he was shot and the lead ball(bullets)remained in his body for decades and mercury poisoning he ingested often as a medical treatment which causes insanity....they were never removed and he carried them around poisoning his brain for 2 decades...fact
JAMA article:
http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/282/6/569Andrew Jackson's Exposure to Mercury and Lead
Poisoned President?
Ludwig M. Deppisch, MD; Jose A. Centeno, PhD; David J. Gemmel, MA; Norca L. Torres, MS
JAMA. 1999;282:569-571.
Historians have suggested that US president Andrew Jackson (1767-1845) experienced lead and mercury poisoning following his therapeutic use of calomel (mercurous chloride) and sugar of lead (lead acetate). To evaluate these claims, we performed direct physical measurement of 2 samples of Jackson's hair (1 from 1815, 1 from 1839). Following pretreatment and acid digestion, mercury was measured using cold vapor generation techniques, while lead levels were measured by electrothermal atomic absorption spectrophotometry. Mercury levels of 6.0 and 5.6 ppm were obtained from the 1815 and 1839 hair specimens, respectively. Lead levels were significantly elevated in both the 1815 sample (mean lead level, 130.5 ppm) and the 1839 sample (mean lead level, 44 ppm). These results suggest that Jackson had mercury and lead exposure, the latter compatible with symptomatic plumbism in the 1815 sample. However, Jackson's death was probably not due to heavy metal poisoning.
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~
Andrew Jackson's Physicians
http://www.tennesseehistory.org/Publications/Summer-2003/andrew_jackson's_physicians.htm His biographers have concluded that Andrew Jackson experienced lead and mercury poisoning. Some have even suggested that heavy metal toxicity contributed to this president’s death. His physicians plied him with calomel (mercurous chloride) and sugar of lead (lead acetate), prescriptions from the early nineteenth century pharmacopoeia. A third integral part of his medical regimen was frequent and rigorous bloodletting, whether performed by a physician or servant or self administered. Venesection was the preferred mode to remove blood but the placing of heated glass cups on the skin, a process referred to as “cupping” was also employed. Collectively these violent therapies together with a few others comprised the treatment philosophy known as heroic medicine.2
Andrew Jackson lived for seventy-eight years. His medical history was encyclopedic. He was the target not only of endemic infectious diseases of his era, malaria and smallpox, but also of the therapeutic agents employed by the practitioners of heroic medicine, bleeding, calomel, and sugar of lead. Additionally Jackson assaulted his physical well being by his predilection for physical confrontation.
As a teenage combatant in the Revolutionary War, Jackson’s forehead and wrist were lacerated by the saber of a British officer. Jackson contracted smallpox while imprisoned on a British prison ship in Camden harbor during the war. This disease contemporaneously sickened his brother, Robert, a fellow prisoner of war. Elizabeth Hutchinson Jackson obtained the release of both of her sons, but Robert died from his disease shortly thereafter. Mrs. Jackson nursed Andrew back to health. In 1806, he fought a duel with Charles Dickinson, the consequences of which long troubled Old Hickory. Dickinson shot Jackson in the left chest and the resultant lung infection persisted until Jackson’s death, thirty-nine years later. He suffered periodically from severe left-sided chest pain and episodic coughing of blood that may have produced chronic anemia. The most likely cause for these symptoms was a traumatic bronchopulmonary fistula.3
In 1813, the future president was involved in a a gunfight that resulted in a bullet wound in his left shoulder. Chronic osteomyelitis of the left shoulder ensued and dead bone spontaneously extruded several years later. The retained lead slug produced occasional discomfort until it was surgically excised in 1823.4
Old Hickory developed diarrhea during the War of 1812; this symptom afflicted him until his death. The initial cause of the diarrhea is unknown, but Jackson compounded his digestive difficulties by the excessive use of both mercury and lead therapeutics. Many authors make reference to Jackson’s malaria.5
Finally, Jackson developed swelling of his ankles in 1829, that progressed to generalized edema in 1845, a condition referred to as dropsy. Fluid accumulated in his lungs and within his abdominal cavity. Tapping and drainage of the fluid, a procedure currently identified as paracentesis, relieved the latter. It is unknown whether Jackson’s terminal symptoms were due to either kidney or heart failure, or to a combination of the two.6
Andrew Jackson’s physicians were educated in the therapeutic philosophy of heroic medicine. This academic lineage coursed from the teachings of Dr. William Cullen at the University of Edinburgh, crested with the pronouncements of the leading American physician of the period, Benjamin Rush at the University of Pennsylvania Medical School in Philadelphia, and flooded the American medical scene through Rush’s many students. Thus, by understanding Cullen and Rush, we then may begin to understand how physicians treated, and affected the health of, Old Hickory.