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Doses, Frequent repetition of

Dufferin Rifles-Medal.

Duodenal Ulcer, Perforating

Cough Mixture, Fothergill's.
Cough Mixture-Paucoast's ..

Counter-irritants, Blisters, etc.-By A. J. Horsey, M.
D., Ottawa, Ont....

PAGE

344 Frozen Persons, Restoration of..
248 Gall-bladder, Removal of......

225

Cremation.-By Joseph Workman, M.D., Toronto.... 257
Crescit Eundo.

Croup and Diphtheria, Non-identity
Croup, Turpeth Mineral in.
Cystitis, Chronic

Cystitis, Urethrotomy in-Thompson
Cystitis, Washing Bladder in

Cysts, Sebaceous, of Scalp-Gross.
Diabetes and Diabetic Coma..
Diabetes, Liquor Brom-Arsen.
Diabetes Mellitus-Tyson .
Diarrhoea, Infantile, Charcoal in.
Diarrhoea, Summer, in Children..
Diarrhoea, Winter...

Digitalis, Indications for use of.
Diphtheria, Chloral Hydrate...

Diphtheria, Iron in......

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Drainage, Abdominal..

Gastric Disturbance, Chloroform Breath in.
Gelsemium, Use of...

Genital Tracts, Reparative Surgery of.
350 Glands, Cervical, Tuberculosis of-Gross..

114 Glottis, Spasm of.-By T. W. Poole, M.D., Lindsay,
Ont.

93

371 Glucose, New test for..

214 Goître-Gross' Clinic...

III Gonorrhoea, Abortive treatment..

296 Good Opportunity..

108 Gonorrhoea, Injection Brou for.....

273 Gonorrhoea, Ol. Santali Flav. in..

222 Gonorrhoea, treatment by Santal..

120 Hemorrhage from the Rectum

172 Halifax Medical College

276 Hæmorrhoids, Carbolic Acid injections in..
253 Hæmorrhoids, treatment of

215 Head-ache, Iodide of Potassium in
254 Head-ache, Remedies for..

Head, Severe injury to..

289 Health Act, Quebec.

135 Health and Mortuary Statistics..

148 Health Bulletin, U. S., Demise of.
310 Health-officers, Appointment of
Heart, Diseases of Balfour..

291

Heart, Wounds of...

376 Hereditary Lineaments

336 Hernia, Femoral, Rupture of Coverings..

141 Hernia, Inguinal, Complicated case.

244 Hernia, Radical cure of Inguinal, by Dissection

233 Hiccough, Persistent...

30 High-pressure Education..

30, 222 Hip, Amputation by Trendelenburgh's method..

115 Hip-joint Amputations-Davy's lever

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190

370

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308
109

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Dysentery, treatment of.

212 Hip-joint, Exsection of-Bauer...

86

Dysmenorrhoea, treatment by Calomel.

119

Hip-joint, Resection of-Cowell..

88

Ear-ache, Atropia in ..

..182, 342

Hippocratic Oath

21

Eclampsia, Case of.- By J. S. J. Harrison, M.D., Sel-
kirk, Ont.....

Holmes, Oliver Wendell, Banquet.

287

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Eczema-Hutchinson..

178

Hounslow Tragedy, The.

220

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Hour-Glass Contraction, Pre-natal.

30

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253

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Puerperal Septicemia, Intra-uterine injections in
Puerperal Septicæmia, Nature of.......

Purpura and Suppression of Menses.
Quebec Medical Election...

Questions and Answers

Questions for Final Examination, M.R.C.S.
Quinine, To remove taste of ...

Quinquinia as an Anti-periodic.-By George T. Mc-
Keough, M.B., M.R.C.S.Eng., Chatham, Ont...
Railway Injury, Case of, Severe.-By J. F. McDonald,
M.D., Hopewell, N. S..
Rare Case-Hingston...
Rectum, Hemorrhage from the.
Register, Ontario Medical Council.
Removals.

Removal without cause..
Reports of Societies-

307 Surgery, Marvel of...

188 Surgical Expedients in Emergencies

372 Sweating, Excessive, treatment.

374 Syme's Amputation....

317 Syphilis, Influence of occupation on.
245 Syphilis, treatment by Indians.
62 Tariff of Fees, Railway Medical..

Teno-Synovitis, Nature and treatment.

97 Tetanus, Acute Traumatic; Effects of Complete Insu-
lation of the Wound by Neurotomy.-By William
Burt, M.D., Paris, Ont.....

195

95 Tetanus, Gelsemium in

366 Tetanus, Traumatic, Eserine in.
127 Thoraco-plastic operation

Tonsillotomy and its Complication by Hæmorrhage.-
By N. A. Powell, M. D., Edgar, Ont.
Tonsils, Enlarged, treatment of..
To our Readers

.31, 61, 94, 190, 255, 287, 349

94

10, 78, 202

10, 103, 166, 202, 363

Toronto City Hall.

Ontario Branch Medical Association..
Medico-Chirurgical Society, Montreal.

Huron Medical Association..
Toronto Medical Society.
Nova Scotia Medical Society
Brant Co. Medical Association.

.29, 335 Toronto University Examinations.

.61, 233 Trachelorrhaphy.-By T. K. Holmes, M.D., Chatham,
Ont

Michigan State Board of Health ..... 104, 205, 268, 294 Transfusion, Successful case

Ontario Board of Health...

Bathurst and Rideau Medical Association..
Winnipeg Medico-Chirurgical Society.
Ontario Medical Association...

Ontario Medical Council

Resorcin as a local application to Chancres.

Resorcin as a substitute for Quinine...

Resorcine in Whooping Cough.

Rheumatic Endocarditis.

Rheumatism, Acute, treatment-Bartholow..

.62, 335

94 Tracheotomy, A New Dilator-Otis

.167, 295

.189, 366

Rheumatism, Acute, Venesection in.—By T. W. Dun-

combe, M.D., Waterford, Ont...

Rheumatism as a Neurotic disease..
Rheumatism, Sodium Salicylate in

Trephining in Head injuries..
Tribute to Dr. Workman..
205 Trinity Medical College....
329
332 Trinity University Convocation.

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Examinations

343 Tuberculosis, Acute Miliary..

316 Tumors, Small, Easy method of Extirpating.

374 Turpeth Mineral in Croup .

348 Typhoid Fever, Antiseptics in.

236 Typhoid Fever, Salicylates and Hemorrhages in
Typhoid, treatment-Ziemmsen

IOI Umbilical Cord, Absence of..

342 Unprofessional..

362
183

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93

I

180

25

27

315

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369

119

303

92

189

284

.127, 284

181

183

93

114

246

277

64

286

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Rotheln. By R. A. Alexander, M.D., Grimsby, Ont. 39 Uterine Fibroids, New treatment...
Rupture, Radical cure-)
-Heaton.

Salicylic Acid in Rheumatism and Typhoid Fever

191

215 Uterine Hæmostatics (Hicks)

53

...

128 Uterus, Cancer of, and its treatment

271

344 Uterus, Extirpation for Prolapse..

214

30, 52 Uterus, Forcible removal by a Midwife.
372 Uterus, Inversion of ..

310

351

107 Vaccination.....

376

87 Venesection Resuscitated-Barker.

163

342 Victoria and Laval

351

246

21

Vision, Causes of defective, in school life.-By L. L.
Palmer, M. D., Toronto
269 Vital Statistics...

72

.127, 157, 190

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BY N. A. POWELL, M.D., EDGAR, ONT.

A three-fold purpose has induced me to present, at this meeting, certain points regarding tonsillotomy and one of its occasional complications. To give you in brief a history of the case which first directed my attention to this subject, to bring out in discussion some of the experience at present stowed away in the gray matter of the cerebral convolutions of the members of this association, and with such help to reach sound couclusions as to what the treatment of the complications in question should be, have been the objects which I have had in view in the preparation of this paper.

At the last meeting of the American Laryngological Association, its secretary, Dr. George M. Lefferts, of New York, discussed "The Question of Hæmorrhage after Tonsillotomy," and classified its frequency and severity thus:

1st. A fatal hæmorrhage is very rare. 2nd. A dangerous hæmorrhage may occcur. 3rd. A serious one, serious as regards both possible, immediate, and remote results is not very unusual, and

4th. A moderate one requiring direct pressure, and strong astringents to check it is commonly met with.

Of the first or fatal class, the writer had not been unfortunate enough to meet with an example. Other surgeons have, however, placed on record a small number of cases fatal from hæmorrhage following the excision of the pharyngeal tonsils, while a much larger number of deaths have been caused by the loss of blood succeeding operative procedures, other than amputations, in the tonsillar region.

Read before the Ontario Medical Association, June 7, 1882.

Coming within the second class, two cases have occurred in the practice of Dr. Lefferts from a total of about 500 operations. Both are recorded in his paper. The history of the first I shall read to you since I am able from the standpoint of the patient to add to it somewhat. In the fall of 1874, while at Demilt Dispensary attending the throat-clinic, held on alternate days by Drs. Lefferts and McBurney, I requested the former to remove my tonsils, as they were subject to recurrent attacks of follicular inflammation. I give you in his language what then occurred.

"I amputated both excessively hypertrophied tonsils with the tonsil bistoury. My incisions, I may say here, were made with care, and were such as I had made many times before in other instances. A few moments after the operation, an inspection of the throat having shown no excessive bleeding, I left the dispensary, where the operation had been performed, and my patient, who was using an ice-water gargle. I did not see him again for several hours, and then found him almost exsanguinated and pulseless. Profuse bleeding commenced almost immediately upon my departure, occurring very suddenly. The flow was so rapid that the patient could not clear his mouth of it. Blood passed into the stomach, giving rise to repeated attacks of vomiting, and into the larynx, causing strangulation. As described to me, his condition was for a time a dangerous one. All the resources at hand at the moment that suggested themselves to the doctors present, except pressure, were tried without avail. The hemorrhage persisted. I was sent for, but not found, and finally my colleague, Dr. McBurney, fortunately reached the case some three hours after the commencement of the bleeding. He at once did what should have been done before, cleared all blood clot out of the pharynx, differentiated the source of the hæmorrhage and applied direct pressure over the spot on the right. side from whence it was found to come. In a short time it had ceased. I arrived later, and fouud my patient stretched upon a bench, as I have said, white, bloodless, and almost pulseless. After an anxious night spent with him where he lay, he was carried in the morning to his home, and slowly convalesced during the following month. There was at no time a recurrence of the bleeding."

In the removal of the right tonsil, the one that gave rise to the trouble afterwards, Dr. Lefferts was

assisted by a surgeon who happened to be present. This latter gentleman held the vulsellum forceps in order to free Dr. L.'s right hand for the use of the bistoury. I noticed that as the section was made strong traction was also made upon the tonsil, and this must have placed on the stretch the tissue last divided, which was the lower part of the gland. In this part lay the artery-probably the tonsillar branch of the ascending pharyngeal-from which the subsequent bleeding occurred. Its mouth opened deep in the sulcus, between the tongue and the stump of the tonsil, and it was so obliquely divided that the contraction and retraction by which natural hæmostasis is effected could not take place. Possibly this vessel was enlarged at the expense of the others supplying the gland; possibly also the indurated tissue through which it ran prevented its closure. About half-an-hour after Dr. Leffert's hurried departure to fill his next engagement, the bleeding became very free. I then asked some of the physicians from other departments of the dispensary to look at the wound. They did so and one prepared for me a tannic acid gargle as advised by Mackenzie, while another immediately after its use applied to the part a solution of the persulphate of iron with a brush. Between them they filled the fauces and pharynx with ink manufactured on the spot; a third gentleman then began giving me ten grain doses of quinine, while another spoke rather indefinitely of the hypodermic use of ergotine or the ligation of the carotid. The fifth could only offer his regrets that he had to leave at once, as he "wanted to wait and see Lefferts stop this." These gentlemen were all educated and skilled physicians in their own specialties, and all but the last seemed anxious to be of service, but none of them remembered the simple surgical fact that direct pressure on the mouth of any bleeding vessel will control the loss till other and more permanent means of checking it may be adopted. The flow being rapid I became faint and exsanguinated in a short time, and in the opinion of those better able than myself just then to form a correct opinion, I could not have survived another hour without the help which Dr. McBurney afforded. It was estimated by several gentlemen present that the loss of blood amounted to between six and seven pints. If either my friends, the throat specialists, or a good practical surgeon had been present when it began,

it would not probably have reached as many
ounces, nor would the general condition have be-
come a dangerous one. Since that time I have
frequently had occasion to perform tonsillotomy,
and have met with nothing more unsatisfactory
afterwards than the loss of an occasional fee for so
doing. I have knowledge, however, of nine cases
besides my own in which a fatal result was all but
reached. One of these occurred in the practice of
an old fellow-student of mine who now fills a chair
in a western college. In this case the doctor left
a student to watch his patient, and was recalled in
haste two hours later.
He found it necessary to
apply pressure with a sponge on a holder for many
hours, and has stated that without the recollection
of my experience and treatment to guide him he
would have been at a loss to know what to do.

From the statistics which I have at hand, based
chiefly on the practices of leading surgeons, I am dis-
posed to think that a dangerous degree of hæmoni-
hage occurs in about 1 per cent. of all tonsillotomies.
If with proper after treatment it is thus frequent,
may we not consider its risks to be greater in con-
nection with that slap-dash and happy-go-lucky
surgery with which even in Ontario we are not al-
together unacquainted? We know how often some
physicians meet with post-partum hæmorrhage,
and are apt to connect this frequency with a faulty
or careless treatment of the third stage of labor.
That obstetrician will see least of it, probably, who
has its dangers and its prevention most con-
stantly in his mind. The same reasoning will ap-
ply to this form of hemorrhage.
viction that the liability to hemorrhage from the
stump of an amputated tonsil will be lessened by
the right performance of the operation that may
cause it, I submit without arguments the following
conclusions for your adoption or amendment :—
The surgeon who proposes to remove a tonsil
should have at hand a strong and perfectly man-
ageable light such as is obtained from a student's
lamp and a forehead protector of four inch diam-
eter and short focus. He should not be depend-
ent upon the kitchen cupboard for a part of his
armament, but should have a good tongue depres-
sor, and this is almost the same as saying that he
should have Turke's model, as for any operation
on the back of the throat it is the only good one.

With the con

He should use the tonsillotome preferably for children, and especially if ether be not given. If

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