I'm so pleased to be hosting author Jocelyn Green this week. She e-mailed me a feasibility question and I managed to rope her into writing a few posts about the medical aspects of the Civil War!
I know...I'm a tricky girl.
Jocelyn has graciously agreed to give away a signed copy of her novel Wedded to War. Just leave a comment in the comments section that includes your e-mail address on any of her posts this week and you'll be eligible to win-- though must live in the USA. Drawing will be Saturday, September 1, 2012 at midnight. Winner announced here on Sunday, Sept 2, 2012!
Here is Part I and Part II.
It’s
impossible to write a Civil War novel about medical care in the Union army
without having at least some text devoted to amputations. Here’s some of the
information that helped me as I wrote Wedded to War, and even now as I’m working on the next novel, Widow of Gettysburg.
Contrary
to popular belief, the days of “biting the bullet” (or a leather strap) during
an amputation were over by the time of the Civil War. Anesthesia was available
in the form of chloroform and ether, even in field hospitals. However, if the
soldier had been wounded more than 24 hours prior to amputation, the surgeon
would not give anesthesia for fear the patient would not recover from it. And
unfortunately, the Confederacy had a severe shortage of medicines, including
these, to work with. So even though the medicine existed, there were plenty of
cases where the patients had to go without it.
Photo courtesy of Kevin Ling |
But
in the cases where anesthesia was available, there were specific guidelines for
how to administer it.
According
to the Manual of Military Surgery
Prepared for the Use of the Confederate States Army (published 1863):
·
Chloroform
should be given in the fresh air with the patient’s head on a pillow and the
body remaining horizontal throughout inhalation.
·
Clothing
should be loosened about the neck, chest and abdomen so that breathing is not
restricted.
·
Only
a light but nutritious meal should be given earlier, or the state of
unconsciousness during the second stage of the anesthetic might bring on
vomiting.
·
Before
giving the chloroform, first give brandy. (Union surgeons did not always follow
this point. They used alcohol stimuli only on physically depressed patients
because they felt it could slow down the induction of anesthesia in a healthy patient.)
The
Confederate manual went on to instruct: “all special instruments of inhalation
have been discarded, and a towel or napkin, folded into a cone, by having its
corners turned down, is not almost universally employed for the purpose. The
chloroform, about a drachm (one-eighth ounce) is poured into this cone, and is
held over the patient’s mouth and nostrils which should previously have been
anointed.” Holding the cone a half-inch from the patient’s face prevented
facial blistering and allowed adequate air flow.
The
first stage of anesthesia was one of excitement, producing “muttering, wild
eyed, the cries, the exalted imagination” followed by “violent struggles,
attempts to rise, and rigid contraction.” If the spasm extended to the larynx,
there would be danger of breathing being obstructed. Surgeons were instructed
to remove the cone temporarily if this were the case.
The
second stage was that of unconsciousness, insensibility and relaxation of the
voluntary muscles. Eyelids would no longer contract when touched. The pulse
would slow and weaken, respiration became shallow and feeble.
Ether
Ether
was slow-acting, had a foul smell patients objected to, and caused coughing.
But it was frequently used in general hospitals where time was not as pressing,
because, unlike chloroform, it did not cause vomiting, prostration or increased
excitement.
It
was also far less dangerous if the wrong dose was given. Throughout the Civil
War, only four deaths were recorded from overdoses of ether, while chloroform’s
rate was 5.4 deaths for every thousand that used it.
The Operation
The
book, Civil War Medicine, by C. Keith
Wilbur, M.D. has easy-to-understand explanations and diagrams of various types
of amputations. Those interested in primary source material for the operations
can thank SonoftheSouth.net for posting excerpts from The Practice of Surgery by Samuel Cooper, here: http://www.sonofthesouth.net/leefoundation/amputation.htm
The book, written in 1820, would have served as the how-to guide for surgeons
in the beginning of the war. These online excerpts provide detailed
instructions for amputation of legs, arms, fingers and toes, including photos
of original Civil War instruments.
Carl
Schurz, commander of the Union’s 11th Corps at Gettysburg, offers
this account of amputations after the battle:
Most of the
operating tables were placed in the open where the light was best some of them
partially protected against the rain by tarpaulins or blankets stretched upon
poles. There stood the surgeons their sleeves rolled up to the elbows, their
bare arms as well as their linen aprons smeared with blood, their knives not
seldom held between their teeth while they were helping a patient on or off the
table, or had their hands otherwise occupied around them pools of blood and
amputated arms or legs in heaps sometimes more than man high. Antiseptic
methods were still unknown at that time. As a wounded man was lifted on the
table often shrieking with pain as the attendants handled him the surgeon
quickly examined the wound and resolved upon cutting off the injured limb. Some
ether was administered and the body put in position in a moment. The surgeon
snatched his knife from between his teeth where it had been while his hands
were busy, wiped it rapidly once or twice across his blood stained apron and
the cutting began. The operation accomplished the surgeon would look around
with a deep sigh. and then—“Next!”
Read
The Reminiscences of Carl Schurz at
Google Books here: http://bit.ly/OCf1CD
Recommended Sources:
For
more in-depth study, in addition to the resources I listed on my last post, I
recommend:
Cooper, Samuel. The Practice of Surgery. London: A and R
Spottiswoode, 1820. Available at Google Books here: http://bit.ly/OvS97P.
Hamilton, Frank
Hastings. A Practical Treatise on Military Surgery. New York: Balliere Brothers,
1861. Available at Google Books here: http://bit.ly/O72JCN
Teacher Tube
video (5 min.) from the Museum of the Confederacy about amputations and
artificial limbs. Not graphic at all. http://bit.ly/SZhlEF
I also did a post on ether and chloroform. You can find that here.
*********************************************************************************
A former military wife, Jocelyn Green authored, along with contributing writers, the award-winning Faith Deployed: Daily Encouragement for Military Wives and Faith Deployed . . . Again. Jocelyn also co-authored Stories of Faith and Courage from the Home Front, which inspired her first novel: Wedded to War. She loves Mexican food, Broadway musicals, Toblerone chocolate bars, the color red, and reading on her patio. Jocelyn lives with her husband Rob and two small children in Cedar Falls, Iowa.
I knew about the ether, but not about the chloroform. What terrible times those must have been - for the patients, for the surgeons, and for those poor folks who had to hold the wounded down.
ReplyDeleteI agree, Becky--not to mention all the wounded men waiting their turn on the table, watching the operations take place. Unfathomable!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for the source references, Jocelyn. I'm wondering how much progress was made regarding amputations fromt he time of the civil war until around the 1890's? Do you know if there were any great strides made regarding medical care in following 20 years or so?
ReplyDeleteHi Judith, yes, thankfully, germ theory came along! This helped a great deal in the sterile conditions of the operations. In the 1870s, Joseph Lister was instrumental in developing practical applications of the germ theory of disease with respect to surgical techniques.
ReplyDeleteRobert Koch was the first scientist to devise a series of tests used to assess the germ theory of disease. Koch's Postulates were published in 1890. These postulates are still used today to help determine whether a newly discovered disease is caused by a microorganism.
I'm sure there were other advances (I mean, I would hope so) but my research hasn't gone much past the Civil War.
Jocelyn,
ReplyDeleteThanks again for these fantastic posts! Such great information.
Very interesting! I had no idea about a lot of this. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeletei am so glad that I was not a soldier in the civil war!
ReplyDeleteI would be so terrified to be a soldier in the Civil Waralso.
ReplyDeleteSo glad you all liked this! I just went back to Samuel Cooper's text on The Practice of Surgery last night and wrote an amputation scene from it. I don't think what I wrote was very grisly, but I'm still wondering if my editor/publisher will leave it in or take it out. We shall see! I think it's important to the plot (book #2 is Widow of Gettysburg) because it shows exactly what the women had to do when they assisted doctors with amputations. Usually there were male assistants to do the work, but after Gettysburg, everyone pitched in to do everything. (well, almost everyone) :)
ReplyDelete