The Death of President McKinley
The lesson taught by the death of
our beloved President will be remembered for all time by the American
people. While there is no land under the sun where freedom and liberty
are so equally shared by all classes as in America, yet it is evident
that this freedom certainly had something to do with and led to
the destruction of this great man. No man or woman should be permitted
in this country to promulgate any doctrine which is opposed to the
best interests of its citizens. The man who preaches anarchy should
be banished. Anarchists should not only not be permitted to promulgate
their doctrines, but they should not be allowed to live in this
country and enjoy its freedom and its privileges, when their whole
lives are devoted to the destruction of its very best principles
and its leaders.
All Praise to the Doctors who had
Charge of the President’s Case. We have the pleasure of a personal
acquaintance with some of the physicians interested in the case,
and there can be no question that every thing known to the art and
science of surgery was applied in this case. It has now become a
settled fact, and should have been long ago, that in all cases of
gunshot wounds of the abdomen, where the cavity [232][233]
has been entered, laparotomy should be done at the very earliest
possible moment. It was done in the President’s case and in the
most skillful manner and by trained, experienced men—the best that
the nation could afford, or the world, either, for that matter.
While the final result was far from what was expected in the earlier
days after the operation, it was no fault of the operators or any
one concerned in the operation.
The Autopsy. The autopsy showed
a very remarkable condition of affairs to exist in the track of
the wound. The stitches were intact. There had been no leak from
the stomach, but there was a large necrotic area surrounding each
wound in the stomach. A similar condition of affairs existed along
the whole line of the track of the bullet. This condition is so
unusual that something more than passing notice of it is demanded.
The wound in the kidney and the wound of the pancreas of themselves
were not necessarily fatal, but of course contributed their share
to shock.
The Bacillus Aerogenes. It
may have been the work of the bacillus aerogenes, which was described
by Welsh and Nuttall in 1891-2. “Later studies of Welsh and Flexner
and many others have confirmed the original belief that the bacillus
is a frequent excitant in man of a serious infectious disease, characterized
by a local or widespread serous and emphysematous, phlegmonous inflammation,
frequently associated with gangrene and general symptoms of a profound
toxemia.
“The bacillus aerogenes is rather
large, on certain media spore-forming, is often capsulated, and
occasionally forms chains. It retains the stain by Gram’s method.
It is anaerobic, growing readily in a variety of artificial culture
media.
“Rabbits are not susceptible to even
large intravenous injections of pure cultures. But if they be killed
soon after such inoculation, within a few hours, at room temperatures,
an abundant development of gas occurs throughout the body. On the
other hand, the subcutaneous injection of a very small quantity
of the fresh edematous exudate is followed by the typical local
and general marks of infection. Guinea-pigs are more susceptible
than rabbits to inoculation, either with cultures or fresh material,
and develop characteristic lesions.
“While infection may occur without
gas, in most cases before death, and especially after, there is
an abundant formation of gas in the tissues. This is largely hydrogen,
formed through the splitting by the bacillus of either sugar or
proteids. While the gas may be present in [233][234]
any of the tissues, in the body cavities, and in the blood-vessels,
it is especially in the liver after death that the marks of gas
accumulation are most striking. This organ may be riddled with small
holes, presenting an appearance which has been characterized as
‘foamy liver.’
“Infection may occur through wounds
or injuries in any part of the body. It has been frequently observed
in pregnant and puerperal women. Ulcers of the stomach and intestine
or the urinary tract may be portals of entry. One of the more common
forms of local infection is the so-called gaseous phlegmon or emphysematous
gangrene. Pulmonary and pleural lesions, appendicitis, and peritonitis
are described as well as gaseous abscesses and purulent meningitis,
while the usual action upon the tissues is the induction of bloody
edema and necrosis. This bacillus is also occasionally pyogenic.
“The natural habitat of the organism
is the soil and the intestinal canal. This accounts for the relative
frequency of infection through the intestinal and genito-urinary
tracts and through wounds contaminated with dirt.
“Infection, especially from the intestinal
canal, may apparently occur during the later hours of life, with
or without symptoms, and with a post-mortem formation of gas. It
is often difficult to determine, since gas formation occurs so early
and so extensively after death, whether the entrance has or has
not been effected during life. It seems fair to infer, as the result
of animal experiments, that when the gas formation, even after death,
is widespread, ante-mortem infection had occurred. Concurrent infection
with other organisms, especially the pyogenic cocci, is frequent.
“Welsh and Nuttall early called attention
to the importance of recognizing the possibility of infection with
this bacillus in judging of a certain class of cases of alleged
air embolism.”
Small Kidney. A significant
fact connected with the post-mortem was that the kidney was rather
small. We take it for granted that the kidney was contracted, and
if this was true, it meant that the President had interstitial nephritis.
This, if it existed, can fully account for the condition of the
wound, as it is a well-known fact that tissue reparation does not
occur, and particularly would it be the case in this instance, as
the President’s vitality was at a low ebb, notwithstanding he was
apparently in good health.
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