I am in the process of doing some dissertation research and the letters of a member of the 2nd Iowa Cavalry have raised a peripheral question for me. Byron McClain mentions being shot in late July of 1864 during a cavalry raid into Mississippi. While in the hospital he related to his parents the some of his wounds were healing fine, while others had turned gangrenous. He says that the doctor "burned out" the gangrenous wounds to treat them. How would this have been done? How common was this treatment? Whatever the treatment was, it did not work, as Mr. McClain died in the hospital at Jefferson Barracks on August 26, 1864.
Thanks in advance for any of your comments.
Thanks in advance for any of your comments.
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