The Assassination of President McKinley
The whole world stood aghast when
the wires flashed the news that the hand of the assassin had been
raised against so estimable and amirable [sic] a man as Mr.
McKinley. The wounds did not prove fatal until a little more than
a week, and from the hour of his injury until death closed the scene,
bulletins were issued at short intervals from Mr. McKinley’s sick
room, and were eagerly read by a sorrowing and sympathetic people
the world over.
We gather the following facts from
the Medical News, a member of whose staff was sent to Buffalo
and interviewed directly the medical men connected with the case.
The President was wounded shortly after 4 o’clock on the afternoon
of Sept. 6, 1901, while holding a public reception in the Temple
of Music on the grounds of the Pan-American Exposition. Czolgosz,
the assassin, carried his pistol (a short, 32 calibre, “bull dog”)
in his right hand, his right arm being carried across his chest
as though in a sling. In straightening the arm to fire its general
direction was downward. The President was immediately conveyed to
the Emergency Hospital on the Exposition Grounds and placed upon
the operating table, where he remained awaiting the arrival of Dr.
Matthew D. Mann, who was summoned in the absence of Dr. Roswell
Park, who was absent at [377][378]
Niagara Falls, but who arrived before the operation was completed.
On seeing that the first shot penetrated the abdominal cavity, (the
second struck the sternum and did not penetrate the skin) Dr. Mann
at once ordered ether administered and prepared himself to do a
laparatomy [sic]. An incision was made (just an hour and
a quarter from the time the wound was inflicted) through the bullet
wound, when it was found that the stomach had been perforated in
the neighborhood of the greater curvature, the anterior opening
being small with sharp inverted edges. The posterior opening was
large and more irregular, but its edges were also inverted, and
the amount of leakage was not great, although the stomach was about
half full. Both openings were closed with Lembert sutures, to reach
the posterior wound the stomach being turned upward and backward
to avoid contact with the intestines. No other visceral wounds could
be found. There was practically no hemorrhage. The abdomin [sic]
was thoroughly flushed out with normal salt solution and closed
up without drainage. The patient was under ether about an hour and
a half. The bullet was not found and was supposed to have lodged
in some of the muscles of the back.
The President’s condition gradually
improved, the temperature reaching 103° F., but gradually reducing
until it reached 100° F. on Sept. 10th. On the night of this date,
as there was increasing tenderness in the wound, the dressings were
removed and there was found a small collection of pus along the
edge of the wound. The pus was evacuated and found to be due to
a small piece of clothing which had been carried into the wound.
After this dressing the President became more comfortable, and the
bulletins were very encouraging.
These did not continue long, however,
for on the 13th the word was sent out that the patient’s heart action
was very unsatisfactory. Each bulletin brought more unfavorable
news until the end came at 2:15 a. m. of September the 14th. The
autopsy showed the wounds in the stomach wall had healed, but the
tissues about them had become gangrenous. There was found also a
wound of the pancreas and of the kidney. These tissues were likewise
gangrenous. The bullet was not found.
The distressing outcome of this case
is greatly to be deplored, and will doubtless give rise to much
discussion if not criticism. There was nothing but praise, and deserved
praised [sic], of the surgeon who so promptly realized the importance
of entering the abdominal cavity in the presence of a penetrating
wound, and who so boldly proceeded to act upon his judgment. No
one, probably, will deny that it is the surgeon’s duty, in all cases
of penetrating wounds of the abdomin [sic], to enlarge the [378][379]
opening already made and determine the presence or absence of injury
to the viscera, and to do this promptly before the absorption of
poisons and the onset of peritonitis. To await the development of
symptoms is to lose precious time and allow the enemy to fortify
itself. It is extremely unfortunate, however, that the serious lesions
of the pancreas and kidney should have been overlooked. The time
spent in the operation, one hour and a half, is evidence that search
was made for further injury, for so much time could not have been
consummed [sic] in repairing the two small wounds of the stomach.
It is very difficult to thoroughly inspect the deep organs in the
upper abdomen, especially through a small opening, and considering
the importance of the personage upon whom he was operating, one
can readily understand the hesitation of the surgeon in making the
opening sufficiently large to permit a more through [sic] investigation,
and yet this very fact made the necessity for thoroughness the more
urgent. Whether or not it would have been possible to repair the
injuries to the pancreas and kidney so as to have averted the fatal
termination we cannot say, but it would have reflected more credit
upon surgery if the diagnosis had been made anti-mortem [sic] and
less sanguine views regarding the outcome of the case expressed.
More impressive teaching oftimes [sic] comes from failure than from
success, and that brought out in this instance is the importance
of knowing that organs are intact, and not to surmise that
they are because of the absence, at the time, of symptoms. As to
the cause of the gangrene along the route of the bullet, further
investigation will be necessary to determine it, but we cannot accept
the theory of one of the surgeons that it was due to poisoned bullets,
but think a more plausible reason would be the destruction of vitality
in the tissues immediately about the track, owing to the slow progress
of the missile followed by the disturbance of the nervous system,
due to what Dr. Mann calls “solar plexus irritation.”
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