The Surgical Aspects of President McKinley’s
Case
So world-wide is the interest felt
in every phase of the case of the late President McKinley, and so
much at variance are many of the statements regarding it which have
appeared in the lay as well as the medical press, that an epitome
of the facts, in so far as up to the present writing they have been
determined, is herewith given.
The extent of the injury inflicted
by the two shots fired by the assassin is stated in the following
report of the autopsy issued by the attending physician:
“The bullet which struck over the
breast-bone did not pass through the skin and did little harm. The
other bullet passed through both walls of the stomach near its lower
border. Both holes were found to be perfectly closed by the stitches,
but the tissue around each hole had become gangrenous. After passing
through the stomach the bullet passed into the back walls of the
abdomen, hitting and tearing the upper end of the kidney. This portion
of the bullet track was also gangrenous, the gangrene involving
the pancreas. The bullet has not yet been found. There was no sign
of peritonitis or disease of other organs. The heart-walls were
very thin. There was no evidence of any attempt at repair on the
part of nature, and death resulted from the gangrene, which affected
the stomach around the bullet wounds, as well as the tissues around
the further course of the bullet. Death was unavoidable by any surgical
or medical treatment, and was the direct result of the bullet wound.”
A full official report of the whole
history of the case is in course of preparation, and will be made
public at an early day. In the mean time [sic] the following facts
appear to have been established with a reasonable degree of certainty:
First. As regards
injury to the viscera, other than the stomach, the wound of the
kidney was not sufficiently severe to cause any appreciable functional
disturbance; there was no appearance of pus or blood in the urine.
The pancreas was probably perforated, although there is some obscurity
upon that point, but certainly was so injured as to result in the
formation of a slough through which the pancreatic [594][595]
secretion ultimately escaped, following the track of the bullet
back of the stomach.
Second. Although
the injury to the kidney and pancreas was not discovered by the
attending surgeons at the time when the abdominal cavity was opened
and the stomach perforations sutured, it is not probable that the
fatal issue would have been averted even had the course and effect
of the bullet been fully ascertained and more extended surgical
interference effected.
Third. The successful
and skilful [sic] suturing of the bullet wounds of the stomach and
the increasingly favorable symptoms which day after day followed
that operation justified the hopeful prognosis of the physicians
in charge, and this notwithstanding the fact that pulse, temperature,
and respiration, although showing progressive improvement, were
at no time thoroughly satisfactory, and even in the most hopeful
stage of the case remained as symptoms of possibly ominous significance.
Fourth. That if
a mistake was made in too early imposing a digestive task upon the
injured stomach, the risk may have been warranted by the failing
strength of the patient and the apparent necessity for sustaining
the vital forces, and that in any case the resultant indigestion
did not materially influence the ultimate result of the case.
Fifth. That the
true reason for the failure of modern surgical science to save a
life so precious to the nation was not faulty operative technique
or mistaken medical treatment, but was inherent in the nature of
the injury and the systemic condition of the patient. President
McKinley had a small heart with thin walls showing fatty degenerative
changes; his pulse was erratic, possibly from organic lesions, as
well as from functional disturbances, to which a somewhat excessive
use of tobacco may have contributed. Like many other overworked
men in public as well as private life, he had for many years been
living upon his vital capital, and had no reserve force upon which
to call in the hour of need. Hence there was enfeebled recuperative
power in the injured tissues. There was no inflammation and no pus;
but nearly the whole track traversed by the bullet became necrotic.
Sixth. The reason
for the development of gangrene in this unforeseen and unusual form
has not been fully determined, and may long remain a mystery. The
theory that the bullets were poisoned has not been sustained by
the results of chemical and bacteriological examination. Indeed,
no poison, organic or inorganic, is at present known to toxicology
capable of producing the exact line of effects which followed the
course of the missile. Another theory is that the necrosis was due
to the action of the escaped pancreatic secretion upon the tissues
[595][596] which it permeated; and
there are recorded cases of gangrene directly or indirectly following
injuries of the pancreas which give some degree of plausibility
to the suggestion. In the absence of much more definite knowledge
regarding the physiology and pathology of the pancreas than we at
present possess this theory must, however, be regarded as simply
a possible hypothesis.
The one supreme fact is that one who
will perhaps go down in history as the best beloved of Presidents,
because his gentle and yet manly nature invited love as well as
trust, was stricken down in an hour when the arm of every fellow-citizen
should have been his defence and every breast his shield, and that
all the resources of modern medical and surgical science were powerless
to save to the American people the ruler whom their suffrages had
twice raised to the chief magistracy of the nation.
If science thus disillusioned, her
brightest expectations blasted, and her most hopeful auguries set
at naught, can from this cruel failure gain one added truth helpful
to others in time to come, it will be as he would have wished. And
if we as a people awaken to a stern realization of the fact that
cancerous sores infect the body politic for which the nation’s safety
demands the swift, sharp sweep of the surgeon’s knife rather than
the laissez-faire of the social optimist or the nostrum of
the political quack, McKinley will not have died wholly in vain.
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