Static Electricity Transmitted to a Distance
and Several X-Ray Tubes
Operated from One Machine
During the autumn of 1901 I made
large therapeutic use of static electricity and the Roentgen rays,
operating a 16-plate Betz machine, and at times felt great need
of increased equipment in order to save both professional and running
time. Not feeling disposed to double the apparatus, I determined
to try to double its capacity, and with little trouble succeeded
in doing so. It seems to me hardly probable that I am the first
to secure the results to be described, nor am I claiming this, not
caring one way or the other; but I may say that in a more or less
extended reading of the literature, pictorial or otherwise, of static
electricity I had never learned that the current may be easily transmitted
from the machine and used at the bed of a patient in any room of
a large house, even 100 feet away, and that the X-ray may be operated
at the machine and at the same time another be produced that far
away. All that is necessary to be done is to run an insulating wire
from each discharge rod, positive and negative, to the point where
the supplementary X-ray is to be made, the ordinary therapeutic
current needing but one wire, a zinc plate, and a Geissler tube.
I have not yet decided as to the limits of capacity, either as to
the number of currents that may be so transmitted, the distance
they may be sent, nor the number of Crookes tubes that will thus
be half illuminated, but will say that several currents can be made
to do work and several tubes used. Anyone wishing to know more about
the limitations in this direction can now go to work and find out.
The utility of this method need not
be much enlarged upon. But a busy physician may flit from one patient
to another in private stalls or rooms, or treat a patient in bed
upstairs while the machine is running downstairs, with or without
an attendant downstairs. A fashionable doctor’s office building
may be fitted up with a machine and transmitted X-rays “thrown in”
with the rent and janitor’s fees; or several physicians can “get
together” and enjoy clubbing rates when not similarly engaged in
their medical society meetings.
The world has been studiously kept
in the dark as to the flimsy reason why the late lamented and still
lamented President McKinley was not X-rayed for that Czolgosz bullet,
before or after death, by his distinguished surgical and medical
attendants. Was it a case of the mountain being unable to go to
Mahomet and Mahomet not being able to go to the mountain? An adaptation
of the transmission feasibility hint just given would have been
easy, and it would have placed everybody concerned in a better light,
X-ray or any other kind.
|