Articles: wounds-history.
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Biography Historical Article
The most triumphant death. The passing of Vice-Admiral Lord Horatio Nelson 21st October 1805.
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Biography Historical Article
A neuroforensic analysis of the wounds of President John F. Kennedy: Part 2--A study of the available evidence, eyewitness correlations, analysis, and conclusions.
A substantial body of literature exists surrounding the assassination and subsequent pathological examination of President John F. Kennedy. In the first part of this series, we provided a previously undocumented eyewitness account by a neurosurgeon of what transpired in Trauma Room 1 of Parkland Memorial Hospital on November 22, 1963. ⋯ The autopsy report, ballistics data, official reviews of the autopsy data, and Dr. Grossman's observations are correlated in an effort to provide a neuroforensic analysis of the nature of the wounds that President Kennedy sustained. The final article of the series will relate the wounds to the timing of the shots and the location of the President as his limousine traversed Dealey Plaza and will discuss the sites from which the bullets could have been fired.
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Biography Historical Article
Nelson's wound: treatment of spinal cord injury in 19th and early 20th century military conflicts.
During the first half of the 19th century, warfare did not provide a background for a systematic analysis of spinal cord injury (SCI). Medical officers participating in the Peninsular and Crimean Wars emphasized the dismal prognosis of this injury, although authors of sketchy civil reports persuaded a few surgeons to operate on closed fractures. The American Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion was the first text to provide summary of results in 642 cases of gunshot wounds of the spine. ⋯ Open large wounds or cerebrospinal fluid leakage, signs of cord compression in recovering patients, delayed clinical deterioration, or intractable pain required surgical exploration. Wartime recommendations for urological and skin care prevented sepsis, and burgeoning pension systems provided specialized longterm rehabilitation. By the Armistice, the effective surgical treatment and postoperative care that had developed through decades of interaction between civil and military medicine helped reduce incidences of morbidity and dispel the hopelessness surrounding the combatant with an SCI.
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Case Reports Biography Historical Article
Fatal spinal cord injury of the 20th president of the United States: day-by-day review of his clinical course, with comments.
This article presents the medical history of the 20th president of the United States, James A. Garfield, with an emphasis on his spinal cord injury (SCI). Numerous references debate the care he received from the medical and surgical perspectives, but little has been written about the essential aspect of his gunshot wound-namely, the damage to his spinal cord. President Garfield was shot in the lumbar spine and was bedridden until he died 80 days following his injury. This article contrasts state-of-the-art care in 1881 to today's standards of care for SCI. ⋯ Deficiencies in general medical care and surgical technique at the time contributed to the president's demise. This case was marked by controversies that still are debated today-for example, whether the bullet should have been removed surgically. Examination of available evidence suggests that with today's advances in medical, surgical, and SCI medicine, a person with this type of injury would likely survive and be a candidate for rehabilitation.
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Biography Historical Article
The assassination of President John F Kennedy: a neuroforensic analysis--part 1: a neurosurgeon's previously undocumented eyewitness account of the events of November 22, 1963.
SUBSTANTIAL LITERATURE EXISTS on the assassination and subsequent pathological examination of President John F. Kennedy. The Warren Report, the United States Government's official report on the assassination, instead of providing definitive answers on the precise cause of President Kennedy's death, sparked intense and on-going debate. ⋯ A neuroforensic analysis of the wounds, from the perspective of the neurosurgeon, would establish a reasonable hypothesis for the mechanics of the shooting. Eyewitness accounts of the events surrounding the assassination represent one critical source of data for such an analysis. This report provides a previously undocumented neurosurgeon's eyewitness account of what transpired in Trauma Room 1 of Parkland Memorial Hospital on November 22, 1963.