Showing posts with label University of the Unusual. Show all posts
Showing posts with label University of the Unusual. Show all posts

Saturday, 1 June 2019

The University of the Unusual (5)

Spontaneous Human Combustion

   This subject has been sitting on my back burner for a while, but two recent mentions of it have given me cause to offer you two unusual subjects in a row. The first occurrence is noted in this quotation: “By the time the 2020 election kicks into highest gear, Trump will have been president for more than three years, barring his impeachment, his resignation or his spontaneous combustion (with him, you never know).” The second reference to SHC is found in the introduction to an article which bears the intriguing title, "The Lucrative Black Market in Human Fat." You are probably thinking that I read only the tabloids, but the quotation is from the New York Times and the article is found in The Atlantic. Now you are probably wondering if you could suddenly burst into flames or are perhaps hoping that Trump will.
   It is highly unlikely that Trump will ignite, nor will you unless you choose to self-immolate in Lafayette Square as an act of protest. It is likely, however, that you are familiar with SHC if you read fiction (Bleak House) and you may have encountered historical accounts. The article about fat noted above begins with this one:
"One night in 1731, Cornelia di Bandi burst into flames. When the 62-year-old Italian countess was found the next morning, her head and torso had been reduced to ash and grease.
Only her arms and legs remained intact. After examining what was left of her body, a local physician concluded, in a report cited years later, that the conflagration “was caused in her entrails” by the variety of combustible materials to be found there, including alcohol and fat, “an oily liquid … of an easily combustible nature.” An early instance of what would come to be known as “spontaneous human combustion..."

One also occasionally runs across references to SHC in the current news; there was a recent case in Edmonton.

   Does spontaneous human combustion happen? I suggest to you that it does not. I could go on, but once again, the Wikipedia entry is very good and I will provide other references. You can decide for yourself while I go looking for an unusual subject that is not covered in Wikipedia.

Flames and Flatulence

   
   
   Before you relax and return the fire extinguisher you should know there is some truth to the stories your buddies told about fart lighting. Some of us do produce "combustible levels of methane" and there are cases where there have been minor explosions when patients are undergoing surgery. Coffins also have been known to explode. 

   Even though I am continually scooped by Wikipedia I can at least offer you unusual and interesting subjects and provide the sources to back them up. I will even offer below a literature review of colonic gas explosions to ensure you are getting your money's worth.

Sources: 
The quotation about Trump is from Frank Bruni and is found in the NYT, Jan.13, 2019. The article in The Atlantic is found on May 26, 2019 and is adapted from a forthcoming book by Chrisopher E. Forth: Fat: A Cultural History of the Stuff of Life. The recent Canadian example: "Man Woke Up on Fire: Edmonton Police," Kevin Maimann, Edmonton Sun, July 19, 2014.

Apart from the Wikipedia entry see: "How Dickens Fueled Spontaneous Combustion, Truthers," Sam Kean, Mental Floss, Dec. 4, 2014 and “A Fiery Death: Murder Or ‘Spontaneous Combustion’? Joe Nickell From: Skeptical Briefs, Volume 22.3, February 4, 2013.

For a recent 'surgical explosion' see: "A Japanese Woman Passed Gas During Laser Surgery: She Was Badly Burned," Travis M. Andrews, Washington Post, Nov.1, 2016.

For the promised literature review:

-Spiros D Ladas, George Karamanolis, and Emmanuel Ben-Soussan, "Colonic Gas Explosion During Therapeutic Colonoscopy With Electrocautery," World J Gastroenterol. 2007 Oct 28; 13(40): 5295–5298.

“A systematic review of the medical research published in English language from 1952 to October 2006 was performed, by using MEDLINE, SCOPUS, SCIRUS, and EMBASE to obtain studies published on colonic gas explosion. The search terms included were combinations of "colonic explosion" or "gas explosion" with "surgery", "electrocautery", "polypectomy", and "argon plasma coagulation".

A total of 20 cases of colonic gas explosion were identified.

Post Script:
There have been unusual reports about an Indian infant who has combusted a few times. See: "Doctors Suspect Rare Disease Might Have Afflicted Indian Child," Anupama Chandrasekaran, and there have been additional follow-up articles.

For those of you who are hypochondriacs, I discovered a series of books covering all kinds of maladies and ailments that you will need to buy.  The one pertinent for this post (and all the others begin with "Curbside Consultation...):


Tuesday, 28 May 2019

The University of the Unusual (4)

Anthropodermic Bibliopegy


Three books bound in human skin. Photo from Fugitive Leaves(the blog of the Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia)

  Those of you who bothered to read the fine print above will realize that the subject of this post is a touchy and somewhat sensitive one: books bound in human skin. A few years ago when some of them were found in the stacks at Harvard, I was going to discuss 'anthropodermic bibliopegy', as one of my unusual subjects, but never got around to it. Now that you know what this particular type of leather-bound book binding is called you can quickly learn all about it in the Wikipedia entry. There is also a very good resource devoted specifically to the subject. So I will simply provide the very basics and the essential sources. Then I will switch to a related subject which is even more unusual; it has to do with tattoos.
   Books bound in human skin do exist. There have been a large number of books discovered in libraries and private collections that contain the inscription, 'bound in human skin", but most of them were not. A new technique - Peptide Mass Fingerprinting - makes it easier and less expensive to determine whether the tome is bound in human, cow, goat or pig.
   There are many reasons why pages are held together in such a manner and you will learn all about them by examining the sources provided. Often they relate to the medical profession and one author notes that “Scratching the surface of the history of any real human-skin book usually reveals a doctor was the one wielding the knife.” The largest collection so far confirmed is found in the Historical Medical Library of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia.


Tattoo Preservation

   In some cases books were bound in the skin of a loved one, or at the request of the owner of the skin to be used. What if you wanted to leave behind, when you died, all of the fine art etched on your body. Could you do so? That is not an unreasonable question to be asked since we now see many more people wearing tattoos than reading books, and it was recently asked by a tattoo artist in Saskatoon. The short answer to it is "Yes".
   The heavily tattooed gentleman from Saskatchewan died recently and requested that his wife save the art. She agreed and the Cleveland company - Save My Ink Forever - did so. The process is a complicated one and your mortician may have reservations, but I will provide the information you need.

Sources:
For the books:
The book image is found in: "The Skin She Lived In: Anthropodermic Books in the Historical Medical Library," Beth Lander, Fugitive Leaves, Oct. 1, 2015.
For a thorough account see: "In the Flesh? Anthropodermic Bibliopegy Verification and Its Implications," Jacob Gordon, RBM: A Journal of Rare Books, Manuscripts and Cultural Heritage, Vol. 17, No.2, Fall, 2016. A copy is available here
The site dedicated to the subject is The Anthropodermic Book Project. 
The quote about doctors is from: "A Book By Its Cover: The Strange History of Books Bound in Human Skin," Megan Rosenbloom, Lapham's Quarterly, Oct. 19, 2016. Ms Rosenbloom is involved in the Book Project noted above.

For the tattoos:
"Dead Saskatoon Tattoo Artist's Skin Removed, Preserved to Honour His Work," The Canadian Press, Nov. 14, 2018.
"Kyle Sherwood, the company’s chief operating officer, went to Saskatoon to surgically excise Wenzel’s skin from 70 per cent of his entire body and preserve it with a special formula in a frame.
The entire job will cost about $80,000 and take about three months.
Cheryl Wenzel was in the room with Sherwood when he began removing the skin. I was able to point out which tattoos (Chris) wanted.”

"Saskatoon Widow Has Her Husband's Tattoos- And the Skin They're On- Preserved," Guy Quenneville, CBC News, Nov. 15, 2018. [The tattoo image above is Mr. Wenzel and it is from this article.]
For an update: "We're Back Together: Honouring His Dying Wishes, Wife Preserves Husband's Tattoos," Bryan Eneas, CBC News, April 15, 2019.
If you want to learn more about the process, it is described by the company: Save My Ink Forever. 

Postscript:
I indicated that it was the books at Harvard that I first read about. The subject was approached there with some humour. One article about it has the title "The Skinny on the Harvard Collection" and another has the words "caveat lector" in the web address: See: "The Science of Anthropodermic Binding."
While reading a recent book review about The Millionaire and the Bard (NYT May 22, 2015 I noticed this example of the use of the skin from calves:“There are many beautiful books in the world. The contemporary British collector Alfred Henry Huth, who possessed a First Folio that Folger coveted, also owned a ravishing “Book of Hours” illuminated in the late 15th century by the Flemish master Simon Marmion. Fashioned from the creamiest of vellum — parchment made from the skins of calves, in this case probably stillborn calves, whose skins were the smoothest and whitest of all — the luminous, one-of-a-kind Huth “Hours” looks like a possession fit for a prince of exquisite taste and limitless wealth.”

For other samples in this blog under the category of the university of the unusual see: The Guinea Worm and The Ingestion of Foreign Objects. 

Wednesday, 15 August 2018

University of the Unusual (3)

The Guinea Worm (and assorted others)




  When the editor of the journal, Emerging Infectious Diseases went looking for a suitable image for the August 2018 issue, he found the one provided above. It is from a painting done by an Englishman, Ben Taylor, and apparently the inspiration came from within. His story is told in a recent Washington Post article, the title of which reveals the contents. A portion is provided below, followed by another account I remembered from years ago.

His Health Had Been Failing for Years: Then He Saw Something Crawling in His Eye,” Kristine Phillips, Washington Post, August 9, 2018.
     “He had been experiencing a litany of symptoms his doctors couldn’t explain: lumps that kept appearing and disappearing, blinding pain in his eyes that lasted for a day and came back another, a small muscle in his forehead that he felt “snap.” His white blood cells soared, and itchy rashes covered parts of his body. His joints ached. He was constantly hungry and he had been eating a lot, but he couldn’t gain weight. There was a sinking feeling that his body had become host to unwelcome visitors, but tests showed nothing.
     One morning, he noticed a faint yellowish lump protruding from underneath his left cornea. And then he felt his eye vibrate, as if something was slithering from within. He rushed to a mirror to find that the lump had disappeared, replaced by a thin line that was also protruding. He touched it, and it moved.
     “Oh, I’ve got a worm in my eye!” Taylor recalled thinking.
      At a hospital not far from his home in Dartmoor in southwestern England, a doctor scalped a tiny part of his eye’s outer layer and pulled out the wriggling parasite while Taylor kept his head still. And there it was, an inch-long roundworm called Loa loa. The doctor placed it in a container and Taylor watched it die.
     That year, 2015, Taylor was diagnosed with Loiasis, commonly known as African eye worm, a condition caused by the parasite Loa loa. He contracted it after spending several days in the jungles of Gabon, a Central African country where infections caused by Loa loa had persisted for years.”

Mary Kingsley




     Years ago I discovered Mary Kingsley who was not-at-all a typical Victorian lady. She travelled alone in parts of Africa accompanied only by a few native recruits. She had some amazing encounters which seemed not to have bothered or frightened her at all. I recall her describing 'eye worms' in Travels in West Africa and found this in Chapter XXII, "Disease in West Africa". The tone is typical of most of her writing which I am sure you will enjoy. Note her advice at the end when she says you should get an early start if you are going to have to be extracting some Guinea Worms from the legs of your porters.

     "Filaria.  This is not, what its euphonious name may lead you to suppose, a fern, but it is a worm which gets into the white of the eye and leads there a lively existence, causing distressing itching, throbbing and pricking sensations, not affecting the sight until it happens to set up inflammation.  I have seen the eyes of natives simply swarming with these FilariæA curious thing about the disease is that it usually commences in one eye, and when that becomes over-populated an emigration society sets out for the other eye, travelling thither under the skin of the bridge of the nose, looking while in transit like the bridge of a pair of spectacles.  A similar, but not identical, worm is fairly common on the Ogowé, and is liable to get under the epidermis of any part of the body.  Like the one affecting the eye it is very active in its movements, passing rapidly about under the skin and producing terrible pricking and itching, but very trifling inflammation in those cases which I have seen.  The treatment consists of getting the thing out, and the thing to be careful of is to get it out whole, for if any part of it is left in, suppuration sets in, so even if you are personally convinced you have got it out successfully it is just as well to wash out the wound with carbolic or Condy’s fluid.  The most frequent sufferers from these Filariæ are the natives, but white people do get them.

     Do not confuse this Filaria with the Guinea worm, Filaria medinensis, which runs up to ten and twelve feet in length, and whose habits are different.  It is more sedentary, but it is in the drinking water inside small crustacea (cyclops).  It appears commonly in its human host’s leg, and rapidly grows, curled round and round like a watch-spring, showing raised under the skin.  The native treatment of this pest is very cautiously to open the skin over the head of the worm and secure it between a little cleft bit of bamboo and then gradually wind the rest of the affair out.  Only a small portion can be wound out at a time, as the wound is very liable to inflame, and should the worm break, it is certain to inflame badly, and a terrible wound will result.  You cannot wind it out by the tail because you are then, so to speak, turning its fur the wrong way, and it catches in the wound.

     I should, I may remark, strongly advise any one who likes to start early on a canoe journey to see that no native member of the party has a Filaria medinensis on hand; for winding it up is always reserved for a morning job and as many other jobs are similarly reserved it makes for delay."
Sources: Travels in West Africa (Congo Français, Corisco and Cameroons) is available for free over the internet and you are encouraged to have a look. If you prefer more modern adventurous women writers, I recommend Dervla Murphy who also travelled in the same area - Cameroon With Egbert (that's her horse). Her Transylvania and Beyond is even better.
For more in this series - The University of the Unusual - see this one on the Ingestion of Foreign Objects and another on Arrow Storks.

Friday, 21 April 2017

The University of the Unusual (1)


(Forthcoming posts under the title above will all involve strange and sensational subjects. Given my blogging performance past it is safe to say the series will consist of at least one entry).


The Ingestion of Foreign Objects
    Children often swallow small objects and adults sometimes accidentally ingest things that were not meant to sink into the stomach, if indeed they can get that far. As well, there are people who deliberately swallow items - many, many items.


    I happened to stumble across a short article in The TImes (London) from the early 1980s that offered examples of patients who had, on purpose, put into their mouths many things not remotely related to any of the major food groups. That article prompted a reader to send in a clipping from The Times which provided another example that occurred almost 50 years earlier. In that piece there was another reference to an even earlier article that was supposedly found in the New York Times and it had to do with a woman who was found to have half a hardware store in her stomach.


    If you are at all interested in investigative reporting involving gastric issues read on since I was able to track down all the sources. Although some of the accounts are astonishing, keep in mind that the sources are a medical journal and the two TIMES, and that his all happened before the era of fake news.


A Knife and Fork For Dinner


    The original report that started all of this is found in the “Times Diary” for March 1, 1982 under the heading “Hard to Swallow”. The author is summarizing an article from a medical journal. I went looking for the original source and here it is: “Recognition and Management of Patients who Repeatedly Swallow Foreign Bodies”, Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine,  Volume 75, February 1982. The article notes  that “During 1978, over 3000 operations for the removal of foreign bodies from-the gastrointestinal tract were performed on adults in England and Wales”.
Here are the five cases presented in that article (if you wish, you can skip these medical accounts and go directly to the two sensational journalistic ones that follow):
Case reports
Case 1:
An 18-year-old warehouseman in Cardiff docks, with a history of repeated drug overdosage, was first treated in the Midlands in 1965 by gastrotomy for the removal of an ingested darning needle. Eleven years after this he swallowed some razor blades which he had wrapped in tissue paper. These were removed at laparotomy which was complicated by a faecal fistula. A few weeks later, following a quarrel with his prostitute girlfriend, he swallowed some more razor blades which, again, he had covered with tissue paper 'so as not to cut my throat'. A plain anteroposterior abdominal X-ray (Figure 1) showed a razor blade which, although it overlay the gastric shadow, was not seen in the stomach at gastroscopy because it was probably situated in the transverse colon. The blades passed naturally and without complication.[WOW]


Case 2:
A male cook first presented at a hospital on the south coast, aged 23, after he had swallowed some pins. Following an unsuccessful attempt at endoscopic removal, the pins were removed by gastrotomy which was complicated by a subphrenic abscess. Two years later he swallowed several darning needles which on plain abdominal X-ray appeared to lie outside the bowel (Figure 2). There were no physical signs to suggest bowel perforation and he was therefore managed conservatively, without complication. Two weeks later he swallowed a propelling pencil and a kitchen knife which both passed naturally. Six months after this he swallowed a penknife and an open safety pin. The penknife was removed at gastrotomy but the safety pin could not be found, and was subsequently passed naturally. When the patient was told that he was fit for discharge, he threatened to 'swallow the hospital bit by bit'; as an hors d'oeuvre he promptly swallowed a bolt from the bed-elevating mechanism. A month after discharge he attended the accident and emergency department of another London hospital claiming falsely to have swallowed paraquat. Two weeks after this he was readmitted to Charing Cross Hospital following an overdose of chlorpromazine, amitriptyline and salbutamol. While an inpatient he swallowed an open safety pin which passed naturally, and a few days before discharge, using a syringe which he had acquired on the ward, he injected his anterior abdominal wall with lavatory cleaner.


Case 3.
A divorced woman, aged 28, was seen at a hospital in Surrey having swallowed three spoons. There was a previous history of depressive illness in adolescence, which had been treated by electroconvulsive therapy, and she had cut her wrists at the age of 23. The patient said that she had swallowed the spoons because she heard a voice telling her to do so. During the next fifteen years, in response to this voice, she swallowed safety pins, needles, hair grips, a tooth brush, both metal and plastic teaspoons, over a dozen dessert spoons and the bell end of a stethoscope. She has undergone at least 17 laparotomies, in a variety of hospitals, for the
removal of these objects. At one laparotomy performed in Charing Cross Hospital, five spoons marked 'Guy's Hospital' were removed. The indications for each of the laparotomies varied but at no time had bowel perforation occurred. Although there are at least five spoons at present in her bowel (Figure 3), for the past three years a policy of conservative management has been adhered to. She has remained well  during this period, although she has been admitted to Charing Cross Hospital on four occasions with mild intestinal obstruction which has rapidly settled with a period of intravenous fluids and nasogastric decompression. It is not clear whether this obstruction is the result of previous surgical adhesions or is due to the spoons.


Case 4.
A 17-year-old subnormal boy, in long-term hospital care, presented with
haematemesis. Plain abdominal X-ray demonstrated foreign bodies in the stomach, including nails, razor blades, glass and coins. Endoscopic removal was attempted but was unsuccessful and the objects were removed by gastrotomy. Following this operation the patient developed mediastinal abscesses which were the result of an oesophageal tear at the level of the azygos arch and which required a thoracotomy for drainage.


Case 5.
A 17-year-old reform school boy swallowed several nuts and bolts because he 'felt like a change of scenery'. He was admitted to St Woolos' Hospital, Newport, where he was managed conservatively and returned to his school's sick-bay. Eventually he was able to confirm, from regular stool examination, that all the objects seen on the plain abdominal Xray had been passed.


“Heimlich Maneuver Sprays Shrapnel”


Had these next two accounts appeared in the tabloids, they might have had a title like the one above.


    The clipping sent in by The Times’s reader must have been this article:
“Italian Labourer’s Appetite: A Diet of Mixed Hardware,” The Times, Sept. 19, 1936.
This report is from their correspondent in Trieste.
“An X-ray examination in a local hospital revealed in the stomach of a 47-year-old labourer 11 pencils, three fountain pens, a fork, a screw, several coins and five keys. Two more pencils had been painfully ejected by the patient as he was entering the hospital, but his statement that he was unable to go home because he had swallowed the key of the front door was disbelieved until its probability was scientifically proved.
A glimpse of other undefined articles, equally hard of digestion, lying in his stomach was obtained, but a complete inventory of them was obtained only on Wednesday after an intricate operation, the fruits of which are said to have amazed the surgeon who performed it. One by one were taken from the man’s body 13 ordinary keys, a large door key, a screw, a sardine-tin opener, three cigarette holders, a spoon, 15 pencils, five fountain pens, four penknives, a safety razor holder, two needles, a piece of glass, four 2-lire coins, one 50-centesimi coin, and a key chain. The operation is said to have been perfectly successful, and the man’s first words after its conclusion were to inquire whether the 8,50 lire he had swallowed had been found.


In the reporting about the 1936 account provided above there was a reference to a sensational case two years earlier and this would be it. Given that we are all now more sensitive about medical privacy I almost redacted Miss Wolf’s name, but I am pretty sure she is not around to be offended. This report is from The New York Times, March 20, 1934.


“1,2O3 METAL ITEMS EATEN BY WOMAN: Hardware Found in Stomach Includes Bolts, Screws, Tacks, Pins, Wire and Glass -SWALLOWED FIVE YEARS AGO”.
A total of 1,203 items of hardware was taken from the stomach of a woman patient at Kings County Hospital after an operation last week, Dr. Adam Eberle, superintendent of the institution, revealed yesterday.
The patient, Miss Mabel Wolf, 40 years old, of 476 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, is recovering and apparently will be none the worse for the experience. Dr. Eberle said her immediate need was a prolonged rest and a more orthodox diet.
The operation, for which the original diagnosis was gall bladder trouble, was performed last Tuesday by Dr. Anthony Pirundini under the direction of Dr. Edwin H. Fiske, head of the hospital’s surgical staff.
The list of items removed follows:
584 fine upholstery tacks,
144 carpet tacks,
2 chair tacks,
46 small screws,
6 mediums screws,
80 large screws,
1 hook-shaped screw (coat hanger)
30 small bolts,
47 larger bolts,
3 picture-frame hooks,
3 nuts,
2 large bent safety pins,
1 small safety pin,
1 head of nail,
3 brass nails,
83 pins,
9 pins without heads,
1 matted mass of hair containing screws and pins.
59 assorted beads,
4 pieces of wire,
89 pieces of glass (all sizes),
1 piece of teacup handle.
According to the story she told physicians, Miss Wolf swallowed the objects in the course of a single week five years ago when she was employed in the hardware section of a Manhattan department store. She said she felt depressed one day and for reasons which she cannot account, swallowed a quantity of tacks, nails, screws and pins.
This she continued for the next five days. There were no immediate effects, she said, but a few weeks later she began to have recurrent pains. These she treated successfully with patent medicines until a few weeks ago, when they became so acute she called a physician.
She was taken to the hospital, where an X-ray examination revealed a mass of foreign substance in the stomach. The physicians were frankly puzzled, but even more so after the operation was performed. They are at a loss to explain how she was able to retain the metal objects for so long a period of time.
Dr. Eberle said the case had attracted a great deal of attention at the hospital and that the hardware had been placed on exhibition for the benefit of internes and others interested.

Miss Wolf is understood to live alone and have no relatives.

You will have to admit that this subject is more interesting than "Clean Eating" and are probably relieved that the entire article was gluten-free.