He may now be said to be convalescent.
John Shehan, aged nineteen, 57th Regiment, was wounded in the left thigh before the Redan, on the 18th of June. He was brought to the general hospital, and placed under the charge of a gentleman of considerable skill and experience. The wound presented two openings, an anterior and a posterior; the latter offered greater facilities for examination than the former; the finger, passed from behind, detected several fragments, which were removed, and as a tolerably uniform surface of bone (vide specimen) was then felt, it was determined, after consultation, to make an attempt to save the limb. The injured extremity was accordingly bound up with a long splint in the most careful manner, and matters promised favorably for a time. He, however, complained of a good deal of suffering in the limb from time to time, gradually wasted, suffered from diarrhœa, and finally sank on the 6th of August. On examination post-mortem, I found the chief organs in a normal condition. There was some congestion of the ilium, and the colon presented a few points of ulceration. The condition of the parts in the left lower extremity was very remarkable. Beneath the integuments, all the muscular and other textures, from the seat of injury to the groin, were converted into a soft, broken-down, black, rotten mass; and I may here observe that this low but intense disorganizing process, extending through the greater part of the limb, has presented itself in several of my examinations of somewhat similar injuries, and appears to me to be connected with a peculiar pathological state in which all the vital organs remain sound, but the vis vitæ is remarkably reduced below par. The fractured bone it is unnecessary to describe. The vertical and cross infraction of the fragments and its almost “arborescent” appearance are most remarkable. I look upon it as a specimen of no ordinary value, conveying more than one most useful lesson. The bones are in the museum of the Royal College of Surgeons.
R. D. LYONS,
Pathologist to the Army in the East.
Camp before Sebastopol, August 30, 1855.
Private William Leah, 30th Regiment, aged twenty-one, was brought to me on the 27th of June, while I was on duty in the trenches, with fracture of the external condyle of the humerus of left arm, by a musket-ball, which had entered the joint between it and head of radius, and had made its exit over olecranon process of ulna. Artery uninjured. On being sent to camp, the joint was excised by Mr. Dowse, surgeon of the regiment. The patient progressed favorably, and the wound has been healed for nearly a month. He can use all the muscles of the forearm, except the flexor of the little finger, and is regaining the motion possessed by the elbow-joint.
DAVID MILROY, M.D.,
Assistant-Surgeon, 30th Regiment.
Camp, Second Division, Heights of Sebastopol, Sept. 5, 1855.