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Charles Kite and the first defibrillation?
(1788)

Apparatus as shown in Kite's An Essay on the Recovery of the Apparently Dead

Apparatus as shown in Kite's An Essay on the Recovery of the Apparently Dead (London, 1788). An electrostatic generator charges a Leyden jar capacitor, which can discharge its accumulated electrical energy through the electrodes below. Energy will build up until the voltage is high enough to jump the spark gap ab.

In 1788 Charles Kite, a member of the Royal Humane Society of London (an organization devoted to salvaging persons seemingly dead) described the use of electricity to revive a three-year-old child who was taken for dead after falling out of a window.

An "apothecary" was sent for, who could do nothing; then electrical resuscitation was attempted by a Mr. Squires, who

with the consent of the parents, very humanely tried the effects of electricity. Twenty minutes had at least elapsed before he could apply the shock, which he gave to various parts of the body without any apparent success; but at length, on transmitting a few shocks through the thorax, he perceived a small pulsation; soon after the child began to breathe, though with great difficulty. In about ten minutes she vomited. A kind of stupor remained for some days; but the child was restored to perfect health and spirits in about a week.

Kite comments:

Do [these examples] not plainly point out, that electricity is the most powerful stimulus we can apply? ... And are we not justified in assuming, that if it is able so powerfully to excite the action of the external muscles, that it will be capable of reproducing the motion of the heart, which is infinitely more irritable, and by that means accomplish our great desideratum, the renewal of the circulation?

(I myself feel that given the length of time to apply the stimulus, Kite was managing cardioversion at best; but that's a pretty good best for 1788. - ERK)



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