The Lancet Practice by Telephone
The Lancet Practice by Telephone
The Lancet Practice by Telephone
METEOROLOGICAL READINGS.
THE Yankees are rapidly finding out the benefits of the telephone. A
(Taken daily at 8 a.m. by Steward’s Instruments.)
newly made grandmamma, we are told, was recently awakened by the
THE LANCET OFFICE, Nov. 27th, 1879. bell at midnight, and told by her inexperienced daughter, " Baby has
the croup. What shall I do with it ?" Grandmamma replied she
would call the family doctor, and would be there in a minute. Grand-
mamma woke the doctor, and told him the terrible news. He in turn
asked to be put in telephonic communication with the anxious
mamma. "Lift the child to the telephone, and let me hear it cough,"
he commands. The child is lifted, and it coughs. "That’s not the
croup," he declares, and declines to leave his house on such small
matters. He advises grandmamma also to stay in bed; and, all anxiety
quieted, the trio settle down happy for the night.
of oxygen has not yet received
Experimenter.—The physiological effect
the attention it deserves from the profession. Dr. Cornelius Fox’s
work on Ozone will give the most recent observations.
Cause and Cure of Hesitation of Speech, 1828) thought that the essence
municating directly with the drain into which the watercloset empties of the affection consisted in the patient trying habitually to speak when
itself. In the other houses, and where we rarely have fever, the slop- the chest was exhausted of air. And
stone pipes open (over a grate) into the drain, and so there is no direct
-
’
Becquerel (Traité sur le Begaiement,
connexion with the houses and the drains, consequently no sewage
1848), himself a stutterer, believed that an inability to retain the breath
sufficiently long for the purposes of speech was at the root of the malady.
poison can be evolved into the dwellings. But, of course, the effort to speak with an exhausted chest would be
Yours respectfully, the natural result of an inability to retain the breath, and this want of
November 17th, 1879. S. L. retentive power over the breath is exactly what we should expect from
A Sufferer.—Cajeput oil has been recommended as a remedy for chil- a chorea of the vocal cords, which would prevent a steady occlusion of
the glottis. In the practical application of their theories, both M’Cormac
blains. Also solution of sulphate of copper (four grains to the ounce). ’
and Becquerel had a good deal of success, and it appears beyond a doubt
Information on the subject will be found in THE LANCET, vol. i. 1875,’ that a
great many cases of stuttering can be cured if the patient’s atten.
pp. 36, 74, 110. tion be directed towards keeping the chest always well filled with air.
Dr. Fleming.—The fee named is absurd. Demand the guinea, and1 I am, Sir, your obedient servant,
appeal to the Local Government Board. Finsbury-square, Nov. 18th, 1879. GORDON HOLMES.
821
NEWSPAPER NOTICES OF MEDICAL WORK. Mr. H. E. Giffard.—If a practitioner undertakes to attend midwifery
THE has the following paragraph in
Pontypridd District Herald a pro- cases, and sends an unqualified assistant, he evidently fails in his
, minent place,:- "LLWYNPIA. engagement, and the contract in law would, we apprehend, not be
"LITHOTOMY.—This rare operation was successfully performed
binding. We do not know that any action can be taken successfully
last Thursday by Dr. Henry Naunton Davies, Cymmer, and staff, at against a practitioner employing an unqualified assistant, unless some
the above place on a lad named Lloyd, twelve years old. It resulted injury to the patient result. But it is clearly wrong in a qualified
’
in the extraction of a renal calculus of the mulberry kind. The lad practitioner to lead a patient to understand that she is to have his
is progressing very favourably. This is another evidence of the skill attendance, and then send an unqualified assistant. The practitioner
of our well-known local surgeon." in such a case would be in an unenviable position. In signing a death
This is a bad specimen of a very objectionable kind of paragraph. certificate, the actual qualifications should be given, and not the sup-
We may be assured that illr. Davies is quite innocent of its appear- posed titles attaching thereto.
ance. But he must have some very indiscreet and fussy friend, Pineal Gland.—1. Walshe.-2. Murchison.-3. There can be no reason
who, though medical enough to know the differences of calculi, is to the contrary.
so little learned in surgery as to describe lithotomy as a rare opera-
THE PHYSIOLOGY OF THE LARYNX.
tion, and to call upon an uninformed population to gape in wonder at
a surgeon for performing it. We cannot so much blame lay news-
To the Editor of THE LANCET.
papers for inserting such paragraphs as we blame medical men who SIR It was only two days ago that I received Mr. Holmes’s reply to
contribute them for publication. The following paragraph from the my second letter.
Whatever be the name given to the current theory of voice production,
Sydney Echo is liable to the same criticism, and calls for the severest it cannot be denied that the so-called longitudinal tension or stretching of
investigation by the Scotch graduates who are belauded for doing the vocal cords by the crico-thyroid muscles forms an essential part of it.
their duty :-
Mr. Holmes now tries to distinguish between longitudinal tension and
"Two important operations were performed this morning at the longitudinal stretching, although he cannot escape from the fact that in
infirmary. The first case was that of a lad named Percy Chapman, all the experiments yet made upon the larynx, the vocal cords were
about sixteen years of age, suffering from stone. Dr. M’Laurin suc- actually stretched and relaxed to procure a rise and fall in the pitch of
cessfully performed the operation of lithotomy, after placing the the voice. But if, as Mr. Holmes admits I rightly argue, the crico-
patient under chloroform. Dr. Cox amputated the left foot of a young thyroid muscles have no such action, then I believe that Tyndall, Helm-
woman named Louisa Murray, aged nineteen. The bone of the foot
holtz, Wyllie, and others will be the last to say that Muller’s experi-
had become diseased, hence the necessity for the operation. Both ments are of the slightest value.
patients are doing as well as can be expected." I do not deny that notes have been produced in this way "an octave
and more above the pitch the subjects in life could have emitted by
HÆMORRHAGE DURING PREGNANCY. parallel means." But it is well known that notes thus produced are
To the Editor of THE LANCET. more like the strains of a penny trumpet than the human voice, and a
pure falsetto note has never been emitted by any method of experi-
SIR,—I read with much interest Mr. Rean’s report of a case under the mentation yet devised.
above heading. I have had one very similar under treatment lately, If therefore, Sir, it should come to be admitted by all, as it has been
though, to judge by Mr. Rean’s description, my case was much more already by Mr. Holmes, that " the simple and obvious means for alter-
severe, also the haamorrhage began in the third month. ing the pitch of the voice," which are now adopted, are unnatural, it
On August 5th, 1879, I attended Mrs. S- for a " slight show" and a will remain for us to seek some other, and perchance to "go out of our
little pain, for which I ordered complete rest and prescribed opium. way after" theories which are complex and at first sight indefinite.
She continued to improve till the 18th, when at 11 P.M. I was called in a To this field of inquiry I again invite him, with a reminder that it may
hurry to see her. I found her perfectly blanched, with a thready pulse be his luck to fill that "little room" which he tells us is still open for
of 110 per minute, and rambling in an almost inaudible voice. On pro- some one holding new opinions on voice production.
ceeding to make a vaginal examination, I found the bed saturated with Yours faithfully,
blood, and the haemorrhage still going on freely. A clot engaged the C. R. ILLINGWORTH, M.B.
os uteri, which I at once removed, applied cold cloths to the vulva The Camp, Newcastle, Natal, South Africa, Sept. 29th, 1879.
and over the pubes, and administered brandy and opium. This had the Dr. Joy Jeffries.—We are not aware that the gentleman has written on
effect of reviving her in a short time ; after that the pains, which I was
colour-blindness. The reference was to a case that had been cited in
then told had been frequent, came on with considerable force, so much
a correspondence in The Times. There was, as far as we recollect,
so that I quite expected to find the ovum come away in a short time.
However, I was mistaken, for the pains soon became weak again, and nothing very special about the case. A costermonger was at first very
the intervals longer. There was consequently a return of the hæmor- slow at sorting colours; but with a little practice he attained average-
rhage ; and seeing no possible chance of saving the ovum, I determined skill, though he may not perhaps have become quite perfect. He had
to hasten its removal by stimulation with ergot. I administered a large a " bad" eye for colour, as some have a bad ear for music, and he had
dose (one drachm of liquid extract}, and the effect surprised me some- not learnt his colour-alphabet. Training remedied the imperfection.
what, as it produced a little continuous pain, which checked the heemor- J. W. G.=The Reading-room of the British Museum, or the Library of£
rhage again. From this time she gradually grew better, and the brandy, the Royal College of Surgeons.
which I had been giving at frequent intervals in small doses, I ordered
to be given every couple of hours till I should see her the following day. Mr. T. Moore.-Yes.
When on the following morning I did see her, I was much pleased with i "ISLEWORTH HOVELS."
the improvement in her condition generally, though a slight trickling
To the Editor of THE LANCET.
still went on ; for this I prescribed sulphate of magnesia in one-drachm
doses, combined with tincture of opium and dilute sulphuric acid, of SIR,—In a late number of THE LANCET you quoted an article from the
Richmond and Ttvickenham Times, giving a description of the so-called
each fifteen drops every four hours. To my great satisfaction, I found at
Isleworth hovels, and you congratulate that paper on the good work it
my next visit this had had the effect of checking the hasmorrhage, and at
the same time it served to keep the bowels open, thereby counteracting was doing in exposing the existence of such places. There is one draw-
the effect of the tincture of opium which she had been taking. In a day back to the good work it is doing-viz., its description lacks the essential
or two I lessened the dose of sulphate of magnesia to half a drachm, as elements of truth.
the former dose had begun to act rather freely on the bowels. In quoting from that paper, after describing the supposed wretched
To save unnecessary length of details throughout this rather long condition of these hovels, you say that the sanitary authorities have not
case, I may summarily say she had three subsequent attacks, though even tried to remedy them. This is utterly false, as the Local Board
much less severe, between that time and October 6th, since when have compelled the owners of the properties referred to to do a great
there has been no return of the haemorrhage. Nevertheless, my patient deal to them, and these improvements have been reported in the very
"would not rest contented without a bottle of the medicine in the
paper that now says nothing has been done. Since reading the article I
house," in which she has immense faith, to take a dose of at once in case
requested Mr. Bullock, the medical officer of health, to visit these
of need. She now tells me she can feel the child quite plainly, though
not so strongly as formerly. She has had six children and three miscar-
places, which he did, and reported at the last meeting of the Local
Board that they were in a fair condition. I also asked Mr. Hunter, the
riages, generally in the third month. district medical officer of the Brentford Union (and consequently very
I might ’add that prior to conception Mrs. S- had been under my
often in these places), what he thought of them, and he replied that
treatment for heart disease (a mitral diastolic murmur). there was very little to complain of. The article goes on to say that on&
I am, Sir, yours faithfully,
part of Isleworth is well known by the appropriate name of the Rookery.
C. B. TOWNSHEND, L.K.Q.C.P.L, &c.
TOWXSHEND, L.K.Q.C.P.I., &C.
This is referring to the town wharf. Though I have lived in Isleworth.
Eastbourne, Nov. 4th, 1879. all my life, I have never heard it called so, and I cannot find a single
MEDICAL OFFICERS IN BRITISH GUIANA AND THE WEST INDIES. person that has.
I shall be glad if you will insert this contradiction to the article copied
Enquirer would esteem it a favour if "A Bengal Civil Surgeon" wouldL into THE LANCET from the Richmond and Twickenham Times, as if
furnish him with further details concerning appointments in the above these remain uncontradicted they are likely to do much injury
reports
places. How are they obtained? Is interest required? Are vacancies to the neighbourhood.-I am, Sir, yours truly,
frequently occurring1 Is there any difficulty in obtaining such ap- ALBERT B. DAY, M.R.C.S.E., &c.,
pointments? Nov. 1879. Member of the Heston and Isleworth Local Board.
822
4. S.-Most of the particulars required will be found on reference to the
advertisement which appears regularly in our columns ; but without
certificates nothing can in the present state of the law be done in the
matter. Nevertheless, an application might be made to the Medical
Medical Diary for the ensuing Week.
Superintendent, who will supply all the information desired.
Monday, Dec. 1.
ROYAL LONDON OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL, MOORFIELDS. - Operations,
UNUSUAL INJURY TO THE EAR. 10½ A.M. each day, and at the same hour.
ROYAL WESTMINSTER OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL.—Operations, 1½ P.M. each
To the Editor of THE LANCET.
day, and at the same hour.
SIR,—The following curious case, which has come under my notice ST. MARK’S HOSPITAL.—Operations, 2 P.M.
within the last few days, may be of interest to some of your readers. METROPOLITAN FREE HOSPITAL.-Operations, 2 P.M.
W. H-, aged twenty-four, states that "about two months ago he ROYAL ORTHOPÆDIC HOSPITAL.-Operations, 2 P.M.
ROYAL INSTITUTION.—5 P.M. General Monthly Meeting.
had a bad cold, and whilst blowing his nose rather violently he felt ODONTOLOGICAL SOCIETY. - 8 P.M. Professor Flower, "On some recent
something crack in his left ear, without any pain, but immediately he Specimens of Abnormal Dentition in the College of Surgeons
felt the wind go through his ear." He lost his hearing directly, and has Museum."-Casual Communications from Dr. Walker, Mr. F. Canton,
been quite deaf ever since. He cannot hear a watch tick when laid and Mr. Van der Pant.
right over the meatus. Whenever he tries to blow his nose, he is unable MEDICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON. -8 P.M. Dr. Lichtenberg will showa
to do it without first putting his finger over the ear to keep the wind in. Splint for Excision of Knee-joint in Cases treated Antiseptically,-
Mr. J. Knowsley Thornton: "Ovariotomy following Incision, long
When placed with the ear close to a jet of gas, and asked to blow his
Drainage, and supposed Case of Ovarian Tumour" (three Cases).-
nose, the flame is distinctly moved, and the current of air can be plainly Mr. H. A. Reeves, "On the Treatment of some Affections of the
heard rushing out. My patient is very much afraid lest his other ear Urethra and Bladder in the Female."
should give way in the same manner. Can any of your readers suggest
any artificial remedy for the deafness ?-Yours faithfully, Tuesday, Dec. 2.
F. C. BRETT, L.R.C.P. Lond. ST. MARK’S HOSPITAL.-Operations, 9 A.M.
Rddlington, Nov. 14th, 1879. Guy’s HOSPITAL. -Operations, I½ P.M., and on Friday at the same hour,
"COLOTOMY BY A PARROT." WESTMINSTER HOSPITAL.-Operations, 2 P.M.
NATIONAL ORTHOPÆDIC HOSPITAL.—Operations, 2 P.M.
To the Editor of THE LANCET. WEST LONDON HOSPITAL.-Operations, 3 P.M.
SIR.,-Allow me to call attention to the fact that Mr. John Wood, in PATHOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON.—8½ P.M. The following Specimens
his remarks on the performance of colotomy by a New Zealand parrot will be shown :-Calvaria from a Case of Congenital Syphilis ; Cancer
(Nestor notabilis), reported in THE LANCET of the 8th instant, p. 692, of Gall-bladder, Ulceration into Duodenum ; Enchondroma of the
Arm ; Aneurism of Aorta, Hæmorrhage into Pericardium ; Emphy-
omitted to state that, though Mr. De la Tour was the first to describe
sematous Cyst of the Lung with Atelectasis; Congenital Syphilitic
the curious operation, the change in the bird’s habits from fruit-eating Bone Disease ; Supposed Rupture of Roots of Brachial Plexus
to flesh-eating had long ago been made familiar to English naturalists (living specimen); Two Cases of peculiar Skin Disease (living
by Mr. Thos. H. Potts, in Nature for 1871, vol. iv., p. 489. specimens). Card: Two Specimens of Aneunsm at back of Heart;
Your obedient servant, Myosarcoma of Head of Tibia.-Specimens on view at 8 P.M.
Kilburn, Nov. 22nd, 1879. HENRY T. WHARTON, M.A.
ERRATUM.—In the sixth line of the fourth paragraph of the letter on
Wednesday, Dec. 3.
MIDDLESEX HOSPITAL.-Operations, 1 P.M.
"Medical Relief on a Loan System," page 784, for "must," read may. ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S HOSPITAL. - Operations, 1½ P.M., and on Saturday
COMMUNICATIONS, LETTERS, &c., have been received from-Dr. Southey, at the same hour.
ST. THOMAS’S HOSPITAL. - Operations, 1½ P.M., and on Saturday at the
London ; Sir Henry Thompson, London ; Mr. G. Buckstone Browne, same hour.
London; Mr. Bernard Roth, Brighton ; Dr. Thorburn; Dr. Johnstone, KING’S COLLEGE HOSPITAL. - Operations, 2 P.M., and on Saturday at
Danville, U.S.A. ; Dr. Pratt, Newtown ; Mr. Blakiston, London; Mr. 1 P.M.
LONDON HOSPITAL.-Operations, 2 P.M., and on Thursday and Saturday
Robinson, Hull; Mr. W. Marston, London ; Dr. Williamson, London; at the same hour.
Dr. Spencer Smyth, London ; Dr. Brakenridge, Edinburgh; Mr. Ellis, GREAT NORTHERN HOSPITAL.-Operations. 2 P.M.
Shipley; Dr. Whipham, London; Dr. Gillespie, London; Mr. Day, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE HOSPITAL. - Operations, 2 P.M., and on Saturday
Isleworth ; Mr. Sheppard, Ashford ; Dr. Slesser, Bramley; Mr. at the same hour.
SAMARITAN FREE HOSPITAL FOR WOMEN AND CHILDREN. - Operations,
Garnell, London; Messrs. Nelson and Co., London ; Mr. J. Seaman, 2½ P.M.
London; Mr. Marsdin, Eastbourne ; Mr. Lowther, Torquay; Messrs. OBSTETRICAL SOCIETY OF LONDON.—8 P.M. Specimens : Ruptured Fal-
Tullot and Son, London; Mr. Footner, Tunbridge Wells; Dr. Jeffries, lopian Tube, by Dr. Godson; Menstrual Decidua &c., by Dr. Galabin;
Boston, U.S.A. ; Dr. Arthur, Airdrie; Mr. Rutherford, Wakefield ; Milk Gelatinous Cord, by Dr. Cleveland ; Uterus removed by Hys-
Dr. Gillon, Wellington, New Zealand; Mr. Wilson, Plymouth; Dr. terotomy, Ovum Forceps, and other instruments, by Dr. Heywood
Smith.-Paper : Report of Experiments on Transfusion of Blood, by
Foster, Bicester ; Mr. Brown, Tredegar ; Mr. Saundby, Greenwich ; Professor Schafer, in Society’s Proceedings.
Mr. Ambler, Cosgrove; Mr. Barker, Rustnagiri, Bombay ; Dr. Baxter,
London; Mr. Startin, London; Dr. Patterson, Glasgow; Mr. Small, Thursday, Dec. 4.
London; Dr. Hunt, Carlisle; Mr. G. Smith, Axbridge ; Dr. Fleming, ST. GEORGE’S HOSPITAL.-Operations, 1 P.M.
ST. BARTHOLOMEW’S HOSPITAL.-1’2 P.M. Surgical Consultations.
Middleton-in-Teesdale; Mr. M’Keehnie, Hillhead ; Mr. Barnes, Lon- CHARING-CROSS HOSPITAL.-Operations, 2 P.M.
don ; Mr. Snell, Sheffield ; Dr. Nesbitt, Burra, South Australia; Mr. CENTRAL LONDON OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL. - Operations, 2 P.M., and On
Pitman, Worcester; Dr. Dreschfeld, Manchester; Mr. Sell, London ; Friday at the same hour.
Messrs. Gray, Davies, and Co., London ; Mr. J. B. Hemerton, Leeds; HARVEIAN SOCIETY.-8! P.M. Harveian Lectures : Mr. Edmund Owen,
"On Certain Practical Points in connexion with the Surgery of
Mr. Rouquette ; Mr. Lunn, Shadwell; Mr. Fall, St. Ives ; Mr. Stocker, Childhood."
Upton; Dr. Dolan, Halifax ; Dr. Dowse, London; Dr. Anderson, Friday, Dec. 5.
Newcastle-on-Tyne; Rev. T. Bartlett, Exbury ; Mr. Farmer, Notting- ST. GEORGE’S HOSPITAL.-Ophthalmic Operations, 1¼ P.M.
ham; Mr. Llanwarne, Hereford; Messrs. M’Gee and Co., Belfast; ST. THOMAS’S HOSPITAL.-Ophthalmic Operations, 2 P.M.
Mr. Johnston, London; Mr. Varney, Ratbgar ; Mr. V harton, Kilburn ; ROYAL SOUTH LONDON OPHTHALMIC HOSPITAL.—Operations, 2 P.M.
Mr. Burdoe, London; Mr. Van Abbott, London ; Mr. Baker, Mere;
Saturday, Dec. 6.
Mr. Craigie, London; Dr. M’Craith, Smyrna; Mr. Morris, London; ROYAL FREE
Dr. Scriven, Duffield ; Dr. Gray, Leith; Mr. Ransford, Liverpool;
HOSPITAL.-Operations, 2 P.M.