| The Cause of the Death of the President      As medical men we are profoundly 
              interested in the cause which led to the death of President McKinley. 
              The post-mortem revealed gangrene along the entire track of the 
              bullet, from the skin wound to and including its track through the 
              edge of the kidney. The pancreas was also gangrenous. The post-mortem 
              report says nothing about a wound of this latter organ, though Dr. 
              Roswell Park intimates that it was injured. Here we have the injured 
              abdominal wall, wounded stomach anterior and posterior walls, wounded 
              kidney, and possibly injured pancreas. We know the men who operated 
              on the president and believe they took every precaution to save 
              the life of their illustrious patient.As surgeons we meet with gangrene 
              where there is mechanical obstruction to the blood current, as in 
              an improperly applied bandage or splint. We see it again in cases 
              of violent inflammation which by the swelling interference with 
              the venous circulation of a part. In this case, so far as we know, 
              there were neither of these agencies at work, and the examination 
              of the [304][305] bullets showed they 
              were not poisoned. Then what produced the gangrene and death of 
              the president? Dr. Roswell Park, in an interview, intimates the 
              possibility of an undetected injury to the pancreas, and that the 
              flow of the pancreatic fluid into the abdominal cavity produced 
              the disastrous results. The post-mortem furnishes no evidence of 
              injury to the pancreas, though it was gangrenous. If it had been 
              injured would its secretion produce the gangrene? If it has such 
              disastrous results why did it confine its action to the tract of 
              the bullet, and its surrounding tissues? Why did it not involve 
              other tissues and organs in the abdominal cavity? The pancreatic 
              juice will liquify fat when that fatty material comes to it as food—dead 
              tissue, but it is not known to attack and destroy living organs 
              and tissues, as the peritoneum and stomach walls, composed of living 
              muscle, fibrous material and muscus [sic] membrane.
 We know that inflammation cannot hide 
              itself anywhere in the body without its presence being detected 
              by the use of the microscope; the blood count in this case, 48 hours 
              before the end, showed that there was no increase of the white blood 
              corpuscles. Unquestionably, then, the surgeons were justified in 
              saying there was no inflammation; and this finding of the microscopist 
              was confirmed at the autopsy. There had been no attempt whatever 
              at repair of the wound in the stomach or elsewhere along the tract 
              of the bullet. We know that two peritoneal surfaces sutured together 
              will unite in a few hours—and here there was no union at the end 
              of 7 days. What was the etiological factor in the gangrene and death 
              of the president? We confess we do not know.
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