r xW'ciocuilftW'^ggJPMagN ;3B -;i Vj,-* ■*it:*.***:*-*:*'-*;********»'•***•.*■•*»*»***..*.V*; %"..'*..•'.*.",-?;%%*..'"\, >»*i*»«I*£*;*i*i*i*;*';?..>;.-;»;-»Vi.*«.'*- *;•**■■*■ st* *-»•»■* *'-• 4 k :• >i:;':::*;-.. *;*;:: SV ; '<•.'.■ .So**!*:::.*;::#-;* >tV.' .';:;•*• $*'. &C (/f','-.'/.,.,/j'»V»'///iV/,».v.*,%->';*.-*it;*.•s-'jfi'i^sfajr. / f.f.t.r » fit t 1 . « - . . »c<; » » , . # » p» * #;#;» •'*»•■»•#' fitf- *■ *\^»f#*»'»**'»*«';'»'.'*'.'.%f»',.'.'.*.'.'-*»*»'.'^*'*,*,',',*♦*.*;%*. * IUtrl*;,. / HAND-BOOK FOR THE MILITARY SURGEON: BEING A COMPENDIUM OF THE DUTIES OF THE MEDICAL OFFICER IN THE FIELD, THE SANITARY MANAGEMENT OF THE CAMP, THE PREPARATION OF FOOD, ETC.; WITH FORMS FOR THE REQUISITIONS FOR SUPPLIES, RETURNS, ETC.; THE DIAGNOSIS AND TREAT- MENT OF CAMP DYSENTERY; AND ALL THE IMPORTANT POINTS IN WAR SURGERY: INCLUDING GUNSHOT WOUNDS, AMPUTATION, WOUNDS OF THE CHEST, ABDOMEN, ARTERIES AND HEAD, AND THE USE OF CHLOROFORM. BY CHAS. S. ^piPLER, A.M., M.D., Surgeon United States Army. AND GEORGE C. BLACKMAN, M.D., F.R.M.S., Prof -ssor of Surgery in the Medical College of Ohio, Surgeon tq the Coniinerciul Hos- pital, St. John's Hospital, etc. ROBERT CLARKE & CO., PUBLISHERS, No. 55 Wkst Fourth Street. 1861. too Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1861, By ROBERT CLARKE & CO., [n the Clerk's Office of the District Court, for the Southern District of Ohio. K. MORGAN & SONS, Stereotypes, Printers and Binders, 111 Main Stiieet. PRE FACE. The want of a work like the present is seriously felt by those now about to engage for the first time in the duties of Mili- tary Surgery. To supply this want, the publishers requested Dr. Chas. S. Tripler, U. S. A., to consent to the issue of the lectures which for the last three years he has delivered in the Medical College of Ohio, by invitation of the Professor of Surgery in that institution. To this the Doctor kindly con- sented. The publishers likewise requested Professor Black- man to supply the material for the chapters on Wounds of the Abdomen, Head, and Arteries—which he has attempted, after very brief notice, amid most pressing engagements. Prof. B. wishes it to be distinctly understood that his only aim has been to compile from the best sources within his reach such a digest as will promote the objects proposed by the publishers. In addition to his own task, Prof. B. has been compelled to arrange three of the lectures of Dr. Tripler from unfinished notes, left with him by Dr. T., who was summoned to report himself to headquarters before his revision of his labors was completed. This, it is hoped, will be a sufficient apology for any imperfections which maybe detected. A chapter on the Use of Chloroform has been added, taken from the valuable work of Mr. Macleod on the Crimean War, which will be found of interest. Cincinnati, May 10, 1861. * CONTENTS. CHAPTER I. Page Duties of the medical officer—Organization of field hospitals—Modes of procuring supplies,......- - - 1 CHAPTER II. Military hygiene—Preservation of health of troops in campaign, - 10 CHAPTER III. Camp dysentery,..........23 CHAPTER IV. Of the general history, character, and treatment of gunshot wounds, 36 CHAPTER V. Amputations, -..... CHAPTER VI. . Wounds of the chest, - - - - CHAPTER VII. Wounds of the abdomen, .... CHAPTER VIII. Wounds of the head,..... CHAPTER IX. Wounds of the arteries, .... CHAPTER X. On the use of chloroform, - 52 - 62 80 - 90 105 - 118 CONTENTS OF APPENDIX. Page. Supply for medical officer, .-.--.-- ii Standard supply for field service, - - - - - - - iv Requisition for medical and hospital supplies, .... xii Form for requisition for forage, ------- xviii Form for requisition for straw, - - xix Form for requisition for fuel, ------- xx Form for accounts of purchasers, - xxi Provision return, --- ...... xxii Return of hospital stores, furniture, etc.,.....xxiii Return of medicines, etc.,.....- - - xxiv Register of sick, --------- xxv Prescription and diet book, -------- xxv Muster and descriptive roll of pay, etc., - ' - - - - xxvi Clothing account, --------- xxvii Surgeon's morning report,.......xxviii Discharge on surgeon's certificate and death, ... - xxix Report of sick and wounded,.......xxx Muster roll of steward, wardmaster, etc., - - - . - xxxviii Pay roll of the hospital,........xlii (6) HAN D-B O O K FOE THE MILITARY SURGEON. CHAPTER I. DUTIES OF THE MEDICAL OFFICER.—ORGANIZATION OF FIELD HOSPITALS.—MODES OF PROCURING SUPPLIES. The military medical officer is charged with the whole sanitary care of his corps. He is not to suppose that he is to sit in his tent, and when called upon to see a patient, he is to repair to the bedside of the sick, prescribe and retire, as in civil life. On the contrary, he is most valuable when having carefully reflected upon the laws of Hygiene, so that he has them at his fingers' ends, he is ready to ap- ply them to the emergency before him, so as to afford to the troops under his immediate charge, the greatest possible security against the invasion of disease. Nothing so much embarrasses operations in a campaign, as a large sick report. Upon marches, the sick re- quire transportation and nursing. Every nurse is an effective man lost to the fighting force. Every wagon employed in the hospital department, is so much lost to the supply train of the army. To limit this loss as much as possible, should be the constant effort of the zealous medical officer. But however scientific, zealous, intelligent and active the medical officer may be, men will get sick, and in a fight, they will get wound- ed. The sick and wounded must be cared for. They must have hospitals, medicines, instruments, hospital stores, bedding, and the like. The inexperienced medical officer can not provide these with- out knowing, from some source, what he wants, and where he is to get it. I shall therefore, in the first place, endeavor to give him this information. 9 HAND-BOOK FOR Medicines, instruments, dressings, hospital stores, and bedding, are furnished by the medical purveyor, upon requisitions made by the senior surgeon of a regiment, or separate commands. In the field, these requisitions are to be approved by the medical director. If there is no medical director prosent, a special requisition may be approved by the commanding officer; and if there be no medical purveyor within reach, the supplies may be purchased by the quar- termaster. These supplies in the army, are required to be made according to the standard supply table; and if any article is not in accordance with that table, the reason therefor must be set forth on the requisi- tion. Forms for these requisitions, accounts for articles purchased, etc., are appended to this book. The senior medical officer of a division or separate corps d'armee, is ex officio, the medical director. A medical officer should be de- tailed by the medical director, to act as medical purveyor. There should be at the depots for the supplies, a medical purveyor in charge of all those pertaining to the hospital department. This officer is expected to be always in condition to supply such requisi- tions as may be made upon him by the medical officers in the field. The quartermaster's department provides " the quarters and trans- portation of the army, storage and transportation for all army sup- plies, army clothing, camp and garrison equipage, cavalry and ar- tillery horses, fuel, forage, straw and stationery." * " Estimates of the medical director, approved by the commanding officer, for the necessary transportation to be provided for the hos- pital service, will be furnished to the quartermaster." "The sick will be transported on the application of the medical officers." " The allowance and change of straw for the sick, is regulated by the surgeon.'' * Tents and camp equipage are furnished by the quartermaster's department The allowance for a surgeon in the field, is two tents, one ax, one hatchet; for an assistant surgeon, one tent, one ax, one hatchet. These are for the personal use of these officers, and they are re- quired to render quarterly returns of them to the quartermaster general. * Army regulations, Art. 41. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 3 Requisitions for all these articles are to be made upon the quar- termaster's department. Medical officers receive their stationery from the medical purveyor and not from the quartermaster. When men are sick in hospital, returns for their subsistence are to be made to the commissary of subsistence, by the senior medical officer, at such stated periods as may be determined by the com- manding officer. The Form for this return will be found in the ap- pendix. Issues to the hospital will be on returns by the medical officer, for such provisions only as are actually required for the sick and the attendants. The cost of such parts of the ration as are issued, will be charged to the hospital at contract or cost prices, and the hospital will be credited by the whole number of complete rations due through the month, at contract or cost prices; the balance, con- stituting the hospital fund, or any portion of it, may be expended by the commissary, on the requisition of the medical officer, in the purchase of any article for the subsistence or comfort of the sick, not authorized to be otherwise furnished.* "The ration is three fourths of a pound of pork or bacon, or one and a fourth pounds of fresh or salt beef; eighteen ounces of bread or flour, or twelve ounces of hard bread, or one and a fourth pounds corn meal; and at the rate, to one hundred rations, of eight quarts of peas or beans, or, in lieu thereof, ten pounds of rice ; ten pounds of coffee; fifteen pounds of sugar ; four quarts of vinegar, one and a half pounds of tallow, or one and a fourth pounds of adamantine or one pound of sperm candles; four pounds of soap, and two quarts of salt." " On a campaign, or on marches, or on board of transports, the ration of hard bread is one pound." The medical officer determines how much of each of these articles he will require for the subsistence of the sick in his hospital during the period for which the return is made. With the fund accruing from the articles saved, he is authorized to call upon the commissary of subsistence, to purchase such comforts for the sick, as can be procured; such as milk, butter, eggs, chickens, fresh vegetables, and the like. With careful and judicious management, the savings of the rations are always sufficient for this purpose. Tea, arrow-root, farina, nutmegs, brandy and whiskey, are sup- s' Army regulations, Art. 42. 4 HAND-BOOK FOR plied by the medical purveyor. The medical officer selects the cooks, nurses and matrons for his hospital. These selections must be ap- proved by the commanding officer. The cooks and nurses are taken from the privates of the regiment. They are exempted from all other duty, except the parades for muster, and the weekly inspection of their companies. When their services are necessary with the Bick, they are also excused from these, by the commanding officer, upon the application of the surgeon. The allowance of hospital attendants for troops in the field, is, for one company, one steward, one nurse and one cook; for each additional company, one nurse ; and for commands of over five companies, one additional cook. The duties of the steward are, to take charge of the medicines, hospital stores and supplies ; to put up the prescriptions of the medical offi- cer; to see to their distribution and administration to the sick; to enter in a book, daily, the issues to the cooks and nurses; to prepare the provision returns, and receive and distribute the rations. The cooks and nurses are under his orders; he is responsible for the cleanliness of the wards, tents and kitchens, patients and attendants, and all articles in use. He will ascertain who are present- at sun- rise, at sunset, and at tattoo, and report absentees. These duties are too important to be entrusted entirely to the steward; they must be constantly superintended by the surgeon and his assistants. Frequent visits should be made to the hospital by the surgeon, and he should require each of his assistants to be responsible for their exact performance in his turn. In camp, an hour is always fixed by the commanding officer, for each particular duty. At the proper time, the surgeon's call is beaten. This is usually a quarter of an hour before, or a quarter of an hour after breakfast. In my opinion, it is better that it should be beaten after breakfast. "At the surgeon's call, the sick, then in the companies, will be conducted to the hospital by the first sergeants, who will each hand to the surgeon, in his company book, a list of all the sick of the company, on which the surgeon shall state who are to remain or go into hospital; who are to return to quarters, as sick or convalescent; what duties the convalescents in quarters are capable of; what cases are feigned; and any other information he may have to com- municate to the company commander." * * Regulations of medical department U. S. Army. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 5 "Patients in hospital are, if possible, to leave their arms and ac- couterments with their companies, and in no case to take ammuni- tion into the hospital." * Upon marches, the surgeon's call is usually sounded as soon as the hospital tent, appropriated to the supplies, is pitched and ar- ranged, at the close of the day's march. At the surgeon's call, a medical officer, to be designated by the surgeon, repairs promptly to the hospital tent, to examine and prescribe for the sick. When there are many sick, all the medical officers should attend the sur- geon's call. Immediately after the examination of the sick, the morning re- port of the surgeon is made out and sent to the adjutant's office, for the information of the commanding officer. This report is always signed by the senior medical officer, and he is responsible that it is correct. The Form for this report is in the appendix. In the field, the senior medical officer of a regiment, or separate command, must keep a register of patients, a prescription and diet book, a case-book, and order, and letter-book. The army Forms for these books are appended. When troops are ordered to move, there will usually be found, in the hospital, some patients too ill to accompany their regiment. General hospitals are established at some convenient points, for the reception of these patients. When men are sent to a general hos- pital it is the duty of the captain of the company to which they belong, to send accurate descriptive lists of the men with them. Wher°e this duty is neglected, it is impossible for the surgeon, in charge of the general hospital, to muster them for payment, to take proper care of their clothing, arms, and other effects, or to inform their captains of the result of their cases. Sometimes, upon a march, a man becomes too ill to bear further transportation, and it is necessary to leave him in a private hospital, or private house. The descriptive list should then be left with him, in the care of the person taking charge of the man. It is incum- bent upon the medical officer, to urge upon the captains the strict fulfillment of this duty. Every consideration of policy and hu- manity requires it should be done. .,....,,, e +VlQ When a patient is sent to a general hospital, it is the duty of he medical officer to send with him, to the surgeon of the hospital, a * Regulations of medical department U. S. Army. 6 HAND-BOOK FOR report containing the history of his case, with the treatment up to that time. This duty must never be neglected. Men are frequently received into the general hospitals, too ill to give any account of themselves; their lives may be the penalty of the neglect of their own surgeons, in failing to comply with this simple requirement. The senior medical officer is required to make the muster and pay rolls of the steward, matrons, cooks, and nurses, attached to his hospital, on the forms furnished from the adjutant-general's office. The pay of the steward, is that of the orderly sergeant of a com- pany, of a matron, six dollars per month and one ration per day. The cooks and nurses are allowed twenty-five cents per day, extra pay. It is the last item only, that is entered upon the hospital rolls—the men are mustered upon their company rolls for their regular pay. The senior medical officer is required to make, " monthly, to the medical director, and quarterly, to the surgeon general, a report of sick and wounded, and of deaths, and of certificates for discharge for disability." * The Form is in the appendix. Medical officers in charge of medical supplies, make returns of them annually, on the 31st December, or whenever they are re- lieved from the charge of them, to the surgeon general. When these supplies are turned over to another officer, the officer deliver- ing them must hand duplicate invoices of them to his successor, or take from him duplicate receipts. He sends one copy of these re- ceipts to the surgeon general with his returns. The Form for these returns is appended. Fuel for the use of the hospital is to be furnished by the quarter- master upon the return of the surgeon, countersigned by the com- manding officer. Straw for filling the bedsacks is furnished by the quartermaster upon the requisition of the surgeon. It takes 12 or 14 pounds of straw for each bedsack. It is not contemplated to use bedsacks in the field, in the army service. They can not be carried upon a march. But in permanent camps, they may be necessary. In that case, the maximum number required will be 80 for 1,000 men. A supply table for field service has been carefully prepared by a board of army surgeons. It will be found in the appendix. It will show at once to the inexperienced surgeon what he wants for commands of any size for a period of * Regulations of medical department U. S. Army. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 7 three months. If he can procure his supplies from an army medi- cal purveyor, it will only be necessary for him to state the strength of the command, and the time for-which the supplies are required, and the proper quantity of each article will be furnished. The number of tents that will probably be required for the hos- pital department, has been carefully estimated by an army medical board, and is as follows : HOSPITAL TENTS. SIBLEY TENTS. 1 2 2 3 The dimensions of the hospital tent referred to, are these: In length, 14 feet; in width, 15 feet; in hight (center), 11 feet; with a wall 4} feet, and a fly of appropriate size. Such a tent will accommodate 8 to 10 patients comfortably. If tents of this pattern can not be furnished by the regimental quartermaster, the ordinary wall tent may be substituted. These tents are for the accommodation of the sick; the sibley and common tents, for the medical supplies, books, and nurses. The same board recommended " the adoption of a hospital knapsack, to be carried by a hospital orderly upon the march or in battle, who is habitually to follow the medical officer. The knapsack is to be made of light wood, to be divided into four compartments or drawers, and to be covered with canvas. The purpose of this knapsack is to carry, in an accessible shape, such instruments, dressings, and medicines as may be needed in an emergency on the march or in the field. The dimensions of the hospital knapsack to be those of the ordinary knapsack." It will be at once perceived how convenient, and even necessary, such an arrangement is. Every medical officer should have one. An ambulance system for the army was recommended by the board, and adopted by the war department. A very few of these carriages have been made for trial, and so far as heard from, the results have been satisfactory. It is to be regretted that there is not in store a full supply for the present emergency. One company, - Three companies, Five companies, Seven companies, Ten companies, 8 HAND-BOOK FOR The calculation upon which the system is based, is that four per cent, of the force will require transportation; one half of whom will be lying down. With the new ambulances, a regiment is estimated to require two four-wheeled and ten two-wheeled ambulances; and in addition four two-wheeled transport carts—the latter for the hospital supplies, tents, cooking utensils, etc. Under present circumstances, we are obliged to use the ordinary baggage wagon for our supplies and camp equipage. One wagon is sufficient for that purpose for a regiment, and as much as can be afforded. For the conveyance of the sick, we have to use such wagons of the train as are emptied or lightened of their loads by the the issue of supplies to the troops. The sick must be distributed among them to the best advantage. All that a medical officer can do in this emergency, is to report to the quartermaster that such a man requires transportation. It is the duty of the latter to provide it Upon the march, the habitual place of the medical officer is at the rear of the regiment. A man who is taken sick, falls out from the ranks, and meets the surgeon as he comes up. He is then examined, prescribed for, and sent to the wagons or remanded to his company, as his case may require. If he is sent to the wagons, he should be furnished with a written permit for that privilege. Medical officers should be very careful in scrutinizing all such cases, or they will find the baggage train seriously embarrassed, and overloaded by men who are able enough to march. In order to prevent the accumulation of stragglers at the rear, un- der pretext of seeing the surgeon, it is advisable for one of the medical officers to ride occasionally to the head of the column, and permit it to pass him on the march. Any man feeling ill, can then see him, and have his case decided on, without the necessity of fall- ing behind his company. When a medical officer makes this move- ment, he should be careful always to pass to leeward of the column, that the dust he raises may be carrieM away from the men. The following extracts from the General Regulations for the Army, will indicate the proper arrangements for the medical officers in battle: " Before the action, the quartermaster of the division makes all the necessary arrangements for the transportation of the wounded. He establishes the ambulance depots in the rear, and gives his as- sistants the necessary instruction for the service of the ambulance wagons, and other means of removing the wounded." THE MILITARY SURGEON. 9 "The ambulance depot to which the wounded are carried or di- rected for immediate treatment, is generally established at the most convenient building nearest the field of battle. A red flag marks its place or the way to it, to the conductors of the ambulances, and to the wounded who can walk." "The active ambulances follow the troops engaged, to succor the wounded and remove them to the depots. For this purpose, the conductors should always have the necessary assistants, that the soldiers may have no excuse to leave the ranks for that purpose." " The medical director of the division, after consultation with the quartermaster general, distributes the medical officers and hospital attendants at his disposal, to the depots and active ambulances. He will send officers and attendants, when practicable, to the active am- bulances, to relieve the wounded who require treatment before being removed from the ground. He will see that the depots and ambulances are provided with the necessary apparatus, medi- cines and stores. He will take post and render his professional ser- vices at the principal depot." " If the enemy endanger the depot, the quartermaster takes the orders of the general to remove it or to strengthen its guard." " The wounded in the depots and the sick are removed, as soon as possible, to the hospitals that have been established by the quar- termaster general of the army on the flanks or rear of the army." This, I think, includes everything the inexperienced medical officer will feel at a loss about, in entering upon his duties with troops in campaign. If anything important is omitted, the haste with which the work is prepared must be my apology. 10 HAND-BOOK FOR CHAPTER II. MILITARY HYGIENE—PRESERVATION OF HEALTH OF TROOPS IN CAMPAIGN. To the neglect of plain hygienic principles. I am persuaded, is to be attributed the greater portion of the diseases that scourge so con- stantly all armies in the field. Pure air; good and sufficient cloth- ing; good, sufficient, and well-cooked food; temperance and cleanli- ness, are the important points. Soldiers in campaign will always have exercise enough. In the army, these hygienic principles are always more or less ob- served ; they form the basis of the regulations in relation to the po- lice of barracks, camps, etc., the clothing and cooking of the men. In the volunteer service, they are not at all, or only imperfectly, ob- served, simply because they are not understood by either officers or men. Their importance is not appreciated, and the consequence is a marked disparity between the two descriptions of force in their losses by disease and death. Thus, in the war with Mexico, the rel- ative losses of the volunteers and regulars of the old army from dis- ease, was a 4.7 to 1; the deaths, 6.3 to 4.7. Excess of loss to volun- teers, 50 per cent. There is no necessity whatever for this. It is due simply to ignorance of the laws of health on the one hand, and the constant observance of them on the other. The first cause I shall notice in this connection, is the ordinary defects of the volunteer recruits. In the volunteers, almost all who offer are received. Thus, men debilitated by malarial cachexia, particularly at the West—by intemperance, etc., are generally re- ceived into the ranks. They look very well, and, so far as they can judge, they are very well; but, exposed to the fatigues and labors of the camp, they are almost sure to become sick. In the regular army, on the other hand, every recruit is subjected to a rigorous inspection before he is received. He is examined, Btripped, and every ordinary disqualification carefully inquired into. The result of this system was, that in 1852, of all applicants for en- listment, there were rejected, 13,338; enlisted, 2,726. Only 17 per cent, of the men offering, were received. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 11 3,162 were rejected as minors; 314 " " " ruptured; 1,071 " " " varicose veins; 732 " " " over age; 630 " " " unsound constitution; 1,965 " " " intemperance. If volunteers were subjected to as searching inspection, fewer would take the field, but they would be much more effective, because they would be less embarrassed by their hospitals, and would suffer less moral depression from seeing so many of their comrades stricken down by disease—the reason for which, they can not comprehend, so that every man fears he may be the next victim. A most important sanitary precaution then for the surgeon to take, is to see to the integrity of body and mind of his men, before he passes them. For his own instruction on this point, he should care- fully study the work of Henderson, or that published by the au- thority of the war department, for the guidance of recruiting officers of the army, by one of the authors of this work. Pure air, one would suppose, could always be commanded in camp—but the fact is far otherwise, without great vigilance. There is no circulation of air, or at least a very insufficient one, in the company tents. The men would never strike them, if they were not ordered. Six or eight men sleeping in a common tent, will render the air poisonous by morning. During the day it will be very imperfectly ventilated. What is to create any current of air through it? Is it surprising that men, passing night after night, in such an atmosphere, should get sick ? Again, men, particularly raw troops, will carry provisions from the messes into their tents, the remains of which are left to decom- pose upon the tent floor, or hang upon the tent poles. If the men are furnished with straw, they will never turn it out of their tents to expose it to sun, or purify; it in any way, if left to themselves. All these things should be looked after by the medical officer, and he should make written suggestions, to the commanding officer, for the correction of these sanitary errors, whenever he perceives them to exist. The straw should be turned out daily, in dry weather, the tent thoroughly policed, and the tents struck at least once in three days. It is of vast importance that the men's blankets and clothing should be frequently aired and repacked. Great care should be _ taken, that the men should sleep dry. Never let them lie down in 12 HAND-BOOK FOR wet clothes, if it can be avoided. The men always carry a change in their knapsacks. If they get soaked on a march, let them put on at least a dry shirt and drawers, after their tents arc pitched, and dry their wet clothes by their camp fires. A ditch should always be dug around a tent, sufficient to carry off any rain that may fall, so that the tent floor may be dry. In selecting ground for a camp, unless uncontrollable strategic reasons compel, low moist ground is always to be avoided, no matter how attractive it may look. A dry gravelly soil is always to be preferred. Before determining upon the ground, a spade should be sunk a foot or more, to ascertain whether it is sufficiently drained to make it safe for the men to sleep on. For obvious reasons, the vicinity of marshes, particularly the leeward side of them, should be avoided, if possible. When the camp is to remain more than a week, in the same place, bunks may be readily made for the sick, by driving forked stakes into the ground at the corners, laying side pieces in the forked ends, and then making transoms of the staves of flour barrels. It is ad- visable to do this whenever practicable. If men are well encamped and the camp well policed, the sick list will be very much di- minished. Vaidy remarks, upon this point, that during a campaign one can not calculate upon less than 10 per cent, of sick, and fear- fully more if badly encamped, badly provisioned, defeated, etc. The subsistence of the men is a matter of the greatest import- ance, as regards quality, quantity, and mode of preparation. The importance of a full stomach to a soldier, has always been recog- nized. Frederick the Great, remarked, " a soldier's courage is in his stomach." A prudent general will always feed his soldiers be- fore fighting, if he has the means. Men insufficiently fed fail, as soldiers, and more readily succumb to morbific influences. Both body and mind show the effects of a poor diet. The U. S. Army ration, however, is all sufficient for the men, and, if well cooked, will keep them healthy and vigorous. The medical officer should inform himself upon the principles of cooking the articles compos. ing the ration, so that he may be able to instruct the regimental cooks upon this important point. Dr. Taylor, the principal medical officer of the British Army, in the Crimea, has remarked, that since he has turned his attention to it, he thinks a competent surgeon should know how to cook, and that he should learn it in the first part of his medical education. Beef and pork are the animal parts of the regular ration. In the THE MILITARY SURGEON. 13 war with Mexico, we sometimes used mutton instead of beef, as it was more readily procured. Beef, however, is the most nutritious animal food ordinarily accessible to the soldier. Its composition is identical with blood. But that it may be readily assimilated, it is important that it be well cooked. Soldiers on a march, or in camp, have the greatest propensity to fry their beef. This is the worst possible way in which it can be cooked. It causes a horny hard- ening of the surfaces of the pieces, preventing the due transmission and diffusion of heat through it, renders the fiber tough, so that it is never sufficiently masticated. Again, the action of heat upon the fixed oils or fat, always used in frying, is to render these substances particularly offensive to the stomach. Fats give off, when boiling, in addition to carbonic acid, and imflammable vapor, a part of the fatty acids, and a most acrid volatile principle (acroleine). The meat is thus deprived of important nutritive principles, and evolves others positively injurious to the stomach. In that admirable and complete system of Military Institutes prepared by General Scott, forty years ago, under the title of General Regulations for the Army, frying was prohibited in the army kitchens. The best mode of cooking the beef is to make it into soup. "It is soup," says Fred- erick, " that makes the soldier." But it takes longer to make soup than to fry—3\ hours being required for the former, and only 15 to 20 minutes for the latter. The British government sent Soyer, the famous cook, to the Crimea, to see if he could not devise some means of improving the soldiers' messes. Soyer found the most preposterous processes of cooking in the soldiers' kitchen; he set about remedying them with great zeal, and was happily successful He has published his Army Receipts, some of which I have tried in the kitchens at Newport Bar- racks, and have found them palatable, nutritious and economical. and I strongly recommend their use. I here insert some of the most useful:— SOUP FOR FIFTY MEN. Put into the boiler, 7£ gallons of water; fifty pounds of beef or mutton; three pounds of rice; eight pounds of fresh-vegetables; ten tablespoonfuls of salt; one tablespoonful of pepper. Simmer three hours, and serve, Skim off the fat, which, when cold, is an excellent substitute for butter. 14 HAND-BOOK FOR PLAIN IRISH STEW FOR FIFTY MEN. Cut 50 pounds of mutton into pieces of a quarter of a pound each; put them in the pan; add eight pounds of onions, twelve pounds of whole potatoes, eight tablespoonfuls of salt, three tablespoonfuls of pepper; cover all with water, giving about half a pint to each pound; then light the fire. An hour and a half of gentle boiling will make a most excellent stew. Mash some of the potatoes to thicken the gravy, and serve. Fresh beef, veal, or pork, will also make a good stew. Beef takes two hours doing. This I know to be a most excellent dish. It can always be pre- pared upon the march, in time for the men's dinner or supper. FRENCH BEEF SOUP—CAMP FASHION. Put in the camp kettle, 6 lbs. of beef, cut in two or three pieces, bones included; f lbs. of plain, mixed vegetables, as onions, carrots, turnips, celery, as can be obtained, or 3 oz. of desiccated vegetables; 3 teaspoonfuls of salt, 1 of pepper, 1 of sugar; 8 pints of water. Let it boil gently for three hours; remove some of the fat, and serve. The addition of £ lb. of bread, cut in slices, or 1 lb. of broken bis- cuits, well soaked in the broth, will make a very nutritious soup. This is enough for six or eight people. The quantity required for a company is easily calculated. STEWED SALT BEEF AND PORK FOR ONE HUNDRED MEN. Put in a boiler, of well soaked beef, 30 lbs., cut in pieces of J lb. each; 20 lbs. pork, cut up; 1£ lbs. sugar; 8 lbs. onions, sliced; 25 quarts of water; 4 lbs. rice. Simmer gently for three hours; skim the fat off the top, and serve. To soak the meat, it should be placed in camp kettles, well covered with water, and left to soak all night. If the water can be changed once or twice, it will be better. Prior to using, it should be washed and squeezed with the hands. If soup is not made, the beef may still be boiled, but in a different way. Soup should be made by beginning the process with cold wa-i ter. Bouilli by putting the beef into boiling water at first, and then simmering at 160° till done. The general rule is, that roasting is to be done quickly, and boil- ing slowly. In roasting, the loss of beef is, 19, mutton, 24, but their chemical constitution is not changed. The loss is made up of water evapo- rated, and fat melted and mixed with the gravy. But in boiling, the THE MILITARY SURGEON. 15 loss, though less in amount, is more serious in quality; it is made up of fat, gelatine and water, with some albumen and hematosine; and if salt is used, potash is likewise lost. Therefore the broth should be eaten. The bean soup, made by soldiers in the army, is the best I have ever eaten. They prepare it by soaking the beans all night. The ration of pork is boiled in it. and any fresh or desiccated vegetables they can procure. Potatoes and onions are great favorites with them. It is seasoned to the taste with salt and pepper. DRINKS. Among European soldiers, water, beer, cider, wine and brandy are used. Ours use coffee and tea. Whisky was formerly issued daily to the troops; but this was abolished in 1832, and coffee and tea substituted. Recently a ration of whisky has been again au- thorized, upon a march, upon fatigue duty, and upon the frontiers. Vaidy objects to hot drinks, such as tea and coffee, from their ex- pensiveness and difficulty of preparation. He thinks they beget luxurious habits that must be interrupted on a campaign, He attri- butes the advice of the British surgeons to use them in malarious districts as prophylactics, rather to their national taste, than to the judgment of enlightened physicians. Sir George Ballingall, on the other hand, says he saw the most marked effects from them in checking the extension of a malignant fever prevailing in the garrison at Hull. Dr. William Ferguson considers coffee or tea, in the morning, more indispensable than dinner, and regards them as sovereign against all the dangers of the morning—the cold, dampness, malaria, etc. I have no doubt of their great value, particularly in malarious districts. In tropical countries, a cup of hot coffee is the first thing, in the morning, with all who can afford it I consider it imprudent for the surgeon to visit his hospital in the morning until he has taken his coffee. If tea can be procured, I consider it preferable to coffee, in camp or on a march, because it can be much more easily prepared. Sol- diers rarely succeed in making coffee clear and palatable under these circumstances. I insert Soyer's method of preparing bol^i, as the best I know of. COFFEE A LA ZOUAVE FOR TEN MEN. Put 9 pints of water into a canteen saucepan, on the fire; when boiling, add 7* oz. of coffee; mix them well together with a spoon 16 HAND-BOOK FOR or piece of wood; leave on the fire a few minutes longer, or until just beginning to boil. Take it off, and pour in 1 pint of cold water; let the wholeremainlOminutes, or a little longer; the dregs will fall to the bot- tom, and your coffee will be clear. Pour it from one vessel into another, leaving the dregs at the bottom; add two teaspoonfuls of sugar to the pint. If milk is to be had, make 2 pints less of coffee, and add that much milk; boiled milk is preferable. TEA FOR EIGHTY MEN. Put 40 quarts of water in a boiler to boil; place the rations of tea in a fine net, very loose, or in a large perforated ball; give one minute to boil; take out the fire, if too much; shutdown the cover; in ten minutes it is ready for use. WATER. The water the men drink is of great consequence, and should be selected with as much care as possible. The quality of the water at hand should have great influence in the selection of camping grounds. Running streams are, ceteris paribus, always preferable to pools or tanks. Hard water is prejudicial to health. Its usual salt is sulphate of lime. Its usual effect is to cause constipation and disordered digestion, besides producing unfavorable effects upon the urinary organs. Vaidy says, an expensive barrack was built in Spain, near a supply of Gypsum water. The consequence was, the men were all taken sick with colic and indigestion, and the barracks had to be abandoned. Sometimes, however, this kind of water seems to cause diarrhea; but then there are probably other purgative salts in combination with it. Such water, if we must use it, should always be previously boiled. The most ready tests of the quality of water upon a march are its agreeable taste and its power of dissolving soap readily. Soldiers upon a march commit great excesses in the quantity of water they drink. The men fill their canteens before moving in the morn- i ing; which is all right, as the water at the camp is generally good; but before they have made one fourth of the day's march it is all consumed, or has become unpalatable from exposure to the sun. At every stream they meet with, or pool of water, they will, if unre- strained, break their ranks rush to the water, fill their stomachs and refill their canteens. This process I have seen repeated in armies a dozen times in one day. I am persuaded this is a fruitful source of that scourge of all armies, camp dysentery. The practice is wisely forbidden by the regulations of the army; but it is a very difficult THE MILITARY SURGEON. 17 habit to break up. Every exertion should be made by the medical officers to impress upon officers and men the necessity of self-denial in this respect, if they wish to preserve their health. I would re- commend, whenever it is practicable, to fill the canteens with tea instead of water, or to add a ration of whisky to the water in the canteens. In cold or wet weather, on guard, on fatigue duty, on the march, or whenever unusual exertion is to be made, I am persuaded the use of brandy or whisky is beneficial. They are food for the lungs, they retard the metamorphosis of tissue, and thus preserve, or rather, hus- band strength. Their protracted use, however, will be found pre- judicial to health, as they obstruct the normal changes. Brandy is the most exceptionable in this respect Whisky is much less so. Whenever a camp is pitched in a peopled part of a country, it is immediately besieged by a host of pie and fruit dealers, whisky or beer sellers, and the like. The surgeon should earnestly urge upon the commanding officer the necessity of prohibiting this trade. It will certainly fill his hospital, if permitted to be carried on. No food or drink should be suffered to be introduced into the camp without having been previously inspected and approved by the medical officers. Soldiers require variety in their diet as much as other peo- ple, and this should be encouraged as far as practicable. Fresh vegetables, when they can be had, are always desirable additions to the messes. Ripe and fresh fruit may generally be used in mode- ration, without serious prejudice to health; but I am quite sure it would be better to do without them altogether in camp than to risk the consequences of the men indulging in unripe and stale fruit, if they are allowed fruit at all. For the sick in hospital, of course a very different diet will be re- quired. It is of great importance that this diet should be palatable, nutritious, and suitable to the impaired digestive powers of the sick. I have selected several of Soyer's receipts for the preparation of food for hospitals, which I subjoin. Some of them can be prepared in almost any situation or climate. A little ingenuity can adapt them to any situation in which war troops will be likely to be placed. SEMI-STEWED MUTTON AND BARLEY. Put in a convenient-sized caldron, 130 pints of cold water; 70 lbs. of meat, or about that quantity; 12 lbs. of plain mixed vegetables (the best that can be obtained); 9 lbs. 6 oz. of barley; 1 lb. 7 oz. of salt; 4 oz. of flour; 1 lb. 4 oz. of sugar; 1 oz. of pepper. Put all the in- 2 18 HAND-BOOK FOR gredients into the pan at once, except the flour; set it on the fire, and when beginning to boil, diminish the heat, and simmer gently for two hours and a half; take the joints of meat out, and keep them warm in the orderly's pan; add to the soup your flour, which you have mixed with enough water to form a light batter; stir well to- gether with a large spoon; boil another half hour, skim off the fat, and serve the soup and meat separate. The meat may be put back into the soup for a few minutes to warm again prior to serving. The soup should be stirred now and then while making, to prevent burn- ing or sticking to the bottom of the caldron. The joints are cooked whole, and afterward cut up in different messes; being cooked this way, in rather thick stock, the meat be- comes more nutritious. Note. The word " about," is fixed to the half and full diet, which varies the weight of the meat; but £ lb. of mutton will always make a pint of good soup; 3 lbs. of mixed preserved vegetables must be used, when fresh are not to be obtained, and put in one hour and a half previous to serving, instead of at first. They will then show better in the soup, and still be well done. All the following receipts may be increased to large quantities, but by all means follow the weight and measure: BEEF SOUP. Proceed the same as for mutton, only leave the meat in till serving, as it will take longer than mutton. The pieces are not to be above 4 lbs. weight, and for a change, half rice may be introduced. The addition of 2 lbs. more will make it thicker and more nutritive. } lb. of curry powder will make an excellent change also. To vary the same, half a pint of burnt sugar water may be added; it will give the soup a very rich brown color. BEEF TEA. Cut 3 lbs. of beef into pieces, the size of walnuts, and chop up the bones, if any; put it into a convenient-sized kettle, with J lb. of mixed vegetables, such as onions, leeks, celery, turnips, carrots (or one or two of these, if all are not to be obtained); 1 ounce of salt; a little pepper; 1 teaspoonful of sugar; 2 oz. of butter; £ pint of water. Set it on a sharp fire for ten minutes or a quarter of an hour, Btirring now and then with a spoon till it forms a rather thick gravy at bottom, but not brown; then add 7 pints of hot or cold water, but THE MILITARY SURGEON. 19 hot is preferable; when boiling, let it simmer gently for an hour; skim off all the fat, strain it through a seive, and serve. THICK BEEF TEA. Dissolve a -good teaspoonful of arrowroot in a gill of water, and pour it into the beef tea twenty minutes before passing through the seive. MUTTON AND VEAL TEA. Mutton and veal will make a good tea by proceeding precisely the same as above. The addition of a little aromatic herbs is always desirable. If no fresh vegetables are at hand, use 2 oz. of mixed preserved vegetables to any of the above receipts. CHICKEN BROTH. Put in a stewpan, a fowl; 3 pints of water; two teaspoonfuls of rice ; 1 teaspoonful of salt; a middle-sized onion, or 2 oz. of mixed vegetables; boil the whole gently for three quarters of an hour; if an old fowl, simmer from one hour and a half to two hours, adding one pint more water; skim off the fat, and serve. A small fowl will do. Note. A light mutton broth may be made precisely the same by using a pound and a half of scrag of mutton instead of fowl. For thick mutton broth, proceed as for thick beef tea, omitting the rice; a tablespoonful of burnt sugar water will give a rich color to the broth. PLAIN BOILED RICE. Put two quarts of water into a Btewpan, with a teaspoonful of salt; when boiling add to it J lb. of rice, well washed; boil for ten min- utes, or till each grain becomes rather soft; drain it into a colan- der, slightly grease the pot with butter, and put the rice back into it; let it swell for about twenty minutes near the fire, or in a slow oven; each grain will then swell up, and be well separated; it is then ready for use. SWEET RICE. Add to the plain boiled rice, 1 oz. of butter, 2 tablespoonfuls of sugar, a little cinnamon, a quarter of a pint of milk; stir it with a fork, and serve; a little currant jelly or jam may be added to the rice. 20 HAND-BOOK FOR RICE WITH GRAVY. Add to the rice 4 tablespoonfuls of the essence of beef, a little but- ter, if fresh, half a teaspoonful of salt: stir together with a fork, and serve. ARROWROOT MILK. Put into a pan 4 oz. of arrowroot, 3 oz. of sugar, the peel of half a lemon, £ teaspoonful of salt, 2J pints of milk; set it on the fire, stir round gently, boil for ten minutes, and serve. If no lemons are at hand, a little essence of any kind will do. When short of milk, use half water; half an ounce of fresh but- ter is an improvement before serving. If required thicker, put less milk THICK ARROWROOT PANADA. Put in a pan 5 oz. of arrowroot, 2J oz. of white sugar, the peel of half a lemon, a quarter of a teaspoonful of salt, four pints of water; mix all well, set on the fire and boil for ten minutes; it is then ready.The juice of a lemon is an improvement; a gill of wine may also be introduced, and % oz. of calf's foot gelatine previously dissolved in water will be strengthening. Milk, however, is prefer- able if at hand. RICE WATER. Put 7 pints of water to boil; add to it 2 oz. of rice washed, 2 oz. of sugar, the peel of two thirds of a lemon; boil gently for three quarters of an hour, it will reduce to 5 pints; strain through a col- ander, it is then ready. The rice may be left in the beverage, or made into a pudding, or, by the addition of a little sugar or jam, will be found very good for invalids. BARLEY WATER. Put in a saucepan 7 pints of water, 2 oz. of barley, which stir now and then, while boiling, add 2 oz. white sugar, the rind of half a lemon thinly peeled; let it boil gently for about two hours, with- out covering it, pass it through a sieve or colander—it is then ready. The barley and lemon may be left in it. TOAST AND WATER. Cut a piece of crusty bread about } lb. in weight; place it upon a toasting-fork, and hold it about six inches from the fire, turn it often, and keep moving it gently until of a light yellow color; then place it nearer the fire, and when of a good brown chocolate color, THE MILITARY SURGEON. 21 put it in a jug and pour over 3 pints of boiling water, cover the jug until cold, then strain it into a clean jug and it is ready for use. Never leave the toast in it, for in summer it would cause fermentation in a short time. This will keep good some time in bottles. Baked apple toast and water.—A piece of apple, slowly toasted till it gets quite black, and added to the above, makes a very nice and refreshing drink for invalids. Apple rice-water.—Half a pound of rice, boiled in the above un- til in pulp, passed through a colander, and drink when cold. All kinds of fruit may be done in the same way. Figs and French plums are excellent, also raisins. A little ginger, if approved of, may be used. Apple barley-water.—A quarter of a pound of pearl barley, in- stead of toast, added to the above, and boil for one hour, is also a very nice drink Citronade.—Put a gallon of water on to boil; cut up one pound of apples, each one into quarters, two lemons in thin slices, put them in the water, and boil them until they can be pulped ; pass the liquor through a colander ; boil it up again with half a pound of brown su- gar , skim, and bottle for use, taking care not to cork the bottle, and keep it in a cool place. For Spring drink—Rhubarb, in the same quantities, and done in the same way as apples, adding more sugar, is very cooling. Also green gooseberries. For Summer drink.—One pound red currants bruised with some raspberry; half a pound of sugar, added to a gallon of cold water, well stirred, and allowed to settle. Mulberry.—The same, adding a little lemon peel: a little cream of tartar or citric acid added to these renders them more cooling in summer and spring. Plain, lemonade.—Out in very thin slices three lemons; put them in a basin ; add half a pound of sugar, either white or brown; bruise all together, add a gallon of water, and stir well. It is then ready, French plum water.—Boil three pints of water; add in six or eiaht dried plums previously split, two or three slices of lemon, a spoonful of honey or sugar; boil half an hour and serve. _ _ For fi* date, and raisin-water, proceed as above, adding the juice of half a' lemon to any of the above. If for fig-water, use six figs. 22 HAND-BOOK FOR Any quantity of the above fruits may be used with advantage in rice, barley, or arrowroot-water. The medical officer should generally upon the march, and always during an action, carry upon his person, a case of pocket instruments and a canteen of good brandy or whisky. Wounded men fre- quently require a mouthful or two of stimulus for the relief of the shock, that in a greater or less degree, follows the receipt of a gun- shot or other wound. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 23 CHAPTER III. CAMP- DYSENTERY. I consider the various forms of Dysentery, or Diarrhea, that pre- , vail in camp, as being so intimately related to each other, it would serve no good purpose to treat of them separately. Sir George Ral- lingall treats of them under the title of Tropical Dysentery. The different features the various forms present, are probably due to climate or other accidents. Their prevalence and fatality in armies has always been marked; I have never known troops in campaign to escape it. It undoubtedly differs from ordinary dysentery in many respects. Thus Pringle remarks: " it is least known out of the field, and often general and fatal there." There were 23,000 cases in the Peninsular army, and nearly 5,000 deaths. It is most prevalent and fatal in hot climates. In India, the deaths from this disease are double those from fevers. In the Florida war, in 1836, it was most extensively prevalent and fatal; and the same is true of the Mexican war; and there the deaths from it, among the new troops, were double those of the old army. Its causes are principally violations of the laws of hygiene I have treated of in the preceding Chapter. I am confident, from my own observations, it may be very materially controlled by a due attention to these. Sir George Ballingall as- signs, as the remote causes, heat combined with moisture; immode- rate and indiscriminate use of fruits; abuse of spiritous liquors; exposure to currents of wind, and night dews. Pringle refers, also, to heat and moisture as remote causes, and observes, that seasons favorable to the generation of flies, caterpil- lars, and other insects, whose increase depends upon corruption, are most productive of dysentery. Rush coincides in this opinion, and says, the remark applies equally to bilious fevers, and has often been verified in Philadelphia. Pringle also remarks upon the similarity of the causes, remote and exciting, of malarial fever and dysentery, and says of the men exposed to the same causes, some get one, some the other, and some both — such as after fatigue upon a hot day, sleeping upon the damp ground, or in wet clothes. 24 HAND-BOOK FOR This is one of the most prolific causes of camp dysentery, and one to which raw troops are particularly exposed. The regular soldier, upon his arrival at the ground selected for the camp, will relieve himself of his knapsack and arms, and then, while waiting for the train with the tents, etc., will collect wood for the camp fires. When the train comes up, he attends to the pitching of his tent, the pre- paration of his evening meal, washing his feet, drying his clothes, etc. When everything is done, he lies down and passes a comfort- able night. The raw recruit, on the other hand, will throw himself on the ground as soon as he halts—perhaps go to sleep, get thor- oughly chilled, puts off his preparations for the night until the last. moment, and, in consequence, has a badly-cooked meal and an un- comfortable tent, imperfect sleep, and rises for the next day's march but slightly refreshed. I point out this error that it may be here- after avoided. Pringle considers camp dysentery to be contagious, though he admits the infection to be less virulent than small-pox or measles. He says: " In camp, the contagion passes from one who is ill, to his companions in the same tent, and from thence, perhaps, to the next. The foul straw becomes infectious. But the great source of infection seems to be the privies, after they have received the dysen- teric excrements of those who first fall ill." Copland mentions the " fruit of hot climates, from his own obser- vation and that of others," as a frequent cause. In my opinion, the fruit of all climates, indiscriminately used, will very generally excite it. There was a notion prevailing at Tampico, while I was there, that the banana was a remedy for it, though the inhabitants say that a drink of brandy, after eating bananas, is sure to make one sick. My observation does not confirm the innocuousness of the banana I had, myself, a severe attack of dysentery from a moderate indul gence in this fruit. I have seen, also, a number of cases excited by the use of the fresh limes so abundant at Acapulco, on the Pacific. Copland enumerates, among the causes, "badly-cooked meat or other food; pork; sour or bad wine; minute insects or their ova or animalcules in the water used for drink." " Several agents deter- mine inflammatory irritation of, and an inordinate flux of fluids to the mucous surface of the large intestine, and their usual results" . %. . . " exposure to cold, or cold and moisture, especially during or after great atmospheric warmth." "Suppression of the secretions and excretions, poured into the large bowels, especially the biliary fluid, and accumulation of mucus THE MILITARY SURGEON. 25 in the follicles, are not altogether without effect in causing or pro- longing the disease, especially of some of its protracted states; and several of the exciting agents, particularly cold, moisture, and mal- aria partly act in this way."—(Copland). Copland then gives the causes that disorder, or, as it were, corrupt these secretions and the circulating fluids—" unripe fruit, blighted grain, flesh and viscera of diseased animals, water holding putrid animal and alkaline sub- stances in solution. They exert a septic action upon the mucous surface, the circulation, and, ultimately, the soft solids." He also notices the convertibility of malignant fevers and dysen- teries, by the concurrence of the exciting causes of the latter with the causes of the former. The causes that have most impressed me as exciting the disease are, in addition to the influence of cold and moisture, suppression of secretion, the cutaneous especially; errors in diet; neglect of ventilation of tents, quarters, and straw; drink- ing impure, or too much, water; bad police of camp; infection from the men's sinks. I must say a word or two upon the last. In regular encampments, the place for the men's sinks is one hun- dred and fifty paces in front of the color line—those of the officers, one hundred paces in rear of the train. But when convenient, the regulations allow the sinks of the men to be placed in rear or on a flank. Both are to be concealed by bushes. Now, in my opinion, the choice of these places should- be determined by the direction of the prevailing winds at the place of encampment, so that the offen- sive effluvia shall be carried away from the camp. There is no doubt, in my mind, that dysentery has been frequently increased, in camp, by a neglect of this precaution. The usual method of con- structing these sinks, is to dig a shallow trench, some eight or ten feet long, to drive a strong forked stake at each end, and to place a strong pole, from one fork to the other, for the men to sit on. These sinks should be at least five feet in depth; immediately after re- veille, not less than six inches of earth should be thrown upon the deposits of the preceding day and night, and when they are filled to within two and a half feet of the surface, they should be completely filled up and new sinks dug. If it can be procured, I would strongly recommend the following disinfectant, as cheap and effective, for use both in camp and hospital sinks; I have transcribed it from the last volume of the Annual of Scientific Discovery: Sulphate of iron and alum are dissolved in water, till the solution is of the strength of 55°, it is then evaporated for 8 or 10 hours, •luring which 8 or 10 per cent, of lime is mixed with the compound— 3 26 HAND-BOOK FOR it is evaporated to a hard compact cake, finally run into forms, and exposed to the air till it is perfectly dry, then reduced to powder. It may be kept in this form, or in solution; it has no odor. It in- stantaneously disinfects putrifying matter, privy vaults, etc. There are many other circumstances, in addition to those 1 have already mentioned, that go to show a relationship between camp dysentery and malarial fevers. Johnson, in his work on tropical climates, says, in this disease the functions of the liver and skin, are always implicated. " He will defy any one who has carefully watched the disease, at the bedside, to produce a single instance in which these functions were carried on in a natural manner, at any period of the disease." Sir Simon Howard, of the East India service, in an alarming epidemic of this kind, caused the men to be kept in barracks out of the sun, from 8 A. M. to ,4 P. M., with the effect of diminish- ing the disease in a fortnight, and converting aggravated dysentery into common diarrhea. This shows the affinity between the acute dysentery or colonites, and the hepatic flux of Ballingall. It is the hepatic flux, however, that within my observation, has been most prevalent in our camps, and most prolific of the chronic cases. Symptomatology.—There will be no difficulty of diagnosis in these cases. The symptoms of ordinary dysentery are well known—the most prominent of which, are more or less fever, frequent calls to stool, with griping and tenesmus, bloody and mucous dejections, small in quantity. But in camp dysentery, we have every degree of extreme disturbance, from the *more violent forms of acute dysentery, to a trifling looseness or diarrhea The alarm of the patient will be in proportion to the violence of the attack; still there is no grade not liable to run into fatal disorganization of the bowel. The security frequently felt from the trifling nature of the attack, may betray the patient into fatal neglect. A prudent surgeon will watch closely the habits of the men, and interfere at once when he finds a soldier running too frequently to the sink. He will do well to walk along the line at the stated roll calls, and observe the sanitary expression of the men. Sir G. Ballingall says, " the hepatic flux more frequently attacks those who, from habit or constitution, are less liable to violent in- flammatory attacks, and more prone to irregular and disordered se- cretions of bile." These men are those of the nervous and melan- cholic temperaments; but I have found it as frequent in the san- guine, phlegmatic, and mixed temperaments, as any others. In fact, THE MILITARY SURGEON. 27 as far as my observation goes, we may take this form as the type, and refer all others to it; superadded causes determine the grade, either in excess or deficiency. It comes on very often as common diarrhea; the ma;a complains that he has to go to the rear half a dozen times a day—he does not notice the character of the dis- charges—they vary in quantity, profuse or the reverse; next he will have griping and colicky pains about the umbilicus; then the dis- charges are unnatural, frothy, like yeast, too light in color; he is flatulent, loses his appetite, complains of "inward thirst," some- times of nausea—his skin becomes dry, pulse quick. In the more chronic cases, the appetite is increased, and can not be restrained ; the man emaciates rapidly, the tongue is furred, or of all colors, from white to the darkest bilious hue. .Now, if the disease goes on unchecked, the appetite may improve, the tongue become cleaner, the fever less, but the flux continues, and emaciation goes on; the de- jections assume, in their course, all sorts of appearances—serous, murcous, gelatinous, sometimes that of a uniform fluid feculent mat- ter, more or less offensive, sometimes containing particles of food undigested. The older authors called those whitish particles, cor- pora penguia (Aretaeus), «;«»■ (Hippocrates). Pringle examined them in some of his cases, and found them to be particles of cheese. Copland notices that the discharges vary from a white albuminous, or white of egg appearance, to a dark olive green or greenish black; sometimes marbled, or on one day like chalk and water, and another like a dark jelly or green fat of turtle. Blood is often either so in- timately mixed with the dejeetions, as to give them a uniform brick red color, or quite distinct and fluid, or partially coagulated. The discharges are sometimes as black and as thick as tar. The uniform brick, or darker red discharge, occurs frequently toward the close of life, and is apt to mislead the surgeon—it looks like an improve- ment in the character of the discharges, but it is generally a fatal symptom. Sometimes we have streaks of pus in the discharge. We have increase of fever at night—the pulse becomes irregular, intermitting, frequent, weak; the tongue glazed, red, fissured, or like typhus; the skin harsh, dry—looks as if the man had not washed or changed his shirt for a month—the surface is scurfy or pulverulent; the emaciation is extreme, the ears transparent; eyes glassy; the lips white; the teeth covered with sordes; the lips re- tracted so as to show the teeth—cadaveric smell: syncope if the man is raised up; then, perhaps, low delirium for a day or two, and the man dies. Sometimes there is a cessation of the discharges for 28 HAND-BOOK FOR 24 or 48 hours—the man thinks he is beginning to mend—then an inclination to stool is felt, the man gets up, staggers to the vessel, falls over and is dead. The urinary secretion is variously affected during the progress of the disease. In the earlier stages, it is not uncommon to have vesi- cal irritation, with frequent micturition and diminished excretion. This is more common in the "colonites" variety; but in the latter Btages the quantity of urine is normal, 30 to 40 ounces daily, but of a low specific gravity 1.002; this gives but 4.66 of solids in 1000, which is less than one tenth of the normal proportion. This may account for the typhoid symptoms we then see. Pain is not constant in the progress of the disease; still pressure over the sigmoid flexure of the colon, will generally discover some tenderness, particularly in the earlier stages. In the progress of the case, the abdomen becomes hard and inelastic. The duration of the disease is from a few days to four months. I have known acute dysentery prove fatal in 24 hours; death may come at any time, it will be governed by the severity of the attack, the character and seat of the original lesion; the powers of resist- ance in the constitution, etc. But camp dysentery is essentially chronic in its tendencies, I have known it to last for years, and the pa- tient eventually recover; this, however, is rare. Autopsies, in these cases usually reveal the omentum retracted to the arch of the colon, demented of fat, a mere shred; some- times it is adherent to different portions of the intestine, but this is an accident due to local complication. The external coats of the intestine are scarcely altered—some slight change of color per- haps. Peritonitis from exhaustion may leave some traces here, but it is not common. The small intestine is distended with flatus ; the large, contracted, sometimes as if strictured. Parts of it give a sense of thickness, as if swollen, particularly about the sigmoid flex- ure, and occasionally the appendix vermiformes. The colon is fre- quently adherent to the other viscera. Sometimes, in the rapid cases, the disintegration of the inner coats extends through the per- itoneal coat, so that the gut is torn asunder in running it over in the usual way. But when the intestine is laid open, extensive destruc- tion is disclosed; ulcers of all sorts and sizes stud the large intestine, clustered more especially about the sigmoid flexure, but extending throughout it, and frequently passing into the ilium. Inflammation of the mucous coat of all the small intestines is not unusual. Some- times the ulcers are raised, and their bases indurated. Again ex- THE MILITARY SURGEON. 29 tensive sloughing of the mucous and submucous coats is seen, and the intestine gets torn by the slighest strain, even by its own weight. Invagination is occasionally met with, or perforation of the intestine, inducing fatal peritonitis. The remaining viscera rarely escape; the most frequent complica- tions are those of the liver, next of the spleen; the pancreas is oc- casionally involved. That the gall bladder should, contain viscid black bile is to be expected, and also that the mesenteric glands should partake of the irritation of the corresponding portions of the intestine. Johnson thinks the liver complication an essential part of the dis- ease. O'Brien investigated this point carefully in an extensive epi- demic in Ireland, and found the liver involved in one half of the cases only, the spleen in one quarter, the small intestine in two thirds, the colon and rectum in all. Abscess of the liver is not so common as Johnson supposed. In India it may be due to other causes, such as engorgement of the gland from climate and diet. In Mexico, it is very common among intemperate pulque drinkers. The symptoms and morbid appearances show the disease to be one of the chylopoetic viscera, sometimes involving them all, and always the intestinal canal, i. e. leaving there indications of the most destructive structural changes. That the disease is essentially in- flammatory, seems to have been the prevalent notion of its nature. Pringle is inclined to that opinion, and Ballingall expresses it em- phatically. I think it decidedly congestive. Copland is the first author I know of to admit this, but with caution, and many qualifi- cations. He, however, says finally, in speaking of hepatic flux : " In most such cases, and in many of the simple as well as the most se- vere forms, congestion of the portal vessels and obstructions of this part of the circulation, are concerned in the production and perpetu- ation of the dysenteric symptoms." This, in my opinion, is always the point of departure of camp dys- entery. • Suppressed or vitiated secretion is its first result, and these act and react on each other, and we have fullness of the vessels, or over-distention, resulting in the destruction of their elasticity, in both liver and intestine. This must be relieved somehow, either by na- ture or art, or it goes on to inflammation, and. this the more intense the further the diseased part from the heart. This view is fully justified by a consideration of the most important recognized causes: suppression of the cutaneous transpiration, throwing.the fluids upon the center; malarial infection, whether from the animalcule of Kir- 30 HAND-BOOK FOR cher and Linnaeus or tho cryptogamous spores of Mitchell; venous plethora, from too much water, or water containing putrid infusoria; abuse of fruits; use of provisions of bad quality, or badly cooked, etc. The error has been in considering the flux to be the grand fea- ture in the disease, whereas this is only symptomatic of more import- ant and remote disturbance. In camp dysentery, the patient seems eventually to perish of the combined effects of inanition and exhausting flux, analogous, at least, to hemorrhage. So long as his fat suffices for respiration, he may survive, emaciation constantly progressing, but beyond this limit, he fails. I may here remark that whatever may be the temporary con- dition of the flux, and however hopeful the patient from its apparent diminution or suppression, so long as emaciation is progressing, the man is not getting better. In my view, we have, then, in camp dysentery— 1st. Congestion of the portal system. 2d. Inflammation, particularly of the mucous coat of the large in- testine, but sometimes involving other organs and tissues. 3d. Vitiated condition of fluids concerned in assimilation of the food, with a consequent want of adaptedness of the latter to the wants of the economy. 4th. Probably paralysis of the lacteals and exhalents, so that the one does not take up the chyle, and the others pour out the thinner portions of the blood in abnormal and exhausting quantities, as well as sometimes the blood corpuscles themselves—indicating, moreover, serious implication of the ganglionic system in the assemblage of morbid phenomena. Treatment.—The peculiar views 'of authors, and the prominent symptoms of the disease, have naturally suggested the treatment they recommend. Thus, the " inflammation " and "flux" notions would indicate astringents and antiphlogistics. Pain would call for anodynes, etc. Pringle, indeed, thought bleeding "unnecessary, yet conducive to the cure." "Still," he says, "unless the fever is kept up by inflammation not peculiar to the disease, repeated bleeedings are unnecessary and hurtful, as in most distempers arising from a putrid cause." In weakly habits and few feverish symptoms, he wholly omits that evacuation. He speaks well of emetics, and used, in his early practice, wine of glass of antimony, which he had observed to be the best medicine in these cases, for relieving both stomach and bowels; but the rough- ness of its operation, and the prejudice against it among other offi- THE MILITARY SURGEON. 31 cers, induced him to substitute ipecac. Still, among the common men, he added to this, one or two grains of tartar emetic. He ob- served that, whenever he gave the weaker or the stronger vomit, they were most successful when they operated by stool. The ipecac. treatment has been revived, of late, by Mr. Docker, surgeon of the 7th Royal Fusileers in the Mauritius. He says that, after repeated failures with other remedies, and a mortality of ten to eighteen per cent., he never fails with ipecac, in large doses. He had but one death in fifty, and that from abscess in the liver, the dysentery being completely cured! " In all constitutions, robust as well as delicate, the result is the same. In the very worst cases, when the strength of the patient is almost exhausted, after the whole range of remedies has been tried in vain, the disease running its course swiftly and surely to a fatal issue, 90 grains of ipecac, have been given, and forthwith the character of the disease, or, I should rather say, of the symptoms, has been entirely changed; for the disease itself is lite- rally cured—put a summary stop to—driven out. The evacuations, from being of the worst kind seen in dysentery, have not gradually, not by any degrees however rapid, changed for the better; they have ceased at once, completely." Mr. Docker uses an emetic, and sometimes a purgative first; then he applies a sinapism to the epigastrium, and gives 3j tr. opii; and while the patient is under the influence of both, he gives the ipecac. in a draught or bolus. I find, however, from his cases, that this acted by procuring good copious evacuations, and that turpentine, camphor mixture, etc., were required for chronic mucous discharges in the after treatment. Pringle always gave purgatives; if the stools were not copious enough with his ipecac, he gave calomel and rhubarb. After purg- ing, he gave an opiate at night; but he says, it is better to omit opiates altogether, than to give them before purging, " for, though they seem to give relief, yet, by confining the wind and corrupted humors, they tend to fix the cause, and render the distemper more obstinate in the end." Herein he differs, reluctantly, from Syden- ham, who, though he did not omit purging in epidemic dysentery, yet, at all other times he trusted to laudanum alone. Now what- ever," says Pringle, " was the nature of those fluxes which he treated in that way, I must believe that such as are most incident to an army are of a less tractable nature, and, in general, can not be cured without repeated evacuation." Sir George Ballingall says that bloodletting is the remedy upon 32 HAND-BOOK FOR which we must rely in the worst form, and in the inflammatory stages of dysentery; but he confesses that this opinion is grounded more upon the post-mortem appearances than upon any repeated or extensive experience of its beneficial effects upon the living. Bampfield, also, insists upon bloodletting, but says, a large propor- tion of the practitioners in both Indies, not only discountenance the practice, but have never employed it. So Twining says, the cure of acute cases, in plethoric subjects, should be attempted by the early and free use of the lancet. But he naively adds, after each general bleeding, twelve or fourteen leeches should be applied to the abdo- men, when pressure reveals pain. Others recommend bleeding to be pushed ad deliquium ; and the further we go back, the stronger is the testimony as to its necessity. Of course, all these authors refer to the semi-acute form of dysen- tery, in so strongly urging the use of the lancet; none of them would have thought of employing it in an ordinary case of hepatic flux. Johnson and Annesly give calomel to the extent of one scruple to gr. ij. or gr. iij. of opium in twenty-four hours. Ballingall disap- proves of this practice, in acute cases, but gives strong testimony to its efficiency in chronic hepatic flux, and pushes it to ptyalism; whenever the exhaustion of the patient does not forbid, he perse- veres with it until the natural secretions are procured. Profuse salivation he condemns, as increased relaxation and debility are in- duced, and the patient is rendered incapable of taking the little sustenance he might be inclined to. The limit I have imposed upon myself will not permit me to fol- low Copland, through the elaborate therapeusis he has developed for the many varied forms of the disease and the symptoms it may from time to time present; they are all referable to, and deducible from, the same principles of local inflammation; vitiated secretion, and perverted ganglionic and animal nervous function being the patho- logical condition. My own observation and experience, extending now over a period of thirty years, have convinced me that, with proper attention to military hygiene, though we may not succeed in completely preventing the occurrence of camp dysentery among troops in the field, still, we can so limit its prevalence as to make it no longer formidable. In treating of the causes of the disease, I have endeavored to point out the hygienic errors men commit, and thus afford the means of obviating or avoiding them. To carry out effectively the sanitary precautions I have indicated, the medical officer must endeavor to avail himself of the assistance of the officers THE MILITARY SURGEON. 33 of the regiment, and especially of the company officers. He should point out to them the necessity of watching over the habits of their men, on the march and in camp; of warning them against the con- sequences of infractions of the sanitary law, and of interposing their authority to prevent them from indulging in any of the practices we have endeavored to show are so prolific in inducing the disease in question. When a man is attacked with any of the forms of camp dysentery, my constant practice is to give at once a purgative dose of sulphate of magnesia gj. combined with \ to £ a grain of tartar emetic. If this does not procure copious catharsis, I repeat the dose the next day or the day after. My object is to unload the portal vessels, as well as to remove any irritating matters that may be present in the intestinal canal. This being done, absolute rest is enjoined, and abstinence from all fluids for the next 24 hours. A spoonful or two of-water at a time, to moisten the mouth, are all that should be allowed. At night, if the patient is restless, a few grains of Dover's powder will generally procure him a comfortable sleep. I have treated hundreds of cases successfully with no other medication, and I firmly believe that, in the great majority of cases of hepatic flux, no other remedies will be required. They may require, some of them, two or three days' abstinence from fluids, with rest, and a repetition of the saline cathar- tic, but these cases will not become chronic. When the symptoms are more severe, the case more obstinate, with pain and tenderness of the abdomen, after the purgation, I use, according to severity of symptoms, dry or wet cups to the abdomen, particularly over the sigmoid flexure of the colon. This I repeat from day to day, to keep up a constant counter-irritation upon the surface, by the one, or to institute an effec- tive local depletion with the other. In acute dysentery with bloody flux, the cups can not be too thoroughly applied. I have not mentioned leeches, because they can not be procured in camp. When there is much symptomatic fever, with dry skin, I have sometimes been obliged to use small doses of ipecac, or Dover's powder, to deter. mine to the surface, but always after the preliminary evacuations. Opiates and astringents, in the beginning of the treatment, are worse than useless. They cause the loss of valuable time, lull one into a false security, aggravate the congestion already existing, and frequently convert a perfectly manageable disturbance of the economy into a formidable and intractable disease. In the more purely dysenteric cases, when the rectum is the chief 34 HAND-BOOK FOR seat of local difficulty, anodyne injections have long been favorite ( remedies. I can not say that I have seen any decided benefit from them. They do seem to allay tenesmus for a while, and thus pro- cure some little rest to the patient; but from their frequent repeti- tion, they become themselves sources of irritation, aggravate the sufferings of the patients, and are, of necessity, abandoned. I can not speak much more favorably of injections of nitrate of silver. The relief that follows them is only temporary—they do not cure; still, when the sufferings of the patient are so atrocious as they sometimes are in the acute form of dysentery, any means of even a temporary respite should certainly be put in requisition. The diet, in these cases, should of course be very simple, bland and unirrita- ting, but nutritious. A few spoonfuls of thick rice water, or of strong animal broth, free from fat, and without seasoning, or of essence of beef, may be given several times in the course of the day; but *he less water the patient drinks, the better. One thing I neglected to mention in its proper place; and that is, the practice of soldiers, after a hot day's march, or in a southern climate, where the nights are almost always cool, to strip up their shirts, leaving the legs and abdomen bare, Avhen they lie down for the night; nothing is more refreshing to the senses, and nothing more prejudicial to the health. I believe it to be the exciting cause of a great many of these cases of camp dysentery. In spite, however, of any system of treatment, some cases of camp dysentery will become chronic, and are then of most difficult man- agement. Once fixed upon an unfortunate patient, the chances are fearfully against his recovery. A few have constitutions sufficiently vigorous to react and recover, after even years of suffering. Within the last five years, 1 have been more successful, however, in the treatment of these cases, and will now endeavor to give, in as few words as possible, the means I have employed. In the purely dysenteric cases, after the subsidence of the fever, the bloody and mucous discharges still continuing, Hope's mixture has seemed to meet the indications well, as a constitutional remedy. As a local means, enemata of persulphate of iron, ten grains, in half an ounce of thin arrowroot, repeated three or more times a day, have been followed by the best results. Sometimes a few drops of laudanum may be added—half a drachm or less. Absolute rest in bed is very essential. Dry cups to the abdomen, I use constantly; wet cups occasionally, when there is any tender- ness to be discovered over the sigmoid flexure of the colon. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 35 Massola, of the Sardinian army in the Crimea, found the use of ergotine in chronic dysentery, a very successful remedy. He gave £ a grain hourly till the discharges were arrested. I have used this remedy since, in several cases, and have been pleased with the re- sults. Sometimes, however, it has failed. I would recommend that it should be tried. La the chronic forms of the hepatic flux, it will perhaps be more useful than in the bloody and mucous fluxes. Some three years ago, my friend Dr. Foster, of Cincinnati, men- tioned to me, that he had seen surprising results in a case of chronic diarrhea, from the use of very small doses of Fowler's solution. I lost no time in testing its powers. The first case in which I em- ployed it was, one of an old friend, a general officer in the army, who was the subject of a debilitating and harrassing diarrhea, contracted •in Florida many years since. He kept it somewhat in check by the constant use of astringent and anodyne draughts. I gave him five drops of the solution a day, in divided doses, with the result of procuring an undisturbed night's sleep, for the first time in several months, and his complete recovery in a few weeks. I have since employed it in several cases, and always with more benefit than any other remedy I have ever used. The perchloride of iron has been extravagantly lauded in all mu- cous fluxes, in a recent work by Deleau. He makes a solution of the salt, which he terms his normal solution, and which is of the strength of 30° Reaumur. Of this he makes a mixture with simple syrup, of 1 part to 60, and the dose is a teaspoonful. I have used the officinal solution in doses of ten drops, in a teaspoonful of syrup or water, and with good effect. It 'is worthy of a trial. I have brought these remedies forward, because I believe them to be new in army practice, because I have seen good results from them, and because I have no confidence, whatever, in the whole' cata- logue of the other astringents, mineral and vegetable, that have been heretofore relied upon in the treatmet of chronic diarrhea. —■ Rest, dry cupping, and a bland but nutritious diet, with as little water drinking as possible; flannel worn habitually next the skin, well ventilated quarters, and protection from currents of air, are important adjuvants in the treatment of all the forms of chronic camp dysentery. 36 HAND-BOOK FOR CHAPTER IV. OF THE GENERAL HISTORY—CHARACTER AND TREATMENT OF GUNSHOT WOUNDS. The phenomena of gunshot wounds differ, in so many respects, from those of other injuries, that it was for a long time supposed that this difference was due to the poisoning the balls. A similar notion was entertained by some of our officers, at Palo Alto, from, the discovery that some of the Mexican balls were made of bell metal. Another of the earlier notions was, that the velocity of their projection through the air caused such a heating of their masses, as to convert them into cauterie, burning the tissues as they pene- trated. Gale, a distinguished surgeon in the time of Henry VIII, wrote a book to prove both these notions untrue. The features of gunshot wounds, are due to the regular operation of natural laws, and neither artificial poisoning, nor the composition of the balls, has anything to do with their effects. From their first invention (which Monroe says was for the ruin of man), to the present day, many improvements have been made in firearms, to increase their destructive effects; but, although, great accuracy and surprisingly long range of fire have been attained, so that it would be supposed a body of infantry must be annihilated in approaching a battery well served, actual results do not verify any such calculations. More men were slain in battle in the old Greek and Roman wars, than at the present day. At the famous battle of Solferino, where rifled cannon and all the modern European improvements were used, the proportion of casualties to the forces engaged, was not as great as in our own battle at Molino del Rey, in the valley of Mexico. It is possible that the time of firing is less now than it was of old but in considering a number of the best contested battles on record, I find that when the losses reach 33 per cent., the battle is ended. It seldom reaches anything like this figure—never more. Projectiles, or other bodies inflicting wounds in battle, are gene- rally buckshot, musket, pistol, or rifle balls, canister, solid or hollow round shot, grape, fragments of shell or stone, splinters from gun- THE MILITARY SURGEON. 37 carriages, etc. The latter cause Jacerations and contusions, as well as penetrating wounds. Of late years, the smooth bored muskets and spherical balls have fallen into disuse. The improved rifled barrels, and the conical ball have superseded them almost entirely. In the Crimea, all the small arms in use, except the Sardinian pistol, carried conical balls. The weight of the English musket or rifle ball, is 1 oz. and 2 scru- ples—the Russian 1 oz. and 5 drachms, ours are 17 to the pound. The Russian ball is conical with a flat base, three rings and two raised ribs to fit the grooves in the barrel. Our balls are conical, with a cupped base and one ring. In theory, the form of the conical ball is perfect. The grooves in the rifle, give it a gyratory motion round its axis, while the flange of the ring at the base, presented to the resistance of the air through which it is passing should prevent it from deviating fj'om its plane of projection in any direction. But this pre-supposes that the den- sity of the ball shall be equal throughout its mass, and that the plane of the ring shall be accurately and perfectly true, and nor- mal to the surface of the ball; conditions that can not be secured, in the necessary mode of manufacturing these balls in large quan- tities. Accordingly, experiment has shown, that they strike a tar- get in all possible directions, a circumstance that may account for the destruction inflicted by some of them, and which, I think, Macleod has erroneously supposed to be the general effect of the conical ball. The Russian grape, range from one and a half ounces to three pounds—ours, one to six pounds. Canister are of all sizes, shapes, and irregular surfaces. Round shot vary from one to two hundred and ninety-four pounds. The last are for columbiads and sea coast defenses. It will be readily conceived how different will be the effects from this great variety of projectiles; how all should differ from wounds inflicted by the old implements of war; and how multiform the characters of the injuries presented to the military surgeon. In my opinion, however, there is no reason to believe that the character or nature of the wounds we are likely to meet with in the present un- fortunate disturbances, will differ in any essential feature from those with which we have been familiar with in former wars, from the fact that improved artillery and small arms will be, to some extent, employed. Should it prove otherwise, I have no doubt the resources of surgery will be fully equal to the emergency. 38 HAND-BOOK FOR It would naturally be supposed ,that, when a ball projected with so much velocity, impinges upon any portion of the body, from the disproportion of the resistance to the power, it would pass onward in a right line; but there is no end to the eccentricities of their courses. A round ball has entered above the elbow on one side, and lodged in the opposite axilla. Another penetrated the right hip, and lodged in the left popliteal space. Balls penetrate the cavity of the thorax, and run round between the pleura and lungs without wound- ing the latter; and again, they have been known to pass round the abdominal parietes within the peritoneum without wounding the viscera. Gulliver has reported a case in which the ball was found lodged in the posterior surface of the sternum, after entering at a distant part of the thorax. Hennen saw a man in whom a ball ran round the neek from one corner of the os hyoides to the opposite; another ascending a scaling ladder, received a ball in the center of the arm, it ran along the limb over the posterior part of the thorax, among the abdominal muscles, through the glutee, and presented in front of the middle of the opposite thigh. In another case, a ball passed between the shirt and skin, from the wrist to the shoulder, furrow- ing the skin, but without penetrating or flying off The irregular shape of fragments of shell, and the size of can- non balls, might be supposed always to inflict wounds, that could not escape recognition. Yet Macleod has recorded a case that oc- curred at Scutari, where a piece of a shell weighing three pounds had buried itself in a man's hip, making so small an opening that it was overlooked for three months, when it was extracted. Larrey reports a case in which a five pound ball was buried in a man's thigh, giving him no inconvenience except from the weight of the limb. Begin has reported a similar case, in which the ball weighed nine pounds, and Hennen one in which a twelve pound ball was similarly buried, and only discovered after death. The deflection of musket and rifle balls and the eccentricities of their courses among the muscles, etc., has been variously explained by different authors. Vidal thinks it due to the guns not having been methodically loaded, and thus the ball receives its impulse in the direction of a diameter not parallel to the axis of the piece .and hence will have a great tendency to deviate. I think if the supposi- tion as to direction of original impulse is true, the direction of the ball would be corrected by the right cylinder through which it must pass before it escapes from the barrel, and that, therefore, Yidal's THE MILITARY SURGEON. 39 explanation is unsatisfactory. It moreover gives us no practical hint. My own explanation is this: In the first place, if the ball does not strike in a direction normal to the surface of the body or limb, its tangential tendency, or tendency to deviate, will be equal to its momentum into the sine of the angle it makes with the surface. In the second place, after penetrating, with its new direction, it meets with various tissues of unequal density, elacticity and tension, which constitute a series of inclined or deflecting planes, opposing its pas- sage, and causing it to deviate from a right line in all conceivable directions. Its velocity is constantly diminished as it passes on, un- til it escapes and falls to the ground, or is arrested among the tissues themselves. In this mode of considering the subject, it is not sur- prising that a ball should run round the neck instead of passing through, or that it should strike the anterior end of a rib and pass out near the spine, without traversing the lung. Vidal has happily called the deviations " primary." He has given the name "consecutive deviations" to those which take place some- times in the position of a ball lodged in the body in consequence of muscular action, change of posture of the patient, or of suppuration detaching it from its original point of arrest. Balls impinging upon flat bones, are very frequently deflected. Macleod says that conical balls are seldom deflected; that round balls pass spirally around the bones without breaking them, but that conical balls take the shortest course. He says that one of these balls passed through two men at Alma, and lodged in a third. There have been some curious calculations as to how many men a ball will pass through. Antonio says a 32-pound ball will pass through 70 men ; an 8-pound ball, 40; a 1-ounce ball, 4. These are mere spec- ulations, and not at all reliable. In field works the upper part of the body is most exposed to shot; the defenses protect the lower part; hence the greater proportion of killed to wounded in field works than in the open field. The error in firing in the field, is generally that the piece is too much elevated, so that a great proportion of the balls projected pass over the heads of the opposing force; others, from other causes, fall short. It has always been a matter of great surprise to me that of the vast number of balls fired, so few should take effect. Hennen calculates that of all gunshot wounds received in battle, there will be 2 in the abdomen, 4 in the neck or breast, 7 in the 40 HAND-BOOK FOR head, 10 in the arms, 4 in the hips or legs, 1 in the knee, and 2 in the feet. Scrive has calculated from his observation in the Crimean war, that, in a siege, the distribution of wounds will be one third in the hip, one twelfth in the chest, and one fifteenth in the abdomen; in the open field, one tenth in the head, one twentieth in the chest, and one fortieth in the abdomen. The statistics of the positions of the wounds of those killed upon the field would be very interesting. The sensation experienced from a musket wound is liko that from a smart blow from a cane; if a bone is broken, the pain will be greater; if a joint is opened, both shock and pain will be still greater; if the thigh is broken, or a great cavity opened, the shock is severe, and particularly so if the abdomen is penetrated. But sometimes, even in severe wounds, the pain is so trifling that the man is unconscious he is hit until he finds the blood trickling down the limb. Hennen, Macleod, and others, say they have known a limb shattered or carried away without the consciousness of the sufferer. Macleod says he knew an officer to have both legs carriod away; he thought he had stepped into a hole, and was not aware of what had occurred to him till he attempted to rise. The character of the wound will depend upon the weight, shape. and velocity of the missile, and the nature of the part wounded, Lacerated wounds result from fragments of shell or stone or splin- ters. As lacerations merely, there is no peculiarity about them; when complicated with penetrations, they partake of the character of gunshot or of bayonet wounds. Macleod says, " a ball passing at great speed over the surface of a limb, may occasion a wound similar to that made by a knife. But this action of a ball is rare." I have never seen anything of this sort; it is possible, however, that the sharp flange of a conical ball or a sharp point upon the surface of a ball, might have this effect. The character and gravity of a buckshot wound, will depend a good deal upon the distance of the object. Wire cartridges carry them close for 20 yards—at 50 they are more divergent—at 150 they will pass singly through a yellow pine board an inch thick. Shot wounds fired close are more dangerous than ball; it is singular how they distribute themselves in all directions among the soft parts, and what extensive disorganization they produce. Vidal remarks, that balls may traverse the lungs, making serious wounds, but the injury from shot is extensive and fatal. Round shot carry away limbs, and large flaps of the soft parts; they crush the bones and produce ex- THE MILITARY SURGEON 41 tensive braying of the viscera and muscles, sometimes without break- ing the skin; but in these cases, the constitutional shock is fearful. A sergeant at Cerro Gorda had one buttock carried away by a round shot. This extensive wound granulated kindly and the man recov- ered without an untoward symptom. I once saw a leg carried away by a rifle ball, but it was discharged at a distance of only a few feet. The extensive concealed injuries produced by round shot, are very remarkable. Delpech records a case in which the bones of the leg were completely smashed, and still, fracture was not even suspected till after death. The liver has been torn to pieces and the lungs lac- erated, while the skin has remained unbroken. Macleod has report- ed a case in which a man was hit by a round shot on the outer side of the right arm and thorax. There was a blue mark upon the arm, but none on the thorax. Death occurred in twenty hours. The peritoneal cavity was filled with dark blood, the right lobe of the liver was torn into small pieces, some of which were loose and mix- ed with the blood. There was no peritonitis, and the remaining vis- cera were healthy. Dupuytren mentions the case of a man wound- ed at the barricades in Paris. There was no sign of injury upon him, and his comrades suspected him of shamming. He was car- ried to the hospital and died. The muscles of one leg were found completely brayed, and still the skin was unbroken. An officer at the storming of Chapultepec while on horseback, had the calf of his right leg similarly injured; sloughing of the whole calf ensued, and yet this gentleman assured me he was totally unconscious of having received any blow upon the part. These singular cases have been attributed to the windage of a passing ball; to the condensation of the air, occasioned by the ball in its passage, and its sudden expansion, afterward causing a rupture of the vessels; to electricity, generated by the passage of the ball through the air. These notions were long since exploded. An En- glish surgeon as long ago as 1672, speaks of it as a thing not generally believed; he affirms, that a cannon ball passing ever so near can do no harm or no one above deck would escape. Epaulettes have been carried away from an officer's shoulder, and the wearer "left un- harmed. Death may be so sudden, in the part struck, as to give no time for the development of any external mark of injury. Larrey found so much internal disorganization in these cases, as to leave no doubt of actual contact. He, as well as Guthrie, supposes that balls have only a rectilinear motion in the first place, and they then carry away any part they touch ; but that from the resistance offered 4 42 HAND-BOOK FOR by the air, and gravitation, they after a while acquire a motion around their axis, and then, with diminished velocity, they roll over a surface instead of carrying it away, and crush everything be- neath. Vidal and Dupuytren suppose that balls have the two mo- tions of rotation and progression ab initio and they thus roll over a surface or round a limb, crushing all underneath, without wounding the skin. Gunshot wounds combine the characteristics of all other wounds, contused, lacerated,punctured, and incised. "Wounds from mus- ket balls, particularly of the face, sometimes bleed considerably at the moment of injury, and for some little time afterward ; although no large vessel shall be injured, to render the bleeding inconveni- ent or dangerous. " When a limb is carried away by a cannon shot, any destructive bleeding usually ceases with the faintings and failure of strength, subsequent on the shock, and a hemorrhage thus spontaneously sup- pressed does not generally return; it is the effort of nature to save life." * Wounds from musket or rifle balls are usually round, discolored at the entrance, and depressed—they are less regularly round at their point of exit, and the hole is larger there; the hole in the soft parts is usually less in diameter than the ball, the contusion at the point of entrance takes, as Sir Charles Bell remarks, the form of several concentric circles. At the center, the integument is killed, and sloughs about the size of the ball; sometimes a plug of the integument is carried in before the ball. In the next ring, the vitality of the integument is seriously compromised, but not entire- ly destroyed. It will depend upon circumstances whether it will be recovered or lost, such as the degree of ecchymosis, the subsequent inflammation, etc. The next ring is composed of irritated and compressed tissue, and always inflames. Then there is a ring of simple bruising and dis- coloration of unequal extent and diffusion. Vidal remarks, that it is in the third circle, that first movements toward Teaction occur, as the parts there preserve their vitality, and are sufficiently irritated to excite inflammation. They swell and suppurate, and if the inflammation is kept within due bounds, the second zone may be saved, and only the eschar thrown off; this is always eliminated either entire or mingled with the pus. The es- * Guthrie. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 43 char does not extend throughout the whole track of the wound— there will probably be none at the point of exit. This is the type. Sometimes there will be extensive sloughing and suppuration, and that of unhealthy pus; owing to the more extensive stunning of the tissues; to the nature of the tissues implicated such as the apon- euroses or fibrous tissues generally; to the bad constitution of the man, or his depressed morale; to the presence of pieces of clothing in the wound; to impure air, or bad food; or perhaps to endemic in- fluence. Sometimes the swelling and suppuration are so slight, that the wound seems to heal by the first intention. Ballingall mentions the case of a negro in India, who had a wound through the biceps mus- cle of the arm, which healed without suppuration. Macleod saw a wound through the gastrocnemius unite by the first intention on the fifth day. In hot climates, these exceptional cases are most fre- quent. If the incised wounds the effect of gunshot, of which Macleod speaks ever occur, this union, by the first intention, would be very probable, but I have never seen it. Vidal says he saw a wound implicating the knee joint, unite with so little suppuration, that he would have been deceived had he not watched the case very closely. Larrey, Sanson, and Hunter, mention similar cases. The wound at the point of exit usually heals first. Different views as to the characteristics of entrance and exit holes, have been advanced by different observers. Macleod says, that the wound at the point of entrance is more regular and less discolored, than at the point of exit, but he is not so sure that the lips of the former are inverted, and of the latter, everted. If the speed of the ball is great, and there is no bone broken, there will be little difference in size or color—but if the speed be diminished, or a bone broken, the hole at the point of exit will be much larger, especially so with conical balls. But in close firing, and the speed of the ball undiminished, the difference is very small, and sometimes the entrance wound is the largest. He saw this twice. The gene- ral rule, I believe to be as first enunciated. Devirgie gives an in- stance in which the wound, at the point of entrance, was the largest, though the ball was fired at a distance. It is possible that this may occur, because an irregular ball may enter by its largest ele- ment, and escape by its smallest or the reverse—or the ball may be altered in its shape while traversing the limb, or it may carry in 44 HAND-BOOK FOR pieces of clothing, or of equipments, and thus modify the charac- teristics of wounds. The holes made in bones, differ from those in the soft parts—in the spongy extremities of the long bones, they are sometimes simi- lar to those in the soft parts, but in the flat bones, the hole is usually larger than the ball. Inflammation and swelling always follow the wound in a short time; the lips of the wound become everted, then suppuration oc- curs, and the casting off of the sloughs with fever, sometimes se- vere, generally of the inflammatory, sometimes of the nervous or typhoid type. Collapse, or shock, is, I think, an attendant of every wound. Sometimes it is appalling, and may indicate the gravity of the wound, but not always. Much depends upon the nerve of the man. It is greater in wounds of the lower extremities, than the upper, or if the wound is received while the man is standing. Chevalier says, it is greater if the ball strikes a muscle in action. It is always alarming in wounds, implicating the great cavities, the abdomen in particular. In some, it is soon recovered from; in others, it con- tinues hours, and ceases only with life. It is relieved, if at all, by stimulants. Guthrie thinks, if it is persistent, it indicates severe internal injury. This may, perhaps, be so, if the external lesion is not sufficient to account for it, as in cases where the leg or thigh are carried off. Collapse is marked by pallor of the surface, white lips, cold sweats, tremors, small and scarcely perceptible pulse—it is not likely to be mistaken. The effects of balls, we have said, depend somewhat upon their shape. Macleod says, " the great velocity, peculiar shape and mo- tion of the conical ball, give to its wounds a character considerably different from those present in wounds caused by round musket balls. If fired, at short range, and if it strike a fleshy part, the conical ball produces, I think, less laceration of the soft parts, than the old ball; but if the range be great, and parts struck bony, witli little covering of flesh, as in the hand or foot, then the tearing, es- pecially at the point of exit, is greatly more marked." Now the effects of balls as hitherto observed upon bones are if they strike obliquely upon flat bones, they glance off, but even then they may be attended by dangerous results, particularly in the head ; if they pass through a flat bone, the hole will be larger than in the soft parts. They sometimes strike the long bones, contusing- THE MILITARY SURGEON. 45 without breaking them, but producing death of the periosteum and consequent exfoliation, or abscess in the cavity of the bone; they may split the bone longitudinally without fracturing it, or even transversely without the fracture being complete; they may bury themselves in the spongy heads of the long bones without splitting them; I have seen a cavity of that nature in the head of the tibia; they may be deposited in the medullary cavities of the long bones, causing much mischief. Macleod says the conical ball always splits the bone in the direction of its axis downwards. It splinters and comminutes the bone in all directions, but is never split itself. Stromeyer, however, has reported a case in which a conical ball was split upon the patella; splitting the bone downward is not all pecu- liar to conical balls. The nerves and blood-vessels generally very fortunately escape injury, unless the ball is ragged, or splinters the bones, or a limb or a large part of it is carried off. But sometimes an artery is perfo- rated, as occurred to a young man in one of our large cities, a few years ago. In this case, the femoral artery was perforated by the ball with a part of the cylinders of the vessel left on each side of the opening. In this case, the vein was also injured. Both vessels were tied, but gangrene ensued and the patient died. Musket balls sometimes pass between an artery and its accompanying vein, with- out apparently injuring either. Inflammation and plugging of the vessels, however, is apt to ensue, with gangrene and the loss of the limb or life. Guthrie has given us an interesting case of this kind. The phenomena of gunshot wounds, thus far noticed, I term the ''constants," or the necessary phenomena. Others I term "vari- ables," or accidents; these are either immediate or remote. The immediate are hemorrhage, and balls or other foreign bodies lodged in the wound. The remote are secondary hemorrhage, pyemia, traumatic erysipelas, hospital gangrene, and tetanus. Treatment of gunshot wounds.—Hemorrhage, as an immediate ac- cident of these wounds, is of rare occurrence. When it does occnr, of course it is necessary to secure the vessel or control the circulation through it by a tourniquet or compression at once. Whether the vessel should be tied or amputation of the limb resorted to, is a ques- tion 1 shall consider hereafter. If the former is the proper course, the bleeding aperture is a guide to the artery, and a ligature may be readily placed upon it. But if an artery of secondary importance is the one injured, and it can be readily compressed against a flat bone, the ligature will be seldom required. A graduated compress, charged 46 HAND-BOOK FOR with persulphate of iron, firmly applied within the wound, will, in most cases, effectually arrest the bleeding forever. In a case of this sort, I would not remove the compress until it was detached or loosened by suppuration. If the compress is resorted to in the continuity of a limb, the whole extremity should be bandaged, be ginning at the toes or fingers, as the case may be, and the limb after- ward kept elevated. When foreign bodies present themselves in the wound, they are to be removed as soon as practicable; but it is seldom that this can be done upon the field during the action. If either ball, broken bone, pieces of clothing, or anything else be within reach, it should be re- moved at once; but all wounds in which the presence of any of these substances is suspected, should be subjected to a thorough explora- tion after the man is removed from the field to the principal depot for the wounded at the rear. • The first dressings upon the field will be limited generally to cleaning the part well, applying a pledget of lint to the wound, and securing it with adhesive straps or a few turns of a roller. Guthrie objects to rollers, as they are so apt to get dirty or displaced; my objection to them is the inconvenience of their application and sub- sequent removal for systematic treatment. But sometimes we are compelled to use them. They should be cut off when removed for the thorough examination of the wound. The first indication in the regular treatment is the removal of foreign bodies, and first of the ball. * Great differences of opinion have prevailed among military sur- geons as to the necessity for removing the ball. There can be no question that they have sometimes remained for years without caus- ing any serious inconvenience. Cysts, called by Balldeni, second- ary cysts, form about them and enclose them, so that they are pre- vented from shifting their position, and need produce no further harm. But sometimes they remain for a time, and then suddenly excite an eliminative inflammation, and occasionally, though rarely prove fatal in the process, as by hemorrhage from ulcerative perfora- tion of an artery, or by sudden change of place, as in the brain. Dupuytren has called attention to the remarkable rapidity with which they sometimes change place, from change of position of the man, from muscular contraction, or from gravitation; and that these changes may produce immediate pressing symptoms. Great importance is attached to the extraction of balls by most military surgeons. Hunter, however, has taken a different view of THE MILITARY SURGEON. 47 the subject, the rather, I am disposed to think, because his rival, Bell, urged this among his reasons for the more objectionable prac- tice of debridement. The practical question is, do wounded men do as well with the balls remaining as when they have been ex- tracted ? Hutin examined 4,000 cases in the Hotel des Invalides, in whom the balls had been left unextracted. There were only 12 of these who suffered no inconvenience; 200 of the remainder had their wounds constantly opening and closing until the balls were removed. Begin insists that the indication for the extraction of the ball is always present, and it should be judiciously attempted. If we suc- ceed, we have done much for the patient; if we fail, from fear of causing more mischief, or from insuperable obstacles, we have at least satisfied the demands of science. Macleod is very decided upon this point. He says that those in the Crimea who were for leaving the ball in, were the civil surgeons; the military surgeons were always for extraction. He asserts that patients who get along with them, are only exceptions; they invariably protract the cure, and increase the irritability of the patient. The inconveniences arising from the presence of the ball, are, protracted suppuration; the blocking up of matter in the wound, causing burrowing abscesses; exfoliation of bone; ulceration of bloodvessels; tetanus, etc. Macleod says, that of four or five cases in which he could not find the ball, two died of tetanus. Now this fact is very suggestive; if there be any relation between tetanus and the presence of a ball, there would be no further dispute as to the necessity of removing it; it is very important to diminish the causes of this almost uniformly fatal accident. Vidal can not agree with Hunter, as to the innocuousness of balls, and the power of nature to expel them as well as other foreign bodies; still, he is equally reluctant to advise protracted searches for them, particularly among delicate organs. I think the weight of authority is all on one side, and have no doubt of its correctness. When a man is faint from loss of blood, from shock, or from the nature of the part wounded, so that any movement of his body might be followed by disastrous consequences, no one in his senses would think of turning him over, or anything else, to find out what had become of the ball; but the " general rule is, as soon as practicable, to ascertain the position of the ball, and remove it as well as other foreign bodies, if it can be done without producing more mischief" Many balls present themselves near 48 HAND-BOOK FOR the surface, are easily felt, and readily extracted; but sometimes it is very difficult to ascertain their position. Probes may be used carefully, or gum-elastic bougies, for exploring the wound. If the wound is large enough, the finger is a very good probe. But, in cases of greater difficulty, the patient may be placed in the position he was in when he received the wound, putting the same muscles in action; while the surgeon places himself, as nearly as possible, in the direction of the projectile. Then consider, as Guthrie says, the "anatomy of the whole circle of injury"—the effect of the fascia?, tendons, muscles, or bones in deflecting the ball, so as to judge of its probable course. The patient's idea of its course may give us valuable hints. Sir Charles Bell suggests the expedient of pressing along the course of the principal nerves of a limb, to ascertain the course of a ball—pain will be occasioned, frequently, in arriving over its site. It was Macleod's practice, after getting all the information he could from his patient, to give him chloroform, and then proceed with his exploration: he says he would risk much to get the ball out. Mistakes of Diagnosis.—Stromeyer refers to a case where the head of the fibula and metatarsal bone were cut upon for a ball. Many similar mistakes might be mentioned. Statements of patients, that the ball has dropped out, are not always reliable; more than one may have entered; opposite orifices may have been made by differ- ent balls. In a battle cross fire is not uncommon, and the same man may receive two or three wounds at the same time, There can be no certainty except in exploration; or when opposite orifices have distinct characteristics of entrance and exit, I think they may be relied on. If the ball can be felt under the skin, or seen, it may be extracted at once, on the field; otherwise, it should be done at leisure, in the rear. Balls are very frequently easily detected after suppuration and subsidence of swelling. When flattened upon or wedged between bones, extraction is sometimes difficult, as in a case where I extracted from cervical spine. At the first dressing, all foreign bodies should be removed and the parts be well cleansed. Lint should then be applied and secured with adhesive straps, or a few turns of a roller. Guthrie objects to rollers: they get dirty, and are easily displaced. I object to them on account of the incon- venience of application and removal for systematic treatment, but it is frequently necessary to employ dressings during the removal of patients to the rear, when they may be cut off, if necessary. Hospital Dressing.—Vidal says, poisoning being the predominant THE MILITARY SURGEON. 49 etiological idea, cauterization was naturally the principal indica- tion in the treatment of the ancients. Pare changed this barbarous practice, and exposed its absurdities. He still, however, adhered to ointments—honey of roses, tinct. of myrrh, etc. These, however, are forgotten, and the modern question is between water dressings, hot or cold, and poultices, and simple lint, with or without a cover- ing of cerate. The wound, I hare said, is of a composite nature, and of every degree of severity. Its extremes are a simple contu- sion, and a braying of all beneath the skin. In the latter case, there will be little use for dressings. Amputation of a limb, first or last, must ensue. I was taught that a gunshot wound could not be poulticed too soon. This was Hunter's opinion. Now the fashion is ice altogether. The aim is to reduce the composite wound to a simple one, that union by the first- intention may be effected as soon as possible. For this reason we amputate when a limb has been shot away. We remove the irregular flaps of soft parts. We try to diminish the extent of the traumatic surface, which is the closest approximation we can make to a simple wound in these cases. We next try to control the coming inflammation to the minimum neces- sary to the reparative process. I use this language in deference to authority. I do not believe inflammation necessary to repair, for Mr. Paget has shown that it is only in the way; but it is, as far as I know, a constant accident of these wounds, and therefore I am willing to employ the language of the schools. Ice has been em- ployed topically since the last century. Schmucker lauds it extrava- gantly. Guthrie uses it everywhere. The French surgeons gener- ally have adopted it, but Vidal says, as a general rule, it is a bad practice; that it is used to prevent or cut short inflammation. Now, ( a certain degree of inflammation is necessary in these wounds; the eschar can not be detached except at that price. Velpeau says the temperature is not equally influenced through- out the limb by ice. The surface may be very cold, and the trajet of the ball very hot. Then we will have an unequal inflammatory action evidently less favorable than if uniform throughout. We have thus a bastard inflammation—a sanious, badly elaborated pus, and wound that progresses slowly toward cicatrization. If there are flaps, or already embarrassed circulation, ice favors gangrene. Velpeau had a patient in La Charite, who had been treated with ice for thirty days in an ambulance, and he found eschars scattered over healthy portions of the skin. He adds: cold topical applica- tions are only suited to cases in which there is violent pain, and a 5 50 HAND-BOOK FOR sensation of heat, without swelling or inflammation. Perhaps a lit- tle cold might be applied beneficially in hot seasons. Vidal agrees with Velpeau, with regard to ice, but not cold water. Cold water was applied by the Italians, soon after the invention of gunpowder, but it was first subjected to charms and incantations. It was long in the hands of quacks, and although regulars saw it used, they at- tributed the success to magical and unchristian acts, that no man of any piety would submit to, as it was unauthorized by the church. Ballingall speaks well of it, so long as it is agreeable to the patient. In other cases, warm fomentations, or cataplasms, may be advan- tageously substituted. Macleod recommends cold applications until inflammation and suppuration are present, then not. Vidal insists that we should not lose sight of the distinction between these two kinds of swelling after gunshot wounds; the one doughy, indolent, cold; with the color but little altered; the other tense and elastic. In the former, sedatives only reduce still more the vital powers al- ready sufficiently suspended by the action of impinging forces. In such cases we must use stimulating and hot applications: if a re- action occurs, we must then employ our antiphlogistics; but gene- rally with these antecedents, poultices and warm fomentations an- swer best in the consequents. In the second variety, the opposite course should be pursued. This question of hot or cold was debated in the French Academy in 1848. Valette has given us a resume of the opinions of several distinguished surgeons, and appended the result of his own experi- ence in the Crimea. Begin thinks the tepid applications are the best Baudens regards ice as a precious means; the wounded are delighted with it, while morbid heat exists. Huguier confines it to wounds, when the whole extent can be subjected to its action, and those in which strangulation is threatened, or burrowing of pus, as in the foot, leg, knee, hand, arm, face, etc. Roux is opposed to them, he says " we can not hinder inflammation, and should not, if we could, as it is contrary to the natural powers." Amussat has found advantage in replacing cold by warm water. Valette objects to cold water, that where there are many wounded together, an undue dampness is kept up in the wards, very preju- dicial to the health of the wounded. He uses simple dressings__ce- rate and lint—poultices, when pain ensues, and leeches, if inflam- mation exists. It is absurd to adopt any method exclusively when we have so many recommended on good authority. We can always THE MILITARY SURGEON. 51 command some of them. Poultices may be made of different sub- stances, bay-root mucilage in Florida, the cactus in Mexico, etc. In cases of extensive crushing or disorganization of a part, no one would use cold applications. Stimulants and hot applications are the proper remedies, but reaction should be watched, and then antiphlogistics, leeches, etc., should be resorted to if necessary. Phlegmonous erysipelas may be treated, as in Gen. Shield's case by yeast poultices and incisions. It is scarcely necessary to warn sur- geons against tents, setons, ointments, etc. The burrowing of pus, and collections of it, should be prevented by means of counter openings, when necessary. Proper bandaging will often save the bistoury. Syringe the wound with tepid water, and remove pieces of cloth, clots of blood, and other foreign bodies. The French use one part of perchlor. ferri., to three parts of water, in profuse sup- purating wounds. My own experience with this agent, has left a favorable impression. Cod liver oil was used in the Crimea in these cases. The position of the limb should be such as to relax the wounded muscle, and favor the return of blood. It should not be forgotten that, as the result of wounds, limbs may become con tracted and require tenotomy. 52 HAND-BOOK FOR CHAPTER V. AMPUTATIONS. Cases for amputation were better defined formerly, than at pres- ent, since excision has come into fashion. Amputation was at first confined to cases of gangrene. Pott extended it to cases in which the patient's life was more hazarded by the attempts to save, than by removing the limb. His doctrine was " better live with three than die with four limbs." Lacerated wounds, with loss of substance, rupture of blood-ves- sels and nerves, extensive denudation of bone, may lead to the ne- cessity of amputation. Guthrie has reported a case where the soft parts were carried away from Poupart's ligament to within four inches of the knee, the artery was laid bare for four inches, and yet the patient recovered. Cases of .compound comminuted fractures, particularly high up in the thigh, and those involving joints may also demand this operation. In the thigh cases, the prognosis is unfavorable, and there is seldom reaction enough to warrant the operation if near the hip joint. Out of eleven cases of excision of the hip joint for gunshot wounds, only one patient recovered. This was a soldier wounded by a shell, at Sebastopol, the operation was performed by Dr. O'Leary. The head, neck and trochanter, were removed. The result was, the limb became two and a half inches shorter than its fellow, and was capable of bearing some weight; the patient could swing and advance it, but could not bend the knee rotation was limited and painful. Williamson says that experience in the Crimea clearly proves the superiority of excision of the head of the femur to amputation, and he thinks it will be more frequently employed, with greater attention to the selection of cases. Acci- dental recovery of one, does not justify this remark. My own ex- perience does not encourage much hope in these cases. As to amputation at the joint, Larrey gives us seven cases, he says two recovered and were seen in Poland. Guthrie says they never reached France; he claims that one of his survived, and was the THE MILITARY SURGEON. 63 first and only patient seen alive in London or Paris, all his others died. Fractures may be complicated with wounds of arteries, either at the time or after the fracture. Seeking both ends of an artery, in an unsound part, causes too much mischief. Wounds of the knee joint, with fracture of bones, require immediate amputation, unless excision can be substituted, and this is possible when the popliteal artery and nerve are not injured (Guthrie). Excision of the knee joint, is not yet much used in military surgery. It was performed in one case in the Holstein, and one in the Crimean war; both re- sulted fatally. The operation has been more successful in civil practice. Absolute rest is required, and this can not, as a general rule, be had in war. Stromeyer was induced to try excision, because amputation of the thigh had been so fatal, being 77 deaths to 51 recoveries. His pa- tient lived three weeks; Esmarch thinks he would have died in eight days, if amputation had been resorted to. I remark, on this case, that the operation was deferred to the fourth day, when fever, in- flammation and suppuration had been set up; ball and pieces of the femur were found loose in the joints, and there was great in- flammation of the soft parts. The patient died of pyemia. Ampu- tation is the only means of prevention. If the joint is penetrated by the ball, the surgeon should always amputate. The fatality in Stromeyer's cases was due to bad hygiene, removal of men to the rear for amputation, and, from the number of the patients, being obliged to defer the operations more than 24 hours. Injuries of the patella do not require amputation, as was proved by two of my own cases in the Mexican war. Stromeyer had the case of a Prussian soldier who recovered with anchylosis after com- minution of the patella by a bullet, and another case in which a conical bullet split the patella, and lodged part of it in the bone; it was removed by incision. Hennen reports similar cases. The crushing of the soft parts, with fracture of the bone, without external wound, may result in inflammation and mortification. Se- vere shell or round-shot wounds generally require amputation, though npparantly unpromising cases, at times, recover. In a case of How- ard's, in the Crimea, the shell carried away 3J inches of the front of the tibia, leaving the posterior part or shell entire; the fragment was removed, and the man recovered. If splintering takes place iu the ankle joint, such cases seldom recover without amputation. Guthrie says, that extensive destruction of the soft parts without di- 54 HAND-BOOK FOR vision of the bone and artery, does not justify amputation; wounds of both, require it, though many recover from one alone. I do not consider the question settled as to the necessity of ampu- tation in fracture of thigh or leg, from gunshot wounds. A case of mine recovered in the city of Mexico, and another in San Francisco. Baudens insists upon amputation. He says emphatically, and re- peats it, " Every fracture of the femur from gunshot, demands im- mediate amputation." He says, that in 60 cases, all but one were comminuted; 15 were amputated immediately, 13 of whom recovered ; of 20 others, secondary operation, 4 only recovered; the other 25 cases in which preservation of the limb was obstinately persisted in, after removal or adjustment of the splinters, all but two died in the course of four months, and their limbs were deformed and useless. Saurel admits all this as to comminuted fractures,but holds that it is a different matter with clear fractures. He insists that the extent and nature of the lesion, should determine the ques- tion as in fracture of other bones; that we must consider the height at which the bone is fractured; those fractures being the more serious, the higher the break. Most French surgeons agree that disartic- ulation should be immediately done when the upper part of the femur is fractured. But when the superior epiphysis is broken, some, Larrey among them, advise preservation when it can be rea- sonably attempted. The surgeon should examine for other injuries, as of chest or ab- domen, before he performs amputation. A case of shoulder joint at Cherubusco, with canister wound and broken rib, died from that cause. Many of the wounded will not mention this; therefore they should be questioned. Should there be a chance of recovery from them, amputation may improve it. Is amputation a promising resource ? I think it is; notwithstanding the unfavorable reports of some statisticians. It is true, we find an alarming mortality after ampu- tation in some cases; but we have as encouraging results in others. Velpeau frequently asks, Is death due to amputation, or in spite of it? Burke reports 80 cases of amputation at Bhurtpoor: all recov- ered in 14 days. Guthrie, 14 shoulder joint, with one death; Larrey, 16, in Egypt, with 2 deaths ; and generally, in the French army, one in 10 die after the operation. I had 2 in Mexico, one died from chest wound. Macleod's statistics refer only to the latter period of the war in the Crimea, and exclude all the unfavorable period. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 55 DIED. Thigh—Primary,.......62.0 Secondary,......75.0 Average,......- 64.0 Parisian Hospital (Malgaigne), ... - 73.9 Hotel Dieu in 1830,.......81.8 Waterloo,.......70.2 India,........48.7 Mexican War, - - - - - - 100.0 Holstein (Stromeyer), - - - - - - 60.0 I amputated 3 thighs in the Mexican war, and all recovered. Shoulder—Crimea,.......33.3 Primary,......20.2 Secondary,......65.0 —from all the campaigns and hospitals in Macleod's table. These ratios of mortality seem so discouraging, that some are ready to pro- scribe amputation. But what would have been the result without it? Has the experiment ever been tried ? Bilguer, surgeon-general in Prussia, forbade amputation in that service, on account of the ill success attending it. At the close of the war in which 6,000 had been wounded, the Prussian surgeons had not amputated a limb. What was the consequence ? One half of those who had fracture of the extremities died; one half of the remainder were unfit for employment—11 he reports as surprising cures. Ballingall disputes even these. Macleod's table of all amputations in the Crimea, give a mortality of 33 per cent. Now, looking to the mortality in civil hospitals after similar amputations for injury, we find it exceeding that in the military hospitals. Ballingall remarks upon this, that the civilian goes from good into bad hygienic influences ; and the soldier the reverse. The civilian is cachectic from intemperance, from de- pressed morale, as he has no hope after the accident—goes through a fever attack in hospital. I do not know under what circumstances Ballingall generalizes in this way. A soldier in campaign always has the best air while on duty, if the camp is well policed; if his officers are intelligent, air can be no better in hospital; and bad as the air is in some hospitals, that to which their inmates have been exposed in mines, factories, and overcrowded dwellings, can not have been much better. The fact that the soldier receives a pension and has no family dependent, may have an influence. We conclude, then, that amputation is the proper resource in such HAND-BOOK FOR ca>es as we have endeavored to point out. It does save life, and es- sentially diminish suffering; and death ensuing can not be attributed to the amputation, but is due to the injury which required the ope- ration. The danger of pyemia is fully as great from the injury as from the amputation, while the danger of hemorrhage, of tetanus, of gangrene, of exhausting suppuration, and the like, are reduced to the minimum by the amputation. In reference to the time for operating, we make three periods, and distinguish the operation accordingly: First, or primary, from the time of the injury to the occurrence of fever or swelling—say, within 48 to 60 hours. Second, or intermediate, during fever and inflammation. Third, or secondary, after fever and constitutional disturbance has set in. There is no point upon which surgeons are more agreed than primary amputation. It is the only operation which Ballingall will sanction on the field. All statistics favor it. The patient is more willing than at a subsequent period. The only objection is collapse. This, when moderate, I have said, is a good anasthetic; if excessive, it demands stimulation and postponement of the operation. We do not know whether reaction will occur; and if death takes place after amputation, it may be attributed to that. Hutchinson denies the possibility of collapse following injury to a degree forbidding amputation. Guthrie has seen necessity for delay to rally a patient. Sir Stephen Hammick, a naval surgeon, advises to "allow patients to recover a little from shock of accident" before amputating. Naval surgeons generally see the wounded at once. There is not much difference, however. I have operated imme- diately in several instances. The collapse is in proportion to the injury. At Cerro Gordo, Lt. Davis, of the Rifles, was wounded in the upper third of the thigh; he never rallied. Macleod says there is an interval before collapse comes on—that chloroform precludes all danger of intensifying shock. Edinburgh cases, a few years ago, tell a different story. I would give chloroform after the battle was over—in the hospital, not on the field. Its administration is unnecessary and impracticable in bat- tle. Larrey agrees with Macleod, and says, " It is demonstrated that shock, far from being a contra-indication to primary amputation, should be an additional motive for performing it—that shock sub- sides instantly after operation—that of three men in whom he am- putated both legs at Wagram, the only one who recovered was the first, and that was done a few moments after he was wounded." It may be true that there is a moment of abeyance of shock, but 1 have THE MILITARY SURGEON. 57 not observed it, andl have seen men almost immediately after their injuries; but when collapse is present, I can not yet recommend a disregard of it. If it be present in the extreme and threatening de- gree, I have attempted to bring about some reaction before operat- ing. Many reasons demand the primary operation, when necessavy at all. Removal from field is painful and irritating; the loss of blood perhaps slow, but sure; exhaustion by this, and anxiety as to events, is prevented by operation on the field, Wiseman, Le Deau, and others, all advocate primary operation. But among the French a different opinion sprang up in the last century. After the battle of Fontenoy, the French Academy of Surgery attempted to deter- mine this question, and gave the prize to Faure, who advocated sec- ondary amputation. Faure says that of 300 amputations after Fon- tenoy, only some 30 were successful. Larrey replied to this, that results must have been very different then from what they were at his time, for they saved more than three fourths of their cases, and some had lost both limbs. This he thinks due to the exercise of more judgment in selecting the right time for amputation—to more methodical dressings—to the more simple, speedy, and less painful mode of operation now in use than formerly. Faure, however, does not proscribe immediate amputation in obvious cases. He advocated it under certain circumstances, because the operation is more suc- cessful in cases when patients have been reduced by sickness. If we look to statistics in civil practice, we shall find that second- ary operations have been most successful in some of the French hos- pitals, but not in the English or Scotch, except at St. Thomas. In this, we have all dying in primary operations for thigh injury, and only 50 per cent, in secondar}r. Macleod finds an average, however, to be, in these cases, in civil hospitals, 69.6 for primary, and 75.4 for second- ary—not a very great difference in favor of either operation. But in amputation for gunshot wounds of the thigh, we have a wide dif- ference in favor of primary—56.5 to 79 per cent, for secondary. An operation on one in vigorous health, is attended with danger peculiar to that condition. John Hunter remarked this. I think that rest and low diet may obviate some of these risks. Macleod says the difficulty is to recognize cases that demand it, and be sure no inter- nal lesion forbids. But he thinks it will save life to operate in all doubtful cases. The statistics of all amputations certainly sustain this advice, 25.22 primary, 45.1 secondary having proved fatal. Ex- clude fingers and toes, and we have 37.1 primary, and 60.0 secondary, fatal. It has been remarked, " the farther the injury from the body, 58 HAND-BOOK FOR the less danger from delay." When the thigh is the seat of injury, in my opinion, the nearer to the body, the less the danger from delay, for, in amputations in the upper third, we have seen how general is the mortality. In the lower third, 50.0 died; middle, 55.3; upper, 86.8; hip, 100. Macleod never saw a recovery where amputation was certainly in the upper third. French and Russians found them so hopeless that they abandoned the operation, and thought it better to try to save them without. Baudens says the Crimean war shows operations at the knee joint more successful than the thigh. Mac- leod gives of this, 6 primary, 3 fatal; one secondary and fatal: pro- portions the same as in the lower third of the thigh. I mention that the older surgeons amputated only for gangrene. There was a dis- pute about the propriety of spreading gangrene. Ballingall, in favor, speaks cautiously; of 6 cases, one died soon after operation, but with- out gangrene attacking the stump; another lived 10 or 12 days, and died of internal injury—broken rib and abscess of liver ; a third got well; one got well of the other three. In only one case did gangrene attack the stump. A sloughing stump and this form of gangrene are different. Secondary amputation is sometimes necessary, for secondary hemorrhage ligatures irritate, and do not succeed here. There is constitutional derangement—phlebitis and sloughing of stump. In- termediary operations are seldom successful, though Faure says they are better than primary. The knee case I quoted from Stro- meyer (fatal), was one of this kind, Every pathological considera- tion is opposed to it, and it should not be resorted to except in very urgent cases. Now as to the place where operations should be per- formed, I do not know any safer principle than Velpeau's. " It is generally advised to amputate at the articulation, or in the continuity of the bone above it. The accidents which supervene after amputa- tion have been chiefly attributed to the fissures which extend some- times to the spongy texture of the upper articular extremity of the broken bone." Kerst remarks that the fissure is always made in the direction taken by the projectile, so when wounded from above down, he was successful in operating a few inches above it. Macleod remarked that the bone is always split downward—this is not alwavs true. The amputation should be above the next joint, if the wound in the bone is not more than three inches below it. This is particu- larly true in reference to the knee and shoulder, for there is -reat danger of phlebitis if the fissure extends into either of these joints Legouest, m a memoir on this subject, strongly opposes amputa- THE MILITARY SURGEON. 59 tion, either primary or secondary, and says expectant treatment has saved more than amputation. He especially opposes the immediate operation. In shaft of bone, Baudens regards it as necessary. Riley, in 1831, asserted that if these cases were not amputated the men invariably died; and that in a careful inspection of the Hotel des Invalides he had been unable to find a single man that had sur- vived a similar injury, nor a thigh stump for a fracture as high aa the middle of the femur. Hutin resumed his investigation, and reached a very different result. Among 4373 he found 143 thigh stumps, and 4230 legs; again, 63 cured without amputation of thigh, and 76 of leg. Considering the seat of the fracture, he reached these results: Fractures in the middle of the thigh; 5 amputations, and 20 cured without amputation; below the middle, 16 with, and 19 without; above the middle, none with, and 24 without. I go on with table now as to leg: He found at the middle of leg 12 with, 22 without; above the middle, 6 with, 20 without; below the middle, 64 with, and 34 without—an unfair result, because he does not give us the number of cases lost in the attempt to save the limb. Saurel concludes that we should fall into a grave error, if we amputated all thigh cases, and that we should confine them to cases where it is comminuted, and the preservation of limb impossible. And much more so as to the leg, as less grave than the thigh, especially when only one bone is broken, though these wounds are worse than when in the upper extremity. The circumstances of the case should govern—if the man can have rest—well; if not, then amputate, in all cases (the leg, if both bones are injured). If extensive splintering exists, amputate anyhow. If you determine not to amputate, remove the spiculae. Sometimes the wound heals without, they become inclosed in the voluminous callus—still they are foreign bodies, and sooner or later indicate their presence, by acute pain and persistent suppuration. We pass now to fractures of the upper extremities, and here we find the results of experience altogether different from those of the lower. Mr. Guthrie says the upper extremities should not be am- putated for almost any musket wound. If the injury is done by cannon, or shell, with destruction of the soft parts and wound of the artery, he says it is best to amputate. Here he is too fast—a mus- ket ball may cause extensive comminution and splintering into the joint. If a wound of the humerus is limited to the head, exsect; if it extends to the shaft, amputate. Neither operation is always neces- sary. Guthrie gives several cases where splinters were removed by GO HAND-BOOK FOR incision, and recovery followed. We can not resist the preponder- ance of opinion in favor of preservation. I confess I did not attempt it in the Mexican war, but the Holstein and Crimean wars have oc- curred since, and I should act differently in another campaign. Stromeyer says, amputation at the shoulder joint, is only neces sary when the ball enters the inner side and injures the vessels and nerves. He says his experience contradicts Larrey's and Guthrie's. That exsection should be limited to the head, and not the shaft of the bone. He says, of 8 left to nature, 5 died; and of 19 resections 7 only died, and these from pyemia, or too late operation. (Five in- ches of bone once removed.) As to the shaft of the bone, the same rule applies as in the thigh. If the injury of the soft parts is exten- sive, and the arteries and veins are wounded, then amputate. An artery wounded with the bone, may recover under favorable circum- stances, as in a case treated by Dr. Coolidge. We come now to the elbow joint; and here exsection is so encouraging, as to establish it, in my mind, as the plan. Macleod's report is very favorable. Stromeyer reports 40 cases, and only 6 deaths, with greater or less mobility in nearly all his cases. Guthrie says, if the olecranon, or other portion of a single bone is fractured, no operation is immedi- ately necessary; if both bones of a limb are injured, amputation was, but excision is now the rule. Saurel reports two similar cases, anchylosis in both, with discharge of fragments. Query : Which is preferable: operation with fair chance of mobility, or no operation and certain anchylosis ? Amputation of the forearm is rarely required; as the fragments may be easily removed, and the arteries tied. In, wounds of the hand, Guthrie says, we should saw through the metacarpal bones, and not open into the wrist, if possible to avoid it, though 1 acknowledge this does well if we can make sufficient flap to cover it. Stromeyer thinks that wounds of the wrist do not require amputation, unless there is extreme laceration. A case which occurred when the sec- ond row of carpus was traversed by a bullet, and yet recovery fol- lowed without the least interference with motion o'f the hand. When cases require active local depletion, use leeches or incisions to re- lieve tension of fibrous coverings. Removal of fragments of the metacarpal bones in preference to exarticulation, would be now adopted, either as a primary or secondary operation. Amputation of a finger is attended with very little danger. Tetanus has some- times, though rarely, followed. Stromeyer says there is not the least danger in primary operations, but after forty-eight hours, they may THE MILITARY SURGEON. 61 be followed by violent inflammation and obstinate suppuration, and not unfrequently by the stiffness of several fingers, or of the whole hand. We may say generally, that the removal of fragments of bone is now superseding amputation. It is scarcely necessary to discuss the various modes of perform- ing amputation, in a work of this chararter. I will only say that where there are two bones, as in the leg, I am in favor of the circu- lar. In the thigh or arm, I prefer the flap. 62 HAND-BOOK FOR CHAPTER VI. WOUNDS OF THE CHEST. Traumatic lesions of the thorax are among the most important that come under the observation of the military surgeon, whether we regard them in relation to the frequency of their occurrence, the importance of the parts exposed to injury, the interesting phe- nomena attending them, or the mortality resulting from them. In many cases they are almost instantaneously fatal from hemorrhage, or suffocation. A large proportion of the slain upon the battle field perish from penetrating wounds of the thorax. The mortality from such wounds in those brought from the field alive, is very great, whether the cavity is penetrated or not. Guthrie tells us, that after the battle of Toulouse which was fought on the 10th of April 1814, of 106 cases received in the hospital, 35 died between 12th April, and 28th June. From this, we may see how soon the man may die, and how long he may linger, fluctuating between life and death, and then perish. Even this time is by no means the limit of danger. Of the remainder of the 106, 14 were returned to duty, and the re- mainder, 57, were sent to England, some to die, and some to be pen- sioned, but very few of the latter were ever fit for service again. During the famous three days in Paris, in 1830, of 40 received in the Hotel Dieu where they had immediate attention and every comfort, 20 died; 10 seriously wounded, recovered; 7 more—in 6 of whom the cavity was not punctured—and 3 wounded by small swords only, recovered. We have also the statistics of 420 cases in the Crimea. Of these 118 died, 226 were returned to duty, and 76 were inval- ided. This includes chest wounds of all kinds; but when we sepa- rate the serious cases we find, 16 cases of lesions of the contents of the cavity without an external penetrating wound, of these, 9 died. Of 33 cases of penetrating wounds with the missile lodged, or sup- posed to be lodged, 31 died. Of all the penetrating wounds, there were 92 cases, and 74 deaths. The mortality of all chest wounds, was 31.50 of officers, and 28.09 of men; of actual lung wound, 69.56 officers, and 80.45 men. THE MILITARY SURGEON. 63 There has prevailed, among surgeons, great difference of opinion as to the mortality from these wounds. Wiseman says, that " al- most all gunshot wounds of the lungs are fatal—that many instances may be given, of recovery from gunshot wounds of the breast, but few from those in the lungs." Houston says, " all wounds penetrat- ing the cavity of the thorax, so as to admit air, are not certainly, nor instantaneously fatal, unless the apertures exceed that of the glottis." This is looking plainly to a certain mechanical cause for the deatff, which, we will find, has very little to do with it. John Bell remarks, that " wounds of substance of the lung are far from being fatal." Hennen says he has seen "many wounds of the tho- rax, from pike, sabre, and gunshot, do well ultimately." Dr. Gregory also testifies that " out of 26 wounds of the thorax, re- ceived at the battle of Quebec, two only were fatal." From a com- parison of these statistics and observations, we may learn both, how dangerous it'is our duty to pronounce this class of injuries, when we meet with them, and how much we may rely upon the resources of nature and art in the ultimate recovery of very unpromising cases. Wounds of the chest naturally divide themselves into wounds of the parietes, and wounds of the viscera contained within the cavity. Fraser, the most recent writer on the subject, has made a number of subdivisions, but I consider them unimportant, and shall not here discuss them separately. Woundsrof the parietes of the thorax may be of every form, from an incision or a puncture, involving the integument only, to a gun- shot wound penetrating to the pleura, fracturing one or more ribs, or the sternum or clavicle, and wounding an artery as e. g., an in- tercostal, or the internal mammary. The incised wound is a matter of little consequence, generally, and requires nothing more than the ordinary dressing, with stitches or adhesive plaster, or both. The other classes of wounds of the parietes are more serious, particularly in regard to their results. We may have a simple con- tusion of the soft parts without external solution of continuity, and apparently requiring no other treatment than rest, with local appli- cation of some form of fomentation—arnica, for example, and yet this may be followed by very serious consequences within the chest. Guthrie remarks, that the most simple of these results are pleuritis and pneumonia, or both, "yet," he continues, "many severe blows are not followed by such serious consequences," and he gives many cases illustrative of this fact. But sometimes from these blows and 64 HAND-BOOK FOR contusions, we have a tearing of the lung itself, and the case be- comes then most serious. When we have wounds, either incised or gunshot, penetrating to the pleura, we are to expect more or less inflammation of that organ, sometimes extending to the lung itself; this, however, does not always occur, but it is the part of prudence to be upon the watch for it. The most simple form of traumatic injury of the parietes, is a a stab by a sword or knife. There is but little pain, if any, attend- ing such a wound as this, though the patient is frequently very much frightened. His alarm sometimes assumes the appearance of true shock, and may communicate itself to the surgeon. 1 have seen several instances of this kind among men engaged in election riots and private brawls. In some of these instances, pleuritis succeeded the wound, though I felt sure the pleura was not punc- tured. I may bave been mistaken, however, the men were of in- temperate and irregular habits, and excited by liquor when tljeir wounds were received, and it is possible subsequent symptoms may have been aggravated from those causes. An aid-de-camp of Gen. Scott received a lance wound under the left scapula, in an affair with some Mexican guerrillas. I felt persuaded, in his case, that the thoracic cavity was not opened, though the pleura may have been injured. This officer's life Avas in great peril for weeks, from re- S lapse of pleuritis, and though now living and well, there are, no doubt, adhesions of the pleura in the part wounded. Bloody sputa may occur in these cases, in the course of the treatment, but as Hennen remarks, the hemorrhage is only second- ary, and is not so active or alarming, as pours out at once, when the lungs are wounded. In gunshot wounds of the parietes, the ball sometimes may carry in before it a fold of the handkerchief or the Bhirt, and be pulled out with them, and this either with or without having penetrated the cavity. It is well to bear this in mind, as we may suppose the ball to be lodged, and proceed to useless explora- tion, when the patient, if questioned, might save us this trouble and subsequent mystification. When the ribs are fractured, we can readily ascertain that fact, by introducing the end of the little finger into the wound. We may look for more serious consequences in these cases, with more pres- ent anxiety and collapse, than when the soft parts alone are impli- cated. The division of an artery will, of course, be made known by the hemorrhage. The treatment of a gunshot wound of the soft parts of the thoracic parietes, will not differ from that I have al- THE MILITARY SURGEON. 65 ready indicated to you, while discussing the general subject of the management of fractured ribs and hemorrhage. Penetrating wounds of the chest are a much more serious matter. Whether the contused viscera are wounded or not, they are always to be looked upon as dangerous, and call for great vigilance and care in their management. Where the viscera are not wounded, we have more pressing symptoms immediately, in the form of shock, anxiety, dyspnoea, and sometimes syncope, we are always to look for pleuritis and its consequences, and frequently pneumonia. When the lungs are wounded, we have, in addition, immediate danger from hemorrhage and suffocation from blood flowing into the air cells, and into the cavity of the thorax. The secondary dangers are also of an aggravated character—violent pleuritis and pneumo- nia, or rather congestions of the lungs, tedious suppuration, with hectic cough, emaciation, and, when the bones are injured, with exfoliation. In gunshot wounds, these dangers are liable to be aggravated by the lodgement of extraneous bodies within the cavity, e. g, balls, pieces of clothing, spicuke of bone, fragments of equipments, etc. These bodies, when lodged in the cavity of the chest, are always liable to excite local inflammation and its consequences, so that the patient can seldom be considered safe while they remain. Hennen tells us, that in deaths from these injuries, he has frequently found pieces of wadding, of clothes, of spiculae of bones, balls, etc.; and in one instance, a piece of the charpie, used in dressing the wound, either loose in various parts of the lungs or in sacs formed around them. Again, he says, these bodies may be lodged within the cavity or in the lungs, without producing immediate or eventual ill conse- quences. In those who recovered, however, the offending bodies have been discharged or extracted through the wound, and some- times even ejected by coughing. Guthrie confirms these observa- tions. He has seen pieces of wadding, of buttons, of bone, and of cloth, coughed up, but never a ball; though, it is said,, even this has occurred. After death, he has seen all these things loose in the chest. Balls more frequently become encysted, and remain without exciting inconvenience. A case is recorded of a man carrying a ball in his chest for forty year?. It was received at the battle of Waterloo. He died in London a few years ago. Hennen mentions cases in which they have been encysted in the substance of the lungs, and no inconvenience felt from them. Percy mentions instances in G QQ HAND-BOOK FOR which they have been known to roll about upon every motion of the patient. This I doubt. But however that may be, when they do remain, they are generally confined in sacs. Eraser has enumerated a number of cases of this sort—one in the Lancet for Jan., 1S47,— where a ball had lodged near the surface of the lung for 50 years; one in the Transactions of the Medico-Chirurgical Society, where a piece of iron hoop had remained in the chest 14 years. These cases are remarkable and interesting in showing such surprising tenacity of life under such severe injuries of the thorax. We can not ac- count for such results, especially when we contrast them with the great mortality following even thrusts with a small sword or the smallest pistol ball, implicating the viscera contained in the thorax. Hennen has given a report of a case, in which a man was wounded between the third and fourth ribs of the right side. The only sin- gularity about the case was, the large irregular wound, admitting three fingers. On the fifth day, while turning the man to examine the wound, a tumor was discovered upon the scapula, and upon opening it, supposing it to be the ball, the surgeon extracted the man's breast-plate, doubled up and enclosing the ball. This man was apparently doing well for three weeks, when he got into a vio- lent rage, and tore off the dressings, with the loss of his life for his pains. But the most remarkable case within my recollection is the one reported by Dr. Cooper, of San Francisco, a few years ago. A young man, 25 years of age, by the bursting of an old gun, was wounded in the side by a piece of old iron which had been used as a breech-pin. "It entered the left side fracturing the fourth rib, and remained in the chest until it was extracted seventy-four days afterward. The patient, at that time, was in a state of extreme prostration; purulent matter was discharging through the opening made by the slug; the left lung had lost its function, and ^the symp- toms of suffocation were most alarming." By a bold and very re- markable operation, after a search of three quarters of an hour with a sound, the body was discovered between the descending aorta and the heart. "The sound, was held against it until a pair of long lithotomy forceps was thereby conducted to the spot, and the breech- pin seized and extracted. The forceps could not follow the sound, and be sufficiently expanded to seize the metal, without lifting the apex of the heart considerably out of its position." The Doctor re- marks, that the patient recovered rapidly after the operation, and appeared to be as well a few months afterward, as he was before he THE MILITARY SURGEON. 67 received the injury, though the left breast remained somewhat sunken. Though, as we have said, we are to consider all penetrating wounds of the chest as very dangerous, still, if the lung is also wounded, the danger is seriously increased. It is a matter of great importance, then, to determine that fact; and this we shall find to be no easy task. One would naturally suppose that if we find a perforation made by a ball upon the surface of the chest, and an exit-hole at an opposite point, that the chest and its corresponding viscera had been traversed; but this is by no means always the case. Hennen says, he has traced a ball making a circuit of the lungs and escaping at a point opposite that of entrance, as if the man had been shot directly across; this also accompanied by bloody sputa, and yet the lung was untouched. Dupuytren asserts almost the same thing. "It happens," says he, "that a ball traverses the chest from side to side, without wounding the lung." Frazer as- serts, that even the conical rifle ball may be so deflected that, how- ever specious the appearances, the pleura may not have been en- tered, and, in many cases, most certainly, the lungs not wounded. The pleura appears to possess a resilient power that is sufficient to deflect the ball. We may note here, however, that though the pleura may not have been entered, still, in some of these cases, the lung may be torn, from the force of the blow, as occurs in other instances of external violence. When a ball traverses the chest, the wound of entrance will be found round, perhaps depressed, discolored, and more or less bloody; the wound of exit will be more of a slit, or a ragged rent, than a circular hole; the alarm is great, vital pow- ers depressed, the wound may or may not bleed externally, or per- haps even internally; the patient may spit more or less blood, the countenance pale, extremities cold, the pulse variable; the symp- toms depending upon or modified by the nature and extent of the injury, the temperament of the patient, etc. Guthrie thinks, that when balls run round the thorax without penetrating the cavity, and make their exit at the opposite side, it is the rare exception to the creneral rule, and depends upon them striking some impenetrable body, such as a piece of money, a button, a rib, or the like. In such cases, the symptoms of penetrating wounds do not occur, or they subside after the first alarm is over, though the various inflamma- tions may, and often do, follow. Eraser remarks, that in penetrating wounds of the chest, when the patient is placed before the surgeon without delay, there is often little or no anxiety, dyspnoea, or other 68 HAND-BOOK FOR urgent symptoms. This is in strong contrast with the alarming de- pression we always observe in penetrating wounds of the abdomen. This, as Fraser suggests, is probably due to the ganglionic system being more directly implicated in the latter. A man was wounded on the 18th June; the ball entered between the ninth and tenth ribs of the right side, posteriorly, and came out three inches from the umbilicus on the same side; no lung symptoms supervened. An- other man was wounded the same day; the ball entered anteriorly at the fourth right rib, and made its exit at the inferior angle of the right scapula; there was great depression. Ten days afterward, ab- sence of respiratory murmur, and slight dullness upon percussion of the base of the right lung. 8th July, respiratory murmur again heard, and no dullness. In a few days he was -returned to duty. Another, in the same battle, received a ball between the sixth and seventh right ribs, which passed out between the ninth and tenth of the same side. Dullness upon percussion, and absence of respira- tion at the posterior part of the right lung; no fever or lung symp- tom supervened. On the 8th July, the respiratory murmur had re- turned, but the dullness upon percussion remained. Another man was wounded on the 8th September, by a grape-shot, which entered at the left loin, passed transversely upward, and made its exit at the eighth left rib. This patient presented no lung symptoms, end his wounds were so nearly healed on the 20th September, that he was sent to his regiment. Mr. Fraser has given us a number of similar cases, but these are sufficient to sustain his remark as to the absence of symptoms in certain cases. The signs relied on by observers generally, as decisive of lung wound, in addition to depression, etc., are hemoptysis, dyspnoea, collapse of the wounded lung, traumatopncea, emphysema and pneumothorax. Guthrie says that bloody expectoration is positive proof that the lung is wounded, though the absence of this symptom does not prove the contrary. Schmucker, Stromeyer and John Bell all consider it a sign of lung wound. The latter says, " if the patient spit blood, 1 fear a wound of the lung; if he has an emphysema, I am sure of it." Dr. John Thomson says, '' that the lungs have been wounded, may be inferred with certainty in every case where a person spits blood immediately or soon after receiving a wound of the chest." Macleod says that "blood by the mouth and blood and air from the wound, are unequivocal proofs that the lungs have been injured." Hennen writes, " to discover whether the wound has injured the lungs or not, is a point which has given to the older surgeons ounce boxes), - Wax, sealing, - - no. 40 lb. X - no. 4 doz. 4 - no. 1 sticks. 2 NOTE.—Furniture of Mess Chest. 8 Basins, tin. 2 Boxes, pepper and salt. 6 Cups, tin. 4 Canisters, (for tea, coffee, sugar, and butter). 2 Dippers and ladles. 1 Grater. 1 Gridiron. 1 Kettle, tea, iron. 12 Knives and forks. 20 X 2 2 1 1 10 X l l l l 1 oz. and 2 oz. 6 Mugs, (Britannia. X pint-) 1 Pan, frying. 1 Pan, sauce. 8 Plates (6) and dishes, (2), tin. 1 Pot, iron. 2 Pots, coffee and tea, tin. 12 Spoons, iron, (table 6, and tea 2). 1 Tray, tin. 6 Tumblers, tin. S. REQUISITION FOR MEDICAL AND HOSPITAL SUPPLIES. Station: Period: From to Command : Officers, ; Enlisted Men, ; All others entitled to Medicines, ; Total, ARTICLES. T3 CI X a o c3 ARTICLES. 13 13 oj X S3 O 13 o> C S3 MEDICINES. " benzoici, ------ oz. " aromatici, - - - lb. Actlieris sulphurici loti, - - - - lb. Alcoholis,......bott. Ammonia? carbonatis, - - - - oz. " muriatis, - iD. Anthemidis, ------ lb. Antimoni et potass, tartratis, - - oz. Argenti nitratis (crystals) - - - oz. " " (fused) - - . oz. Bismuthi subnitratis, - - - - oz. " zinci carbonatis, - lb. > Collodii, - Copaibae, - - - - Creasoti, - - - - Cretae preparatae, - - - Cupri sulphatis, Emplastri adhaesivi, - ■ - " cantharidis, " ferri, - - - " hydrargyri, " ichthyocollas, - Extracti belladonnae, " buchu fluidi, " colchici acetici, " colocynthidis comp., " colombae fluidi, " conii, - - - " cubebae fluidi, " gentianae fluidi, " glycyrrhizae, " hyoscyami, " ipecaeuanhae fluidi, " piperis fluidi, - " pruni virg. fluidi, " rhei fluidi, " sarsaparillae fluidi, " senegae fluidi, - " sennae fluidi, " taraxaci fluidi, " Valerianae fluidi, - " zingiberis fluidi, Ferro iodidi, - - - " et quiniae citratis, " sulphatis, Gambogiae, - - - - lb. oz. lb. oz. yds. lb. lb. lb. yds. oz. lb. - lb. oz. - lb. lb. - lb. oz. - lb. oz. - lb. lb. - lb. lb. - lb. lb. - oz. lb. Guaiaci resinae, Hydrargyri chloridi corr,, " " mitis, " cum creta, " iodidi, " oxidi rubri, Iodinii, - Lini, - Liquoris ammoniae, " ferri iodidi, " potass, arsenitis, " sodse chlorinatae, " zinci chloridi/ Magnesiae, - _ - '" sulphatis, Massaa pil. hydrargyri, Mellis despumati, Morphias sulphatis, - Myrrhas, - - Olei anisi, - " cajuputi, " earyophylli, " cinnamomi, - ( menthas piperitae, ' morrhuae, ' olivae, - - - ( origani, ' ricini, - ( terebinthinae, ' tiglii, Picis abietis, - Plumbi acetatis, • Potassae acetatis, lb. oz. lb. lb. - lb. lb. - lb. oz. bott. bott. - lb. lb. - oz. lb. - dr. lb. - bott. bott. oz. qt. bott. qt. bott. dr. lb. - lb. lb. - lb. Requisition for Medical and Hospital Supplies— Continued. Potassas bioarbonatis, " bitartratis, " chloratis, " nitratis, - " sulphatis, Potassii cyanureti, " iodidi, - - . Pruni virginianas, Pulveris acacias, " aloes, - " cantharidis, " capsici, - - . " cinchonas, " ferri, - " per sulphatis, " glycyrrhiza, - " ipecacuanha1, ' et opii, " jalapas, " lini, - " opii, - - . " rhei, - " sabinas, " sinapis nigras, " ulmi, - - - Quassia,.....- - lb. Quiniae sulphatis, - oz. Rhei,.......oz' Sacchari, - - - - . n, Saponis, ------- jb Scillae, ---.__ oz Serpentariae, ------ lb. Sodas bioarbonatis, - ib, " boratis, ------ lb. " et potass, tartratis, - lb. Spigelias, -.....ib] Spiritus ammon. aromatici, - 0z. " aetheris compositi, - - - lb. " nitrici, - lb. " Lavandulae comp., - - - lb. " vini gallici, -" bott. Strychnias, ------ dr. Sulphuris loti, ----- ib. Syrupi scillas, ------ lb. Tincturos aconiti radieis, ... ib. " digitalis, ----- oz. ■' ergot* (Dublin) - oz. " ferri ehloridii, - - - - lb. " veratri viridis, - 0z. Unguenti hydrargyri, - lb. Unguenti hydrargyri nitratis, - - lb. Veratria1, ------- dr. Vini colchici seminis, - lb. i_» Zinci-acetatis, ------ oz. K> " sulphatis, ----- oz. INSTRUMENTS. Buck's spongeholder for the throat, - - no. Cupping glasses or tins, ... no. Dissecting, ----- - sets. Lancets, spring, ----- no. " thumb, - - no. Obstetrical, ------ sets. Pocket, ------ no. Scarificators, ----- no. Splints (assorted), - - - - - sets. Stethoscopes, - no. Stomach pump and case, - - - - no. Syringes, enema, - - - - - no. " penis, glass, ... - no. " " metallic, - no. " vagina, - - - - - no. Teeth extracting, - - - - - sets. Tongue depressor (hinge), - no. Tourniquets, field, - no. " spiral, - - - - - no. Trusses, hernia, - - - - - no. BOOKS. Anatomy, cop. Chemistry,......cop. Dispensatory, ------ cop. Medical dictionary, - - - - cop. " formulary, ... - cop. " jurisprudence and toxicology, cop. " practice, - cop. Obstetricy, --,--- cop. Regulations for medical department, - cop. Surgery, ------- cop. Blank, ------ no. Case,.......do. Meteorological register, - no. Order and letter,.....no. Prescription,.....no. Register, ------ no. Requisitions, ~) Returns, > no. Reports of sick, J HOSPITAL STORES. Arrow root, ------ lb Barley,.......lb Cinnamon, ------ lb Cloves, - -.....oz Cocoa,.....J lb Farina,.......lb Ginger, ground (Jamaica). - - - lb Nutmegs, ------- oz Tea,.......lb Whisky, bottles of,.....doz Wine, bottles of,.....doz Requisition for Medical and Hospital Supplies—Continued. BEDDING. Bed sacks, ------ no Bedsteads, iron, - po. Blankets, woolen, ----- no. Coverlets, ------ no. Gutta percha cloth, - - ' - - - yds. Mattresses, ------ no. Musquito bars, ------ no. Pillow cases, ------ no. _ " ticks, ------ no. Sheets, ------- no_ FURNITURE, DRESSINGS, Etc. Bandages, suspensory, - no. Binder's boards, ----- n0- Corks, assorted, ----- o m Total drawn for. Monthly allowance to each. Total allowance. REMARKS. Pounds. Pounds. ------ — ■ Total, I certify, on honor, that the above Requisition is correct and just, and that straw has not been drawn for any part of the time above charged. Surgeon. Received at , the of 18 , of Quartermaster United States Army, pounds of straw, in full of the above requisition. (signed duplicates.) Surgeon. K0IMV1 KOIt INQUISITION KOK KUKL. Iit'tfiiinilion for Fuel for the Hospital at. of 18' . for the month Total, Cord*. WOOD. I'Vot. I lielieH. COAI,. HiihIioIh. 1'oundn. R KM A It KM. No. of Kinm. I certify on honor, that the above roquiHilion il corroct inid JuhI, mid that I liuvo not drawn fuel for any part of the tiim above charged. Kiccicivici) at , the of , 18 , of , Qiimi toinniHlor U. S. Army, cord foot inchcx of wood, of OOlll, in full of the above rrqiiinitioti. (hkjnkd IN DUri.IOATR.) 1861. FORM FOR ACCOUNTS OF PURCHASES. The United States To A. B. J)r Anril. For $ ct.' I oertify that tho above articles wero purchased for the use of the Hospital at this post. Received at of the sum of in full of tho above account. A. B. PROVISION RETURN. Provision Return for men in Hospital for days, commencing on the , and ending on the 18 . STATION. RATIONS of REMARKS. Steward. oS 3 Nurses. *►» § n3 a M m u Sick. tn <« o to CS «^ 3 D bO «g 13 &, d « 3 fc £ o EH o Ph 0) s « 3 m o ti o o 02 0Q > Total. Due, - . - Retained, Surgeon., HOSPITAL STORES. Arrow root, Barley, -Etc., etc. ARTICLES. On hand at last return. Received since last return. Total to be accounted for. Expended with the sick. Issued. Lost or destroyed by unavoid-able accident. Worn out or unfit for use. Total expended, issued, etc. On hand. REMARKS. 81 SH s a a W 5S cr—i W SsUi Gq H a © cl .». W 00 3 bo o a. *j a, §" W < 05 > •s r/j H H O -i w OS w OC w s *■* S ^5 00 *i »J cl s prt ^5 «. H cl c^. W w a* «> H LH H ►w a 1—' «! QO 3 a. Sii a ITTXX •xiaNaddv MEDICINES. Acacia?, - - - - lb. Acidi acetici, - - - lb. " arseniosi (arsenic), - oz. Etc., etc. > H h-t o t-l Ul On hand at last return. Received since last return. . Total to be accounted for. Expended with the sick. Issued. Lost or destroyed by unavoida-ble accident. Worn out or unfit for use. Total expended, issued, etc. On hand. > W m a 31 S» 5s-> S a cl a. W to * o o C Pr- ►=1 oa S •s a cs r-l aj «> i—i s <2 O ^a a, Ul ^ *■* Cto 3 W a. H a^ a a. <§ ■xioiiadav ATXX REGISTER OF SICK. No. NAMES. a 03 P3 a o g 'So 3 cS s o o '3 a o 13 «> a 3 id u o .a M 3 o 3 S o 13 » OS « S -a £ oi o a E-ttC T3 '3 3 ft •■J> REMARKS. 3 > CO Wool Overalls. Cotton Overalls. . Wool Jackets. Cotton Jackets. Cotton Shirts. Flannel Shirts. Boots. Stockings. Blankets. Forage Caps. Great Coats. Great Coat straps. Leather Stocks. Drawers. Date of issue. BY WHOM ISSUED. TIAXX ■xiaNaddv SURGEON'S MORNING REPORT. £ < Morning Report of the Surgeon at , >> a d a o O REMAINING AT LAST REPORT. a o H TOTAL. Returned to duty. Discharged. 13 5 REMAINING. DATE. "3 '&, o l-H 3 M a u 3 3 "3 'E, o 3 M o 3 C? 3 M In Hospital. o 3 3 M REMARKS. APPENDIX. XXIX DISCHARGES ON SURGEON'S CERTIFICATE, AND DEATHS. NAME. Surname. Christian name. Rank. Regi- ment. Com- pany. Disoase. Dato of dis- charge from service. Date of death. REMARKS. Note -Discharges on surgeon's certificate, and deaths occurring among those of the command not on sick report, will be also reported, but separated from the others by a double line drawn across the page. The remarks will in each case specify the manner in which the disease originated, when it is known. REPORT OF SICK AND WOUNDED. Report of the sick and wounded at for the quarter ending TAKEN SICK OR RECEIVED INTO HOSPITAL DURING THE QUARTER. classes of diseases. Month, - FIRST. SECOND. THIRD. TOTAL BY EACH DISEASE. TOTAL BY EACH CLASS. Specific diseases. o X "3 o ft 0) o3 O X "3 ft 03 O X "3 o ft to el X S3 ft el O X "3 o ft Fevers. Eruptive fevers. Febris Congestiva, -Febris Continua Communis, -Febris Intermittens Quotidiana, Febris Intermittens Tertiana, Febris Intermittens Quartana, -Febris Remittens, - - -Febris Typhoides, -Febris Typhus, -Febris Typhus leterodes, All other diseases of this class, Erysipelas, - - - -Rubeola, -Scarlatina, -Variola, -Varioloides, -All other diseases of this class, • Diseases of the or- gans connected with the diges- tive system. Diseases of the respiratory sys- tem. Carry forward, Cholera Asiatica, - - - Cholera Morbus, - - - Colica, - - - - - Constipatio, - - - - Diarrhoea Acuta, - Diarrhoea Chronica, Dysenteria Acuta, - - - Dysenteria Chronica, - Dyspepsia, - - - - Enteritis, - - - - Gastritis, - - - - Haematemesis, - Hepatitis Acuta, - Hepatitis Chronica, Icterus, . . - - Parotitis, - Peritonitis, - - - - Splenitis, - - - - Tonsillitis, - - - - All other diseases of this class, Asthma, - - - - - Bronchitis Acuta, - - - Bronchitis Chronica, Catarrhus Epidemicus, - Catarrhus, - Haemoptysis, - - - Laryngitis, - Phthisis Pulmonalis, - Pleuritis, - - - - Pneumonia, - - - - All other diseases of this Report of Sick and Wounded—Continued. TAKEN SICK OR RECEIVED INTO THE HOSPITAL DURING THE QUARTER. CLASSES OF DISEASES. Month, - FIRST. SECOND. THIRD. TOTAL BY EACH DISEASE. TOTAL BY EACH CLASS. Specific diseases. a5 c3 X ft CD cS X "3 o ft CD C3 o X "3 cd ft o O X a CD ft CD o X 03 CD ft Diseases of the circulatory sys- -tern. Diseases of the brain and nerv- • ous system. Aneurisma, - - - -Angina Pectoris, Carditis, -Endocarditis, - - - -Pericarditis, -Phlebitis, -Varicocele, - - - -Varix, - - - - -All other diseases of this class. A-poplexia, ... -Cephalalgia, -Cerebritis, -Chorea, -Delirium Tremens, - - -Epilepsia, -Ictus Solis, - - - -Irritatio Spinalis, Mania, - - - - - Diseases of the urinary and genital organs, and venereal affections. Diseases of the serous exhalent vessels. Diseases of the fibrous a o o "3 c H Total. CD 1 Ratio per qr. DIRECTIONS. In regard to this Report, the utmost punctuality and exactness will be required. It will be accompanied with a general Sanitary Report, to be written on alternate pages of foolscap paper, with a margin of one inch on the left side of each page, and to be folded in four equal folds; in which the medical officer will furnish information respecting all those agencies which may have influenced the sickness and mortality of the troops—such as the medical topography of the station; the climate ; prevalent diseases in the vicinity ; the duty and employment of the troops; the nature of their barrack and hospital accommo- dations; diet; water; clothing, and general habits of the men as to cleanliness, temperance, etc. Cases of unusual interest will be reported in detail. Diseases of women and children, if given, must be reported separately. No duplicate of this report is required. xxxvm APPENDIX. MUSTER Muster Roll of Steward, Wardmaster, Cooks, Nurses and Matrons, the day of , 18 , when last NAMES. Present and absent. HOW MUSTERED IN THE ARMY. No. Rank. a 03 a o O Regi-ment. ENLISTED. When. Where. By whom. Period. RECAPITULATION. Present. Absent. For duty, - - - Sick, . - - - In arrest, or confinement, f On detached service, | On furlough, \ Without leave, I Sick, - - - - I In arrest, or confinement, Strength—Present and Absent, Joined. f Enlisted in hospital, By re-enlistment, By transfer, - From desertion, - - - f Expiration of service, j For disability, - - - Discharged. \ By sentence of G. C. Martial, By civil authority, [ By order, - Transferred, - ("Killed in action, - -j Of wounds, - - - [From disease,etc., - Deserted, - - Died. APPENDIX. XXXIX ROLL. attached to the Hospital of mustered, to the day of , army of the United States, from 18 . attached to hospital. LAST PAID. (See note 7 of Remarks.) BOUNTY. Act June 17, '50. (See note 4 of Remarks.) names. Present. When. How em-ployed. By pay-master. To what time. Paid. Dolls. Due. Dolls. •4 H I certify, on honor, that this Muster Roll is made out in the manner re- quired by the printed notes ; that it exhibits the true state of the Hospital Department for the period herein mentioned; that the " Remarks " set op- posite each name are accurate and just; and that the *' Recapitulation " exhibits in every particular the true state of the Hospital, as required by the Regulations and the Rules and Articles of War. Station : Date : Surgeon, in charge of Hospital. I certify, on honor, that I have carefully examined this Muster Roll; that I have mustered and minutely inspected the hospital attendants ; and that the police and general condition of the Hospital Department is found to be as follows. 14 Inspector and Mustering Officer. Xl APPENDIX. Muster Roll—Continued. NOTES. 1.—Under the head of Remarks, the date of any soldier's joining, whether originally, or from any absence; all changes of rank, by promotion, appoint- ment, or reduction, with date of same, and No., date, etc., of order; all au- thorized stoppages, fines, sentences, with No., date, etc., of order, etc.; in case of absence, the nature and commencement of, No., date, etc., of order, and period assigned for same (to be repeated on every roll xohile it lasts); if wounded in battle, or injured on duty—if side, or confined, a remark to that effect, etc., must be carefully stated opposite to the name of the person con- cerned, with everything else necessary, either to account fully for every indi- vidual, to guide the paymaster, or ensure justice to the soldier, and to the United States. 2.—In noting stoppages to be made for loss or damage to public property, the gross amount due for Ordnance, Horse Equipments, Clothing, etc., will bo separately stated in the order enumerated in par. 1187, G. R. 3.—Additional pay, due under Sec. 2, Act of Aug. 4, 1854, will be thus noted, viz.: " For 1st re-enlist., $2 pr. mo.; " or, " For 2d re-enlist., $3 pr. mo.;" or, " For 3d re-enlist.,$4 pr. mo.; " etc. That due under Sec. 3 of the same act, thus : " For cert, of merit, $2 per mo." That due under Sec. 4 of the same act, thus: " In lieu of comm., §2 pr. mo." 4.—The installments of Bounty due under Sec. 3, Act of June 17,1850, are paid as follows: f-g-, -$, ^, i, at the end of the 1st, 2d, 3d, and 4th years, respectively, the remainder at the expiration of enlistment; and will, under the head of Remarks, be noted thus : " Ret'd Bounty due, 1st (or 2d, 3d, etc.) inst. $—." See G. 0. 20 of 1850. Besides which, in the col- umns headed "Bounty Paid" and "Bounty Due," must be entered in figures, the whole amount hitherto paid, and the whole amount yet due, on ac- count of said bounty. 5.—The "three months' extra pay," for re-enlistment, under Sec. 29, Act of July 5, 1838, being paid by the recruiting officer, should not be noted on the muster rolls. 6.—The roll of those belonging to the hospital, will be immediately fol- lowed by that of those who, since last muster, have ceased to belong to it. These will be classed in the following order, viz.: Discharged, Transferred, Died, Deserted; and the utmost particularity will be observed in the remarks concerning them. Date and place will, in every case, be given; and No., date, etc., of orders, or description of authority, be always carefully specified. Soldiers discharged and re-enlisted, or who have deserted and been retaken, since last muster, have their place in both of the above rolls. APPENDIX. Xli 7.—The remark " discharge and final statements given " will be made oppo- site to the name of every discharged soldier, to whom such papers have ac- tually been given. But the blank spaces under the head of Last Paid, are to be filled as usual. 8.—In all cases of " re-enlistment" prior to the expiration of the term of service, the discharge on the old enlistment will be given at the time the soldier " re-enlists," from and on which day, his pay on the new enlistment will commence. 9.—Within three days after each regular muster, the mustering officer or commandant of the post, will transmit to the Adjutant General a copy of the muster roll of each company. Blanks will be supplied from the Adju- tant General's Office, and will be acknowledged on the first muster roll for- warded after their receipt. - .RECORD Of Events which may be necessary or useful for future reference of the War Department, or for present information. PAY ROLL OF THE HOSPITAL. Pay Roll of the Hospital, from the day of , 18 , when last paid, to the day of , 18 Period paid for. Pay per month. Amount of pay. Retained pay. Bounty. Total am't due. Am't of stoppages. Balance. paid. Received payment of. Witness. Paid. Dolls. Due. Dolls. Months. Days. Dolls. Dolls. Cts. Dolls. Cts. Dolls. Cts. Dolls. Cts. Dolls. Cts. t Note —Three muster and pay rolls are made at each muster—one to be retained with the hospital records, and two for the PaymasterOneT^S-roll is It the same time forwarded to the Adjutant General. The muster and pay roll blank is used for this purpose, the « pay roll" portion being cut off. See « General Orders," No. 9, of February 12 18ol. I *fira--T7a^*i«l*5«!*.-' - -. \~......, j y:%? «i*:f *■?--*-#•- - i«w;t inn '•'i Rp«t;{ •** ' '-*:#« *«'«*:■ *;' » •> " i Rw;«v ■■\ «;;i;«;^x" 'H ^^;:??^:;x::^sS:>i>:ssiij •8 ❖ivXy^ It1 4H*.> *:♦ - », 'x't>. 1'