4. Ibid.—Boy, age 5 years. Button in larynx. Aphonia, dyspnœa, stridulous breathing. Distress gradually subsided. Many years afterward found mucous membrane of larynx thickened; vocal cords red and uneven.
5. Ibid.—Man, drunk, swallowed a half-sovereign. Urgent dyspnœa; pain in throat; aphonia; stridulous breathing; dysphagia; cough; copious mucous expectoration. Laryngoscopic examination showed coin in œsophagus. The crico-thyroid membrane was incised and coin pushed upward and ejected.
6. Med. Times and Gaz., 1874, i., p. 486.—Man, age 20, had severe dyspnœa. In taking a living fish in his teeth (it was about four inches long and had large dorsal fin), the fish passed into the pharynx and lay doubled up. Impossible to remove it because of spines. Tracheotomy at once. Twenty-four hours afterward the fish had decomposed enough to be partly removed. Patient died of exhaustion.
7. Littlejohn: Edin. Med. Jour., 1875, xx., p. 780.—Woman found dead in bed. Suffocated by pus from abscess of tonsil which burst during sleep. Found pus in air-passages down to smallest bronchi; lungs congested; right side of heart distended with dark fluid blood; left side contracted and nearly empty. Blood everywhere fluid. Some lividity of face. The woman had died quietly lying beside her husband, who was not awakened.
8. Sayre: New York Med. Jour., 1874, xix., p. 420.—Girl, age 7, swallowed a bead. Had continuous cough; much pain under middle of sternum. The bead moved upward and downward in respiration. Tracheotomy. Four days afterward she coughed the bead out, inspired once, and apparently died. Artificial respiration used; alcohol injected into rectum; galvanization of phrenic nerves. She finally coughed up a piece of thick mucus and recovered.
9. Duffy: Trans. Med. Soc. No. Car., 1874, p. 126.—Boy, age 8, swallowed a cow-pea. It lodged in the trachea. Some months afterward, laryngotomy performed. The boy seemed to die at once. Artificial respiration used. After a while he expelled first some mucus, then the pea. Recovered.
10. Tardieu: Op. cit., p. 290.—Man, age 50, found dead on the floor. At base of neck and front of chest were many punctated ecchymoses. Brain and lungs much congested; the latter showed subpleural spots. Tongue and lips bitten. Death was due to cerebral and pulmonary congestion from an epileptic seizure.
11. Oesterlen: Vier. f. ger. Med. und öff. San., 1876, xxiv., p. 10.—Woman, age 30, epileptic. Found dead. Examination showed signs of asphyxia; blood-vessels engorged, marked œdema of lungs, etc. Opinion given that she died in epileptic paroxysm, and certain injuries observed were caused by a fall.
12. Tardieu: Op. cit., p. 322.—Two children, one 2 months old, the other 18 months old; in bed together. The older overlay the younger, which died. Necroscopy: lungs voluminous, in places congested, in others pale; abundant subpleural ecchymoses; quite emphysematous. Fluid blood in heart.