Yakey, Jacob P.a machine readable transcriptionSusan C. LawrenceKenneth M. PriceKenneth J. Winkle2011med.d2e31116Civil War WashingtonUniversity of Nebraska–LincolnCenter for Digital Research in the Humanities319 Love LibraryUniversity of Nebraska–LincolnLincoln, NE 68588-4100cdrh@unlnotes.unl.edu2011
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Matthew BosleyKourtney KleinAlex KinnamanThe Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellion. (1861-65.)Washington, DCGovernment Printing OfficePart 2Volume 21876548-549, 520-521Medical and Surgical History of the War of the Rebellionwounds and injuries of the upper extremitieswounds of the shoulder jointexcisions at the shoulderexcisions of the head and portions of the shaft of the humerusprimary excisions of the upper extremity of the humerus for shot injurysuccessful operationsball entered shoulder at anterior edge of deltoid muscle, fractured humerusexcision of head and some shaft of humerusabscess of arm, fragment of necrosed bone removedlimb of slight service for manual labordisability totalgeneral anesthesia, chloroformproofed figure encodingadded figure encodingcopied case from MSHWR, added proofing of transcription and encoding, identified keyword terms
CASE 1522.—Sergeant Jacob P. Yakey, Co. D, 125th New York, aged 21 years, was wounded at Petersburg, June 22, 1864, and sent to a Second Corps hospital, where Surgeon D. H. Houston, 2d Delaware, reported that "he was struck by a conoidal ball, which entered the left shoulder at the anterior edge of the deltoid muscle, and fractured the humerus." On the same daySurgeon William S. Cooper, 125th New York, excised the head and three inches of the shaft of the left humerus through a ∨-shaped incision, the patient being under chloroform. The case progressed well. On June 28th, the patient was sent to Lincoln Hospital, and furloughed on September 17th, and discharged November 10, 1864. In January, 1865, he was admitted to a hospital at Troy as contract nurse. He had an abscess of the left arm. which was incised by Surgeon G. H. Hubbard, U. S. V., and a small fragment of necrosed bone was removed. After this the wound healed firmly. Sergeant Yakey was pensioned. Examiner W. S. Searle reported, July 6, 1865, "the arm is useless at present." Examiner A. Churchill, of Utica, reported, September 29, 1866, the injury and operation, and added: "There is still a running sore near the shoulder-joint, and another near the elbow-joint. The bone removed has not been reproduced; he has little control of the muscles of the arm, and the limb is of slight service for manual labor." Examiner C. B. Coventry, of Utica, reported, September 4, 1873, "almost total loss of use of the arm. Disability total." A photograph of the patient was made at Lincoln Hospital (Contributed Surg. Phot., A. M. M., Vol. II, p. 13), which is copied in Figure 3, PLATE XIII, opposite page 520. There has been no application for a supporting apparatus in this case.