End-to-end union of intestine by means of the Murphy button: the two portions of the Murphy button, held in position by purse-string sutures, are ready to be pressed together. (Richardson.)
Fig. 572
Union—end to end—with the Murphy button.
The underlying principle of the Murphy button is that each half can be inserted separately and that then, by pressing these halves together, an opening is at once afforded from one part of the bowel to the other. If the halves be pressed together with the proper degree of firmness they produce, first, adhesion between considerable areas around their circumference, followed in the course of a few days by a necrosis of the central portion, which sloughs because deprived of its circulation by the pressure. So soon as this separation or sloughing is complete the button drops into the intestinal canal, being completely loosened, and is now carried along by peristalsis and by the fecal current from above, its position shifting as would that of a scybalous mass or a fecal concretion, until it finally emerges from the intestinal tube, being passed from the anus. How soon it will thus appear will depend in large measure upon the point of the intestinal canal into which it is thus intruded. If this be high up it will be slower in appearing. If low down it may be expected sooner. While it usually appears within ten days or two weeks it may, however, be longer retained, and in one case of my own was not passed for three months, although the anastomosis was made with the ascending colon, into which it must have dropped.
[Fig. 573] shows one of the halves held in the grasp of a forceps, being inserted into a small buttonhole opening just large enough to receive it, around which there has been passed a buttonhole or purse-string suture of silk. This portion once thus inserted should not be lost within the bowel, it being necessary to retain control of it by the forceps until its application to the other half. Both halves being inserted and brought opposite to each other, as in [Fig. 574], the smaller is introduced into the larger, and they are then pressed together until the included serous surfaces are brought into contact, with sufficient pressure inflicted to bleach them, in order that their subsequent necrosis may be ensured. A circular row of sutures should now be placed around the surfaces thus applied, in order to more widely secure them in contact. The procedure being completed in this way, the parts are dropped back into the abdomen and the abdominal wound closed.
Fig. 573
Introduction of one-half of a Murphy button. (Bergmann.)