Some surgeons have, in such cases, preferred cutting down upon the principal artery of the limb, in preference to performing another amputation, even when it is practicable; and they have sometimes succeeded in restraining the hemorrhage for a sufficient length of time to allow the stump to resume a more healthy action. This operation, although successful in some cases, will generally fail, and particularly if absolute rest cannot be obtained, when amputation will become necessary. The same objection of want of success may be made to amputation; on a due comparison of the whole of the attending circumstances, the operation of tying the artery in most cases is to be preferred in the first instance, and if that prove unsuccessful, then recourse is to be had to amputation; but this practice is by no means to be followed indiscriminately. The artery ought to be secured with reference to the mode of operating, as in aneurism, but the doctrines of this disease are not to be applied to it, because it is still a wounded vessel with an external opening.
To obviate all doubts, the part from which the bleeding comes should be well studied, and the shortest distance from the stump at which compression on the artery commands the bleeding carefully noted; at this spot the ligature should be applied, provided it be not within the sphere of the inflammation of the stump. In case the hemorrhage should only be restrained by pressure above the origin of the profunda, and repeated attempts to secure the vessel on the surface of the stump have failed, amputation is preferable to tying the artery in the groin, when the strength of the patient will bear it.
When hemorrhage takes place after amputation at or below the shoulder-joint, it is a dangerous occurrence. An incision should then be made through the integuments and across the great pectoral muscle, when the artery may be readily exposed, and a ligature placed upon it without difficulty anywhere below the clavicle.
If the state of the stump in any of these cases should appear to depend upon the bad air of the hospital, the patient had better be exposed to the inclemency of the weather than be allowed to remain in it.
In crowded hospitals, hemorrhages from the face of an irritable stump are not unfrequent, and often cause a great deal of trouble and distress. It is not a direct bleeding from a vessel of sufficient size to be discovered and secured by ligature, but an oozing from some part of the exposed granulations, which are soft, pale, and flaccid. On making pressure on them the hemorrhage ceases, but shortly after reappears, and even becomes dangerous. This hemorrhage is usually preceded by pain, heat, and throbbing in the surface from which it proceeds. There is irritation of the habit generally, and a tendency to direct debility. The proper treatment consists in the removal of the patient to the open air, with an antiphlogistic regimen in the first instance, followed by the use of quinine and acids; cold to the stump, in the shape of pounded ice or iced water. Escharotic and stimulating applications should be used with caution. If any of the styptics which are sometimes announced as infallible could be relied upon, their application in these cases would be most advantageous. The solution of the perchloride of iron is the best.
LECTURE IV.
APHORISMS FOR AMPUTATIONS, ETC.
65. Amputation of a limb is the last resource and the opprobrium of surgery, as death is of the practice of physic; it being, notwithstanding, impossible to do impossibilities, and save a limb or a life which can no longer be preserved. Art and science at that point cease to be useful.
66. At the commencement of the war in the Peninsula, all surgeons believed it to be impossible to compress in an effective manner the artery of the thigh against the bone, as it passes over the edge of the pubes, and that the loss of blood on its division must be so formidable as to be murderous. This was merely a surgical delusion, which maintained its ground in London until the end of 1815, when the French soldier, whose thigh I had successfully taken off at the hip-joint, after the battle of Waterloo, without first tying the femoral artery, was shown to all disbelievers. It was the great point in advance in English and European surgery, and one great result of the practice of that war.
67. This great, indeed most important fact, having been established, the surgery of amputation was deprived of nearly all its terrors. Confidence, and with it coolness, were obtained; and many young surgeons diligently sought for an operation on the hip-joint as the ne plus ultra of operative boldness and dexterity, much after the fashion of the young lady pianistes, who do not consider themselves in any way advanced on the road to perfection until they can play at least the overture to Guillaume Tell, if not the Galop Chromatique of Listz, nearly as well as the composer himself.