RESTORATION OF LIFE.
COLLAPSE DURING OPERATION. HEART MASSAGE EFFECTIVE REMARKABLE CASE IN AUCKLAND. The efficacy of heart massage for the restoration of life in patients collapsing on the operating table is endorsed by Mr. Garrick Robertson, of 'Auckland, in an article in the current issue of the New Zealand Medical Journal. “Although heart massage is fairly well known as a possible procedure,” he remarks, “I have not heard any personal reports of such cases, so I venture to think the record of these cases may be of inteest to the profession in New Zealand.”
V Mr. Robertson states that he has tad several cases of heart massage during the last year or two, and he describes in detail a “striking example of its saving powers.” In this case, a sailor went to the Auckland Hospital with a septic- thumb, but otherwise apparently in good health. Ho was placed under a general anaesthetic, and the abscess was lanced. It was then noticed that the patient’s heart had stopped beating, and the respirations were dying away. 'Artificial respiration was started, and Mr. Rosertson, who happened to be in the hospital at the time, was summoned. On arrival, he found that the man "was quite white, and there were no : heart sounds, neither had voluntary respiration been restored. The ma;; seemed quite dead. Making the necessary surgical incision, Mr. Robertson introduced his hand and grasped the heart firmly, binding that there was ho muscular movement in the heart, the surgeon squeezed it between his hand and the ribs isverai times, whereupon it gave
a uisduct, but feeble, kick, followed by slow and feeble contractions, which soon came bounding and rapid. Tlie wound was sewn up, and the patient put to bed.
The patient remained in a very excited condition for 12 hours, but two days after the operation he was quite mornml, but could not remember anything that had happened during the two days. He made a complete recovery. The interest of the case, as Mr. Robertson emphasises in bis paper, lies particularly in the fact that at the lowest calculation the man must have been dead for three minutes, probably five.
In an earlier case of heart massage performed by Mr. Robertson the subject was a man on whom he was operating for appendicitis. This man did well, but the result was not so striking as in the case just described, for a very little time elapsed between his heart stopping and the massage which restarted it. In a third case in which this manoeuvre was tried Mr. Robertson was unsuccessful.
“It will be seen that heart massage adds another efficient method of dealing with cases of sudden collapse on the operating table,” Mr. Robertson remarks in concluding the article. “With the experiences recorded above I am firmly convinced that when the surgeon is sure that the heart has stopped there ’should be no excuse for not applying this procedure; but I should like to emphasise the fact that this should only be done after failure to restore animation with the usuai restoratives, and, judging from the first case, it would seem that there Is no great hurry, for the heart will respond atfer a comparatively long lat ent peiod.”
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Bibliographic details
Taihape Daily Times, 3 September 1918, Page 6
Word Count
538RESTORATION OF LIFE. Taihape Daily Times, 3 September 1918, Page 6
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