular impact was evidenced by the presence of a +large irregular contused wound of entry over the tuberosity of the +tibia. + +The presence of the bullet in the knee-joint was later determined by the +X-rays, and Mr. Bowlby removed it successfully. Seven months later the +range of movement was nearly normal. + +I may add that I saw several instances of large leaden bullets lodging +in the popliteal space, and a comparatively insignificant number of +bullets of small calibre in the same situation. This was very striking, +in view of the immense relative frequency of use of the latter forms. +There is no doubt, moreover, that small bullets rarely lodge even in the +neighbourhood of joints, unless at the distal end of a long track. To +take the extreme example of large bullets, those employed as shrapnel, +in comparison with the frequency with which wounds were produced by +them, bullets lying at the bottom of short tracks in the neighbourhood +of joints were not uncommon. Thus I saw one lying over the hip-joint, +and another in close proximity to the shoulder capsule. + +Wounds of the third class, where the bones had been superficially +grooved, were in some respects the most serious. This was especially so +in the knee and ankle joints, and some cases will be quoted later under +the heading of the special joints to illustrate this point. Danger only +arose in the event of suppuration; and here the presence of the long +oblique superficial track in a neighbourhood liable to comparatively +free movement was the important element. Such tracks usually opened the +synovial sac more extensively than direct perforating wounds, and if +suppuration occurred in any portion of the track, the pus was very +liable to be sucked into the joint on any free movement. The presence of +fine splinters of the bone displaced in the production of the groove was +also a special character of wounds of this class. Another point worthy +of mention is that in these cases it was not always easy to be quite +certain whether the joint cavity had been implicated or not, since cases +often occurred in which, although the bones had been grooved, the joint +cavity escaped. The indication, however, was to consider any wound in +the immediate proximity of a joint as perforating until it was healed. +This course was the more easy to take, since a large proportion of such +wounds were accompanied by some degree of synovial effusion, even when +the neighbouring joint had escaped puncture. + +Wounds of the fourth class, although the most highly characteristic of +the form of accident, were in many instances the most favourable in +regard to their course. The tracks might course directly across the +joint in any direction, or they might course obliquely, traversing +either one or both the component bones. In the latter case the exit +might be in the diaphysis, and be accompanied by the separation of an +exit fragment such as is illustrated in fig. 52, p. 169. The +particularly favourable character of the direct transverse and +antero-posterior wounds depended on the slight amount of splintering of +the bones, the limited nature of the opening into the joint, and the +shortness of the tracks in the soft parts, which ensured that, even if +infection did occur, the resulting pus was near the surface, and +generally spread in that direction and escaped. + +Wounds of the fifth class were the most dangerous, but the danger was +entirely a secondary one, dependent on the occurrence of infection. +These injuries were liable to be accompanied by the presence of +extensive irregular wounds of the soft parts, in which suppuration was +frequent, and the suppuration of the joint frequently meant subsequent +amputation, if not a worse result. + +_Course and symptoms of wounds of the joints._--The immediate result of +any perforation of a joint was the development of intra-articular +effusion. This consisted of synovial fluid admixed with a varying +proportion of blood. The degree of synovitis was apt to vary with the +amount of force expended in the production of the injury; for this +reason both high velocity and irregular impact were of importance in +this relation. + +The constant feature, however, depended on the effusion of blood; this +was not rapid, or, as a rule, very abundant, but tended to increase +during the first twenty-four hours. It resulted in a swelling of the +joint, which possessed some peculiar features. At first elastic and +resilient, it slowly decreased in volume with the assumption of a soft +doughy character on palpation. In the case of the knee, where readily +palpated, it very much resembled a tubercular synovial membrane, except +for its extreme regularity of surface; still more closely the condition +noted in a haemophilic knee of some duration. Absorption took place with +some rapidity, and except for slight thickening, the joints might appear +almost normal, in a period of from two to four weeks. With the +development of the effusion there was local rise in temperature of the +surface, and in a considerable number of the cases a general rise of +temperature. + +This latter was sometimes very marked, as in the case of all the other +traumatic blood effusions, but not quite so regular in occurrence. It +was important, as I have seen it give rise to the suspicion of +suppuration, when tapping resulted in nothing more than the evacuation +of turbid synovia mixed with blood. Pain was rarely a prominent symptom +in consequence of the generally moderate degree of distension. + +As a rule, these injuries were characterised by the small tendency to +the development of adhesions; but this in great part depended on the +care expended on their treatment. If kept too long quiet, either from +necessity when the effusion was followed by much thickening, or when the +external wound was large and so situated as to be harmfully influenced +by movement, or in the ordinary course of treatment, troublesome +stiffness, even amounting to firm anchylosis, sometimes followed. I saw +several such cases, some of the most confirmed being wounds of the +knee-joint complicated by injury to the popliteal vessels or nerves. The +latter complication I saw altogether six times, but only once with a +thoroughly bad knee, and in this case the injury had affected both the +vessels and the internal popliteal nerve. The joint in that case was +straightened out by continuous extension by Major Lougheed, when it came +under his charge some six weeks after the primary injury, but I hear has +again relapsed, and the popliteal paralysis is not much improved. + +The small tendency to formation of adhesions in uncomplicated cases +probably depended on the coagulation of a layer of blood over the whole +internal lining of the joint. This kept the synovial surfaces apart at +the lines of reflection of the membrane, and, given sufficiently active +treatment, mobility was restored before any firm union could take place. + +The primary escape of synovial fluid was rarely observed, as the wounds +of the soft parts were too small and valvular to permit of it. Synovia +in some abundance, mixed with pus, sometimes escaped in considerable +quantity when infection had opened up the tracks. + +Primary suppuration in any joint as a result of small and direct wounds +was very rare. I observed it only on one occasion. On the other hand, a +considerable number of cases in which secondary suppuration occurred +came under my notice. In some of these the suppuration was secondary to +comminuted fractures of the shaft of the tibia, in which the articular +extremity was implicated. These offered no special peculiarity. In +others infection of the joint was secondary to infection and suppuration +in the deep part of long oblique wound tracks, and these were of +sufficient interest to warrant the insertion of two illustrative cases. + + (43) In a man wounded at Paardeberg the bullet entered the leg + to the inner side of the crest of the tibia, about 3 inches + below the tubercle; thence it coursed upwards to emerge about 2 + inches above the cleft of the knee-joint on the outer side. + Regulation dressings were applied, and a week later the man + arrived at the Base, with little apparent mischief in the + knee-joint. He was placed in bed and warned against movement; + on the second day, however, he got up and walked to the + latrine. When bending his knee to sit down he was seized with + agonising pain in the joint, and had to call out for help; he + was then carried back to bed in a more or less collapsed + condition. The knee commenced to swell; there was rise of + temperature and great pain, together with extreme restlessness. + I was asked to see him two days later, and after a + consultation, Major Burton, R.A.M.C., freely incised the + knee-joint bi-laterally. One opening was closed, the second + plugged for drainage, as there was a large quantity of pus. No + improvement followed, and a week later Major Burton amputated + through the thigh. An attack of secondary haemorrhage a few days + later, combined with the degree of septic infection, ended the + man's life. On examination of the joint, a groove forming + three-fourths of a tunnel was found in the external tuberosity + of the tibia, leading into the knee-joint beneath the external + semilunar cartilage. The bullet had then passed upwards over + the outer border of the cartilage, bruised the margin of the + external condyle of the femur in such a manner as to depress + the outer compact layer, and finally escaped from the joint + near the upper reflection of the synovial membrane. The + synovial membrane was granular in appearance and reddened, but + there was no suppuration outside the confines of the joint, + except in a cavity corresponding to 2 inches of the track + before it actually perforated the tibia. A localised abscess + had evidently formed here and been diffused into the joint by + the movement of flexion already described. + + (44) A man wounded during General Hamilton's advance on + Heilbron was struck on the outer aspect of the heel. An oval + opening of some size led down to a track in the os calcis; the + bullet was retained. The foot was dressed, and put up later in + a plaster-of-Paris splint. On the tenth day the splint was + removed to see to the wound, which looked satisfactory and was + re-dressed. + + A few hours later the man was seized with very severe pain in + the ankle, and a day later I was asked to see him by Mr. + Alexander. The man was anaesthetised, and I examined the wound + with care, and also removed the retained bullet from the inner + margin of the leg. The bullet was reversed, having no doubt + suffered ricochet, hence the large aperture of entry, but it + was in no way deformed. I could not certainly determine the + presence of any fluid in the ankle-joint, and as the pain was + apparently localised to the distribution of the + musculo-cutaneous nerve, I decided not to freely open the + joint. In this, however, I erred, and two days later, after + consultation, the joint was freely incised by Mr. Alexander. It + was then found that the bullet in its passage had just touched + the posterior aspect of the tibia and wounded the ankle-joint. + A localised collection of pus which had formed in the deep part + of the wound had been diffused into the joint by the movements + made when the splint was removed, in a similar manner to that + described in the last case. This joint also did badly, and an + amputation of the leg had to be performed by Mr. Alexander to + save the man's life. + +These two cases are particularly instructive as showing, first, how +quietly a small amount of deep suppuration may sometimes take place; +and, secondly, the importance of keeping the joints quiet on a splint +when there is any reason to suspect their implication by wounds of this +character. + +_The general treatment_ of the wounded joints was simple. The old +difficulties of deciding on partial as against full excision, or +amputation, were never met with by us. We had merely to do our first +dressings with care, fix the joint for a short period, and be careful to +commence passive movement as soon as the wounds were properly healed, to +obtain in the great majority of cases perfect results. Careful light +massage, if available, was used to promote absorption of blood. + +If suppuration occurred, the choice between incision and amputation had +to be considered. In the early stages this choice depended entirely on +the nature of the injury to the bones. If this were slight, incision was +the best plan to adopt. I saw several cases so treated which did well, +although convalescence was often prolonged, and only a small amount of +movement was regained. Amputation was sometimes indicated in cases of +severe bone-splintering, when the shafts were implicated, but was as a +rule only performed after an ineffectual trial to cut short general +infection of the septicaemic type by incision. + +I have dwelt at such length on the subject of suppuration on account of +its importance, but I should add that, on the whole, suppuration of the +joints was uncommon, except in the case of injuries far exceeding the +average in primary severity. + +_Special joints._--Such deviations from the general type of injury as +above described depended entirely on peculiarities of anatomical +arrangement, and peculiarities in the situation of the joint clefts in +the different parts of the body. A few words as to these are perhaps +necessary. + +_Shoulder-joint._--Wounds of this articulation were by no means common. +This depended, I think, on two points in the architecture of the joint: +first, a bullet to enter the front of the cavity and traverse the joint +needed to come with great exactitude from the immediate front; secondly, +wounds received from a purely lateral direction calculated to pierce the +head of the humerus and the glenoid cavity were naturally of very rare +occurrence. Wounds of the prominent tip of the shoulder received while +the men were in the prone position were not uncommon, but it was +remarkable how rarely the shoulder-joint was implicated in these. The +question of the narrow nature of the cleft exposed also comes up in this +position. As far as my experience went, injuries to the lower portion of +the capsule accompanying wounds of the axilla were those most often met +with. The ease and neatness with which pure perforations of the head of +the humerus can be produced was also an important element in the +frequent escape of this joint. No case of fracture of the glenoid cavity +happened to come under my notice. + +I saw few instances in which the joint needed incision, and cannot +recall or find in my notes any case in which serious trouble arose. + +_Elbow-joint._--Injuries to this joint came second in frequency in my +experience to those of the knee. They were, in fact, comparatively +common, especially in conjunction with fractures of the various bony +prominences surrounding the articulation. Fractures of the lower end of +the humerus were of worse prognostic significance than those of the +ulna, on account of the greater tendency to splintering of the bone. I +saw several cases of pure perforation of the olecranon without any signs +of implication of the elbow-joint. In a case which has been utilised for +the illustration of some of the types of aperture (fig. 20, p. 59), at +the end of a week there was no sign of any joint lesion, although the +bullet had obviously perforated the articulation. + +Several cases of suppuration which came under my notice did well. I saw +one of them a few days ago, six months after the injury, with perfect +movement. In another of which I took notes, the bullet entered over the +outer aspect of the head of the radius, to emerge just above the +internal condyle anteriorly. A considerable amount of comminution of the +olecranon resulted, and when the man came into hospital some ten days +later the joint was suppurating. The joint was opened up from behind, +and some fragments of bone removed by Mr. Hanwell. On the 26th day this +joint was doing well, and considerable flexion and extension were +possible without pain. There was a somewhat abundant discharge of bloody +synovia during the first few days after the operation. + +[Illustration: FIG. 59.--Illustrates the very neat and limited injury to +the Phalanges over the dorsal aspect of the first inter-phalangeal joint +of the Middle Finger, accompanying a gutter wound received by the +patient while holding a rifle.] + +I never saw any troublesome results from perforations of the _carpus_. +The joints of the _fingers_ also offered little special interest, +except in so far as they afforded astonishing examples of the extreme +neatness of the injuries which a small-calibre bullet can produce. Fig. +59 is a good example of such an injury. + +_Hip-joint._--I can only repeat with regard to this joint what I have +already said as to the injuries to the head of the femur. I had +practically no experience of small-calibre bullet injuries to the +femoral constituent, and beyond the single case of injury to the +acetabular margin mentioned on p. 193 I saw no obvious wounds of the +joint at all. + +_The knee_, as usual, proved itself _par excellence_ the joint most +commonly injured, no doubt as a result of its size, the extent of its +capsule anteriorly, and its exposed position. In spite, however, of the +frequency with which it suffered injury, and the opportunities it +afforded for observation of the progress of the effusions towards +absorption, the injuries to the joint gave less anxiety and attained a +more favourable prognostic character than is the case in civil practice. +This depended on the very favourable course observed in the frequent +pure perforations following a direct line. These occurred in every +direction, the accompanying haemarthrosis usually disappearing completely +in an average period of little over a month. The extremes can be fairly +placed at a fortnight and six weeks. Limitation of movement was slight +or non-existent in many cases; in others it was of a very moderate +character, and I only remember to have seen one case in which a really +serious anchylosis developed. In this the man was struck from a distance +of 300 yards, and a considerable amount of bone dust from the femur was +found in the lips of the exit aperture. The wounds healed _per primam_, +but when I saw the man two months later anchylosis in the straight +position was apparently complete. + +The comparatively frequent association of popliteal aneurisms with +wounds of the knee-joint has already been spoken of in relation to +anchylosis. Wounds of the popliteal space from larger bullets sometimes +caused more troublesome after-stiffness than wounds of the articulation +itself. Again I remember a small pom-pom wound at the inner margin of +the ligamentum patellae without obvious wound of the joint, which was +accompanied by synovitis from contusion, and was followed by very +considerable limitation of movement. This had only been partially +improved when the patient returned home, in spite of prolonged massage +and passive movement. + +The general remarks on the joints cover all that need be said as to +suppuration of the knee-joint. + +_The ankle-joint_ maintained the undesirable character which it has +always held as a subject for gunshot injuries. This is entirely a +question of sepsis, and in great measure depends on the fact that the +foot, as enclosed in a boot, is invested with skin particularly +difficult to thoroughly cleanse; while the socks are an additional +source of infection to the wounds before the patients come under proper +treatment. + +Of seven cases of suppurating ankle-joint, of which I have notes, only +two retained the foot, and one of these after a very dangerous illness. +This case was one of special interest as exemplifying the results +dependent on variations in velocity on the part of the bullet. The +patient was struck at a distance of twenty yards. The bullet entered the +front of the right ankle-joint and emerged through the internal +malleolus, just behind its centre, causing no comminution of the latter. +It then entered the left foot by a type wound one inch behind and below +the tip of the internal malleolus, traversed and comminuted the +astragalus, and emerged one inch below the tip of the external +malleolus. The first joint healed _per primam_. The second produced by +the bullet when passing at a lower rate of velocity was accompanied by +considerable comminution of the bone. It suppurated, and gave rise to +great anxiety both for the fate of the foot and the life of the patient. +It is probable that the more abundant haemorrhage which took place from +the second wound was in part responsible for the occurrence of +infection. + +The second of the two cases is of some interest in relation to the +doctrine of chances as to the position in which a wound may be received. +The man was wounded in one of the earlier engagements, a bullet passing +transversely through his leg immediately behind the bones and about half +an inch above the level of the ankle-joint. He recovered, and rejoined +his regiment, only to receive at Paardeberg a second wound, about an +inch lower, which traversed the ankle-joint. On his return to Wynberg he +happened to be sent to the same pavilion, and occupied the same bed he +had left on returning to the front. + +The subject of the result of wounds of the joints of the _foot_ has +received sufficient consideration under the heading of wounds of the +tarsus. + +The repetition of the fact that, among the whole series of cases on +which this chapter is founded, not a single instance of primary or +secondary excision of a joint, either partial or complete, is recorded, +forms an apt conclusion to my remarks on this subject. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +INJURIES TO THE HEAD AND NECK + + +Injuries to the head formed one of the most fruitful sources of death, +both upon the battlefield and in the Field hospitals. It has been +suggested that the mere fact of wounds of the head being readily visible +ensured all such being at once distinguished and correctly reported, +while wounds hidden by the clothing often escaped detection. When the +external insignificance of many of the fatal wounds of the trunk is +taken into consideration this is possible; but, on the other hand, it +must be borne in mind that the head is in any attitude the most +advanced, and often the most exposed, part of the body, and even when +the soldier had taken 'cover,' it was frequently raised for purposes of +observation. For the latter reasons I believe injury to the head fully +deserved the comparative importance as a fatal accident with which it +was credited. + +A number of somewhat sensational immediate recoveries from serious +wounds of the head have been placed upon record. Observation, however, +shows that these, with but few exceptions, belonged either to certain +groups of cases the relatively favourable prognosis in which is familiar +to us in civil practice, or that the wounds were received from a very +long range of fire, and hence the injuries were strictly localised in +character. + + +ANATOMICAL LESIONS + +_Wounds of the scalp._--Nothing very special is to be recorded with +regard to these; they either formed the terminals of perforating wounds, +or were the result of superficial glancing shots. The glancing wounds +were of the nature of furrows, varying in depth from mere grazes to +wounds laying bare the bone. Their peculiarity was centred in the fact +that a definite loss of substance accompanied them, the skin being +actually carried away by the bullet; hence gaping was the rule. Every +gradation in depth was met with, but the only situations in which wounds +of considerable length could occur were the frontal region in tranverse +shots, or, when the bullet passed sagitally, the sides of the head, or +the flat area of the vertex. + +The danger of overlooking injuries to the bone was of special importance +in the short subcutaneous tracks occasionally met with at the points at +which the surface of the skull makes sharp bends. In all such wounds it +was a safe rule to assume a fracture of the skull until this was +excluded by direct examination. In some of the gutter wounds and +subcutaneous tracks crossing the forehead and sides of the head, signs +of intracranial disturbance were occasionally observed in the absence of +external fracture, such as transient muscular weakness, unsteadiness in +movements, giddiness, diplopia, or loss of memory and intellectual +clearness. In connection with such symptoms the classical injury of +splintering of the internal table of the skull, the external remaining +intact, had to be borne in mind, but I observed no proven instance of +this accident. I am of opinion, moreover, that its occurrence with small +bullets travelling at a high degree of velocity must be very rare, since +little deflection is probable unless the contact has been sufficiently +decided to fracture the external table; while in the cases of spent +bullets the injury is unlikely, as requiring a considerable degree of +force. + +_Injuries to the cranial bones, without evidence of gross lesion to the +brain._--It may be premised that these were of the rarest occurrence, +and they may be most readily described by shortly recounting the +conditions observed in a few cases I noted at the time. The injuries +resulted from blows with spent bullets, from bullets barely striking the +skull directly, or those striking over the region of the frontal +sinuses. Wounds of the mastoid process will not be considered in this +connection as being of a special nature (see p. 299). + +I saw only one case of escape of the internal, with depressed fracture +of the external, table of the skull. + + (45) In marching on Heilbron a man in the advance guard was + struck by a bullet at right angles just within the margin of + the hairy scalp. The regiment was at the time to all intents + and purposes outside the range of rifle fire, and the patient + was the only individual struck among its number. When brought + into the Highland Brigade Field Hospital, a single typical + entry wound was discovered; examination with the probe gave + evidence of a slight depression in the external table of the + frontal bone just above the temporal ridge. Although no + perforation was detectible by the probe, and this was + positively excluded on the raising of a flap (Major Murray, + R.A.M.C.), it was considered advisable to remove a 1/4-inch + trephine crown, the pin of the instrument being applied to the + margin of the depression. No depression or splintering of the + internal table was discovered, nor any injury to the dura, nor + blood upon the surface of that membrane. The man made an + uninterrupted recovery. + + (46) A case of frontal injury was shown to me at Wynberg, in + which a distinct furrow could be traced across the upper part + of the frontal sinuses. There had been no symptoms beyond + temporary diplopia, and the wound was healed; no surgical + interference had been deemed necessary. + + (47) In a man wounded at Poplar Grove, a single typical wound + of entry was found 3/4 of an inch above the right eyebrow and + the same distance from the median line. No primary symptoms + were observed, but on the evening of the second day the + temperature rose above 100 deg. F., and the man seemed somewhat + heavy and dull. The patient was examined by Major Fiaschi and + Mr. Watson Cheyne, and it was decided to explore the wound. Mr. + Cheyne removed fragments both of external and internal tables, + one of the latter having made a punctiform opening, not + admitting the finest probe, in the dura-mater. The bullet was + traced into the nasal fossae, where it was subsequently + localised with the aid of the Roentgen rays when the patient + came under my observation at Wynberg some days later (fig. 60). + +_Gunshot fracture of the skull with concurrent brain injury._--This was +the commonest form of head injury, and possessed two main peculiarities; +firstly, the large amount of brain destruction compared with the extent +of the bone lesion; secondly, the fact that any region of the skull was +equally open to damage. In consequence of the second peculiarity, the +position and direction of secondary fissures are not so dependent on +anatomical structure as in the corresponding injuries of civil practice. +Thus, fractures of the base, for instance, were less constant in their +course and position. The cases as a whole are best divided into four +classes. + +[Illustration: FIG. 60.--Mauser Bullet in Nasal Fossa. (Skiagram by H. +Catling.) Case No. 47] + +1. Extensive sagittal tracks passing _deeply_ through the brain, and +vertical wounds passing from base to vertex or _vice versa_, in the +posterior two thirds of the skull. These will be referred to as general +injuries. + +2. Vertical or coronal wounds in the frontal region. + +3. Glancing or obliquely perforating wounds of varying depth in any part +of the head. + +4. Fractures of the base. + +Of these classes the first was nearly uniformly fatal; the second +relatively favourable, and with low degrees of velocity often +accompanied by surprisingly slight immediate effects; while the third +had perhaps the best prognosis of all, but this varied as to the defects +that might be left, and with the region of the head affected. + +1. _General injuries._--Fractures of this class may be treated of almost +apart. For their production the retention of a considerable degree of +velocity on the part of the bullet was always necessary, and the results +were consequently both extensive and severe. + +The aperture of entry was comparatively small, since to take so direct +and lengthy a course through the skull the impact of the bullet needed +to be at nearly an exact right angle to the surface of the bone. Any +disposition to assume the oval form, therefore, depended mainly upon the +degree of slope of the actual area of the skull implicated. In size the +aperture of entry did not greatly exceed the calibre of the bullet; in +outline it was seldom exactly circular, but rather roughly four-sided, +with rounded angles, slightly oval, or pear-shaped. The margin of the +opening consisted of outer table alone, the inner being always +considerably comminuted. Fragments of the latter, together with the +majority of those corresponding to the loss of substance of the outer +table, were driven through the dura mater and embedded in the brain. +These bony fragments were more or less widely distributed over an area +of a square inch or more, and not confined to a narrow track. + +[Illustration: FIG. 61.--Diagram of Aperture of Entry in Occipital Bone, +showing radiating fissures exact length. The exit in the frontal region +was of typical explosive character. Range '100 yards'.] + +The amount of fissuring at the aperture of entry was often not so +extensive as I had been led to expect. Fig. 61 is a diagram illustrating +a fairly typical instance; in some cases no fissuring existed. As a rule +the nearer to the base, the greater was the amount of fissuring +observed. The fissures were sometimes very extensive in this position, +probably as a result of the lesser degree of elasticity in this region +of the skull. Again, when the aperture of entry was near the parts of +the vertex where sudden bends take place, considerable fissuring of the +same nature as that seen in the superficial tracks (fig. 68) was +produced in the flat portion of the skull above the point of entrance. + +Radial fissuring around the aperture of entry in the skull scarcely +corresponds in degree with that seen when the shafts of the long bones +are struck, and is far less marked and regular than when one of these +small bullets strikes a thick sheet of glass set in a frame. I saw +several apertures in the thick glass of the windows of the waterworks +building at Bloemfontein produced by Mauser bullets. They differed +little from the opening seen in an ordinary plate-glass window resulting +from a blow from a stone, except perhaps in the regularity and +multiplicity of the radial fissures. As in the skull, the opening was a +little larger than the calibre of the bullet, and the loss of substance +on the inner aspect considerably exceeded that on the outer. + +The degree of fissuring is probably affected by the resistance offered +by the particular skull, or the special region struck, but as a rule the +elasticity and capacity for alteration in shape possessed by the bony +capsule, is opposed to the production of the extreme radial starring +observed in the long bones or a fixed sheet of glass. Corroborative +evidence of the influence of elasticity in the prevention of starring is +seen in the limited nature of the comminution of the ribs in cases of +perforating wounds of the thorax. + +In the most severe cases we can only speak of the 'aperture' of exit in +a limited sense in so far as the opening in the scalp is concerned; this +was often comparatively small, not exceeding 3/4 of an inch in diameter. +Beneath this limited opening in the soft parts, the bone of the skull +was smashed in a most extensive manner. The portion exactly +corresponding to the point of exit of the bullet was carried altogether +away, but around this point a number of large irregularly shaped +fragments of bone, from 3/4 to 1 inch in diameter, were found loose, and +often so displaced as to expose a considerable area of the dura-mater. +Beyond the area of these loose fragments, fissures extended into the +base and vertex, in the latter case often being limited in their extent +by the nearest suture. + +Over extensive fractures of this nature general oedema and +infiltration of the scalp, due to extravasation of blood, were present. +When the exit was situated in the frontal region ecchymosis often +extended to the eyelids and down the face, while in the occipital region +similar ecchymosis was often seen at the back of the neck. + +The opening in the dura mater at the aperture of entry was either +slitlike, or more often irregular from laceration by the fragments of +bone driven in by the bullet. At the point of exit a similar limited +opening corresponded with the spot at which the bullet had passed, while +separate rents of larger size were often seen at some little distance. +The latter were the result of laceration of the outer surface of the +membrane by the margins of the large loose fragments of bone above +described. + +Injury to the brain more than corresponded in extent to the fractures of +the bone. Pulping of its tissue existed over a wide area both at the +points of entrance and of exit. In the former position the amount of +damage was the less, the gross changes roughly corresponding with the +tissue directly implicated by the bullet itself, and the fragments of +bone carried forward by it. The degree of splintering of the skull +therefore in great part determined the severity of the lesion. At the +exit aperture much more widespread destruction existed, while masses of +brain tissue, small shreds of the membranes, fragments of bone, and +_debris_ from the scalp were found occasionally bound together by +coagulated blood and protruding from an exit opening of some size. The +largest masses of such _debris_ were most often seen in instances in +which the bullet had entered by the base to escape at the vertex of the +skull. + +The brain in the line of injury suffered comparatively slightly, but +small parenchymatous haemorrhages into its tissue indicated in lesser +degree the same type of injury undergone by the mass of brain pulp and +small blood-clots found at the external limits of the wound. Beyond this +extensive haemorrhages at the base of the skull were common. + +With regard to the extensive character of the brain destruction in the +region of the aperture of exit, it must be borne in mind that this +lesion corresponds in position with one which would exist even if the +injury were of a non-penetrating degree. A large proportion of the +contusion and destruction is therefore explained by violent impact of +the projected brain with the skull prior to the passage of the bullet, +and not to the direct action of the bullet on the tissues. + +These cases of 'general injury' afford a marked example of the lesions +to which the term 'explosive' has been applied, and as such have an +important bearing on the theories held as to the mode of production of +explosive effect. The increased area of tissue damage at the aperture of +exit favours the theory of direct transmission of a part of the force +with which the bullet is endowed, to the molecules of tissue bounding +the track made by the projectile. Thus the area of destruction +corresponds with the cone-like figure which one would expect to be built +up by the vibrations spreading from the primary point of impact. The +exit region of the skull is subjected not alone to the force of the +travelling bullet, but also to that exerted over a much wider area by +the tissue to which secondary vibrations have been communicated. The +brain itself is, in fact, dashed with such violence against the bone as +to cause a great part of the injury. + +No doubt the brain in its reaction to the bullet forms as near an +approach to a fluid as any solid tissue in the human body, and +experimental observation has shown how greatly its presence or absence +in the skull affects the degree of comminution on the exit side; hence +the fondness for the so-called hydraulic theory that has been always +exhibited in the case of these injuries. The localisation of the injury +in its highest degree to the neighbourhood of the exit aperture, +however, shows that in any case the main wave takes a definite direction +in a course corresponding to that of the bullet. + +The real importance of the presence of the brain within the skull in +increasing the amount of damage at the exit end of the track, is as a +medium for the ready transmission of forcible vibrations. That the +latter are to some extent conveyed as by a fluid is evidenced by the +occasional presence of brain matter and fragments of bone in the +aperture of entry, which suggests recoil or splash such as would be +expected from a fluid wave. + +Experience of the character of the lesions observed after severe +concussion by the ordinarily somewhat coarser forms of violence common +to civil life, fully explains the severity of the damage to the brain +tissue met with in injuries due to bullets of small calibre. Viewing the +elaborate arrangements which exist for the preservation of the central +nervous system from the moderate vibration incidental to ordinary +existence, it is easy to appreciate the harmfulness of such exquisite +vibratory force as that transmitted by a bullet of small calibre +travelling at a high rate of velocity. + +_Effect of ricochet in the production of severe forms of injury._--In +connection with the lesions above described mention must be made of +cases in which the aperture of entry reaches a large size, or a portion +of the skull is actually blown away. + +Examples of the former class were not uncommon; I will briefly relate +one. + + (48) A Highlander while lying in the prone position at + Rooipoort, was struck by a bullet probably at a distance of + about 1,000 yards. A large entry wound in the scalp was + produced, while the defect in the skull was coarsely comminuted + and was capable of admitting three fingers into a mass of + pulped brain. Both brain matter and fragments of bone were + found in the external wound, which was situated just anterior + to the right parietal eminence. The bullet passed onwards + through the base of the skull, crossing the external auditory + meatus, fracturing the zygoma and probably the condyle of the + mandible, and eventually lodged beneath the masseter muscle. + Blood and brain matter escaped from the external auditory + meatus. + + The patient was brought off the field in a semi-conscious + condition, the pupils moderately contracted but equal, the + pulse 66, very small and irregular in beat, the respiration + quiet and easy, and with paralysis of the left side of the + body. The faeces had been passed involuntarily. + + The wound was cleansed and bone fragments removed. The patient + had to travel in a wagon for the next three days until the + column halted. The progress of the case was unsatisfactory, as + the wound became infected, and the man eventually died on the + 14th day of general septicaemia, but with little evidence of + local extension of septic inflammation. + + In this instance the head was no doubt struck by a bullet which + had previously made ricochet contact with the ground. I saw + several such cases. + +Closely connected with such injuries are those in which large portions +of the skull and scalp were actually blown away. I never witnessed one +of these myself, but I recall two instances described to me by officers +who lay near the wounded men on the field. In one the frontal region was +carried away so extensively that, to repeat the familiar description +given by the officer, 'he could see down into the man's stomach through +his head.' In a second case the greater part of the occipital region was +blown away in a similar manner, and this was of especial interest as the +wounded man was seen to sit up on the buttocks and turn rapidly round +three or four times before falling apparently dead. The observation +offers interesting evidence of the result of an extensive gross lesion +of the cerebellum. + +In the absence of exact information, it may well be that such injuries +as the two latter were produced by some special form of bullet, but as +both were produced while the patients were lying on the ground, and +therefore especially liable to blows from ricochet bullets, I am +inclined to attribute both to this cause. + +In considering injuries of the above nature, one cannot help speculating +on the possible influence of a head-over-heels ricochet turn on the part +of the bullet while traversing the long sagittal axis of the skull. It +is not uncommon for apical target ricochets to present evidence of +damage to the apex and base of the mantle alone. This must depend on a +rapid turn on impact, which might well be imitated in the case of the +skull, and would then go far to explain the production of some of the +most severe forms of explosive exit wounds met with. See cases 48, 54, +68. + +Short of ricochet, the influence of simple wobbling must also be +considered in shots from a long range. The entry wound may be large as a +result of this condition, but as the velocity possessed by the bullet is +low, the injuries would probably not be of a very severe nature. + +In connection with the subject of wobbling, reference should be made to +the form suggested by Nimier and Laval, in which the wobble, as the +result of resistance to the apex of the revolving bullet, assumes the +form of movement seen when the spin of a top is failing. This would +explain a peculiarity in some wounds of entry over the skull first +pointed out to me by Mr. J. J. Day. When such wounds were explored, as +well as the presence of brain in the entry aperture, a number of +fragments of the external table of the skull were found everted and +fixed in the tissues of the scalp. As already suggested, this may be +mere evidence of splash, but it may be equally well explained by a +process of wobble around the axis of revolution of the bullet. This +might, no doubt, also be invoked to explain the displacement of some of +the fragments in fractures of the long bones, where considerable +resistance to the passage of the bullet is offered. + +II. _Vertical or coronal wounds in the frontal region._--These injuries +were common, and offered some of the most interesting illustrations of +the variations in symptoms and effects following apparently exactly +identical lesions, judging from the condition of the external soft parts +alone; since the latter sometimes gave little indication of the force +(dependent on the rate of velocity) which had been applied. + +With the lower degrees of velocity simple punctured fractures of the +skull resulted, without extensive lesion of the frontal lobes as +evidenced by immediate symptoms. The nature of the fractures differed in +no way from the punctured fractures we are familiar with in civil +practice. The openings of entry in the bone were irregularly rounded, +corresponding in size to the particular calibre of the bullet concerned. +The margin consisted of outer table alone, while the inner table was +either considerably comminuted, or a large piece was depressed, wounding +the dura-mater and projecting into the brain substance (see fig. 63). +The aperture of exit presented exactly the opposite characters, the +splintering comminution or separation of a large fragment affecting the +outer table, while the inner presented a simple perforation. The latter +condition is represented in figs. 71 and 72, and I will here give short +notes of four illustrative cases, as being the shortest and most +satisfactory method of conveying a correct idea of the nature of such +injuries. + +[Illustration: FIG. 62--Aperture of Entry in Frontal Bone. Case No. 50. +1/2] + + (49) _Vertical perforation of frontal bone._--Wounded at + Belmont, while in the prone position. Aperture of _entry_ + (Mauser), at the anterior margin of the hairy scalp on the left + side; course, through the anterior part of the left frontal + lobe, roof of the left orbit, cutting the optic nerve and + injuring the back of the eyeball, floor of the orbit, the + antrum, the hard palate, and tongue. _Exit_, in mid line of the + submaxillary region. No cerebral symptoms were noted, and on + the fifth day the man was sent to the Base hospital without + operation; the pulse was then 70 and the temperature normal. + The movements of the eyeball were perfect, but blindness was + absolute. At the Base hospital the eye suppurated and was + removed. The patient was then sent home apparently well. He has + since been discharged from the service, and is now employed as + a painter in Portsmouth Dockyard. + + (50) _Vertical perforation of frontal bone._--Wounded at + Paardeberg while in the prone position. Range, 600-700 yards. + Aperture of _entry_ (Mauser), at the fore margin of the hairy + scalp above the centre of the right eyebrow; course, through + the anterior third of the right frontal lobe, roof of orbit, + front of eyeball, margin of floor of orbit making a distinct + palpable notch, and cheek; _exit_ through the red margin of the + upper lip, 1/2 an inch from the right angle of mouth. The + bullet slightly grooved the lower lip. + + The patient rose almost immediately after being struck, and + walked about a mile, although feeling dizzy and tired. The + wounds, which both bled considerably, were then dressed. After + three days' stay in a Field hospital, the patient was sent in a + bullock wagon three days and nights' journey to Modder River + and thence to the Base. + + There was anaesthesia over the area supplied by the outer branch + of the supra-orbital nerve, extending from the supra-orbital + notch backwards into the parietal region, but none over the + area supplied by the second division of the fifth nerve. + + On the tenth day there were no signs of cerebral disturbance + except a pulse of 48. The eyeball was suppurating, and the + temperature rose to 99 deg. at night. The lids were still swollen + and closed. + + A few days later the eyeball was removed and at the same time a + flap was raised and the fracture explored (Major Burton, + R.A.M.C.). An opening somewhat angular, 1/3 of an inch in + diameter, was found with a thin margin in the outer table of + the skull (fig. 62); when this was enlarged with a Hoffman's + forceps, an opening in the dura was discovered, and + cerebro-spinal fluid escaped. A piece of the inner table of the + skull (fig. 63), 3/4 by 1/3 an inch in size, was discovered + projecting downwards vertically into the brain. This latter was + removed and the wound closed. Healing by primary union + followed, and no further symptoms were observed. + + [Illustration: FIG. 63.--Fragment of Inner Table depending + vertically from lower margin of puncture shown in fig. 62. The + centre was perforated. Exact size] + + (51) _Transverse frontal wound._--Wounded at Paardeberg. The + man was sitting down at the time he was struck, in the belief + that he was out of the range of fire. The _entry_ and _exit_ + wounds were almost symmetrical, placed on the two sides of the + forehead at the margin of the hairy scalp, 2-1/4 inches above + the level of the external angular processes of the frontal + bone. The patient lost consciousness for about half an hour, + then rose and walked half a mile to the Field hospital. The + wounds were dressed, and after a stay of three days in + hospital, the man was sent the three days' journey to Modder + River; during the journey he got in and out of the wagon when + he wished. After two days' stay at Modder, a journey was again + made by rail to De Aar (122-1/2 miles). The wounds were healed. + The man stayed at De Aar nearly a month, and then, rejoining + his regiment, made a two days' march of some 22 miles on hot + days. He had to fall out twice on the way by reason of + headache, feeling dizzy, and 'things looking black.' He did not + own to any loss of memory or intellectual trouble, but was + invalided to England. This patient returned to South Africa + later, and is now on active service. + + (52) _Transverse frontal wound._--Within a few days an almost + identical symmetrical wound in the frontal region occurred in + the same district, from a near range. The patient became + immediately unconscious, and remained so until his death some + four days later, his symptoms being in no way alleviated by + operation and the removal of a quantity of bone fragments and + cerebral _debris_. At the _post-mortem_ examination, extensive + destruction of both hemispheres of the brain was revealed, and + large fissures extended into the base of the skull. + +III. _Glancing or oblique perforating wounds of varying depth in any +portion of the cranium._--These injuries were the most common, the most +highly characteristic of small-calibre bullet wounds, the most +interesting from the point of view of diagnosis, prognosis, and +treatment, and beyond this they formed the variety most unlike any that +we meet with in civil practice. + +They were met with in every region of the cranium, and in every degree +of depth and severity. The lesser are best designated as gutter +fractures, the deeper are perforating and gradually approximate +themselves to the type of injury described as class 1. + +When the bullet struck a prominent or angular spot on the skull a +considerable oval-shaped fragment was occasionally carried away, leaving +an exposed surface of the diploe (case 60, p. 274). Under these +circumstances the apparent lesion on raising a flap was slight, but +exploration often showed extensive intra-cranial mischief. Thus in the +case referred to both dura and brain were wounded, and continuing +haemorrhage led to the development of progressive paralysis, relieved +only by operation. + +From the more deeply passing bullets a more or less oval opening +resulted, in which both tables were freely comminuted and displaced. +These cases differed from the typical gutter fracture only in length and +outline, and the nature of the accompanying intra-cranial lesion was +identical, while in the latter particular they differed much from +fractures in which the impact of the bullet was direct, in spite of a +near resemblance in the appearances in the osseous defect. + +I saw one instance in which a circular fissure about 1-1/2 inch from +the actual opening of entry surrounded the latter, the area of bone +within the circle being somewhat depressed, though radial fissures were +absent. + +In several of these cases fragments of lead were either found on the +fractured surface of the bone or within the cranial cavity, showing that +the bullets had undergone fissuring of the mantle, or had actually +broken up on impact. + +_Gutter fractures._--The nature of the injury to the bones in these is +best illustrated by a series of diagrams of sections such as are shown +below. + +[Illustration: FIG. 64.--Gutter Fracture of first degree. The drawing +does not show well the small fragments of bone usually carried from the +margins of the depression by the bullet.] + +In the most superficial injuries the outer table was grooved and +depressed, usually with loss of substance from small fragments directly +shot away: these latter had either been driven through the wound in the +soft parts, or remained embedded on the deep aspect of the enveloping +scalp (fig. 64). In the less common variety the scalp was slit to a +length corresponding with the injury to the bone, but more often oval +openings in the skin existed at either end of the track. The inner table +was practically never intact, but the amount of comminution naturally +varied with the depth to which the outer table was implicated (fig. 65 +_A_, and _B_). + +The following is an illustrative example of this degree, and also +emphasises the consequences which may follow primary non-interference. + +[Illustration: FIG. 65.--Diagrammatic transverse sections of varying +condition of bones in Gutter Fractures of the first degree. _A._ With no +loss of substance. _B._ With comminution.] + + (53) _Superficial gutter fracture in parietal region. + Convulsive twitchings. Secondary paralysis._--Wounded at Modder + River. Range, 400 yards. A scalp wound 3 inches in length ran + vertically downwards, commencing 1 inch from the median line, + and situated immediately over the upper third of the right + fissure of Rolando. The patient was unconscious for several + hours after the injury, and later suffered with severe + headache, and twitchings in the left shoulder and arm. + + The wound healed, but a well-marked groove was palpable in the + bone beneath, and the twitchings persisted. The latter came on + about every twenty minutes, and loss of power in the left upper + extremity, and to a less degree in the lower, developed. The + memory was defective, and the patient suffered at times with + headache. The pupils were equal but sluggish in action. No + changes were discovered in the fundus beyond a well-developed + myopic crescent at the lower and outer part of the left disc + (Mr. Hanwell). + + The twitchings became more frequent and latterly were + accompanied by somewhat severe muscular contractions in the + upper extremity, while the loss of power in the lower extremity + became more marked. Headache was also more troublesome. + + The patient throughout refused any operation, saying he would + rather go home first, and at the end of a month he left for + England. + +In the deeper injuries more and more of the outer table was cut away, +and the inner became gradually more depressed, fractured, or comminuted +(fig 66). + +[Illustration: FIG. 66.--Gutter Fracture of the second degree. +Perforating the skull in the centre of its course. External table alone +carried away at either end.] + +Bevelling at the expense of the outer table at both entry and exit ends +of the course existed, but in either case a portion of the inner table +was also detached and depressed. Sometimes the depressed portion of the +inner table was mainly composed of one elongated fragment; this was +either when the bullet had not implicated a great thickness of the outer +table, or had passed with great obliquity through especially dense bone +(see fig. 70). When the bullet had passed more deeply the inner table +was comminuted into numberless fragments. I have frequently seen 50 or +60 removed. Where such tracks crossed convex surfaces of the skull, the +two conditions were often combined; thus at one portion of the track, +usually the centre, the comminution was extreme, while at either end a +considerable elongated fragment of inner table was often found, the +latter perhaps more commonly at the distal or exit extremity (fig. 67). + +[Illustration: FIG. 67.--Diagrammatic transverse sections of complete +Gutter Fracture. _A._ External table destroyed, large fragment of +internal table depressed. (Low velocity or dense bone.) _B._ Comminution +and pulverisation of both tables centre of track. _C._ Depression of +inner table (low velocity)] + +The nature of the injury to the bone when the flight of the bullet +actually involved the whole thickness of the calvarium was comparable to +that seen in the case of the long bones when struck by a bullet +travelling at a moderate rate (see plate XIX. of the tibia, or what is +illustrated in the case of the pelvis in fig. 55). In point of fact, a +clean longitudinal track appeared to have been cut out. The length of +these tracks naturally depended upon the region of the skull struck. +When a point corresponding to a sharp convexity, or a sudden bend in +the surface, was implicated, an oval opening of varying length in its +long axis was the result; when a flat area, as exists in the frontal or +lateral portions of the skull, was the seat of injury, a long track was +cut. + +_Superficial perforating fractures._--These formed the next degree; the +chief peculiarity in them was the lifting of nearly the whole thickness +of the skull at the distal margin of the entry, and the proximal edge of +the exit, openings; the flatter the area of skull under which the bullet +travelled the more extensive was the comminution. In some cases nearly +the whole length of the bone superficial to the track would be raised; +in fact, the bullet having once entered, the force is applied from +within in exactly the same way that it operates on the inner table in +the gutter fractures. A corresponding injury is met with in the case of +the bones of the extremities (see fig. 57 of the tibia), and again the +resemblance between these injuries of the skull and such perforations of +the long bones as are illustrated by skiagrams Nos. III. and XXIII. of +the clavicle and fibula is a close one. + +[Illustration: FIG. 68.--Superficial Perforating Fracture. Illustrating +lifting of roof at both entry and exit openings] + +I will add here a case of coexistent gutter fracture and perforating +wound of the skull, the conditions of the bone in which will illustrate +the behaviour of the outer and inner tables respectively, when struck +with moderate force. + +[Illustration: FIG. 69.--Diagrammatic longitudinal section of Fracture +shown in fig. 68] + +[Illustration: FIG. 70.--Fragment forming the main part of the floor of +Gutter Fracture in the squamous portion of the temporal bone. (Low +velocity, hard bone)] + + (54) Wounded at Thaba-nchu. Guedes bullet. _Entry_ behind left + ear, just above posterior root of zygoma; gutter fracture; + bullet retained within skull. Above and corresponding to right + frontal eminence there was a haematoma, beneath which a loose + fragment of bone was readily palpable. When brought into the + Field hospital, twenty-four hours after the injury, the man + appeared to understand when spoken to, but made no answers to + questions. The urine was passed unconsciously, the bowels were + confined. + + He was drowsy, the pupils widely dilated, the pulse 68, of good + strength, and the temperature 104 deg.. He slept well the following + night and midday there was little change, except that the + pupils acted to light, and the pulse had risen to 88, becoming + dicrotic and small. The temperature was 103 deg., the tongue furred + and dry, but he was lying with the mouth wide open. + + At 2 P.M. the wound was explored. The entry led down to a + typical gutter fracture in the squamous portion of the temporal + bone, at the point of junction of the vertical with the + horizontal part; the floor of the gutter had been displaced + inwards as a single fragment (fig. 70). A flap was raised in + the frontal region, where a scale of outer table (fig. 71), + clothed with diploic tissue, was found loose. Beneath this a + puncture on the frontal bone, about corresponding in size to + the bullet, was discovered. This opening was enlarged, and a + bullet detected and removed. The bullet was a Guedes, with no + marks of rifling, and was in no way deformed. At least a square + inch of the right frontal lobe was pulped, so that the bullet + lay in a cavity. + + The patient improved somewhat during the next two days, and on + the third took a 16 hours' journey to Bloemfontein, where Mr. + Bowlby (who was present at the operation) kindly took him into + the Portland Hospital. The pulse gradually rose to 112, the + temperature remained on an average from 102 deg. to 103 deg., the + respiration rose to 36, the face became somewhat livid, and on + the sixth day death occurred rather suddenly, apparently from + respiratory failure. For two days before his death the patient + sometimes asked for food, &c.; there was occasional twitching + of the left angle of the mouth, and, when the posterior wound + was manipulated, some twitching of the fingers of the left + hand. When the wound was dressed on the fourth day, there were + breaking-down blood-clot and signs of incipient suppuration. + + Mr. Bowlby made a _post-mortem_ examination, and found + considerable pulping of the tip of the right frontal and left + temporo-sphenoidal lobes, and a thick layer of haemorrhage + extending over the whole base of the brain. + +[Illustration: FIG. 71.--Scale of outer table of Frontal Bone and +Diploe. Exact size, from fracture shown in fig. 72] + +[Illustration: FIG. 72.--Perforating Fracture of Frontal Bone from +within Separation of plate outer table. (Low velocity.) 1/2] + +The injury to the _cranial contents_ varied with the degree of bone +injury. Haemorrhage on the surface of the dura may in rare instances have +been the sole gross lesion; I never met with such a condition, however. +In all the cases in which comminution had occurred, some laceration of +the dura, even if not more than surface damage or a punctiform opening, +had resulted. In the more serious gutter fractures an elongated rent of +some extent usually existed. In the perforating fractures two more or +less irregular openings were the rule. The amount of haemorrhage, even if +the venous sinuses were implicated, was on the whole surprisingly small, +when the cases were such as to survive the injury long enough to be +brought to the Field hospital. I never saw a typical case of middle +meningeal haemorrhage, although many fractures crossing the line of +distribution of the large branches came under observation. Case 60, p. +274, illustrated the fact that the osseous lesions of lesser apparent +degree are sometimes the more to be feared in the matter of haemorrhage, +as compression is more readily developed. + +The degree of injury to the brain depended on the depth of the track, +the resistance offered by the bones of any individual skull, the weight +of the patient, but chiefly on the degree of velocity retained by the +bullet. It was sometimes slight and local as far as symptoms would guide +us; but in the majority of cases out of all proportion to the apparent +bone lesion, if the range was at all a short one. Cases illustrative of +these injuries are included under the heading of symptoms. + +It will be, of course, appreciated that the coarse brain lesions under +the third heading differed in localisation and in extent alone, and in +no wise in nature, from those observed in the two preceding classes. The +damage consisted in direct superficial laceration and contusion, and +beyond the limits of the area of actual destruction, abundant +parenchymatous haemorrhages more or less broke up the structure of the +brain, such haemorrhages decreasing both in size and number as +macroscopically uninjured tissue was reached. No opportunity was ever +afforded of examining a simple wound track in a case in which no obvious +cerebral symptoms had been present. + +IV. _Fractures of the base._--In addition to the above classes, a few +words ought to be added regarding the gunshot fractures of the base of +the skull. These possessed some striking peculiarities; first in the +fact that they might occur in any position, and hence differed from the +typically coursing 'bursting' fractures we are accustomed to in civil +life as the consequence of blows and falls, and consequently were often +present without any of the classical symptoms by which we are accustomed +to locate such fissures. Secondly, the peculiar form was not uncommon in +which extensive mischief was produced from within by direct contact of a +passing bullet. + +As far as could be judged from clinical symptoms, indirect fractures of +the base such as we are accustomed to meet in civil practice in +connection with fractures of the vault were decidedly rare, and, as has +already been mentioned, ocular evidence of extensive fissures extending +from perforating wounds of the vertex was wanting, except in the extreme +cases classed under heading I. For these reasons I am inclined to regard +them as uncommon. + +Direct fractures of the base, on the other hand, were of common +occurrence, especially in the anterior fossa of the skull. These might +be produced either from within, the most characteristic form of gunshot +injury, or from without. The fractures from within were often simple +punctures of the roof of the orbit or nose. + +Punctured fractures of the roof of the orbit caused little trouble as +far as the cranium was concerned, but the orbital structures often +suffered severely. I saw one or two very severe comminutions of the roof +of the orbit caused by bullets which had crossed the interior of the +skull; in one case the whole roof was in small fragments, while the +damage in others was not greater than chipping off some portion of the +lesser wing of the sphenoid. The roof of the orbit again was sometimes +very severely damaged by bullets which first traversed that cavity +itself; thus in one case which recovered, the bullet passed +transversely, smashing both globes, and fracturing the roof of both +orbits and the cribriform plate so severely as to lacerate both +dura-mater and brain, portions of the latter being found in the orbit on +removal of the damaged eyes. + +Fractures of the middle and posterior fossae were met with far less +frequently, partly I think because vertical wounds passing from the +vertex to the base in these regions were with few exceptions rapidly +fatal, and partly from the fact that the occipital region, being +ordinarily sheltered from the line of fire, was rarely exposed to the +danger of direct fracture from without. As an odd coincidence I may +mention that in my whole experience during the war I only once saw +bleeding from the ear as a sign of fracture of the base, apart from +direct injuries to the tympanum or external auditory meatus. + +_Symptoms of fracture of the skull, with concurrent injury to the +brain._--These consisted in various combinations of the groups of signs +indicative of the conditions of concussion, compression, cerebral +irritation, or destruction. Although the symptoms possessed no inherent +peculiarities, yet certain characteristics exhibited served to +illustrate the fact that, as a result of the special mechanism of +causation of the injuries, the type deviated in many ways from that +accompanying the corresponding injuries of civil practice. + +The characters of the external wounds will be first considered, followed +by some remarks concerning the symptoms attendant on the different +degrees and types of lesion, the symptoms special to injuries to +different regions of the head, and on the subsequent complications +observed. + +In the simplest injuries the type forms of entry and exit wound were +found, and it has already been observed that in these, if symmetrical, +considerable difficulty existed in discriminating between the two +apertures. This is to be explained by the fact that the arrangement and +structure of the scalp are identical in corresponding regions; hence the +only difference in the conditions of production of the entry and exit +wounds exists in the absence of support to the skin in the latter. The +granular structure of the hairy scalp is opposed to the occurrence of +the slit forms of exit, hence the openings were usually irregularly +rounded. Any increase of size in the exit wound in the soft parts due to +the passage of bone fragments with the bullet, was equalised in that of +entry by the fact that the latter, as supported by a hard substratum, +was usually larger than those met with in situations where the skin +covers soft parts alone. + +In some cases of gutter fracture the wounds of entry were large and +irregular, as a result of upward splintering of the bone at the distal +margin of the aperture of entry in the skull, and consequent laceration +of the scalp. Again, on the forehead very pure types of slit exit wound +were often met with in the position of the vertical or horizontal +creases. With higher degrees of velocity on the part of the bullet and +consequent comminution at the aperture of exit in the bone, the scalp +was more extensively lacerated, and large irregular openings in the soft +parts, often occupied by fragments of bone and brain pulp, were met +with. It is well to repeat here, however, that the presence of brain +pulp in a wound by no means necessarily indicated the aperture of exit, +for it was sometimes found in the entry opening also. + +In the most severe cases, such as are included in class I., the exit +wound often possessed in the highest degree the so-called 'explosive' +character. From an opening in the skin with everted margins two or more +inches in diameter a mass of brain debris, bone fragments and particles +of dura-mater, skin, and hair, bound together by coagulated blood, +protruded as a primary hernia cerebri if the patient survived the first +few hours after the injury. In other cases of the same class the actual +opening was smaller, but the whole scalp was swollen and oedematous, +sometimes crackling when touched from the presence of extravasated blood +in the cellular tissue, while firm palpation often gave the impression +that the head consisted of a bag of bones over a considerable area. + +Gutter fractures of the scalp were sometimes situated beneath an open +furrow, gaping from loss of substance, or beneath a bridge of skin; in +the latter case they were usually palpable. Simple punctures were also +usually palpable, but the smallness of the openings sometimes rendered +their detection more difficult than might be assumed. + +I never saw a case in which the skull escaped injury when the bullet +struck the scalp at right angles, but the frequency with which Mauser +bullets were found within the helmets of men would suggest that this +must have sometimes occurred. A case of injury to the external table +alone has been described (p. 243). An illustration of the next degree of +injury is afforded by the following:--A bullet lodged in the centre of +the forehead, the point lying within the cranial cavity, while the base +projected from the surface: this patient suffered but slight immediate +trouble, so little, indeed, that he merely asked his officer to remove +the bullet for him, as it was inconvenient. The bullet was subsequently +removed in the Field hospital. + +In a few cases the bullet entered the skull and was retained, when only +a single wound was found. Such cases are described in Nos. 54 and 68, +where the position of the bullet was determined by palpable fractures +beneath the skin. With regard to the retention of bullets, however, in +small-calibre wounds, it was always necessary to examine the other parts +of the body with great care, and to ascertain, if possible, the +direction from which the wound was received, as an exit was often found +some distance down the neck or trunk. Again the possibility of the +opening having been produced by glancing contact had to be considered. + +In cases which survived the injury on the field, free haemorrhage, as in +wounds of other regions, was rare, and although general evidence of loss +of blood was often noted in patients brought in, progressive bleeding +was seldom observed. Again, when the wounds were explored, the amount of +blood, although considerable, was usually not more than sufficed to fill +up the space consequent on the loss of brain tissue. This was especially +striking when large venous sinuses, as the superior longitudinal, were +involved in the injury. None the less, haemorrhage at the base of the +brain was, I believe, responsible for early death in many of the severe +cases, especially when the wounds were near the lower regions of the +skull. + +Escape of cerebro-spinal fluid was not so prominent a feature as might +have been expected, considering how freely the arachnoid space was +opened up in many cases. I think this was usually checked by early +coagulation of the blood, and later by adhesions. It must be remembered +also that extensive wounds were most common on the vertex, or at any +rate over the convex surface of the brain, while fractures of the middle +fossa were usually rapidly fatal. + +_Concussion._--Cases exhibiting symptoms of pure uncomplicated +concussion were distinctly rare, as would be expected from the +mechanism of the injuries. On the other hand, symptoms of concussion +formed the dominant feature of all severe cases. + +The symptoms in many instances consisted in great part in transitory +signs of the so-called 'radiation' type, such as are seen in destructive +lesions where the signs of nervous damage rapidly tend to diminish and +localise themselves. + +As to the causation of the 'radiation' symptoms, it is difficult to +discriminate the effects of neighbouring parenchymatous haemorrhages from +those of local vibratory concussion of the nervous tissue. The local +character of the signs seems, however, to point to causation by +molecular disturbance, resulting from the conduction of forcible +mechanical vibration to the brain tissue rather than to upset in the +intra-cranial pressure. Again the limited nature of the paralysis +observed, sharply defines it from the general loss of power accompanying +ordinary cases of concussion of the brain. The similarity of the +phenomena to those described in other parts of the body under the +heading of 'local shock' is sufficiently obvious. + +The following instance well exemplifies the condition in question: + + (55) Wounded at Spion Kop. A scalp wound 3 inches in length + crossed the left parietal bone nearly transversely, starting + 1-1/2 and ending 2 inches from the median line: the centre of + the wound corresponded with the position of the fissure of + Rolando. The patient was struck at a distance of fifty yards + while kneeling; he fell and remained unconscious an hour and a + half. Right hemiplegia without aphasia followed. The wound was + cleansed and sutured, and in three days both arm and leg could + be moved, after which time the man improved rapidly. Three weeks + later when I saw him at Wynberg there was still comparative + weakness of the right side, but beyond some neuralgia of the + scalp, the man considered himself well. No groove could be + detected on the bone on palpation. (This case offers a good + example of the ease with which bone injury may be overlooked. + The man came over to England 'well;' but while on furlough, two + pieces of bone came away spontaneously. He is now again on + active service.) + +_Compression._--Equally rare was it for pure symptoms of compression to +be exhibited. This depended on two circumstances: first, the rarity of +injuries giving rise to meningeal haemorrhage; secondly, the fact that in +nearly every case a more or less extensive destructive lesion was +present, at the margins of which less completely destroyed tissue +remained, capable of giving rise to symptoms of irritation. Again, as we +have seen, free haemorrhage into, or from the walls of, the cavities +produced in the brain was not a marked feature, and beyond this the +large defect in the cranial parietes was calculated to render a high +degree of compression impossible. + +As the most serious head injuries presented a remarkable similarity in +their symptoms, I will shortly summarise their common features. + +Every degree of mental stupor up to complete unconsciousness was met +with, but in some instances where the pulse, respiration, and general +bodily condition pointed to speedy dissolution, the patients answered +rationally often between moans or cries indicative of pain. + +Widespread paralysis often existed, but this was seldom completely +general; more commonly it was combined with extreme restlessness of the +unparalysed parts, or sometimes, even when the whole of one hemisphere +was tunnelled, and in all probability widely destroyed, restlessness was +the only symptom. In some cases twitching of the features or the limbs +or severe convulsions were superadded. + +The pupils were rarely unequal, and at the stage in which these patients +were first seen were usually moderately contracted. Wide dilatation was +uncommon throughout. + +The pulse was with very few exceptions slow, sometimes irregular. In +some instances, when the wounds had been thought suitable for +exploration, the slow pulse was altered after operation to a rapid one, +and death usually quickly supervened. + +Respiration was irregular, sometimes sighing; in the late stage often of +the Cheyne-Stokes type; actual stertor was exceptional, but the +respiration was often noisy. + +The temperature was often raised from an early stage to 99 deg. or 100 deg., and +if the patient survived a day or two, it often rose to 103 deg. or 104 deg.. How +far the secondary rise depended on sepsis it was not always easy to +determine. The urine was usually retained. + +Cases presenting the above characters were usually those suffering from +lesions such as are described in class I., and mostly died in +twenty-four to forty-eight hours. The correspondence of the train of +symptoms with those due to combined brain destruction and severe +concussion is at once apparent. + +To illustrate the nature of the symptoms in patients suffering from the +less extensive forms of injury, such as those included in classes II. +and III. under the heading of anatomical lesion, the relation of a short +series of histories will be advisable. I may first premise, however, +that the special characteristics of these were in some instances the +almost entire absence of primary symptoms of gravity; in others general +symptoms of a severity out of apparent proportion to the external +lesion; while in all destructive lesions, very widely distributed +radiation symptoms developed, often disappearing with great rapidity. + +The symptoms consisted in those of concussion, irritation, local +pressure, and actual destruction. + +The symptoms of concussion were either general, and then usually +transient, or local paralysis of the radiation variety, which also +rapidly improved. + +Signs of irritation consisted in irritability of temper, drowsiness, +closure of the eyes and objection to light, contracted pupils sometimes +unequal, a tendency to the assumption of the flexed position at all the +joints, twitchings, and sometimes convulsions. Sometimes these appeared +early as a direct result of mechanical irritation from bone fragments or +blood-clot; sometimes only in the course of a few days, as a result of +irritation of parts recovering from the radiation effects which had +prevented earlier nervous reaction. Possibly in some cases the symptoms +of irritation depended upon an increase in the amount of haemorrhage, and +in others upon the development of local inflammatory changes. + +Local pressure, or actual destruction of brain tissue, was evidenced by +temporary paralysis in the former, permanent loss of function in the +latter, condition. + +Fractures of the anterior fossa of the skull were attended by very +marked evidence of orbital haemorrhage, as subconjunctival ecchymosis +(rarely pure), increased tension, and proptosis. + +Injuries to the cranial nerves at the base, with the single exception of +lesion of the optic nerves, which was not rare, were in my experience +uncommon in the hospitals--a fact pointing to the very fatal nature of +direct basal injuries, except in the anterior fossa of the skull. Signs +indicative of injury to the olfactory lobe were occasionally observed. + +I should, perhaps, again insist here on the rarity with which acute +diffuse septic infection occurred in cases of these degrees of severity, +also on the fact that interference with the wounds in the way of +secondary exploration, even when they were manifestly the seat of local +infection, was followed almost without exception by good immediate +results; and, lastly, that when suppuration did occur, it was usually +strictly local in character. The influence of the climate of South +Africa and our surroundings has already been discussed, but whether +climate, condition of the patients, or peculiarity in the nature of +causation of the wounds was responsible, in no series of cases was the +absence of acute inflammatory troubles more striking than in this one of +brain injuries. + +Frontal injuries were those most frequently unaccompanied by primary +symptoms of severity; slowing of the pulse--this often fell to 40--and +occasional irregularity, were almost the only constant signs of cerebral +damage. Some patients temporarily lost consciousness, others rose at +once and walked to the dressing station, and in few cases was any +psychical disturbance noted in the early stages. + +I think, however, it may be affirmed that frontal injuries, accompanied +by trivial signs, resulted without exception from the passage of bullets +travelling at a low rate of velocity. Thus in several of the instances +here related the patients at the time of reception of the wound were +under the impression that they were entirely beyond the range of fire, +and in one, in which well-marked signs of concussion followed, the +bullet, which had traversed the head, retained only sufficient force to +perforate the skin of the neck and bury itself in the posterior +triangle without even fracturing the clavicle, against which it +impinged. In men struck at a shorter range, signs of concussion, often +followed by transient radiation signs of injury to the parietal lobe, +were common. These signs were, I think, not as a rule due to surface +haemorrhage, since they were of a purely paralytic nature and not +irritative. Several cases with partial or complete hemiplegia, +hemiplegia and aphasia, or facial paralysis are recorded below. + + (56) _Frontal injury_.--Wounded at Magersfontein. In prone + position when struck, distance 700 to 800 yards. _Entry_ + (Mauser), at the margin of the hairy scalp above and to the + left of the frontal eminence; course, through anterior third of + left frontal lobe, roof of orbit, obliquely across line of + optic nerve, inner wall of orbit, nose, right superior maxilla + piercing alveolar process, and passing superficial to inferior + maxilla: _exit_, one inch anterior to angle of jaw. The bullet + again entered the posterior triangle of the neck, struck the + right clavicle, and turned a somersault, so that its base lay + deepest in the wound. + + The patient was unconscious for a short time, suffered with + general headache and giddiness, and was somewhat irritable. On + the third day the pulse was 70, temperature normal, and he was + sent to the Base. There was considerable proptosis, oedema + and discoloration of the eyelid, and subconjunctival + ecchymosis, but the movements of the eyeball could be made and + light could be distinguished. The sense of smell was apparently + absent. A week later the headache was gone, the pulse numbered + 80 to 90, the temperature was normal, he slept well, sat up in + bed and smoked, took his food well, and exhibited no cerebral + symptoms. He could detect the smell of tobacco, but not as a + definite odour. + + No further symptoms were noted, the sense of smell returned, + the swelling of the eyelid and proptosis decreased, but the + upper lid could not be raised. When the lid was drawn up, there + appeared to be vision at the margins of the field with a large + central blind spot. The patient left for England at the end of + a month apparently well. + + (57) _Gutter fracture of frontal bone._--Wounded at Paardeberg. + _Entry_ (Mauser), 3/4 of an inch within the margin of hairy + scalp above outer extremity of right eyebrow; gutter fracture; + _exit_, 2 inches nearer middle line, at the same distance from + the margin of the hairy scalp. The patient was knocked head + over heels, his main feeling being a sense of dulness in the + right great toe. He sat up and got a first field dressing + applied, then lay down, but as he was still under fire, he + retired 1,000 yards to the collecting station; here he dressed + some patients, and later mounted an ambulance wagon and was + driven to the Field hospital. The next day he helped with the + work of the hospital, amongst other things controlling the + artery during an amputation of the arm. He then took a three + days' and nights' journey to Modder River in a bullock wagon, + during which journey he had a fit, which was general, the + thumbs being turned in and a wedge being necessary between the + teeth to prevent him biting his tongue. + + On the sixth day the wound was examined, and between this and + the tenth day he had several fits of the same nature as the + first, accompanied by stertorous breathing and profuse + sweating. On the tenth day Mr. Cheatle opened up the wound and + removed numerous fragments of bone, leaving a clean gutter 2 + inches by 3/4 of an inch. After the operation no further fits + occurred, and eight days later he was conscious, but was + excitable and talked at random. On the twentieth day he arrived + at the Base after 30 hours' railway journey (623 miles). He was + then quite rational, but unable to make any demands on his + memory and very sensitive to noise; at times he wandered in the + evenings and his temperature rose as high as 100 deg.. The wound + was open and granulating, the floor pulsating freely. + + Three weeks later the wound was still open, and the skin dipped + in at the lower margin. The mental condition was much improved, + although attempts at giving a history of his case were + obviously tiresome. + + The wounds in the leather headband of this patient's helmet + were interesting, the round aperture of entry in the exterior + of the helmet being followed by a starred exit aperture in the + leather band, the second entry opening in the leather band + being again circular, and the external opening in the puggaree + a transverse slit. + + (58) _Transverse superficial perforating frontal + injury._--Wounded at Graspan. Aperture of _entry_ + (Lee-Metford), at upper and outer part of left frontal + eminence; _exit_, at margin of hairy scalp over outer third of + right eyebrow. On the second day the patient complained of + giddiness and headache; the pulse was 60. He was then walking + about. The wounds were explored and typical entry and exit + apertures discovered in the frontal bone from which cerebral + matter was protruding. Both openings were enlarged (Mr. S. W. + F. Richardson) with Hoffman's forceps, and a considerable + number of splinters of the inner table were removed from the + aperture of entry. + + The headache gradually passed off, but there was throbbing + about the scar, and pulsation was visible for some three weeks, + after which no further symptoms were observed. + + (59) _Oblique frontal gutter fracture._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1/2 an inch to right of median + line of forehead, 3/4 of an inch from the margin of the hairy + scalp; _exit_, about 3/4 of an inch anterior to the lower + extremity of the right fissure of Rolando. Weakness of left + facial muscles, especially of angle of mouth. No further motor + symptoms. Wounds explored (Mr. Stewart); numerous fragments of + bone and some pulped cerebral matter were removed. Patient + developed no further signs; the paralysis, although improved, + did not completely disappear. The man a year later was still on + active duty, the paralysis almost well, and no further ill + effects of the injury remained. + +In the fronto-parietal or parietal regions, signs of damage to the +cortical motor area were seldom absent, sometimes evanescent, at others +prolonged. In some cases the signs were permanent and followed by +evidence of local sclerosis. + +The motor area on both sides of the brain was sometimes implicated; thus +in a child shot at Kimberley the bullet entered in the right frontal +region, and emerged to the left of the line connecting bregma and inion +a little behind its centre. Paralysis of both lower extremities +resulted, power rapidly returning in the right, while incomplete +paralysis persisted in the left. + +In only one instance (see case 73, p. 292) was any permanent sensory +defect observed, and the mental condition of this patient would have +certainly suggested a functional explanation for its presence, had it +not been for the accompanying inequality in the axillary surface +temperatures. + +In a second case (No. 67) blunting of sensation followed a definite +lesion of the inferior parietal lobule. In this instance an occipital +lesion was associated with the parietal. + + (60) _Parietal gutter fracture._--Wounded at Magersfontein. A + scalp wound 3 inches in length ran transversely across the + right parietal bone at the level of the lower third of the + fissure of Rolando. A second wound of entry was found crossing + the third dorsal spine; the bullet was retained and was + palpable over the right scapula. There was left facial + paralysis, weakness and numbness of both upper extremities, + especially of the left, and some difficulty in swallowing. The + man was sent to the Base, where he arrived on the fourth day. + The symptoms had then become much more marked, consciousness + was incomplete, and articulation slow and imperfect. There was + complete left hemiplegia, and deviation of the tongue to the + right. The pulse was 40. An exploration (Mr. J. J. Day) showed + that an oval plate of the outer table of the parietal bone had + been struck off. A trephine was applied to the exposed diploe + and a crown of bone removed; considerable comminution of the + inner table had occurred, several large fragments having + perforated the dura-mater. The latter did not pulsate; it was + therefore freely incised, and many more fragments of bone and a + large quantity of blood-clot removed. + + The first effect of the operation was slight, but ten days + later rapid improvement commenced, the first sign being + acceleration of the pulse, which rose to 70. On the eighteenth + day the original symptoms still remained to a diminished + extent, but a fortnight later there remained traces of the + facial weakness only, and there was little difference in the + grip of the two hands. The patient was shortly afterwards sent + home. Ten months later he returned to South Africa on active + service. + + (61) _Fronto-parietal gutter fracture._--Wounded at Graspan. + _Entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch within the margin of the hairy scalp, + 1/2 an inch to the left of the median line; _exit_, 3-1/2 + inches posterior in same line. Complete right-sided hemiplegia. + The wounds were explored on the fourth day (Major Moffatt, + R.A.M.C.) and a gutter fracture involving the frontal and + parietal bones exposed. The dura-mater was lacerated and brain + matter from the frontal lobe escaped freely. A large number of + bone fragments were removed. On the fourth day after the + operation, the patient became unconscious with right-sided + twitchings, but rapidly improved, and at the end of three + weeks, except for slight headache, he was well, the power of + the right side being good. Ten months later he rejoined his + regiment in South Africa, no apparent ill effects remaining. + + (62) _Fronto-parietal perforating fracture._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_, within the margin of the hairy scalp; + _exit_, behind and below the left parietal eminence, the track + crossing about the centre of the fissure of Rolando. Right + hemiplegia, the lower half of the face only being involved. The + wounds were explored and a large number of fragments of bone + and a quantity of pulped cerebral matter removed. Six days + later the hemiplegia persisted, speech was slow, headache was + troublesome and the pulse not above 45. After this, gradual + improvement took place, and a month later the lower extremity + and face had regained good power. The upper extremity remained + flaccid and paralysed, except for some slight power of movement + of the shoulder. + + (63) _Fronto-parietal perforating fracture._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 2-1/2 inches from the median + line, 3-1/2 inches from the occipital protuberance; _exit_, 3/4 + of an inch from the median line, 4-1/2 inches from the + glabella; sanious fluid escaped from both ears. There was left + facial paralysis, complete paralysis of the left upper + extremity, and partial paralysis of the left lower extremity. + The patient was deaf, drowsy, and the pulse 45. + + Exploration showed the entry wound to be in the parietal, the + exit to involve both parietal and frontal bones. The openings + were enlarged, and a number of fragments of bone, together with + pulped cerebral matter and blood-clot, were removed. The wound + healed, except at the front part, where a small prominence + suggested a hernia cerebri. + + The patient improved slowly; fourteen days after the operation + he could hear well, and the flow from the ears had ceased. The + facial weakness was slight, the upper extremity was still + powerless, but he could move the lower and draw it up in bed. + At the end of six weeks the wound had healed, and he was got up + and dressed. + + At the end of two months he was well enough to be sent home; + there was only a trace of facial weakness; the right upper + extremity, however, was powerless and slightly rigid, + occasional twitchings occurring in it. Considerable power had + been regained in the lower extremity, so that the patient could + walk with help, but foot-drop persisted; the gait was spastic + in character, the reflexes were much exaggerated, and there was + marked clonus. The patient was sensible, but his manner + suggested some mental weakness. Both the openings in the skull + were closed by very firm material, apparently bony. + + This patient became a Commissionaire some ten months later. His + mental condition is normal, and loss of memory seems confined + to the events immediately following the injury. The lower + extremity has improved, but the upper is useless. + + (64) _Parietal injury: retained bullet._--Wounded at + Paardeberg. Aperture of _entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch diagonally + below and anterior to left parietal eminence. No exit. The + patient was trephined by the surgeons of the German ambulance + at Jacobsdal. + + Sixteen days later he arrived at the Base. A circular pulsating + trephine opening was then to be felt beneath the flap, but no + information was forthcoming as to the bullet. The patient + could speak, but lost words and the gist of sentences; he + could remember nothing as to himself since the day of the + injury. There was right facial weakness; he could not close the + right eye or whistle, but there was little apparent want of + symmetry; there was weakness in the grip of both hands, more + marked on the right side; both lower extremities could be + moved. The reflexes were normal, although the left limb was + slightly rigid. The pupils were equal, reflex normal; slight + nystagmus. Pulse 72, small and regular. Temperature normal. + Rapid improvement followed. + + During the fourth week the temperature rose to 103 deg., and + remained elevated for six days, but no local or general signs + appeared; at the end of five weeks there was little evidence of + the paralysis remaining. The patient was discharged from the + service on his return home. + +In the upper part of the occipital region glancing or superficial +injuries were comparatively favourable; those near the base, especially +if perforating, were very dangerous. Two such cases are referred to +elsewhere. Case 69 is included as the only example of cerebellar injury +I happened to see who lived any appreciable time after the accident. + +The main interest in these cases centres in the defects produced in the +area of the visual field. I am extremely indebted to my colleague, Mr. +J. H. Fisher, who has kindly determined this for me in three of the +following cases. It will be noted that in two instances the injury was +to the left occipital lobe. In these the resulting hemianopsia was of +the pure lateral homonymous character, and in both the visual symptoms +were accompanied by a certain degree of amnesic aphasia (65 and 68). + +In 65 the injury was definitely unilateral, and at the time of the +operation I decided that at least an inch and a half of the posterior +extremity of the left occipital lobe was totally destroyed. + +In 68 the lesion was probably confined to the left lobe, but it is +impossible to exclude slight injury to the right lobe also. In this +instance amnesic aphasia was a far more marked symptom than in 65, and +the position of the lesion suggested damage both to the visual and +auditory word centres. + +Cases 66 and 67 are instances of damage to both occipital lobes. In 66, +although the wound was a glancing one, and did not perforate, it was so +near the median line, and accompanied by such severe damage to the bone, +that a symmetrical lesion of the cuneate and precuneate lobules of both +right and left sides is to be inferred. In 67 the great longitudinal +fissure was traversed by the bullet obliquely. It is of great interest +to observe that in each of these cases the lesion of the visual field +was a horizontal one and affected the lower half in place of assuming a +lateral distribution. + +In all four cases the primary effect of the occipital injury was the +same--viz. absolute blindness--while the return of vision in each was of +the nature of the dawning of light. I regret that I am unable to furnish +any detail as to increase of the field of vision in the progress of the +cases, but circumstances rendered continuous observation of the patients +impossible. + +In each case deafness was apparently the direct result of concussion of +the ear on the side corresponding to the wound. Deafness of the opposite +ear was never noted. + +In case 67 some general blunting of sensation was noted in the paralysed +upper extremity, and in this patient, no doubt, injury to the inferior +parietal lobule accompanied the occipital lesion. + + (65) _Injury to left occipital lobe._--Wounded at Belmont. A + single transverse wound, 2 inches in length, extended across + the occipital bone, 2 inches above the level of the external + protuberance. When seen on the third day the wound was gaping + and pulped cerebral matter was found in it. The patient was + very drowsy, lying with closed eyes, and complaining of great + coronal and frontal headache. He could distinguish light and + darkness, but not persons. Total blindness immediately followed + the injury, persisting some three days, and the patient spoke + of return of sight as of the appearance of dawn. The pupils + were equal, moderately dilated and acted to light, which was + unpleasant to him. He was somewhat irritable and silent, but + apparently rational. Temperature 99 deg.. Pulse 56 full. Tongue + clean. No sickness, no difficulty in micturition. + + Fifty-six hours after the injury the wound was opened up and + cleaned, and an oval fractured opening about 3/4 by 1/2 inch + was exposed 3/4 inch to the left, and 2 inches above the + occipital protuberance. The margins of the opening showed + several small fragments of lead attached to the bone. A + 3/4-inch trephine was applied at the left extremity of the + opening, and it was found that about a square inch of the + internal table was comminuted and driven into the brain, + together with several small fragments of lead. On introducing + the finger, about 1-1/2 square inches of the occipital lobe + were found to be pulped, and the finger could be swept across + the tentorium. There was no sinus haemorrhage (nor did the + history suggest that haemorrhage had ever been severe). The + cavity was carefully sponged out, and the wound closed with a + drainage aperture. Little change followed in the patient's + condition, and on the sixth day he was sent to the Base + hospital. + + Three weeks later the wound was firmly healed. The patient + still complained of frontal headache, and wore a shade, as the + light hurt his eyes and made them water freely. The pupils + acted, but were wide; objects could be distinguished, and also + persons. Otherwise, the man's condition was good: he began to + get up, and at the end of six weeks returned to England. + + A year later the man was earning his living as a Commissionaire + porter. He complains of giddiness when he stoops, or when he + looks upwards, and at times he suffers much with headache both + in the region of the injury and across the temples. + + There is a bony defect and slight pulsation at the site of the + injury, but no prominence. When attempts are made to read the + lines run together, and a dark shadow comes before his eyes. He + speaks of the latter as still terribly weak. Speech is slow and + somewhat simple, but he makes no mistakes as to words. Memory + is bad for recent events. + + Mr. Fisher makes the following report as to the eyes: Pupils + and movement of eyes normal in every respect. No changes in + fundi. + + Vision, R. 5/12 with--0.5 5/6 + L. 5/9 with--0.5 5/5 + +[Illustration: FIG. 73.--Right Visual Field, in case 65. Injury to left +occipital lobe. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good daylight. Right +homonymous hemianopsia] + +[Illustration: FIG. 74.--Left Visual Field, case 65] + + There is therefore practically full direct vision. Though the + man chooses a concave glass he is not really myopic. There is + typical right homonymous hemianopsia; the answers, when tested + with the perimeter, are quite certain, and the fields + absolutely reliable. + + The man's statements confirm the condition; he is aware of his + inability to see objects to his right-hand side, and is apt to + collide with persons or objects on that side. + + The lesion is one of the left occipital cortex in the cuneate + lobe and the neighbourhood of the calcarine fissure. The speech + suggests a slight degree of aphasia. + + (66) _Injury to occipital lobes._--Wounded at Magersfontein + while in prone position. Distance, 500 yards. He says he was + never unconscious, but for two days was absolutely blind. His + eyesight gradually improved, but headache was very severe, and + sleeplessness nearly absolute. On the eighth day the wound, + which was situated over the right posterior superior angle of + the parietal bone, was opened up, and a number of fragments of + bone and a quantity of pulped brain removed from a depressed + punctured fracture, surrounded by an annular fissure, + completely encircling it, 1-1/2 inch from the opening. The + portion of brain destroyed was probably a considerable portion + of the cuneate and precuneate lobules of both sides, as well as + a portion of the first occipital convolution, and the superior + parietal lobule of the right side. There was no evidence of + injury to the superior longitudinal sinus in the way of + haemorrhage. + + After the operation the patient slept better, but still + complained of headache, and when he arrived at the Base, the + flap became oedematous, and the stitch holes and also the + central part of the wound suppurated. The temperature rose to + 101 deg.. The wound was therefore re-opened, and a number of + additional fragments of bone, some as deeply situated as 2 + inches from the surface, were removed. Steady improvement + followed, and at the end of a further three weeks the wound was + healed, the headache had ceased, and there were no abnormal + symptoms, except that light was unpleasant to the right eye, + and the field of vision was manifestly contracted (Mr. Pooley). + + A year later the man was employed as a letter-carrier. He + complains of headache at times, and on six occasions has had + 'fainting fits.' He says that the latter commence with tremor, + that his legs then give way and he falls. In a quarter of an + hour he gets up, and feels no further inconvenience. Speech is + perfect, there is no deafness. The bone defect is very nearly + completely closed. + + Mr. Fisher reports as follows as to the vision. There is a high + degree of hypermetropia in each eye, the R. has nearly 6.0 D + and the L. about 5.0 D. With correction he gets practically + full direct vision with each. + +[Illustration: FIG. 75.--Right Visual Field, in case 66. Injury to both +occipital lobes. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good artificial +light. Defect in field complicated by functional symptoms] + +[Illustration: FIG. 76.--Left Visual Field, in case 66. Defect in lower +half of field] + + The patient has been examined before, and has been informed + that his vision quite incapacitates him from further service. + He began by stating that he could not see on either side of + him, but only straight in front; that he is apt to collide with + people in walking, was nearly knocked down by a horse, and that + his acquaintances accuse him of passing them unnoticed. The + fields of vision are very small, but the loss is not typically + in the temporal half of either. That of the right eye which we + know as the spiral field, becoming more and more contracted as + the perimeter test is continued, is what is found in functional + cases; that of the left, however, shows a characteristic loss + of the lower part of the field of vision, and agrees with the + statement of the man that he can see the upper part of my face + but not the lower when he looks at me. Such a loss agrees with + a lesion involving the upper part of the cuneate lobe above the + calcarine fissure. + + I feel satisfied that there is considerable loss in the right + field also, but the functional element obscures its exact + nature. + + The fundi, pupils, and ocular movements are all normal. + + (67) _Injury to occipital lobes and left motor and sensory + areas._--Wounded outside Lindley (Spitzkop). Range within 1,000 + yards. _Entry_, one inch within the right lateral angle of the + occipital bone, external wound more than 1/2 an inch in + diameter; _exit_, 2 inches from the median line, over the upper + half of the left fissure of Rolando. Behind the wound of exit + comminution of the parietal bone, extending back to the + lambdoid suture, existed. I attributed this to oblique lateral + impact by the bullet on the inner surface of the skull. + + The patient could afterwards remember being struck, but became + rapidly unconscious. When brought into the Field hospital some + five hours later the condition was as follows: Semi-conscious, + can speak, apparently blind, pupils equal, of moderate size, do + not react to light. Right hemiplegia. No sickness. Moans with + pain in head. Passes water normally. + + Considerable haemorrhage had occurred from each wound, the scalp + was puffy, and the bones yielded on pressure over the left + parietal bone, indicating considerable comminution. + + The night was so cold that no operation could be considered, so + the head was partly shaved, the wounds cleansed, and a dressing + applied. The next morning the Division marched at 5 A.M., and + it was considered wise to leave the man at Lindley in the local + hospital. + +[Illustration: FIG. 77.--Right Visual Field, in case 67. Injury to both +occipital lobes. Field for white. Test spot 10 mm. Good artificial +light. Defect in lower half of field] + +[Illustration: FIG. 78.--Left Visual Field, in case 67] + + No operation was performed there, but I heard later that the + man recovered full consciousness at the end of five days, and + at the end of a fortnight he commenced to see again. + + Six weeks later he travelled to Kroonstadt, thence to + Bloemfontein, and thence to Cape Town and home to Netley. The + paralytic symptoms meanwhile steadily improved. + + Seven months later his condition is as follows: Scarcely a + trace of facial paralysis. Slight power of movement of arm, + forearm, and fingers, but grip is very weak. Little power of + abduction of the shoulder or of straightening the elbow. The + latter movement is made with effort and in jerks. Sensation + over the back of the arm is somewhat lowered, and is 'furry' at + the finger tips. There is very little wasting of the muscles + noticeable. + + Walks well, but with some foot-drop. Slight increase of + patellar reflex. He says that he does not walk in the street + with confidence, as he often feels as if omnibuses &c. were + coming too near him. + + He is absolutely deaf in the right ear. + + The openings in the skull are closed, the occipital lies about + halfway between the external auditory meatus and the external + occipital protuberance, while the parietal still affords + evidence of the earlier comminution, one fissure passing + backwards as far as the lambda, and the whole surface is lumpy + and uneven. + + The track through the brain no doubt involved a considerable + extent of the outer aspect of the right occipital lobe and the + cuneate lobule. It must also have crossed the great + longitudinal fissure, and penetrated the left Rolandic region, + just above its centre, probably involving the precuneate + lobule, and a portion of the internal capsular fibres as well + as the cortex on the left side. The deafness was probably due + to concussion of the internal ear. + + Mr. Fisher has kindly furnished the following note regarding + the vision. The pupils, movements, and fundi are quite healthy. + There is good direct vision R. or L. 5/5 fairly, and together + 5/5. The man complains he has lost his side sight, also the + lower; he demonstrates the latter quite obviously with his + hand, and says he has to repeatedly look down when walking. He + thinks no improvement has taken place during the last month. + The accompanying fields of vision show the loss quite + characteristically. + + (68) _Injury to left occipital lobe._--Wounded at Paardeberg. + _Entry_ (Mauser), through the lambdoid suture on the right side + of the mid line. Bullet retained, but a palpable prominence + behind the left ear suggested its localisation. + + The patient became at once unconscious and remained so for + several days. He was completely blind; vision returned later, + but only to a limited degree. There was complete loss of + memory as to the events of the day. + + When admitted at Rondebosch into No. 3 General Hospital the + condition was as follows: The field of vision is limited, and + examination shows right homonymous hemianopsia. When any one + comes into the tent the patient sees a shadow only until his + bed is reached. + + When spoken to the patient 'thinks and thinks,' and then + apologises for not answering, saying he will remember at some + future time. He is absolutely unable to remember times, names, + or localities, but places his hand to his head and appears to + think deeply in the effort to recall them. Occasionally when + you go into his tent he suddenly remembers something he has + been trying to think of for some days, and will tell you. + + A fortnight later after an attack of influenza the patient was + not so well, and vision was apparently becoming more impaired. + + An incision was made (Mr. J. E. Ker) so as to raise a flap the + centre of the convexity of which was 2-1/2 inches behind the + left external auditory meatus. A slight prominence and a + fissure was discovered in the temporal bone, and over this a + trephine was applied. On removal of the crown of bone the + bullet was discovered with the point turned backwards (having + evidently undergone a partial ricochet turn) on the upper + surface of the petrous bone, just above the lateral sinus. The + dura-mater was healed but thickened, and some clot upon its + surface was removed. + + The wound healed per primam, and a rapid recovery was made. Ten + days later a running water-tap was able to be detected 120 + yards from the tent door. The hemianopsia however persisted. + +The following letter, dictated by the patient to his wife, and sent to +me, gives a clear account of his condition ten months later:-- + + I am pleased to say my memory is better than it was some time + ago, though at times I am entirely lost and really forget all + that I was speaking about. I also find that I often call things + and places by their wrong names. I sometimes try to read a + paper or book which I have to read letter by letter, sometimes + calling out the wrong letter, such as B for D &c., and by the + time I have read almost halfway through, I have forgotten the + commencement. + + My sight is about the same. There is no improvement in the + right eye, and the doctor at Stoke said that the left eye was + not as it ought to be and might get worse. + + I ofttimes go to take up a thing, but find I am not near to it, + though it appears to me so. + + I have no pain to speak of in the head, though at times a + shooting pain. + + I have a continual noise in the left ear as if of a locomotive + blowing off steam, and a deafness in the left ear which I had + not before being wounded. + +I am extremely indebted to my friend Mr. J. Errington Ker for the notes +of the above case, so successfully treated by him. + + (69) _Injury to occipital lobe._--Wounded at Modder River. + Scalp wound in occipital region. Two days later on arrival at + the Base the patient was extremely restless and in a condition + of noisy delirium. The wound was explored (Mr. J. J. Day) and a + vertical gutter fracture discovered 1/2 an inch above and to + the left of the occipital protuberance. The gutter was 1-1/2 + inch in length and finely comminuted, the dura wounded, and the + left occipital lobe pulped. A number of fragments of bone (one + lodged in the wall of, but not penetrating, the lateral sinus) + and pulped brain were removed. No improvement took place in the + general condition, but the patient lived twenty-two days, + during which time he coughed up a large quantity of gangrenous + lung tissue and foul pus. + + At the _post-mortem_ examination a wound track was found + extending to the crest of the left ilium, where the bullet was + lodged. The patient was no doubt lying with his head dipped + into a hole scooped out in the sand (a common custom) when + struck; the bullet then traversed the muscles of the neck, + entered the upper opening of the thorax, where it struck the + bodies of the second and third dorsal vertebrae, one third of + the bodies of each of which were driven into an extensive + laceration of the lung; it then grooved the inner surfaces of + the eighth and ninth ribs, fractured the tenth and eleventh, + and passing the twelfth traversed the deep muscles of the back + to the pelvis. Beyond the injury to the occipital lobe, the + cerebellum was found to be lacerated and extensively bruised + and ecchymosed. + +_Complications._--_Hernia cerebri_ as a primary feature has already been +mentioned as one of the peculiarities of some explosive wounds. In the +later stages of the cases in which primary union did not take place the +development of granulation tumours was often seen, sometimes in +connection with slight local suppuration, sometimes over a cerebral +abscess. In some cases a wound which had once closed reopened and a +hernia developed. This sequence was chiefly of prognostic significance +as an indication of intra-cranial inflammation, usually of a chronic +character, and affecting rather the lowly organised granulation tissue +formed in the cavity than the brain itself. When primary union of the +skin flap and wound failed, the process of definitive closure of the +subjacent cavity was always a very prolonged one, and it was in such +cases that a great proportion of the so-called herniae developed. + +_Abscess of the brain._--Local abscesses formed in a considerable +proportion of the cases where serious damage to the brain had occurred, +in whatever region this happened to be. I never saw one develop in cases +where primary union had taken place, even when bone fragments had not +been removed; neither did I ever see an abscess situated at a distance +from the original injury. I take it that the latter is to be explained +by the early date of the suppuration, and the fact that in the great +majority of small-calibre wounds the exit opening exists in the +situation of the contre-coup damages of civil practice. + +The main feature in the symptoms when abscesses developed was the +insidious mode of their appearance, usually at the end of fourteen to +twenty-one days, and their comparative mildness. + +Very slight evidences of compression were observed; thus, varying +degrees of headache, drowsiness, irritability of temper or depression, +twitchings, or in some cases Jacksonian seizures, combined with slow +pulse and slight rises of temperature. I never happened to see complete +unconsciousness. The slight evidence of compression was perhaps +explained in most cases by the large bony defect in the skull, which +acted as a kind of safety-valve. Again the firm nature of the +cicatricial tissue which formed at the periphery of the injury and +extended up to the skull and there formed a more or less firm +attachment, also preserved the actual brain tissue to some degree from +either pressure or direct irritation. After evacuation of the pus, the +usual difficulty was experienced in ensuring free drainage, and +definitive healing and closure of the cavities was very slow. The +following two cases will illustrate the character of the cases of +cerebral abscess we met with:-- + + (70) _Fronto-parietal abscess._--Wounded at Magersfontein + (Mauser). _Entry_, 1-3/4 inch above the line from the lower + margin of the orbit to the external auditory meatus, and 1-3/4 + inch behind the external angular process; _exit_, a little + posterior to the left parietal eminence. There was right + hemiplegia. The wounds were explored, and a large number of + fragments of bone and pulped brain were removed, especially + from the anterior wound. No great improvement followed, and the + patient was sent to the Base. At this time there was a large + hernia cerebri at the anterior wound which was suppurating. + + A further operation was here performed (Mr. J. J. Day). The + hernia cerebri was removed, also several fragments of bone + which were found deeply imbedded in the brain. The patient then + improved, but a month later his temperature rose, and on + exploration an abscess was discovered in the frontal lobe and + drained. + + Subsequently the patient suffered with Jacksonian seizures, + sometimes starting spontaneously, sometimes following + interference with the wound. The convulsions commenced in the + muscles of the face, and the twitchings then became general. + Meanwhile the right upper extremity remained weak, although the + fist could be clenched, and all movements of the limb made in + some degree. + + Some difficulty was experienced in maintaining a free exit for + the pus, which was however overcome by the use of a silver + tube. All twitchings ceased about a month after the opening of + the abscess, the man improved steadily, and he left for England + fifteen weeks after the reception of the injury, walking well, + with a firm hand-grip, and the wounds soundly healed. + + (71) _Frontal injury. Secondary abscess._--Wounded at Modder + River. Aperture of _entry_ (Mauser), just external to the + centre of the right eyebrow; _exit_, above the centre of the + right zygoma. The wound did not render the man immediately + unconscious, but he lost all recollection of what had happened + to him for the next three or four days. The wounds were + explored on the second day, at which time the patient was in a + semi-conscious drowsy state, the pupils contracted and the + pulse slow. A number of fragments of bone and pulped brain + matter were removed. + + Subsequently to the operation the patient showed more signs of + cerebral irritation than usual, lying in a semi-conscious state + and more or less curled up. He answered questions on being + bothered. He improved somewhat, and was sent to the Base, + where the improvement continued, but he suffered much from + headache. + + Later the headache became much more severe, and eleven weeks + after the injury the man complained of great pain both locally + and over the whole right hemisphere; he lay moaning, with the + temperature subnormal, and the pulse very slow. At times there + was nocturnal delirium. + + The wound had remained closed and apparently normal, but now a + small fluctuating pulsating nipple-like swelling developed in + the situation of the aperture of entry. This was incised, and + two ounces of sweet pus evacuated (Professor Dunlop). A tube + was introduced, and removed later on the cessation of + discharge. + + Removal of the tube was followed by a recurrence of the same + symptoms, and this occurred on no fewer than six occasions + whenever the wound closed. + + At the end of twenty weeks the patient appeared quite well, the + wound had been closed six weeks, the previously irritable + mental state was replaced by placidity, and he was sent home. + +_Diagnosis._--The importance of proper exploration of scalp wounds to +determine the condition of the bone has already been insisted upon. The +localisation of the position and extent of the injury to the cranial +contents depended simply on attention to the symptoms, and needs no +further mention here. + +_Prognosis._--This subject can only be very imperfectly considered at +the present time, since only the more or less immediate results of the +injuries are known to us, while the more important after consequences +remain to be followed up. + +As to life the immediate prognosis has been already foreshadowed in the +section on the anatomical lesions. It is there shown that the first +point of general importance is the range of fire at which the injury has +been received. At short ranges, as evidenced by the history, the +characters of the wounds, and the severity of the symptoms, the +immediate prognosis was uniformly bad, a very great majority of the +patients dying, and that at the end of a few hours or days. + +The rapidity with which death followed depended in part on the actual +severity of the wound, and still more on the region it affected; the +nearer the base and the longer the track the more rapidly the patients +died, and this always with signs of failure of the functions of the +heart and lungs due to general concussion, pressure from basal +haemorrhage, or rapid intracranial oedema. In my experience no patients +survived direct fracture of the base in any region but the frontal, +although many, no doubt, got well in whom fissures merely spread into +the middle or posterior fossa. Patients with very extensive injuries at +a higher level, on the other hand, often survived days, or even a week, +then usually dying of sepsis. + +The actual relative mortality of these injuries I can give little idea +of, but it was a high one both on the field and in the Field hospitals; +thus of 10 cases treated in one Field hospital, after the battle at +Paardeberg Drift, no less than 8 died; while of 61 cases from various +battles who survived to be sent down to the Base during a period of some +months, only 4 or 6.55 per cent. died. Many of the latter, as is seen +from the cases here recorded which were among the number, were none the +less of a very serious nature. The early causes of death in patients +dying during the first forty-eight hours have been already mentioned; +the later one was almost always sepsis. + +As in civil practice the best immediate results were seen in injuries to +the frontal lobes, and after these in injuries to the occipital region. +In the latter permanent lesions of vision were, however, common. The +above injuries apart, the prognosis depended on the severity and depth +of the lesion. The frequency and extent of radiation symptoms often made +it possible to give a more hopeful prognosis than the immediate +conditions seemed to warrant, if the exact situation of the lesion, and +the probable velocity at which the bullet was travelling, were taken +into account; since the actual destructive lesion, when the velocity had +been insufficient to cause damage of a general nature, was often very +strictly localised. + +Another very important point in the immediate prognosis was the primary +union of the scalp wound; if this could only be ensured, few cases went +wrong afterwards. Such remote effects as I witnessed were mainly the +results of the actual destructive lesion, such as paralyses and +contraction. I know of only one case in which early maniacal symptoms +closely followed on a frontal injury, and here the symptoms accompanied +the development of an abscess. Some patients were depressed and +irritable, and some were blind or deaf, probably from gross lesion; in +one patient the mental faculties generally were lowered. + +In spite of the surprising immediate recoveries which occurred, and the +small amount of experience I am able to record as to remote ill effects +of these injuries, I feel certain that a long roll of secondary troubles +from the contraction of cicatricial tissue, irritation from distant +remaining bone fragments, as well as mental troubles from actual brain +destruction, await record in the near future. + +Since my return to England I have heard of four cases of injury to the +head, which died on their return, as the result of the formation of +secondary residual abscesses; and of one who died suddenly, soon after +his return to active service in South Africa apparently well. These +occurrences are sufficiently suggestive. + +It may be of interest to add here two cases of secondary traumatic +epilepsy of differing degree:-- + + (72) _Gutter fracture over left temporo-sphenoidal lobe. + Traumatic epilepsy._--A trooper in Brabant's Horse was wounded + at Aliwal North, in March, in several places. A Mauser bullet + entered the head 1-1/2 inch above the junction of the anterior + border of the left pinna with the side of the head. The exit + wound was situated just below and behind the left parietal + eminence. The patient stated that the shot was fired by a man + he recognised in a laager 150 yards distant from him. + + The man remained unconscious eleven days, and when he came + round paralysis of the right upper extremity, and weakness of + both lower extremities, were noted. There was also ataxic + aphasia. + + The wounds healed, but two months later the man began to suffer + from fits every few days. He spoke of them as fainting fits, + but they were accompanied by general twitchings. + + The patient was shown to me in July by Major Woodhouse, + R.A.M.C. The strength of the right upper extremity was then + good, and he walked well. Speech was slow, but correct. The + pupils were equal, and acted normally. + + The mental condition was weak, and the temper irritable. The + man had hallucinations, and was very obstinate: there was + complete deafness of the left ear. He refused surgical + treatment, but was really hardly a responsible individual. + + (73) _Gutter fracture in right frontal region. Traumatic + epilepsy._--Wounded at Pieter's Hill. Gutter fracture crossing + the outer aspect of the frontal lobe, immediately above the + level of the right Sylvian fissure. The wound was perforating + at the central part, but only reached as far back as the lower + end of the ascending frontal convolution. The patient was + rendered unconscious and was removed to Mooi River. He was + there seen by Sir William MacCormac, who removed a number of + fragments of bone. The patient rapidly recovered consciousness + after the operation, but was completely hemiplegic. After a + month he suddenly found he was able to move his lower + extremity, and later the paralysis became steadily less. + + On his return home the man obtained employment as a + Commissionaire, but nine months after the injury, while his + wife was helping him on with his coat one morning, he was + suddenly seized with a fit; the paralysed arm was jerked up, + and convulsions became general, a wedge needing to be inserted + to prevent the tongue suffering injury. + + When admitted into the hospital, the cicatrix of the wound was + considerably depressed, and the central part was evidently + continuously attached to the surface of the brain. Pulsation + was both visible and palpable, there was little or no + tenderness on examination, and the patient did not complain of + pain. + + Little trace of the left facial paralysis remained. The man + walked well, but with foot-drop. The left upper extremity was + rigid, but chiefly from the elbow downwards. The fingers were + flexed, but a slight increase of grip could be effected. No + other active movements of hand. The elbow was held flexed, but + could be straightened to about 3/4 range on effort. The + shoulder could be slightly abducted, but wide movements were + made by the scapular muscles. + + Sensation was dull over the left side of the face, also over + the left side of the neck. There was complete loss of cutaneous + sensibility over the lower half of the forearm and hand, and a + similar patch in the left axilla. Over the rest of the + extremity the sensation was better on the flexor than on the + extensor aspects. There was little alteration in the common + sensation elsewhere, except that the contrast between that of + the dorsum and sole of the foot was somewhat more marked than + usual. The temperature of the insensitive axilla was one degree + higher than that of the right. + + The left knee jerk was somewhat exaggerated. + + On December 15 an incision was made through the old cicatrix + directly over the defect in the skull. On separating the skin + it was found directly adherent to the cicatrised dura, and when + this was incised a large vicarious arachnoid space was opened + up. The space was crossed by a number of strands of connective + tissue, and the cavity had no epithelial lining. The fluid ran + out freely, and the space was evidently in free communication + with the general arachnoid cavity. A trephine crown was taken + out at the posterior end of the gutter, and the surface of the + brain explored, but no fragments of bone were found. I + therefore replaced the crown, and closed the bony defect in the + floor of the gutter with a plate of platinum fitted into a + groove made in the bony margin. The wound was then sutured. + Primary union took place, and there was no constitutional + disturbance beyond one temperature of 100 deg. on the evening of + the second day; otherwise the temperature remained normal, and + the pulse did not rise above 75. + + On the second evening a fit occurred, coming on while the + patient was apparently asleep. It lasted about a quarter of an + hour and was general, the patient becoming for a short time + unconscious, and passing water involuntarily. + + On the third morning two similar fits occurred, the first a + severe one, during which the patient passed a motion + involuntarily. The commencement of all three fits was observed + by the nurse only, but in each the convulsions apparently + commenced in the face and then became general. + + Three months later no further fits had occurred, and the + patient, who throughout had said he felt remarkably well, + complained of nothing. The upper extremity was apparently + slightly less rigid than before the exploration, and the + patient said he walked somewhat better than before. The closure + of the skull was perfect. + +_Treatment._--The treatment of fractures of the skull possesses a degree +of surgical interest that attaches to no other class of gunshot injury, +since operative interference is necessary in every case in which +recovery is judged possible. The injuries are, without exception, of the +nature of punctured wounds of the skull, and the ordinary rule of +surgery should under no circumstances be deviated from. An expectant +attitude, although it often appears immediately satisfactory, exposes +the patient to future risks which are incalculable, but none the less +serious. Happily the operations needed may be included amongst the most +simple as well as the most successful, and expose the patient with +ordinary precautions to no increase of risk beyond that dependent on the +original injury. + +Cases of a general character, or in which the base has been directly +fractured other than in the frontal region, are seldom suitable for +operation, since surgical skill is in these of no avail; but in all +others an exploration is indicated. I use the word 'exploration' +advisedly, since what may be called the formal operation of trephining +is seldom necessary except in the case of the small openings due to +wounds received from a very long range of fire; in all others there is +no difficulty, but very great advantage, in making such enlargement of +the bone opening as is necessary with Hoffman's forceps. + +The scalp should be first shaved and cleansed; if for any reason an +operation is impossible, this procedure at least should be carried out, +with a view to ensuring, as far as possible, future asepsis, infection +in head injuries being almost the only danger to be feared. The shaving +may need to be complete, but local clearance of the hair suffices in +many cases. The hair having been removed, the scalp is cleansed with all +care, a flap is raised of which the bullet opening forms the central +point, and the wound explored. In slight cases the entry opening is the +one of chief importance, and the exit may be simply cleansed and +dressed. In some instances, as in direct fracture of the roof of the +orbit from above, the exit should not be touched. + +The flap having been raised, if the wound be a small perforation, a +1/2-inch trephine crown may be taken from one side; but it is rare for +the opening to be so small that the tip of a pair of Hoffman's forceps +cannot be inserted. The trephine is more often useful in cases of +non-penetrating gutter fractures where space is needed for exploration, +and the elevation or removal of fragments of the inner-table. Loose +fragments may need to be removed from beneath the scalp, but the +important ones are those within the cranium. These may either be of some +size, or fine comminuted splinters of either table, often at as great a +distance as 2 inches or more from the surface. The cavity must be +thoroughly explored and all splinters removed. I have seen more than +fifty extracted in one case of open gutter fracture. The brain pulp and +clot should then be gently removed or washed away, and the wound closed +without drainage. Fragments of bone, as a rule, are better not replaced, +but complete suture of the skin flap is always advisable in view of the +great importance of primary union, and the fact that a drainage opening +exists at the original wound of entry, and that the wound is readily +re-opened to its whole extent, should such a step be advisable. + +The detection of fragments is easiest and most satisfactorily done with +the finger, and in all but simple punctures the opening should be large +enough to allow thoroughly effective digital exploration; the remarks +already made as to the factors determining the size of fragments are of +interest in this connection. The determination of the amount of brain +pulp which should be removed is somewhat more difficult; one can only +say that all that washes readily away should be removed, and its place +is usually taken up by blood. + +Few fractures of the base are suitable for treatment; the only ones I +saw were those of direct fracture of the roof of the orbit or nose, +produced by bullets passing across the orbits; here the advisability of +interference with the injured eye led to opening of the orbit, and +sometimes exposed the fracture. Some patients recovered, even when the +damage had been sufficient to cause escape of pulped brain into the +orbit. + +The after treatment simply consisted in keeping the patients as quiet as +circumstances would permit, and the administration of a fluid diet. In +some cases recurring symptoms pointed to the continued presence of bone +fragments; these were usually indicated by signs of irritation, or often +of local inflammation, in the latter case infection taking the greater +share in the causation. Such cases needed secondary exploration, and the +wonderful success of this operation, even when the wound was evidently +infected, was perhaps one of the most striking experiences of the +surgery in general. + +I should add a word here as to the most satisfactory time for the +performance of these operations; as in all cases the earlier they could +be undertaken the better, but in the head injuries the advantages of +early interference were more evident than in any other region. This +depended on the fact that, as in civil practice, the scalp is one of the +most dangerous regions as far as auto-infection of the wound is +concerned, and one of the most difficult to cleanse, except by thorough +shaving. Beyond this the extreme simplicity of the operative procedure +needed, called for few precautions beyond those for asepsis, and very +little armament in the way of instruments, &c. + +When on the march from Winberg to Heilbron with the Highland Brigade we +had some five days' continuous fighting, and on this occasion several +perforating fractures of the skull were brought in. The coldness of the +nights at that time made evening operations an impossibility; hence the +operations on these men were performed at the first dressing station, in +the open air, at the side of the ambulance wagons, often during the +progress of fighting around. Of several cases so operated on, all healed +by primary union without a bad symptom of any kind, except one (see p. +249), in whom a very large entrance opening over the right cortical +motor area led down to an extensive destruction of the brain, +complicated by a fracture of the base in the middle fossa. This wound, +from the first considered hopeless, became septic during the four days' +travelling in an ambulance wagon that was necessary, and the man died at +the end of fourteen days. As the whole cortical motor area was +destroyed, death was, perhaps, the end most to be desired; but the fight +that this man made for recovery, and the fact that his death, after all, +was due to general infection and not to any local extension of the +injury, very strongly impressed me with the possibility of recovery, +even in such extensive cases, if only an aseptic condition can be +maintained. I saw many other cases of the same nature, particularly in +men who, as a result of unfortunate circumstances, were necessarily left +out on the field for more than twenty-four hours. In some of these +maggots were found in the wounds only thirty-six hours after the +infliction of the injury. + +I have said nothing as to the treatment of the large primary herniae +cerebri in wounds of an explosive nature, since these were rarely +subjects suitable for operation; but in the instances of minor severity +they were treated as the other cases where the pulped brain lay mostly +within the skull. + +In cases where the wounds were in the frontal or fronto-parietal +regions, and hemiplegia existed, the rapid improvement in the paralytic +symptoms, after operation, was very marked, showing that the signs were +mainly, or entirely, due to 'radiation' injury. I am inclined to think +that temporary injury of this kind from vibratory disturbance and small +parenchymatous haemorrhages, were far more often the cause of the +paralysis than surface haemorrhage, since the latter was rarely found in +large quantity. Large clots, however, no doubt growing in both size and +firmness, occasionally occupied the area of destroyed brain, and these +sometimes manifestly exercised pressure that was at once relieved by +their evacuation. + +In cases where inflammatory hernia cerebri developed, a secondary +exploration was often indicated for the removal of fragments of bone or +the evacuation of pus, otherwise the condition was best treated by dry +dressings and gentle support. + +Abscess of the brain was treated by simple evacuation and drainage by +metal or rubber tubes: the operations were always of extreme simplicity, +since the abscess in every case I saw was in the direct line of the +wound track, and was readily opened by the insertion of a director or +blunt knife. The only trouble in the after treatment was that already +referred to, of preventing premature closure of the drainage opening. + +I have made no special reference to the method of dressing, since it was +of the ordinary routine kind. The most important factor in success was +the efficient primary disinfection of the scalp; a piece of antiseptic +gauze and some absorbent wool, efficiently secured, was all that was +needed later. + +As usual the consideration of the treatment of cases in which the bullet +was retained may be considered last. Such accidents were distinctly +rare. I operated in only one (No. 54, p. 260) in whom the indications +both for localisation and interference were obvious, since the bullet +had palpably fractured the bone, although it had not retained sufficient +force to enable it to leave the skull. In two other cases that I saw, in +one the bullet was lodged in the zygomatic fossa, in the second just +below the mastoid process. The former patient died; the latter exhibited +symptoms indicative of injury to the occipital lobe (No. 68), and was +successfully treated by Mr. J. E. Ker. I never happened to see a case in +which a retained bullet in the skull was localised by the X rays, but +such might have been possible in case No. 64, p. 275. In no case is +primary interference indicated, unless a fracture exists where the +bullet has tried to escape, or secondary symptoms develop pointing to +irritation. + +Under ordinary circumstances, moreover, the indications for removal of a +bullet are not likely to be sufficiently imperative to necessitate the +operation being undertaken until the patient can be placed under the +best conditions that can be secured. This is the more advisable since +such operations need the infliction of an additional wound, require +great delicacy, and may be very prolonged in performance. The experience +of civil practice has already sufficiently proved the small amount of +inconvenience likely to follow the retention of a bullet in the skull. + +I may again mention the fact that in explorations for the removal of +bone fragments, fragments of lead, from breaking or setting up of the +bullet, are sometimes found. + +Taken as a whole, the operations on the head were extremely satisfactory +from a technical point of view; the large depressed pulsating cicatrix +so often left was the chief defect observed. The circumstances under +which many of the operations had to be performed militated strongly, +however, against the successful replacement of separated bone fragments, +which might have rendered the defects less serious. + +Secondary operations for traumatic epilepsy scarcely come within the +scope of these experiences. In case 73, p. 292, it is of interest to +note the manner in which the cavity due to loss of brain substance was +filled up. No doubt a similar vicarious arachnoid space develops in all +cases in which a soft pulsating swelling fills an aperture in the bones +of the skull. + + +WOUNDS OF THE HEAD NOT INVOLVING THE BRAIN + +_Mastoid process._--The most important wound of the cranium not already +mentioned was that involving the mastoid process and the bony capsule of +the ear. Wounds of the mastoid process obtained their chief interest in +connection with paralysis of the seventh nerve. This nerve rarely or +never escaped, and, as far as my experience went, the facial paralysis +was permanent (see cases 111-114, p. 355). I think the same prognosis +holds good with regard to the deafness resulting from these injuries, +and it is difficult to believe, with our experience of the effect of +vibration on other nerve centres and organs, that the internal ear could +ever escape permanent damage. + +In a number of cases the tympanum itself, or the external auditory +meatus, was directly implicated in tracks; in these, also, loss of +hearing was the rule. + +Wounds of the pinna when produced by undeformed bullets were usually of +the same slitlike nature remarked in perforations of the cartilages of +the nose, and healed with equal rapidity. + +_Wounds of the orbit._--Injuries to the orbit were very numerous and +serious in their results, both to the globe of the eye and the +surrounding structures. + +_Anatomical lesions._--The wound tracks, with regard to the injuries +produced, may be well classified according to the direction they took; +thus--vertical, transverse, and oblique. + +Vertical wound tracks were on the whole the least serious, but this +mainly from the fact of limitation of the injury to one orbital cavity. +They were usually produced by bullets passing from above downwards +through the frontal region of the cranium, and were received by the +patients while in the prone position. + +Transverse and oblique wounds owed their greater importance to the fact +that both eyes were more likely to be implicated. + +Besides these tracks, which actually crossed the cavities, a number +involved the bony boundaries, producing almost as severe lesions in the +globe of the eye, many of the patients being rendered permanently blind. +The only difference in nature of such cases was the escape of orbital +structures, and this was of minor importance in the presence of the +graver lesion to vision. The following is an illustrative case:-- + + (74) Wounded at Colenso. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch below the + centre of the margin of the right orbit; _exit_, behind the + right angle of the mandible. Fracture of lower jaw, and + development of a diffuse traumatic aneurism of the external + carotid artery. The common carotid artery was tied for + secondary haemorrhage (Mr. Jameson) some three weeks later. + + Vision was affected at the time of the accident; the fingers + could be seen, but not counted. After ligation of the carotid + the condition was possibly worse, and this needs mention as + transitory loss of power in the left upper extremity also + followed the operation. + +Fractures of the bony wall were of every degree. The most severe that I +saw were two in which lateral impact by a bullet crossing the cranial +cavity caused general comminution of the whole orbital roof. Fissures of +the roof were common in connection with 'explosive' exit apertures in +the frontal region of the skull. Pure perforations usually accompanied +the vertical or transverse wounds of the cavity, fragments at the +aperture of entry then being projected into the orbit, sometimes +penetrating the muscles. + +Occasionally the margin of the cavity was merely notched. + +The ocular muscles were often divided more or less completely, and +occasionally some difficulty arose in determining whether loss of +movement of the globe in any definite direction depended on injury to +the muscle itself, or to the nerve supplying the muscle. The following +case illustrates this point:-- + + (75) _Entry_ (Mauser), 2 inches behind the right external + canthus; the bullet pierced the external wall and traversed the + floor of the right orbit beneath the globe, crossed the nasal + cavity, and a part of the left orbit; _exit_, at the lower + margin of the left orbit, beneath the centre of the globe of + the eye. + + Complete loss of sight followed the injury, and persisted for + one week. Modified vision then returned. + + Three weeks later there was diplopia; loss of function of the + right external and inferior recti, although the ball could be + turned downward to some extent by the superior oblique when the + internal rectus was in action. Movements of the left globe were + not seriously affected. + + The pupils were immobile and moderately dilated, but atropine + had been employed two days previously. + + A year later the condition was as follows: There is some + weakness of the right seventh nerve, as evidenced by want of + symmetry in all the folds of the face, and in narrowing of the + palpebral fissure. + + When at rest the right eye is somewhat raised and turned + outwards. Active movements outwards or downwards are + restricted. There is diplopia, and the vision of the right eye + is much impaired; the man can see persons, but cannot count + fingers with certainty, although he sees the hand. Putting on + one side the loss of free movement, there is no obvious + external appearance of injury to the eye. + +Mr. J. H. Fisher reported as follows: + + Ophthalmoscopic examination shows the left eye and fundus to be + normal. The right disc is not atrophied, but the whole of the + lower half of the fundus is coated with masses of black retinal + pigment. There is atrophy in spots of the capillary layer of + the choroid, and the larger vessels of the deeper layer are + exposed between the interstices of the pigment masses. There is + no definite choroidal rupture. The lesion encroaches upon and + implicates the macular region. + + The injury is a concussion one, not necessarily resulting from + contact, and certainly not due to a perforation. The loss of + movement and faulty position are the result of injury to the + muscles, and not to nerve implication. + + The man complained that when he blew his nose the left eye + filled with water and air came out. The left nasal duct was + however shown to be intact, as water injected by the + canaliculus passed freely into the nose. + +Intra-orbital bleeding, subconjunctival haemorrhage with proptosis and +ecchymosis of the lids were usually well marked. The latter was +sometimes extreme. + +Injury to the nerves was naturally of a very mixed character. In many +instances the branches of the first two divisions of the fifth nerve +were obviously implicated and regional anaesthesia was common. This was +often transitory when the result of vibratory concussion, contusion, or +pressure from haemorrhage. In other cases it was more prolonged as a +result of actual division of the nerve. As is usually the case, when a +small area of distribution only was affected, sensation was rapidly +regained from vicarious sources, even when section had been complete. + +As individual injuries, those to the optic nerve were the most +frequently diagnosed. I am sorry to be unable to attempt a +discrimination of injuries to the nerve alone from those in which both +nerve and globe suffered, but the globe can rarely have escaped injury, +either direct or indirect, when the bullet actually traversed the +orbital cavity. (A few further remarks concerning injuries to the optic +nerve will be found in Chapter IX.) + +Injuries to the globe of the eye, either direct or indirect, accompanied +most of the orbital wounds. + +In some the lesion was of the nature of concussion. In such the bone +injury was usually at the periphery of the orbit, or to the bones of the +face in the neighbourhood. The loss of vision might then be temporary, +persisting from two to ten days, then returning, often with some +deficiencies. + +In other similar external injuries, the lesion of the globe was more +severe, and permanent blindness followed. + +In variability of degree of completeness, these lesions of the globe +corresponded exactly with those produced in other parts of the nervous +system by bullets striking the bones in their vicinity, and they were no +doubt the result of a similar transmission of vibratory force. + +In a third series of cases the globe suffered direct contusion, and in a +fourth was perforated and destroyed. + +In cases in which permanent blindness was produced without solution of +continuity of the sclerotic coat, the nature of the lesion was probably +in most cases vibratory concussion and the development of multiple +haemorrhages from choroidal ruptures of a similar nature to those seen in +the brain and spinal cord. The actual haemorrhagic areae varied in size; +but, as far as my experience went, gross haemorrhages into the anterior +chamber did not occur without severe direct contact of the bullet. + +In the vast majority of the cases blindness, whether transitory or +permanent, developed immediately on the reception of the injury, and was +possibly in its initial stage the result of primary concussion. + +Cases were, however, seen occasionally in which the symptoms were less +sudden, of which the following is an example. I did not think that the +mode of progress seen here could be referred to simple orbital +haemorrhage, although this existed, but rather to intravaginal haemorrhage +into the sheath of the optic nerve. On external inspection the globes +appeared normal. + + (76) Wounded at Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), over the centre + of the right zygoma; the bullet traversed the right orbit, + nose, and left orbit. _Exit_, immediately above the outer + extremity of the left eyebrow. + + The patient stated that he could 'see' for thirty minutes with + the right eye and for an hour with the left, immediately after + the injury. He then became totally blind, and has since + remained so. During the next three weeks there were occasional + 'flashes of light' experienced, but these then ceased. + + At the end of three weeks the condition was as follows: Ocular + movements good in every direction except that of elevation of + the globe. The levator palpebrae superioris acted very slightly; + the right, however, better than the left. + + There were marked right proptosis, less left proptosis, and + slight patchy subconjunctival haemorrhage of both eyes. The + pupils were dilated, motionless, and not concentric. + + The patient was invalided as totally blind (November, 1900). + +Mr. Lang, who saw this patient on his return to England, kindly +furnishes me with the following note as to the condition. There was +extensive damage to both eyes, haemorrhage, and probably retinal +detachment as well as choroidal changes. + +The quotation of a few illustrative examples typical of the ordinary +orbital injuries may be of interest:-- + + (77) _Vertical wound._--_Entry_, into left orbit in roof + posterior to globe, and internal to optic nerve; _exit_, from + orbit through junction of inner wall and floor into nose. + + Complete blindness followed the injury, but upon the second day + light was perceived on lifting the upper lid. There was marked + proptosis, subconjunctival ecchymosis, swelling and ecchymosis + of the upper lid, and ptosis. Anaesthesia in the whole area of + distribution of the frontal nerve. + + At the end of three weeks, fingers could be recognised, but a + large blind spot existed in the centre of the field of vision. + The general movements of the globe were fair, but the upper lid + could not be raised. The proptosis and subconjunctival + haemorrhage cleared up. + + Little further improvement occurred; six months later the + patient could only count the fingers excentrically. A very + extensive scotoma was present. The optic disc was much + atrophied, the calibre of the arteries diminished and the veins + full (Mr. Critchett). The ptosis persisted. It was doubtful in + this case whether the ptosis depended on injury to the nerve of + supply, or on laceration and fixation of the levator palpebrae + superioris. The latter seemed the more probable, as the + superior rectus acted. The absence of any sign of gross + bleeding into the anterior chamber is opposed to the existence + of a perforating lesion of the globe in this case. + + (78) _Entry_ (Mauser), from cranial cavity, just within the + centre of the roof of the right orbit; _exit_, from the orbit + by a notch in the lower orbital margin internal to the + infra-orbital foramen; track thence beneath the soft parts of + the face to emerge from the margin of the upper lip near the + left angle of the mouth. Collapse of globe, proptosis, + subconjunctival haemorrhage, oedema and ecchymosis of lids. + + Shrunken ball removed on twenty-fourth day (Major Burton, + R.A.M.C.). + + (79) _Entry_ (Mauser), at the posterior border of the left + mastoid process, 3/4 inch above the tip; _exit_, in the inner + third of the left upper eyelid. Globe excised at end of seven + days. Facial paralysis and deafness. + + (80) _Entry_ (Mauser), from cranial cavity through centre of + roof of orbit; _exit_, through maxillary antrum. Total + blindness. Movements of ball good, no loss of tension. + Proptosis, subconjunctival haemorrhage, ecchymosis of eyelids. + No improvement in sight followed. One month later the globe + suppurated and was removed. The bullet had divided the optic + nerve and contused the ball. + +_Prognosis and treatment of wounds of the orbit._--Except in those cases +in which return of vision was rapid, the prognosis was consistently bad +in the injuries to the globe. When the globe was ruptured it, as a rule, +rapidly shrank. The case (80) quoted above is the only one in which I +saw secondary suppuration. + +With regard to active treatment, the majority of the cases were +complicated by fracture of the roof of the orbit, and in many instances +concurrent brain injury was present. In all of these, as a general rule, +it was advisable to await the closure of the wound in the orbital roof +prior to removal of the injured eye, if that was considered necessary. +The only exception to this rule was offered by instances in which the +bullet passed from the orbit into the cranium; in these primary removal +of fragments projecting into the frontal lobe was preferable. As already +indicated, such wounds were comparatively rare except in the case of +bullets coursing transversely or obliquely. + +The wounds were, as a rule, followed by considerable matting of the +orbital structures. + +_Wounds of the nose._--I will pass by the external parts, with the +remark that perforating wounds of the cartilages were remarkable for +their sharp limitation and simple nature. I remember one case shown to +me in the Irish Hospital in Bloemfontein by Sir W. Thomson, in which at +the end of the third day small symmetrical vertical slits in each ala +already healed were scarcely visible. This case very strongly impressed +one with the doctrine of chances, since on the same morning I was asked +to see a patient in whom a similar transverse shot had crossed both +orbits, destroying both globes and injuring the brain. + +A retained bullet in the upper portion of the nasal cavity has already +been referred to (fig. 60). This accident was naturally a rare one; in +that instance the bullet had only retained sufficient force to insert +itself neatly between the bones. + +Wounds crossing the nasal fossae were comparatively common. The +interference with the sense of smell often resulting is discussed in +Chapter IX. + +_Wounds of the malar bone_ were not infrequent. The small amount of +splintering was somewhat remarkable considering the density of structure +of the bone. In this particular the behaviour of the malar corresponded +with what was observed in the flat bones in general. A case quoted in +Chapter III. p. 87, illustrates the capacity of the hard edge of the +bone to check the course of a bullet, and cause considerable deformity +and fissuring of the mantle. + +_Wounds of the jaws. Upper jaw._--A large number of tracks crossing the +antrum transversely, obliquely, or vertically were observed. In the +first case the nasal cavity, in the others the orbital or buccal cavity, +were generally concurrently involved. It was somewhat striking that I +never observed any trouble, immediate or remote, from these perforations +of the antrum. If haemorrhage into the cavity occurred, it gave rise to +no ultimate trouble. I never saw an instance of secondary suppuration +even in cases where the bullet entered or escaped through the alveolar +process with considerable local comminution. The branches of the second +division of the fifth nerve were sometimes implicated. In one instance a +bullet traversed and cut away a longitudinal groove in the bones, +extending from the posterior margin of the hard palate, and terminating +by a wide notch in the alveolar process. + +A good example of a troublesome transverse wound of the bones of the +face is afforded by the following instance:-- + + (81) _Entry_ (Mauser), through the left malar eminence, 1 inch + below and external to the external canthus; _exit_, a slightly + curved tranverse slit in the lobe of the right ear. + + The injury was followed by no signs of orbital concussion, and + no loss of consciousness. There was free bleeding from both + external wounds and from the nose. The sense of smell was + unaffected, but taste was impaired, and there was loss of + tactile sensation in the teeth on the left side also on the + hard palate. There was no evidence of fracture of the neck of + the mandible, nor of the external auditory meatus, but there + was considerable difficulty in opening the mouth widely or + protruding the teeth. The latter difficulty persisted for some + time, and was still present when I last saw the patient. + +_Mandible._--Fractures of the lower jaw were frequent and offered some +peculiarities, the chief of which were the liability of any part of the +bone to be damaged, and the absence of the obliquity between the cleft +in the outer and inner tables so common in the fractures seen in civil +practice. + +The neck of the condyle I three times saw fractured; in each instance +permanent stiffness and inability to open the mouth resulted. This +stiffness was of a degree sufficient to raise the question whether the +best course in such cases would not be to cut down primarily and remove +a considerable number of loose fragments, and thus diminish the amount +of callus likely to be thrown out. + +Fractures of the ascending ramus and body were more frequent. They were +accompanied by considerable comminution, but all that I observed healed +remarkably well, and in good position, in spite of the fact that many of +the patients objected to wear any form of splint. + +The most special feature was the occurrence of notched fractures, +corresponding to the type wedges described in Chapter V. When these +fractures were at the lower margin of the bone, the buccal cavity +occasionally escaped in spite of considerable comminution, the latter +confining itself to the basal portion of the bone. + +When the base of the teeth, or the alveolus, was struck, a wedge was +often broken away, and from the apex of the resulting gap a fracture +extended to the lower margin of the bone. + +When fractures of the latter nature resulted from vertically coursing +bullets, much trouble often ensued. I will quote two cases in +illustration:-- + + (82) Wounded at Rooipoort. _Entry_ (Mauser), through the lower + lip; the bullet struck the base of the right lateral incisor + and canine teeth, knocked out a wedge, and becoming slightly + deflected, cut a vertical groove to the base of the mandible; + _exit_, in left submaxillary triangle. The bullet subsequently + re-entered the chest wall just below the clavicle, and escaped + at the anterior axillary fold. The appearance of these second + wounds suggested only slight setting up of the bullet; the + original impact was no doubt of an oblique or lateral + character. + + The injury was followed by free haemorrhage and remarkably + abundant salivation (I was inclined to think that the latter + symptom was particularly well marked in gunshot fractures of + the body of the mandible), and very great swelling of the floor + of the mouth. + + The patient could not bear any form of apparatus, but was + assiduous in washing out his mouth, and made a good recovery, + the fragments being in good apposition. + + (83) _Entry_ (Mauser), over the right malar eminence; the + bullet carried away all the right upper and lower molars, + fractured the mandible, and was retained in the neck. + + A fortnight later an abscess formed in the lower part of the + neck, which was opened (Mr. Pooley), and portions of the mantle + and leaden core, together with numerous fragments of the teeth, + were removed. The bullet had undergone fragmentation on impact, + probably on the last one (teeth of mandible), and still + retained sufficient force to enter the neck. + +This case affords an interesting example of transmission of force from +the bullet to the teeth, and bears on the theory of explosive action. + +In the treatment of fractures of the upper jaw, interference was rarely +needed. In the case of the mandible, a remark has already been made as +to the advisability of removing fragments when the neck of the condyle +has suffered comminution. The removal of loose fragments is necessary in +all cases in which the buccal cavity is involved. Experience in fracture +of the limbs has shown a tendency to quiet necrosis when comminution was +severe, in spite of primary union. This is no doubt dependent on the +very free separation of fragments on the entry and exit aspects from +their enveloping periosteum. In the case of the mandible, considerable +necrosis is inevitable, and much time is saved by the primary removal of +all actually loose fragments. + +A splint of the ordinary chin-cap type with a four-tailed bandage meets +all further requirements, but the patients often object to them. Cases +in which the fragments could be fixed by wiring the teeth were not +common, as the latter had so frequently been carried away. The usual +precautions as to maintaining oral asepsis were especially necessary. + +The results of fractures of the mandible were, in so far as my +experience went, remarkably good, as deformity was seldom considerable. +The absence of obliquity and the effect of primary local shock were no +doubt favourable elements, little primary displacement from muscular +action occurring. + +Wounds of the _cheek_ healed readily, and the same was noticeable of the +lips. Wounds of the _tongue_ healed with remarkable rapidity when of the +simple perforating type, often with little or no swelling or evidence of +contusion. At the end of a few days it was often difficult to localise +them. + +In connection with this subject a remarkable case which occurred at the +fighting at Koodoosberg Drift is worthy of mention, although the +projectile was a shell fragment and not a bullet of small calibre. + + (84) A Highlander was the unfortunate possessor of an entire + set of upper teeth set in a gold plate. A small fragment of a + shell perforated the upper lip by an irregular aperture, and + struck the teeth in such a manner as to turn the posterior edge + of the plate towards the tongue, which latter was cut into two + halves transversely through to the base. + + The patient asserted that the plate had been driven down his + throat, but nothing was palpable either in the fauces or on + external examination of the neck. He spoke distinctly, but + there was dysphagia as far as solids were concerned. + + On the second day swelling of the neck due to early cellulitis + developed, especially on the left side, and signs of laryngeal + obstruction became prominent. Chloroform was administered, but + on the introduction of the finger into the fauces, respiration + failed and a hasty tracheotomy had to be performed. No foreign + body was palpable with the finger in the pharynx. + + Tracheitis and septic pneumonia developed, and the man died of + acute septicaemia thirty-six hours later. Death occurred just as + the Division received marching orders, and no _post-mortem_ + examination was made. As a result of palpation at the time of + the tracheotomy, the probabilities seemed against the presence + of the tooth plate in the pharynx, but the absence of positive + evidence scarcely allows the case to be certainly classed as + one of cellulitis and septicaemia secondary to wound of the + tongue. + + +WOUNDS OF THE NECK + +Wounds of the neck were not unfrequent and were of the gravest +importance; there can be little doubt that they accounted for a +considerable proportion of the deaths on the field. On the other hand, +the neck as a region offered some of the most striking examples of +hairbreadth escape of important structures. Consideration of a number of +the vascular lesions (see cervical aneurisms, p. 135) also shows +conclusively that in no region did the small size of the bullet more +materially influence the result, since no doubt can exist that all these +wounds would have proved immediately fatal if produced by projectiles of +larger calibre. + +In this place only a few general considerations will be entered into, as +most of the important cases are dealt with under the general headings of +vessels, nerves, and spine; but it is convenient to include here the few +remarks that have to be made concerning the cervical viscera. + +The wounds of the soft parts might course in any direction, but vertical +tracks from above downwards were rare. In point of fact, these occurred +only in connection with perforations of the head, and as vertical wounds +of the latter were received in the prone position, usually when the head +was raised, the necessary conditions for longitudinal tracks were seldom +offered. One case of a complete vertical track in the muscles of the +back of the neck has been already quoted (No. 69, p. 286). + +Tracks coursing upwards from the trunk were somewhat more frequent in +occurrence; thus a considerable number traversing the thorax were seen. +In such instances the aperture of exit was generally situated in the +posterior triangle, and some of the brachial nerves often suffered. + +The commonest forms of wound were the transverse or the oblique. A large +number of cases with such tracks will be found among the cases of injury +to the cervical vessels and nerves. In some instances the course was +restricted to the neck alone, in others the trunk or upper extremity was +also implicated. + +The favourable influence of the arrangement of the structures of the +neck, which allows of the ordinary displacement excursions necessary for +deglutition, respiration, and their cognate movements, was very strongly +marked. Thus in several cases the bullet traversed the neck behind the +pharynx and oesophagus without injuring either viscus, and the escape +of the main vessels and nerves was equally striking. In such wounds the +wedge-like bullet without doubt separated and displaced all these +structures, causing mere superficial contusion. + +In connection with the latter statement, the rarity of direct sagittal +wounds in the hospitals should be mentioned. This is probably to be +explained by the facts that wounds in the mid-line of the neck +implicated the cervical spinal cord, and that sagittal wounds +implicating the vessels were apt to lead more directly to the surface, +and thus external haemorrhage was favoured. A few examples of cervical +tracks will suffice to illustrate these remarks:-- + + (85) _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), below angle of scapula; _exit_, + centre of posterior triangle. Injury to the lung, and + haemothorax. No damage to neck structures. + + (86) _Entry_ (Mauser), over Pomum Adami; _exit_, below right + scapular spine. Median and musculo-spiral paralysis. + + (87) _Entry_, a large oval aperture through ninth right rib, + 1/2 an inch external to scapular angle; _exit_, anterior border + of sterno-mastoid opposite Pomum Adami. Second entry, opposite + angle of mandible; exit, in centre of cheek. + + Wound of lung. Musculo-spiral paralysis still persisting at the + end of nine months. + + (88) _Entry_ (Mauser), 2 inches above left clavicle at margin + of trapezius; _exit_, 1 inch from sternum in left first + intercostal space. Contusion of brachial plexus, with mixed + signs, which disappeared in two months. No signs of vascular + injury. + +See also cases of cervical aneurism, &c. + +_Wounds of the pharynx._--I saw only three cases of wound of the +pharynx; in each the injury was in the nasal or buccal segment of the +cavity, and in each the soft palate was injured, in two instances the +wound being a small perforation. + +All three cases belong to the somewhat miraculous class. The first (89) +was the only one in which the wound gave rise to subsequent trouble. The +second was under the charge of Mr. Bowlby, and will no doubt be more +fully recounted by him, as interesting signs of injury to the cervical +cord were present. In the third the occipital neuralgia was the only +troublesome symptom. + +In both cases 90 and 91 the high position of the wound in the fixed +portion of the pharynx no doubt accounted for the absence of any +infective trouble. + + (89) _Wounds of the pharynx._--_Entry_ (Lee-Metford), + immediately below the tip of right mastoid process; the bullet + traversed the neck, entering the pharynx close to the right + tonsil, crossed the cavity of the pharynx and the mouth, + emerging through the left cheek. Great swelling of the fauces + and dysphagia persisted for some days after the injury, and + there was considerable haemorrhage. + + Infection of the posterior portion of the track from the + pharynx resulted, and suppuration continued for some weeks: a + small sequestrum eventually needed to be removed from the tip + of the transverse process of the atlas. + + (90) _Entry_ (Mauser), through mouth; the bullet pierced the + soft palate and the posterior wall of the pharynx, and passed + out between the transverse process of atlas and the occiput. No + serious pharyngeal symptoms. + + (91) _Entry_ (Mauser), through the mouth, knocking out the left + upper canine and bicuspid teeth. Perforation of the soft palate + just to the right of the base of the uvula and the posterior + wall of the pharynx; _exit_, 1-1/2 inch internal to and 1/2 an + inch below the tip of the right mastoid process. Haemorrhage + persisted for half an hour, and the patient could not swallow + solids for a week. Great occipital neuralgia followed the + wound. + +_Wounds of the larynx._--I saw only one wound of the larynx (see No. 10, +p. 135). In this instance the thyroid cartilage was wounded on either +side at the level of the Pomum Adami. Transitory haemorrhage and signs of +oedema were the only signs referable to the wound, but in addition the +bullet contused the left vagus and gave rise to temporary laryngeal +paralysis. The same course was observed in a second case of perforation +of the larynx of which I was told. + +_Wounds of the trachea._--The two cases recounted below are the only +tracheal injuries I met with; in one the oesophagus was also +implicated. This patient died from mediastinal emphysema. In the second +case the wide development of emphysema was prevented by the early +introduction of a tracheotomy tube. + + (92) _Entry_ (Mauser), on the outer side of the right arm, + 3-1/2 inches below the acromion; _exit_, 3 inches below the tip + of the left mastoid process, through the sterno-mastoid. Thirty + six hours later there was very free haemorrhage into the right + posterior triangle, emphysema at the episternal notch, + dysphagia, and complete obliteration of the cardiac area of + dulness. Respiration was rapid (40) and extremely noisy. Pulse + 130, small and weak. + + A tracheotomy was performed (Mr. Stewart), but the patient died + an hour later. When the operation was performed a considerable + amount of mucus from the oesophagus was discovered in the + wound. The bullet had passed obliquely between trachea and + oesophagus, wounding both tubes. + + (93) _Entry_, at the centre of the margin of the left + trapezius; _exit_, in mid line of the neck over the trachea. + Dyspnoea was noted the next morning, which increased during a + journey in a wagon. On the third day the dyspnoea was more + troublesome and emphysema began to develop in the neck. A + tracheotomy was performed (Mr. Hunter), and the tube was kept + in for four days. No further trouble was experienced, and the + wound shortly closed, and the patient, a surgeon, returned to + his duties. Temporary signs of median nerve concussion and + contusion were noted. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +INJURIES TO THE VERTEBRAL COLUMN AND SPINAL CORD + + +Every degree of local injury to the constituent vertebrae and the +contents of the spinal canal was met with considerable frequency. Pure +uncomplicated fractures of the bones were of minor importance, except in +so far as they exemplified the general tendency to localised injury in +small-calibre bullet wounds. Injuries implicating the spinal medulla, on +the other hand, were proportionately the most fatal of any in the whole +body to the wounded who left the field of battle or Field hospital +alive, and these cases formed one of the most painful and distressing +features of the surgery of the campaign. + +The prognostic gravity of any spinal injury depended upon two factors: +first, the obvious one of relative contiguity or direct implication of +the cord or nerves in the wound track; secondly, the degree of velocity +retained by the bullet at the moment of impact with the spine. +Observation of the serious ill effects produced by bullets passing in +the immediate proximity of large strongly ensheathed peripheral nerves +surrounded by soft tissue, such as those of the arm or thigh, would lead +one to expect that a comparatively thin-clad bundle of delicate nerve +tissue like the spinal cord, enclosed in a bony canal so well disposed +for the conveyance of vibrations, would suffer severely, and such proved +to be the case. + +_Fractures in their relation to nerve injury_ will be first dealt with, +and secondly injuries to the cord itself. + +Isolated fractures of the processes were not uncommon, the determination +of the injury to anyone being naturally dependent on the position and +direction taken by the wound track. + +For implication of the _transverse processes_ sagittal wounds coursing +in varying degrees of obliquity were mainly responsible. Such injuries +might be unaccompanied by any nerve lesion. Thus a Boer received a +Lee-Metford wound at Belmont which passed from just below the tip of the +right mastoid process across the pharynx and through the opposite cheek. +No bone damage was at first suspected; suppuration in the neck, however, +followed infection from the pharynx, and when a sinus which persisted +was opened up later, a number of small comminuted fragments were found +detached from the transverse process of the axis. In other cases more or +less severe symptoms of nerve lesion were observed, varying from +transient hyperaesthesia, due to implication of the issuing nerves, to +symptoms of spinal haemorrhage, such as are portrayed in the following:-- + + (94) A private in the Black Watch was wounded at Magersfontein + from within a distance of 1,000 yards. Among other wounds, one + track entered 1 inch to the right of the second lumbar spinous + process, and emerged 1 inch internal to the right anterior + superior iliac spine. There were signs of wound of the kidney, + and in addition, retention of urine, incontinence of faeces, + complete motor and sensory paralysis of the right lower + extremity, and total absence of all reflexes. Anaesthesia + existed over the whole area of skin supplied by the nerves of + the sacral plexus, hyperaesthesia over that supplied by the + lumbar nerves. + + On the tenth day subsequent to the injury, the hyperaesthesia in + the area of lumbar supply was replaced by normal sensation, + motor power began to be slowly regained in the muscles supplied + by the anterior crural and obturator nerves, and the patellar + reflex returned. At this time lowered sensation returned in the + area supplied by the sacral plexus, but no improvement in motor + power took place, and no control was regained over the bladder + and rectum. + + During the succeeding week some sciatic hyperaesthesia + developed, but on the twenty-eighth day the patient developed + secondary peritonitis from other causes and died on the + thirty-first. A fracture of the transverse process existed, but + unfortunately the spinal canal was not opened for examination + and no details can be given as to the condition of the cord. + (See case 201, p. 463.) + +Fractures of the _spinous processes_, or those involving both the +process and laminae, were not uncommon. Isolated separation of the +spinous process was usually the result of wounds crossing the back +obliquely or transversely. Examples of this injury were numerous, +especially in the dorsal region, as being the most prominent, +particularly when the patients assumed the prone position when advancing +on the enemy. + +Cervical injuries, owing to the comparatively sheltered position of the +more deeply sunk spines, and from the fact that the head was usually +under cover of a stone or ant-heap, were less common; in one instance +hyperaesthesia was noted in one upper extremity as the result of a +crossing bullet having struck the fourth cervical spine. In a man +wounded at Paardeberg Drift the bullet entered at the centre of the +buttock, traversed the bones of the pelvis, and, leaving that cavity +above the crest of the ilium, crossed the spine to emerge in the +opposite loin. Suppuration occurred, and when the wound was laid open +the third and fourth lumbar spinous processes were found to be loosened, +but still connected to the surrounding soft parts. There were no nerve +symptoms in this case; these would not have been expected, since by the +time that the bullet had traversed the bones of the pelvis its velocity +must have been considerably lessened, even if high at the moment of +primary impact. In another case a dorsal spine, together with its +lamina, was separated and moveable; the only nerve symptoms were slight +pain and a crop of herpes on the line of distribution of the +corresponding intercostal nerve, the bullet having probably struck the +nerve in passing across the intercostal space. In one instance of a +retained bullet lying beneath the skin of the back, its passage between +two contiguous dorsal spines without fracture of either was determined +during an extraction operation. + +When the prone position was assumed by the men, more or less +longitudinal wounds in the course of the spine were naturally liable to +occur. These tracks assumed somewhat greater importance than the +transverse ones, because the injury to bone was more often multiple, and +the laminae were frequently implicated. The relative importance of such +injuries was dependent on the velocity of the bullet and the depth at +which it travelled. As an instance of a more serious character the +following may be given:-- + + (95) In a Highlander wounded at Magersfontein, probably at a + range within 1,000 yards, the bullet entered at the right side + of the sixth cervical vertebra; tracking downwards, it loosened + the laminae of the fifth and sixth dorsal vertebrae from the + pedicles, and separated the tip of the seventh spine. The + bullet was extracted from beneath the skin at the latter spot, + its force having been no doubt exhausted by the resistance of + the firm neural arches supported by the weight of the man's + body. Symptoms of total transverse lesion of the cord followed, + and the patient died at the end of fifty-four days. The bone + had not apparently been sufficiently depressed to exert + continuous pressure, but the cord was diffluent and actually + destroyed over an area corresponding with the fourth, fifth, + sixth, and seventh dorsal segments. + +I saw no instance of wound of the _neural arch_ from a direct shot in +the back in any of our men, neither was I ever able to detect an injury +to the articular processes as a localised lesion. + +Injuries to the _centra_ were very frequent, but differed +extraordinarily in their importance. Perforation by bullets travelling +at a relatively low grade of velocity, but still one sufficient to allow +them to pass through the body, produced in many instances no symptoms +whatever when the track did not lie in immediate contiguity to the +spinal canal or perforate it. + +In all the wounds which I had the opportunity of examining post mortem, +the fracture was of the nature of a pure perforation of the cancellous +tissue of the centrum, with no comminution beyond slight splintering of +the compact tissue at the aperture of exit. In one instance the bullet +passed in a coronal direction so close to the back of the centrum as to +leave a septum of only the thickness of stout paper between the track +and the spinal canal. In this case signs of total transverse lesion were +present. I never happened to meet with a case in which the canal was +encroached upon from the front by displaced bone. In some cases at the +end of six weeks there was difficulty in determining the position of the +openings, and section of the bone was necessary in order to assure +oneself as to the direction of the track. + +In some instances the centra were pierced in the coronal direction with +varying degrees of obliquity; in others the direction was more sagittal; +in two of the latter the bullet was retained in the spinal canal. The +tracks were sometimes confined to one vertebra, but often implicated +two. In others the bullet passed longitudinally through the thorax, +grooving or perforating one or more centra. + +The accompanying evidences of nerve injury varied from nil to those of +pressure or irritation of the nerve roots, transient signs of spinal +concussion, signs of contusion and haemorrhage, or to evidence of total +transverse lesion. Instances of all these conditions will be quoted +under the heading of injuries to the cord or nerves. + +_Signs of injury to the vertebrae._--Separation of the spinous processes +was often indicated by slight deformity, either evident or palpable, +local pain, tenderness, mobility, and crepitus. In some cases these +local signs were reinforced by evidence of cord injury. Fractures +involving the laminae differed merely in the degree to which the above +signs were developed. Fractures of the transverse processes were +generally only to be assumed from the position and direction of the +wounds, the assumption being sometimes strengthened in probability by +evidence of injury to the cord and nerves. + +Fractures of the centra were also frequently only to be assumed from the +direction of the wound tracks, and possibly from evidence of nerve +injury. When no paralysis supervened, interference with the movements of +the back, or pain, was so slight as to be inappreciable, especially in +the presence of concurrent injury to other parts, which was seldom +absent. I only once saw any angular deformity from this injury, and that +slight, and not apparent before the end of three weeks. In this +particular a very striking difference exists between injuries from +small-calibre bullets and larger ones such as the Martini-Henry. In the +only instance of Martini-Henry fracture of the spine that came under my +notice, the centrum was severely comminuted and deformity was obvious. +Still, as in so many particulars, the difference was only one of degree, +since comminution of the centra in gunshot wounds has always been +observed to be slight in nature compared with what is met with in the +compression fractures of civil life. + +A few words will suffice to dismiss the questions of diagnosis, +prognosis, and treatment of the above injuries. The diagnosis depended +on attention to the signs above indicated, the prognosis almost entirely +on the concurrent injury to the nervous system, which will be considered +later, and the treatment consisted in enforcing rest alone. + + +INJURIES TO THE SPINAL CORD ACCOMPANYING SMALL-CALIBRE BULLET WOUNDS OF +THE VERTEBRAE + +_Anatomical lesions._--In introducing the subject of the nature of the +lesions of the spinal cord and membranes, I should again enforce the +statement that their character and degree, in comparison with the slight +accompanying bone damage, are pathognomonic of gunshot wounds, and that +these characters find their completest exemplification in injuries +produced by bullets of small calibre, endowed with a high grade of +velocity. Again, that the varying degrees of damage depend comparatively +slightly on the position of the bone lesion, apart from actual +encroachment on the canal, while the degree of velocity retained by the +bullet at the moment of impact is all-important. In no other way are the +divergent results to be explained which follow an apparently identical +injury, in so far as extent, position, and external evidence of damage +to the spinal column are concerned. + +Injuries to the nerve roots of the nature of concussion and contusion, +are dealt with in Chapter IX. + +_Pure concussion_ of the spinal cord may, I believe, be studied from a +better standpoint in the case of small-calibre bullet injuries than in +any others, since in many instances it is, I think, possible to exclude +any complications such as wrenches and strains of the vertebral column, +and ascribe the symptoms to the pure effect of extreme vibratory force +communicated to the cord by its enveloping bony canal. The condition +must be considered under the two headings of slight and severe. + +In _slight concussion_ the usually transient effects of the injury, and +its happy tendency not to destroy life, place us in a state of +uncertainty as to the occurrence of anatomical changes, since no +opportunity of post-mortem examination occurred. The clinical condition +included under this term corresponds with that implied in 'spinal +concussion' in civil practice. One point of extreme interest, whether +the subjects of small-calibre bullet spinal concussion will in the +future suffer from the remote effects common to similar sufferers in +civil life from other causes such as railway collisions, still remains +for future determination. An ample field for such observations has at +any rate been created by the present war. + +In _severe concussion_ a far more highly destructive action is exerted. +This condition may be followed by complete disorganisation of the cord, +accompanied or not by multiple parenchymatous haemorrhages into its +substance. Either or both of these pathological conditions are produced +by the impact of the bullet with the spine, given a sufficiently high +degree of velocity, and it is difficult to separate clinically the +resulting symptoms. This is a matter perhaps of less importance, since +it stands to reason that a vibratory force, capable of rupturing the +spinal capillaries, would at the same time damage the nervous tissue. + +In speaking of concussion of this degree, it should be clearly +recognised that a general condition, such as is indicated by the use of +the term 'concussion of the brain,' is in no wise implied. The condition +is really far more nearly allied to one of contusion, a strictly +localised portion of the spinal cord undergoing the destructive process +which affects the segments below only in so far as it interrupts the +normal channels of communication with the higher centres. + +Case 102 is an instance of such a lesion, the post-mortem examination +showing clearly that the spinal canal was not encroached upon by the +bullet. The cord in this instance appeared little changed +macroscopically, and this fact was observed in other instances, both +during operations and post mortem. + +_Contusion._--This condition is very closely allied to the last. In +cases 101 and 103 the spinal canal was as little encroached upon as in +102, but the bullet struck the somewhat elastic neural arch in each +case, and post mortem an adhesion between the cord and the enveloping +dura opposite the point at which impact of the bullet was closest +suggests that, in spite of the escape of the bone from fracture, it may +have been momentarily depressed to a sufficient degree to contuse the +cord, or the latter may have suffered a _contre-coup_ injury. For these +reasons the inclusion of the cases as instances of pure concussion is +not warranted. In both Nos. 99 and 100 the neural arch had actually +suffered fracture, and although the bone was not depressed or exercising +pressure at the time of the autopsies, it was no doubt driven in +temporarily at the moment of impact of the bullet. + +At the post-mortem examinations of injuries of this nature it was common +to find one to four segments of the spinal cord completely disorganised. +At the end of some five weeks, the common duration of life, the +structure of the cord was represented by a semi-diffluent yellowish +material, the consistence of which was so deficient in firmness as to +allow the partial collapse of the membranes covering the affected +portion, so as to exhibit a definite narrowing when the whole was held +up (see fig. 79). In such cases traces of extra- or intra-dural +haemorrhage sometimes still persisted. + +_Haemorrhage._--This occurred as surface extravasation and in the form of +parenchymatous haemorrhages. I saw the former both in the extra-dural and +peri-pial forms, but never in sufficient quantity to exert a degree of +pressure calculated to produce symptoms of total transverse lesion. Here +again, however, it is difficult to speak with confidence since the +conditions which regulate the tension within the normal spinal canal are +so complicated and liable to variation, that it is very difficult to +estimate the effect of any given haemorrhage discovered. + +My friend Mr. R. H. Mills-Roberts described to me one fatal case under +his care in the Welsh Hospital in which extra-dural haemorrhage was so +abundant as, in his opinion, to have taken a prominent part in the +production of the paralytic symptoms. + +Examples of both extra- and intra-dural (peri-pial) haemorrhage are +afforded by cases 99, 102, and 103; in none was it large in amount or +widely distributed. The condition was probably also frequently +associated in varying degree with that to be immediately described +below. + +_Intra-medullary haemorrhage_ (_haemato-myelia_).--The importance of this +condition is lessened in small-calibre bullet injuries by the fact +already alluded to, that it is almost invariably accompanied by +concussion changes. In one instance in which death took place at the end +of eight days, partly as the result of concurrent injury, in a man in +whom signs of total transverse lesion of the cord were present, the +substance of the cord was found to be closely scattered over with +haemorrhages of various sizes and extending for a longitudinal area of +some three inches. + +As to the frequency with which haemorrhage into the substance of the cord +occurred, I regret to be unable to give an opinion. In the late +post-mortem examinations I witnessed, a yellow discoloration of the +softened cord was the only macroscopic evidence of haemorrhage. + +Haemorrhages of this nature may, however, account for the grave paralytic +symptoms in some cases of partial or total transverse lesion not due to +direct compression or laceration. + +The conditions of concussion, contusion, or haematomyelia were, I +believe, responsible for at least nine-tenths of the cases in which a +total transverse lesion was indicated by the symptoms. The extreme +importance of realising this fact and the rarity of the production of +symptoms by continuing compression both from the prognostic and the +therapeutic point of view is obvious. + +The analogous injuries termed generally in Chapter IX. nerve contusion, +although frequently accompanied by tissue destruction, may be followed +by reparative change, and are capable of complete or almost complete +spontaneous recovery; while the lesions in the spinal cord are +permanent, and complete recovery is only witnessed in the parts affected +by the remote pressure or irritation from blood extravasation, or in +those influenced by concussion. + +I include below short abstracts of all the cases of lesion of the spinal +cord which terminated fatally, in which I had the opportunity of +witnessing the post-mortem conditions. In a considerable proportion of +the cases at the end of six weeks the spinal cord was softened over an +area of from two to four segments in such degree as to have practically +lost all continuity. Although the autopsies were made on patients who +had died slowly and in summer weather, often twelve to sixteen hours +after death, I think it can be but fair to assume, when the consistency +of the remaining portion of the spinal cord is considered, that the +softening was only in slight degree if at all exaggerated by post-mortem +change. Again symptoms of secondary myelitis and meningitis had been +observed in some of the fatal cases prior to death. + +I had but one opportunity of observing a case in which a retained bullet +exercised compression, and none in which this was due to displaced bone +fragments. I also only once came across a case of complete section, but +no doubt both bone pressure and section may have occurred with greater +frequency amongst patients dying on the field or shortly after. The case +of section is illustrated in fig. 80. It will be noted that, although +the section is complete, the bullet lies to one side of the canal, and +hence the bullet, as fixed in its course by the bone of the centrum, +directly struck but half of the whole width of the cord. + +It was striking how little secondary change in the cord had occurred in +the neighbourhood of the spot of division. This well illustrates the +comparatively slight vibratory effect of a bullet travelling with a +degree of velocity insufficient to completely perforate the vertebral +column. + +_Symptoms of injury to the spinal cord._--In _slight spinal concussion_ +these exactly resembled those of the more severe lesions, except in +their transitory nature. They consisted in loss of cutaneous +sensibility, motor paralysis, and vesical and rectal incompetence. The +phenomena persisted from periods of a few hours to two or three days, +return of function being first noticeable in the sensory nerves, and +often with modification in the way of lowered acuteness, or minor signs +of irritation, such as formication, slight hyperaesthesia or pain, +pointing to a combination with the least extensive degrees of +haemorrhage; later, motor power was rapidly regained. The subjects of +such symptoms often suffered from weakness and unsteadiness in movement +for some days or weeks; a sharp line of discrimination between such +cases and those described in the next paragraphs is manifestly +impossible. + +_Spinal haemorrhage._--The symptoms of this condition developed +differently according to whether concurrent concussion existed. +Occasionally very typical instances of pure haemorrhage were observed +with transient symptoms:-- + + (96) A private in the Yorkshire Light Infantry was wounded at + Modder River; the bullet entered between the eleventh and + twelfth ribs, just posterior to the left mid-axillary line, + emerging in the posterior axillary fold, at its junction with + the right side of the trunk. On the second day after the injury + the lower extremities became drawn up, the knees and hips + assuming a flexed position, and this was followed shortly by + the advent of complete motor and sensory paraplegia, + accompanied by retention of urine. Two days later, the patient + again passed water normally, and gradual and rapid return of + both sensation and motor power took place. At the end of + fourteen days no trace of the condition remained, and the + patient was shortly after sent home. + +The symptoms, however, were rarely so simple as in this example; it was +very much more common to meet with an admixture of signs of primary +concussion, or at any rate symptoms of radiation. The following is an +extreme but excellent example of more complicated and prolonged effects: + + (97) A lance-corporal of the Black Watch was wounded at + Magersfontein at a range of from 400 to 500 yards. The bullet + entered over the left malar bone 2-1/2 inches from the outer + canthus, while the aperture of exit was 2-1/4 inches above the + inferior angle of the right scapula, 3/4 of an inch anterior to + its axillary margin. + + Very shortly after the injury complete motor and sensory + paralysis developed in both upper extremities, followed by the + development of a similar condition in the left lower limb, and + retention of urine and faeces, but the latter unaccompanied by + the marked abdominal intestinal distension so characteristic in + cases of total transverse lesion. The right side of the chest + continued to work well, but the intercostals of the left side + were paralysed. No disturbance of the normal action or + condition of the pupils was noted. After the first few days the + condition began to improve. + + Three weeks later, the chest was moving symmetrically and well, + sensation and motor power had returned in considerable degree + in the left lower extremity, with marked increase in both the + plantar and patellar reflexes; sensation had returned in both + upper extremities, a slight amount of motor power was regained + in the right, but the left remained entirely flaccid and + incapable of movement. + + At the end of a month power was regained over both bladder and + rectum, some slight movement of the left thumb was possible, + and a certain degree of hyperaesthesia developed over the back + of the forearm. + + At the end of six weeks there was little further alteration, + but that in the direction of improvement. There was some + wasting of the muscles of the left upper extremity, and this + was most marked in the muscles supplied by the ulnar nerve. + + At the end of ten weeks the patient had been up some days; he + could stand and walk, but was unable to rise from the sitting + posture without help. The plantar and patellar reflexes were + much exaggerated, and there was ankle clonus, most marked in + the left limb. The right upper extremity was normal, but weak; + there was wrist-drop on the left side and the deltoid was + wasted and powerless; on the other hand the fingers could be + flexed, and although the elbow could not be, there were signs + of returning power in the biceps, and some movements of the + shoulder could be performed by the capsular muscles. It was + remarkable that common sensation was more acute in the left + than the right lower extremity, but I attributed this to the + remains of hyperaesthesia on the left side. The patient left for + home shortly after the last note. + +In both these cases the absence of marked hyperaesthesia or pain points +to medullary haemorrhage (haemato-myelia) as the pathological condition +produced by the injury. In this particular they contrast well with case +94 quoted on page 315, where the degree of both hyperaesthesia and pain +indicated a combination of pressure and irritation of the nerve roots by +surface haemorrhage on the affected side. In case 97 the persistence for +four weeks of paralysis of the bladder and rectum suggested medullary +haemorrhage in addition, while the return of patellar reflex in the +paralysed limb negatived the occurrence of an extensive destructive +lesion. + +In view of the extreme interest of these cases I will shortly detail one +other in which the cauda equina alone was affected. + +I must confess my inability to place the case definitely in the +category either of concussion or medullary haemorrhage. As so often +happened, both conditions probably took part in the lesion. The +immediate development of the primary symptoms is no doubt to be referred +to concussion, while the patchy nature of the prolonged lesion and +gradual recession of the symptoms point to the presence of haemorrhages. +We find here the link most nearly connecting the spinal cord and the +peripheral systemic nerves. Such a case goes far to show that the +condition which I have in the next chapter often referred to as nerve +contusion may in fact be produced by an injury far short of actual +contact. + + (98) A trooper in the Imperial Yeomanry, while advancing in the + crouching attitude, was struck by a bullet from his left front, + at an estimated distance of 300 yards. The bullet traversed the + right arm anteriorly to the humerus, entered the trunk in the + line of the posterior axillary fold, 1-1/2 inch below the level + of the nipple, crossed the thoracic and abdominal cavities, + deeply striking the lumbar spine, and finally lodged beneath + the skin over the venter of the left ilium. The skin was + broken, but the force of the bullet was not sufficient to cause + it to pass through, and it was later expressed from the wound + by the surgeon. The bullet was a Mauser, and not in any way + deformed, although it must at any rate have struck the spine + and perforated the ilium. + + Immediate paraplegia resulted, both sensation and motor power + were completely abolished, but there was no trouble either with + the bladder or rectum. No symptoms of injury to either thoracic + or abdominal viscera were noted. + + Three days after the injury sensation and some return of motor + power were observed in the left extremity, and some power of + movement in the toes of the right foot. + + During the next eight weeks steady but slow improvement took + place; during the last three weeks of this period he made the + voyage to England. Ever since the injury some elevation of + temperature was noted, a rise at night to 100 deg. or at times to + 102 deg.; for this no definite cause was discovered. In the tenth + week the condition was as follows: The temperature has become + normal. The patient has lost flesh to a considerable extent + since the reception of the injury. The lower extremities are + much wasted, especially the peroneal muscles. Patellar reflexes + can be obtained, but the knee jerks are uncertain. Unevenly + distributed paralysis exists in both lower extremities. + Left--Sensation fairly good throughout. Quadriceps very weak; + does not react to electrical stimulation. Calf muscles act + fairly. Anterior tibial and musculo-cutaneous groups are + paralysed. Right--Quadriceps acts better than on left, muscles + below the knee paralysed, and in the same area there is + complete absence of sensation. The patient complains of + shooting pains in both legs, and there is some deep muscular + tenderness. + + Three weeks later an abundant crop of vesicles appeared over + the front of the right thigh and leg, above and below the knee. + Sensation in the limb at the same time returned to a + considerable degree, anaesthesia persisting on the outer aspect + of the thigh only. + + At the end of four months very considerable improvement had + taken place, but there was no return of motor power in the + right leg, or the muscles supplied by the peroneal nerve in the + left leg. There was some general oedema of the legs, + especially of the right, possibly in connection with the + herpetic eruption which was now disappearing. Muscular + tenderness had disappeared. There was also definite improvement + in the size and tone of the peroneal muscles, although no motor + power was regained. + + At the end of five months, slight gradual improvement was still + taking place, but the loss of power was nearly as extensive as + when the last note was taken. The skin of the right leg was + glossy, that of the left apparently normal. At times some + hyperaesthesia of the soles was noted, and the plantar reflex + was very brisk. + + The right anterior tibial and musculo-cutaneous groups of + muscles reacted to the strongest faradic current, not to any + galvanic current below 20-25 m.a., contraction very sluggish. + The same muscles in the left leg also reacted to the strongest + faradic current, but only locally, with no sort of effect on + the tendons. Similar contractions could be induced in the right + quadriceps, but none in the left (Dr. Turney). + + Appreciation of heat and cold applied to the skin was fair, + but, in the case of heat, distinctly slow in the right leg and + foot. + + At the end of seven months improvement was still taking place; + the patient could now stand, walk a little with crutches, and + even ascend and descend a staircase. + + * * * * * + + _Severe concussion, contusion, or medullary haemorrhage + producing signs of total transverse lesion, and complete + transverse section._--The symptoms of these conditions will be + taken together, because, with very slight variations, they may + be considered as lesions of equal degree as to severity, bad + prognosis, and unsuitability for active interference. + + All were characterised by the exhibition of the same essential + phenomena, symmetrical abolition of sensation and motor power + on either side of the body, absence of any signs of irritation + in the paralysed area, and loss of patellar reflex. In a small + number of the cases of medullary haemorrhage some return of + sensation was observed prior to death; in a still smaller, + traces of motor power, and in one or two irritability of the + muscles or feeble reflexes pointed to the fact that destruction + of the cord was not absolute. As abstracts of a series of cases + are appended on page 330, it is only necessary to add a few + remarks as to any slight peculiarities which seemed directly + dependent on the mode of causation. + + It may be first stated that these severe injuries were + accompanied by signs of a very high degree of shock. In fact, + the shock observed in them was more severe than in any other + small-calibre bullet injuries that I witnessed. The patients + lay still with the eyes closed, great pallor of surface, + sometimes moaning with pain, the sensorium much benumbed, or + occasionally early delirium was noted. The pulse was small, + often slow and irregular, and the respiration shallow. The + originally quiet state was often changed to one of great + restlessness of the unparalysed part of the body, with the + appearance of reaction. + + The degree of primary pain varied greatly, but as a rule it was + considerable; in some cases it was excruciating in the parts + above the level of the totally destructive lesion, and commonly + of the zonal variety. A hyperaesthetic zone at the lower limit + of sensation usually existed. + + In the majority of the cases pain must have depended on + meningeal haemorrhage. In one of the cases related, positive + evidence was offered as to this particular by the autopsy, + although this was made as long as six weeks after the original + injury, since no other source of pressure or irritation was + discovered. When I first saw this patient some twenty-four + hours after the injury he was moaning with pain, although a + strong and plucky man; I hastened to give him an injection of + morphia, and assured him that it would relieve his suffering: + as I left I heard him say to his neighbour: 'That is no use; + they gave me three last night, and I was no better,' and his + remark proved true. + + In high dorsal and cervical injuries the temperature rose high, + in one case to 108 deg. F.; I had no opportunity, however, of + observing the temperature in any case immediately before and + after death. During the hot weather the profuse sweating of the + upper part of the body contrasted very strongly with the dry + skin of the paralysed part. + + The heart's action was often particularly irregular in the + dorsal injuries, and the respiration slow and irregular; as + these cases, however, were often complicated by severe + concurrent injuries to internal organs, the irregularities + could hardly be ascribed to the spinal-cord lesion alone. In + cases of pure diaphragmatic respiration, the rate did not as a + rule exceed the normal of 16 or 20 to the minute, and it was + quite regular; this was noted soon after the injury and + persisted throughout the course of the cases. As is usually the + case, both respiration and the heart's action were most + embarrassed in the cases in which abdominal distension was a + prominent feature. In some of the neck cases the Cheyne-Stokes + type of respiration was very strongly marked. + + In cases of low dorsal injury intestinal distension was + extreme, and I think more troublesome than the same condition + as seen in civil practice. The distension was accompanied by + most persistent vomiting, continuing for days, and in the cases + that lived for some time severe gastric crises of the same type + occurred in some instances. + + Priapism was a common symptom; but, as is seen from the cases + quoted, was rarely due to any gross direct laceration of the + cord. + + Trophic sores were both early to develop, and extensive; + primary decubitus occurred in all the cases I saw, and steady + extension followed. In one case a remarkable symmetrical + serpiginous ulceration developed in the area of distribution of + the cutaneous branches of the external popliteal nerve on the + outer side of the leg. + + The paralysis in nearly every case was of the utterly flaccid + type, and wasting of the muscles was early and extreme. This + was occasionally accentuated by the supervention of myelitis. + + Opportunities for making observations on the quantity of urine + secreted were not great, and I can offer no remark as to the + occurrence of polyuria. In one rapidly fatal case, however, + suppression of urine occurred. + + (99) _Lumbar region. Transverse lesion._--Range under 1,000 + yards. Wound of _entry_ (Mauser), over the seventh rib 1 inch + from the left posterior axillary fold; _exit_, over the centre + of the right iliac crest. Complete symmetrical motor and + sensory paralysis of lower extremities, entire abolition of + reflexes, retention of urine. + + On the ninth day there was some return of sensation in the + lower extremities, and a cremasteric reflex was to be obtained. + A large bedsore had developed over the sacrum. No further + change occurred in the lower extremities. The patient became + progressively emaciated and exhausted, cystitis persisted, the + bedsore deepened. The man eventually developed signs of a large + basal abscess in the left lung, and died on the forty-second + day. + + At the _post-mortem_ a fracture of the first lumbar lamina was + discovered, with some splintering of the bone; the lumbar + spinous process was attached and in its normal position. + Opposite the centre of the cauda equina were the remains of a + considerable haemorrhage, both extra- and intra-dural, the + nerves appearing somewhat compressed, but of normal + consistency. The muscles of the back were infiltrated with + putrid pus on both sides. A pulmonary abscess cavity the size + of a hen's egg occupied the upper part of the lower lobe of the + left lung. The kidneys were congested, and the bladder + thickened and chronically inflamed. + + (100) _Cervico-dorsal region. Total transverse lesion._--Wound + of _entry_ (Mauser), to the right of the sixth cervical + vertebra: the bullet was removed on the field from the left of + the seventh dorsal spinous process, which was somewhat + prominent. Complete motor and sensory paralysis extended + upwards to the third intercostal space; the breathing was + almost entirely diaphragmatic. Retention of urine. Entire + abolition of reflexes in lower limbs and trunk. Hyperaesthesia + was present in both upper extremities, with a zone of + hyperaesthesia around the chest. The patient suffered greatly + for some weeks from pain in the hyperaesthetic area, he + developed severe cystitis and later incontinence of urine. A + large trophic sacral bed-sore steadily increased in depth and + size. + + About ten days before death, which occurred on the fifty-third + day from exhaustion and septicaemia, the patient complained of + pains in his legs; but there was no return of sensation, + motion, or reflexes. + + At the _post-mortem_, the seventh dorsal spinous process was + found to be loose and the laminae of the fifth, sixth, and + seventh vertebrae were separated from the pedicles, and somewhat + depressed on the left side. These laminae were adherent to the + dura, as were also a few small separated bony spiculae. There + was no sign of old haemorrhage. The spinal cord was practically + gone between the levels of the fourth and seventh dorsal + vertebrae, and diffluent from myelitis up to the third cervical. + + (101) _Dorsal region; total transverse lesion._--Wound of + _entry_ (Mauser), in the left supra-spinous fossa of the + scapula; _exit_, between the eleventh and twelfth ribs of the + right side. Complete motor and sensory paralysis, with absence + of reflexes from mid-dorsal region downwards. Upper + intercostals working. Retention of urine, penis turgid. + Sensation perfect to lower extremity of sternum. Early trophic + sacral bed-sores developed and steadily increased in depth and + extent, slighter ones developed on the heels. The paralysis was + flaccid throughout. The patient gradually emaciated with fever, + and died on the seventy-eighth day. + + At the _post-mortem_ the wound proved not to have penetrated + the thorax, and both the vertebral spines and laminae were + intact, no trace of bony injury being discoverable. Opposite + the sixth dorsal vertebra, for a distance of 1-1/2 inch, the + cord and dura were adherent, and over the same area the cord + was represented by soft custard-like material. There was no + sign of old haemorrhage. + + (102) _Dorsal region; total transverse lesion; slight + extra-dural haemorrhage._--Wound of _entry_ (Mauser), at the + posterior aspect of the right shoulder; _exit_, 2 inches to the + left of the spine below the ninth rib. + + Complete motor and sensory paralysis below the site of the + lesion, with absence of superficial and deep reflexes. + Retention of urine. Great abdominal distension, pain, and + vomiting. Bed-sores over the sacrum developed on the third day; + meanwhile the vomiting continued on and off for a week, and + very severe girdle pain persisted. + + One month later when seen at the Base hospital considerable + improvement had occurred. Sensation had returned in both lower + limbs; but flaccid paralysis persisted and both were wasted, + especially the left. There was no return of reflexes in the + lower limbs, the urine was passed in gushes, and the patient + was cognisant when these occurred. The sacral bed-sores were, + however, very extensive and becoming larger and deeper. + + At the end of the fifth week slight power was regained in the + flexors and abductors of the right thigh, and the same muscles + of the left limb could be made to contract feebly. Meanwhile + the patient suffered with severe fever, accompanied by frequent + rigors and profuse sweats; the bed-sore continued to extend, + and the urine was foul and contained pus. + + The patient continued in a similar condition, progressive + emaciation and exhaustion taking place, and at the end of six + weeks he died. + + At the _post-mortem_ the bullet was found to have tracked + beneath the right scapula, entering the chest by the fifth + intercostal space and lacerating the right lung; thence it + entered the eighth dorsal centrum and tunnelled both this and + the ninth diagonally, to escape beneath the ninth rib. On + opening the spinal canal the tunnel was found to be separated + only by the compact tissue of the centrum from the cavity, + while a thin extra-dural haemorrhage separated the dura from the + bones anteriorly. The spinal cord exhibited no sign of pressure + and was firm and continuous, but up to the lower limit of the + dorsal region there was septic myelitis and meningitis, the + result of pus having tracked up the canal from the sacral + bedsore. Suppurative cystitis and pyelitis were present. The + patient was the subject of an old urethral stricture which had + given rise to trouble during treatment. + + (103) _Dorsal region; total transverse lesion; slight + intra-dural haemorrhage._--Wound of _entry_ (Mauser), below + spine of scapula, close to right axilla; _exit_, 2-1/2 inches + to left of tenth dorsal spinous process. + + Complete motor and sensory paralysis below ensiform cartilage, + with well-marked hyperaesthetic zone around trunk. All reflexes + absent. Retention of urine. Incontinence of faeces. Bed-sores in + sacral region developed during the first two days, and + seventeen days later well-developed serpiginous trophic sores + developed on the outer side of each leg and continued to + increase slowly until death. The paralysis remained of the + absolutely flaccid variety. Great emaciation occurred, + accompanied by hectic fever, the temperature ranging from + normal to 102.5 deg.. During the third week double pleurisy + developed. + + At the _post-mortem_ no bone injury could be detected. The cord + and dura-mater were adherent over an area corresponding to the + fifth to the eighth dorsal vertebrae, and opposite the seventh + the cord was soft and of the consistence of butter. A small + intra-dural haemorrhage was still evident below the main lesion, + not extensive enough to give rise to serious compression. + General adhesions in each pleura. Cystitis. + +[Illustration: FIG. 79.--Appearance of Spinal Cord enclosed in membranes +in case 103 after removal from the canal. When the membranes were opened +a white custard-like substance took the place of the cord. Slight +evidence of extra-dural haemorrhage existed] + + (104) _Dorsal region; section of cord; retained bullet._--Wound + of _entry_ (Mauser), in seventh right intercostal space, 4-1/2 + inches from the dorsal spinous processes, oval in outline; + bullet retained. + + Complete motor and sensory paralysis, with absence of reflexes + below umbilicus. Retention of urine, incontinence of faeces. + Large sacral bed-sore developed rapidly. Right haemothorax. + + The patient emaciated rapidly, and for the last fourteen days + the temperature ranged to 104 deg., the bed-sore steadily + increasing in size. Death occurred on the forty-second day. + + At the _post-mortem_ a Mauser bullet was found embedded in the + centrum of the twelfth dorsal vertebra. The bullet was slightly + curved; its anterior extremity had passed across the spinal + canal, and wounding the dura posteriorly rested against the + left lamina. The plating of the mantle of the bullet was + stripped from half the area of the tip. The dura was not + adherent, and the cord was softened for half an inch above the + point of section; above this it was normal, the vessels + coursing normally to the softened spot. Below the point of + section the cord was blanched, but offered no other macroscopic + evidence of disease. No evidence of either intra- or + extra-dural haemorrhage was detectible. + +[Illustration: FIG. 80.--Complete division of Spinal Cord. The bullet is +retained, and from its position can be seen to have struck the right +half of the cord only. The nickel plating of half of the tip of the +bullet is stripped off. Case No. 104] + + The right pleura contained a large quantity of dark cocoa-like + fluid. Extensive adhesions were present in both pleural + cavities. The spleen was much enlarged. At the base of the + bladder a large submucous haemorrhage had occurred, the + blood-clot had assumed a dark orange colour, and on first + opening the viscus the appearance was that of a mass of faeces. + The mucous lining elsewhere was slaty grey, with small + haemorrhages. The kidneys were large, but no abscesses or + pyelitis were present. + + (105) _Cervico-dorsal region; total transverse lesion._--Wound + of _entry_ (Mauser), opposite right sixth cervical transverse + process; _exit_, on left side of third dorsal spinous process. + Slight grasping power was present in the hands, and the patient + could hold his arms across his chest. Complete motor and + sensory paralysis, with absence of all reflexes below. The + pupils were moderately contracted. Retention of urine. On the + second day blebs appeared on each buttock, and the patient + complained of very severe pain in the neck: the temperature + rose to 103 deg., and on the third day he died suddenly. No + _post-mortem_ examination was made. + +I observed two similar cases in the Field Hospital at Orange River, the +patients dying on the third day; pain and high temperature were +prominent symptoms in both. In one patient early delirium was present. + + (106) _Dorsal region; Martini-Henry wound._--Wound of _entry_, + oval, 1 inch x 3-1/4 inches; long axis obliquely crossing + infra-spinous fossa of right scapula; bullet retained + (Martini-Henry). Spine of third dorsal vertebra loose, and a + distinct thickening to its right side. Complete symmetrical + paralysis extending up to upper extremities. No sensation on + surface of trunk below cervical area. Respiration entirely + diaphragmatic. Retention of urine, penis turgid. Total absence + of reflexes, superficial and deep. Reddening of buttocks, but + no bullae. + + General hyperaesthesia of upper extremities, with severe + spasmodic attacks of pain. + + On the third day an exploration was decided upon, in view of + the local deformity, and the severe pain in the upper + extremities. The third dorsal spine was found to be loose, as a + result of bilateral fracture of the neural arch; the bullet had + crossed the right limit of the spinal canal, and destroyed the + body of the vertebra, and passing onwards had entered the left + pleural cavity, into which air entered freely from the + operation wound. + + The patient was relieved from his pain by the exploration, and + lived four days. On the second day after operation, however, + the temperature rose to 107 deg., while on the last two days the + temperature was normal in the mornings, rising to 105 deg. in the + evenings. No alteration resulted in the trunk symptoms. + +_Diagnosis._--The pure question of the fact of injury of the spinal cord +needs no discussion; but it is necessary to make some remarks on the +discrimination between concussion, contusion and haemorrhage, meningeal +and medullary haemorrhage, the latter condition and compression, and on +partial and complete severance of the cord. + +The sharp discrimination of cases of concussion from those of slight +medullary haemorrhage was necessarily impossible. I think the only points +of any importance in diagnosing pure concussion were the transitory +nature of the symptoms, and the uniformity of recovery, without +persistence of any signs of minor destructive lesion. In medullary +haemorrhage the tendency for a certain period was towards increase in +gravity in the signs. It goes almost without saying that the latter +point was seldom accurately determined in patients struck on the field +of battle; these perhaps lay out for hours before they were brought in, +and when they were placed in the Field hospital the rush of work did not +usually allow the careful observation necessary to clear up this +difference in the development of the symptoms. Nevertheless it is +preferable to consider the cases in which transitory symptoms persist +for a period of hours, or even a couple of days, as instances of pure +concussion, unless the existence of this condition can be disproved by +actual observation. + +Extra-medullary haemorrhage, accompanied by only slight encroachment on +the spinal canal, certainly results with some frequency from +small-calibre wounds. Some of the quoted cases show this decisively by +_post-mortem_ evidence, others by such clinical signs of irritation as +pain and hyperaesthesia. I think its presence may also be assumed in +cases of total transverse lesion due to medullary haemorrhage or severe +concussion, accompanied by well-marked pain and hyperaesthesia above the +level of paralysis. As affecting treatment, however, determination of +its presence is of small importance. + +The important conditions for discriminative diagnosis are those of local +compression, actual destructive lesion, whether from concussion changes, +contusion, or medullary haemorrhage, and partial and total section of the +cord. + +First, with regard to compression of the cord, the possible sources are +three; (i) extra-dural haemorrhage, which may, I think, be dismissed with +mention as rarely capable of producing severe symptoms. (ii) The +displacement of bone fragments. This is of less importance than in civil +practice, because an injury by a bullet of small calibre, capable of +seriously displacing fragments, has probably at the same time produced +grave changes in the cord. In the presence of severe immediate symptoms +we may tentatively assume that a simultaneous destructive lesion has +been produced. In such injuries pain, combined with a tendency to +improvement in the paralytic symptoms and return of reflexes, is the +only point in favour of bone pressure, unless considerable deformity of +the spinal column can be detected by palpation or examination with the +X-rays. + +(iii) Pressure from the bullet. This is the most important form of +compression, because the mere fact of retention of the bullet is +evidence of a low degree of velocity, and therefore opposed to the +existence of the most severe form of intramedullary lesion. In a case of +apparent transverse lesion with retained bullet, shown to me at No. 3 +General Hospital by Mr. J. E. Ker, the pain was very severe, and so +greatly aggravated by movement that an anaesthetic had to be administered +prior to the renewal of some necessary dressings. The general condition +of this patient precluded a projected operation, and after death the +bullet was found to be pressing laterally upon a cord not materially +altered on macroscopic inspection. In the case of retained bullet +recorded (No. 104), the slight degree to which the severed ends of the +cord appeared altered has been already remarked upon. + +Beyond this we are helped by the position of the aperture of entry, and +its shape, as evidence of the direction in which the bullet passed, the +presence of pain, and positive proof may be obtained by examination with +the X-rays. + +Lastly, we come to the discrimination of total or partial section, +destruction by vibratory concussion or contusion, and severe +intramedullary haemorrhage. Except in the case of partial section with +localised symptoms, which must be rare, I believe this to be impossible +from the primary symptoms, although some indication of possible +encroachment on the canal may be obtained from careful consideration of +the course of the wound, as evidenced by the position and shape of the +openings, the position of the patient's body at the time of reception of +the injury being taken into consideration. Later we may get some aid +from the possible improvement in the symptoms in the case of haemorrhage. +In cases with signs of total transverse lesion, however, the +discrimination of the conditions is of little practical importance, +since either is equally unfavourable and unsuitable for surgical +treatment. + +In closing these remarks reference must be made to the occasional +occurrence of paraplegic symptoms of an apparently purely functional +nature. I saw these on one or two occasions, of which the following is +a fair example. A man was wounded in the lower extremity and fell. When +brought into the hospital he complained of loss of power in the legs and +inability to straighten his back. No very definite evidence was present +of serious impairment either of motor or sensory nerves, and the man was +got up and walked with crutches. While moving about the hospital camp, +another man pushed him down, and the patient then became completely +paraplegic. He was placed in bed, and the next day moved his limbs +without any difficulty, and gave rise to no further anxiety. + +_Prognosis._--In slight concussion the importance of prognosis is as to +remote effects, and upon this no opinion can be given at the present +time. The same may be said concerning cases in which transient symptoms +followed the slighter degrees of surface and medullary haemorrhage. In +the case of the latter, however, I think it would be rash to give a too +confident opinion as to the future non-occurrence of secondary changes. + +Severe concussion is probably irrecoverable. + +Meningeal haemorrhage of either form is one of the slighter lesions, and +less dangerous, both as an immediate condition and as to the +probabilities of after trouble. None the less the possibilities of +secondary chronic meningitis, or chronic trouble from adhesions, must be +kept in mind. + +Cases of medullary haemorrhage with incomplete signs are favourable in +prognosis, as far as life is concerned; as to complete recovery, +however, this is hardly possible; in many cases serious functional +deficiency at any rate will remain, while in others the healing of the +lacerated tissue and subsequent contraction can scarcely fail to +influence unfavourably an already imperfect recovery. + +I think it must be a rare occurrence for pressure from bone fragments to +be able to be regarded as a favourable prognostic condition, since in +the very large majority of cases the velocity of the bullet causing the +injury will have been such as to inflict irreparable damage on the cord. +Still, cases may occasionally be met with where the velocity has been +sufficiently low, or contact with the bone slight enough, to allow of +the comparative escape of the cord. In this relation cases in which the +bullet is retained, especially if the symptoms of transverse lesion are +incomplete, may be regarded as relatively favourable. + +Cervical and high dorsal injuries, as in civil practice, offered the +worst prognosis. In cases in which symptoms of total transverse lesion +were present, as far as my experience went, it was, however, only a +matter of importance as to the prolongation of a miserable existence. +All the patients eventually died; those with higher lesions at the end +of a few days; the lower ones, at the completion on an average of six +weeks of suffering. + +The actual causes of death resembled exactly those met with in civil +practice, except in so far as it was more often influenced or determined +by concurrent injuries, a complication so characteristic of modern +gunshot wounds. Thus exhaustion, septicaemia from absorption from +suppurating bed-sores or from severe cystitis, secondary myelitis, and +pulmonary complications, carried off most of the patients. + +_Treatment._--The general treatment of the cases demanded nothing +special to military surgery, except in so far as it was modified by the +disadvantage to the patient of necessarily having to be transported, +often for some distance. The ill effects of this, particularly in cases +of haemorrhage, are obvious, but in so far as fracture was concerned the +question of transport did not acquire the importance that it does in +civil practice, since the nature of the fractures and their strict +localisation did not render movement either painful or particularly +hurtful. It was indeed striking how little pain movement, made for the +purposes of examination, caused these patients. The treatment of +bed-sores, cystitis, or other secondary complications possessed no +special features. + +The importance of insuring rest in the early stages of the cases of +haemorrhage is self-evident; hence, if the possibility exists of not +moving the patient, its advantage cannot be too strongly insisted upon. +Again, if transport is inevitable, the shorter distance that can be +arranged for the better. It should be borne in mind, also, that from the +peculiar nature of causation of the injuries, stretcher or wagon +transport for short distances is preferable to the vibratory movements +of a long railway journey. Beyond this the administration of opium, and +in some cases the assumption of the prone position, are both useful in +the recent or possibly progressive stage of haemorrhage. + +Lastly, as to active surgical treatment by operation. In no form of +spinal injury is this less often indicated, or less likely to be useful. +It is useless in the cases of severe concussion, contusion, or medullary +haemorrhage which form such a very large proportion of those exhibiting +total tranverse lesion, and equally unsuited to cases of partial lesion +of the same character. Extra-medullary haemorrhage can rarely be +extensive enough to produce signs calling for the mechanical relief of +pressure; the section of the cord cannot be remedied. In one case with +signs of total transverse lesion, in which a laminectomy was performed, +no apparent lesion was discovered, and this would frequently be the +case, since the damage is parenchymatous. The experience was indeed +exactly comparable to that which followed early exposure of the +peripheral nerves. + +Only three indications for operation exist. 1. Excessive pain in the +area of the body above the paralysed segment; operation is here of +doubtful practical use, except in so far as it relieves the immediate +sufferings of the patient. + +2. An incomplete or recovering lesion, when such is accompanied by +evidence furnished by the position of the wounds, pain, and signs of +irritation of pressure from without, or possibly palpable displacement +of parts of the vertebra, that the spinal canal is encroached upon by +fragments of bone. + +3. Retention of the bullet, accompanied by similar signs to those +detailed under 2. + +In both the latter cases the aid of the X-rays should be invoked before +resorting to exploration. + +Operation, if decided upon, in either of the two latter circumstances, +may be performed at any date up to six weeks; but if pressure be the +actual source of trouble, it is obvious that the more promptly operation +is undertaken the better for early relief and ulterior prognostic +chances. + +In only one case of the whole series I observed did it seem possible to +regret the omission of an exploration. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +INJURIES TO THE PERIPHERAL NERVE TRUNKS + + +The occurrence of these injuries has undoubtedly increased in frequency +with the employment of bullets of small calibre, and no other class of +case more strikingly illustrates the localised nature of the lesions +produced by small projectiles of high velocity. Again, no other series +of injuries affords such obvious indications of the firm and resistent +nature of the cicatricial tissue formed in the process of repair of +small-calibre wounds, and in none is the advantage of a conservative and +expectant attitude so forcibly impressed upon the surgeon. Implication +of the nerves may be primary, or secondary to an injury which left them +originally unscathed. + +_Nature of the anatomical lesions._--In degree these vary in +mathematical progression, but the extent of the lesion is not always +readily differentiated by the early clinical manifestations, and again +the actual damage is not to be estimated by the gross apparent +anatomical lesion alone; but, in addition, consists in part in changes +of a less easily demonstrable nature, varying with the velocity with +which the bullet was travelling and the consequent comparative degree of +vibratory force to which the nerve has been subjected. In these +injuries, as in those of every part of the nervous system, the degree of +velocity appears to gain especial importance both in regard to the +general symptoms and the local effect on the functional capacity of the +nerve. + +This is perhaps a fitting place for the introduction of a few further +remarks as to the significance of the term 'concussion' in connection +with the injuries produced by bullets of small calibre, since the most +striking exemplification of the results following the transmission of +the vibratory force of the projectile is afforded by the behaviour of +the comparatively densely ensheathed and supported peripheral nerves. + +As already pointed out in Chapters VII. and VIII. the chief concussion +effects on the nervous tissue of the brain and spinal cord are of a +destructive nature, far exceeding those accompanying the injuries +designated by the same term seen in the ordinary accidents met with in +civil practice, and this damage is comparatively localised in extent. + +In the case of the peripheral nerves I have still employed the terms +'concussion' and 'contusion' to designate certain groups of symptoms and +clinical phenomena, but any sharp distinction between the two conditions +on a morbid anatomical basis is impossible. The results of severe +vibratory concussion may, in fact, be more generally destructive than +those of contusion, and the subsequent effects more prolonged. A certain +length of the affected nerve is apparently completely destroyed as a +conductor of impulses, the connective-tissue element alone remaining +intact. Under these circumstances a nerve, the subject of the most +serious degree of vibratory concussion, which, if cut down upon, may +exhibit no macroscopic change, may take a longer period to recover than +one in which the presence of considerable local thickening points to +direct contact with the bullet, with resulting haemorrhage into the nerve +sheath and perhaps partial gross rupture of nerve fibres. + +The therapeutic and prognostic importance of the above remarks, if +correct, is obvious. The course of the nerve is preserved by its intact +connective-tissue framework, and ultimate recovery by a regeneration of +the nerve fibres is more likely to be complete, and will be just as +rapid, if nature be relied on and the nerve be left untouched by the +hand of the surgeon. + +It is, I think, undeniable that nerve trunks may escape severe or +irrecoverable injury by lateral displacement. The mere fact that the +trunk itself may be perforated by a slit in its long axis would suggest +the possibility of displacement of the whole structure, and this no +doubt occurred with some frequency. Displacement would naturally be most +frequent in the case of nerves, such as those of the arm, which run long +courses in comparatively loose tissue. In a remarkable case already +narrated, an exploratory operation showed the musculo-spiral nerve in +the upper part of the arm to have been driven into a loop which +projected into, and provisionally closed, an opening in the brachial +artery. + +I. _Simple concussion._--Anatomically, or histologically, no information +exists as to the changes which give rise to the often transitory +symptoms dependent on this condition. We are reduced to the same +theories of molecular disturbance and change which have been invoked to +account for similar affections of the central nervous system. The +causation of concussion is, however, materially influenced in its degree +by the velocity of flight of the bullet and consequent severity of the +vibratory force exerted. Hence actual contact of the bullet with the +nerves is not necessary for its production, as is seen in the temporary +complete loss of functional capacity in the limbs in many cases of +fracture, where the vibrations are rendered still more far-reaching and +effective as the result of their wider distribution from the larger +solid resistance afforded by the bone. The relative density and +resistance offered by the different parts of the bone acquire great +significance in this relation, since local shock due to nerve concussion +is far more profound when the shafts are struck than when the cancellous +ends furnish the point of impact. + +The form of concussion which most nearly interests us in this chapter is +that affecting single nerve trunks in wounds of the soft parts alone, +and here the passage of the bullet is, as a rule, so contiguous to the +nerve that there is difficulty in drawing a strict line of demarcation +between such cases and those dealt with in the next paragraph. + +II. _Contusion._--Clinically this was the form of nerve injury both of +greatest comparative frequency and of interest from the points of view +both of diagnosis and prognosis. + +The seriousness of a contusion depends on two factors: first, the +relative degree of violence exerted upon the nerve, which is dependent +on the force still retained by the travelling bullet; and, secondly, on +the extent of tissue actually implicated. The range of fire at which the +injury was received determines the importance of the first factor; the +second varies with the degree of exactness with which the nerve is +struck, and on the direction taken by the bullet. Naturally transverse +wounds affect a small area; while an oblique or longitudinal direction +of the track may indefinitely increase the extent of injury to the nerve +trunk, and hence acquire prognostic significance in direct ratio to the +amount of tissue which needs to be regenerated. + +As to the actual anatomical lesion resulting in the cases which we +designated clinically as contusion I can give no information. On many +occasions when the symptoms were considered of such a nature as to +render an exploration advisable, no macroscopic evidence of gross injury +was obtained. It was therefore impossible to draw a definite line of +demarcation between such cases and those which we considered merely +concussion. It could only be assumed that the vibration transmitted to +the nerve had occasioned such changes as to destroy its capacity as a +conductor of impressions. + +In some cases the presence of a certain amount of interstitial blood +extravasation was suggested clinically by early hyperaesthesia and signs +of irritation; in others the paralysis was of such a degree as to lead +to the inference that a complete regeneration of the existing nerve +would be necessary prior to the restitution of functional capacity. + +In a certain proportion of the injuries the development of a distinct +fusiform swelling in the course of the nerve pointed to the existence of +considerable tissue damage, while in others this was evidenced +clinically by early signs of neuritis. + +III. _Division or laceration._--The varying mechanical conditions +affecting the last class of injury play a similar role here. Thus the +degree of laceration depends on the direction of the wound track, and as +all lacerations are accompanied by contusion, the relative velocity +retained by the travelling bullet assumes the same importance. + +I saw every degree of injury to the trunks, from notching to complete +solution of continuity, and in some cases destruction and disappearance +of pieces from one to two or more inches in length. Such lesions as the +latter were most common in the forearm. In this segment of the limbs +tracks of varying degrees of longitudinal obliquity are readily +produced, whether the patient be in the upright or prone position, +since the upper extremities are commonly in forward action whichever +position is assumed. + +The most peculiar form of injury consisted in perforation of the trunk +without gross destruction of its fibres, and without in many cases +prolonged or permanent loss of functional capacity. I cannot speak with +any confidence as to the comparative frequency of occurrence of this +form of injury, but judging by the analogous perforations of the +vessels, it is probably not uncommon in trunks large enough to allow of +its production. The trunk nerves of the arm, and the great sciatic +nerve, were probably the most frequent seats of such wounds. As, +however, a very short experience of the futility of early interference +in the case of nerve lesions warned me against exploration before a date +at which observations of this nature were unsatisfactory, I gained less +experience on this point than I could have wished. + +In the case of completely divided nerves the development of a bulbous +enlargement on the proximal end was constant, and very marked in degree. +I saw few cases in which primary effects could be certainly referred to +pressure or laceration by bone spicules, excepting in some fractures of +the humerus, and perhaps some injuries of the seventh nerve accompanying +perforating wounds of the mastoid process. + +IV. _Secondary implication of the nerves._--This was a striking +characteristic in many at first apparently simple wounds of the soft +parts. In such cases it was due to implication of the contiguous trunk +in the process of cicatrisation, and its importance varied with the size +of the nerve in question. In the smaller sensory trunks it was often +evidenced by the occurrence of neuralgic pain, especially liable to be +influenced by climatic changes; in the larger, by signs of more or less +severe motor, sensory, and trophic disturbance. Musculo-spiral paralysis +from implication in, or pressure from, callus in cases of fracture of +the humerus was very frequent. This would naturally be expected from the +extreme degree the comminution of the bone often reached, and the +consequently large amount of callus developed. + +The effect of cicatrisation of the tissues surrounding the nerves +varied somewhat according to the degree of fixation of the individual +nerve implicated. Thus if a nerve lay in a fixed bed some form of +circular constriction resulted; if, on the other hand, the nerve was +readily displaceable, the cicatrix often drew it considerably out of its +course; in either case symptoms corresponding with those of pressure +resulted. + +_Symptoms of nerve lesion_.--These differed little in character from +those common to such injuries in civil practice, except in the relative +frequency with which they assumed a serious aspect. After all in civil +practice nerve concussion is most familiar to us in the degree common +after knocking the elbow against a hard object, and the same may be said +in regard to the allied injury of contusion. It is in small-calibre +bullet wounds alone that the occurrence of such severe and sharply +localised injury to deep parts as was observed is possible. + +_Concussion_.--Temporary loss of function was often observed in the +limbs, corresponding to the distribution of one or more nerve trunks +when wound tracks had passed in their vicinity. Interference with +function sometimes amounted to loss of sensation alone: in others to +loss of both sensation and motor power. Such symptoms were of a +transitory character, lasting for a few days or a week; if both +sensation and motion were impaired, sensation was usually the first to +be regained. In these cases secondary trouble was not uncommon, since +the near proximity of the track to the originally affected nerve offered +every chance for implication of the latter in the resulting cicatrix. +This sequence was often observed, and its symptoms are described under +the heading of secondary implication below. Equally striking were the +instances of concussion in the case of the nerves of special sense and +their end organs, temporary loss of smell, vision, or hearing being not +uncommon, often passing off in the course of a few days with no apparent +ulterior ill-effect. + +One of the most interesting illustrations of the occurrence of +concussion was furnished by cases in which complete paralysis of a limb +rapidly cleared up with the exception of that corresponding to a single +individual nerve of the complex apparently originally implicated. +Instances of severe contusion or division of one nerve of the arm, for +instance, accompanied by transient signs of concussion of varying +degrees of severity in all the others, were by no means uncommon. + +_Contusion_.--The symptoms of contusion were somewhat less simple, +since, in addition to lowering or loss of function, signs of irritation +were often observed. In the slighter cases irritation was often a marked +feature, as was evidenced by hyperaesthesia and pain combined with loss +of power. In cases in which pain and hyperaesthesia were primary +symptoms, these were often transitory. I will quote an illustrative case +which, though affecting the nerve roots, is characteristic of the +effects of slight contusion in the case of the nerve trunks in any part +of their course:-- + + (107) _Contusion of cervical nerve roots_.--Range probably + about 1,000 yards. Wounded at Belmont. Aperture of _entry_ + (Lee-Metford), immediately posterior to the right fifth + cervical transverse process; _exit_, immediately anterior to + the space between the third and fourth left cervical transverse + processes. The movements of the neck were perfect, there was + neither pain nor difficulty in swallowing. Extreme + hyperaesthesia was present in both palms and down the front of + the forearms. The grip in either hand was weak, this being + possibly explained in part by the hyperaesthesia of the palms, + as all movements of the upper extremities could be made, + although not with full power. On the fourth day the condition + was much improved on the left side, and at the end of a week + the left upper extremity was normal; the right (side of entry, + and therefore exposed to greater force from the bullet) + improved more slowly, becoming normal only at the end of three + weeks. + +I observed an identical case of injury to the cervical roots, and many +similar instances in injuries of the nerve trunks of the limbs in which +the course was exactly parallel. In the more severe, pain was often +added to hyperaesthesia. + +In the most severe cases the signs corresponded in all particulars, +except in the early entire loss of reaction of the muscles to +electricity, with those of complete section. Loss of sensation and +motion was immediate, complete, and prolonged, the limbs being lowered +in temperature, flaccid, and powerless. General systemic shock was also +severe. In the case either of plexus or multiple contusions, or where +the injury was more local, correspondingly complete signs were present +in the area supplied by the affected nerves. + +In the cases in which the contusion was not of extreme degree, +hyperaesthesia often developed as a later sign, and was probably due to +the irritation of haemorrhage, when the sensory portion of the nerve +began to regain functional capacity. The date of appearance of the +hyperaesthesia varied from a few days to a week or later. It might then +persist for weeks or many months. + +In a few instances large blebs rose on the back of the hand, or patches +of vesicles appeared over the terminal distribution of the nerve, +pointing to early trophic changes. + +The period of recovery varied greatly; in some instances of very +complete paralysis, function was regained and became apparently normal +at the end of three or four weeks; in others, even after severe wasting +of muscles for weeks, rapid improvement occurred often suddenly, while +in some there was no apparent recovery at the end of months. In cases of +long-deferred improvement, wasting of the muscles became a very +prominent feature; but this without complete loss of reaction of the +muscles to electrical stimulation. + +Recovery of sensation usually preceded by some time that of motion, the +former often reappearing in some degree at an early date, and, even if +very modified in character, it formed a most useful and valuable aid +both in diagnosis and prognosis. + +When in a position allowing of direct examination, the contused portion +of the nerve sometimes developed a palpable fusiform thickening, +manipulation of which might give rise to formication in the area of +distribution--a favourable prognostic sign. + +Many of the cases bore a very marked resemblance in character to those +in which paralysis results from tight constriction of the limb, as in +the arm after the application of an Esmarch's tourniquet. + +_Laceration._--If incomplete, the signs corresponded very nearly to +those of severe contusion, since partial section is impossible without +the occurrence of the latter. The condition indeed was only to be +distinguished by the partial nature of the recovery, and even this +latter might be only more prolonged. + +The same remarks hold good with regard to perforation of the nerve +trunks; but, as regards function, these injuries are not so serious in +prognosis as very much more limited transverse divisions or mere +notching, and in some cases the disturbance of function was by no means +profound or prolonged. + +Absolute loss of reaction to electrical stimulus from above was the only +pathognomonic sign of actual section, unless the position of the nerve +was such as to allow of palpation, when the presence of a bulbous end at +once settled the difficulty. In many cases of superficial tracks with +division of such nerves as the long or short saphenous, the early +development of bulbs in the course of the trunks gave positive +information, and these were often observed. + +_Traumatic neuritis._--This was a common sequence of contusion of the +nerve itself, or of its subsequent inclusion in a cicatrix or callus. It +was evidenced by hyperaesthesia both superficial and deep, pain, +contracture, wasting of the muscles, local sweating, and the development +of glossy skin. + +Examples of this condition were seen in the case of nearly every nerve +in the body. In frequency of occurrence, degree of severity, and in its +selection of individual nerves considerable variation was met with. With +regard to the two former points, personal idiosyncrasy, and degree of or +peculiarity in the nature of the injury, are the only explanations I can +suggest. Perhaps in some instances exposure to wet or cold in the early +stages of the injury was of some import. Thus, I saw several severe +cases of musculo-spiral neuritis in men who were wounded during the +trying and wet march on Bloemfontein. I did not observe that suppuration +or wound complications seemed important explanatory moments, as most of +the cases occurred in wounds that healed rapidly. + +With regard to the question of selection; the same nerves that appear +particularly liable to suffer from idiopathic inflammations, toxic +influences, or to be the seat of ascending changes (e.g. ulnar, +musculo-spiral, and external popliteal), were those most often affected +by secondary neuritis. Many of the most severe cases I saw were in the +musculo-spiral nerve. + +_Scar implication._--The signs of this most commonly commenced with +neuralgia, or painful sensations when such movements were made as to put +the cicatrix on the stretch. Although such neuralgia might not be +constant, it was often observed to be troublesome when the patients were +exposed to cold in sleeping out at night, or to extra fatigue, as in +long marches. The results in many cases stopped at this point, but the +size and wide distribution of certain nerves rendered even such slight +symptoms of importance; while in others well-marked signs of neuritis +declared themselves, such as glossy skin, pain, muscular wasting, and +paralysis. + +_Ascending neuritis._--In a few cases I observed very remarkable +instances of ascending neuritis, after comparatively slight wounds. I +will quote three of these as illustrations and make no further remarks +as to the symptoms. It will be observed that one is a case of ulnar, +both the others of external popliteal, neuritis:-- + + (108) _Ulnar nerve: secondary ascending neuritis._--Boer + wounded at Elandslaagte. Wound of hand, implicating anterior + two-thirds of third metacarpal bone. This bone, together with + the middle finger, was removed, and healing took place by + granulation slowly. + + The resulting gap allowed considerable overlapping of the + fingers, and shortening of the corresponding digit; the index + finger also became flexed as a result of destruction of the + extensor tendons. Three months later the man was still in + hospital in consequence of the tardiness with which the wound + had healed: at this time pain was noted, which became very + severe in the whole course of the ulnar nerve; superficial + hyperaesthesia and deep muscular tenderness developed, but no + wasting. Several crops of herpetic vesicles also developed over + the distribution of the radial nerve in the hand. This pain was + followed by spastic contracture, first of the ulnar fingers and + later of the wrist and elbow, which could only be straightened + by the application of considerable force. The limb was, + therefore, kept straight by the application of a splint; and + warm baths, and a blister applied over the course of the ulnar + nerve, were resorted to: under this treatment the condition + improved until the patient was well enough to be transferred as + a prisoner, and I saw him no more. + + (109) _Peroneal nerve branches._--Wounded at Colenso. _Entry_, + at the anterior margin of the fibula 5 inches above the + external malleolus; the track crossed the anterior aspect of + the leg obliquely, to its _exit_ 1 inch above the centre of the + ankle joint. Incomplete paralysis of the peronei muscles + followed, combined with progressive wasting of the whole limb, + which at the end of a month was marked, and then commenced to + improve. + + (110) In a second case the wound took a similar course in the + centre of the leg, crossing the line of the branches of the + musculo-cutaneous nerve. Motor paralysis of the peronei + followed, together with general lowering of tactile sensation + in the musculo-cutaneous area. + +_Traumatic neurosis._--In connection with the cases just quoted, mention +must be made of the fact that the functional element was often somewhat +prominent. The influence of this factor was not to be neglected in case +108; again, its presence was a feature in cases 132 and 134, of injury +to the sciatic nerve and of peripheral injury to the seventh nerve (p. +355). A remark has been made as to the occurrence of functional +paraplegia on p. 337. Again, in the case of the organs of special sense. +Case 66, of injury to the occipital lobes, showed that a mixture of +organic and functional phenomena might be a source of error, even in the +determination of the visual field in the subject of an undoubted +destructive lesion. On more than one occasion an injury was accompanied +by loss of the power of speech; thus a patient who received a slight +wound of the neck did not speak again until the application of a battery +by my colleague, Mr. H. B. Robinson. A patient was also for a short time +an inmate of No. 1 General Hospital, Wynberg, who had become deaf and +dumb as a result of the explosion of a shrapnel shell over his head. +This patient also did not recover his powers until he returned to the +mother-country. + +In many other cases of nerve concussion or contusion, the recovery of +power and sensation, or the disappearance of neuralgia or contractures, +was so sudden and rapid after prolonged continuance of the symptoms, as +to suggest a very strong functional element in their origin. The +influence of the general shock to the nervous system received by the +patients had an important bearing on these phenomena, and their interest +from a prognostic point of view was very great. + + +INJURIES TO SPECIAL NERVES + +_Cranial nerves._--It will be convenient first to make a few remarks +concerning the nerves of special sense. + +_Olfactory._--I observed temporary loss of smell on three occasions. In +two instances this accompanied transverse wounds of the bones of the +face in which the upper third of the nasal cavities was crossed; in the +third a track passing obliquely downwards from the frontal region passed +through the inner wall of the orbit, and crossed the nose at a lower +level. In view of the small area of the olfactory distribution which was +directly implicated, I was at first inclined to regard the loss of smell +as dependent on the presence of dried blood on the surface of the mucous +membrane, or on obstruction of the cavities from the same cause. Further +observation, however, appeared to show that it was due to concussion of +the branches of the olfactory nerve, since the loss of function +persisted when the cavities were manifestly clear. + +In all these cases we were confronted with the same difficulty which was +experienced both in lesions of sight and hearing, the determination as +to whether the concussion was of the branches or of the olfactory bulb. +When the symptom was the accompaniment of a fracture of the roof of the +orbit, the possibility of concussion of the olfactory lobe was manifest. +In all, again, it was difficult to say what part the accompanying +concussion of the branches of the fifth nerve took in the production of +the symptom. In all three cases mentioned the return of function was +gradual, but apparently fairly complete at the end of three weeks. In +one it was noted that at first the patient was conscious of an odour +before he was able to discriminate its actual nature; later he could +determine the latter readily. + +_Optic._--Some remarks concerning lesions of the optic nerve have +already been made under the heading of wounds of the orbit. Concussion +and contusion of the nerve both occurred, but I was unable to +differentiate between the effects of these on the nerve itself, apart +from the effects on the globe of the eye, which usually accompanied +wounds of the orbit. + +In some cases the nerve was directly divided in orbital wounds, and +either pressure on or division of the nerve in the intra-cranial portion +of its course, or as it traversed the optic foramen, was not uncommon. + +_Auditory._--Loss of hearing was also not infrequent; thus it +accompanied all three wounds of the mastoid process quoted under the +heading of the seventh nerve, also two cases of fracture of the +occipital bone near the ear quoted on p. 278. In all these instances it +was impossible to attribute the deafness to lesion of the nerve alone, +as the causative injury equally affected the internal ear, and in at +least two the bullet implicated the tympanum as well in its course. The +deafness was absolute in each case, and in none had any improvement +occurred at the end of nine months. Deafness was a symptom in a certain +number of the more severe cerebral injuries in which the course of the +bullet was not so near to the internal ear: probably some of these were +central in origin. + +I only once observed any interference with the sense of taste. + +_Remaining cranial nerves._--I have little to say regarding the _third_, +_fourth_, and _sixth_ nerves. In the case of the third nerve, ptosis was +occasionally seen in wounds of the skull involving the roof of the +orbit, but the relative parts taken by injury to nerve and laceration or +fixation of muscle respectively, were usually hard to determine. Again, +the fourth and sixth nerves may have been damaged in some of the more +extensive orbital wounds, especially those in which the globe suffered +injury, but the signs under such circumstances were difficult to +discriminate, and the injury was of slight practical importance, in view +of the major injury to the globe itself. + +_Fifth nerve._--Concussion, contusion, or laceration of the different +branches of the three divisions of the fifth nerve were common in wounds +of the head, but most frequent in fractures of the upper or lower jaws. +Localised anaesthesia was common from one or other of these causes, but +for the most part transitory in the cases of contusion or concussion. I +saw no case of entire loss of function in any one division, symptoms +being mostly confined to certain branches, as the supra-orbital, the +temporo-malar, the dental branches of the second division, the +auriculo-temporal nerve, and the lingual, dental, and mental branches of +the third division. I did not observe any cases in which modification of +the special senses accompanied these injuries beyond those mentioned in +the remarks already made on the subject of anosmia, and one case in +which some modification of the sense of taste accompanied an injury to +the floor of the mouth. It was a matter of surprise, considering the +frequency with which subsequent neuritis was met with in the nerves +generally, that trifacial neuralgia in some form was not more often met +with. I never observed any serious case. Perhaps this is one of the +fields in which a longer after-period may increase our knowledge. +Lastly, I never observed motor paralysis in the case of the third +division, although sensory symptoms in some of the branches were common, +evident proof that injuries to the trunk were rare. + +_Seventh nerve._--Facial paralysis was most commonly observed in cases +of wound of the mastoid process, apart from central cortical facial +paralyses, of which several are quoted in the chapter on injuries of the +head. All the wounds of the mastoid process were, in addition, +accompanied by absolute deafness. I am sorry to be unable to give any +details as to the electrical condition of the muscles in these cases, +but I believe that in the great majority the paralysis was mainly the +result of nerve concussion, since the perforations were clean in +character and not obviously accompanied by comminution. Pressure from +haemorrhage into the Fallopian canal may, of course, have been present, +and in some instances, particularly those in which the bullet traversed +the tympanic cavity, spicules of bone may have caused laceration. In +every case, however, all the branches were equally affected; the +paralysis was absolute, and in none did any improvement occur while the +cases were under my observation. + +The following are a few illustrative examples:-- + + (111) Boer wounded at Belmont. _Entry_, immediately above + zygoma; the bullet passed through the temporal fossa, fractured + the neck of the mandible, traversed the mastoid process, and + emerged at the lower margin of the hairy scalp, 1 inch from the + median line. Facial paralysis was complete, and there was no + improvement at the end of ten weeks. + + (112) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_, at the posterior + border of the left mastoid process, 1/2 an inch above the tip; + _exit_, through the right upper lip at the junction of the + middle and outer thirds. There was considerable haemorrhage from + the left ear. The injury was followed by complete deafness, and + facial paralysis, which showed no sign of improvement. + + There was complete anaesthesia over the area of distribution of + the third division of the fifth nerve; this improved rapidly, + and at the end of five weeks was hardly to be detected; neither + at that time could any impairment of power on the part of the + muscles of mastication be detected. No impairment of the sense + of taste was noted. + + (113) _Entry_, above the anterior extremity of the zygoma, + bullet retained. Primary haemorrhage from ear. Complete facial + paralysis and deafness. Anaesthesia over distribution of + temporal branch of temporo-malar nerve, part of supra-orbital + area, auriculo-temporal nerve, and small occipital cervical + nerve. The muscles of mastication acted well. Ecchymosis below + the right mastoid process. + + (114) Wounded at Paardeberg. 300 yards. _Entry_, at the + posterior border of the right mastoid process, 3/4 of an inch + above the tip; _exit_, the inner third of the left upper + eyelid. (Eye destroyed.) Complete right facial paralysis; deaf, + on right side cannot hear tick of watch either held close or in + contact. Purulent otitis media. + +In this place I might mention two other cases of lesion of the seventh +nerve secondary to wound of peripheral branches. In one a patient was +struck by several fragments of lead from a bullet which broke up against +a neighbouring stone. These for the most part lodged in the skin over +the left orbicularis muscle, but one also lodged in the conjunctiva and +was removed. Some ten days later the patient complained that he could +not lift the upper lid. The levator palpebrae was normal, but spasm of +the orbicularis held the eye firmly closed. The condition did not +improve, and the patient was invalided home. He recovered later. + +In another patient a bullet entered above the right zygoma and traversed +the orbits, without wounding the globes. At the time no want of power of +the muscles of the face was noted, but a year later there was evident +weakness of the whole of the muscles of the right side of the face, with +loss of symmetry. + +In the former case the functional element was strong, but in both an +ascending neuritis was probably present. + +_Tenth nerve._--The pneumogastric was implicated in many wounds of the +neck. I never observed an uncomplicated case, but laryngeal paralysis +was temporarily present in two of the cases of cervical aneurism in +which the wound crossed above the level of origin of the recurrent +laryngeal branch, while in two others the recurrent branch itself was in +close contact with the wall of the aneurism (p. 135). In all such cases +signs of concussion or contusion of the nerve would be expected, judging +from the similar results observed in the brachial nerves when the +neighbouring artery was implicated. The only obvious symptoms occurring, +however, were laryngeal paralysis and acceleration of the pulse. As the +latter symptom was often observed in the cases of arterio-venous +communication, wherever situated, and as the sympathetic nerve also lay +in close contiguity to the wound track, it was difficult to ascribe it +with certainty solely to the vagus lesion. In the two cases of high +vagus injury the laryngeal paralysis steadily improved, and at the end +of six months was apparently well; in the two others it persisted at the +end of three months and a year respectively. + +The nerve must have been very frequently damaged in wounds of the neck; +it is possible that this injury may have been an important factor in the +death of some of the patients with cervical wounds upon the field. + +_Eleventh nerve._--I append the only case of localised spinal accessory +paralysis I observed. This was one of my earliest experiences, and when +I examined the neck, in the Field hospital, I assumed from the +completeness of the sterno-mastoid and trapezius paralysis that the +nerve was severed. The patient, however, made such a rapid recovery +that it became evident that the nerve had been contused only, and that +the recovery of function was not due, as is so often the case, to +vicarious compensation by the cervical supply to the muscles. + + (115) _Entry_, immediately to the right of the fourth cervical + spinous process; _exit_, at the anterior border of the left + sterno-mastoid opposite the angle of the mandible. The left + shoulder was depressed, the head inclined to the injured side. + There was evident spinal accessory paralysis, and marked + hyperaesthesia of the whole left upper extremity, most severe in + the circumflex area. The hyperaesthesia gradually disappeared in + a few days, and was clearly due to concussion and possibly + slight contusion of the cervical nerve roots. The spinal + accessory paralysis improved, so that the patient returned to + the front at the end of a month: when I saw him some four + months later the shoulders were held quite symmetrically. + +The _twelfth nerve_ was occasionally damaged in wounds of the floor of +the mouth. I saw no case of permanent paralysis. + +_Injury to the systemic nerves._ _Cervical plexus._--Evidence of injury +to the superficial branches of the cervical plexus was not rare; thus I +saw cases of small occipital anaesthesia, and great occipital neuralgia, +but none of motor paralysis from injury to the deeper muscular branches. +I take it that the smallness of the branches, and the multiple supply +possessed by many of the muscles of the neck, would both take part in +rendering certain evidence of the injury of an individual motor nerve +rare. + +_Brachial plexus._--Injury to this plexus in the neck was common; the +main peculiarity observed was the partial nature of the damage +inflicted. + +Thus injury to a single nerve, or to a complex of two or more, was far +more common than one implicating the whole plexus. Again, while complete +paralysis might affect one set of nerves, another might simply exhibit +signs of irritation in the form of hyperaesthesia or pain. + +The wounds producing these injuries varied much in direction; thus some +crossed the neck transversely, some were obliquely transverse, while +others took a more or less vertical course. + +These same remarks hold good in the case of the nerves of the arm. In +the upper half, especially, complex injury was not rare, while in the +lower third affection of individual nerves was more common. Another +important difference must be mentioned in regard to the upper and lower +segments of the course of the brachial nerves; they are not only more +widely distributed below, but also more fixed in position, a fact +antagonistic to the escape of the nerve by displacement and liable to +expose it to more severe contusion. + +The latter point holds good in the forearm also; here, individual +injuries often occurred. + +While at work in the Field hospital alone I gained the impression that +the musculo-spiral nerve would not retain the unenviable character of +being the most vulnerable nerve of the upper extremity, since the +chances of each individual nerve seemed about equal, putting the +question of the long course of the musculo-spiral nerve against the +humerus out of question. This expectation was, however, not confirmed, +since the musculo-spiral itself, if not primarily affected, was so often +the seat of secondary mischief in fractures of the humerus. The +posterior interosseous branch seemed to exhibit a similar vulnerability +to slight injuries, to be referred to later under the external popliteal +of the lower extremity. Again, in complex injuries of the brachial +plexus, or nerve trunks, the musculo-spiral branch rarely escaped being +a member, if not individually singled out. + +Of the _thoracic nerves_ I have little to say. They must have been often +injured in the thoracic wounds, yet, as far as my experience went, +intercostal neuralgia was uncommon, or at any rate not a special +feature. One observation of interest, however, does exist; in the cases +in which the ribs were fractured by bullets travelling across them +within the thorax, pain was distinctly a prominent feature. This was no +doubt referable to the facts that in such instances the intercostal +nerves were especially liable to direct injury, and that this was often +multiple. On one occasion a crop of herpetic vesicles developed along +the course of a dorsal nerve in an injury implicating a single +intercostal space posteriorly. + +_Lumbar plexus._--Although not quite so well arranged to escape bullet +wounds as the thoracic nerves, the lumbar, by reason of their deep +position and the comparatively wide area they cover, together with the +rarity of wounds taking a sufficiently longitudinal direction to cross +the course of more than one or two branches, were also comparatively +rarely damaged. I never saw an uncomplicated case of anterior crural +paralysis, and rarely cruralgia. I think this is to be explained in two +ways: first, that the trunk course of the nerve is short; secondly, that +it lies in the inguinal fossa. The second fact is of importance, since +wounds in this region were in my experience responsible for a +considerable percentage of the deaths on the field or shortly +afterwards. Such deaths probably occurred from internal haemorrhage from +the iliac arteries, and it was in such cases that the anterior crural +nerve stood in greatest danger of injury. I also never saw a case of +localised obturator paralysis. On the other hand, anaesthesia or +hyperaesthesia in the area of distribution of the lumbar nerves in the +groin, the external cutaneous and the long saphenous in the thigh, were +not uncommon. Hyperaesthesia developed in more than one case in which +injury to the psoas had led to haemorrhage into the muscle sheath. + +_Sacral plexus._--The sacral plexus is far more liable to extensive +direct injury than either of the two preceding. Its cords are larger, +gathered up into a much smaller space, and more liable to injury, from +the fact that the slope in which they lie is more readily followed by a +bullet track. Again, the cords rest for a considerable portion of their +course on a bony bed, a particularly dangerous position in gunshot +wounds, since the nerves are not only exposed to the danger of direct +wound, or pressure from bony spicules, but also readily receive +transmitted vibrations secondary to impact of the bullet with the bone. + +None the less I had few occasions to observe extensive injuries of the +plexus. In one instance damage particularly affecting the lumbo-sacral +cord occurred, but this was complicated by signs of irritation of the +anterior crural and obturator nerves, as the result of retro-peritoneal +haemorrhage and injury to the psoas muscle. Two cases in which the +sacro-coccygeal plexus suffered isolated injury on account of their +characteristic nature as gunshot injuries will be shortly quoted: + + (116) _Sacro-coccygeal plexus._--_Entry_, at the junction of + the middle and posterior thirds of the left iliac crest; the + bullet passed obliquely downwards through the pelvis to lodge 3 + inches below the right trochanter major. Incontinence of soft + faeces persisted for five weeks, and retention of urine during + three weeks. + + This patient subsequently died on the homeward voyage, but I am + unable to say from what cause. + + (117) _Entry_, over third sacral vertebra; _exit_, 2 inches + from the median line, and 1-1/2 inch above Poupart's ligament + on the anterior abdominal wall. Incontinence, with involuntary + passage of faeces, persisted during the first twenty-four hours, + and for two days the urine had to be withdrawn with a catheter. + No further signs of nerve injury were noted. + +The same explanation of the comparative rarity of injuries to the sacral +plexus that has been already given in the case of the anterior crural +nerve holds good--viz. that in a great many of the pelvic wounds +involving the plexus early death followed from the severity of the +concurrent injuries. + +Injuries to the great sciatic nerve outside the pelvis, or to one of its +constituent elements, on the other hand, formed one of the most familiar +of the nerve lesions. The wounds giving rise to these were of the most +diverse character; some crossed the buttock in a vertical, transverse, +or oblique direction; others travelled through the thigh in +corresponding directions, while a third series involved both buttock and +thigh. + +The size of the great sciatic nerve renders complete laceration by a +bullet of small calibre a matter almost of impossibility; hence complete +division may almost be left out of consideration in the case of this +nerve. On the other hand, partial division, perforation, and severe +contusion are each and all favoured by the same factor. + +With an extended thigh the nerve is in a state of comparatively slight +tension, and this may be still lessened if the knee be flexed. This +factor, together with the density of the sheath of the nerve, favours +the possibility of displacement, and this occurrence is more likely in +the lower segment than in the upper, which is comparatively fixed in +position. + +Clinical experience appeared to illustrate the importance of these +anatomical factors, as the worst cases of sciatic injury that I saw were +in connection with wounds of the buttock or the junction of that segment +of the trunk with the thigh. + +The most striking observation with regard to the injuries of the great +sciatic nerve was the comparatively frequent escape of the popliteal +element and the severe lesion of the peroneal. This was so pronounced as +to amount to as high a proportion of peroneal symptoms as 90 per cent., +and often when the whole nerve was implicated the popliteal signs were +of the irritative, the peroneal of the paralytic type. When bullets +crossed the popliteal space, given wounds of equal severity in +corresponding degrees of contiguity to the respective nerves, the +peroneal element always suffered in greater degree. Again, the peroneal +nerve symptoms were more obstinate and prolonged, and instances of +ascending neuritis were more common than in the case of any other nerve +of the lower extremity, and the trophic wasting of muscles was more +marked. + +The peroneal nerve, therefore, acquires the same unenviable degree of +importance in the lower extremity enjoyed by the musculo-spiral in the +upper. Here, again, we are confronted with the fact that the peroneal +element of the great sciatic nerve is the more prone to idiopathic +inflammations or toxic influences, and hence we can only assume it to +possess a special vulnerability. The peroneal element is of course +somewhat the more exposed, as lying posterior; but it seems unreasonable +to assume that so large a proportion of the injuries can implicate the +posterior segment of the nerve as to make the startling difference in +the incidence of degeneration explicable. In this relation we may bear +in mind that the muscles supplied by this nerve suffer most in the +degeneration subsequent to anterior polio-myelitis, and again that in +cerebral hemiplegia or spinal-cord injuries they are the last to +recover. Unfortunately no explanation of these remarkable facts, so +forcibly impressed by the large series of cases with peroneal symptoms +seen in a short time, is forthcoming. + +I may dismiss the other branches of the sacral plexus in a few words. +The small sciatic was occasionally injured in its course in the buttock, +and the small saphenous in the leg. When either element of the latter +was injured, it was surprising how sharply the imperfections in the +anaesthesia corresponded with the composite character of the nerve. + + +CASES OF NERVE INJURY + +The following cases are added mainly to give some idea of the +comparative frequency with which the individual nerves were injured, and +also to exemplify the more common forms of complex injury met with. +Circumstances, unfortunately, did not always allow of extended +observation at the time, and I have not been very fortunate in my +attempts to obtain subsequent information on this series since my +return. A certain amount of prognostic information is, however, +furnished by some of the records, and I am very much indebted to my +colleague, Dr. Turney, for help in this matter. + + (118) _Brachial plexus._--_Entry_, 2 inches above the clavicle + at the anterior margin of the trapezius; _exit_, first + intercostal space, 1 inch from the sternal margin. Heavy dull + pain developed at once, extending down the upper extremity. A + fortnight later this pain still persisted; there was lowered + sensation in the ulnar area with formication, also lowered + sensation in the internal cutaneous area of distribution; + sensation in the lesser internal cutaneous area was normal. The + patient went home with the nerve symptoms well at the end of a + month. + + (119) _Brachial plexus injury._--Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_, at the anterior border of the sterno-mastoid opposite + the pomum Adami; _exit_, through the ninth rib below and 1/2 an + inch external to the scapular angle. Emphysema and considerable + blood extravasation developed in the posterior triangle of the + neck, also loss of power in the musculo-spiral distribution, + but no anaesthesia. At the end of the first fortnight there was + evident wasting of the muscles, but some power was returning in + the triceps. At the end of a month the man left for England, + with fair power in the triceps, but well-marked wrist-drop. A + year later the wrist-drop still persisted. + + (120) _Plexus injury._--Wound of _entry_, over pomum Adami; + _exit_, below scapular spine, about centre. Complete median and + musculo-spiral paralysis. + + (121) _Median, musculo-cutaneous, and musculo-spiral + nerves._--The wound traversed the axilla from just beneath the + anterior fold; three weeks later a firm mass in the axilla + corresponded to the wound track. Hyperaesthesia developed in the + area of median distribution, with deep pain in the muscles. + There was rigidity of the biceps cubiti and slight wasting in + the radial extensors. The patient improved slowly, and + eventually was discharged and passed out of sight. + + (122) _Brachial nerves._--Wounded at Paardeberg. Range 500 + yards. _Entry_, at the front of the arm, 2 inches below the + junction of the anterior axillary fold; _exit_, a little lower, + at the back of the arm, in the line of junction of the + posterior axillary fold. + + Considerable shock attended the primary injury; when reaction + had taken place, complete motor and sensory paralysis was noted + of the whole upper extremity, with the exception of some power + of movement of the posterior interosseous group of muscles. + Three weeks later the patient could extend the wrist, but + sensation was imperfect in the arm, and completely absent in + the forearm and hand. The track was now hard and palpable, but + there was no hyperaesthesia in any area; when the track was + manipulated slight formication in the hand was experienced. The + biceps and triceps were equally paralysed. There was no wasting + in any of the muscles. + + (123) _Brachial nerves._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_, + through the anterior axillary fold at its junction with the + arm; _exit_, on the posterior wall of the thorax, 1/2 an inch + from the median line at a level with the angle of the scapula. + Complete musculo-spiral paralysis; haemothorax. Three weeks + later, radial sensation returned; but the triceps was very + weak, and wrist-drop was complete. There was some wasting of + the muscles supplied by the median and ulnar nerves, and + complete obliteration of the radial pulse. A year later the + musculo-spiral paralysis still persisted. + + (124) _Musculo-spiral and median._--Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_, 3 inches below the anterior axillary fold, on the + inner aspect of the arm; track passed obliquely downwards + behind the humerus to a point on the outer aspect of the arm + 1-1/2 inch below the level of the entry. The humerus escaped + injury. Musculo-spiral paralysis was complete; hyperaesthesia in + the distribution of the median followed some days later. One + month subsequently radial sensation had returned, and a feeling + of numbness had taken the place of the median hyperaesthesia. + The triceps and marginal muscles were much wasted, and only + interosseous extension was possible in the fingers. + + (125) _Brachial nerves._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ and + _exit_, in the upper third of the arm internal to the humerus. + Complete median paralysis, anaesthesia in the ulnar area, and in + the radial supply to the dorsum of the middle and ring fingers. + Could flex, extend, and adduct and abduct the wrist; some power + of flexion in index finger, in others none. The flexion of the + wrist was dependent on the ulnar supply to the muscles of the + forearm. No wasting of the interossei, skin normal except for a + large trophic blister on the dorsum of the hand. Little + improvement had taken place in this patient at the end of a + year. + + (126) _Brachial nerves._--Wounded at Magersfontein. The wound + traversed the lower part of the upper third of the arm, + fracturing the humerus. Immediate complete loss of power in the + arm was experienced, together with loss of all sensation. Three + weeks later the humerus was united; the fracture was evidently + the result of passing contact, and not of direct impact. The + paralysis was still complete in the distribution of the median, + ulnar, and musculo-spiral nerves. There was considerable + wasting of the hand and forearm, and a good deal of thickening + in the lower third of the arm. + + Four months after the original injury, the nerves were explored + by Mr. Eve, who kindly gives me the following information. All + the nerves and vessels of the arm were united into one firm + bundle by cicatricial tissue. When dissected clear, the median + nerve was found to be thickened and enlarged for about 1-1/2 + inch of its length; the ulnar was not completely freed, but was + found to be continuous and indurated; the musculo-spiral was + also intact, but at its entrance into the humeral groove a mass + of callus was felt. A sclerosed and thickened portion of the + median nerve 3-1/2 inches in length was resected, also 1 inch + of sclerosed ulnar nerve, and both were sutured. The + musculo-spiral nerve was left for future exploration. A small + traumatic aneurism was found on the brachial artery, and the + vessel was ligatured above it. + + Ten months later no improvement in the median or ulnar nerves. + Electrical reaction present in musculo-spiral group of + muscles. + + (127) _Musculo-spiral._--Transverse wound through arm posterior + to humerus. Slight suppuration. Triceps weakened only, complete + paralysis of radial extensors and posterior interosseous group. + Radial sensation lowered only. + + (128) _Musculo-spiral._--_Entry_, 2 inches above and 1/2 an + inch behind the external humeral condyle; _exit_, at the inner + edge of the biceps, 1/2 an inch lower in the arm than the + entry. It is doubtful whether the paralysis was noted at first, + but a few days later complete posterior interosseous paralysis + and lowered radial sensation were remarked. No change except a + deepening of the anaesthesia, and the development of formication + on manipulation of the wound occurred, and at the end of three + weeks the nerve was exposed (Mr. Watson), and it was found that + a notch had been cut in its outer border, which had opened out + into a V shape. The margins of this notch were refreshed and + the gap closed. Ten days later radial sensation was fairly + good, but the motor symptoms remained unchanged. Nine months + later steady but very slow improvement was reported. + + (129) _Ulnar and musculo-cutaneous nerves._--_Entry_, back of + forearm; the bullet passed between the bones and was retained + at the posterior aspect of the arm. Three weeks later the hand + was glossy and stiff, the fingers extended and adducted, the + thumb was held stiffly in the palm with no power of extension. + The forearm was held semiprone, and the elbow flexed by a rigid + biceps. Six months later the same position was maintained, but + the contracture disappeared under an anaesthetic. + + (130) _Median and posterior interosseous._--_Entry_, over the + external margin of the radius at the centre of the forearm; + _exit_, at the inner margin of the olecranon 1-1/2 inch below + the tip. Lowered cutaneous sensation in median distribution, + and loss of median flexion of wrist and fingers. Complete + wrist-drop. The triceps supinator longus and extensor carpi + radialis longior were perfect. Twelve days later the wrist + could be raised into a direct line with forearm, but there was + no change in the median symptoms. A week after this the + anaesthetic median area became hyperaesthetic both as to skin and + on deep pressure over the muscles. + + (131) _Sacral plexus. Great sciatic nerve._--Wounded at Modder + River. _Entry_, in left loin; _exit_, at lower margin of + buttock. The wound was followed immediately by complete + peroneal paralysis, both motor and sensory. Fourteen days later + hyperaesthesia developed in the area of distribution of the + internal popliteal nerve, the superficial pain being greatest + in the sole; the muscles of the calf were also very tender on + manipulation. The pain increased, and at the end of twenty-four + days the patient's sufferings were so great that Mr. Thornton + cut down upon and exposed the nerve. It was found embedded in + firm cicatricial tissue close to the sciatic notch; this + compressed the nerve to such a degree that a waist was apparent + upon it. + + The nerve was freed and resumed its normal outline. For a few + days the patient was much relieved, but the neuralgia then + returned in greater intensity than ever. Morphia was injected + hypodermically, and other hypnotics employed, but with little + effect, the patient developing the hysterical condition so + common in the subjects of severe sciatica. Some five weeks + later a sudden improvement took place, the morphia was + decreased, and the patient became sufficiently well to return + to England, but there was still deep tenderness in the calf, + and well-marked hyperaesthesia of the sole. + + A year later the patient had been discharged from the Service, + but was earning his living in a shop. He walked fairly well, + but still with foot-drop, and complained of tenderness in the + sole. I am indebted to Dr. Turney for the following report on + the condition of the muscles. + + Calf muscles practically normal. In the anterior tibial and + peroneal groups the faradic irritability is much diminished, + that in the peroneus longus being the lowest of all. + Contraction can be induced in the extensor longus hallucis, + extensor longus digitorum, and peroneus brevis; but reaction is + doubtful in the case of the tibialis anticus and peroneus + longus. + + With the galvanic current contraction is sluggish, and the + irritability diminished. No serious changes are present except + in the peroneus longus. ACC > KCC at 10 M. A. + + (132) _Great sciatic._--_Entry_, at outer aspect of the thigh, + just above the centre; _exit_, at the junction of the inner and + posterior aspects of thigh, about 2 inches lower. The wound was + produced by a ricochet bullet, and beyond the perforation of + the sciatic nerve the femur was fractured obliquely (see plate + XVI.). Hyperaesthesia of the sole was noted early, and when I + saw the patient three months later, there was wasting of the + muscles of the leg, and foot-drop, although he walked with a + stick. + + These symptoms persisted, and on his return to England an + exploration was made by Sir Thomas Smith, and the two fragments + of mantle seen in the skiagram were removed from the substance + of the sciatic nerve. Eight months after the injury, the + patient still walked with foot-drop; there was modified + sensation in the musculo-cutaneous area, and a feeling as if + the bones of the foot were uncovered when he walked. The + circumference of the affected leg was more than 1 inch less + than that of the sound one. Steady but slow improvement was + taking place. + + (133) _Great sciatic_.--In a third patient with a buttock + track, the symptoms were identical with those observed in case + 131. In this an exploration showed that the nerve had been + perforated. Although the symptoms were never so severe as in + No. 131, yet recovery was very much slower and less complete, + the muscular weakness remained more marked, and the skin + exhibited more evidence of trophic lesion. Some contracture of + the knee and rigid foot-drop took place, and at the end of + twelve months the patient walked poorly with a stick. + Improvement is, however, continuing. + + (134) _Great sciatic_.--Wounded at Ladysmith. _Entry_, + immediately below left buttock fold; _exit_, at anterior aspect + of thigh, 3-1/2 inches below Poupart's ligament. The left leg + was paralysed, and patient was sent down to the Base, where he + remained two months. The wound closed by primary union, the + paralysis improved, and the man rejoined his regiment. After he + had been in camp four days, his leg gave way, and he returned + to hospital, where he contracted enteric fever. Later, he was + sent home, and eight months after the reception of the injury + his condition was as follows: + + Left lower limb somewhat wasted, a diminution of 1 inch in the + circumference of the leg and 1/2 an inch in the thigh being + found. The patient walks with foot-drop, and the flexor muscles + of the knee are weak. On examination the peroneal muscles + reacted but sluggishly to faradic irritation. There is complete + anaesthesia of the foot to above the ankle, and up to the knee + tactile sensation and appreciation of pain were dulled. The + left plantar reflex was absent, the right slight, the left + patellar reflex was abnormally brisk. There was neither ankle + nor patellar clonus, and the other reflexes were present and + normal. The gait was spastic, and the patient was more troubled + by a contraction of the calf muscles, which prevented his + putting the heel to the ground, than by the foot-drop. + + Beyond these local phenomena there was marked tremor of the + upper extremities on any exertion, and slight lateral + nystagmus. The patient was not sure that this had not been + present ever since he recovered from the enteric fever, but it + was sufficiently marked to give rise to the suspicion of the + development of disseminated sclerosis. + + The patient was a hard-headed, sensible man. He remained in the + hospital under the care of Dr. Turney, to whom I am indebted + for notes of the case, forty-six days. During this period he + was treated by faradic electricity, and, with some checks, + notably the development of passive effusion into the left + knee-joint, and a fugitive attack of redness over the dorsum of + the foot, both suggesting trophic changes, steadily improved. + The anaesthesia became limited to the outer half of the leg, at + the end of one month was limited to the dorsum of the foot + only, and at the end of six weeks entirely disappeared. + Meanwhile the tendency to drawing up of the heel by the calf + muscles became less, and the gait improved. The man left the + hospital at the end of two months, very satisfied with his + condition, although the tremor of the hands was still present + in a lessened degree. + + (135) _External popliteal._--Wounded at Magersfontein, 250-300 + yards. _Entry_, at the outer side of the thigh, 5 inches above + the lower extremity of the external condyle; _exit_, at the + inner margin of the adductors, at a level 4 inches higher in + the thigh. The track crossed behind the femur. Complete + peroneal motor paralysis and anaesthesia, except in the hinder + part of the region supplied by the mixed external saphenous. + Slight hyperaesthesia of the sole. Improving at the end of three + weeks, but paralysis still nearly complete. + + (136) _External popliteal._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_, + 5 inches below the highest part of the right iliac crest, on + outer aspect of hip; _exit_, at the posterior margin of the + gracilis, 2 inches from the perineum. Complete peroneal + paralysis followed, which rapidly improved, and on the + twenty-second day was nearly well. + + (137) _Internal popliteal. Secondary anaesthesia_.--_Shell_ + wounds of the right popliteal space. Wounded at Belmont. + Anaesthesia of the outer side of the calf, the leg and sole of + foot. No motor paralysis. As cicatrisation progressed, the + anaesthesia became more marked and was complete over the whole + of the external saphenous area. + + (138) _Internal popliteal._--Wounded at Paardeberg. 400-500 + yards. _Entry_, about the centre of the outer half of the + patella; _exit_, at the centre of the calf, about 2 inches from + the popliteal crease. Five days after the injury severe burning + pain developed in the sole. A fortnight later the pain was much + less severe, but varied in degree with the heat of the weather, + being worse when cool. At this date, however, rubbing became + comforting. + + (139) _External popliteal._---Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_, 1 inch above the upper end of the internal margin of + the patella; _exit_, at the margin of leg, just below the outer + tuberosity of the tibia. Complete peroneal paralysis followed + the injury. A month later the nerve was bared and found + slightly thickened. An improvement in cutaneous sensation + followed quickly, and a much slower improvement in the motor + power commenced. + + (140) _External popliteal nerve._--Wounded at Beacon Hill. A + _bayonet_ entered over upper quarter of fibula, and passed + between the bones of leg into the calf. An aneurismal varix of + the calf vessels developed, also incomplete peroneal paralysis. + The scar was raised from the nerve (Major Simpson, R.A.M.C.) + six weeks later, and at the end of a fortnight the power and + sensation were both much improved and the patient returned to + England. + + (141) _External popliteal._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_, + 1/2 an inch above the internal border of the patella; _exit_, + 1-1/2 inch from the head of the fibula and over that bone. The + wound was followed by peroneal paralysis. Six weeks later + sensation was still diminished in the anterior tibial and + musculo-cutaneous nerve areas, and marked foot-drop, little + improved, persisted. The patient came to England, and at the + end of twelve months is reported as very little improved. + + (142) _Anterior tibial._--_Entry_, 1 inch in front and below + the external malleolus; _exit_, at the centre of the sole, just + anterior to the bases of the metatarsal bones. Wasting and + paralysis of extensor brevis digitorum. + + (143) _Small sciatic and small saphenous._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. 200 yards. Two wounds: (i) _Entry_, below the + centre of the twelfth rib on the left side; _exit_, immediately + to the left of the buttock furrow at upper part, (ii) _Entry_, + in the right loin, midway between the last rib and iliac crest; + _exit_, just within the centre of the left buttock; the two + wounds crossed diagonally. Hyperaesthesia in area of + distribution of small saphenous and small sciatic nerves, which + rapidly improved. + + (144) _Lumbar plexus._--Boer, wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_, eleventh interspace, posterior axillary line; _exit_, + tenth interspace, right mid-axillary line. Impaired sensation + in area of distribution of external cutaneous and crural branch + of genito-crural nerves. At the end of a fortnight anaesthesia + was less apparent, but a feeling of numbness persisted, which + soon disappeared. + +_Prognosis and treatment._--In considering the prognosis in cases of +nerve injury, several of the points already raised as to the nature of +the lesion are of importance. Short of actual section, it may be broadly +stated that no lesion is too serious to render ultimate recovery +impossible. + +In cases in which the injury has been produced by a bullet fired at a +short range, or in which contact with the nerve has been close, the +return of functional activity is very slow. In such instances the +condition probably resembles that in which a divided nerve has been +sutured, with the additional disadvantage that a considerable portion of +the nerve, both above and below the point actually struck, has been +destroyed as far as the conduction of nervous impulses is concerned. +This may reasonably be concluded in the light of the evidence offered by +the injuries of the spinal cord, in which several segments usually +suffered if the velocity of the bullet was great, and also if the fact +is remembered that, when thickening takes place, a considerable length +of the nerve is usually implicated. + +Recovery is notably slow in the case of certain nerves, _e.g._ +musculo-spiral and peroneal, even when the injury has not been of +extreme severity. Again, these same nerves are apparently more seriously +affected by moderate degrees of damage than are others. + +As favourable prognostic elements we may bear in mind: low velocity on +the part of the travelling bullet, and with this a lesser degree of +contiguity of the track to the nerve. The early return of sensation is a +favourable sign, and in this relation the development of hyperaesthesia, +whether preceded by anaesthesia or no, points to the maintenance of +continuity of, and a moderate degree of damage to, the nerve. The early +return of sensation, even if modified in acuteness, was always a very +hopeful sign; also the production of formication in the area of +distribution of the nerve on manipulation of the injured spot. As in the +case of nerve injuries of every nature, the disposition and temperament +of the patient exerted considerable influence on the course of the +cases. + +Complete section of the nerves in these bullet wounds only obtained +special importance in two ways: first, in that a considerable portion of +the trunk might be shot away in oblique tracks, and, secondly, in that +very severe contusion might affect the nerve for a considerable +distance beyond the point actually implicated. In point of fact, +complete section when treated by suture was often more rapidly recovered +from than an injury in which only a portion of the width of a trunk was +divided. This was no doubt to be explained on the theory that the +contiguous portion of the nerve suffered less when tension and +resistance were lessened by complete severance of the cord. + +_The treatment_ of slight nerve contusion was simple; rest alone was +necessary, and in the course of hours or days paralysis was recovered +from. The symptoms were most troublesome in patients of a neurotic +temperament, or those who had suffered from severe systemic shock. + +In severe concussions and contusions the first care had to be devoted to +the discrimination of the lesion from that of division. A period of rest +then needed to be followed by one of massage and movement, to maintain +the nutrition of the muscles. In a considerable portion of the cases a +stage of neuritis had to be expected. In all cases, either of severe +concussion, contusion, or complete section, accompanied by the fracture +of a bone, especial care was necessary that the bandaging and fixation +of the limb were not sufficiently tight to add the dangers of muscular +ischaemia to those of the nerve injury already present. + +Neuritis, whether dependent on local injury, implication in the scar, +pressure from callus, or of the ascending variety, needed the same +treatment: rest, preservation of the limb from cold or damp, and the +local application of anodynes, as belladonna, or hot laudanum +fomentations. In some cases a general anodyne, as morphia, was +preferable; then always to be used with caution, as the patients soon +craved inordinately for it, and were unwilling to give it up. Later, +local blisters in the line of the nerve trunk, careful massage and +exercise when muscular and cutaneous tenderness had subsided, the +application of the continuous current to the nerves, and perhaps +faradisation of the muscles, were all useful. + +Splints were often temporarily required to resist contracture, or the +assumption of false positions; in either case they needed to be +frequently removed, and movement &c. made, in order to avoid any chance +of troublesome stiffness. + +_Operative treatment._--Early interference was only warranted by +positive knowledge that some source of irritation or pressure could be +removed; thus a bone spicule, or a bullet, or part of one, particularly +portions of mantles. + +In case of contusion the expiration of three months is the earliest date +at which any operation should be taken into consideration, and +interference is only then advisable if there is good prospect of freeing +the nerve from compressing adhesions. The two strongest indications for +operation are (1) signs pointing to the secondary implication of the +nerve in a cicatrix, especially when these are of such a nature as to +indicate local tension, fixation, or pressure; (2) the possibility of +the irritation being the result of the presence of some foreign body, +such as a bone spicule, or portions of a bullet mantle; in such cases +the X rays will often give useful help. + +With regard to the early exploration of cases of traumatic neuralgia, it +may be pointed out that when this was undertaken the results were as a +rule very temporary. In many cases in which the measure was resorted to, +either no macroscopic evidence of injury to the nerve was discovered, or +a bulbous thickening was met with of such extent as to make excision +inadvisable, even if it were considered otherwise the most suitable +treatment. + +Even when complete section of the nerve was assured by the absence of +any power of reaction to stimulation by electricity from above on the +part of the muscles, operation was better not undertaken until +cicatrisation had reached a certain stage. If done earlier than at the +end of three weeks, the sutured spot became implicated in a hard +cicatrix, and any advantage to be obtained by early interference was +lost. When partial division of a trunk was determined, the same date was +the most favourable one for exploration, the gap in the nerve being +freshened and closed by suture. There is little doubt, however, that in +some cases such injuries were recovered from spontaneously. + +In view of the uniformly bad results observed in the case of the seventh +nerve, I am inclined to think that the above rules might be tentatively +relaxed, and the nerve primarily explored by an operation resembling +that for mastoid suppuration. It is of course doubtful whether the +trouble does not generally result from the vibratory concussion alone; +but as this is not certain, and the operation would only have to be +performed on patients already permanently deaf, it might be worth while +at any rate opening the Fallopian canal with the object of relieving +tension. It is not probable that in any of the cases quoted much +splintering of the bone had occurred, as the wounds appeared to be of +the nature of pure perforations. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +INJURIES TO THE CHEST + + +In regard to Prognosis wounds of the chest furnished the most hopeful +class of the whole series of trunk or visceral injuries. Cases of wound +of the heart and great vessels afforded the only exceptions to an almost +universally favourable course, both as regards life and the +non-occurrence of serious after-effects. + +This was mainly explicable on two grounds: first, the sharply localised +character of the lesion produced by the bullet of small calibre; and, +secondly, the fact that the lung, the most frequently injured organ, is +not materially affected by the grade of velocity with which the bullet +strikes. In point of fact, wounds of this organ probably afford an +instance in which high grades of velocity are distinctly favourable to +the nature of the injury, and this is possibly true in the case of +wounds of the chest-wall also. + +The significance of the calibre of the bullet in wounds of the chest is +evident. The late Mr. Archibald Forbes, in one of his letters from the +seat of the Franco-German war, remarked that in crossing a battlefield +it was easy to recognise the patients who had suffered a wound of the +lung from the fact that the whistle of the air entering and leaving the +chest was plainly audible. This was, indeed, not uncommonly the case in +wounds produced by the older bullets of large calibre, but with the +employment of the smaller projectile it has become an experience of the +past. Some evidence as to the comparative severity of wounds produced by +the larger forms of bullet was, moreover, afforded by the present +campaign, since Martini-Henry wounds were occasionally met with. Of some +instances observed by myself, in one, external haemorrhage was a +prominent symptom; in another, a piece of lung was prolapsed from a +wound in the back, and twice I observed pneumothorax, an uncommon +sequela to wounds from bullets of small calibre. + +It may be remarked, however, that all these more serious injuries were +recovered from, also that when we consider that the patients were +comparatively young and healthy subjects, the favourable prognosis was +what might have reasonably been expected. When, as occasionally +happened, a patient of more mature years, with enlarged facial +capillaries, received a wound of the lung, the course was in no way so +favourable as that witnessed in the case of the younger men. + +In support of this opinion I may add that wounds from shrapnel and +fragments of shell also did remarkably well, although they sometimes +gave rise to more troublesome symptoms than did wounds produced by +bullets of the Mauser type. Again, these injuries as a whole were of +nothing like so serious a nature as the lacerations of the lung produced +by fractured ribs, which we commonly have to treat in civil practice, +and are not accustomed to regard as especially dangerous. + +It is also a striking fact that the most common and troublesome +complication of wounds of the chest, haemothorax, was usually the result +of the wound of the chest-wall and not of the lung. I preface these +remarks to the detailed account of the thoracic injuries, because I +think the favourable course usually taken by patients with wounds of the +lung has been accorded somewhat greater prominence than the +circumstances warranted. + +_Non-penetrating wounds of the chest-wall._--Surface wounds were not +very common, and were chiefly of interest in so far as they illustrated +the very superficial course that may be occasionally taken by a bullet +without breach of the integument, and as sometimes affording opportunity +for the exercise of diagnostic skill when the track traversed the +axilla. + +The most common situation for tracks taking a long course on the surface +of the thoracic skeleton was the back. Such wounds were usually received +while the patients were prone on the ground; thus I might instance a +case in which the bullet entered the posterior aspect of the shoulder 3 +inches above the spine of the scapula, passed downwards, pierced that +process, and emerged 2 inches below the inferior angle of the bone. +Wounds of a similar nature coursing in transverse and oblique +directions, and not implicating bone, were also seen. Those implicating +the vertebrae have been already dealt with. The scapular region was also +a favourite one for the lodgment of retained bullets, some resting in +the supra- and infra-spinatus muscles, others lying beneath the bone +itself. + +On the anterior aspect of the chest, bullets coming from the front +sometimes traversed and fractured the clavicle, and then took a short +course downwards, emerging over the ribs or sternum. Figure 81 +represents a particularly long track in this region. In other cases the +precordial region was crossed, but I never witnessed any serious effect +on the heart's action in any such injury at the time the patients came +under my notice. + +Wounds received with the arm outstretched and traversing the axilla +sometimes gave considerable trouble in excluding with certainty a +perforation of the thoracic cavity. Thus a bullet entered below the +centre of the right clavicle and emerged 2-1/2 inches below, above the +angle of the scapula, at its axillary margin. The arm was outstretched +at the moment of the reception of the injury; but when the wound was +viewed with the limb placed alongside the trunk, it seemed almost +impossible that the chest cavity could have escaped. In some cases of +this kind the difficulty was at once cleared up by noting evidence of +injury to the axillary nerves. + +A word will suffice as to the treatment of these wounds. The only +special indication was to keep the scapula at rest for a sufficient +period. I have dealt with the anatomy of them at such length only +because in their extreme form they are so highly characteristic of the +nature of the injuries which may be produced by bullets of small +calibre. + +_Penetrating wounds of the chest._--Tracks crossing the thoracic cavity +in every direction were common. When the erect attitude was maintained, +frontal and sagittal wounds, pure or oblique, were received; when the +prone position was assumed, longitudinal tracks, either purely or +obliquely vertical, were the rule. Experience of wounds of the latter +class was extensive in the present campaign, from the fact that so many +of the advances were made in prone or crawling attitudes. The vertical +and transverse tracks each possessed the special characteristic of +frequently implicating both the thoracic and abdominal cavities, but the +vertical were often prolonged into the neck, or even downwards through +the pelvis. The vertical wounds in addition sometimes exhibited one very +important feature, the fracture of several ribs from within, often at a +very considerable distance from the aperture of either entry or exit. + +[Illustration: FIG. 81.--Superficial Track in anterior Wall of Trunk] + +_Characters of the apertures of entry and exit._--As has already been +mentioned, the chest-wall was one of the situations in which the +aperture of entry was often large, and the oval form due to obliquity of +impact on the part of the bullet was particularly well marked. The exit +wounds were often smaller than those of entry, especially if the bullet +emerged by an intercostal space; even when the ribs were comminuted, the +fragments were, as a rule, too small to occasion more than a slightly +enlarged and irregular aperture. Taken as a class, however, and putting +aside explosive exit wounds, wounds of the chest afforded more numerous +examples of irregular outline and variation in size than were met with +in any other region of the body. + +When the tracks penetrated the broad upper intercostal spaces, an +interesting feature, due to the tense and rigid nature of the muscles +closing the intervals, and their large admixture of fibrous tissue, was +sometimes noticed. The bullet, especially if passing obliquely, was apt +to cut a slit in the muscles far exceeding in size the opening in the +overlying integument, with the result of leaving a palpable subcutaneous +defect. Under these circumstances the yielding spot was often noticed to +rise and fall with the movements of respiration, external palpation met +with an absence of normal resistance, and there was impulse on coughing. + +_Fractures of the ribs._--These injuries were produced in either +transverse or longitudinal coursing tracks, their special feature being +a sharp localisation of the lesion of the bone. + +In tracks crossing the chest transversely the injury to the ribs might +consist in notching, perforation, or complete solution of continuity, +sometimes with fine comminution. In the incomplete injuries some +importance attached to the localisation of the lesion to the upper or +lower border of the rib, in so far as the intercostal artery was +concerned. Comminution at the wound of entry was, as a rule, not so +extensive as at the aperture of exit, and in any case was less apparent, +since the fragments were driven inward. The wider comminution at the +exit aperture depends on the lesser degree of support afforded by the +thoracic coverings to the convex outer surface of the rib, and on the +fact that the velocity of the bullet has been lowered by its passage +through the opposite rib and the chest cavity. + +The splinters of comminuted ribs are small, and wide-reaching fissures +rare. These characters depend on the elastic nature of the resistance +offered by the curved rib to the passage of the bullet, which is +calculated to preserve the bone from the full force of impact, except at +the point actually impinged upon. + +Fractures of the ribs, produced from within by bullets taking a +longitudinal course through the thorax, were still more special in +character. They were also more important, as giving rise to troublesome +symptoms. + +In these, again, the degree of injury to the bones varied considerably. +In some cases the bones were merely grooved internally, without any +external deformity; in other cases a sort of green-stick fracture was +produced, accompanied by the projection of a tender salient angle +externally; in others complete solution of continuity was effected. + +Another feature of importance was the occasional implication of several +ribs. In this case the symptoms accompanying the injury were very much +more like those observed in the corresponding injuries resulting from +indirect violence seen in civil practice. + +Injuries to the _costal cartilages_ closely resembled those to the ribs. +Perforation, bending from injury to the inner aspect, and comminution +were observed. The latter condition differed from the similar one seen +in the case of the ribs only in so far as the tougher consistence of the +cartilage did not lend itself to such free comminution, and the +splinters remained in great part attached. The nature of the fractures, +in fact, somewhat resembled that seen on breaking a piece of cane. + +I saw no fracture of the _sternum_ except of the nature of a pure +perforation; these were not uncommon in the hospitals, either in the +upper or the extreme lower portions of the bone. Fractures in other +portions were no doubt usually associated with fatal injuries to the +heart. The openings were usually so small as to be difficult of +palpation, and I never had the opportunity of examining one _post +mortem_. + +Perforations of the body of the _scapula_ were common, but they were of +little importance in symptoms or prognosis. + +_Symptoms of fracture of the ribs._--Fractures accompanying transverse +wounds of the chest were characterised by the insignificance of the +symptoms produced. Every common sign of fracture of the rib was in fact +absent. Neither pain, stitch on inspiration, nor crepitus, either +audible or palpable, was, as a rule, present. This absence of signs was +accounted for by the nature of the lesion: thus in perforations or +notchings there was no loss of continuity, while in the freely +comminuted fractures the loss of continuity was so absolute as to allow +no possibility of the main fragments rubbing together. Again, part of +the symptoms attending these injuries, as seen in civil practice, +depends upon contusion and laceration of the surrounding structures--a +condition precluded by the localised nature of the application of the +violence by a bullet of small calibre. In order to establish a +diagnosis, therefore, we were in many cases reduced to palpation, and +occasionally to direct examination of the wound. + +Fractures accompanying longitudinal tracks formed a class rather apart +in the matter of symptoms. In these mere groovings might also be +accompanied by no signs, or at the most by slight local pain and +tenderness. When, however, the grooving was sufficiently deep to be +accompanied by deformity, or a complete solution of continuity was +effected, the signs were often severe. The tender salient angle, or, in +the absence of this, a highly tender localised spot, often pointed to +the less severe injuries, and when the fractures were complete or +multiple, pain was a very prominent symptom, both constant and in the +form of inspiratory stitch. The severity of the pain was probably to be +in part ascribed to implication of the intercostal nerves, which in +these injuries was direct and often multiple. Again, severe contusion or +actual laceration of the nerves, with resulting anaesthesia, was less +common than when the bullet directly implicated the nerves in transverse +wounds. Free comminution and absolute solution of continuity were also +less common than in the fractures accompanying transverse wounds; hence +pain from rubbing of the fragments on inspiratory movement or palpation +was more common, and crepitus, either on auscultation or palpation, was +more often met with. Patients with this class of fracture often suffered +greatly from painful dyspnoea, and were unable to assume the supine +position. + +_External haemorrhage_ of severity was rare from these thoracic wounds; +in many cases it did not amount to more than local staining of the +shirt; altogether I saw only one or two cases where any serious bleeding +occurred. Internal haemorrhage into the pleura, in consequence of the +position of the intercostal arteries, was common, and often abundant; +this will be treated of under the heading of haemothorax. + +_Treatment of fractured ribs._--Transverse wounds of the thorax, with no +symptoms of fractured ribs, needed to be dealt with as wounds of the +soft parts alone. + +In multiple fractures accompanying longitudinal tracks, bandaging or +strapping for the purpose of fixation was necessary to relieve pain. A +few fragments of bone sometimes needed primary removal, and occasionally +small sequestra were removed at a later date; but necrosis was rare, +unless some complication led to the development of a fistula. + +Retained bullets were occasionally met with in the chest wall. In such +cases the last remaining energy of the bullet often seemed to have been +spent in diving under the margin of a rib and turning longitudinally up +or down. Removal was sometimes necessary, either from the prominence +produced, the presence of pain, or the continuance of suppuration. Some +of the specimens removed offered interesting evidence of the capacity of +the ribs to withstand considerable violence from a bullet. These were +slightly bent, and marked by a half-spiral groove. I saw such bullets +removed from the thoracic and the abdominal wall, and the evidence +seemed rather against the groove having been produced prior to their +entrance into the body. + +[Illustration: FIG. 82.--Spirally grooved Mauser Bullet] + +_Wounds of the diaphragm._--Perforations of the diaphragm were very +frequent, and as a rule of small significance. When, however, the course +taken by the bullet was parallel with that of the slope of the +diaphragm, a more or less extensive slit was the result. I saw such a +wound still gaping, and 2 inches in length, in the body of a patient +who died three weeks after the infliction of a fatal abdominal injury. + +In several other obliquely transverse thoracic wounds there was reason +to assume the existence of similar slits. Certain signs were more or +less constant under these circumstances. These consisted in shallow +respiration, often accompanied by a groan or the slightest degree of +hiccough on inspiration, and considerable increase in respiratory +frequency. In one patient the respirations were at first 48, only +dropping to 36 some seventy hours after the reception of the injury. In +some of the cases in which the abdominal cavity was implicated, wound to +the diaphragm seemed a more likely explanation of early, frequent, and +painful vomiting than did visceral injury. The possibility of the later +development of diaphragmatic herniae in some of these patients will have +to be borne in mind in the future. + +_Visceral injuries._--The frequent escape of the thoracic viscera from +injury, putting aside the lungs which fill so great a part of the +cavity, was very remarkable. I never saw a case in which I could assume +injury to any of the posterior mediastinal viscera, although such may +have occurred on the field of battle. An injury to the oesophagus, for +instance, would almost of necessity be accompanied by wound of either +one of the large vessels, even the thoracic aorta, or the spinal column. +I was somewhat surprised, however, to learn on enquiry from surgeons who +had seen a large number of the dead and dying on the field, that +thoracic wounds, putting aside those that directly implicated the heart, +were responsible for but a small proportion of the fatalities. + +The escape of the posterior mediastinal viscera, the great vessels, and +the heart, is, I believe, to be explained by the fact that all are +supported and held in position by the loose meshed mediastinal tissue, +which allows for their displacement after the manner observed in the +case of the vessels and nerves lying in the loose tissue of the great +vascular clefts. + +_Wounds of the heart._--Perforating wounds of the heart were probably +fatal in all instances, in spite of the fact that, in some patients who +survived, the position of wound apertures on the surface of the body +made it difficult to believe that the heart had not been penetrated. +(See cases below.) + +In the case of this organ, we must bear in mind its constant variations +in bulk, its elastic compressibility, and its variations in position in +systole and diastole. The variations in bulk and position would be +capable of explaining the escape of the organ from injury at some +particular moment, when a second shot apparently through the same wound +track might implicate it. Beyond this, reasoning from the case of +analogous hollow viscera, as the arteries or the intestine, a bullet +might readily score the surface of the heart without perforating its +cavity. + +Such accidents were observed. Thus, in a case examined by Mr. Cheatle, +the patient died of suppurative pericarditis, secondary to a wound of +which the external apertures had closed. In this patient both auricle +and ventricle were scored externally by the passage of the bullet. + +I am, however, disinclined to allow that many patients survived direct +blows on the heart, since I believe that in the majority if not in all +cardiac wounds the actual cause of death was not haemorrhage, but sudden +stoppage of the heart's action. This is to be inferred from the fact +that severe external haemorrhage did not occur; in some cases the shirt +was hardly stained, and in all death occurred in the course of a very +few minutes. Again, in none of the patients whom I saw who had received +possible wounds of the heart-wall were there evident signs of +haemo-pericardium. In view of the difficulty of detecting this condition +from physical signs, this argument is naturally not of great weight, but +must be allowed. + +One or two death scenes from cardiac wound were described to me. In one +the patient muttered 'They have got me this time,' and died quietly; in +a second the patient's face became ghastly pale, he lay on his back with +the knees flexed, clutching the ground, gasping for breath, and died +only after some minutes of evident great agony. The absence of any +_post-mortem_ details as to the condition of the heart in these injuries +is much to be regretted. + + (145) _Entry_, in the seventh left intercostal space, in the + posterior axillary line; _exit_, immediately below the ninth + costal cartilage, close to the position of the gall bladder. + + This track in all probability involved the diaphragm twice, + both lungs and pleurae, and passed immediately beneath the + heart. The liver was also perforated, but the spleen and + stomach probably escaped as far as could be judged from the + symptoms. The patient afterwards developed a pneumo-haemo-thorax + on the right side. The immediate symptoms were great distress + in breathing and rapid irregular pulse. The difficulty in + respiration was probably in part accounted for by the injuries + to the lung and diaphragm. The pulse remained from 112 to 120 + for three days, at first soft and hardly perceptible, later + very irregular, and dropping one every fifth or sixth beat; and + it seemed fair to attribute this to the shock to the nervous + mechanism of the heart. The patient recovered from the chest + injury. + + In some other patients in whom the track passed close below the + heart a disturbance of the pulse rate was noted, but this was + in some cases a slowing, not below 48, in others quickening to + 100, with irregularity both in force and beat. + + (146) _Entry_, in the fourth right interspace, 3 inches from + the middle line; _exit_, in the seventh left interspace, in the + mid-axillary line. This wound was received at a distance of + 500-600 yards, but the bullet penetrated both sides of a stout + silver cigarette case and some cigarettes before entering the + body. There were minor signs of pulmonary injury, 'coughing day + and night,' and slight discoloration of the sputum on three or + four occasions. The respirations were quickened to 32, and as + much as ten days after the injury the pulse only beat 48 to the + minute; it then rose to 56, but beat in a very deliberate + manner. + +In other cases the signs were almost nil. + + (147) _Entry_, in the fourth right intercostal space 3/4 of an + inch from the sternum; _exit_, in the sixth left interspace in + the posterior axillary line. This patient had no symptoms, + beyond quickening of the pulse to 100, and a 'feeling of + tightness at the heart.' He shortly returned to active duty. + + (148) _Entry_, situated in the third right interspace 3 inches + from the sternal margin; _exit_, in the fourth left space 2-3/4 + inches from the sternal margin. In this case the bullet without + doubt passed through the anterior mediastinum, and slight + injury to the lung was evidenced by transient haemoptysis. + +Some remarks regarding wounds of the thoracic vessels have already been +made in Chapter IV., where instances of injury to the innominate and +left subclavian arteries are recounted. The escape of the large trunks +was generally quite as astonishing as in other parts of the body, +especially in the superior mediastinum. + + (149) _Entry_, over the first right intercostal space beneath + the centre of the clavicle; _exit_, at left anterior axillary + fold. The great vessels must have been crossed here in + immediate contact, and considerable haemorrhage from the wound + of entry caused great anxiety; this ceased spontaneously, + however, and, beyond transient haemoptysis and a right + pneumo-thorax, no further trouble occurred. + + (150) _Entry_, in the ninth interspace, just anterior to the + anterior axillary line; _exit_, through the right half of the + sternum, 1/2 an inch below the upper border. No primary + haemorrhage of importance followed, but I believe this patient + subsequently died. The wound was received at a range of within + fifty yards. + +_Wounds of the lungs._--Numerically, pulmonary wounds formed the most +important series of visceral injuries met with in the thorax, the +frequency of incidence corresponding with the proportionate sectional +area occupied by the organs. Although these injuries did well, and +needed little interference on the part of the surgeon, many points of +interest were raised by them. + +Thus the comparative importance of the wound in the chest-wall to that +in the lung itself, was scarcely what, without actual experience, would +have been expected, the former proving so very much the more important +element of the two. + +The question of velocity on the part of the bullet took a very secondary +position in these injuries. I saw a number of cases in which the +patients estimated the range at which they received their wounds as from +30 to 50 yards, and although some of the wounds were of a severe type, +the increased gravity depended rather on the injury to the chest-wall +than to that of the lung. If the bullet passed by the intercostal space, +avoiding the rib, I very much doubt if the relative velocity was of any +importance, further than from the fact that a sufficiently low degree to +allow of lodgment of the bullet was distinctly unfavourable. + +In view of the general lack of significance in these injuries it was +interesting to note how very definite was the ill effect of early +transport on the after course. This depended on the frequent development +of parietal haemothorax in patients who were not kept absolutely at rest. + +The tracks produced in the lungs by the bullets were very minute, and in +the few cases in which opportunity arose for their examination _post +mortem_ some little time after the infliction of the wound, there was +great difficulty in localising them. The slight damage incurred by the +pulmonary tissue is due to its elasticity and non-resistent character. + +Pulmonary haemothorax was distinctly rare. Reasoning from the analogous +wounds of the liver, tracks scoring the surface of these organs might be +much more to be feared than clean perforations. The elasticity of the +lung tissue, however, must make such lesions rare. In point of fact, +there is no reason why a perforation by a bullet of small calibre should +be much more feared than a puncture from an exploring trocar, and the +danger of the two wounds is probably very nearly the same. + +The only points of importance as to the particular region of the lung +traversed were the distance from the periphery as affecting the probable +size of the vessels injured, and perhaps the implication of the base or +apex of the organ respectively. I am under the impression that wounds in +the apical region were somewhat more liable to be followed by the +development of pneumothorax, and possibly haemothorax, while wounds at +the base gained their chief importance from the frequency of concurrent +injury to the abdominal viscera. I had no experience of the immediate +results of wound of the great vessels at the root of the lung, but +assume that they led to speedy death. + +_Symptoms of wound of the lung._--I shall describe the whole complex +usually observed, although it is obvious that the wound of the +chest-wall is responsible for a large proportion of the signs. + +The majority of these injuries were accompanied by a certain degree of +systemic shock, and this was more marked in wounds received at a short +range. The shock was, however, rather to be attributed to the injury to +the chest-wall and thoracic concussion than to that to the lung itself. +I think it may also be stated that few patients were inclined to walk +or remain in the erect position after receiving these wounds; this +feature was also noted in horses in whom a bullet passed through the +lungs. + +The remarks made as to the pain accompanying fractures of the ribs apply +equally here. Pain was not a prominent symptom, except in so far as the +actual impact caused temporary suffering. It was striking how often +patients who received wounds through the arm prior to the same bullet +traversing the chest appreciated the chest wound only, yet the chest +might pass unnoticed when a still more sensitive part was struck later, +as has been already mentioned in the section on wounds in general. + +Dyspnoea was not a prominent primary symptom. The patients sometimes +had 'all the wind knocked out of them' at the moment of impact, but when +seen at the Field hospitals a short time later, the respirations were +shallow, but easy and regular, and only moderately quickened; thus 24 +was a not uncommon rate. Naturally if accumulation of blood in the +pleura began early and continued, these remarks do not hold good; and +again in some older men of full-blooded type and the subjects of +recurrent attacks of bronchitis, a considerable degree of pain, +dyspnoea, and even cyanosis was sometimes present soon after the +injury. The complication of wound of the diaphragm has already been +referred to in this relation. + +Local respiratory immobility of the thoracic parietes and consequent +asymmetry of movement were constant. This was especially a marked +feature when the upper part of the chest was implicated on one side +only. It rather corresponded, however, to the local shock observed in +wounds of the limbs than to the instinctive immobility accompanying +fractures of the ribs; since, as already explained, small-calibre bullet +wounds of the ribs are not necessarily painful on movement, and the sign +existed even when the bullet had passed by an intercostal space. This +sign was naturally a transitory one. + +Haemoptysis was a fairly constant sign, but sometimes quite absent when +no doubt could exist as to the perforation of the lung. As a rule, a +considerable quantity of blood might be coughed up shortly after the +injury; but I never knew this to be sufficient in amount to give rise +to any misgivings as to danger from the haemorrhage. After the first +evacuation of blood from the wounded lung, the sign varied much; in the +majority of instances the patients continued to expectorate small +quantities of blood mixed with mucus, for some three or four days, the +blood gradually assuming a coagulated condition. Sometimes only the +primary haemoptysis was noted, and still more rarely the expectoration of +clots was continued for a week, or even longer. This probably depended +partly on personal idiosyncrasy, partly on the size of the vessels which +had been implicated in the track. + +Cough was not commonly the troublesome symptom noted in the contused +wounds of the lung seen in civil practice accompanying fracture of the +ribs. Moist sounds were usually audible on auscultation, but in many +cases over a very limited area and only on the first few days. + +Cellular emphysema was distinctly rare, and usually limited in extent: +thus I saw it in the posterior triangle of the neck alone in an apical +wound; over about a third of the upper part of the thorax in another +wound through the second intercostal space, and in this case oddly +enough the emphysema was the only sign of injury to the lung; and very +occasionally widely distributed--in the latter case there were also +usually multiple fractures of the ribs. Neither issue of air from the +external wound nor frothy blood was ever seen with small-calibre wounds, +but I saw one instance in a case of Martini-Henry wound. + +_Pneumothorax_ was also rare. I saw pneumothorax three times out of +about half a dozen Martini-Henry wounds, but I do not think it occurred +as often in 100 small-calibre wounds. The Martini-Henry wounds all +recovered; but convalescence was very prolonged, and the same remark to +a less degree holds good in the small-calibre cases. + +That the slow recovery in cases of pneumothorax in the Martini-Henry +wounds was due mainly to the size of the opening in the thoracic +parietes was, I think, proved by the fact that in the small-calibre +bullet wounds, followed by the development of pneumothorax, the external +wounds were usually large and irregular in type; also, that in the only +pneumothorax which I saw produced during an extraction operation, the +air was very rapidly absorbed. In the latter case, however, there was +little reason to conclude that wound of the lung had occurred primarily, +and certainly no opening existed at the time the thorax was incised. + +_Haemothorax._--This was the most frequent and also the most interesting +of the complications of wound of the chest. In 90 per cent. or more of +the cases, the haemorrhage was of parietal source, and due either to +direct injury to the intercostal vessels by the bullet or to laceration +by spicules of comminuted ribs. For this reason, the passage of the +bullet whether by an intercostal space, or through a rib, provided the +wound was not at the posterior part of the space where the artery +crosses, was a point of considerable prognostic importance. Exclusion of +the lung as the source of haemorrhage was, I think, amply justified by +the absence of continuous recurrent or progressive haemoptysis in the +majority of the cases, and by the very small trace of injury found in +the lungs of patients who died some weeks after the injury. In such it +was difficult to discriminate the tracks at all. I only happened to see +one case where free haemoptysis, during the course of development of a +haemothorax, pointed to the lung as the source of the blood. + +Haemorrhage into the pleural cavity occurred in some degree in a very +large proportion of the chest wounds, but it was especially interesting +to note how greatly its extent was influenced by the amount of transport +to which the patients were subjected in the early stages after the +injury. During the early part of the campaign, on the western side, I +saw a large number of chest wounds, and had I been asked my opinion as +to the relative frequency of occurrence of haemothorax I should have +placed it at about 30 per cent. The patients in these early battles +needed little wagon transport, and when sent down to the Base travelled +in comfortable ambulance trains. After the commencement of the march +from Modder River to Bloemfontein, however, these conditions were +changed, and all the chest as other cases were exposed to the necessity +of three days and nights' journey to the Stationary hospitals and +afterwards to the long journey to Cape Town. Of these patients, at +least 90 per cent. suffered with haemothorax of varying degrees of +severity. + +In some cases, the least common, signs of considerable intra-pleural +haemorrhage immediately followed the wound; in others, the accumulation +of blood was gradual, and only manifest in any degree at the end of +three or four days, when it became stationary if the patient was kept at +rest. In a second series the haemorrhage was of the recurrent variety; +these cases differing little in character from those of slight +continuous haemorrhage. In a third, the bleeding was definitely of a +secondary character, corresponding with one of the classes of secondary +haemorrhage described in Chapter IV., and occurring on the eighth or +tenth day from giving way of an imperfectly closed wounded vessel. In +either of the two latter classes the development of the haemothorax often +corresponded with a journey, or with allowing the patient to get up. + +The general course of these effusions was towards spontaneous absorption +and recovery. Coagulation of the blood took place early, the fluid serum +separated, and tended to undergo absorption with some rapidity, leaving +a small amount of coagulum at the base, which evidenced its presence for +many weeks by a persistence of a certain degree of dulness on +percussion. Early coagulation, I think, accounted for the usual absence +of gravitation ecchymosis as a sign. + +The course to recovery was sometimes broken by signs of slight pleuritic +inflammation, which, as affecting the amount of effusion, will be spoken +of under the heading of symptoms. In some cases the amount of blood was +so great as to necessitate means being taken for its removal; in these a +reaccumulation often took place. Occasionally an empyema followed in +cases thus treated. + +The nature of the blood evacuated on tapping varied much. In very early +aspirations unchanged blood was often met with, but clot sometimes made +evacuation difficult and necessitated a second puncture. In the tappings +done at the end of a week or more a dark porter-like fluid was common, +while when suppuration was imminent a brick-red-coloured grumous fluid +replaced normal blood. In the cases where early incision was resorted +to, blood both fluid and in clots was often mixed with a certain +proportion of lymph flakes, perhaps indicating the part taken by +inflammatory reaction to the irritation of the clot in producing the +rise of temperature. + +_Symptoms of haemothorax._--In the more severe cases of primary bleeding +the symptoms did not, as a rule, reach their full height until the third +or fourth day after the injury. The patients then often suffered +severely. The pulse and temperature rose, and to general symptoms of +loss of blood were added: occasional lividity of countenance; severe +dyspnoea, accompanied by inability to lie on the sound side or to +assume the supine position; absence of respiratory movement on the +injured side; pain, restlessness, cough, and sometimes continuance of +haemoptysis, small clots usually being expectorated. + +Accompanying these symptoms were the usual physical signs of fluid in +the pleura in differing degrees and combination. Dulness of varying +extent up to complete absence of resonance on one side, often +accompanied in the incomplete cases by well-marked skodaic resonance +anteriorly. Loss of vocal resonance, and fremitus; oegophony, tubular +respiration over the root of the lung or at the upper limit of the +dulness, and more or less extensive displacement of the heart. Obvious +increase in girth, fulness of the intercostal spaces, or gravitation +ecchymosis was rare. The latter was most common in instances in which +multiple fracture of the ribs existed (see fig. 83). I think the rarity +of the last sign must have been due to the early coagulation of the +blood, and its retention by the pleura, as I saw well-marked gravitation +ecchymosis in one or two cases of mediastinal haemorrhage. + +The above complex of symptoms was common to all the cases, but in the +slighter ones they gave rise to little trouble, and cleared up with +great rapidity. + +[Illustration: FIG. 83.--Gravitation Ecchymosis in a case of Haemothorax, +accompanying fracture of three ribs from within. The influence of the +fractures on the development of the ecchymosis is shown by the linear +arrangement of the discoloration] + +The most interesting feature was offered by the temperature, as this was +very liable to lead one astray. A primary rise always occurred with the +collection of blood in the pleura, this reaching its height on the third +or fourth day, usually about 102 deg. F. in well-marked cases; it then fell, +and in favourable instances remained normal. In a large number of cases, +however, where the amount of blood was considerable, this was not the +case, the primary fall not reaching the normal, and a second rise +occurred which reached the same height as before or higher. The second +rise was accompanied by sweating, quickened pulse, and the probability +of the development of an empyema had always to be considered. I believe +in most cases this secondary rise was an indication of a further +increase in the haemorrhage, for the dulness usually increased in extent, +and such rises were often seen when the patient had been moved or taken +a journey. Again, the temperature often fell to normal after +paracentesis and removal of the blood, to rise again with a fresh +accumulation, which was not uncommon. I have already mentioned the large +proportional incidence of haemothorax observed in the patients who had +to travel down from Paardeberg, and I might instance another case +related to me by Dr. Flockemann of the German ambulance, which was very +striking. A Boer, wounded at Colesberg, developed a haemothorax which +quieted down, and he was removed to Bloemfontein; on arrival at the +latter place the temperature rose, and other signs of fever suggested +the development of an empyema; an exploring needle, however, only +brought blood to light. After a short stay at Bloemfontein the symptoms +entirely subsided, and the man was sent to Kroonstadt, when an exactly +similar attack resulted, again quieting down with rest. + +Similar recurrent attacks of haemorrhage and fever occurred, however, in +patients confined to their beds without moving after the first journey. +Some temperature charts, in illustration of this point, are added to the +cases quoted later. The explanation of the recurrent haemorrhages is, I +think, to be found in the reduction of the intra-thoracic pressure with +coagulation and shrinkage of the clot in the pleura in the patients kept +quiet in bed, while in the patients who had to travel it was probably +the result of direct mechanical disturbance. + +In many of these cases a pleural rub was audible at the upper margin of +the dulness with the development of the fresh symptoms. Whether this was +due to actual pleurisy or to the rubbing of surfaces rough from the +breaking down of slight recent adhesions which had formed a barrier to +the effusion, I am unable to say, but the signs were fairly constant. In +some instances the increase in the amount of fluid was, no doubt, due to +pleural effusion resulting from irritation from the presence of +blood-clot, or perhaps the shifting of the latter; in these the +secondary rise of temperature may well be ascribed to the development of +pleurisy. + +I am inclined to believe, however, that the primary rise of temperature +was similar to that seen when blood accumulates in the peritoneal cavity +as the result of trauma, and the secondary rises in most cases to those +which we saw so frequently accompanying the interstitial secondary +haemorrhages spoken of in Chapter IV., and are to be explained on the +theory of absorption of a blood ferment. The secondary rises always +occurred with a fresh effusion, often of blood, occasioning an +extension, which broke down probable light adhesions and exposed a fresh +area of normal pleural membrane to act as a surface for absorption. + +It is, of course, manifest that the fever might also be ascribed to the +infection of the clot or serum from without, and in the first cases I +saw I was inclined to take this view, since we had in every case the +primary wounds of chest-wall, and possibly of lung, and in some the +addition of a puncture by an exploring needle between the first and +second rise. After a wider experience, however, I abandoned the +infection theory, as it seemed opposed by the very infrequent sequence +of suppuration. The effect of simple removal of the blood or serum was +also often so striking as to strongly suggest that it alone was +responsible for the fever. Exactly the same result, moreover, followed +evacuation of the interstitial blood effusions already mentioned +elsewhere. + +The common course of all the cases of haemothorax was to spontaneous +recovery, the rapidity of the subsidence of the signs depending mainly +on the quantity of the primary haemorrhage, and the occurrence of further +increases. The blood serum tended to collect at the upper limit of the +original blood effusion (as was often proved on tapping), and this was +first absorbed; the clot deposited on the pleural surface and at the +basal part of the cavity was, however, not absorbed with the same +rapidity. In the majority of the patients when they left the hospitals, +at the end of six weeks on an average, some dulness and deficiency of +vesicular murmur always remained, and the clot and the surrounding +surface, irritated by its presence, will, no doubt, be responsible for +permanent adhesions in many cases. That such adhesions do form in the +majority of cases I feel certain, as, although these patients when they +left the hospital were to all intents and purposes apparently well, few +of them could undertake sustained exertion without getting short of +breath, and sometimes suffering from transitory pain, and for this +reason it became customary to invalid them home. + +In a small proportion of the cases empyema followed; but I never saw +this in any case that had neither been tapped nor opened, and I saw +only one patient die from a chest wound uncomplicated by other injuries. +This case was an interesting one of recurrent haemorrhage followed by +inflammatory troubles:-- + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 2.--Secondary Haemorrhages in a case of +Haemothorax. Case No. 151] + + (151) The wound was received at short range, probably at from + 100 to 200 yards. _Entry_, 1 inch from the left axillary margin + in the first intercostal space; _exit_, at the back of the + right arm 1-1/2 inch below the acromial angle; both pleurae were + therefore crossed. The patient expectorated at first fluid, + then clotted, blood in considerable quantity. When brought into + the advanced Base hospital on the third day, there were signs + of blood in the left pleura, cellular emphysema over the right + side of the chest, and signs of collapse of the right lung. The + temperature chart gives shortly the course of the case: the + right pneumo-thorax cleared up spontaneously, also the + emphysema; but the left pleura needed tapping to relieve + symptoms of pressure on four occasions, the 13th, 15th, 19th, + and 25th days respectively. On the first two occasions blood + was removed, on the third blood serum only, and on the last + pus. The patient was relieved after each aspiration; after the + third, the temperature fell to normal, the general condition + also improved, and he promised to do well. None the less, + reaccumulation took place, the evacuated fluid assumed an + inflammatory character, and an incision to evacuate pus was + eventually followed by death on the twenty-seventh day. The + amount of haemoptysis throughout was considerable, and the case + was possibly one of pulmonary haemothorax, as after death no + source of haemorrhage could be localised in the intercostal + space. The track in the lung was almost healed, and although a + part of it allowed the introduction of a probe for about an + inch, it could be traced no further even on section of the + organ, and no special vessel could be located as the original + bleeding spot. + +_Empyema._--I may here add the little that I have to say on this +subject. During the whole campaign the single case of primary empyema +that I saw was the one recorded below, which deserves special mention as +illustrating the disadvantage of extracting bullets on the field. Under +the conditions which necessarily accompanied this operation the +ensurance of asepsis was impossible, and the additional wound no doubt +proved the source of infection. + + (152) _Entry_, at the posterior margin of the sterno-mastoid + muscle, 2 inches above the clavicle; the bullet came to the + surface beneath the skin over the fifth rib, in the nipple line + of the right side. There was never any haemoptysis, but the + patient suffered with some dyspnoea throughout. After a three + days' stay in the Field hospital, where the subcutaneous bullet + was removed, the patient was transported by wagon and train to + the Base, a journey of about 600 miles. + + On the fifth day pus escaped from the extraction wound, and + when the case was examined at the Base, the temperature was + 101 deg., the pulse over 100, the respirations 30, and the whole + side of the chest was dull, with the exception of a patch of + boxy resonance over the apex anteriorly. On the following day + the chest was drained, and a considerable amount of pus + evacuated, which was mixed with breaking-down blood-clot. A + fortnight later a second operation had to be performed to + improve the drainage, and the patient made a tedious recovery. + +The following case well illustrates the symptoms in a severe case of +haemothorax, and empyema following aspiration:-- + + (153) The patient was wounded at Paardeberg at a range of from + 500 to 700 yards. _Entry_, just to the left of the episternal + notch; _exit_, in the fifth left interspace posteriorly, midway + between the spine and vertebral margin of the scapula. A + quantity of bright blood was brought up at once, and later + blood was coughed up in clots. + + There was no great pain at the moment of the injury; the man + again got up to the firing line, and later walked two miles to + the Field hospital without aid. He remained here a week, when + he was sent down to the Base, and during the first three days' + journey in the wagon he began to get worse. On the fourth day + cough began to be very troublesome. + + When he arrived at the Base, fifteen days after the original + injury, there was much dyspnoea; the temperature was 102 deg., + and the pulse 110. The left side of the chest was dull + throughout; an aspirating needle was introduced, and a pint of + very dark liquid blood drawn off. The whole of the blood was + not removed on account of the very severe cough and pain which + the evacuation occasioned. The man appeared to steadily improve + until three weeks later, when the temperature, which throughout + had been uneven, became consistently high, and signs of fluid + at the base increased. An aspirating needle was introduced, and + 16 ounces of pus were drawn off. Two days later a piece of rib + was resected (Mr. Pegg) and another pint of pus evacuated. + After this, rapid improvement took place, and in ten days the + man was able to be up and dressed, although a small amount of + discharge still persisted. He eventually made an excellent + recovery. + +Secondary empyemata not uncommonly followed incision of the chest, or +excision of a rib for draining a haemothorax. These operations in the +early part of the campaign were more freely undertaken on the +supposition that rise of temperature and other symptoms of fever pointed +to incipient breaking down of the clot. Subsequent experience showed +this not to be the case, and early operations for drainage ceased to be +undertaken. In these operations a primary difficulty was met with in +effectively clearing out the clot, a drain had to be left, and +suppuration occurred later in a considerable proportion. The +suppurations were most troublesome; local adhesions formed, and the pus +collected in small pockets, which were difficult to find and to drain, +and even when the collections seemed to have been successfully dealt +with at the time, residual abscesses often followed at a very late date. +Thus, I saw a case with a contracted chest and a fresh abscess the day +before I left Cape Town, in whom I had advised and witnessed an +operation for the evacuation of clot in the presence of signs of fever a +week after my arrival in the country, nine months previously. I saw +another case where general infection followed incision of a haemothorax, +but the patient fortunately recovered. + +The question of _pleurisy_ has already been mentioned in connection with +haemothorax; it no doubt accounted for secondary effusion in some cases, +and beyond this I have nothing to add to what has been there said. + +_Pneumonia_ was rare; there were occasionally signs of consolidation, +but, I think, quite as often in the opposite lung as in the one injured. +I never saw a fatal case, and I am inclined to think that when it +occurred it was as often the result of cold and exposure as of the +injury to the lung. Abscess of the lung I only saw once, and that in a +case in which the injury to the chest was complicated by paraplegia from +spinal injury and septicaemia, and it was possibly pyaemic. + +_Diagnosis._--No difficulties special to small-calibre wounds were +experienced, except such as have been already dealt with. The only class +of case which frequently gave rise to difficulty was haemothorax. Here +two points especially needed consideration. (1) _The source of the +haemorrhage as parietal or visceral._ As has been already foreshadowed, +this was mainly to be decided by the amount and persistence of the +haemoptysis, but naturally free haemoptysis did not negative concurrent +parietal bleeding. Then the actual source of the bleeding other than +from the lung had to be considered; in the great majority of cases the +intercostal vessels were responsible, and attention to the course of the +tracks often allowed this to be definitely decided upon. + +A case included in the chapter on Injuries to the Blood Vessels (No. 5, +p. 127) is of great interest in this particular; in that instance +feebleness of the radial pulse, together with the position of the wound, +was a valuable indication of injury to the subclavian artery, but +weakened somewhat by the fact of retention of the bullet, and hence +uncertainty as to the exact course that it had taken, and as to whether +the bullet itself was not responsible for pressure on the vessel. Such +indications, however, should make one very chary of interference with a +haemothorax, even with extremely urgent symptoms, in the light of our +present knowledge of the nature of the lesions to the great vessels +produced by small-calibre bullets, and their tendency to be incomplete. + +(2) _The imminence of suppuration or its actual occurrence._--In most +cases it sufficed to preserve an expectant attitude, and in the +persistence or increase of symptoms, to have recourse to an exploratory +puncture as the best means of solution of the difficulty. + +_Prognosis._--The prognosis both as to life and as to subsequent +ill-effects was remarkably good; in many cases of uncomplicated injury +to the lung the patients rejoined their regiments at the end of a month +or six weeks. In the more serious cases complicated by the collection of +blood in the pleura, convalescence was more prolonged, and an average +time of six to eight weeks often elapsed before the patients could be +safely discharged from hospital. In the more serious a certain amount of +dulness always persisted at this time over the base of the lung, and the +chest was usually somewhat contracted on the injured side, with evidence +in the way of decreased vesicular murmur that the lung was still not +free from compression. With regard to the persistence of dulness on +percussion, it is well to bear in mind that a thin layer of blood +apparently produces as serious impairment of resonance as a much larger +quantity of serum. The signs appeared to favour the view that the space +necessary for the location of the haemorrhage had been obtained at the +expense of the lung rather than by distension of the thoracic parietes, +and also, I think, denoted the presence of adhesions. Possibly they will +entirely disappear with the return of full excursion movements of +respiration, the latter being often still somewhat restricted when the +patients left hospital. All the patients with such signs were liable to +attacks of pain and shortness of breath on actual bodily exertion. I +happened to meet with an officer, the subject of a Lee-Metford wound of +the thorax, sustained five years previously, and he told me that he was +nine months before he could take active exercise without feeling short +of breath. + +As to the cases of haemothorax and empyema which needed drainage, all did +well; but expansion of the lung was much less satisfactory than would +have been expected, probably on account of especially firm adhesions. +The importance of concurrent injury I need hardly dwell on; but I might +add that perforation of one or both arms, the most common one, did not +materially affect the general statements above made. + +_Treatment._--In the early stages of the pulmonary wounds rest was the +all-important indication, and when this was assured few serious cases of +haemothorax occurred. Beyond simple rest, the administration of opium +with a view to checking internal haemorrhage was used with good effect. +The wounds needed simple dressing only. + +The treatment of haemothorax at a later date, however, was of much +interest and difficulty. I think the following lines may be laid down +for guidance in such cases:-- + +(i) Haemothorax, even of considerable severity, will undergo spontaneous +cure. An early rise of temperature may be disregarded. + +(ii) Tapping the chest is indicated when pressure signs on the lung are +sufficiently severe to cause serious symptoms, and the removal of the +blood undoubtedly shortens the period of recovery, as well as relieves +symptoms. + +In such cases the collection of blood has usually been rapid and +continuous; hence a fresh haemorrhage is always probable when the local +pressure has been removed. Tapping therefore should not necessarily mean +complete evacuation, and should be followed by careful firm binding up +of the chest, the administration of opium, and the most stringent +precautions for rest. + +(iii) Tapping may be needed as a diagnostic aid, and in such +circumstances as much fluid as can be removed should be evacuated with +the same precautions as mentioned in the last paragraph. + +(iv) Tapping may be indicated for the evacuation of serum expressed from +the blood-clot, or due to pleural effusion, on the same lines as in any +other collection of fluid in the pleural cavity. + +(v) Early free incision is, as a rule, to be steadfastly avoided. Some +cases already quoted fully illustrate its disadvantages. + +(vi) Cases in which an incision and the ligature of a parietal artery +are indicated are very rare. I never saw such a one myself. + +(vii) If a haemothorax suppurates, it must be treated on the ordinary +lines of an empyema. In view of the constant formation of adhesions and +difficulty in drainage, a portion of a rib should always be resected in +order to ensure sufficient space for after-treatment. The cavities, as a +rule, are better irrigated, the usual precautions being taken where +there is any reason to fear that the lung is still in communication with +the cavity. + +Care in carrying out asepsis in tapping, which should be performed with +an aspirator, need hardly be more than mentioned. It will be noted that +in some of the cases quoted suppuration followed tapping, but it must be +remembered that in these the two primary wounds already existed as +possible channels of infection. + +Retained bullets of small calibre in the thoracic cavity were not +common, unless the lodgment had occurred in the bodies of the vertebrae. +I saw very few. Shrapnel bullets and fragments of shells, however, were, +in proportion to the frequency of wounds from such projectiles, more +commonly retained. The rules to be followed in such cases do not +materially deviate from those to be observed in the body generally. + +When the bullet is causing no trouble, and is lodged in either the bone +of the spine or the lung substance, no interference is advisable. When, +on the other hand, the bullet as viewed by the X-rays is seen to be in +the pleural cavity, and any symptoms of its presence exist, it may be +justifiable to remove it. I saw this done in one case for the removal of +a shrapnel bullet from the lower reflexion of the pleura on account of +fixed pain and tenderness complained of by the patient. The bullet, a +shrapnel, had perforated the arm, which the patient was sure was by his +side at the moment of injury, and the X-rays showed it to lie at the +bottom of the pleural cavity, where we assumed it had fallen. When, +however, the bullet was removed by Mr. Watson, he found that the fixed +pain and tenderness had been the result of a fracture of a rib from the +inner side, not involving loss of continuity; hence the actual +indication for the operation had been a delusive one, since the bullet +had not fallen, but expended its last force in injuring the rib. The +patient made an excellent recovery, and rejoined his regiment at the end +of six weeks. I saw several cases in which the bullet was lodged in +either the lung or bones of the spine do well with no interference. The +great disadvantage of primary removal in inducing an artificial +pneumo-thorax and in laying open a haemothorax is obvious. + +In case of lodgment of the bullet in the lung, bearing in mind the +infrequency of untoward symptoms, the latter should be watched for prior +to interference. + +The following cases illustrate some typical instances of wound of chest +accompanied by the development of haemothorax:-- + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 3.--Primary Haemothorax, with rise of +temperature. Secondary rise, with fresh effusion and pneumonia. +Spontaneous recovery. Case No. 154] + + (154) _Severe haemothorax. Spontaneous recovery._--Wounded at + Modder River at a distance of 30 yards. _Entry_, at the + junction of the left anterior axillary fold with the + chest-wall; _exit_, immediately to the left of the seventh + dorsal spinous process. The patient arrived at the Base with + signs of an extensive haemothorax, accompanied by a temperature + which reached 102 deg. on the fourth day, and on the evening of the + tenth 103 deg.. The man was very ill, and an exploring needle was + inserted, by which about an ounce of blood was evacuated. The + signs of fluid in the left pleura were accompanied by those of + consolidation over the lower fourth of the right lung, and the + sputa were rusty. Evidence of perforation of the left axillary + artery existed in feebleness of the radial pulse; and there was + musculo-spiral paralysis. + + After the preliminary puncture, the man refused any further + operative treatment, although a second rise of temperature + commenced on the fifteenth day, culminating in a temperature of + 103.2 deg. on the eighteenth. The further treatment of the patient + consisted in the ensurance of rest and the alleviation of pain. + A steady fall in the temperature extended over another three + weeks, together with diminution in the signs of fluid in the + pleura. At the end of seventy-four days the man was sent home, + some slight dulness at the left base, and contraction of the + chest sufficient to influence the spine in the way of lateral + curvature, being the only remaining signs. + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 4.--Primary Haemothorax. Secondary rise +of temperature, with increase in the effusion. Spontaneous recovery. +Case No. 155] + + (155) _Severe haemothorax. Secondary effusion. Spontaneous + recovery._--Wounded at Koodoosberg Drift, at a distance of 200 + yards. _Entry_, at angle of the right scapula; _exit_, at the + junction of the left anterior axillary fold with the + chest-wall. No signs of spinal cord injury. The patient was + brought in from the field twelve miles by an ambulance wagon on + the second day, and in crossing the Modder River he was + accidentally upset into the stream. For the first four days + there was no haemoptysis, but for the succeeding nine days small + brightish red clots were expectorated. There was some + tenderness over the ribs from the fifth to the ninth in the + axillary line, and on the ninth day some gravitation ecchymosis + appeared over the same region. Cough was an early troublesome + symptom in this case, and when admitted to the Base hospital, + about the seventh day, there was evidence of fluid extending + about a third of the way up the back. + + On the tenth day after admission a pleural rub was detected at + the upper margin of the dulness, and the latter shortly + extended upwards over a little more than half the back. + Meanwhile, there was no further haemoptysis, respiration was + fairly easy, 24 per minute, but accompanied by slight + dilatation of the alae nasi, and the temperature, which had been + ranging from 99 deg. to 100 deg., began to rise steadily, on the + fifteenth day reaching 102.5 deg.. The patient refused even an + exploratory puncture, and was treated on the expectant plan. + The temperature slowly subsided, with a steady improvement in + the physical signs, and at the end of about ten weeks he left + for home with only slight dulness and incapacity for active + exertion remaining. (Now again on active service.) + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 5.--Haemothorax, primary and secondary +rises of temperature, on each occasion falling on the evacuation of the +blood. Case No. 156] + + (156) _Severe haemothorax. Recurrent secondary effusion. Tapping + on two occasions. Cure._--The patient was wounded at + Paardeberg, and arrived at the Base on the eighteenth day. + _Entry_, below the first rib, just external to its junction + with the costal cartilage; _exit_, through the ninth rib, just + within the posterior axillary line. The whole right side of the + chest was dull, with signs of the presence of fluid, the heart + being displaced to the left. There was considerable distress; + the respirations averaged 40, the pulse 100, and the + temperature reached 101.5 deg. the first evening after arrival. + + On the nineteenth day the thorax was aspirated (Mr. Hanwell) + and 50 ounces of dirty red-coloured fluid, half clot, half + serum, were evacuated. Considerable relief was afforded; the + respirations became slightly less frequent; the heart returned + to a normal position, and distant tubular respiration was + audible. The temperature dropped to normal the third day after + evacuation of the fluid, but on the sixth day it again + commenced to rise, and meanwhile fluid again began to collect. + + On the twenty-sixth day a second aspiration resulted in the + evacuation of 35 ounces of bloody fluid in which flakes of + lymph were found. Three days later the temperature became + normal. The respirations fell to 22, and the patient made an + uninterrupted recovery. + +[Illustration: TEMPERATURE CHART 6.--Wound of Lung. Secondary +development of Haemothorax, with rise of temperature. Spontaneous +recovery. Case No 157] + + (157) _Moderate haemothorax. Secondary effusion at the end of + twenty days. Spontaneous recovery._--Wounded at Paardeberg; + range from 700 to 1,000 yards. _Entry_, in the centre of the + second right intercostal space, anteriorly; _exit_, at the + level of the sixth rib posteriorly, through the scapula, close + to its vertebral margin. + + The patient arrived at the Base on the sixth day; he said he + expectorated some blood at the end of about ten minutes after + being shot, and experienced a 'half-choking sensation.' A small + quantity of phlegm and occasional clots had been expectorated + since. He had walked about a good deal; movement occasioned + cough, and he became 'blown' very rapidly. + + On admission there were signs of fluid in the lower third of + the pleural cavity, but no general symptoms beyond an evening + rise of temperature to an average of 99 deg.. About the twentieth + day the temperature commenced to rise, and on the twenty-third + and four following evenings reached 102 deg.. The fever was + accompanied by some distress, and a well-marked increase in the + physical signs of the presence of fluid in the chest. The pulse + rose to 96, and the respirations considerably above the average + of 24, which was at first noted. A strictly expectant attitude + was maintained, and the temperature steadily fell in a curve + corresponding to the rise, gradually reaching the normal at the + end of a week. The physical signs at the base steadily cleared + up, and at the end of six weeks the patient returned to England + convalescent. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +INJURIES TO THE ABDOMEN + + +Perhaps no chapter of military surgery was looked forward to with more +eager interest than that dealing with wounds of the abdomen. In none was +greater expectation indulged in with regard to probable advance in +active surgical treatment, and in none did greater disappointment lie in +store for us. + +Wounds of the solid viscera, it is true, proved to be of minor +importance when produced by bullets of small calibre; but wounds of the +intestinal tract, although they showed themselves capable of spontaneous +recovery in a certain proportion of the cases observed, afforded but +slight opportunity for surgical skill, and results generally deviated +but slightly from those of past experience. Such success as was met with +depended rather on the mechanical genesis and nature of the wounds than +upon the efforts of the surgeon, and operative surgery scored but few +successes. + +It is true that to the Civil Surgeon accustomed to surroundings replete +with every modern appliance and convenience, and the possibility of +exercising the most stringent precautions against the introduction of +sepsis from without, abdominal operations presented difficulties only +faintly appreciated in advance; but this alone scarcely accounted for +the want of success attending the active treatment of wounds of the +intestine when occasion demanded. Failure was rather to be referred to +the severity of the local injury to be dealt with, or to the operations +being necessarily undertaken at too late a date. Many fatalities, again, +were due to the association of other injuries, a large proportion of the +wound tracks involving other organs or parts beyond the boundaries of +the abdominal cavity. + +The frequent association of wounds of the thoracic cavity with those of +the abdomen afforded many of the most striking examples of immunity from +serious consequences as a result of wound of the pleura. It must be +conceded that in a large number of such injuries only the extreme limits +of the pleural sac were encroached upon, yet in some the tracks passed +through the lungs, although without serious consequences. Under the +heading of injury to the large intestine a somewhat special form of +pleural septicaemia will be referred to. + +It may at once be stated that such favourable results as occurred in +abdominal injuries were practically limited to wounds caused by bullets +of small calibre, and that, although in the short chapter dealing with +shell injuries a few recoveries from visceral wounds will be mentioned, +I never met with a penetrating visceral injury from a Martini-Henry or +large sporting bullet which did not prove fatal. + +_Wounds of the abdominal wall._--It is somewhat paradoxical to say that +these injuries possessed special interest from their comparative rarity +of occurrence, since they were not of intrinsic importance. Their +infrequency depended on the difficulty of striking the body in such a +plane as to implicate the belly wall alone, and their interest in the +diagnostic difficulty which they gave rise to. + +In many cases the position of the openings and the strongly oval or +gutter character possessed by them were sufficient proof of the +superficial passage of the bullet; in others we had to bear in mind that +the position of the patient when struck was rarely that of rest in the +supine position, in which the surgical examination was made, and +considerable difficulty arose. Some superficial tracks crossing the +belly wall have already been referred to in the chapter on wounds in +general and in that dealing with injuries to the chest, in which the +above characters sufficed to indicate that penetration of the abdominal +cavity had not occurred. In other instances a definite subcutaneous +gutter could be traced, and often in these a well-marked cord in the +abdominal wall corresponding to the track could be felt at a later date. +Again, limitation to the abdominal wall was sometimes proved by the +position of the retained bullet, or sometimes by the presence in the +track of foreign bodies carried in with the projectile. See case 160. + +Fig. 84 illustrates an example where the limitation to the abdominal +wall was evident on inspection. Here the division of the thick muscles +of the abdominal wall had led to the formation of a swelling exactly +similar to that seen after the subcutaneous rupture of a muscle, and two +soft fluctuating tumours bounded by contracted muscle existed in the +substance of the oblique and rectus muscles. + +[Illustration: FIG. 84.--Wound of Abdominal Wall (Lee-Metford). Division +of fibres of external oblique and rectus abdominis muscles. Case 159] + +The cases which presented the most serious diagnostic difficulty in this +relation were those in which the wound was situated in the thicker +muscular portions of the lower part of the abdominal and pelvic walls. +Such a case is illustrated in the chapter on fractures (see fig. 55, p. +191). I saw one or two such instances, in which only the exploration +necessary for treatment of the fracture decided the point. In many of +the wounds affecting the lateral portion of the abdominal wall the +question of penetration could never be definitely cleared up, as wounds +of the colon sometimes gave rise to absolutely no symptoms. + +In a certain proportion of the injuries the peritoneal cavity was no +doubt perforated without the infliction of any further visceral injury, +and in these also the doubt as to the occurrence of penetration was +never solved. + + (158) _Wound of belly wall._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ + (Mauser), 2 inches below the centre of the left iliac crest; + _exit_, 1-1/2 inch above and internal to the left anterior + superior iliac spine. The patient was on horseback at the time + of the injury and did not fall; he got down, however, and lay + on the field an hour, whence he was removed to hospital. + Probably the track pierced the ilium, and remained confined to + the abdominal wall. There were no signs of visceral injury. + + (159) Cape Boy. Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), + immediately above and outside right anterior superior spine; + _exit_, 1-1/2 inch below and to right of umbilicus. A + well-marked swelling corresponded with division of the fibres + of the oblique muscles and of the rectus, and on palpation a + hollow corresponding with the track was felt. The abdominal + muscles were exceptionally well developed (fig. 84). + + (160) Wounded at Magersfontein while lying prone. _Entry_, + irregular, oblique, and somewhat contused, over the eighth left + rib, in the anterior axillary line; _exit_, a slit wound + immediately above and to the left of the umbilicus. The bullet + struck a small circular metal looking-glass before entering, + hence the irregularity of the wound. The patient developed a + haemothorax, but no abdominal signs; the former was probably + parietal in origin, secondary to the fractured rib, and the + whole wound non-penetrating as far as the abdominal cavity was + concerned. + + (161) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1-1/2 inch + external to and 1/2 inch below the left posterior superior + iliac spine; _exit_, 1 inch internal horizontally to the left + anterior superior spine. + + No signs of intra-peritoneal injury were noted, but free + suppuration occurred in left loin; the ilium was tunnelled. + + The same patient was wounded by a Jeffrey bullet in the hand; + the third metacarpal was pulverised, although the bullet, which + was longitudinally flanged, was retained. + + (162) Wounded outside Heilbron. _Entry_, below the eighth right + costal cartilage; _exit_, below the eighth cartilage of the + left side. The wound of entry was slightly oval; that of exit + continued out as a 'flame'-like groove for 2 inches. A week + later the wound track could be palpated as an evident hard + continuous cord. + +_Penetration of the intestinal area without definite evidence of +visceral injury._--This accident occurred with a sufficient degree of +frequency to obtain the greatest importance, both from the point of view +of diagnosis and prognosis, and as affecting the question of operative +interference. Amongst the cases reported below a number occurred in +which it was impossible to settle the question whether injury to the +bowel had occurred or not, and I will here shortly give what explanation +I can for the apparent escape of the intestine from serious injury. + +We may first recall the general question of the escape of structures +lying to one or other side of the track of the bullet. I believe that +there can be no doubt as to the accuracy of the remarks already made as +to the escape of such structures as the nerves by means of displacement, +and that the occurrence of such escapes is manifestly dependent on the +degree of fixity of the nerve or the special segment of it implicated. +The general tendency of the tissues around the tracks to escape +extensive destruction from actual contusion has also been referred to, +and is, I think, indisputable. + +If these observations be accepted, I think there can be no difficulty in +allowing that the small intestine is exceptionally well arranged to +escape injury. First of all, it is very moveable; secondly, it is so +arranged that in certain directions a bullet may pass almost parallel to +the long axis of the coils; thirdly, it is elastic, capable of +compression, and light, and hence offers but a small degree of +resistance to the passage of the bullet across the abdominal cavity. + +Certain evidence both clinical and pathological supports the contention +that the small intestine may escape injury from the passing bullet. + +First of all, the fact may be broadly stated that injuries to the small +intestine were fatal in the great majority of certainly diagnosed cases, +while, on the other hand, many tracks crossed the area occupied by the +small intestine without serious symptoms of any kind resulting. +Secondly, experience showed that when the bullet crossed the line of the +fixed portions of the large intestine the gut rarely escaped, and that, +although a considerable proportion of these cases recovered +spontaneously, in a large number of them immediate symptoms, or +secondary complications, clearly substantiated the nature of the +original injury. As far as my experience went, however, I never saw any +instance in which an undoubted injury of the small intestine was +followed by the development of a local peritoneal suppuration and +recovery, a sequence by no means uncommon in the case of wounds of the +large intestine. Although, therefore, I am not prepared to deny the +possibility of spontaneous recovery from an injury to the small +intestine, under certain conditions which will be stated later, I +believe that in the immense majority of cases in which a bullet crossed +the small intestine area without the supervention of serious symptoms, +the small intestine escaped perforating injury. + +Beyond the clinical evidence offered above, certain pathological +observations support the view that the intestine escapes perforation by +displacement. Most of my knowledge on this subject was derived from the +limited number of abdominal sections I performed on cases of injury to +the small intestine, and may be summed up as follows. + +The small intestine may present evidence of lateral contusion in the +shape of elongated ecchymoses, either parallel, oblique, or transverse +to its long axis. These ecchymoses resemble in extent and outline those +which ordinarily surround a wound of the intestinal wall produced by a +bullet (see fig. 87, p. 418). + +The wall of the small intestine may be wounded to an extent short of +perforation, either the peritoneal coat alone being split, or the wound +implicating the muscular coat and producing an appearance similar to +that seen when the intestine is dragged upon during an operation, but +without so much gaping of the edges (see fig. 85, p. 416). + +I met with these conditions in association with co-existing complete +perforations of the small intestine, and in one case of intra-peritoneal +haemorrhage in which no complete perforation was discoverable (No. 169, +p. 432). + +The implication and perforation of the small intestine are to some +extent influenced by the direction of the wound. A striking case is +included below, No. 201, in which a bullet passed from the loin to the +iliac fossa on each side of the body, approximately parallel to the +course of the inner margin of the colon, and I also saw some other +wounds in this direction in which no evidence of injury to the small +intestine was detected, and which got well. Again wounds from flank to +flank were, as a rule, very fatal; but I saw more than one instance +where these wounds were situated immediately below the crest of the +ilium, in which the intestine escaped injury (see case 171). A very +striking observation was made by Mr. Cheatle in such a wound. The +patient died as a result of a double perforation of both caecum and +sigmoid flexure; none the less the bullet had crossed the small +intestine area without inflicting any injury. + +The sum of my experience, in fact, was to encourage the belief that, +unless the intestine was struck in such a direction as to render lateral +displacement an impossibility, the gut often escaped perforation. + +As a rule, the wounds of the abdomen which from their position proved +the most dangerous to the intestine were-- + +1. Wounds passing from one flank to the other were very dangerous, as +crossing complicated coils of the small intestine, and two fixed +portions of the colon. This danger was most marked when the wounds were +situated between the eighth rib in the mid axillary line and the crest +of the ilium; above this level the liver, or possibly liver and stomach, +were sometimes alone implicated, and the cases did well. Again, when the +wounds crossed the false pelvis the patients sometimes escaped all +injury to viscera. + +2. Antero-posterior wounds in the small intestine area were very fatal +if the course was direct; in such the small intestine seldom escaped +injury. + +3. Wounds with a certain degree of obliquity from anterior wall to +flank, or from flank to loin, were on the other hand comparatively +favourable, as the small intestine often escaped, and if any gut was +wounded, it was often the colon. + +4. Vertical wounds implicating the chest and abdomen, or the abdomen and +pelvis, were on the whole not very unfavourable. For instance, when the +bullet entered by the buttock and emerged below the umbilicus, a number +of patients escaped fatal injury; this depended on the comparatively +good prognosis in wounds of the rectum and bladder. A good many +patients in whom the bullet entered by the upper part of the loin, and +escaped 1-1/2 inch within the anterior superior spine of the ilium, also +did well. The same holds good when the wounds either entered or emerged +under the anterior costal margin of the thorax, either prior to or after +traversing the thorax. + +Wounds passing directly backward from the iliac regions were in my +experience very unfavourable; but I believe mainly as a result of +haemorrhage from the iliac arteries. + +_The occurrence of wounds of the abdomen of an 'explosive' +character._--The vast majority of the abdominal wounds observed in the +Stationary or Base hospitals were of the type dimensions. A certain +number of the abdominal injuries which proved fatal on the field or +shortly afterwards were described as explosive in character, and were +referred by the observers to the employment of expanding bullets. + +A few words on this subject seem necessary, because it seems doubtful +whether such injuries could be produced by any of the forms of expanding +bullet of small calibre in use, unless the track crossed one of the +bones in the abdominal or pelvic wall. That this was sometimes the case +there is no doubt: thus I saw two cases in which the splenic flexure of +the colon was wounded, in which the external opening was large, and a +comminuted fracture of the ribs of the left side existed. One can well +believe that bullets passing through the pelvic bones might 'set up' to +a considerable extent, and although I never happened to see such a case, +an explanation of some of the wounds described by others might be found +in this occurrence. + +In instances in which the soft parts alone were perforated, I am +disinclined to believe that bullets of small calibre, either regulation +or soft-nosed, were responsible for the injuries. I had the opportunity +of examining two Mauser bullets of the Jeffreys variety which crossed +the abdomen and caused death. In the first (figured on page 94, fig. 40) +very little alteration beyond slight shortening had occurred. In the +second the deformity was almost the same, except that the side of the +bullet was indented, probably from impact with some object prior to its +entry into the body. In each case the bullet was of course travelling at +a low rate of velocity; hence no very strong inference can be drawn +from either. In the case of the second specimen, which was removed by +Mr. Cheatle, a remarkable observation was made, which tends to throw +some light on one possible mode of production of large exit apertures. +This bullet crossed the caecum, making two small type openings; but +later, when it crossed the sigmoid flexure, it tore two large irregular +openings in the gut. This might be explained on the ground that the +velocity was so small as only just to allow of perforation, which +therefore took the nature of a tear. I am inclined to suggest, as a more +likely explanation, that the spent bullet turned head over heels in its +course across the abdomen, and made lateral or irregular impact with the +last piece of bowel it touched. A slightly greater degree of force would +have allowed a similar large and irregular opening to be made in the +abdominal wall also. + +In this relation the question will naturally be raised as to how far the +explosive appearances may have been due to high velocity alone on the +part of the bullet. I am disinclined from my general experience to +believe that explosive injuries of the soft parts were to be thus +explained. On the other hand, I believe that the possession of a low +degree of velocity very greatly increased the danger in abdominal +wounds. I believe that the bowel was, under these circumstances, less +likely to escape by displacement, and was more widely torn when wounded; +again, that inexact impact led to increase of size in the external +apertures, and the bullet was of course more often retained. + +Mr. Watson Cheyne[19] published a very remarkable instance of one of the +dangers of an injury from a spent bullet, in which, in spite of +non-penetration of the abdominal cavity, the small intestine was +ruptured in two places. + +I believe the majority of the wounds designated as explosive were the +result of the passage of large leaden bullets, either of the +Martini-Henry or Express type. The small opportunity of observing such +injuries in the hospitals of course depended on the fact that the +majority were rapidly fatal. + +_Nature of the anatomical lesion in wounds of the intestine._--The +openings in the parietal peritoneum tended to assume the slit or star +forms, probably on account of the elasticity of the membrane. A diagram +of one of these forms is appended to fig. 89. In this instance the +opening in the peritoneum was made from the abdominal aspect, prior to +the escape of the bullet from the cavity, and on the impact of the tip, +the long axis of the bullet was oblique to the surface of the abdominal +wall. + +In the intestinal wall the openings varied in character according to the +mode of impact. + +In some cases the gut was merely contused by lateral contact of the +passing bullet. The result of this was evidenced later by the presence +of localised oval patches of ecchymosis. These were identical in +appearance with the patches shown surrounding the wounds in fig. 87. + +[Illustration: FIG. 85.--Lateral Slit in Small Intestine produced by +passage of bullet. Slit somewhat obscured by deposition of inflammatory +lymph. (St. Thomas's Hospital Museum)] + +More forcible lateral impact produced a split of the peritoneum, or of +this together with the muscular coat. Such a lateral slit is shown in +fig. 85, although the clearness of outline is somewhat impaired by the +presence of a considerable amount of inflammatory lymph. + +Fig. 86 exhibits a lateral injury of a more pronounced form. The bullet +here struck the most prominent portion of the under surface of the +bowel, and produced a circular perforation not very unlike one produced +by rectangular impact, except in the lesser degree of eversion of the +mucous membrane. Here again the appearance is somewhat altered by the +presence of a considerable amount of lymph, but this is of less +importance in this figure because the lymph is localised to the portion +of the bowel in the immediate neighbourhood of the opening which had +suffered contusion and erasion. + +[Illustration: FIG. 86.--Gutter Wound of Small Intestine caused by +lateral impact. Position of shallow portion of gutter indicated by +deposition of inflammatory lymph. Circular perforation. (St. Thomas's +Hospital Museum)] + +Fig. 87, A B, illustrates a symmetrical perforation of the small +intestine; the aperture of entry (A) is roughly circular, and a ring of +mucous membrane protrudes and partially closes the opening. The aperture +of exit is a curved slit, again partially occluded by the mucous +membrane. The same amount of difference between the two apertures did +not always exist; in many cases both were circular, and apparently +symmetrical. Beyond this I have seen three apertures in close proximity, +two lying on the same aspect of the bowel, and the first of these was no +doubt an opening due to lateral impact similar to that seen in fig. 86. +In the recent condition little difference existed between the three +apertures. + +The localised ecchymosis surrounding the apertures is quite +characteristic of this form of injury, and is a valuable aid to finding +the openings during an operation. + +Fig. 88 shows the interior of the same segment of bowel, as fig. 87. It +shows the localised ecchymosis as seen from the inner surface, here +rather more extensive from the fact that the blood spreads more readily +in the submucous tissue. + +[Illustration: FIG. 87.--Perforating Wounds of Small Intestine. A. +Entry; note circular outline and eversion of mucous membrane. B. Wound +of exit; curved slit-like character, eversion of mucous membrane. Note +the localised ecchymosis, more abundant round exit aperture. (St. +Thomas's Hospital Museum)] + +It will be noted that the main feature of the form of injury is the +regular outline and the small size of the wounds. Another feature not +illustrated by the figures should also be mentioned. In the ruptures of +intestine with which we are acquainted in civil practice the wound in +the gut is almost without exception situated at the free border of the +bowel, but in these injuries it was just as frequently at the mesenteric +margin. The importance of this factor is considerable, since wounds +near the mesenteric edge are much more likely to be accompanied by +haemorrhage, and thus the opportunity for diffusion of infection is +considerably multiplied, to say nothing of the danger from loss of +blood. + +Beyond these more or less pure perforations, long slits or gutters were +occasionally cut. I saw instances of these in the case of the ascending +colon, and in the small curvature of the stomach. The comparative fixity +of the portion of bowel struck is a matter of great importance in the +production of this form of injury. + +[Illustration: FIG. 88.--The same piece of Intestine as that shown in +fig. 87, laid open to show the ecchymosis on the inner aspect of the +Bowel. The two indicating lines lead to the openings, which appear +slit-like, and are sunk at the bottom of folds. (St. Thomas's Hospital +Museum)] + +It may be well to add that, although the figures inserted are all taken +from small-intestine wounds, the nature of the wounds of the +peritoneum-clad part of the large intestine in no way differed from +them, except in so far as fixity of the bowel exposed it to a more +extensive wound when the bullet took a parallel course to its long axis. + +A more important point in the injuries to the large intestine was the +possibility of an extra-peritoneal wound. I saw several such lesions of +the colon, every one of which ended fatally. I became still more fully +convinced of the greater seriousness of extra- to intra-peritoneal +rupture of this portion of the gut than I was when I expressed a similar +opinion in a former paper.[20] It will be seen later that the results of +intra- and extra-peritoneal wounds of the bladder fully confirm this +view, as all extra-peritoneal injuries died, while many intra-peritoneal +perforations recovered spontaneously. + +_Wounds of the mesentery._--I had little experience of this injury; in +fact, case 169, on which I operated, was my sole observation. It stands +to reason, however, that injuries to the mesentery would be much more +frequent proportionately to wounds of the gut than is the case in the +ruptures seen in civil practice, since the whole area of the mesentery +is equally open to injury. Viewing the extreme danger of haemorrhage into +the peritoneal cavity in these injuries, I should be inclined to expect +that a considerable proportion of those deaths from abdominal wounds +which took place on the field of battle were due to this source. + +_Wounds of the omentum._--Here, again, I am unable to express any +opinion, although the supposition that haemorrhage from this source took +place is natural. + +Prolapse of omentum was comparatively rare, except in cases with large +wounds; it was apparently seen with some frequency among patients who +died rapidly on the field of battle. I only saw it twice, and on each +occasion in shell wounds. The wounds from small-calibre bullets were as +a rule too small to allow of external prolapse. + +Fig. 89, however, illustrates a very interesting observation. A patient +in the German Ambulance in Heilbron, under Dr. Flockemann, died as a +result of suppuration and haemorrhage secondary to an injury to the +colon. At the autopsy a portion of the omentum was found adherent in the +wound of exit, but it had not reached the external surface. The chief +interest of the observation lies in the light it throws on the mechanism +of these injuries. It is impossible to conceive that a small-calibre +bullet coming into direct contact with the omentum could do anything but +perforate it. It, therefore, appears clear that in a displacement like +that figured, only lateral impact occurred with the omentum, which was +carried along by the spin and rush of the bullet into the canal of exit, +where it lodged. + +[Illustration: FIG. 89.--Great Omentum carried by the bullet into an +exit track leading from the abdominal cavity. A. Outline of opening in +the peritoneum] + +_Results of injury to the intestine._ 1. _Escape of contents and +infection of the peritoneal cavity._--I think there is little special to +be said on this subject. The escape of contents into the peritoneal +cavity was by no means free, unless the injury was multiple. Thus in one +case of injury to the small intestine, No. 166, on which I operated, +there was absolutely no gross escape until the bowel was removed from +the abdominal cavity, when the contents spurted out freely. In one case +of very oblique injury to the colon there was a considerable quantity of +faecal matter in a localised space, but as a rule the ordinary condition +best described as 'peritoneal infection' from the wound was found. The +bad effect of anything like free escape was well shown in multiple +perforations; in these suppurative peritonitis rapidly developed and the +patients died at the end of thirty-six hours or less. A typical case is +quoted in No. 168. + +2. _Peritoneal infection, and general septicaemia._--As is evident from +the results quoted among the cases, the degree which this reached varied +greatly. It may of course be assumed that in some measure it occurred in +every case in which the bowel was perforated, but it was sometimes so +slight as to be scarcely noticeable. This may be said to have been most +common in injuries to the large intestine. Wounds of the caecum, +ascending and descending colon, the sigmoid flexure, or the rectum, were +sometimes followed by no serious symptoms, either local or general. +Again in these portions of the bowel the development of local signs, and +the later formation of an abscess, were by no means uncommon. + +In the case of the small intestine I never observed this sequence, and +the same may be said of the transverse colon, which in its anatomical +arrangement and position so nearly approximates to the small bowel. In +suspected wounds of these portions of the bowel either the symptoms were +so slight as to render it doubtful whether a perforation had occurred, +or marked signs of general peritoneal septicaemia developed, and death +resulted. + +The condition of the peritoneum in fatal cases varied much. In some a +dry peritonitis, or one in which a considerable quantity of slightly +turbid fluid was effused, was found. In others a rapid suppurative +process, accompanied by the effusion of large quantities of plastic +lymph, was met with. My experience suggested that the latter condition +was the result of free infection from multiple wounds of the gut, the +former the accompaniment of single wounds. Hence I should ascribe the +difference mainly to the extent of the primary infection. + +This is perhaps a suitable place to further discuss the explanation of +the escape of a considerable number of the patients who received wounds +of the abdomen, possibly implicating the bowel. Although this was not, I +think, so common an occurrence as has been sometimes assumed, yet many +examples were met with. Several reasons have been advanced. + +(1) Great importance has been given to the fact that many of the men +were wounded while in a state of hunger, no food having been taken for +twelve or more hours before the reception of the injury. In view of the +well-proved fact in these, as in other intestinal injuries, that free +intestinal escape does not occur, and that it is usually a mere question +of infection, this explanation, in my opinion, is of small importance. +It might with far more justice be pointed out that many of these wounded +men were for them in the happy position of not having friends freely +dosing them with brandy and water after the reception of the injury, and +this was possibly an element of some importance. + +Some of the men did, however, drink freely, and in one case which +terminated fatally a comrade gave a man wounded through the belly an +immediate dose of Beecham's pills. + +(2) Mr. Treves has suggested that the effect of the severe trauma on the +muscular coat of the bowel is to cause a cessation of peristaltic +movement. This, as in the case of 'local shock' elsewhere, may no doubt +be of importance, and to it should be added the simultaneous cessation +of abdominal respiratory movements in the segment of the belly wall +covering the injured part. The occurrence of general cessation of +peristaltic movement is, however, to some extent opposed by the fact +that in a certain number of the cases early passage of motions was seen +just as happens in the intestinal ruptures seen in civil practice. + +I should be inclined to ascribe the escape from serious infection in +these injuries to the same cause which accounts for their comparative +insignificance in other regions--namely, the small calibre of the bullet +and consequent small size of the lesion: in point of fact to the minimal +nature of the primary infection. I very much doubt if any patient who +had more than one complete perforation of the small intestine got well +during the whole campaign. This opinion is, moreover, supported by the +fact that the prognosis was so far better in cases of injury to the +large than to the small intestine, in which former segment of the bowel +we have the advantages of a position beyond the region in which +intestinal movement is most free, the unlikelihood of multiple injury, +and a drier and more solid type of faecal contents. + +In the instances in which recovery followed perforating injuries without +any bad signs we can only assume a minimal infection, and sufficient +irritation and reaction on the part of the bowel to produce rapid +adhesion between contiguous coils, and thus provisional closure. + +The other mode of spontaneous recovery which I saw several times take +place in the injuries to the large bowel consisted in the limitation of +the spread of infection by early adhesions and the development of a +local abscess. The non-observance of this process in any case of injury +to the small intestine raises very great doubts in my mind as to the +frequent recovery of patients in whom the small intestine was +perforated. + + +INJURIES TO THE INTESTINAL TRACT + +1. _Wounds of the stomach._--A considerable number of wounds in such a +situation as to have possibly implicated the stomach were observed, and +of these a certain number recovered spontaneously. The only two +instances that came under my own observation are recorded below. It will +be noted that in each the special symptoms were the classic ones of +vomiting and haematemesis. In the first case blood was also passed per +anum, and in the second the diagnosis was reinforced by the escape of +stomach contents from the external wound. + +The second case was a surgical disappointment. No doubt the fatal issue +was mainly dependent on the fact that the external wound had to be kept +open to allow of the escape of the abundant discharge from the wounded +liver. In the absence of the hepatic wound, however, I believe it would +have been possible for this patient to have got well spontaneously, in +view of the firm adhesions which had formed around the opening in the +stomach, and the consequent localisation which had been effected. +Another unfortunate element in this case was the comminuted fracture of +the seventh costal cartilage, which maintained the patency of the +aperture of exit. The latter point, however, was of doubtful importance +from this aspect, as the vent provided for the gastric and biliary +secretions may have been the safety-valve that had allowed localisation +to develop. + +I believe that the secondary haemorrhage was the main element in robbing +us of a success in this case, and that this depended on the digestion of +the wound by the gastric secretion. The early troubles which arose in +the treatment of this patient well illustrate the difficulties by which +the military surgeon is at times met; but the patient was admirably +attended to and nursed by my friend Mr. Pershouse, and an orderly who +was specially put on duty for the purpose. + + (163) Wounded at Rensburg. _Entry_ (Mauser), in ninth left + intercostal space in posterior axillary line; _exit_, a + transverse slit 1/2 an inch in length to left of xiphoid + appendage. Patient was retiring when struck; he did not fall, + but ran for about 1,000 yards, whence he was conveyed to + hospital. He vomited half an hour after the injury (last meal + bread and 'bully beef,' taken two hours previously), and during + the evening three times again, the vomit consisting mainly 'of + dark thick blood.' He was put on milk diet, and not completely + starved; on the third day a large quantity of dark clotted + blood was passed per rectum with the stool, and this continued + for two days. + + Ten days after the injury the temperature was still rising to + 100 deg., and did not become normal till the fourteenth day. The + pulse averaged 80. The abdomen, meanwhile, moved fairly well, + respirations 18 to 20. Some tenderness was present in the + epigastrium and towards the spleen. Resonance throughout. + Ordinary diet was now resumed, and beyond slight epigastric + pain on deep inspiration, no further symptoms were observed, + and the patient left for England at the end of the month. The + spleen may have been traversed in this patient, as well as the + lower margin of the right lung. + + (164*) Wounded at Enslin. _Entry_ (Mauser), 3/4 of an inch from + the spine, opposite the eighth intercostal space; _exit_, + through the seventh left costal cartilage, 1 inch from the + median line. The patient was lying in the prone position when + shot: he vomited blood freely, and the bowels acted three times + before he was seen forty hours after the accident, each motion + containing dark blood. + + On the commencement of the third day the patient's expression + was extremely anxious, and he was suffering great pain. Pulse + 96, temperature 100 deg.. Tongue moist, occasional vomiting, bowels + open yesterday. Has taken fluid nourishment since injury. The + abdomen moved with respiration, but was moderately distended, + especially in the line of the transverse colon; it was + tympanitic on percussion, there was no dulness in the flanks, + and only moderate rigidity of the wall on palpation. Frothy + fluid stained with bile and faecal in odour was escaping from + the wound of exit, and the everted margins of the latter were + bile-stained. + + A vertical incision was carried downwards from the wound for 4 + inches. A rugged furrow was found on the under surface of the + left lobe of the liver; the stomach was contracted and firmly + adherent by recent lymph to the under surface of the liver and + the diaphragm. The transverse colon was much distended. On + separating the stomach a slit wound was found at the lesser + curvature, immediately to the right of the oesophagus. This + wound was closed with some difficulty with two tiers of + sutures; the cavity was mopped out, and then irrigated with + boiled water; a plug was introduced along the line of the + furrow in the liver, and the lower part of the abdominal + incision closed. + + The patient stood the operation well, and was removed to his + tent; during the day, however, two thunder showers occurred + during each of which water, several inches if not a foot deep, + rushed through the camp. After the second flood he was removed + to the operating room, the only house we had, and slept there. + The pulse rose to 120, and respiration to 26, and there was + pain, which was subdued by 1/3 grain of morphia, administered + subcutaneously. A fair amount of urine was passed, and the + bowels acted once, the motion containing blood. + + On the second day after operation there was some improvement; + the pulse still numbered 116, and the temperature was raised to + 100 deg., but the belly moved fairly, and pain was moderate. + Abundant foul-smelling, bile-stained discharge came from the + wound when the plug was removed. Rectal feeding was + supplemented by small quantities of milk and soda by the mouth. + + The condition did not materially change, but on the fourth day + it was evident that the suturing of the stomach wound had given + way, and liquid food escaped readily when taken. The discharge + remained bile-stained and very foul. No extension of + inflammation to the general peritoneal cavity occurred, but it + was evident that the patient was suffering from constitutional + infection from the foul wound, the lower part of which opened + up somewhat after the removal of the stitches on the seventh + day. The wound was irrigated three times daily with 1-300 + creolin lotion, but remained very foul. The man slowly lost + strength, although escape from the stomach considerably + decreased. On the tenth day a sudden severe haemorrhage + occurred, presumably from a large branch of the coeliac axis. + The bleeding was readily controlled by a plug, and did not + recur; but the patient rapidly sank, and died on the twelfth + day after the operation, and fourteen days after reception of + the injury. No _post-mortem_ examination was made. + +2. _Wounds of the small intestine._--These were comparatively common, +but offered little that was special either in their symptoms or the +results attending them. Wounds were met with in every part of the small +gut; but I saw no case in which an injury to the duodenum could be +specially diagnosed. + +As to the symptoms which attended these injuries, it is somewhat +difficult to speak with precision, and it must be left to my readers to +form an opinion as to how many of the cases recounted below were really +instances of perforating wounds. My own view is that in the majority of +the cases that got well spontaneously, the injury was not of a +perforating nature, and that for reasons which have been already set +forth. It will, however, be at once noted that in all the five cases in +which the injury was certainly diagnosed in hospital death occurred. + +The cases of injury to the small intestine are perhaps best arranged in +three classes. + +1. Those who died upon the field, or shortly after removal from it. In +these the external wounds were often large, the omentum was not rarely +prolapsed, and escape of faeces sometimes occurred early. Shock from the +severity of the lesion, and haemorrhage, were no doubt important factors +in the early lethal issue in this class. Many of the injuries were no +doubt produced by bullets striking irregularly, by ricochets, by bullets +of the expanding forms, or by bullets of large calibre. As being beyond +the bounds of surgical aid, this class possessed the least interest. + +2. Cases brought into the Field, or even the Stationary hospitals, with +symptoms of moderate severity, or even of an insignificant character, +in which evidence of septic peritonitis suddenly developed and death +ensued. + +3. Cases in which the position of the wounds raised the possibility of +injury to the intestine, but in which the symptoms were slight or of +moderate severity, and which recovered spontaneously. + +The whole crux in diagnosis lay in the attempt to separate the two +latter classes, and, personally, I must own to having been no nearer a +position of being able to form an opinion on this point, in the late +than in the early stage of my stay in South Africa. The advent of +peritoneal septicaemia was in many instances the only determining moment. +On this matter I can only add that, in civil practice, an exploratory +abdominal section is often the only means of determination of a rupture +of the bowel wall. + +With regard to the cases of suspected injury to the bowel which +recovered spontaneously, the symptoms were somewhat special in their +comparative slightness, and in the limited nature of the local signs. +Thus the pulse seldom rose to as much as 100 in rate, 80 was a common +average. Respiration was never greatly quickened, 24 was a common rate. +The temperature rarely exceeded 100 deg.. Vomiting was occasionally severe, +but usually not persistent, ceasing on the second day. A good quantity +of urine was passed. As to the local signs, these again were of a +limited nature; distension did not occur, or was slight; movement of the +abdominal wall was only restricted in the neighbourhood of the wound, +the affected area amounted to a quarter, or at most half, the abdominal +wall, and rigidity was localised to a similar segment. Local tenderness +usually existed; but, as a rule, there was little or no dulness to point +to the occurrence either of fluid effusion or a considerable deposition +of lymph. + +Again many of the patients suffered with very slight symptoms of +constitutional shock, although there was considerable variation in this +particular. + + (165*) Wounded at Graspan, sustaining a compound fracture of + the fibula. While being carried off the field, a second bullet + (Lee-Metford) entered immediately outside the left posterior + superior iliac spine, perforated the pelvis, and emerged 1-1/2 + inch within the left anterior superior spine. The patient was + then put down and left on the field ten hours; later he was + carried to shelter for the night, and arrived at Orange River + on the second day. He suffered with some pain in the abdomen, + especially during the journey in the train, but was not sick; + the bowels were confined. + + When seen on the third day at 6 P.M., some pain was complained + of in the abdomen, which moved freely in the upper part, but + was motionless below the umbilicus. No distension. Tenderness + around wound of exit and some rigidity. The bowels had acted + four times during the day; motions loose, dark brown, and + containing no blood. Face not anxious, eyes bright, temperature + 102 deg.. Pulse 96, regular, and of good strength. Tongue moist and + little furred. + + The abdomen was opened at 5 A.M. on the fourth day, as the + local signs had become more pronounced, and the patient had + passed a restless night in great abdominal pain. A local + incision was chosen, as the wound was presumably in the sigmoid + flexure. The sigmoid flexure was adherent to the abdominal wall + opposite the wound of exit, and a dark ecchymosed patch was + found, but no perforation could be detected. Foul pus and gas + escaped freely from the pelvis, but no wound of the large bowel + could be discovered here. On enlarging the incision upwards + three openings were found in a coil of jejunum, probably that + about five feet from the duodenal junction usually provided + with the longest mesentery. No fourth opening could be found. + The openings were circular, about 1/3 inch in diameter, clean + cut, with a ring of everted mucous membrane, and the wall of + the bowel in the neighbourhood was thickened. All three + openings were included within a length of 2-1/2 inches. There + was no surrounding ecchymosis of the bowel wall. Very little + escaped intestinal contents were found in the situation of the + bowel. The latter had apparently been retracted upwards, and + lay to the left of the lumbar spine. The wounds were readily + closed by five Lembert's sutures, three crossing the openings, + and one at each end. The belly was then washed out with boiled + water and closed. The delay in finding the wounds due to the + mistaken impression that they would be found in the pelvis + materially prolonged the operation, which lasted an hour and a + half. The patient never rallied, and died seventeen hours + later. It is possible that a wound in the sigmoid flexure was + present which had already closed at the time of operation. + + (166*) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), opposite + central point of left ilium; _exit_, 1-1/2 inch above the + centre of the right Poupart's ligament. Vomiting commenced soon + after the injury, and this was continuous until the patient's + arrival in the Stationary hospital on the fourth day, when the + condition was as follows:-- + + Face extremely anxious in expression. Temperature 101 deg., + sweating freely. Pulse 110, fair strength. Tongue moist. + Abdomen much distended, rigid, motionless, tympanitic + throughout. Bowels confined. No urine had been passed for + twenty-four hours, [Symbol: ounce]ij in bladder on + catheterisation, clear, and containing no blood. + + Abdominal section. Median incision. A considerable quantity of + bloody effusion was evacuated. Intestine generally congested + and distended. No lymph. Two wounds were found in the ileum on + the opposite sides of one coil; the openings were circular, + with the mucous membrane everted. No escape of faecal matter was + visible until the intestine was delivered, when intestinal + contents spurted freely across the room. The openings were + sutured with five Lembert's stitches. The bowel was punctured + in two places to relieve distension, and then returned into the + belly, after washing with boiled water. + + Four pints of saline solution were infused into the median + basilic vein, and 1/30 grain strychnine sulph. was injected + hypodermically. + + The patient did not rally, and died twelve hours after the + operation. + + (167*) Wounded at Graspan. _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), midway + between the umbilicus and pubes; _exit_, 1 inch to the left of + the fifth lumbar spine. The patient was seen on the third day + in the following condition: in great pain, expression extremely + anxious, vomiting constantly. Pulse 150 running, respirations + 48. Temperature 100 deg., sweating freely. Great distension, + rigidity, and general tenderness of immobile abdomen. No + improvement followed the administration of brandy and + hypodermic injection of strychnine 1/30 grain, and operation + was deemed hopeless. + + In the evening the patient was apparently dying. Face blue and + sunken and covered with sweat, eyes dull, speechless, pulse + imperceptible, restlessness extreme, bowels acting + involuntarily, no urine in bladder. + + The man was placed in a tent by himself, and to my surprise was + alive and better the next morning; the expression was still + anxious, but the face brighter and not sweating; the pulse + only numbered 100, but was very weak, and the hands and feet + were cold. The condition of the abdomen was unaltered, but the + thoracic respiration had decreased in rapidity from 48 to 28. + + His condition still seemed to preclude any chance of successful + intervention, but none the less life was retained until the + morning of the seventh day, the state alternating between a + moribund one and one of slight improvement. He was lucid at + times, although for the most part wandering, and was so + restless that no covering could be kept upon him. Vomiting was + continuous, so that no nourishment could be retained; the + bowels acted frequently involuntarily, and little or no urine + was passed. Meanwhile, the abdomen became flat, then sunken, an + area of induration and tenderness about 6 inches in diameter + developing around the wound of entry. Slight variations in the + pulse, and from normal to subnormal in the temperature, were + noted, and death eventually occurred from septicaemia and + inanition. + + (168*) Wounded at Driefontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), above the + posterior third of the left iliac crest, at the margin of the + last lumbar transverse process (probably through ilio-lumbar + ligament); _exit_, 1 inch below and to the left of the + umbilicus. + + The patient was wounded at 3 P.M., but not brought into the + Field hospital until 9 P.M., when the temperature of the tents + was below 28 deg.F. He was considerably collapsed, suffering much + pain, and vomited freely. The abdomen was flat, but very + tender. Bowels confined. The column had to move at 5 A.M. the + next morning, when the temperature was still near freezing, and + during the day continuous fighting prevented any chance of + operation. The man steadily sank during the day, and died + thirty-six hours after the reception of the injury. + + _Post-mortem condition._--Belly not distended, dull anteriorly + in patches, and right flank dull throughout. When the belly was + opened, extensive adhesion of omentum and intestine enclosing + numerous collections of pus were disclosed, and on disturbing + the adhesions a large collection of turbid blood-stained fluid + was set free from the right loin. The great omentum was much + thickened and matted, with deposition of thick patches of + lymph; very firm recent adhesions also united numerous coils of + small intestine. The pus was foetid, but no appreciable + quantity of intestinal contents was detected in it. The lower + half or more of the small intestine was injected, reddened, and + thickened. The wounds which were situated in the lower part of + the jejunum and ileum were multiple, and seven perforations + were detected; besides these the intestine was marked by + bruises, and some gutter slits affecting the serous and + muscular coats only. Considerable ecchymosis surrounded these + latter. The clean perforations were circular, less than 1/4 + inch in diameter, and for the most part closed by eversion of + the mucous membrane. Intestinal contents were not apparent, but + escaped freely on manipulation of the bowel. + + (169*) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), over the + eighth rib in the anterior axillary line; _exit_, 1 inch to the + left of second lumbar spinous process, just below the last rib. + Vomiting commenced almost immediately after reception of the + injury, and the bowels acted frequently. This condition + persisted until the fourth day, when the patient was brought + down to Orange River, and the signs were as follows. + Considerable pain in left half of abdomen, pulse 110, fair + strength, temperature 101 deg.. Some general distension of abdomen + with complete disappearance of hepatic dulness. Some movement + of right half of abdomen, left half immobile, dulness extending + from the flank as far forwards as linea semilunaris. An + incision was made in left linea semilunaris, and Oj blood + evacuated from the left loin. There was no lymph on the + intestines nor sign of inflammation. No perforation was + discovered in either stomach or intestine, but on two coils of + jejunum there were deep slits 3/4 inch long, extending through + both peritoneal and muscular coats. Beyond these wounds, on + other coils oval patches of ecchymosis, due to direct bruising, + were present. The peritoneal cavity was sponged free of all + blood and irrigated with boiled water; no bleeding point was + discovered, and the abdomen was closed. + + The next morning the patient was comfortable; temperature + 100.2 deg., pulse 100. Tongue clean and moist; he vomited once + during the night. + + Some bloody discharge had collected in the dressing, and at the + lower angle of wound there was a local swelling, apparently in + the abdominal wall. The flank was resonant. + + During the afternoon the patient became faint, and when seen at + 6 P.M. was in a state of collapse, in which he shortly died. + + Death was apparently due to renewal of the previous haemorrhage. + No _post-mortem_ examination was made. + + (170*) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1/2 inch to + the left of the second sacral spine; _exit_, immediately below + the left anterior superior iliac spine; the patient was + kneeling at the time, and the same bullet traversed his left + thigh in the lower third. When seen on the third day, the + lower part of the abdomen was motionless, tumid, and tender. + The bowels had been confined for three days; there had been no + sickness, and the tongue was moist and clean. Temperature 100 deg., + pulse 90, fair strength, respirations 38. The patient had once + had an attack of acute appendicitis, and he himself said he was + sure he now had 'peritonitis,' as he had pain exactly similar + in the belly to that he had suffered in his previous illness. + + No further signs, however, developed under an expectant + treatment, and he remained some two months in hospital, while + the wound in the thigh and a third injury to the elbow-joint + were healing. + + (171) _Entry_ (Mauser), at the highest point of the left crista + ilii; _exit_, through the right ilium, 2 inches horizontally + anterior to the posterior superior spine. Absolutely no + abdominal symptoms followed. The bowels were confined five + days, and then opened by enema. The patient complained of some + stiffness in the lumbo-sacral region, but the right + synchondrosis was no doubt implicated in the track. + + (172) Wounded at Paardeberg (range 800 yards). _Entry_ + (Mauser), 2 inches diagonally below and to the right of the + umbilicus; _exit_, not discoverable. For the first two days the + patient had to lie out with the regiment; on the fourth he was + removed to the Field hospital. During the first three days the + patient vomited (green matter) frequently, and the belly was + hard and painful; as biscuit was the only available food, no + nourishment was taken. The bowels acted on the second night. At + the end of a week the patient was sent by bullock wagon (three + days and nights) to Modder River, and then down to Capetown, + where he walked into the hospital on the thirteenth day, + apparently well. + + Two days later the temperature rose to 104 deg., and enteric fever + was diagnosed, no local signs pointing to the injury existing. + The patient made a good recovery. + + (173) Wounded at Colenso. _Entry_ (Mauser), at junction of + outer 2/5 with inner 3/5 of line from right anterior superior + iliac spine to umbilicus; _exit_, at upper part of right great + sacro-sciatic foramen, in line of posterior superior iliac + spine. Advancing on foot when struck; he then fell and crept + fifty yards to behind a rock, where he remained seven and a + half hours. For two days subsequently he vomited freely; the + bowels acted nine hours after the injury, and then became + constipated. No further symptoms were noted, and at the end of + three weeks the abdomen was absolutely normal. The man is now + again on active service. + + (174*) Wounded at Modder River while retiring on foot. _Entry_ + (Mauser), at highest point of right iliac crest; _exit_, 2-1/2 + inches to right of and 1/2 inch above level of umbilicus. The + injury was not followed by sickness, and the bowels remained + confined. During the first two days 'pain struck across the + abdomen' when micturition was performed. + + When the patient came under observation on the third day the + condition was as follows:--Complains of little pain, + temperature normal, pulse 72, respirations 24, tongue moist, + bowels confined. Rigidity of abdominal wall and deficient + mobility of nearly whole right half of belly, the whole lower + half of which moves little with respiration. No track palpable + in abdominal parietes. No dulness, no distension. The + temperature rose to 99.5 deg. at night. On the fourth day the + bowels acted freely, the pulse fell to 60, the respirations + were 24, and the temperature normal. + + Tenderness and rigidity persisted in the right flank to the end + of a week, after which time no further signs persisted. + + (175*) Wounded at Modder River while lying on right side. Range + 500 yards. Walked 400 yards after injury. _Entry_ (Mauser), at + the junction of the posterior and middle thirds of the right + iliac crest; _exit_, 3 inches to right of and 1/2 inch below + the level of the umbilicus. The injury was followed by no signs + of intra-abdominal lesion; on the third day the temperature was + normal, pulse 80, and the tongue clean and moist. Some soreness + at times and tenderness on pressure were complained of, but the + man was discharged well at the end of one month. + + (176*) Wounded while doubling in retirement at Modder River. + _Entry_ (Mauser), immediately above the junction of the + posterior and middle thirds of the left iliac crest; _exit_, 1 + inch below costal margin (eighth rib), 3 inches to the right of + the median line. The bullet was lying in the anterior wound, + whence it was removed by the orderly who applied the first + dressing on the field. The patient remained on the field seven + and a half hours, and when brought into hospital at once + commenced to vomit. The ejected matter, at first green in + colour, during the next forty-eight hours changed to a dirty + brown. Meanwhile, the abdomen was somewhat painful. When seen + on the third day he had ceased to vomit for three hours. The + face was slightly anxious, and the patient lay on the ground + with the lower extremities extended. Temperature 99 deg., pulse 72, + fair strength. Respirations 32, shallow. Tongue moist, lightly + furred, bowels not open for four days. He slept fairly last + night. Abdomen soft, moving well with respiration, no + distension, slight tenderness below and to the right of the + umbilicus, and local dulness in right flank. + + The next day the pulse fell to 60 and the bowels acted, but + there was no change in the local condition. The man looked + somewhat ill until the end of a week, but was then sent to the + Base, and at the expiration of a month was sent home well. + + (177*) Wounded at Modder River. Two apertures of _entry_ + (Mauser); (_a_) below cartilage of eighth rib in left nipple + line; (_b_) 2 inches below and 4-1/2 inches to the left of the + median line. No exit wound discovered, and no track could be + palpated between the two openings, which were both circular and + depressed. When seen on fourth day there was tenderness in the + lower half of the abdomen, and the left thigh was held in a + flexed position. Respirations 20, respiratory movement confined + to upper half of abdominal wall. Pulse 70, temperature 99 deg.. + Tongue moist, covered with white fur; bowels confined since the + accident; no sickness. The patient remained under observation + thirteen days, during which time pain and difficulty in + movement of the left thigh persisted, also slight tenderness in + the lower part of the abdomen; but at the end of a month he was + sent to England well, but unfit to take further part in the + campaign. I thought the bullet might be in the left psoas, but + it was not localised. + + (178*) Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ (Mauser), 3-1/2 inches + above and 1-1/2 inch within the left anterior superior iliac + spine; _exit_, 1-1/2 inch to the right of the tenth dorsal + spinous process. The same bullet had perforated the forearm + just above the wrist prior to entering the abdomen. No local or + constitutional signs indicated either bowel injury or + perforation of liver. The man, however, was suffering from a + slight attack of dysentery, passing blood and mucus per rectum + with great tenesmus. He was sent to the Base at the end of a + week, and returned to England well three weeks later. He + attributed his dysentery to the wound, as the symptoms did not + exist prior to its reception; but as the disease coincided + exactly with what was very prevalent amongst the troops at the + time, I do not think there was any connection between it and + the injury. + + (179) Wounded near Thaba-nchu. _Entry_, over the centre of the + sacrum at the upper border of fourth segment; _exit_, 1-1/2 + inch above left Poupart's ligament, 2 inches from the median + line. Aperture of entry oval, with long vertical axis. Exit + wound a transverse slit, with slight tendency to starring (see + fig. 19, p. 58). One hour after being shot the patient vomited + once. There was some evidence of shock and considerable pain. + The bowels acted involuntarily simultaneously with the + vomiting, and incontinence of faeces and retention of urine + persisted for four days. The vomit was bilious in appearance; + no blood was seen either in it or the motions. + + Forty-six hours after the injury the condition was as follows: + Face slightly anxious and pale; skin moist, temperature 100.4 deg.; + pulse 116, regular and of fair strength; respirations 24; + abdomen slightly tumid; tenderness over lower half, especially + on left side; the lower half moves little with respiration. + + Twenty-four hours later the patient had improved. He was + comfortable and hopeful; slept well with morphia 1/3 grain + hypodermically. Tongue moist, covered with white fur; has been + taking milk only, [Symbol: ounce]ij every half-hour. No + sickness. Temperature + + 99 deg.. Pulse 104. Respirations 24. Abdomen flatter; general + respiratory movement; tenderness now mainly localised to an + area 2-1/2 inches in diameter, to the left of the umbilicus, + above exit wound. + + The patient continued to improve, and on the fifth day + travelled six hours in a bullock wagon to Bloemfontein. Soon + after arrival his temperature was normal: pulse 80, + respirations 16, with good abdominal movement. Local tenderness + persisted in the same area, but was less in degree. Tongue + rather dry, bowels confined. Micturition normal. Two drachms of + castor oil and an enema were given. + + On the ninth day patient was practically well, except for + slight deep tenderness. He remained in bed on ordinary light + diet, but at the end of the third week he was seized by a + sudden attack of pain, the temperature rising to 103 deg. and the + pulse to 140, the abdomen becoming swollen and tender. He was + then under the charge of Mr. Bowlby, who ordered some opium, + and the symptoms rapidly subsided. Although this wound crossed + the small intestine area, it is probable that the symptoms may + have been due to an injury of the rectum or sigmoid flexure. + +3. _Wounds of the large intestine._--Injuries to every part of the large +bowel were observed, and spontaneous recoveries were seen in all parts +except the transverse colon, which, as already remarked, is near akin +to the small intestine with regard to its position and anatomical +arrangement. + +The only case of perforation of the vermiform appendix that I heard of, +one under the care of Mr. Stonham, died of peritoneal septicaemia. +Several cases of recovery from wounds of the caecum and ascending colon +are recounted below. The only points of importance in the nature of the +signs of these injuries were their primary insignificance, and the +comparative frequency with which _local_ peritoneal suppuration followed +them. The absence of a similar sequence in some of the cases in which +wounds of the small intestine were assumed, was, in my opinion, one of +the strongest reasons for doubting the correctness of the diagnosis. It +is also a significant fact that injuries of the ascending colon--that is +to say, of the portion of the large bowel which perhaps lies most free +from the area occupied by the small intestine--were those which most +frequently recovered. + +The following cases afford examples of the course followed in a number +of injuries to the large intestine, and illustrate both the +uncomplicated and the complicated modes of spontaneous recovery. + +No. 180 affords a good example of an extra-peritoneal injury, and of the +especially fatal character of such lesions. This case was also one of my +surgical disappointments. + +Nos. 182, 183 are of great interest in several particulars. First, the +aperture of exit was large and allowed the escape of faeces, not a very +common feature in wounds not proving immediately fatal. Secondly, in +neither were any peritoneal signs observed. Thirdly, in each the exit +wound communicated with the pleura, and the patients died from +septicaemia mainly due to absorption from the surface of that membrane +(_Pleural septicaemia_). + +No. 190 is a most striking instance of spontaneous cure, since no doubt +can exist that both rectum and bladder were perforated. + + (180*) _Injury to the caecum and ascending colon._--Boer, + wounded at Graspan while sheltering behind a rock, lying on his + back. + + _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), in right thigh, 3 inches below and 1 + inch within anterior superior spine of ilium; _exit_, in back, + on a level with the fourth lumbar spinous process and 3 inches + from that point. + + Half an hour after the wound the patient commenced to suffer + severe stabbing pain; he lay on the field one hour; later he + was taken to a Field hospital, and on the second day was sent + by train a distance of twenty-five miles. + + When seen at the end of fifty hours the condition was as + follows. Face anxious, complexion dusky. Great abdominal pain, + especially about the umbilicus. Vomiting frequent and + distressing; bowels confined since the accident; tongue dry and + furred. Urine scanty. Pulse full and strong, 125; respirations, + entirely thoracic, 30. + + Abdomen generally distended and tympanitic, wall rigid and + motionless. Dulness in right flank, together with superficial + oedema and emphysema. + + Abdominal section fifty-three and a half hours after accident. + Incision in right linea semilunaris. Great omentum adherent to + ascending colon, which was covered with plastic lymph. Gas and + intestinal contents escaped from an opening at the line of + reflexion of the peritoneum from the ascending colon; + retro-peritoneal extravasation and emphysema extended the whole + length of the ascending colon and around duodenum, the wall of + the colon itself exhibiting subperitoneal emphysema. The colon + was freed and the rent sewn up with interrupted sutures. About + [Symbol: ounce] iv of foul faecal fluid were evacuated from + loin, and a free counter-opening made. The opening in the ilium + by which the bullet had entered the abdomen was found at the + brim of the pelvis; the loin and peritoneal cavity were sponged + dry and flushed with boiled water; no lymph was seen on the + small intestine. A large gauze plug was inserted into the + posterior wound, one end of the plug being brought out of the + operation incision. + + During the succeeding six days progress was not unsatisfactory: + the abdomen became soft, moved with respiration, there was no + sickness, and the bowels acted. The pulse fell to 90, + respirations to 20, and the temperature did not exceed 102 deg. F. + The wound suppurated freely, however, and although there were + no further signs of peritoneal septicaemia, it was evident that + general infection had taken place, and on the sixth day a + parotid bubo developed on the right side, which was opened. + + On the seventh day the patient suddenly commenced to fail + rapidly; vomiting was almost continuous--at first curdled milk, + later frothy watery fluid--and on the eighth day he died. The + abdomen remained soft, sunken, and flaccid, and death no doubt + resulted from general septicaemia rather than from peritoneal + infection, absorption taking place from the large foul cavity + behind the colon. As the cavity in part surrounded the + descending duodenum, this possibly accounted for the attack of + vomiting which preceded death. + + (181*) _Ascending colon._--Wounded at Graspan while lying in + prone position. _Entry_ (Mauser), over ninth rib in line of + right linea semilunaris; _exit_, in right buttock, just below + and behind the top of the great trochanter. + + The injury was followed by little abdominal pain, but a strange + sensation of local gurgling was noted. The bowels acted as soon + as the patient reached camp, some hours after being wounded. + There was no sickness and nothing abnormal was noted in the + motions, except that they were loose and light-coloured. + + On the evening of the third day the patient came under + observation in the ambulance train for Capetown. He looked + somewhat anxious and ill, but he complained of little pain; the + temperature was 102 deg., pulse 88, fair strength, soft and + regular. There was local dulness, tenderness, and deficiency of + movement in the right iliac region. As it was night, he was + removed from the train and an operation was performed the next + morning. + + Prior to operation the condition was as follows: Pulse 84, + temperature 100 deg.; respiration easy, 20. Tongue moist, but + thickly coated in centre. Abdomen moves fairly, and is + resonant, except in right lower quadrant. No distension. + Dulness, tenderness, and rigidity in right iliac region, marked + to outer side of caecum. Entry wound nearly and exit quite + healed. Cannot flex right thigh. The following operation was + performed. Appendix incision, about [Symbol: ounce]j of faecal + fluid and faeces in a localised cavity on outer and anterior + aspect of caecum evacuated; adhesions very firm. Cavity sloughy + throughout and caecum covered with dull grey lymph. The opening + in the bowel was not localised, and it was considered wiser to + treat the case like one of perforation from appendicitis than + to run the risk of breaking down adhesions. A small awl-like + opening was found in the ilium with powdered bone at its + entrance leading to the wound of exit. + + The after-treatment of the case gave rise to no anxiety, but + healing of the resulting sinus was slow; faecal-smelling pus + escaped for some days, and a number of small sloughs came away. + On the twelfth day the patient was sent down to Wynberg, where + he remained twelve weeks. A counter-incision was needed in the + loin to drain the suppurating cavity three weeks after the + primary operation, and five weeks after the operation an escape + of gas and faeces took place from the anterior wound, while the + bowels were acting, as a result of a dose of castor oil. No + further escape of faeces occurred, and he left for England with + a small sinus only. No extension of inflammation into the + original wound track ever occurred, both openings and the canal + healing by primary union. + + The sinus remained open, and occasionally discharged for a + further period of six months, and then healed firmly; since + when the patient has been in perfect health. + + (182*) _Splenic flexure, descending colon._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), in sixth left intercostal + space in mid-axillary line; _exit_, in left loin, below last + rib, at outer margin of erector spinae. The patient remained in + the Field hospital three days, during which time he exhibited + no serious abdominal symptoms, but during the journey to Orange + River (53-1/2 miles) he was sick. He remained at Orange River + two days, and while there an enema was administered, producing + a normal motion. The abdomen was slightly distended; it moved + fairly, there was slight rigidity, but little tenderness. + Temperature 100.8 deg., pulse 120. No appearance of faeces in wound. + + When seen on the sixth day the condition was as + follows:--Patient cheerful and not in great pain. Temperature + 99.2 deg.; pulse 120; respirations 48, very shallow. Abdomen soft, + moving freely, no distension or general tenderness. Fluid faeces + escaping in abundance from the wound in loin. Redness of skin + and swelling below level of wound, and cellular emphysema + above. Faecal-smelling fluid was also escaping from the thoracic + wound. + + The wound was enlarged, but the patient rapidly sank, and died + of septicaemia on the seventh day. + + (183*) An exactly similar case came under observation from the + battle of Modder River, except that the opening in the loin was + somewhat larger, and earlier and freer escape of faeces took + place from it. In this also faecal matter passed freely into the + left pleural cavity, and faecal matter was expectorated, while + there was an almost complete absence of abdominal symptoms. + Death occurred on the fourth day. + + No _post-mortem_ examination was made in either case, but I + believe in both the extra-peritoneal aspect of the colon was + implicated and that the septicaemia was in great part due to + absorption from the pleural rather than the peritoneal cavity, + since in neither case were the abdominal symptoms a prominent + feature. + + (184) _Possible wound of caecum._--Wounded at Spion Kop. Bullet + (Mauser) perforated the right forearm, then entered belly. + _Entry_, 3 inches from the right anterior superior iliac spine, + in the line of the supra-pubic fold of the belly wall (a + transverse slit); _exit_, in right buttock, on a level with the + tip of the great trochanter and 2 inches within it. The wound + was received immediately after breakfast had been eaten. There + was retention of urine and constipation for three days, but no + sickness. Local pain and tenderness were severe, and at the end + of three weeks there was still local tenderness, slight + induration, and dragging pain on defaecation. The patient + returned to England at the end of a month well, except for + slight local tenderness. + + (185) _Possible wound of colon._--Wounded at Paardeberg; range + 200 yards. Walking at time. The bullet (Mauser) perforated the + left forearm, just below the elbow-joint. _Entry_, into belly 1 + inch anterior to the tip of the left eleventh costal cartilage; + no exit. + + The injury was followed by pain in the left half of the abdomen + and vomiting, which continued for two days. The bowels acted on + the third day; no nourishment was taken for two days, but a + small quantity of water was allowed. No further symptoms were + noted, and at the end of a fortnight the patient was well, + except for slight local tenderness. The bullet could not be + detected with the X-rays. + + (186) _Wound of caecum_.--Wounded at Paardeberg. _Entry_ + (Mauser), 2 inches diagonally above and within right anterior + superior iliac spine; _exit_, immediately to the right of the + fifth lumbar spinous process; the patient was lying on his left + side when struck. A burning pain down the right thigh + immediately followed the accident, and lasted some days. There + was no sickness, the bowels were confined three days, and there + was pain across the back and down the thigh. + + On the tenth day he arrived at the Base, when he was lying on + his back suffering considerable pain. The temperature ranged to + 101 deg.. There was diarrhoea and cystitis, with a considerable + amount of pus in the urine, which was very offensive. A small + fluctuating spot existed on the back, just to the right of the + original exit wound which was firmly healed. The abdomen moved + fairly with respiration in its upper part, but was motionless + below, especially in the right iliac fossa; some induration was + to be felt here. The right thigh was kept flexed. + + During the next few days the pus disappeared from the urine, + and with this change the induration in the right iliac fossa + increased. An incision (Mr. Gairdner) was made into the + fluctuating spot behind, and pus evacuated. The patient + recovered. + + (187) _Possible wound of caecum._--Wounded outside Heilbron. + _Entry_ (Mauser), in the right loin, 2-1/2 inches above the + iliac crest, at the margin of the erector spinae; _exit_, 1-1/2 + inch above and within the right anterior superior spine of the + ilium. There was little shock. The patient was brought six + miles in a wagon into camp, and slept comfortably with a small + morphia injection. Prior to the accident the patient was + suffering from diarrhoea, but afterwards the bowels were + confined. The next morning there had been no sickness and + little pain. The tongue was moist and clean, the pulse 80, the + respirations 24, the belly moved generally, although + inspiration was shallow; the temperature was 99 deg.. Slight + tenderness in the belly to the inner side of the exit wound, + but no dulness. + + The patient was starved for the first thirty-six hours, a + little warm water then being allowed. No symptoms developed, + and a perfect recovery followed. + + (188) _Colon_, _liver_.--Wounded outside Heilbron. _Entry_ + (Mauser), midway between the last right rib and the crista + ilii; _exit_, below the eighth costal cartilage in nipple line. + There were no serious primary symptoms, but ten days after the + accident the temperature rose, swelling and pain developed in + the right loin, and on the fourteenth day a large tympanitic + abscess was opened (Dr. Flockemann, German Ambulance.) + Faecal-smelling gas and pus were evacuated. There was no + extension of the abscess forwards. A week later the patient had + much improved, although there were evident signs of general + absorption, and the discharge from the abscess cavity was + abundant and very foul. On the thirteenth day a serious + haemorrhage occurred from the loin wound, which was opened up, + but no evident source was discovered; haemorrhage was repeated + the next day, and the man died. + + At the _post-mortem_ examination a large quantity of + chocolate-coloured fluid was found free in the abdomen and + pelvis. A chain of small local abscesses was found surrounding + the ascending colon, and a larger one over the front of the + caecum. The wall of the ascending colon was generally thickened, + and from this, in three places, openings with rounded margins + connected the abscess cavities with the lumen of the bowel. One + of the openings, larger than the others, was possibly the + aperture of entry of the bullet; the others were apparently + spontaneous. + + At the anterior border of the right lobe of the liver an + abscess cavity existed in connection with the wound of the + liver, and this was continuous with the aperture of exit, + although not discharging. The aperture of exit was plugged by a + tag of omentum (see fig. 89). No obvious source of the + haemorrhage was forthcoming, but it probably originated in one + of the large branches of the vena cava. The bullet had struck + the transverse process of the lumbar vertebra, but had not + given rise to any signs of spinal concussion. + + (189*) _Ascending colon._--Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_ + (Mauser), midway between the tip of the tenth right rib and the + iliac crest. Bullet retained. A second wound existed over the + centre of the left sterno-mastoid, and the bullet here was also + retained and never localised. The patient stated that he + brought up blood at short intervals for half an hour + immediately after he was wounded. This might have been + explained by the wound in the neck, but no difficulty in + swallowing was noted. The bowels acted the day after he was + shot, and, except for some local tenderness and immobility, no + abdominal signs were noted. Three weeks later a swelling was + obvious to the right side of the umbilicus, and a tympanitic + abscess developed; this was opened, and a deformed Mauser + bullet extracted. Foul pus, but no faecal matter, was evacuated, + and after discharging for a fortnight the wound closed, and the + man was sent home as 'well.' In this case I assumed a wound of + the ascending colon had occurred. + + (190*) _Rectum and bladder._--Wounded at Graspan, while + retiring at the double. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch to the right + of the coccyx; _exit_, 1 inch above the junction of the middle + and outer thirds of left Poupart's ligament. The man suffered + with some pain in the abdomen, and for first two days with + retention of urine. The urine was drawn off with the catheter, + and contained blood. During the next five days micturition was + hourly or more frequent; gas was passed _per urethram_, and the + urine was very foul, containing evident faecal matter. + Micturition continued frequent, with purulent cystitis for one + month. Local tenderness, pain, and immobility developed over + the lower quarter of the abdomen, extending to the right iliac + fossa. A local abscess pointed a little to the right of the mid + line, and 2 inches above the symphysis, and from this + foul-smelling pus, but no faeces, was discharged for three + months, during which period the surrounding dulness and + induration gradually decreased and the sinus healed. When the + patient left for England there was still occasional slight + discharge from the original wound of entry, and there was + slight discomfort on micturition, but he was otherwise well. + + A year later the man had resumed active duty, and, except for + occasional pain on stooping, considered himself well. + +The following cases are appended as of some general interest. The first +two (191, 192) illustrate extra-peritoneal injuries to the rectum. In +neither did positive evidence exist of wound of the bowel, but the +symptoms in each rendered this accident probable. Case 193 is an +illustration of apparent escape of the anal canal in a wound in which +from the position of the external apertures this escape would have +appeared impossible. + +Wounds of the extra-peritoneal portion of the rectum, as a rule, +appeared to have a somewhat better prognosis than would have been +expected; in any case, the prognosis was far better than that obtaining +in wounds of the base of the urinary bladder. My experience on the +subject of these wounds was, however, limited to the two cases quoted. + +Case 194 is inserted as an example of the complicated nature of the +abdominal injuries not so very unfrequently met with. It illustrates +well the difficulty which may arise at any stage in the course of +treatment of an injury, in the certain determination or exclusion of +wound of a part of the alimentary canal. + + (191) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), in the right + loin, immediately below the ribs in the mid-axillary line; + _exit_, about the centre of the left buttock, on a level with + the tip of the great trochanter. A second lacerated shell wound + of back was present. All the wounds suppurated. For the first + sixteen days following the injury all control was lost over the + anal sphincter, and bloody faeces, and later slime, constantly + escaped, but no faecal matter ever escaped from the wound in the + buttock. There was no history of previous dysentery, and rectal + examination afforded no information. The buttock wound had to + be opened up, disclosing a tunnel in the ilium. + + The wounds granulated slowly with continuous suppuration, but + were healed, and the patient returned home at the end of + fourteen weeks, the bowels acting normally. + + (192) Wounded at Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), at the junction + of the middle and posterior thirds of the left iliac crest; the + bullet was retained, and removed (Mr. Pegg) from the back of + the right thigh, 3 inches below the back of the great + trochanter. After the injury retention of urine followed, with + incapacity to control loose motions, though solid ones could be + retained. The retention was treated by catheterisation, which + was followed by cystitis. The power of micturition was slowly + recovered, and three weeks later he could pass water, at times + in a dribbling stream only; the cystitis had improved. The man + returned to England very much improved, but not quite well, at + the end of five weeks. + + (193) Wounded at Modder River. _Entry_, in the right buttock, + near the outer border at the upper part; _exit_, at the lower + part of outer border of left buttock. The line of the wound + exactly crossed the position of the anus, but no sign of injury + to the rectum could be discovered. + + (194) Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), 1/2 inch + below the margin of the iliac crest, at the junction of its + middle and posterior thirds, and on a level with the fifth + lumbar spinous process; _exit_, below the cartilage of the + eighth rib, just within the left nipple line. Struck while + retiring; fell at once, and remained thirty hours on the field. + Patient stated that he vomited 'blood like coffee grounds' six + times while lying on the field, and twice after being brought + in. His bowels were confined for three days. His right lower + extremity was paralysed. + + On the fifth day there was considerable induration around the + wound of exit, and the upper half of the abdomen was immobile + and tender. The temperature rose to 100 deg., and the pulse was 96. + Shortly afterwards a similar condition was noted in the lower + half of the abdomen; the temperature continued to be raised and + the pulse quickened, when on the thirteenth day a considerable + quantity of pus was passed per rectum, and diarrhoea set in; + this continued for three days, with marked improvement in the + general symptoms. Micturition, which had been painful, became + normal; the pulse and temperature fell, and the expression + became less anxious. The patient continued to sleep badly, + however, and complained of pain. + + At the end of the third week he still looked ill, but was + easier. Temperature normal in the morning, 100 deg. in evening, + pulse 80. Tongue thickly furred, but moist. Still on milk diet; + appetite bad; bowels irregular. + + The abdomen moved little in the lower half, induration + persisted in the left iliac fossa, the left thigh continued + flexed, and resonance was impaired to the left of the + umbilicus. + + At the end of six weeks a distinct hard swelling in two parts, + separated by a resonant area, was noted to the left of the + umbilicus and in the left iliac fossa. The abdomen moved + fairly, and there was little tenderness over the swelling. + During the next week the swelling appeared to increase and to + fluctuate; at the same time the temperature again began to rise + to 100 deg. and 101 deg. at eve. The swelling was taken to be a + localised peritoneal suppuration, and an incision was made over + it; but this led down to a free peritoneal cavity, with a + tumour pressing up from the posterior abdominal wall. The wound + was therefore closed, and a fresh extra-peritoneal incision + made, immediately above Poupart's ligament, when the swelling + proved to be a large retro-peritoneal haematoma. As the cavity + extended into the pelvis and up to the level of the costal + margin, it was deemed wise only to evacuate a part of the + blood-clot. The origin of the bleeding was not determined, and + the wound was closed and healed by first intention. The man + continued to improve, and left for home five weeks later. + + This patient has continued to improve since his return, but the + left thigh is still somewhat flexed. + +_Prognosis in intestinal injuries._--This was of a most discouraging +character compared with the prognosis in abdominal injuries as a whole. +The cases were of two classes, however: those that died within +twenty-four hours, and those that died at the end of from three days to +a week. + +Cases falling into the first category are obviously of little importance +from the point of view of surgical treatment. Many of them died from the +widespread nature of the injury, and the shock produced by it; others +from haemorrhage from the large abdominal vessels. It is unlikely that +any could have been saved, even under the most satisfactory conditions. + +In the following small table, therefore, I have included only the cases +which have been already quoted, which survived long enough to be +amenable to surgical treatment, and which were for some days under my +own observation. Some of them, in fact almost all, I watched until they +were either convalescent, or died, and in six I performed operations. + +I am aware, and have short details of the histories of eight patients +wounded in the same battles who died prior to the termination of the +first thirty-six hours; but these are not included, for the reason +stated above, and also because I am uncertain whether all the injuries +were produced by bullets of small calibre. + +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ + | | Localised | | | +Viscous wounded | Number of | Secondary | Recovered | Died | + | cases | suppuration | | | + | | occurred | | | +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ +Stomach certain | 2 | -- | 1 | 1 | +Stomach possible | 1 | -- | 1 | -- | +Small intestine certain | 5 | 0 | -- | 5 | +Small intestine possible | 10 | 0 | 10 | -- | +Large intestine certain | 8 | 4[21] | 4 | 4 | +Large intestine possible | 4 | -- | 4 | -- | +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ +Bladder certain | 3 | 3 | 1 | 2 | +Bladder possible | 1 | -- | 1 | -- | +Liver | 6 | -- | 6 | -- | +Kidneys | 6 | -- | 4 | 2 | +Spleen | 3 | -- | 2 | 1 | +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ + Total | 49[22] | -- | 34 | 15 | +-------------------------+-----------+-------------+-----------+------+ + +Included in the above table are thirty instances of intestinal injury, +and these are divided up according to the segment of the intestinal +canal implicated, and also as to whether the perforation was certain, or +only assumed from the position of the external apertures and the +presence of abdominal symptoms of a noticeable grade. + +From this analysis it appears clear-- + +1. That wounds of the stomach have a comparatively good prognosis, and +that they may recover spontaneously. It is true that only two examples +are included in my table; but I was at various times shown patients with +similar injuries and histories, and a number of cases which have been +published appear to substantiate the opinion. From our experience of the +occasional spontaneous recovery of gastric perforations from disease, I +think we might be prepared to expect that the stomach would offer a +comparatively favourable seat for these wounds. It may be pointed out, +however, that haematemesis, the main feature in the symptoms pointing to +wound, is by no means direct proof of more than contusion. + +2. That perforating wounds of the small intestine are very fatal +injuries; every patient in whom the condition was _certainly_ diagnosed +died. + +3. That in the cases in which a perforation was inferred from the +position of the external apertures and the symptoms, not one patient +suffered from the secondary complications--_e.g._ local peritonitis and +suppuration, which were common in the case of the large intestine, and +which we are accustomed to see after perforation from disease. This +renders the occurrence of actual perforation in the majority of the +cases a matter of very grave doubt. + +If spontaneous recovery does take place after this injury, it is only in +cases in which the wounds are single, and slight in character. + +4. That in eight cases in which perforation of the large intestine was +certain, four recoveries took place; but in each instance suppuration +occurred. I am, however, quite prepared to believe that perforation may +have occurred in some or all of the other four cases included as +'possible,' provided the wounds were intra-peritoneal. + +Wounds of the caecum and ascending colon are those which have the best +prognosis, and after these of the rectum. The comparatively good +prognosis in these parts is what would be expected, on account of their +greater fixity, and lesser tendency to be covered by the small +intestine. + +An extra-peritoneal wound of any of these portions of the bowel is more +dangerous than an intra-peritoneal, and more likely to give rise to +septicaemia. + +Of the cases included in my table eighteen of the possible intestinal +injuries were observed among the wounded of the four battles of the +Kimberley relief force. These cases I saw early and followed to their +termination, and I believe the list contains the great majority of all +the patients who received intestinal wounds in those battles. On inquiry +I could not learn of others from the officers of the Field hospitals; +but no doubt some patients died before their reception into hospital, +and some may have been overlooked; again, I know of two cases in which +death took place within the first week, but which went direct to the +Base and did not come under my observation. These exceptions being made, +we have a fairly complete series, from which some deductions may be +drawn. The cases included are marked with an asterisk. + +Of the eighteen cases, eight or 44.4 per cent. died. These were made up +as follows:--Stomach, one case; this patient died at the end of fourteen +days, as a result of secondary haemorrhage and septicaemia. It was +complicated by a severe wound of the liver and also one of the lung. + +Small intestine, four certain cases; all died, two after operation in +the stage of septicaemia, and one after operation from recurrent +haemorrhage, possibly from the mesentery. Of the other six cases one can +only say that the position of the wounds was such as to render wound of +the intestine possible, and that all suffered with abdominal symptoms of +some severity. + +Large intestine. Of six cases in which wound was certain, three died, +one after operation. One recovered after operation, two recovered with +local peritoneal suppuration. In one case the injury could only be +returned as possible. + +In connection with this subject I have received permission from Mr. +Watson Cheyne to quote the statistics published by him[23] concerning +the abdominal wounds observed after the fighting at Karree Siding, on +March 29, which are as follows:-- + + 'The number of the wounded was 154, and in fifteen it was + considered that the abdominal cavity had been penetrated. Of + these patients, five had already died within twenty-four to + twenty-eight hours after the injury, and I saw ten who were + still alive. Of these nine were left alone, and four died + within the next twenty-four or thirty-six hours; five were + still alive when I left Karee on Sunday afternoon, April 1. On + one I operated, but he died on April 2. + + The Karee statistics are really the only complete ones which I + have as yet been able to obtain. The following are the notes of + the cases above alluded to. + + Besides the five cases of abdominal wounds which had already + died, and of which I could get no complete details, the + following ten are cases which I saw from twenty-four to thirty + hours after they were shot:-- + + +CASES FROM THE ACTION AT KAREE + + CASE I.--The point of entrance was 2 inches to the right of the + umbilicus, and the bullet was found lying under the skin far + back in the left loin. The patient was pulseless, and there was + much rigidity of the abdomen, tenderness, and vomiting. He died + a few hours later. + + CASE II.--The bullet, coming from the side, had entered the + abdomen 4 inches below and behind the right nipple. There was + no exit wound. The patient had been vomiting a good deal, but + not any blood; the abdomen was very rigid and tender. He was + obviously very ill, and died the next morning. The bullet had + probably perforated the liver and _stomach_. + + CASE III.--There was a large wound above the right anterior + iliac spine (probably the point of exit), and a small opening + behind and near the spine on the same side. There was great + tenderness and rigidity of the abdomen. He died a few hours + later. + + CASE IV.--In this case there was a transverse wound of the + abdomen, the bullet having entered on the right side in the + middle of the lumbar region and passed out on the left side, + rather higher up and further back. All the symptoms of acute + peritonitis were present. The patient died the next morning. + + CASE V.--The bullet had entered the anterior end of the sixth + intercostal space on the left side, and was found lying under + the skin over the seventh intercostal space on the right side + and about 2 inches further back. He had vomited blood on the + previous day. The bullet may have perforated the _stomach_. The + epigastrium was somewhat tender, but there were no marked + symptoms. On April 1 he was going on well. + + CASE VI.--The place of entrance of the bullet was 1 inch in + front of the right anterior superior spine, and of exit behind + the left sacro-iliac synchondrosis. There was much haemorrhage + at the time. His condition when I saw him was fair, and there + was no marked abdominal tenderness. On April 1 his morning + temperature was 101 deg.. There were no signs of general + peritonitis, and his condition was good. + + CASE VII.--The bullet had entered from behind, about the tip of + the twelfth rib on the left side, and had left about the middle + of the epigastrium, and rather to the left of the middle line. + + Vomiting was still going on, but not of blood. There was much + tenderness and rigidity of the abdomen, and he was almost + pulseless. On April 1 his general condition was better, but the + abdomen was very rigid and tender. (Subsequently died.) + + CASE VIII.--The point of entrance of the bullet was about 2 + inches from the anterior end of the seventh left intercostal + space, and of exit rather lower down and further back on the + right side. The patient said that he had vomited brown fluid + after the injury. There was much abdominal pain, but his + general condition was fair. On April 1 there was still much + pain, but his general condition was good. + + CASE IX.--The bullet had entered about 1-1/2 inch in front of + the anterior inferior spine on the right side, had gone + directly backwards, and had come out in the buttock. The + patient, however, suffered very little. On March 31 there was + slight tympanites and tenderness in the right iliac fossa. The + bowels acted well, and no blood was passed. On April 1 he was + very well, and it was considered very doubtful if any viscus + was wounded. + + CASE X.--The point of entrance was in the middle of the right + buttock, a little above the level of the trochanter; the exit + was through the anterior abdominal wall in the right semilunar + line at the level of the umbilicus. The patient was decidedly + ill; the abdomen was a good deal distended, and pressure on it + caused an escape of gas through the anterior opening. There was + a good deal of abdominal tenderness and rigidity. I opened the + abdomen outside the right linea semilunaris, and found a + perforation in the anterior wall of the _ascending colon_, + without any adhesions around, which was easily stitched up. The + posterior opening was found about 2 inches lower down, with a + piece of omentum firmly adherent to it and completely closing + it. As the patient was in a bad state, I thought it better, + instead of excising the piece of intestine beyond the holes or + tearing off the omentum, to leave the wounds alone, merely + cleaning out the peritoneal cavity as well as I could and + arranging for free drainage. He rallied from the operation very + well, and for twenty-four hours it looked as if he might get + better; but he gradually got worse and died on April 2.' + +The above statistics are particularly valuable, as they give the +incidence of abdominal injuries compared with those in general in one +definite battle. This amounted to the high number of 15 in 154 or 9.74 +per cent. wounded. I am inclined to think that this is a higher +proportion than the average of the campaign, and that more of the men +must have been exposed in the erect position than was ordinarily the +case during the fighting. + +The statistics also show that 33.33 per cent. of the patients with +abdominal injuries died within from twenty-four to twenty-eight hours, +and that the percentage of deaths had risen to 73.33 per cent. at the +end of the third day. These numbers again seem high, but in this +relation it may be noted that, as a small force only was present, and as +all the patients were together, Mr. Cheyne had unusually good +opportunities for seeing all the cases. + +One other point is doubtful from the report, and that is what percentage +of the wounds were caused by bullets of small calibre. In one case it is +definitely stated that the wound was large, and in the second that gas +escaped from the wound; both of these may have been instances in which a +large bullet, or some expanding form, had been employed, and there is no +doubt that the use of such projectiles was more common at this stage of +the campaign than it was earlier. + +_Treatment of injuries to the intestine._--Some general rules for the +immediate treatment of all cases may be laid down. First, the patients +must be removed with as little disturbance as possible, and absolute +starvation must be insisted upon. If the patients be suffering from +severe shock, hypodermic injections of strychnine should be +administered, or possibly some stimulant by the rectum. + +After a battle, when these cases may be brought in in considerable +number, they should be collected and placed in the same tent. The +objection to congregating a number of severely wounded patients together +must be disregarded in the face of the manifest advantage of being able +to treat all alike in the matter of feeding. After the battles of the +Kimberley relief force, Surgeon-General Wilson, at my request, had all +the abdominal cases placed in a large marquee, where we were able to +carefully watch the whole of the patients from hour to hour, and little +chance existed for any indiscretion on the part of the patients in the +way of eating or drinking. + +If possible, the patients should be kept absolutely quiet until they are +evidently out of danger. A week's stay at Orange River sufficed for this +object in the cases referred to. The avoidance of transport is +manifestly of extreme prognostic importance. + +When feeding is commenced at the end of twenty-four or thirty-six hours, +it must be in the form at first of warm water, then milk administered in +tea-spoonfuls only. + +In doubtful cases the use of morphia must be avoided. + +Operative treatment is required in a certain number of the cases, but in +the majority of instances we are met with the extreme difficulty that in +a very large proportion of the occasions upon which these wounds are +received an exploratory abdominal section is not warranted in +consequence of the conditions under which it has to be performed. + +A word must be added as to these difficulties; they are in part purely +of an administrative nature, partly surgical. After a great battle the +wounded are numerous, and amongst them a very considerable proportion of +the wounds and injuries are of such a nature as to do extremely well if +promptly dealt with, and each of these makes small demands on the time +of the staff. Abdominal operations, on the other hand, are +unsatisfactory from a prognostic point of view, and their performance +requires much time and the assistance of a considerable number of the +men, who are obliged to neglect the treatment of the more promising +cases for those of doubtful issue. This difficulty, although not +surgical in its nature, is nevertheless a practical one of great +importance and appeals strongly to the Principal Medical Officers in +charge of the arrangements. It is only to be avoided by an increase of +the staff, which is not likely to be made except on very special +occasions. + +Other difficulties are purely surgical. First, the difficulty +of diagnosing with certainty a perforating lesion. In the presence of +the fact that many incomplete lesions follow wounds crossing the +intestinal area, and that these give rise to modified symptoms, I +believe this determination to be impossible without the aid of an +exploratory incision. Here we are met with the remaining surgical +difficulties--disadvantages such as the absence of sufficient aid to the +operating surgeon, difficulties connected with the temperature, wind, +and dust, and as to the subsequent treatment of the patient. Again +difficulty in obtaining the most important adjunct, suitable water, or +indeed any water in a sufficient quantity. + +It is of course obvious that conditions may exist in which all these +troubles may be avoided. Again, the practical difficulty adverted to +above does not come in the way when a single man happens to sustain an +abdominal wound on the march. Under such circumstances an exploration +may be not only justifiable, but obligatory, and the general rules of +surgery must be followed rather than such incomplete indications as are +suggested below. + +My own experience led me to the following conclusions: + +1. A wound in the intestinal area should be watched with care. In the +face of the numerous recoveries in such cases, habitual abdominal +exploration is not justified, under the conditions usually prevailing in +the field. + +2. The very large class of patients excluded by this rule from operation +leads us to a smaller and less satisfactory number to be divided into +two categories: + +Patients who die during the first twelve hours. The whole of these are +naturally unfit for operation, and their general condition when seen +often precludes any thought of it. + +Patients with very severe injuries, as evidenced by the escape of faeces, +or with wounds from flank to flank or taking an antero-posterior course +in the small intestinal area. These patients die, and the majority of +them will always die whether operated upon or not. The undertaking of +operations upon them is unpleasant to the surgeon, as being unlikely to +be attended with any great degree of success, whence the impression may +gain ground that patients are killed by the operations. None the less, I +think these operations ought to be undertaken when the attendant +conditions allow, and it is from this class of case that the real +successes will be drawn in the future. The history of such injuries, +after all, corresponds exactly with what we were long familiar with in +traumatic ruptures in civil practice, and now know may be avoided by a +sufficiently early interference. The whole question here is one of time, +and this will always be the trouble in military work. + +3. The expectant attitude which is obligatory under the above rules in +doubtful cases, brings us face to face with a large proportion of +patients in the early or late stage of peritoneal septicaemia. These +cases run on exactly the same lines as those in which the same condition +is secondary to spontaneous perforation of the bowel, in which we +consider it our duty to operate, and in which a definite percentage of +recoveries is obtained. Hence another unpleasant duty is here imposed +upon the surgeon. Two such cases on which I operated are recounted +above, and although I cannot say they give much encouragement, I should +add that in the only one I left untouched, I regretted my want of +courage for the five days during which the patient continued to carry on +a miserable existence. + +4. The treatment of the cases in which an expectant attitude is followed +by the advent of localised suppuration presents no difficulty; simple +incision alone is needed, and healing follows. + +As a rule this is a late condition. In one case of injury to the +ascending colon recounted above, however, considerable local escape of +faeces had occurred, and a successful result was obtained by a local +incision on the third day without suture of the bowel. In this case I +believe the wound in the bowel to have been of the nature of a long +slit, but the surrounding adhesions were so firm as to render any +interference with them a great risk, and a successful result was +obtained at the cost of a somewhat prolonged recovery. I am convinced +that the best course was followed here. (No. 131.) + +When the suppuration was of a less acute character, it was generally +advisable to allow the pus to make its way towards the surface before +interference. + +5. Cases of injury to the colon in which the posterior aspect is +involved should be treated by free opening up of the wound, and either +by suture of the bowel or else its fixation to the surface. I operated +on one such case, and although the patient eventually died on the eighth +day, from septicaemia, he certainly had a chance. Two cases where the +opening looked so free that one almost thought the wound could be +regarded as a lumbar colotomy did badly; in both infection of the +pleura took place, besides extension of suppuration into the +retro-peritoneal areolar tissue. In the future I should always feel +inclined to enlarge such wounds and bring the bowel to the surface. + +As regards actual technique the majority of the wounds are particularly +well suited to suture; three stitches across the opening and one at +either end of the resulting crease sufficed to close the opening +effectively. The openings in the small intestine were not as a rule +difficult to find, on account of the ecchymosis which surrounded them. +From what I have seen stated in the reports given by other surgeons, +there seems to have been more difficulty in discovering wounds in the +large gut. Under ordinary circumstances the only instruments specially +needed are a needle and some silk. At my first two operations, as my +instruments had gone astray, the wounds were readily closed by a needle +and cotton borrowed from the wife of a railway porter. + +If aseptic sponges or pads are not available, boiled squares of ordinary +lint may be employed for the belly, and towels wrung out of 1 to 20 +carbolic acid solution used to surround the field of operation. Whenever +there is any likelihood of the necessity for operations, water boiled +and filtered should be kept ready in special bottles. + +When septic peritonitis was already present, the ordinary procedure of +dry mopping, followed by irrigation, was necessary, before closing the +belly. + +The after-treatment should be on the usual lines as to feeding, &c. + +I am unaware to what degree success followed intestinal operations +generally during the campaign. I saw only one case in which the small +intestine had been treated by excision and the insertion of a Murphy's +button in which a cure followed: this case was in the Scottish Royal Red +Cross hospital under the care of Mr. Luke. I heard of two cases in which +the large intestine was successfully sutured, and of one other in which +recovery followed the removal of a considerable length of the small +bowel for multiple wounds. + +In concluding these most unsatisfactory remarks, I should add that the +impressions are those that were gained as the result of the conditions +by which we were bound in South Africa, and which might recur even in a +more civilised region. Under really satisfactory conditions nothing I +saw in my South African experience would lead me to recommend any +deviation from the ordinary rules of modern surgery, except in so far as +I should be more readily inclined to believe that wounds in certain +positions already indicated might occur without perforation of the bowel +when produced by bullets of small calibre; and further in cases where I +believed the fixed portion of the large bowel was the segment of the +alimentary canal that had been exposed to risk, I should not be inclined +to operate hastily. + +A careful consideration of the whole of the cases that I saw leaves me +with the firm impression that perforating wounds of the small intestine +differ in no way in their results and consequences when produced by +small-calibre bullets, from those of every-day experience, although when +there is reason merely to suspect their presence an exploration is not +indicated under circumstances that may add a fresh danger to the +patient. + +_Wounds of the urinary bladder._--Perforating wounds of the bladder are +the injuries nearest akin to those we have just considered, but a great +gulf separates them, in so far as the escape of a few drops or even a +considerable quantity of normal urine does not necessarily mean +peritoneal infection. The difference in this particular was very +forcibly demonstrated in my experience, since an uncomplicated +perforation of the bladder in the intra-peritoneal portion of the viscus +proved to be an injury that not infrequently recovered spontaneously, I +believe in a considerable proportion of the cases. + +I include only one such case in my list because it was the only example +which happened to be under my personal observation during its whole +course, but from time to time I was shown several others in which the +position of the external apertures and the transient presence of +haematuria left little doubt as to the nature of the injury. The case +recounted above, No. 190, is of especial interest, since the patient +recovered from an injury which involved both the bladder and a fixed +portion of the large intestine in contact with its posterior surface. + +In another, No. 194, a transient inflammatory thickening pointed to a +local inflammation of a non-infective character, since no suppuration +ensued, and this may have been a case of extra-peritoneal wound; on the +other hand, the bladder may have entirely escaped injury. In wounds of +the portions of the viscus not clad in peritoneum, as a rule, a very +different prognosis obtains. Two typical cases are related, which I +believe fairly represent the general results which follow when the +bladder is either wounded behind the symphysis or at the base. The first +case, No. 195, exemplifies a very characteristic form of wound when +small-calibred bullets are concerned. The bullet, taking a course more +or less parallel to that of the wall of the viscus, cut a long slit in +its anterior wall. This bullet in its onward passage comminuted the +horizontal ramus of the pubes, and lodged in the thigh. Into the latter +region the greater part of the extravasated urine escaped. I think the +history of this case fully shows that I made a blunder in not performing +a proper exploration, instead of contenting myself with an incision in +the thigh. My only excuse was that the patient at the time I saw him was +in a very collapsed state, and a severe grade of abdominal distension +suggested that septic peritonitis was already in an advanced stage. In +point of fact, the patient at once improved, sufficiently so to be able +to undergo a second exploration at a later date by Mr. Hanwell at the +Base, only dying of septicaemia at the end of twenty-one days. Even a +free supra-pubic vent might, I believe, have given him a chance of life. + +When the perforation was at the base of the bladder, however, the +prognosis was very bad, and, as far as I know, not a single patient +escaped death. The increase of risk in an extra-peritoneal wound of this +viscus is indeed very great, while an intra-peritoneal perforation may +be considered an injury of lesser severity, provided the urine be of +normal character. + + (194_a_) _Possible wound of the bladder._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), immediately above the + symphysis pubis; _exit_, in the buttock, behind the tip of the + left great trochanter. The man was struck while advancing, and + fell, thinking at the time 'that he was struck in the foot.' He + lay twelve hours on the field, and passed water for the first + time when the bearer removed him. During the next two days he + passed urine only twice, and no blood was noticed. The bowels + acted on the evening of the third day. When seen on the fourth + day he complained of aching pain in the lower part of the + belly, and a concentric patch of tender induration extended for + about 1-1/2 inch around the wound. The abdominal wall was + moving well. The tongue was clean and moist. There was no blood + in the urine, and micturition was not frequent. Temperature + 99.4 deg.. Pulse 80, good strength. The patient was then sent to + the Base. At the end of seventeen days there was still a little + tenderness in the left iliac fossa; but the man was otherwise + well, and at the end of a month he was sent home. + + (195) _Extra-peritoneal wound of the bladder._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), at the fore part of the right + buttock. No exit. The patient was seen on the third day. He had + an expression of extreme anxiety, and complained of very great + pain in the abdomen and thigh. The abdomen was greatly + distended and tympanitic, and the left thigh and groin were + very much swollen and oedematous, with some redness of + surface. Temperature 100 deg., pulse 120. No sickness, tongue + moist, bowels confined. Retention of urine. The condition of + the patient was very grave; but he was anaesthetised, clear + urine was withdrawn from the bladder by catheter, and an + incision was made into the thigh just below the inner third of + Poupart's ligament, where fluctuation was evident. Two pints of + bloody urine were evacuated, and when a finger was introduced + it passed over a fracture of the pubes into the pelvis, but not + into the peritoneal cavity. In view of the patient's condition + it was not thought wise to proceed further, and he somewhat + improved later, and was sent to the Base. Loss of power in the + right lower extremity pointed to injury to the anterior crural + nerve. + + On the patient's arrival at Wynberg there were signs of local + peritonitis in the lower half of the abdomen, and all his urine + was passed from the wound in the left thigh. Some days later + this wound was enlarged to allow of the freer exit of pus, and + a fragment of bone was removed. The wound granulated healthily, + but the man steadily emaciated and lost ground, with signs of + chronic septicaemia, and he died on the twenty-first day. At the + _post-mortem_ examination a transverse wound of the anterior + wall of the bladder behind the pubes, below the peritoneal + reflexion, was found gaping somewhat widely, and 2 inches in + length. There was little sign of previous peritonitis. The + retained bullet was discovered beneath the femoral vessels in + the left thigh. + + (196) _Extra-peritoneal perforation of the bladder._--Wounded + at Paardeberg. _Entry_ (Mauser), 3 inches above the left tuber + ischii; _exit_, above the symphysis, immediately over the right + margin of the penis. The patient was retiring to fetch + ammunition when shot. Urine was noted to escape from both + apertures the day after, and this continued until he was sent + down to the Base on the fourteenth day. The patient was then + considerably emaciated, complained of great pain, especially + down the left thigh (sciatic nerve), the temperature averaged + 100 deg., the pulse 80, tongue clean and moist, bowels acted + regularly, no sign of injury to the rectum. He was taking food + fairly, but was very sleepless. Urine was passed per urethram, + and also escaped by both wounds. The abdomen was flaccid and + sunken, respiratory movements being confined to the upper half. + + As there was evidence of considerable infiltration in the + buttock, the original entry wound was enlarged, and a catheter + was tied into the bladder. Little change occurred in the + symptoms and the local condition, urine and pus continued to + escape freely from the posterior wound, and the patient + gradually sank, dying on the thirty-eighth day. At the + _post-mortem_ examination the peritoneum was found intact and + unaltered, but there was extensive pelvic cellulitis around the + bladder, a large slough and some pus lying in the cavum Retzii. + An aperture of entry still open existed in the centre of the + anterior wall of the bladder, and a patent exit opening at the + base of the trigone. The bullet had passed out of the pelvis by + the great sciatic notch. + +The above remarks and cases sufficiently set forth the prognosis in +these injuries. For the intra-peritoneal lesions an expectant plan of +treatment may be followed by uncomplicated recovery. Mention has already +been made of a case in which a Mauser bullet was retained in the bladder +and was subsequently passed per urethram. In such a case a cystotomy +would be indicated were the bullet discovered in the viscus. + +As to extra-peritoneal injuries it is difficult to lay down guiding +lines. I believe the ideal treatment would be a supra-pubic cystotomy +and drainage of the bladder by a Sprengel's pump apparatus, such as we +employ at home. Under these circumstances, with the possibility of +keeping the bladder actually empty, I believe good results might be +obtained. Certainly drainage of the bladder by a catheter tied in proved +worse than useless, and I very much doubt whether a simple supra-pubic +opening would give any better results under the circumstances under +which a patient has to be treated in a Field hospital. + +Cases might, however, occur in which oblique passage of the bullet cuts +a groove and makes a large opening in the peritoneum-clad portion of the +viscus. Under satisfactory conditions a laparotomy would be here +indicated. I take it that this condition would most probably be +accompanied by retention of bloody urine, which fact would arouse +suspicion. + + +INJURIES TO THE SOLID ABDOMINAL VISCERA + +_Wounds of the kidney._--Tracks implicating the kidneys were of +comparatively common occurrence. As uncomplicated injuries they healed +rapidly, and without producing any serious symptoms beyond transient +haematuria. + +The nature of the lesion appeared to vary with the direction of the +wound. In many cases a simple puncture no doubt alone existed, an injury +no more to be feared than the exploratory punctures often made for +surgical purposes. In other cases the wounds may have been of the nature +of notches and grooves. + +Two of the cases recounted below were of a more severe variety; in one +(No. 201) both kidneys were implicated by symmetrical wounds of the +loin, and in the case of the right organ a transverse rupture was +produced, which was followed by the development of a hydro-nephrosis, +and later by suppuration. This injury was probably the result of a wound +from a short range, as the patient was one of those wounded in the early +part of the day at the battle of Magersfontein. It was complicated by a +wound of the spleen and an injury to the spinal cord producing +incomplete paraplegia accompanied by retention of urine. The last +complication was responsible for the death of the patient, since +ascending infection from the bladder led to the development of +pyo-nephrosis and death from secondary peritonitis. + +Case 202 is an instance of a transverse wound of the upper part of the +abdominal cavity; it is impossible to say what further complications +were present. The early development of a tympanitic abscess suggested an +injury to the colon, but this was not by any means certain. The +condition of the kidney was very likely similar to that in the last +case, but the ultimate recovery of the patient left this a matter of +doubt. The case was also one dependent on a short-range wound, since the +patient, one of the Scandinavian contingent, was wounded at +Magersfontein during close fighting. + +The common history of the symptoms after a wound of the kidney was +moderate haemorrhage from the organ, persisting for two to four days. In +one of the cases recounted below the haematuria was accompanied by the +passage of ureteral clots, but this was not a common occurrence. + +For the sake of comparison I have included one case of wound of the +kidney from a large bullet, in which death was due to internal +haemorrhage. In this instance the injury was a complex one, the lung +certainly, and the back of the liver probably, being concurrently +injured. None the less if the same track had been produced by a bullet +of small calibre I believe the injury would not have proved a fatal one. +I never saw such free renal haemorrhage in any of the Mauser or +Lee-Metford wounds. + + (197) _Wound of right kidney._--Wounded at Modder River while + lying in the prone position; retired 100 yards at the double + with his company, and walked a further 1-1/2 mile. There was + very slight bleeding. _Entry_ (Mauser), in the tenth right + intercostal space in the mid-axillary line; _exit_, in eleventh + interspace, 2 inches from the spinous processes. Cylindrical + blood-clots, 3 inches in length, were passed on the first two + occasions of micturition after the accident, and the urine + contained blood. For four days he could only lie on the wounded + side. When seen on the third day the urine was normal, and + there were no signs of injury to either thoracic or abdominal + viscera. He returned to England well at the end of a month. + + (198) _Wound of right kidney._--Wounded at Modder River while + kneeling to dress another man's wound. _Entry_ (Mauser), in the + seventh right intercostal space in the nipple line; _exit_, 1 + inch to the right of the twelfth dorsal spine. The man was + carried off the field, and during the first day vomited + frequently. For two days there was blood in his urine, and he + passed water four to five times daily. He returned to duty at + the end of three weeks. + + (199) _Wound of the left kidney._--Wounded at Magersfontein. + _Entry_ (Mauser), 2 inches to the left and 1 inch below the + left nipple. No exit. Lying in prone position when struck. + Bloody urine was passed at normal intervals for four days, when + the haematuria ceased. No thoracic signs, and no other sign of + abdominal injury. There was tenderness in the left loin below + the twelfth rib for some days, possibly over the position of + the bullet, but the latter was neither localised nor removed. + + (200) _Wound of the right kidney._--Wounded at Magersfontein + while retiring on his feet. _Entry_ (Mauser), immediately to + the right of the second lumbar spinous process; bullet retained + and lay beneath margin of ninth right costal cartilage. The man + passed urine containing blood twelve times during the first + day, and haematuria continued until the evening of the third + day. On the third day the belly was tumid and did not move + well; there was no dulness in the right flank. Pulse 120, fair + strength. Temperature 99 deg.. Respirations 20. Tongue moist, + bowels confined for four days. The fifth day the pulse fell to + 76, and the bowels were moved by an enema. Great tenderness + over bullet. The tenderness persisted over the bullet and also + in the right flank until the tenth day, when the bullet was + removed. At the end of a month the patient returned to England + well but during the third week there was occasionally blood in + the urine. + + (201) _Wound of both kidneys (rupture of right) and + spleen._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Mauser), (_a_) 1 + inch to right of second lumbar spinous process; (_b_) above + angle of left ninth rib: _exits_, (_a_) 1 inch internal to + right anterior superior iliac spine; (_b_) in seventh + intercostal space in mid-axillary line. The wound on the right + side gave rise to a lesion of the lumbar bulb (see p. 315), and + the patient suffered throughout with retention. There was + complete paralysis of the right lower extremity, both motor and + sensory. For ten days there was haematuria, and very severe + cystitis developed, while the patient suffered with severe + abdominal pain. The cystitis persisted, also retention, which + gradually gave way to dribbling, while irregular rise of + temperature and tenderness in the loins pointed to ascending + inflammation in the ureters. The patient gradually lost + ground, and a month later suddenly developed signs of + peritonitis, severe vomiting, distension, and dulness in the + right flank; and in two days he died. + + At the _post-mortem_ examination the following condition was + found:--On the right side general pleural adhesions, recent + lymph over ascending colon and caecum, [Symbol: ounce]vj of + bloody fluid in a localised cavity between colon, kidney, + stomach, and liver. Lower quarter of right kidney in half its + width separated from main part of organ, yellow in colour, and + enveloped in disintegrating clot. Blood-staining of psoas + sheath; no injury to vertebral column or to bowel detected. + + On the left side recent pleural adhesions and consolidation of + base of lung, rent of diaphragm; spleen soft and disorganised + and presenting a yellow cicatrix at its upper end, and at + antero-external aspect of left kidney was a soft yellow + puckered spot about the size of a florin, dipping 3/4 of an + inch into the organ, which was otherwise healthy, beyond + congestion. The capsules of both kidneys were adherent, but + there was no sign of suppuration. + + (202) _Wound of right kidney. Traumatic + hydronephrosis._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ + (Lee-Metford), in the eleventh intercostal space in the + posterior axillary line; _exit_, in the tenth right interspace, + in mid axillary line. The patient was in the prone position + when struck, and lay on the field from 5 A.M. until 6 P.M. + There was no sickness, and the bowels did not act. When seen on + the fourth day he was cheerful, but in some pain. The abdominal + wall moved well, but was rigid; there was some general + distension, and very marked local distension of the gastric + area extending across to the right, so that a depressed band + extended between the upper and lower parts of the belly. There + was marked local dulness in the right flank, which did not + shift on movement; the abdomen was elsewhere tympanitic. Tongue + furred, bowels confined; there has been no sickness, and no + haematemesis. Urine normal, and in good quantity. Temperature + 100 deg.. Pulse 84, good strength. There was impairment of + sensation in the area of distribution of the external cutaneous + and crural branch of the genito-crural nerves. + + On the sixth day the bowels acted, after the administration of + [Symbol: ounce]j of sulphate of magnesia, and the distension was + much lessened, although the belly retained its unusual + appearance. The dulness in the flank was unaltered. Temperature + 100.8 deg., pulse 92. + + A week later the man was much improved, suffering no pain. + Temperature ranged from 99 to 100 deg., and the pulse about 80. The + abdomen was normal in appearance, except for general prominence + of the right thorax in the hepatic area. + + During the third week a large tympanitic abscess developed at + the aperture of exit, and this was opened (Mr. S. W. F. + Richardson) through the chest, and a large collection of + foul-smelling pus, but no faecal matter, evacuated. The patient + again improved, but a fortnight later a swelling and apparent + signs of local peritonitis developed in the right inguinal and + lower umbilical and lumbar regions. An incision made over this, + however, disclosed a normal peritoneal cavity and was closed. + + At the end of ten weeks the patient was sent to the Base + hospital; a large firm swelling was then evident, extending + from the liver to the inguinal region, and nearly to the median + line. This gradually increased until it filled half the belly; + it was at first thought to be a retro-peritoneal haematoma + (similar to that described in case 194), but it became quite + soft and fluctuating, and was then tapped, and [Symbol: + ounce]50 of blood-stained fluid, which proved to be urine, were + removed. The urine rapidly reaccumulated, and the cavity was + then laid freely open. Urine continued to discharge in large + quantity for two months, the man meanwhile remaining well, and + passing a somewhat variable daily quantity of urine ([Symbol: + ounce]xxiv-[Symbol: ounce]lx). + + At the end of six months the wound had healed, and the man was + serving as an orderly in the hospital. + + (203) _Wound of right kidney and lung._--Wounded near + Paardekraal, while crawling on hands and knees. _Entry_ + (Martini-Henry, or small bullet making lateral impact), just + above the right nipple, opening ragged and large, bullet + retained. There was very severe shock, accompanied by vomiting, + but no haematemesis. Later there was some haemoptysis. Pulse 120, + respirations 48. + + Twenty-four hours later the vomiting had ceased; the patient + had passed a restless night, in spite of an injection of + morphia. He lay on his right side, pale and collapsed, but + answered questions and was quite collected. Pulse + imperceptible, respirations 56; the abdomen moved freely. The + urine had been passed twice, and was chiefly blood. The patient + died shortly afterwards, apparently mainly from internal + haemorrhage, although restlessness was not a prominent feature. + As the Column was on the march no autopsy was possible. + +The treatment of uncomplicated wounds of the kidney consisted in the +ensurance of rest, either alone, or with the administration of opium if +the haematuria was severe. The after-treatment in the event of the +development of hydronephrosis is on ordinary lines. Tapping, or incision +followed by extirpation of the injured viscus, if the less severe +procedures failed. I never saw a case where renal haemorrhage suggested +the removal of the kidney as a primary step, and much doubt whether such +a case is likely to be met with, as the result of a wound from a bullet +of small calibre. + +_Wounds of the liver._--Wounds of the liver were, I believe, responsible +for more cases of death from primary haemorrhage than those of the +kidney. I heard of a few cases in which this occurred, although I never +saw one. Case 204 is of considerable interest as illustrating the result +of an injury to one of the large bile ducts. Putting the deaths from +primary haemorrhage on one side, the prognosis in hepatic wounds was as +good as in those of the kidneys. A few fairly uncomplicated cases are +quoted below, but wounds of the liver occurred in connection with a +large number of other injuries both of the chest and abdomen, and except +in the case of wound of the stomach, recorded on page 425, No. 164, and +in case 188, I never saw any troublesome consequences ensue. + +_Nature of the lesions._--I never saw any case of so-called explosive +lesion of the liver, such as have been described from experimental +results; this may have been due to the fact that such patients rapidly +expired, but such were never admitted into the hospitals. + +The most favourable cases were those in which a simple perforation was +effected; such were usually attended by a practical absence of symptoms, +unless a large bile duct had been implicated, when a temporary biliary +fistula resulted. + +Biliary fistulae were, however, much more common when the bullet scored +the surface of the organ. One such case is recounted under the heading +of injuries to the stomach, No. 164. Here a deep gaping cleft with +coarsely granular margins extended the whole antero-posterior length of +the under surface of the left lobe, and the escape of bile was free. +This was the nearest approach to one of the so-called explosive injuries +I met with. + +Case 207 is an example of a superficial injury from a bullet possibly of +small calibre in which a superficial groove was followed by temporary +escape of bile, and it is of interest to note a very similar condition +in a shell injury (No. 210) recorded on p. 477. + +Although both these cases recovered, I think notching and superficial +grooving must be considered much more serious injuries than pure +perforation. (See case 188, p. 442.) + +The symptoms observed in these injuries have been already indicated in +the above description of the nature of the lesions. They consisted in +the pure perforations of practically nothing, in the grooves or the +perforations implicating a large duct in the escape of bile. In two of +the cases in which a biliary fistula was present transient jaundice was +noticed. + +In many cases the accompanying wound of the diaphragm gave rise to much +discomfort; again, in the transverse wounds the action of the heart was +often affected by the local cardiac shock accompanying the injury. In +one case in which the colon was at the same time wounded (No. 188), an +abscess formed at the site of the hepatic wound, as might have been +expected. + +As uncomplicated injuries, these wounds were little to be feared. Except +as a source of haemorrhage in rapidly dying patients, I never heard of a +fatality. As a complication of other injuries, however, the wound of the +liver, as has been shown, was sometimes of importance. It was remarkable +in case 204 how little trouble the biliary fistula gave rise to, +although the bile was discharged across the pleural cavity. + +The treatment consisted in rest, and morphia in the cases of suspected +progressive haemorrhage, or in the presence of great pain. In cases where +bile was escaping, it was important to ensure a free vent for the +secretion. + + (204) _Wound of liver. Biliary fistula._--Wounded at + Magersfontein. _Entry_ (Lee-Metford), below the seventh rib, in + the left nipple line; _exit_, through the eighth rib, in the + mid axillary line on the right side. The patient lay for + seventeen hours on the field, during which time the bowels + acted once, but there was no sickness. The bowels then remained + confined. When seen on the third day the abdomen was normal and + the chest resonant throughout on both sides; bile to the amount + of some ounces escaped from the wound on the right side. + Suffering no pain; temperature 99 deg., pulse 100. The bowels acted + freely the following day. + + During the next fortnight there was little change; [Symbol: + ounce]ii-iij of bile escaped daily, and there was occasional + diarrhoea. At the end of that time, however, the temperature + rose; there was local redness and evidence of retention of pus. + The wound was therefore enlarged, some fragments of rib removed, + and a drainage tube inserted. After this the temperature fell, + and for the next two months the patient suffered little except + from the discharge from the sinus; this persisted for three + months, becoming less in amount and less bile-stained, the + fistula eventually closing in the fourteenth week, when the + patient was sent home on parole. + + (205) _Wound of liver_.--_Entry_ (Mauser), 1 inch below and to + the left of the ensiform cartilage; _exit_, in the sixth right + intercostal space, just behind the posterior axillary line. The + trooper was sitting bolt upright on his horse at the time; both + were shot and fell together. 'Stitch' on coughing or laughing + was the only sign noted after the accident; this rapidly + subsided. + + (206) _Wound of the liver._--Wounded at Magersfontein. _Entry_ + (Mauser), through the seventh left costal cartilage, 1 inch + from the base of the ensiform cartilage; _exit_, below the + twelfth rib 2 inches to the right of the lumbar spines. The + patient lay on the field some hours and was brought in at night + very cold, and suffering with much shock. No signs of abdominal + injury developed, but the pulse remained as slow as 66 for some + days, and there was some pain and stiffness about back and + sides, or on taking a deep breath. These signs persisted some + days, but no others developed, and in six weeks the patient + returned to duty. + + Some three months later this patient suffered from a short + severe attack suggesting local peritonitis, but he again + returned to duty. + + (207) _Wound of the liver._--Wounded at Tweefontein. _Entry_, + in eighth intercostal space in right mid axillary line; _exit_, + 1-1/2 inch below the point of the ensiform cartilage, 1/2 an + inch to the right of the mid line. The wounds were large, and + although the impact had been oblique, they were possibly + produced by a Martini-Henry or Guedes bullet. + + On the second day bile began to escape from the exit aperture, + and this together with a little pus continued to be discharged + for a week, when the wound rapidly healed up. The only symptom + which occasioned any trouble was a stitch on inspiration, + probably attributable to the wound of the diaphragm. There was + no fracture of the rib. + + (208) _Wound of the liver._--Wounded outside Heilbron at a + range of fifty yards. _Entry_ (Mauser), in the tenth right + interspace 2 inches to the right of the dorsal spines; _exit_, + through the gladiolus, immediately to the right of the median + line, and just above the junction with the ensiform cartilage. + There was considerable shock on reception of the injury, and a + great feeling of dizziness. Continuous vomiting set in and + persisted for the first two days, then became occasional, and + ceased only at the end of a week. There was also occasional + hiccough, and stitch on drawing a long breath. The respiration + was shallow and rapid. The bowels acted twice shortly after the + injury. + + The pulse was rapid and small, and a week after the injury was + still above 100. The abdomen was then normal and moving + symmetrically, and the respiration fairly easy. There were no + signs of chest trouble, but some mucous expectoration. A slight + icteric tinge existed. The patient made a good recovery. + +_Wounds of the spleen._--Uncomplicated wounds of the spleen were +necessarily rare, and beyond this the strict localisation of a track to +the spleen is not a matter of great ease. None the less the spleen must +have been implicated in a considerable number of the wounds crossing the +chest and abdomen. I know of only one case in which a wound which +crossed the splenic area caused death from haemorrhage, and of this I can +give no details, as I never saw the patient. In this instance, however, +a wound of the spleen was diagnosed after death from the position of the +wounds. The patient continued to perform his duty as an officer in the +fighting line for at least an hour after being struck, and then died +rapidly apparently from an internal haemorrhage. + +In case No. 201, included amongst the renal injuries, a wound of the +spleen existed, but had given rise to no symptoms, and at the time of +death, some three weeks later, was cicatrised. The only other assertion +of importance that I can make is, that, as far as I could judge, wounds +of the spleen from bullets of small calibre were not, as a rule, +accompanied by haemorrhage, since I never saw a case in which dulness in +the left flank suggested the presence of extravasated blood, and in no +case that I saw was there any history of general symptoms pointing to +the loss of blood. + +This is only to be explained by our similar experience with regard to +wounds of the liver unaccompanied by puncture of main vessels, and +perhaps haemorrhage is still less to be expected in the case of the +spleen, in consequence of the contractile muscular tunic with which the +organ is provided. + +I can quote no case of certain injury to the spleen, except that already +referred to discovered at a _post-mortem_ examination, but many wounds +were observed in positions of which the following may be taken as a +type. _Entry_, through the seventh left costal cartilage, 3/4 of an inch +from the sternal margin; _exit_, 2-1/2 inches from the left lumbar +spines at the level of the last rib. + +As an instance of the doctrine of chances I might quote the position of +the wound in the patient who lay in the next bed. Both patients were +wounded while fighting at Almonds Nek. _Entry_, through right seventh +costal cartilage, 3/4 of an inch from the sternal margin; _exit_, 1-1/2 +inch from the lumbar spines, at the level of the last right rib. + +In neither of these cases did anything except the position of the +external apertures point to the infliction of visceral injury. + +_General remarks as to the prognosis in abdominal injuries._ The +prognosis in each form of individual visceral injury has been already +considered, but a few points affecting these injuries as a class should +perhaps be further considered. + +First, as to the influence of range on the severity of the injuries +inflicted; I am not able to confirm the greater danger of short range, +except in so far as there is no doubt that more shock attends such +injuries, and possibly some of the most severely wounded were killed +outright as a direct consequence of the greater striking force of the +bullet. + +Among the cases in which but slight effects were noted, however, many +were said to have been hit within a range of 200 yards, as for instance +the two injuries quoted under the heading of wounds of the spleen. + +I personally saw no cases in which explosive injuries of the solid +viscera were to be ascribed to this cause. + +Secondly, as to the immediate prognosis in all abdominal injuries, the +ensurance of rest and limitation as far as possible of transport were of +the highest importance, either in the case of wound of the alimentary +canal, or in wounds of the solid viscera in which haemorrhage was a +possible result. + +Thirdly, as to the later prognosis in these injuries; very few men are +fit to resume active service without a prolonged period of rest. In +spite of the insignificance of the primary symptoms, or of the +favourable course taken by the injuries, active exertion was almost +always followed for some months by the appearance of vague pains and +occasionally by indications of recurrent peritoneal symptoms, pointing +to the disturbance of quiescent haemorrhages, or of adhesions. Wounds of +the kidney are apparently those least liable to be followed by trouble. + +Lastly, the prognosis was influenced in the case of many of the viscera +by coexisting injury to other organs or parts. + +For instance, at least thirty per cent. of the abdominal wounds were +complicated by wound of the thorax; and in the lower segment of the +abdomen injury to the extra-peritoneal portions of the pelvic organs was +common. + +Both the immediate and ultimate prognosis were influenced greatly by +this fact. + +As to the individual injuries: + +1. Wounds in the intestinal area, except in certain directions, often +traverse the abdomen without inflicting a perforating injury on the +bowel. + +2. If the alimentary canal is perforated, injuries in certain segments, +even if perforating, may be followed by spontaneous recovery. I should +say the prognosis from this point of view is best in the ascending +colon, then in the rectum; after these most favourable segments, I +should place the others in the following order: stomach, sigmoid +flexure, descending colon. As to perforating wounds of the transverse +colon and small intestine, I believe spontaneous recovery to be very +rare. + +3. Wounds of the solid viscera generally, usually heal spontaneously, +and give no trouble unless one of the great vessels has been injured. I +include in this category all organs except the pancreas, of wounds of +which I had no experience. + +4. Wounds of the bladder, if of the nature of pure perforations in the +intra-peritoneal segment, often heal spontaneously. + +5. As a rule, injuries to the organs in their intra-peritoneal course +have a far better prognosis than those which implicate the organs in +their uncovered portions. + +6. The small calibre of the bullet is alone responsible for the +favourable results observed. + +7. The danger or otherwise of an intestinal injury depends mainly on +mechanical conditions; for instance, the fixity of the ascending colon, +and its comparative freedom from a covering of small intestine capable +by movement of diffusing any infective material, account chiefly for +such favourable results as are seen when that segment of the bowel is +implicated. + + +WOUNDS OF THE EXTERNAL GENITAL ORGANS + +Wounds of the _scrotum_ were not uncommon, especially in connection with +perforations of the upper part of the thigh. They offered no special +feature, beyond the common tendency of every-day experience to the +development of extensive ecchymosis. + +Wounds of the _testicles_ I saw on several occasions. I remember only +one out of some half-dozen in which castration became necessary. I was +told of one case, for the accuracy of which I cannot vouch, in which +destruction of one testicle was followed by an attack of melancholia, +culminating in the suicide of the patient. + +Wounds of the _penis_ also occurred, but as a rule were unimportant. I +append a case, however; in which the penile urethra was wounded, which +is of some interest. + + (209) Wounded at Heilbron. Range 1,500 yards. _Entry_, 2-1/2 + inches below the right anterior superior iliac spine; the + bullet traversed the groin superficially in the line of + Poupart's ligament, emerged, and crossed both penis and + scrotum. The trooper was in the saddle when struck, and the + penis probably somewhat coiled up. Three wounds were found, one + at the junction of the penis and scrotum which opened the + urethra, a second one about 3/4 of an inch along the under + surface of the penis, and a third on the left side of the base + of the prepuce. A considerable amount of oedema and + ecchymosis of the scrotum developed, but no extravasation of + urine. A catheter was kept in the urethra for some days, and + the opening eventually closed by granulation. + +I only once saw a patient with an injury to the deep urethra; in this +case concurrent injury to other pelvic organs led to death on the third +day. As a good many of the patients with pelvic wounds died rapidly, the +accident may have been more common than my experience would suggest. + +FOOTNOTES: + +[19] _British Med. Journal_, May 12, 1900, i. 1195. + +[20] 'On Traumatic Rupture of the Colon.' _Annals of Surgery_, vol. xxx. +1899, p. 137. + +[21] Two of these died. + +[22] The cases of injury to the solid viscera are those only which +happen to be quoted in the text, and give no idea of relative mortality. + +[23] _British Medical Journal_, May 12, 1900, vol. i. p. 1194. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +ON SHELL WOUNDS + + +The title of this work hardly allows of its conclusion without a brief +mention of the shell wounds observed during the campaign. + +As already pointed out, these formed but a very small proportion of the +injuries treated in the hospitals, and beyond this they possessed +comparatively small surgical interest, since, as a rule, the features +presented were those of mere lacerated wounds, while the more severe of +the cases which survived only offered scope for operations of the +mutilating class so uncongenial to modern surgical instincts. + +The fatal wounds consisted in extensive lacerations resulting in the +destruction of the head or limbs, the laying open of the abdominal or +thoracic cavities, or the production of visceral injuries beyond the +possibility of repair. Of such injuries no further mention will be made. + +A very great variety of shells was employed during the campaign, +especially on the part of the Boers, and the frontispiece gives some +idea of these. The photograph was taken by Mr. Kisch after the relief of +Ladysmith. For the want of more extended knowledge I shall confine +myself to the description of a few injuries caused by two classes of +large shell, those of the Vickers-Maxim or 'Pom-pom,' and two varieties +of shrapnel. + +The large shells employed may be divided into classes according to the +metal used in their construction, and the nature of the explosive with +which they were filled. These details are of some surgical import, +because they affect the nature of the fragments into which the shells +are broken up. + +Fragments of shells constructed with cast iron and burst with powder, +and also of forged steel exploded with lyddite, are depicted in fig. 90. + +[Illustration: FIG. 90.--A, B, D. Fragments of 200 lb. forged Steel +Howitzer Shell exploded by lyddite. C. Fragment of Cast-iron Shell +exploded by powder. B exhibits transverse markings which might be +mistaken for the lines seen in the Boer segment shells, but which really +correspond to the area of fixation of the copper driving band] + +Examination of fragment C of a cast-iron shell exploded by powder shows +the characteristic granular fracture, and edges, although sharp, yet of +a comparatively rounded nature. The fragment is also heavier for its +surface measurement, as the metal is thicker than that seen in the +remaining fragments, although the cast-iron shell was of a much smaller +calibre than the steel one. The lesser degree of penetrative power, and +increased capacity to contuse, possessed by such fragments are obvious. + +A B and D are fragments of a large forged steel howitzer shell exploded +by lyddite, such as were cast by our guns. The photograph well shows the +more tenacious structure of the metal in the incomplete longitudinal +fissuring exhibited, while the margins are of a sharp knifelike +character, well calculated to penetrate or, in the case of superficial +injuries, to produce wounds of a more sharply incised character than the +cast-iron shell. Fragments A and B also show an appearance suggestive of +partial fusion, characteristic of high explosive action, in the turning +of the prominent margins. + +The larger fragments of such shells were responsible for the most +serious mutilating injuries, while small fragments sometimes caused +comparatively simple perforating wounds. I remember a fragment of the +fused character not larger than a small nut which had perforated the +front of the thigh of a Boer, and lodged near the inner surface of the +femur. Removal of the fragment was followed by a free gush of +haemorrhage. When the wound was opened up an opening was found in the +external circumflex artery, haemorrhage from which had been controlled by +the impaction of the piece of shell. As an example of the cutting power +of sharp fragments of shell I might instance the case of another Boer in +whom light passing contact had been made by the missile. A gaping +incised wound extended from above the angle of the scapula down to the +outer surface of the buttock. The wound involved the latissimus dorsi, +and the external and internal oblique muscles of the abdomen. The +separate muscular layers were sharply defined in the lateral parts of +the floor of the wound, and remained so for some time during the gradual +contraction of the large granulating surface produced. The degree of +contusion was in fact slight, while the incised character was strongly +marked. + +In some cases the fragments merely struck the soldiers on the flat +without producing any wound. In one such case a blow upon the +epigastrium was, according to the patient, followed by the vomiting of a +considerable amount of blood. A fluid diet was ordered, and no further +ill effects were noted. The following case illustrates an oblique blow +of a perforating character, which was nevertheless recovered from. + +[Illustration: FIG. 91.--Various portions of Brass Percussion and Time +Fuses] + + (210) _Shell-wound of abdomen. Injury to liver._--Wounded at + Paardeberg by a fragment of shell. Aperture of entry, a ragged + opening in the median line. The fragment of shell was retained + over the ninth costal cartilage in the nipple line. The wound + bled freely, but the man was taken into camp, and then four + miles on to the hospital, where he was anaesthetised and the + fragment extracted. The wound of entry was at the same time + enlarged, cleansed, and partly sutured. The patient vomited + once after the anaesthetic, and the bowels remained confined for + three or four days after the injury. The extraction wound + healed readily, but a considerable amount of slimy, + bile-stained discharge was still escaping from the ragged + entrance wound on the man's arrival at the Base on the + fourteenth day. The abdomen was then normal in appearance, and + as to physical signs, except for a tympanitic note over the + hepatic area to the right of the wound. The temperature was + normal, the pulse 90, the tongue clean, and the bowels were + acting. At the end of four weeks pleurisy, with effusion, + developed on the right side; the chest was aspirated and + [Symbol: ounce]xx of clear serum drawn off. The man then + rapidly improved; the bile-stained discharge ceased at the end + of five weeks, and a small granulating wound eventually closed + at the end of two months, when the man returned to England. + +Fig. 91 is inserted to illustrate the multifarious nature of the +fragments into which the component parts of shells may break up. The +pieces are for the most part of brass, and formed parts of either time +or percussion fuses. + +Fig. 92 represents the one-pound Vickers-Maxim shell in its actual size. +The wounds produced by this shell are of some interest, since the +Vickers-Maxim may be said to have been on trial during this campaign. +The general opinion seems to have been to the effect that the moral +influence produced by the continuous rapid firing of the gun and the +attendant unpleasant noise were its chief virtues. A considerable number +of wounds must, however, have been produced by it, which, if not of +great magnitude and severity, were, at any rate, calculated to put the +recipients out of action, and these wounds, moreover, were slower in +healing than many of the rifle-bullet injuries. + +The shell is so small that it was said to occasionally strike the body +as a whole, and perforate. I was shown a case in which a wounded officer +was confident that an entire shell had perforated his arm. The entry +wound was at the outer part of the front of the forearm, the exit at the +inner aspect of the arm, just above the elbow. Two ragged contused +wounds existed, which healed slowly, but no serious nervous or vascular +injury had been produced. Although it is probable that only a fragment +perforated in this case, it is of interest in connection with the +following. + +In a case shown to me by Sir William Thomson in the Irish Hospital at +Bloemfontein, an entire shell had passed between the left arm and body +of a trooper, perforating the haversack, as also a non-commissioned +officer's notebook contained within it, without exploding. The only +injury sustained by the trooper was a contusion on the inner aspect of +the elbow-joint, with slight signs of contusion of the ulnar nerve. The +case is of some importance, as showing that a comparatively resistent +body can be perforated without necessary explosion on the part of the +shell; hence the possibility of a similar perforation of the soft parts +of the body. + +[Illustration: FIG. 92.--Unexploded 1-lb. Vickers-Maxim Shell. (Actual +size)] + +Fig. 93 is of a number of fragments of Vickers-Maxim shells, and it was +by such that the great majority of the wounds were produced. + +Wounds from fragments of these shells were, indeed, not at all rare. +They were met with on any position; but, as far as my experience went, +they were more common on the lower extremities than in other parts of +the body, if the sufferers were in the erect position when wounded. I +saw a good many wounds in the neighbourhood of the knee, some of which +implicated the joint. When the injuries were received by patients in the +lying or crouching positions, any part of the body was equally likely to +be affected, or, again, the presence of large stones or rocks in the +vicinity might determine the scattering of the flying fragments at a +more dangerous height than when the shells burst from contact with the +actual ground. + +The relation of one or two examples of wounds from pom-pom fragments may +not be without interest, the more so as they illustrate the favourable +influence of a low degree of velocity on the part of a projectile. I saw +three wounds produced by the percussion fuses of these shells, an +experience which shows that they were not very uncommon. + +[Illustration: FIG. 93.--Fragments of Vickers-Maxim 1-lb. Shells. The +centre fragment of the lower row is the point of a steel armour-piercing +shell; although unsuitable for the purpose, they were occasionally +employed in the field by the Boers] + + (211) _Perforating shell-wound of abdomen._--Wounded at + Magersfontein by the fuse screw of a small shell + (Vickers-Maxim). Aperture of entry ragged, roughly circular, + and 2 inches in diameter, with much-contused margins situated + in the median line, nearly midway between the ensiform + cartilage and umbilicus. The screw was lodged in the abdominal + wall at the margin of the thorax, just outside the left nipple + line. The aperture of entry was cleansed by Major Harris, + R.A.M.C., who determined the fact that penetration of the + peritoneal cavity had occurred, and removed the fuse (see fig. + 94) by a separate incision. The patient made an uneventful and + uninterrupted recovery, the wound healing by granulation and + leaving little weakness of the abdominal wall. He returned to + England at the end of five weeks. + +In a second case the fuse, together with a fragment of the iron case, +entered the buttock by a ragged opening. The fragment of iron escaped by +an exit aperture of about the same size. When the patient arrived at the +Base some days after the injury, a hard body was felt in the wound, and +on exploration the fuse was found and removed. + +In a third case the fuse struck the side of the foot below the outer +malleolus and comminuted the astragalus, and then passing forwards +lodged beneath the extensor tendons of the toes. The wound was explored +at the time of the injury and some fragments of bone removed; +considerable cellulitis supervened, and the fuse was only discovered +some days later when the patient came under the care of Sir W. Thomson +in the Irish Hospital in Pretoria. It was there removed, together with +some more fragments of bone, and the wound slowly granulated. The +patient then returned to England, when the wound rapidly healed after +the removal of some further necrosed fragments of cancellous tissue. The +astragalus had been reduced to a mere shell of compact tissue, and the +convexity of the articular surface was altogether lost. The deformity, +together with the formation of adhesions in the ankle-joint, led to the +development of a firm anchylosis. + +[Illustration: FIG. 94.--Pom-pom Percussion Fuse, exact size] + +My friend Mr. Abbott removed a similar fuse from the substance of the +lung after the lapse of nine months, the patient having developed an +empyema, and a chronic fistula, which rapidly closed after the removal +of the foreign body. + +[Illustration: PLATE XXV + +OBLIQUE FRACTURE OF THE HUMERUS CAUSED BY A FRAGMENT OF A VICKERS-MAXIM +OR POM-POM SHELL + +The entire absence of comminution is very striking] + +I will add one further case, that illustrated by plate XXV. In this a +fragment of a pom-pom shell entered the outer aspect of the right +shoulder to escape on the inner aspect of the arm, just below the +confines of the axilla. An oblique, non-comminuted fracture of the +humerus resulted, which in spite of moderate suppuration united well in +the course of six weeks. The case is of particular interest as +illustrating the nature of the fracture to be expected when the velocity +retained by the missile is low. + +The above instances show that such peculiarities as belong to wounds +produced by pom-pom shells depend on the comparatively small size and +weight of the fragments, and on the small degree of impetus with which +they are propelled. + +[Illustration: FIG. 95.--Boer Segment Shell, or Shrapnel. The large +fragment is a piece of the case, the smaller are two of the pieces of +iron packed within] + +Fig. 95 illustrates a form of shrapnel employed by the Boers, the case +of which is of cast metal arranged in definite segments, while the +interior is filled with small fragments of iron so shaped as to pack in +concentric layers. As to the wounds produced by the contained fragments +I have no experience, since I never saw one of the pieces of iron +removed. This no doubt depended in part on the very unsatisfactory +practice made by the Boers with shrapnel generally. Even when they fired +English shrapnel, the shells were, as a rule, exploded far too high to +cause any serious danger to the men beneath. I saw on one occasion a +large number of shrapnel shells exploded over a body of Imperial +Yeomanry, but as a result of the great height at which all the shells +were exploded, not a single casualty resulted. + +The segment casing of the shell, however, I several times saw removed +from the body. The fragment shown in fig. 95 was removed from the +buttock of a man after one of Lord Methuen's early battles. It may be +remarked that the buttock is rather a common, and also a favourable, +seat for shell wounds with retention of the fragment. This no doubt +depends on the fact that the buttock is one of the few superficial +regions in which sufficient depth of tissue exists for the retention or +the passage of so large an object as a fragment of shell. + +Fig. 96 is of a number of leaden shrapnel bullets from our own shells. A +normal undeformed bullet, such as was the usual cause of wounds, is +shown at the left-hand upper corner. The remainder show common forms of +deformity caused by striking on the ground or against rocks. I attribute +small importance to the deformed bullets, as I never saw one removed, +and it is probable that a ricochet shrapnel bullet would rarely retain +sufficient force to penetrate. The lower fragments are inserted to +illustrate a fact that would scarcely have been assumed, that these +bullets on impact occasionally suffer a fracture of a somewhat +crystalline nature. The occurrence of this gross form of fracture is of +some interest in relation to the extreme fragmentation sometimes +undergone by the hardened leaden cores of the small-calibre bullets. + +A considerable number of wounds from leaden shrapnel bullets were met +with among our own men, as well as among the Boers. The wounds possessed +little special interest, except from the fact that the bullets were +often retained. I saw bullets in the chest on several occasions, also in +the abdomen, pelvis, the neighbourhood of joints, and in the limbs. + +I saw one patient who had suffered no less than six perforating wounds +as the result of the bursting of one shrapnel shell. + +I will here quote one case of interest as completing the various forms +of perforating wound of the abdomen met with during the campaign. + +[Illustration: FIG. 96.--Normal, Deformed, and Fractured Leaden Shrapnel +Bullets] + + (212) _Perforating shrapnel-wound of abdomen._--Boer wounded at + Graspan. Aperture of _entry_ (shrapnel), opposite eighth left + costal cartilage, 1 inch external to nipple line. The opening + was circular, and surrounded by an area of ecchymosis 4 inches + in diameter; _exit_, 4-1/2 inches above and to the right of the + umbilicus. Patient was at first in a Boer ambulance, and only + seen by me on the ninth day. At that date he was dressed and + walking with a gauze pad and bandage over the wounds. From the + exit wound, which was 1 inch in diameter, protruded a piece of + sloughing omentum, the margin of the wound being everted and + raised over a circular indurated area. + + It was thought best to allow the sloughing omentum, which was + very foul, to separate spontaneously, and then to return the + stump. At the end of three weeks, however, the slough had not + only separated, but the stump had retracted, and only a small + granulating surface was left, which healed spontaneously. + +I have little to say regarding the treatment of shell wounds. The +mutilating injuries, if not of a fatal character, necessitated treatment +of a corresponding nature to the damage. In all such cases the general +rules of surgery indicate the lines to be followed. + +In the case of shrapnel wounds the bullets were often better removed; +but when in dangerous positions, as sunk deeply in the chest, abdomen, +or pelvis, they were best left, unless some very special indication for +removal existed. Large fragments of shell always demanded removal. + +In conclusion I will only make the further remark, that shell wounds, +with the exception of clean leaden shrapnel tracks, always suppurated. + +I make this closing statement with the view of emphasising the influence +exerted on the aseptic course of modern rifle wounds by the small +calibre of the bullet, since both bullet and shell wounds were exposed +to the same surrounding conditions. + + + + +INDEX + + +Abdomen, injuries to, 407 + General prognosis in, 470 + +Abdominal wounds: + Explosive, 414 + Non-perforating, 409 + Perforating, 411 + +Abscess of the brain, 287 + +Acetabulum, fracture of, 193 + +Acetylene light, 30 + +Ambulance: + Foreign, 30 + Trolly (McCormack-Brook), 18 + Wagons, 19 + +Amputations: + Effect of transport on, 110 + for fracture, 177 + +Aneurisms: + Effect of rest on, 127 + Gangrene after, 152 + Traumatic, 122 + False, 123 + True, 126 + Treatment of, 127 + +Aneurismal varix: + Arm and forearm, 147 + Effect on circulation, 134 + Carotid, 146 + Femoral, 147 + Mode of development, 130 + Popliteal, 147 + Prognosis in, 144 + Signs of, 131 + Treatment of, 144 + +Anosmia, 348 + +Antrum, wounds of, 306 + +Aphasia: + Amnesic, 276 + Ataxic, 273 + Functional, 351 + +Arterial haematoma, 123 + Prognosis in, 126 + Treatment of, 126 + +Arteries: + Compression by cicatrices, 113 + Contusion of, 112 + Division of, 114 + Perforation of, 114 + +Arterio-venous aneurism: + Arm and forearm, 150 + Cervical, 149 + Femoral, 150 + Leg, 150 + Popliteal, 151 + Treatment of, 148 + + +Biliary fistula, 467 + +Bladder: + Wounds of, 443, 457 + Extra-peritoneal, 458 + Intra-peritoneal, 457 + Retained bullet in, 110, 460 + +Bones. See Fractures + +Bowlby, Mr.: + Retained bullets in joints, 229, 230 + Wound of pharynx, 311 + +Brain: + Abscess of, 287 + Cerebral irritation, 269 + Compression of, 267 + Concussion of, 266 + Effect of ricochet on, 249 + Explosive injury of, 247, 248 + Frontal injuries, 247, 249, 266 + Fronto-parietal injuries, 273 + Occipital injuries, 276 + Parietal injuries, 273 + Prognosis in cerebral injuries, 289 + Treatment, 289 + +Bread, 7 + +Buck wagon, 21 + +Bullets: + Characters directly affecting wounds: + Aseptic nature, 70 + Calibre, 41 + Composition of, 51 + Deformities of, 81 + Fragmentation, 88 + Length, 41 + Mantles of, 52, 82, 83 + Penetration, 49 + Revolution, 45 + Ricochet, 82 + Shape, 42 + Stability, 51 + Striking force, 50 + Velocity of flight, 42 + Weight, 42 + Effect of resistance of bones on, 86, 87, 88, 93 + Retention of, 71, 79 + Indications for removal of, 110 + in bladder, 110, 460 + in chest, 381, 401 + in nasal fossa, 244 + in or near joints, 229, 230 + in skull, 244, 249, 260, 266, 284, 298 + in spinal canal, 337 + Reversal of, 81 + Varieties of: + Determination of, 105 + Expanding, 91 + Explosive, 95 + Guedes, 48, 51 + Krag-Joergensen, 48, 51 + Jeffreys, 94 + Large leaden, 95 + Lee-Metford, 52, 89 + Mark IV., 94 + Mauser, 52, 83 + Soft-nosed, 93 + Tampered, 95 + Tweedie, 94 + Waxed, 52 + + +Cauda equina, injury to, 325, 330 + +Cellulitis, 34 + +Cervical nerve roots, injury to, 107 + Plexus, 357 + +Cheatle, Mr. G. L.: + Entry and exit wounds, 72 + First field dressing, 107 + Wound of heart, 383 + " " intestine, 413 + +Cheek, wounds of, 309 + +Chest, injuries to, 374 + Character of wounds, 377 + Influence of small calibre of bullet on, 374 + Martini wounds, 374, 388 + Non-penetrating wounds, 375 + Penetrating wounds, 376 + +Cheyne, Mr. W. W., F.R.S.: + Abdominal wounds, 449 + Spent bullets, 243, 449 + +Civil surgeons, 38 + +Climate, 8, 36, 71 + +Comparison of South African with other campaigns, 14 + +Compression of brain, 267 + Spinal cord, 319 + +Concussion of brain, 266 + Eye, 300 + Joints, 226 + Nerves, 341, 343 + Spinal cord, 315 + +Contour wounds, 65 + +Contusion: + Nerves, 343 + Spinal cord, 316 + +Costal cartilages, fractures of, 379 + +Cox, Dep. Insp.-Gen.: + Case of varix, 148 + + +Day, Mr. J. J.: + Fractures of the skull, 251 + +Deadliness of modern weapons, 16 + +Diaphragm, wounds of, 381 + +Displacement of structures by the bullet, 68 + Abdomen, 411 + Nerves, 342 + Vessels, 382, 384 + Viscera, 310, 382, 411 + +Drink, 8 + +Dust, 8, 35 + Bacteriology of, 36 + + +Empyema, 394, 396 + +Enteric fever, 9 + +Epilepsy, traumatic, 291 + +Equipment of foreign ambulances, 31 + Surgical, 4 + +Erysipelas, 34 + +Expanding bullets, 91 + +Explosive bullets, 95 + +Explosive wounds: + of abdomen, 414 + of fractures, 155 + of head, 245 + of leg, 221 + of soft parts, 97 + of thigh, 197 + +Eye, injuries to, 299 + +Facial paralysis: + Cortical, 273-277 + Peripheral, 355 + +First field dressings, 107 + +Flies, 36 + +Flockemann, Dr.: + Haemothorax, 393 + Injury to abdomen, 420 + +Fractures: + Course of healing of, 172 + Explosive wounds in, 155 + into joints, 163, 228 + Limb bones, 154 + Local shock in, 172 + Long bones, types of, 161 + Longitudinal, 163 + Notch, 165 + Oblique, 165 + Perforating, 166 + Stellate, 161 + Transverse, 166 + Wedge, 165 + Osteomyelitis in, 174 + Pom-pom fractures, 483 + Prognosis, general, in, 174 + Special features of, 155 + Special bones: + Acetabulum, 193 + Carpus, 183 + Clavicle, 178 + Femur, 193 + Fibula, 219 + Humerus, 178 + Jaws, 306 + Malar, 305 + Mastoid process, 299 + Metacarpus, 185 + Metatarsus, 224 + Orbital walls, 300 + Patella, 215 + Pelvis, 189 + Radius, 183 + Ribs, 377 + Scapula, 177, 379 + Skull: + Base, 262 + Glancing, 254 + Gutter, 255 + Perforating, deep, 245 + Superficial, 259 + Treatment of, 293 + Spine, 314 + Sternum, 379 + Tarsus, 223 + Tibia, 217 + Short and flat bones, 168 + Suppuration of soft parts in, 173 + Symptoms of, 171 + Treatment of: + General, 175 + Femur, 205 + Leg, 221 + Upper Extremity, 135 + Variation in character during the campaign, 154 + +Fractures in Franco-German war (Sir W. MacCormac), 167 + +Fragmentation of bullets, 88 + +Fuses of shells, wounds by, 481 + + +Gangrene: + Acute traumatic, 34 + After ligature of main vessels, 152 + +Genital organs, wounds of, 472 + +Guedes rifle, 65 + +Gutter wounds: + of bladder, 458 + of bones, 231 + of intestine, 417 + of joints, 231 + of liver, 466 + of pelvis, 189 + of scalp, 242 + of skull, 255 + of soft parts, 157 + + +Haemarthrosis, 232 + +Haemorrhage, 104, 114 + Control by bullets, 116 + by loop of nerve, 116 + Deaths from, 116 + Fever dependent upon, 118 + Internal, 116 + Interstitial, 118 + Primary, 114 + Recurrent, 117 + Secondary, 117 + Treatment of, 120 + +Haemorrhoids, 10 + +Haemothorax, 386, 389 + Behaviour of blood in, 390 + Course of, 390, 394 + Diagnosis of, 398 + Effect of transport on, 389 + Empyema after, 394 + Pleuritic effusion in, 390 + Prognosis in, 399 + Recurrent bleeding in, 393 + Parietal, 389, 398 + Pulmonary, 386, 389 + Symptoms of, 391 + Temperature in, 391, 393 + Treatment of, 400 + +Head, injuries to, 241 + +Health of the troops, 7 + +Heart, wounds of, 382 + in neighbourhood of, 384 + +Hemianopsia, 276 + Altitudinal, 277 + Lateral, 276 + +Hospitals: + Field, 29, 37 + Foreign, 30 + General, 31, 38 + Improvised, 28, 39 + Indian Field, 29 + Stationary, 27, 31, 33, 37 + Varieties of, 28 + +Hospital ships, 24 + Tents, 32 + Trains, 23 + +Hydronephrosis, 464 + + +Impact, irregular, 80, 82 + +Instruments, 4 + +Intestine, injuries to: + Diagnosis of, 428 + Difficulties of operation, 453 + Indications for operation, 454 + Lateral contusion, 416 + Prognosis, 446 + Treatment, 452 + Wounds of, 415 + Extra-peritoneal, 419 + Large intestine, 436, 444 + Results of, 421 + Small intestine, 427 + +Irregular wounds, 97 + +Itinerary, 2 + + +Jam, 7 + +Jaws, fractures of: + Lower, 306 + Upper, 306 + Treatment of, 308 + +Jenner, L. L., bacteriology of dust, 36 + +Joints, injuries to, 225 + Arterial wounds in, 121, 233 + Classification of, 229 + Course after, 232 + Fractures into, 228 + Signs and symptoms, 232 + Suppuration of, 233 + Treatment, general, 235 + +Joints, retained bullets in or near, 229, 230 + +Joints, special: + Ankle, 239 + Elbow, 236 + Hand, 237 + Hip, 238 + Knee, 238 + Shoulders, 236 + Tarsus, 240 + + +Ker, J. E., cases of aneurism, 152 + +Kidney, wounds of, 461 + +Krag-Joergensen rifle, 65 + + +Laminectomy, 335, 340 + +Larynx, wounds of, 312 + +Leaden bullets, 95 + +Lee-Metford rifle, 53, 64 + +Lewtas, Col. I. M. S., cases of aneurism, 144 + +Lightning stroke, 10 + +Liver, wounds of, 466 + +Local shock, 103 + in fractures, 172 + +Lower jaw, fractures of, 306 + +Lungs, wounds of, 385 + Diagnosis, 398 + Effect of velocity on, 385 + Prognosis, 399 + Retained bullets in, 401 + Symptoms of, 386 + Treatment of, 400 + +Lyddite shells, 475 + + +MacCormac, Sir W.: + Aneurism, 150 + Fractures, 167 + +Malar bone, fractures, 305 + +Mandible, fractures, 306 + +Mantles, stability of, 51, 83 + +Martini-Henry rifle, 48 + Wounds by, 96 + +Mastoid process, 299 + +Mauser rifle, 64 + +Meat, 7 + +Mediastinal wounds, 382, 384 + +Mesentery, wounds of, 420 + +Mills-Roberts, Mr. H. R.: + Spinal haemorrhage, 321 + +'Modders, the,' 9 + +Mortality, general, 11 + amongst officers, 14 + in battles of Kimberley Relief Force, 12 + + +Nasal _fossae_, bullet in, 244 + +Neck, wounds of, 309 + +Nerves, injuries to, 341 + Concussion, 341, 343, 346 + Contusion, 343, 347 + Displacement of, 342 + Laceration, 344, 348 + Perforation, 345 + Prognosis in, 370 + Scar, implication of, 345, 350 + Section, 344 + Symptoms of, 346 + Treatment of, 371 + Velocity in relation to, 341 + +Nerves, special: + Cranial: + Fifth, 353 + Fourth, 353 + Eighth, 353, 354 + Eleventh, 356 + Olfactory, 352 + Optic, 352 + Seventh, 354, 372 + Sixth, 353 + Tenth, 356 + Third, 353 + Twelfth, 357 + Spinal: + Brachial, 357 + Cervical, 347, 357 + Lumbar, 359 + Sacral, 359 + Sacro-coccygeal, 360 + Thoracic, 358 + +Neuritis: + Ascending, 350 + Peripheral, 355 + Traumatic, 349 + +Neurosis, traumatic 351 + +Nose, wounds of, 305, 348 + +Nurses, 38 + + +Officers, mortality among, 14 + +Olecranon, fracture of, 183, 237 + +Omentum, wounds of, 420 + Prolapse of, 420 + +Operations: + Difficulties of, 35 + in field, 296 + in Field hospitals, 109 + +Orbit, wounds of, 299 + Prognosis and treatment of, 304 + +Osteomyelitis in fractures, 174 + +Outfit, surgical, 3 + + +Pain in wounds, 103 + +Paraplegia, functional, 337 + +Penetration of bullets, 49 + +Penis, wounds of, 472 + +Peritoneal infection, 412 + +Pharynx, wounds of, 311 + +Pleural septicaemia, 437 + +Pleurisy, 390, 398 + +Pneumonia, 9, 398 + +Pneumo-thorax, 388 + +Pom-pom shells, 478 + +Portland Hospital, 34 + +Psychical disturbance, 101 + + +Rain, 9, 36 + +Range of fire: + Difficulty of judging influence on mortality, 17 + +Rectum, wounds of, 443, 444 + +Removal of wounded from the field, 18 + +Respiration in spinal injuries, 329 + +Retained bullets. See Bullets + +Reversed bullets, 81 + +Revolution of bullet, 45, 46 + +Ribs, fractures of, 377 + Signs of, 379 + +Ricochet, 82 + Effect on wound type, 249 + Lee-Metford, 89 + Mauser, 84 + Within body, + Abdomen, 415 + Skull, 249 + +Rifles: + Bore, 41 + Guedes, 47, 54 + Krag-Joergensen, 47, 54 + Lee-Metford, 47, 64 + Martini-Henry, 47, 97 + Mauser, 47, 64 + Modern principles of, 40 + Trajectory, 44 + Varieties employed, 47, 48 + + +Scalp wounds, 242, 264 + +Scapula, fractures of, 177, 379 + +Scrotum, wounds of, 472 + +Septic disease, 34 + +Septicaemia: + General, 34 + in enteric fever, 9 + Peritoneal, 421 + Pleural, 437 + +Shells, 474 + Varieties of, 475 + Vickers-Maxim, 478 + Lyddite, 476 + Shrapnel, 483 + +Shell wounds: + of abdomen, 480, 485 + Proportionate occurrence of, 11 + +Shell fuse wounds, 481 + +Ships, hospital, 24 + +Shock: + General, 101 + Local, 103 + Treatment of, 110 + +Shrapnel, 483 + +Simla, 25 + +Skull. See Fractures + Fractures independent of gross brain lesion, 242 + with brain lesion, 248 + +Spinal column: + Injuries to, 314 + Fractures of centra, 317 + Spinous processes, 315 + Transverse processes, 314 + +Spinal cord, injuries to, 315 + Compression by bullets, 319 + Concussion, 319 + Contusion, 320 + Diagnosis, 335 + Haemato-myelia, 322 + Section of, 323 + Shock accompanying, 328 + Signs of, 323 + Transport of, 339 + Treatment of, 339 + +Spinal haemorrhage: + Epidural, 321 + Haemato-myelia, 322 + Peri-pial, 321 + +Spleen, wounds of, 469 + +Splints: + Aluminium, 177 + Field cane, 209, 221 + Hodgen's, 211 + Wire gauze, 187 + +Sternum, fractures of, 379 + +Stevenson, Col. W. F.: + Local shock, 106 + Explosive wounds, 159 + +Stokes, Sir W.: + Treatment of aneurism, 151 + +Stomach, wounds of, 424 + +Stonham, Mr. C.: + Wound of vermiform appendix, 437 + +Sunstroke, 10 + +Suppuration of wounds, 78 + in fracture, 173 + +Synovitis, vibration, 226 + + +Temperature of air, 8, 36 + in blood effusions, 118, 391, 393 + +Tents, 32 + +Testicle, wounds of, 472 + +Tetanus, 34 + +Thirst, 8 + +Thomson, Sir W.: + Pom-pom wounds, 479 + Wound of nose, 305 + +Thoracic vessels, wounds of, 384 + +Tonga, the, 19 + +Tongue, wounds of, 309 + +Trachea, wounds of, 312 + +Traction engines, 23 + +Trains, hospital, 23 + +Trajectory, 44 + +Transport: + after battles, 26 + of wounded men from field, 18 + of wounded of the Kimberley Relief Force, 25 + of chest injuries, 386 + of fractures, 176 + of spinal injuries, 339 + +Traumatic aneurism. See Aneurism + +Traumatic epilepsy, 291 + +Traumatic gangrene, 34 + +Traumatic neurosis, 107, 351 + +Treves, Mr. F.: on cessation of intestinal peristalsis, 423 + +Trolly (McCormack-Brook), 19 + + +Upper jaws, 306 + +Urethra, wounds of, 472 + +Urinary Bladder. See Bladder + + +Varix. See Aneurismal varix + +Vegetables, 7 + +Veldt sores, 10 + +Velocity of bullet: + Circumstances influencing, 43 + Initial, 42, 49 + Remaining of various rifles, 49 + +Velocity, influence of: + on fractures of long bones, 163 + on fractures of short and flat bones, 168 + on wounds of abdomen, 414 + of chest, 385 + of joints, 226, 230 + of lungs, 385 + of nerves, 341 + of skull, 251 + of spine, 319 + +Vermiform appendix, wounds of, 437 + +Vibration synovitis, 226 + +Vickers-Maxim shell, 478 + +Vomiting in spinal injuries, 329 + + +Wagons: + Ambulance, 20 + Buck, 22 + Ox, 20 + +Warfare, deadliness of, 40 + +Water in South Africa: + Character of, 8, 36 + Transport of, 5 + +Waxed bullets, 52 + +Wobble, 80, 81, 251 + +Wounded men, removal from the field, 18 + +Wounds, general: + Aperture of entry, 55, 72 + Aperture of exit, 58, 74 + Climate, influence on, 71 + Clinical, course of, 69 + Contour tracks, 65 + Direct nature of tracks, 63 + Directions of tracks, 66 + Displacement of structures, 68 + Explosive exit wounds, 97 + Foreign bodies in, 71 + First field dressing, 107 + Haemorrhage, 104 + Irregular types of, 80, 97 + Mode of healing, 72 + Multiple character, 67 + Nature of tracts, 68 + Pain, 103 + Prognosis, 106 + Psychical disturbance, 101 + Shock, 101 + Small bore, 67 + Superficial tracts, 65 + Suppuration, 69, 78 + Symptoms, 100 + Tracks, nature of, 68 + Treatment, 107 + + * * * * * + +PRINTED BY +SPOTTISWOODE AND CO. LTD., NEW-STREET SQUARE +LONDON + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Surgical Experiences in South Africa, +1899-1900, by George Henry Makins + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SURGICAL EXPERIENCES *** + +***** This file should be named 21280.txt or 21280.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/2/1/2/8/21280/ + +Produced by Jonathan Ingram, Josephine Paolucci and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. Special rules, +set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to +copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to +protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark. Project +Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you +charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission. If you +do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the +rules is very easy. You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose +such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and +research. They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do +practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks. Redistribution is +subject to the trademark license, especially commercial +redistribution. + + + +*** START: FULL LICENSE *** + +THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE +PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK + +To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free +distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work +(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project +Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project +Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at +https://gutenberg.org/license). + + +Section 1. General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic works + +1.A. By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to +and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property +(trademark/copyright) agreement. If you do not agree to abide by all +the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy +all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession. +If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the +terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or +entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8. + +1.B. "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark. It may only be +used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who +agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement. There are a few +things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works +even without complying with the full terms of this agreement. See +paragraph 1.C below. There are a lot of things you can do with Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement +and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. See paragraph 1.E below. + +1.C. The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation" +or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic works. Nearly all the individual works in the +collection are in the public domain in the United States. If an +individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are +located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from +copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative +works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg +are removed. Of course, we hope that you will support the Project +Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by +freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of +this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with +the work. You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by +keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project +Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others. + +1.D. The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern +what you can do with this work. Copyright laws in most countries are in +a constant state of change. If you are outside the United States, check +the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement +before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or +creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project +Gutenberg-tm work. The Foundation makes no representations concerning +the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United +States. + +1.E. Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg: + +1.E.1. The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate +access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently +whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the +phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project +Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed, +copied or distributed: + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + +1.E.2. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived +from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is +posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied +and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees +or charges. If you are redistributing or providing access to a work +with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the +work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1 +through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the +Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or +1.E.9. + +1.E.3. If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted +with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution +must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional +terms imposed by the copyright holder. Additional terms will be linked +to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the +permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work. + +1.E.4. Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this +work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm. + +1.E.5. Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this +electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without +prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with +active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project +Gutenberg-tm License. + +1.E.6. You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary, +compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any +word processing or hypertext form. However, if you provide access to or +distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than +"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version +posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org), +you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a +copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon +request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other +form. Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm +License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1. + +1.E.7. Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying, +performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works +unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9. + +1.E.8. You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing +access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided +that + +- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from + the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method + you already use to calculate your applicable taxes. The fee is + owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he + has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the + Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation. Royalty payments + must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you + prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax + returns. Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and + sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the + address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to + the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation." + +- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies + you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he + does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm + License. You must require such a user to return or + destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium + and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of + Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any + money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the + electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days + of receipt of the work. + +- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free + distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works. + +1.E.9. If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm +electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set +forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from +both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael +Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark. Contact the +Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below. + +1.F. + +1.F.1. Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable +effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread +public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm +collection. Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain +"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or +corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual +property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a +computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by +your equipment. + +1.F.2. LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right +of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project +Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project +Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all +liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal +fees. YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT +LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE +PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH F3. YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE +TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE +LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR +INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH +DAMAGE. + +1.F.3. LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a +defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can +receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a +written explanation to the person you received the work from. If you +received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with +your written explanation. The person or entity that provided you with +the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a +refund. If you received the work electronically, the person or entity +providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to +receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund. If the second copy +is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further +opportunities to fix the problem. + +1.F.4. Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth +in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER +WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO +WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTIBILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE. + +1.F.5. Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied +warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages. +If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the +law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be +interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by +the applicable state law. The invalidity or unenforceability of any +provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions. + +1.F.6. INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the +trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone +providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance +with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production, +promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works, +harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees, +that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do +or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm +work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any +Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause. + + +Section 2. Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm + +Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of +electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers +including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers. It exists +because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from +people in all walks of life. + +Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the +assistance they need, is critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's +goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will +remain freely available for generations to come. In 2001, the Project +Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure +and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations. +To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation +and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4 +and the Foundation web page at https://www.pglaf.org. + + +Section 3. Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive +Foundation + +The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit +501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the +state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal +Revenue Service. The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification +number is 64-6221541. Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at +https://pglaf.org/fundraising. Contributions to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent +permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws. + +The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S. +Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered +throughout numerous locations. Its business office is located at +809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email +business@pglaf.org. Email contact links and up to date contact +information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official +page at https://pglaf.org + +For additional contact information: + Dr. Gregory B. Newby + Chief Executive and Director + gbnewby@pglaf.org + + +Section 4. Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg +Literary Archive Foundation + +Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide +spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of +increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be +freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest +array of equipment including outdated equipment. Many small donations +($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt +status with the IRS. + +The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating +charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United +States. Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a +considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up +with these requirements. We do not solicit donations in locations +where we have not received written confirmation of compliance. To +SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any +particular state visit https://pglaf.org + +While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we +have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition +against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who +approach us with offers to donate. + +International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make +any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from +outside the United States. U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff. + +Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation +methods and addresses. Donations are accepted in a number of other +ways including including checks, online payments and credit card +donations. To donate, please visit: https://pglaf.org/donate + + +Section 5. General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic +works. + +Professor Michael S. Hart was the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm +concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared +with anyone. For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project +Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support. + + +Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S. +unless a copyright notice is included. Thus, we do not necessarily +keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition. + + +Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility: + + https://www.gutenberg.org + +This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm, +including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary +Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to +subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks. diff --git a/21280.zip b/21280.zip Binary files differnew file mode 100644 index 0000000..197dad4 --- /dev/null +++ b/21280.zip diff --git a/LICENSE.txt b/LICENSE.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6312041 --- /dev/null +++ b/LICENSE.txt @@ -0,0 +1,11 @@ +This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements, +metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be +in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES. + +Procedures for determining public domain status are described in +the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org. + +No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in +jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize +this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright +status under the laws that apply to them. diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..53bd8c7 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,2 @@ +Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for +eBook #21280 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/21280) |
