To illustrate the opposition Bowditch found in the United States, he quotes309 a remark of W. W. Gerhard, the distinguished auscultator of Philadelphia, "that he should be as willing to have a bullet shot through his chest as to have paracentesis performed on one of his patients."

309 Unpublished MS., 1882.

About 1850,310 Bowditch saw the paper published by Hughes and Cock, and it determined him in future to try the trocar they had used or something like it.311 "Fortunately, a few weeks before (April 10, 1850) M. Wyman had a sudden and severe case with large effusion and intense orthopnoea. Death was threatening, yet Wyman felt called upon by public opinion, medical and lay, to summon a prominent practitioner from Boston. They both agreed that the patient was in extreme danger, and Wyman urged tapping with an exploring-trocar. It was decided to postpone surgical interference until next day, when another meeting would be held, the consulting physician returning to Boston to advise with the ablest men of the faculty and render their decision the following forenoon. That was done, and it was found that no prominent practitioner in Boston would consent to the idea of tapping. Nevertheless, the oppression was so severe, and death so imminent unless the patient could be relieved by some means, that the country physician agreed to Wyman's proposal that an exploring-trocar should be introduced. The fluid flowed out imperfectly, but some relief and no harm resulted" (Bowditch). Two days after this, Wyman operated again with the exploring-trocar and a suction-pump. Wyman312 demonstrated to John Homans on the 23d of February, 1850, that the chest could be safely punctured with his instrument and the serum evacuated in acute pleurisy.

310 Ibid.

311 Ibid.

312 Private letter to author, 1883.

Although suction, as we have shown, was used as far back, probably, as Galen (second century), by Scultetus in 1662, and was in use in 1707, as shown in Anel's work, in 1742 in Laurence Heister's work, by Ludwig and Lehren in 1768, again in 1796 (Benj. Bell), yet it had been abandoned and lost sight of, with the exception of Laennec's suggestion of its application in the form of a cupping-glass over the orifice of puncture, until Guérin (1841) used it. The author followed Trousseau's clinics in 1849 and 1850, and saw him repeatedly operate with Reybard's canula guarded by gold-beater's skin, but never with Guérin's suction apparatus. The French seemed to have lost sight of it until 1865, when Guérin, at the French Academy, recalled attention to it, showing how he aspirated liquids, instead of allowing them to flow outward after the puncture. His apparatus consisted of a curved trocar, the end of which was made tapering and sharp enough to puncture the thorax through the skin and the muscles; of a pump, the piston of which was perfectly adjusted to produce a vacuum; and of an adjuster at the extremity of the pump, consisting of a stopcock which enabled the operator alternately, without removing the instrument, to aspirate the fluid and evacuate it into a basin. Wyman's pump, invented in 1850, was arranged very much in the same way, only it contained valves which were opened and closed by the movement of the barrel, to enable the operator to suck out the fluid and then force it out of the pump. After the operation the skin, being drawn over and closing the orifice, acted as a valve which prevented at the same time the entrance of air and the escape of fluid. Dieulafoy, in November, 1869, invented his aspirator, which is based upon the same principles as those used by Guérin (1841) and by Wyman and Bowditch (1850)—namely, pneumatic aspiration, which the vacuum of the air-pump supplies. Guérin's instrument was large and costly. Wyman's trocar was of a very small diameter, being only one-twenty-fourth of an inch, and the canula but little larger. This was attached, at first, directly to the aspirating syringe, afterward by means of a flexible tube. With this apparatus Wyman demonstrated that tissues could be safely punctured and cavities evacuated without the admission of atmospheric air, that the wound, causing but a drop or two of blood, was followed by no inflammation, and that no dressing was required. The smallest trocar used previously to Wyman's was that of Roe, which was one-twelfth of an inch in diameter. From 1850, Bowditch appreciated the great value of Wyman's invention, as shown in one of the first operations on a patient of his. He adopted and practised it. His position as professor of diseases of the chest, and his great reputation in that branch, gave him an extensive practice and brought him many cases of pleurisy. He met with great opposition from the surgeons and prominent practitioners of the country, but his results were so favorable that he forced an unwilling and an unbelieving profession to accept, as he expresses it, "the beautiful thought of Wyman of thoracentesis or aspiration with a fine needle." "I considered the operation so simple, and yet so effectual, and never harmful, that I deemed it my duty to print cases illustrative of its value." Bowditch had been for eight or ten years endeavoring to get some effective plan of opening the chest without risk. He readily caught at Wyman's plan, and he operated so frequently and successfully as to demonstrate its value to the medical public both of this country and of Europe. As he states,313 it was, in fact, what he had been for years longing for—viz. a simple and painless, or almost painless, operation for removing fluids from the thorax—one that could be done without danger and leave no open wound. Bowditch relates314 that when he visited Europe, nine years after his first publication of cases, he showed the instrument in England, Scotland, France, and Germany, and that he met with very indifferent recognition of its value. Only W. T. Gardner of Edinburgh and Budd of London seemed to appreciate the plan. They had instruments made after the American pattern. All others had no faith in the operation. In Paris his old master, Louis, smiled incredulously at his enthusiasm for it and doubted its necessity. At Vienna Skoda turned with apparent scorn and left the room as Bowditch was demonstrating its employment. The Parisian authors, Woillez, Peter, Moutard-Martin, Peyrot, and others, do not even mention Bowditch, but give Trousseau alone the credit of popularizing thoracentesis.

313 Unpublished MSS., 1883.

314 Ibid.

Trousseau's first publication was in 1843, and yet in 1859 there was no general adoption of the operation, nor was there until 1869, when Dieulafoy rediscovered Wyman's wonderful improvement of the application of negative force to draw out fluids from the chest.