Notes on a Case of Fracture of the Fibula in a Melancholic Patient, with Remarks on Treatment in Fractures Generally

1898 ◽  
Vol 44 (184) ◽  
pp. 101-104
Author(s):  
J. F. Briscoe

The object of this communication is to draw from the members of the Association the modern treatment of fractures as adopted in institutions for the insane. It is obvious that the various plans, as practised in hospitals, must be considerably modified in asylums. For instance, to strap and bandage a case of fractured ribs, secundum artem, taxes any medical officer, unless the patient is quietly disposed and clean in his habits. However, with skill and a fairly docile patient, there should be little difficulty in the management of ordinary fractures of the bones below the elbows and the knees. From time to time one reads of cases of fractures of the ribs occurring in asylums, remarkable autopsies being recorded. It is difficult sometimes to give a correct history of their causation, and, in consequence, much opprobrium has been unjustly cast on asylum officials. It is believed by not a few that there is a peculiar affection of the ribs in the insane causing them to fracture readily. It is said, too, that it is common in general paralysis. Dr. Christian has stated in the Journal of Mental Science, January, 1886, that he is decidedly opposed to the idea that general paralytics are more liable to fracture of the bones. He gives 250 cases, and says, “I can assure you, gentlemen, I have not come across a single case of fracture among them.” But no figures of the kind can be relied upon unless verified by post-mortem examination. It is not uncommon to find in the mortuaries of ordinary hospitals and asylums, and in the dissecting-room, specimens of fractured ribs, the causation of which is unaccounted for. With our present pathological knowledge of the osseous system we must withhold our verdict.

1871 ◽  
Vol 17 (77) ◽  
pp. 1-24
Author(s):  
Robt Boyd

The following observations are mainly the result of the author's experience during twenty years in the Somerset. County Asylum; many of them have appeared from time to time in his annual reports of that institution.


1899 ◽  
Vol 45 (191) ◽  
pp. 758-760
Author(s):  
E. B. Whitcombe

The patient, thirty-nine years of age, was admitted into Birmingham Asylum in February, 1898. He was a porter, married, in fairly robust condition, and was a typical example, both mentally and physically, of general paralysis of the insane of somewhat short duration. He was stated to have been steady, of temperate habits, and had been in the army. For twelve years he served in India. No history of fevers or other illness. The disease progressed without any special features until January 14th of this year, when he was noticed to be worse; his breathing was a little rapid, and in consequence he was sent to the infirmary ward and was examined thoroughly by the assistant medical officer, who found nothing specially interesting, but ordered him to be put to bed and kept warm. This was about 3 o'clock in the afternoon. At 7 o'clock the same evening I was asked to see the patient (he had been examined at 5 o'clock by the nurse). I found the left leg from thigh to toe was double the size of the other leg, and nearly the whole surface of the leg was perfectly black, and there were numerous large bullæ the size of one's fist in different places along the leg. There was no special line of demarcation. At first sight it looked like an extreme case of local purpura, but after a careful examination I came to the conclusion that putrefaction had actually set in, and that the man was dying, and death took place an hour after I saw him. The most extraordinary part of this case occurred afterwards. I am accustomed to go and see a body before giving my certificate to the coroner. I saw this man between 10 and 11 on Sunday morning, he having died at 8 p.m. on Saturday. The body was double the former size; it was more like the body of a negro, the whole surface being in a black condition, and the bullæ had increased on the other parts of the body. The scrotum was distended to the size of a man's head, and the penis swelled and distorted. The case was the more extraordinary as the highest temperature recorded locally at the time was 52·8°, and the lowest 34°. I personally saw the coroner, and together we went through numerous works on jurisprudence, but we could find nothing to give us any idea as to the cause of this condition, and he very kindly and in scientific interests ordered an inquest. He sent Dr. Simon, Professor of Medical Jurisprudence in Mason College, to make the post-mortem examination. The results were practically nil, the whole body internally and externally being putrefied. The cause of death was very naturally put down to general paralysis, but as to any cause for this extremely rapid putrefaction we could arrive at no conclusion. The case is one of very great interest. I believe that the first idea that the nurse had in the infirmary was that this man must have been injured. Now there was the usual considerable difference between the appearance of an injury and this condition, which looked like purpura; but besides this the difficulty that occurred to my mind was as to the fixing of the time of death. Here was a body presenting the appearances which are usually recognised as those of three or four weeks' duration, and these had happened certainly within sixteen hours. From the point of view of jurisprudence it occurred to me that a murder might be committed, that the body might present these appearances, and that it would be a most serious matter for a medical man to give an opinion as to the time of death. We know that in hot countries this condition does occur, but we were in the middle of winter, and the condition arose from, so far as we could judge, no special cause whatever. There was some atheroma of the arteries, but otherwise we could distinguish nothing of importance at the post-mortem. It is to be regretted that no bacteriological examination was made.


1871 ◽  
Vol 17 (79) ◽  
pp. 364-370
Author(s):  
R. Boyd

In my communication on General Paralysis in the previous number of the Journal, reference is made to tables, showing various particulars in 124 males and 31 females suffering from this disease, and in whom post-mortem examinations were made during a period extending over 20 years. As these tables were found to be too voluminous for publication in the Journal an analysis or summary only was given. A further reference to the subject may not be uninteresting, especially as relates to the spinal canal, the spinal cord, and investing membranes, since any notice of their condition in insane persons is entirely omitted, even by recent observers. These morbid changes, so frequently noticed by myself and colleagues at the Somerset County Asylum, and in many instances submitted to others for microscopical examination, can only have been overlooked in other institutions from the difficulty of exposing the spinal cord, so as to admit of its complete examination, the instruments in common use not being suitable for the purpose. Those I have been in the habit of using for dividing the spinal column, after laying it bare with a large-sized scalpel, are a common tenon saw, a chisel and mallet, the same as used in opening the skull, and both operations may be performed with equal facility after a little practice.


VASA ◽  
2002 ◽  
Vol 31 (4) ◽  
pp. 281-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bollinger ◽  
Rüttimann

Die Geschichte des sackförmigen oder fusiformen Aneurysmas reicht in die Zeit der alten Ägypter, Byzantiner und Griechen zurück. Vesal 1557 und Harvey 1628 führten den Begriff in die moderne Medizin ein, indem sie bei je einem Patienten einen pulsierenden Tumor intra vitam feststellten und post mortem verifizierten. Weitere Eckpfeiler bildeten die Monographien von Lancisi und Scarpa im 18. bzw. beginnenden 19. Jahrhundert. Die erste wirksame Therapie bestand in der Kompression des Aneurysmasacks von außen, die zweite in der Arterienligatur, der John Hunter 1785 zum Durchbruch verhalf. Endoaneurysmoraphie (Matas) und Umhüllung mit Folien wurden breit angewendet, bevor Ultraschalldiagnostik und Bypass-Chirurgie Routineverfahren wurden und die Prognose dramatisch verbesserten. Die diagnostischen und therapeutischen Probleme in der Mitte des 20. Jahrhunderts werden anhand von zwei prominenten Patienten dargestellt, Albert Einstein und Thomas Mann, die beide im Jahr 1955 an einer Aneurysmaruptur verstarben.


Author(s):  
Sabina Strano-Rossi ◽  
Serena Mestria ◽  
Giorgio Bolino ◽  
Matteo Polacco ◽  
Simone Grassi ◽  
...  

AbstractScopolamine is an alkaloid which acts as competitive antagonists to acetylcholine at central and peripheral muscarinic receptors. We report the case of a 41-year-old male convict with a 27-year history of cannabis abuse who suddenly died in the bed of his cell after having smoked buscopan® tablets. Since both abuse of substances and recent physical assaults had been reported, we opted for a comprehensive approach (post-mortem computed tomography CT (PMCT), full forensic autopsy, and toxicology testing) to determine which was the cause of the death. Virtopsy found significant cerebral edema and lungs edema that were confirmed at the autopsy and at the histopathological examination. Scopolamine was detected in peripheral blood at the toxic concentration of 14 ng/mL in blood and at 263 ng/mL in urine, and scopolamine butyl bromide at 17 ng/mL in blood and 90 ng/mL in urine. Quetiapine, mirtazapine, lorazepam, diazepam, and metabolites and valproate were also detected (at therapeutic concentrations). Inmates, especially when they have a history of drug abuse, are at risk to use any substance they can find for recreational purposes. In prisons, active surveillance on the management and assumption of prescribed drugs could avoid fatal acute intoxication.


1997 ◽  
Vol 38 (3) ◽  
pp. 253-262
Author(s):  
A.-M. Dalin ◽  
K. Gidlund ◽  
L. Eliasson-Selling

1888 ◽  
Vol 34 (146) ◽  
pp. 167-176
Author(s):  
G. T. Revington

I think that the foregoing statistics, and those which follow, together with the large number of cases which I quote, and which connect general paralysis with almost every form of neurotic manifestation, will prove conclusively that neurotic inheritance is a striking feature in the causation of general paralysis. I question whether a distinction between “the cerebral and the insane element” in general paralysis can be maintained. If general paralysis is not a degeneration of the mind-tissue, then the pathology of insanity has no existence, and I would say that the subtle influence for evil, which is transmitted from parents, whose brains are deteriorated by neurotic outbursts, or soaked in alcohol, or wrecked by physiological immorality, tends strongly towards such degeneration. If insanity is, as Dr. Savage says, a perversion of the ego, then a general paralytic is the in-sanest of the insane. We know that the children of a melancholic parent, for example, may develop any form of neurosis—in other words, it is not that melancholia or general paralysis, or any other definite disease, is transmitted, but that a certain tendency to deviate from normal development is transmitted. This tendency to deviate is the neurotic diathesis, and the form of its development is determined by collateral circumstances, and a certain series of collateral circumstances determine the development of general paralysis. Perhaps neurotic inheritance may mean in some cases a limited capital of nervous energy, and if this is wasted recklessly the individual breaks down suddenly and pathologically, as we all do slowly and physiologically. I would also point out that considering the number of histories of insanity which owing to ignorance or reticence we, do not receive, and considering that we never receive information as to the existence of the slighter neuroses, it is marvellous that we get so high a percentage as 51. Of the 145 general paralytics with a reliable history, 38 had a family history of insanity, 28 a family history of drink, 8 of both, 43 had a personal history of drink, 8 of a previous attack too remote to be considered, at least, according to our present ideas, as part of the disease, and the vast majority had a history of some physiological irregularity which must be considered as conducive to the creation of an acquired neurosis. We may now pass to some further statistics.


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