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(1) Warren, S., and Gates, 0.: Am. J. Cancer 16 (pt. 1): 1358, 1932. (2) Major, R. H.: Bull. Johns Hopkins Hosp. 29: 223, 1918. (3) Rahl-Buckhardt: Cited by Major.2 ( 4) Lippmann, H.: Ztschr. f. Krebsforsch. 3: 293, 1905. (5) :Rothacker, A.: 1bid. 12: 39, 1913. (6) Bugher, J. C.: Am. J. Cancer 21: 809,1934. (7) von Kahlden, C.: Zentralbl. f. allg. Path. 6: 257, 1895. (8) von Werdt, F.: Beitr. z. path. Anat. 59: 453, 1914. (9) 7'e Linde, R. W.: AM. J. 0BST. & GYNEC. 20: 552, 1930. (10) Bland, P. B., and Goldstein, L.: Surg., Gynec. & Obst. 61: 250, 1935. (11) Pratt, F. B.: J. Obst. & Gynacc. Brit. Emp. 44: 880, 1937. (12) Schulze, Margaret: West. J. Surg. 47: 114, 1939. 512 HIBERNIA BA-:
SEVERE MATERNAL TRAUMA IN EARLY PREGNANCY CoNGENITAL AMPUTATIONS IN THE INFANT AT TERM HARRY MEYER, M.D., AND HAROLD CuMMINS, PH.D., NEw ORLEANS, LA.
(From the Independent Division, Department of Obstetrics, Charity Hospital of New Orleans, and Department of Anatomy, Tulane University) HE special interest of the present case lies in the occurrence of major trauma at about the close of the first trimester of pregnancy, and the delivery at term of an infant presenting multiple congenital amputations. A causal relationship between the maternal injury and the fetal defects cannot be established, but since the possibility is not absolutely excluded, the potential medicolegal aspects of this and similar cases are deserving of note. Mrs. E. L. D., white, aged 29 years, was found in an unconscious state on a highway Jan. 6, 1940. She was still unconscious when brought by the poliee to the accident room at Charity Hospital. The patient exhibited an extreme degree of shock, blood pressure being 50/20. Fractures, multiple lacerations, contusions, and abrasions were present, and there was a partial avulsion of the scalp. A catheter· ized specimen revealed gross hematuria. The patient responded to shock treatment, the blood pressure rising to 100-120/50·70. She was given a double dose of mixed serum. Upon regaining consciousness the patient explained that she had been walking alone on the highway. Though she could recall nothing of the accident, the circumstances point to her having been struck by an automobile. She was three months pregnant; the last menstrual period began about October 5. Her only previous pregnancy was normal, with delivery at full term about two years before. X-rays were made, with the following findings: 1. Fracture of the right acromial process. 2. Fractures of the left pelvis at the junction of the ascending pubic ramus and the ischium and at the junction of the descending ramus and ischium. 3. Fracture of the sacrum, with no displacement. 4. Compound comminuted fractures of the lower halves of the right tibia and fibula, with overriding. 5. Fracture of the right parietal (from which the patient complained of persistent headache and diplopia). Subsequent urinalyses showed no blood. A second double do~
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On April H the obstetric department was asked to see the patient. Neither bt>fore nor after this date was there any difficulty incident to pregnancy. There was no vaginal bleeding, and all the :findings in obstetric examination were entirely normal. X-ray of the pelvis showed slight callus about the fraetures, but there was no evidence of pelvic obstruction. On May 4 the patient was discharged. She returned later for change of caHt, and with approach of the date of expected delivery entered th,e obstetrical ward on .July 8. The blood pressure was 120/80; pulse, 80; temperature, 98.4" F. A cast was still present on the right leg, which emitted a foul odor. The pelvic measurements were normal, the presentation was vertex R.O.P., and the fetal heart sounds were 140 in the R.L.Q. There was apparently no disproportion. A final x-ray of the pelvis showed no evidence of obstruction or bone displacement. Labor began July 10. After a normal course for :fifteen hours and 50 minutes a male child, weighing 6lh pounds, was spontaneously delivered. The child cried immediately at birth. The puerperium was uneyentful and the mother was discharged eight dayH later. The infant was held in the hospital, where it has remained until the present time (January, 1941), for observation and treatment. The infant presented multiple congenital amputation~ as characterized below, but otherwise there were no externally evident abnormalities. There were no abno~mal ities evident in the mother nor, according to her statement, in othN members of the family. 1. The ruost conspicuous defects involved the right arm (Fig. 1 ). There waR a deep cleft completely encircling the upper arm slightly above its middle (Figs. 1 and 2). The musculature of the lower arm and hand was atrophic (or hypotrophic,). The transverse dimensions of the lower arm and hand were smaller than on the left side, and there was a pronounced wrist drop (Figs. 1 to :!). All bones of the right arm and hand were less robustly formed than tho~e of the left. The lower arm and hand were pallid and cold. 2. The left hand (Fig. 4) showed a completed amputation of the middle aud terminal segments of the index :finger and amputation ,of the terminal segment of the ring :finger. There were several encircling and irregularly disposed clefts on the middle :finger. Depending freely from the end of the index, there was a thin catgutlike strand, and there were several similar threads uniting tle index and middle :fingers. 3. On the righ1 foot the distal segments of the :first three digits were ampu· tated, and their stumps were syndactylous. A plastic operation was performed on the right arm with the aim of relieving compression at the level of the annular cleft. This was followed by improved circulation in the lower arm and hand, but the wrist drop has persisted. Except for a pneumonia, the infant has been in good health, and is now (January, 1941) about to be discharged. The infant conforms to the typical picture of congenital amputations (Streeterl) with respect to the occurrence of mult.iple amputations and furrows, though it i~ unusual in presenting involvement at a level above the elbow. Portions of HO!lle digitH are actually amputated, while the annular furrow8 of the right arm and of the middle finger of the left hand represent the same principle of affection, differently localized and expressed. The history of fetal amputations has been traeed by Streeterl and the mechanism has been further discussed by Cummins2 and Keith.3 In Streeter's earliest specimen, of fourteen weeks' menstrual age, the process is already well advanced. When there is actual amputation, it is brought about by necrosis and sloughing, with occasional remains persisting in the form of strands, such as are observed in the left hand of the present case. The charaeteristic an· nular furrows are considered to result from local de:ficiency in the growth capacity of the tissues, of less severe grade than that leading to sloughing. Not uncommonly, as in the right foot of this case, there is coexistent amputation of digits and syndactylia of their remaining stumps. Coleman,4 and others have raised the query as to whether there may be a causal relationship between these concurrent abnormalities. Our own conclusion is that the syndactylia is secondary to amputation,
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the digits becoming joined by the reparative processeH which follow amputation, in a manner similar to that in which secondary syndactylia may oceur after ~evere burn,; if precautions are neglected. It is now clear' that congenital amputations are not produced by any of the frequently suggested extrinsic mechanical agencies, such as ligature by amniotic bands or by the umbilical cord. The process operates intrinsically. ·while laek of vital
Fig. Fig. Fig. Fig. finger.
1.-The infant at about one week. 2.-The deep annular- cleft of the r'g·ht upper arm. 3.-Right hand. Note wrist drop. 4.-Left hand. Note amputation of index and furrows encircling the middle
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capacity of the tissues is demonstrated in the observed pathology of fetal amputations, a fully satisfactory explanation of its etiology is not yet available. From observations upon what is evidently the same condition in animals it appears that amputative processes arise primarily as a result of germjnal defectiveness. Bagg and Little,-' and Baggs have produced in the descendants of x-rayed mice a large frequency of congenital defeets, including clubfoot, polydactylism, and loss of distal portions of extremities. The x-ray exposure so alters the reproductive cells that embryos which they produce are thus defective. In rats without experimental treat· ment (Wooley and Cole•), the tail, toes, or rarely an entire foot may be involved in amputations, occurring usually between ten and twenty days after birth. This process in the rat has a germinal basis, and a probably reces!live heredity. The deficiency may be regarded as due to a ''susceptibility factor,' ' for which the animal will suffer if other influences make it manifest. Ag·ain in the rat. a mild amputative tendency evident as slight annular constrictions is reported by McElroy and Goss,g arising in animals maintained on diets deficient in vitamin B 6 ; its appearance in only 10 per cent of the animals restricted to the Hame rlepletion dit>t is suggestive of a susceptibility factor. From consideration of other reported instances of cong<>nital amputations in 1mman subjects* and of the parallel conditions observed in mire !md rats, we conclude that the amputations in the present case are to be explained as the result of in· capacity which was inherent in the developing embryo. But since actual manifestation of that incapacity might have been dependent upon the co•eXistence of other influences, the possible roles of known incidents of the prenatal history should be examined. . The maternal injury in early pregnancy might be suggested as a possible source of developmental disadvantage. If it were a faetor, the injury presumably would have operated mechanically, by disadjustment of the fetal-maternal circulatory relationships. There is the further possibility of vitiation of the fetal environment by toxic substances and fever incident to osteomyeliti~. The brief x·ray exposures to which the fetus was subjected in making plates of the pelvis may be definitely ruled out as a causative agency. Neither of the two suggested possible factors can be ab· solutely excluded, though it would be difficult to 1mbstantiate their influence. 9n the other hand, tl1ere are two indications against etiologic significance of the mat
(1) St·reeter, G. L.: Contrib. to Embryo!., Carnegie lust. of \Vash. 22: 1, 1930. (2) Cwmmins, H.: Brennemann's Practice of Pediatrics 4: Chap. 24, 1937. (3) Keith, Arthwr: Brit. J. Sur g. 28: 173, 1940. ( 4) Coleman, H. A.: J. A. M. A. 83: 1164, 1924. (5) Bagg, H. J., and Little, C. C.: Am. J. Anat. 33: 119, 1924. (6) Bagg, H. J.: Am. J. Anat. 43: 167, 1929. (7) Wooley, G. W., and Cole, L. J.: J. Heredity 29: 123, 1938. (8) McElroy, L. W., and Goss, H.: Proe. Soc. Exper. Bioi. & Med. 45: 717, 1940.
*The limits of a case report do not admit a full listing of the literature consulted, but we wish to direct attention to an important early monograph on congenital amputations which has escaped the attention of recent writers on the subject: Montgon:M!ry. w_ F.: An Exposition of the Signs and Symptoms of Pregnancy: with some other papers on subjects connected with midwifery. From the second London edition, 1857, Philadelphia, Blanchard and I..ea.