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Br Heart3' 1993;70:587-588
VIEWS FROM THE PAST
How John Parkinson did the post mortem on
Sir James Mackenzie
Arthur Hollman
Department ofMedicine, UniversityCollege LondonMedical School,LondonA HollmanCorrespondence to:Dr A Hollman,Department of Medicine,University College LondonMedical School, 5University Street, LondonWC1E 6JJ.Accepted for publication14 September 1993.
Figure 1 J3ohn Parkinson(1885-1976) aged 44.
In the 1950s Sir John Parkinson (fig 1) was
the doyen of British cardiology and knownworldwide especially for the Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. His seniority was combinedwith a concem for the younger members ofthe specialty and it was his custom to invitethe Junior Cardiac Club to his home.' That ishow he recognised me one afternoon in June1954 when I was walking to the NationalHeart Hospital to attend Dr Paul Wood'sclinic. I said that I was going to show DrWood the heart of a patient of his who haddied at University College Hospital. Sir Johnasked jokingly if the leather case in my handwas my portable postmortem set, and he theninvited me to see his own such set. The nextday I went to his rooms where he got out theset and told me its history.When he was chief assistant to Dr (later
Sir) James Mackenzie at the London Hospitalin 1913 he was encouraged to purchase asmall postmortem set because it was, saidMackenzie, very useful for doing postmortems in peoples' homes. We can safely
assume from this first hand comment thatthis was what Mackenzie did when he was ingeneral practice in Burnley, though there isno mention of such post mortems in hisobituaries and biographies.24 It is a greattribute to Mackenzie's standing in the com-munity-"the beloved physician"-that hewas able to do so. Certainly he sent hearts toDr (later Sir) Arthur Keith for pathologicalexamination having written,7 "You are theman I have been looking for; I have heartswhich I observed in patients over a long seriesof years and now I want some one to examinethem." They came from patients with heartblock and with atrial fibrillation8 and wereexamined before Keith and Flack discoveredthe sino-atrial node.The set that Sir John Parkinson showed me
(fig 2) was in a mahogany case measuring32 x 16 x 6 cm and weighing 1 9 kg. It wasin excellent condition and contained a saw, aspine wrench, bowel scissors, a large knife,scalpels, a hammer, scissors, and hooks.Many of these items were stamped Evans andCo. Old Change-an address near theLondon Hospital. It was a typical post-mortem set of the time. Similar ones are illus-trated in the catalogue of Down Brothers for1906 which lists 13 sets of varying content,costing between £2.Os.Od and C£10.8s.0d (say,£120 to £650 now). In three of them theinstruments were in a metal tray so that theycould be sterilised.
Sir James Mackenzie's own cardiac prob-lems began when he was 47 and atrial fibrilla-tion developed after he had run 400 yards. Atthe age of 54 slight angina of effort developedand the next year, 1908, he had a two hourattack of cardiac pain during the night. Afterthat his angina slowly worsened but he was68 before it forced him to give up his belovedgolf. A few weeks before his death at the ageof 72 Mackenzie told Parkinson that he wasto do a postmortem examination when thetime came: "I protested, but he smiled andsaid that his brother (the late Lord Amulree)would see that I did what he wished".9 Bynow Mackenzie had to chew a trinitrin tableteven before leaving his study to greet avisitor. This did not prevent him, a true Scot,from attending the Burns Night celebration in1925. However, severe cardiac pain duringthe evening forced him to return to his flat inAlbert Hall Mansions. During that night and
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Hollman
Figure 2 Sir JohnParkinson's postmortemset.
the following day he was given chloroforminhalations and morphine to alleviate severeand prolonged attacks of pain and he died at4 am on January 26 (30 hours after the onsetof pain). Parkinson then used his postmortemset, possibly for the first time. The examina-tion was made 14 hours after death so it mayhave been done elsewhere than in the flat. Ashe did the examination Parkinson must haveremembered, among many other reflections,the day 12 years before when his chief hadadvised him to buy a postmortem set. Heremoved the heart and sent it to ProfessorDavid Waterston who was professor ofanatomy at St Andrews University whereMackenzie had founded his Institute forClinical Research in 1917.
In 1932 Sir Thomas Lewis askedWaterston if he might be allowed to examinehis "old friend's" heart (Wellcome Institute.Contemporary Medical Archives Centre,PP/LEW A1/723) and he did so with hisassistant Dr R T Grant. Their report is incor-porated in Waterston's article "Sir JamesMackenzie's heart" which appeared in the
first volume of the British Heart Journal in1939.10 In brief there was severe coronaryatheroma with an old infarct that was consis-tent with the episode in 1908 and also arecent infarct together with numerous smallscars in the left ventricle. A mass of throm-bus, mostly recent, overlay an area of severesubendocardial fibrosis.
1 Campbell M. The British Cardiac Society and the CardiacClub: 1922-1961. BrHeartJ 1962;24:673-95.
2 Wilson JM. The beloved physician, Sir james Mackenzie: abiography. London: John Murray, 1926.
3 Mair A. Sir James Mackenzie, M.D. 1853-1925, GeneralPractitioner. Edinburgh: Churchill Livingstone, 1973.
4 Obituary. Sir James Mackenzie. BrMedJ 1925;i:242-4.5 Obituary. Sir James Mackenzie. Lancet 1925;i:257-9.6 Lewis T. In memoriam. Sir James Mackenzie. Heart
1925;25:i-iv.7 Keith A. An autobiography. London: Watts and Co,
1950:253-5.8 Mackenzie J. New methods of studying affections of the
heart. IV. Action of digitalis on the human heart incases where the inception of the rhythm of the heart isdue to the ventricle. BrMedJ 1905;i:759-62.
9 Parkinson J. Sir James Mackenzie. The centenary of hisbirth. BrHeartJ 1954;15:125-7.
10 Waterston D. Sir James Mackenzie's heart. Br Heart J1939;1:237-48.
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