The mystery of the exploding teeth And other curiosities from the history of medicine

Thomas Morris

Book - 2018

"This wryly humorous collection of stories about bizarre medical treatments and cases offers a unique portrait of Victorian medicine in all its grisly weirdness. A puzzling series of dental explosions beginning in the nineteenth century, with the most recent case in the 1960s, is just one of many strange tales that have long lain undiscovered in the pages of old medical journals. Award-winning medical historian Thomas Morris has assembled the stories thematically so readers will witness Mysterious Illnesses (such as the Rhode Island woman who peed through her nose), Horrifying Operations (1635: A hungover Dutchman swallows a knife, which is then surgically removed from his stomach), Dubious Treatments ("Take twelve young swallows ...out of the nest . . ."), Unfortunate Predicaments (such as that of the boy who honked like a goose after inhaling a bird's larynx), and many other marvels. Read together, these entertaining stories amount to far more than a series of anecdotes. They are worth reading for their entertainment value alone, but they also tell us a great deal about the evolution of modern medicine. Some show the medical profession hopeless in the face of ailments which today would be quickly banished by modern drugs; but others are heartening tales of recovery against the odds, patients saved from death by the devotion or ingenuity of a conscientious doctor. As a collection they allow the reader to learn about the evolution of medical expertise and to understand the rationale behind therapeutic regimes that would otherwise seem inexplicable today.However embarrassing the ailment or ludicrous the treatment, every case tells us something about the knowledge (and ignorance) of an earlier age, along with the sheer resilience of human life"--Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Anecdotes
Published
New York, NY : Dutton, An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC [2018]
Language
English
Main Author
Thomas Morris (author)
Physical Description
xiii, 351 pages ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9781524743680
  • Introduction
  • 1. Unfortunate predicaments
  • A fork, up the anus
  • Swallowing knives is bad for you
  • The golden padlock
  • The boy who got his wick stuck in a candlestick
  • Shot by a toasting fork
  • Mr. Dendy's eggcup case
  • Broken glass and boiled cabbage
  • Honking like a goose
  • Penis in a bottle
  • The colonic carpentry kit
  • Suffocated by a fish
  • 2. Mysterious illnesses
  • A hideous thing happened in High Holborn
  • The incredible sleeping woman
  • The dreadful mortification
  • The human pincushion
  • The man who fought a duel in his sleep
  • The mystery of the exploding teeth
  • The woman who peed through her nose
  • The boy who vomited his own twin
  • The case of the luminous patients
  • The missing pen
  • 3. Dubious Remedies Death of an earl
  • The tobacco-smoke enema
  • Saliva and crow's vomit
  • The pigeon's-rump cure
  • Mercury cigarettes
  • The tapeworm trap
  • The port-wine enema
  • The snake-dung salesman
  • 4. Horrifying Operations
  • The case of the drunken Dutchman's guts
  • If you can't find a, surgeon...
  • The self-inflicted lithotripsy
  • A high pain threshold
  • A window in his chest
  • The sad case of Hoo Loo
  • All at sea, An extraordinary surgical operation
  • 5. Remarkable recoveries
  • The wandering musket ball
  • The miller's tale
  • In one side and out the other
  • A bayonet through the head
  • An interesting and remarkable accident
  • The lucky Prussian
  • A case for Dr. Coffin
  • The healing power of nature
  • Severed, replaced, reunited
  • Give that man a medal
  • A hit of a headache
  • 6. Tall, tales
  • Sleeping with the fishes
  • Death of a 152-year-old
  • The combustible countess
  • He sliced his penis in two
  • Half man, half snake
  • The human waxwork
  • The slugs and the porcupine
  • The amphibious infant
  • The seventy-year-old mother-to-be
  • 7. Hidden Dangers
  • A surfeit of cucumbers
  • The perils of being a writer
  • Why children should never wear hats
  • Killed by his false teeth
  • Pegged out
  • The cast-iron stove panic
  • Brolly painful
  • A flaming nuisance
  • Cycling will give you heart disease
  • Sources
  • Acknowledgments
  • Index
Review by Booklist Review

The clinical cases Morris has collected, creating what amounts to a medical version of Ripley's Believe It or Not!, are often intriguing, occasionally disgusting, sometimes tragic, but always weird. Mined from the pages of old medical journals, textbooks, and newspaper reports, these case histories provide a glimpse of the state of medical knowledge and beliefs from the seventeenth to the twentieth centuries. Doctors are depicted as determined and bold or reckless. Patients are portrayed as stoic and trusting or gullible. Accounts of strange illnesses, near-miraculous recoveries, self-inflicted conditions, wacky remedies, and scary surgeries are presented. People intentionally swallow things other than food and water. Some insert items in body orifices other than the mouth. Patients are treated with tobacco smoke enemas and reptile excrement. Bioluminescent human beings are described. A teenager carrying a scythe falls, and the implement goes through his chest. Some of the anecdotes are exaggerated or even tall tales. A young woman purportedly urinates from her eyes, ears, nose, and breasts, which is not physiologically possible. Morris offers a most peculiar jaunt through medical history.--Tony Miksanek Copyright 2018 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

Medical historian Morris (The Matter of the Heart) documents strange, inspiring, and sometimes ghastly tales of treatments that show how the medical field has evolved in the past three centuries. What were once standard, "validated" practices will seem absurd to modern readers. Organized by general illness type, the first chapter explores "unfortunate predicaments" of peculiar situations, from those with various kitchen utensils lodged in bodily canals to people having swallowed knives. Other sections focus on mysterious ailments, or drownings. The stories reveal the pathos and earnest intent of physicians treating their patients based on then-current beliefs. However, the author also discusses charlatans, including one doctor who claimed to revive patients who spent weeks underwater. The vast amount of material from diverse sources will amuse readers and leave them shaking their heads, while Morris's attempts at humor occasionally make it seem as though he does not recognize the real suffering patients endured. VERDICT This informative, fascinating look at the history of medicine will be of interest to general readers.-Aaron Klink, Duke Univ., Durham, NC © Copyright 2018. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Ripley-esque collection of "compellingly disgusting, hilarious, or downright bizarre" medical oddities.British journalist and medical historian Morris (The Matter of the Heart: A History of the Heart in ElevenOperations, 2018), a regular writer for the Lancet, scoured 300 years of medical literature's "little-known corners" to ferret out 60-plus cases that reach the level of believe-it-or-not's. "Every one of these cases says something about the beliefs and knowledge of an earlier age," he writes. He presents the cases in anecdotal fashion, with numerous quotes from the published articles, accompanied by the author's witty and often humorous, colloquial commentary. The cases are divided into seven sections, including "Mysterious Illnesses," "Horrifying Operations," and "Remarkable Recoveries." In the "Unfortunate Predicaments" file, we find the 1823 case of a sailor who, when sufficiently inebriated, would swallow clasp-knives "for a laugh." He once swallowed three in succession and, at another time, over two days, 14; ultimately, 35 in all: "Dear oh dear. Will he never learn?" Most passed, but some, an autopsy revealed, remained, partially digested. Then there's the 1827 case of a boy "who got his wick stuck in a candlestick." He was unable to urinate, so they finally operated, and an enormous jet of urine "projected" onto the doctor. "Charming." Like quirky Perry Mason book titles, the list unwinds: the boy who vomited his own twin, the case of the luminous patients, the case of the drunken Dutchman's guts, the self-inflicted lithotripsy, the combustible countess, the death of a 152-year-old, the human waxwork, the amphibious infant, and the man killed by his false teeth. In 1857, San Francisco surgeon Dr. Elias Samuel Cooper performed a two-plus-hour heart surgery, an "unthinkable" feat. He removed a piece of metal from beneath a beating heart while the patient "was fully conscious." For its time, Morris writes, "there is virtually nothing to match this operation for complexity and sheer jeopardy."Amusing and often painful items best taken in small doses. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Unfortunate predicaments   A regular feature of any hospital emergency department is the patient who turns up with an embarrassing and entirely self-inflicted complaint. When questioned about the nature of their ailment and how it came about, they may fall silent or offer a less than plausible explanation. In 1953, a man was admitted to a hospital in Barnsley with severe abdominal pain that he said had been plaguing him for almost a fortnight. Surgeons discovered severe tearing in the wall of his rectum, evidently inflicted just a few hours earlier, which they were able to repair. Asked how he had sustained this injury, the patient claimed that he was standing too near a firework "while in a stooping position," and it had gone off unexpectedly. Pressed for the truth, he admitted that he had become frustrated in his personal life and had "decided to explode a firework up his seat." That's one way of dealing with it, I suppose.   The medical literature is brimming with misguided individuals, the forebears of this proctological pyrotechnician, who inserted strange objects in places where they weren't meant to go. One of the earliest stories concerns a monk who tried to ease his colic by coaxing a bottle of perfume inside his gut; another relates how a surgeon rescued the dignity of a farmer who had somehow ended up with a goblet wedged inside his rectum. But these are prosaic achievements compared with some of the bravura feats recorded in the following pages. What is so impressive about many of these tales of mishap is the sheer ingenuity that had gone into creating a highly regrettable situation-often matched by the imaginative manner in which a physician or surgeon went about treating the unfortunate patient.   Medicine has improved almost beyond recognition in the past few centuries, but some things never change. The human capacity for mischief, misadventure and downright idiocy is apparently a trait that progress cannot eradicate.   A fork up the anus   Modern medical journals aren't exactly famous for their snappy headlines. The professional terminology doesn't help: It's not easy to write a zinger of a heading if the subject of your article has a name like bestrophinopathy, idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura or necrotizing fasciitis.   But recent years have seen a fightback against such sterile jargon, with a few researchers trying to grab their readers' attention by means of literary allusions, pop culture references and bad puns. One recent article in The New England Journal of Medicine made a desperate pitch to George R. R. Martin fans with the headline "Game of TOR: The Target of Rapamycin Rules Four Kingdoms." Another, about foreign bodies in the bladder, was headed "From Urethra with Shove." And for sheer chutzpah, it's difficult to beat "Super-mesenteric-vein-expia-thrombosis, the Clinical Sequelae Can Be Quite Atrocious"-the improbable title of an article about a serious complication of appendicitis.   But my favorite medical headline of all was written almost three hundred years ago. In 1724, the Philosophical Transactions, the journal of the Royal Society, published a letter from Mr. Robert Payne, a surgeon from Lowestoft in Suffolk. The title is unimprovable:   James Bishop, an apprentice to a ship-carpenter in Great Yarmouth, about nineteen years of age, had violent pains in the lower part of the abdomen for six or seven months. It did not appear to be any species of the colic; he sometimes made bloody urine, which induced Mr P. to believe it might be a stone in the bladder. He was very little relieved by physic; at length a hard tumour appeared in the left buttock, on or near the glutaeus maximus, two or three inches from the verge of the anus, a little sloping upwards. A short time after, he voided purulent matter by the anus, every day for some time.   This is the old sense of the word tumor: not necessarily indicating abnormal tissue growth, but a swelling of any description. This example was, as it turned out, some sort of cyst, and eventually its surface broke. The surgeon suspected it was an anal fistula-an anomalous channel between the end of the bowel and the skin. But events soon proved him wrong:   Shortly after the prongs of a fork appeared through the orifice of the sore, above half an inch beyond the skin. As soon as the prongs appeared, his violent pains ceased; I divided the flesh between the prongs, according to the best of my judgment; and after that made a circular incision about the prongs and so with a strong pair of pincers extracted it, not without great difficulty, handle and all entire. The end of the handle was besmeared with the excrement, when drawn out.   Naturally. This was a surprisingly large item of cutlery:   It is six inches and a half long, a large pocket-fork; the handle is ivory, but is dyed of a very dark brown colour; the iron part is very black and smooth, but not rusty.   The young man was reluctant to explain how he had managed to get himself in this predicament; at least, not until he was threatened with the withdrawal of his allowance.   A relation of his, a Gentleman in this neighbourhood, who sent him to be under my care, the Reverend Mr Gregory Clark, Rector of Blundeston, on whom, in a great measure, his dependence is, threatened never to look upon him more, unless he would give him an account how it came; and he told him, that, being costive, he put the fork up his fundament, thinking by that means to help himself, but unfortunately it slipped up so far, that he could not recover it again.   Mr. Payne adds a postscript:   PS: He says he had no trouble or pain till a month, or more, after it was put up.   A fact that does not alter the moral of this cautionary tale: If you're constipated, it's better not to stick a fork up your fundament.   Swallowing knives is bad for you   Compulsive swallowers have always featured heavily in medical literature. There are numerous cases in nineteenth-century journals-but most of the individuals concerned were obviously suffering from some kind of mental illness. This, from the Medico-Chirurgical Transactions for 1823, is the first I've come across in which the patient was swallowing knives for a laugh.   In the month of June 1799, John Cummings, an American sailor, about twenty-three years of age, being with his ship on the coast of France, and having gone on shore with some of his shipmates about two miles from the town of Havre de Grace, he and his party directed their course towards a tent which they saw in a field, with a crowd of people round it. Being told that a play was acting there, they entered, and found in the tent a mountebank, who was entertaining the audience by pretending to swallow clasp-knives. Having returned on board, and one of the party having related to the ship's company the story of the knives, Cummings, after drinking freely, boasted that he could swallow knives as well as the Frenchman.   Not a particularly wise boast, and his comrades lost no time in challenging him to prove it. Eager not to disappoint them, he put his penknife in his mouth and swallowed it, washing it down with yet more booze.   The spectators, however, were not satisfied with one experiment, and asked the operator "whether he could swallow more?"; his answer was, "all the knives on board the ship", upon which three knives were immediately produced, which were swallowed in the same way as the former; and "by this bold attempt of a drunken man", (to use his own expressions) "the company was well entertained for that night."   Actions have consequences, as every sailor should know, and when foreign objects are ingested, the "consequences" usually come within twelve hours. And lo, it came to pass.   The next morning he had a motion, which presented nothing extraordinary; and in the afternoon he had another, with which he passed one knife, which however was not the one that he had swallowed the first. The next day he passed two knives at once, one of which was the first, which he had missed the day before. The fourth never came away, to his knowledge, and he never felt any inconvenience from it.   So no problem, right?   After this great performance, he thought no more of swallowing knives for the space of six years. In the month of March 1805, being then at Boston, in America, he was one day tempted, while drinking with a party of sailors, to boast of his former exploits, adding that he was the same man still, and ready to repeat his performance; upon which a small knife was produced, which he instantly swallowed. In the course of that evening he swallowed five more. The next morning crowds of visitors came to see him; and in the course of that day he was induced to swallow eight knives more, making in all fourteen.   It seems safe to assume at this point that Mr. Cummings was not-ahem-the sharpest knife in the drawer.   This time, however, he paid dearly for his frolic; for he was seized the next morning with constant vomiting and pain at his stomach, which made it necessary to carry him to Charleston hospital, where, as he expresses it, "betwixt that period and the 28th of the following month, he was safely delivered of his cargo."   No doubt this was a common naval euphemism of the time rather than an original bon mot; but it made me laugh. Having "emptied the hold," Cummings boarded a vessel traveling to France. But on the return journey, his ship was intercepted by HMS Isis, and he was press-ganged into service with the Royal Navy.   One day while at Spithead, where the ship lay some time, having got drunk and, as usual, renewed the topic of his former follies, he was once more challenged to repeat the experiment, and again complied, "disdaining," as he says, "to be worse than his word."   An honorable person may keep their word, but a sensible one does not consume five knives, as the misguided American did that night. And he still wasn't finished; far from it.   On the next morning the ship's company having expressed a great desire to see him repeat the performance, he complied with his usual readiness, and "by the encouragement of the people, and the assistance of good grog", he swallowed that day, as he distinctly recollects, nine clasp-knives, some of which were very large; and he was afterwards assured by the spectators that he had swallowed four more, which, however, he declares he knew nothing about, being, no doubt, at this period of the business, too much intoxicated to have any recollection of what was passing.   Dear oh dear. Will he never learn?   This, however, is the last performance we have to record; it made a total of at least thirty-five knives, swallowed at different times, and we shall see that it was this last attempt which ultimately put an end to his existence.   Feeling like death, and probably more than a little foolish, Cummings applied to the ship's surgeon for laxatives, but the drugs he was given had no effect.   At last, about three months afterwards, having taken a quantity of oil, he felt the knives (as he expressed it) "dropping down his bowels", after which, though he does not mention their being actually discharged, he became easier, and continued so till the 4th of June following (1806), when he vomited one side of the handle of a knife, which was recognized by one of the crew to whom it had belonged.   And who presumably was not eager to reclaim it.   In the month of November of the same year, he passed several fragments of knives, and some more in February 1807. In June of the same year, he was discharged from his ship as incurable; immediately after which, he came to London, where he became a patient of Dr Babington, in Guy's Hospital.   The doctors did not believe his story and discharged him. His health improved, and it was not until September 1808 that he reappeared:   He now became a patient of Dr Curry, under whose care he remained, gradually and miserably sinking under his sufferings, till March 1809, when he died in a state of extreme emaciation.   Even during this final illness, the doctors treating him refused to believe that he had swallowed more than thirty knives, until . . .   Dr Babington having one day examined him, conjointly with Sir Astley Cooper, these gentlemen concluded, from a minute inquiry into all the circumstances of the case, and especially from the deep black colour of his alvine evacuations, that there really was an accumulation of ferruginous matter in his organs of digestion. And this was fully confirmed soon afterwards by Mr Lucas, one of the surgeons of the hospital, who, by introducing his finger into the rectum, distinctly felt in it a portion of a knife, which appeared to lie across the intestine, but which he could not extract, on account of the intense pain which the patient expressed on his attempting to grasp it.   The doctors tried to dissolve the knives (or at least blunt their edges) with nitric and sulfuric acids, a measure that must have done more harm than good. Powerless to help their patient, they had to watch as he wasted away and finally died. The physicians dissected his body and found that the inside of the abdomen presented an extraordinary sight: The tissues were stained a dark rusty color. Several blades were found inside the intestines, one of them piercing the colon. This alone would have been enough to kill him. But that wasn't all:   The stomach, viewed externally, bore evident marks of altered structure. It was not examined internally at this time, but was opened soon afterwards, in the presence of Sir Astley Cooper and Mr Smith, surgeon of the Bristol infirmary, who happened to be present at that moment, when a great many portions of blades, knife-springs, and handles, were found in it. These fragments were between thirty and forty in number, thirteen or fourteen of them being evidently the remains of blades; some of which were remarkably corroded, and prodigiously reduced in size, while others were comparatively in a state of tolerable preservation.   A close examination of the abdominal organs also cleared up one question that had puzzled the doctors: Why was it that some knives had traveled through the gut virtually unaltered, while others had been partly digested?   When the stomach was able to expel them quickly, they passed through the intestines, enclosed within their handles, and therefore comparatively harmless; while at a later period, the knives were detained in the stomach till the handles, which were mostly of horn, had been dissolved, or at least too much reduced to afford any protection against the metallic part. Excerpted from The Mystery of the Exploding Teeth: And Other Curiosities from the History of Medicine by Thomas Morris All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.