With regard to insufflation, Le Bon[896] objects to it in asphyxia as being hurtful and not useful. Colin[897] tamponed the trachea of a horse; in four minutes fifty seconds it was apparently dead; the tampon was removed and insufflation practised for fifteen to twenty minutes without effect. He claims that artificial respiration is useless after the circulation ceases.

Fell[898] and O’Dwyer[899] recommend forced inspiration. McEwen[900] uses a tracheal tube by the mouth.

Dew[901] offers a new method of artificial respiration in asphyxia of the new-born; Lusk[902] considers the subject of life-saving in still-births; Forest,[903] artificial respiration in the same; Read[904] discusses Schultze’s method with approval; Duke[905] plunges the infant into hot water; Richardson[906] recommends artificial circulation by injection of vessels, or electric excitation; Jennings[907] recommends the same; Richardson[908] also considers fully the subject of artificial respiration and electrical excitation; Woillez[909] has described and recommended what he calls a spirophore.

After the removal of a foreign body the irritation remaining may cause a sensation as if the body was still lodged.

Death may occur from hemorrhage after its removal.

Post-Mortem Appearances.

These are mainly those of asphyxia. There may also be evidences of external violence, homicidal or accidental, as of pressure on the chest. Persistent deformity, flattening of the nose and lips, and excoriation of these parts may result from forcible closure of mouth and nose.

The SKIN AND CONJUNCTIVA usually show patches of lividity and punctiform ecchymoses; especially lividity on the lips and limbs. The face may be pale or violet; it is often placid, especially if the suffocation is accidental. Tardieu[910] admits that infiltration of the conjunctiva and punctiform ecchymoses of the face, neck, and chest may also be found sometimes in women after severe labor, and in epileptics. He records the result of the examination of those who died from suffocation at the Pont de la Concorde, 1866. The face and upper parts of the trunk were generally light red to a deep violet or black color, with punctated blackish ecchymoses on the face, neck, and upper part of chest.

The EYES are usually congested. Mucus and sometimes bloody froth are found about the NOSE and MOUTH. The TONGUE may or may not protrude.

The BLOOD is usually dark and very fluid. Wounds after death may bleed. According to Tardieu[911] fluidity of the blood is most constant in compression of the chest and abdomen, as also its accumulation in the vessels and right side of heart. Its color varies from red to black.