1. W

    US presidential shootings: When would medicine have actually become modern enough for various assassinated US Presidents to survive?

    Which person, exactly? Also, this other person didn't actually develop cholecystitis, did they? Nor did they develop any aneurysms or pseudoaneurysms on their blood vessels, did they?
  2. W

    US presidential shootings: When would medicine have actually become modern enough for various assassinated US Presidents to survive?

    It apparently mentions a Winckler article from 1905 in regards to this, very possibly in German. I know because I looked at this entire article from 1941 on LibGen.
  3. W

    US presidential shootings: When would medicine have actually become modern enough for various assassinated US Presidents to survive?

    Do you know when the first successful surgery for a splenic aneurysm was? Apparently some German guy named Selten did it--as per my link above here: This is relevant to the question of saving James Garfield's life.
  4. W

    US presidential shootings: When would medicine have actually become modern enough for various assassinated US Presidents to survive?

    A liquid diet for the rest of his life would have definitely sucked! Though I do suppose that it's better than guaranteed death.
  5. W

    US presidential shootings: When would medicine have actually become modern enough for various assassinated US Presidents to survive?

    https://pubs.rsna.org/doi/abs/10.1148/36.2.171 But I couldn't actually find out when exactly Selten actually did this first successful operation! :(
  6. W

    US presidential shootings: When would medicine have actually become modern enough for various assassinated US Presidents to survive?

    In regards to US presidential shootings, when would medicine have actually become modern enough for various assassinated US Presidents to survive? I suspect that even nowadays both Lincoln and JFK would have still died since they were shot in the head, but when exactly would medicine have become...
Back
Top