THE SPARK OF LIFE
By J. R. Brinkley, M.D., C.M., Ph.D., Sc.D.
Chief Surgeon, Brinkley-Jones Hospital
and Training School
for Nurses, Milford, Kansas
(Written October, 1920)
For many years scientists have believed
that a part, or all of the glands of the human body
influenced longevity. They believed our glands
contained the “life spark.” Men for
hundreds of years have been seeking the “fountain
of youth.” Ponce de Leon when he landed
in Florida and saw the beautiful springs and flowers
thought he had found it, and so announced to the world.
Long ago we learned that the pituitary gland influenced
growth and development. For instance if the pituitary
gland over-functioned we had Giantism. If it
under-functioned the opposite was the result a
dwarf. If the thyroid gland was at fault we would
have either the low mentality commonly spoken of as
cretinism, or myxedema. We found that by feeding
children the fresh gland substance a marked improvement
would be obtained and sometimes a cure. Some years
ago there was a surgical craze which called for the
removal of the women’s ovaries. It was
thought that many nervous troubles, including epilepsy,
etc., were due to diseased ovaries, so the surgeons
removed ovaries just about as promiscuously as tonsils
and teeth are now taken out. After a while they
found a woman without ovaries was about ruined, so
something had to be done, and ovarian extracts and
substances were fed to the unfortunates. Good
results were obtained so long as the feeding process
kept up, but if the feeding was stopped, the miserable
symptoms returned. One factor was always in evidence,
that a woman who had no ovaries never menstruated
again. Premature change of life (menopause) resulted.
Ageing took place early. A loss of interest in
the pleasant things of life existed. As a wife
or companion for the home the woman was worse than
useless. Her life was so miserable that all who
came in contact with her were made miserable, also.
She was unsexed, and one of the “sparks of life”
had been taken away. She assumed characteristics
of the male. If the testes of a man are removed
he will assume the characteristics of a woman.
Many changes will take place. His mind is no
longer clear, he tires easily, cannot concentrate upon
any subject, and has marked loss of memory and of
physical well being. The things that once appealed
to him are now undesirable. The opposite sex are
repulsive and he shuns their society. A man or
woman who suffers the premature loss of their glands
of regeneration will become more or less defective
mentally and their life will be materially shortened.
At one time a favorite expression
was, “A man is as old as his arteries.”
We know better than this now. A man is just as
old as he feels, when said feeling is directed to
his sex organs. The first sign of old age is
impotency, and more men are reaching a premature impotency
than ever before in the history of the world.
Their glands are burning up, as it were. After
impotency is well on its way arterio-sclerosis or
hardening of the arteries is noticed, then the mental
inefficiency, as well as physical weakness. Right
on the heels of impotency comes prostatitis.
I was taught in medical school that nearly all men
suffered from an enlarged prostate and prostatitis:
that it was one of the diseases of “old age”;
that we were heir to it and might expect it to show
up after the age of 45. I was also taught that
arterio-sclerosis was another disease of old age,
and all men were heir to it. However, we are
beginning to awaken to a few things. We are approaching
the dawn of a new day. We are beginning to understand
the whys and wherefores. While I have been criticized
and called everything under the sun, except an angel,
I expected as much, and I am ready to face the world
with my facts; not theories. I have a long and
hard fight before me yet.
The cures that I have effected by
gland transplantation up to the present time are enough
to justify me for all of my work and efforts along
this new line of science. Should I never operate
again, I feel justly repaid and know that I have started
something that will go on and on and live forever.
Gland transplantation for the cure of disease within
the next ten years will be as common as the removal
of a diseased appendix is now. You can hardly
pick up a daily paper without reading an account of
some surgeon performing a wonderful operation of transplanting
bone or tissue from some animal to replace that which
was diseased in the human. Why not borrow what
we need from the animal? We use their flesh for
food. We also use their gland substances in the
fresh or dried form to supply our bodies with whatever
we may not possess.
My first efforts in gland transplantation
were directed towards the cure of sterility.
A man came to me who had been impotent for sixteen
years. Every known means had been used in his
case. My experiments in the use of glands from
animal to animal, led me to believe that if the gland
from a goat could be transplanted into the human body
this impotency and sterility could be overcome.
This man was willing to try anything as he was 46
and his wife was 42. They were very anxious for
a male child. Twelve months after the transplantation
I delivered his wife of a 10-pound baby boy, who is
alive and well today. In appreciation of what
the goat glands had done for them they named the baby
“Billy.” He lives within four miles
of me now. This first case being a wonderful success
encouraged me to experiment with humans on a larger
scale. Willing subjects were not easy to obtain.
After obtaining, it was difficult to operate.
The operation or experiment could not be performed
in any of the general hospitals. Ethics as well
as country and little town gossip forbid such work.
It was necessary for me to build a hospital of my own
so that my experiments could be carried on without
the public or profession knowing anything about them.
If good results were obtained I could announce to
the world; if none were obtained the matter could be
dropped. After four male children had been born,
due directly to gland transplantation, the news leaked
out, and has swept the world like wildfire. While
I was transplanting glands for sterility, other beneficial
effects were noted by me as well as my patients.
Now, since I have transplanted glands into more than
600 men and women it is an easy matter to give some
comprehensive statistics. A complete record is
kept of each case and follow-up letters are used so
that we are in a pretty fair way to estimate just
what we are doing. Five cases of insanity have
been cured to date. The great difficulty in obtaining
insane people for operation is, they are confined
in a state institution, and the authorities will not
permit their removal, especially when their loved
ones tell the “higher ups” they wish Dr.
Brinkley, “the gland man,” to transplant
goat glands. “Oh, no, it’s all rot
and will never do!” However, we have operated
upon five cases and have cured five cases. After
awhile we will break down this great wall of prejudice,
and insane people will be ordered out for this operation.
At present when habeas corpus proceedings are all
that will obtain the release, and gland transplantation
is the object, not much of a chance exists. I
am going to mention one of our very interesting cases,
as the man lives only about 15 or 20 miles from me
in Dickinson County, Kansas. His name is Lon
Jones, and his case is known far and wide within the
state of Kansas. My writing about Mr. Jones will
not be the betrayal of a professional secret.
He is anxious for the world to know about it.
Some six weeks or two months before I was called to
see him he was stricken suddenly, insane. He
had mounted his horse and was driving his cattle home
for the night when it was noticed by others that he
acted “queer.” He began to whip and
fight his steed as well as the cattle unmercifully.
He dismounted or fell off his horse and at first was
thought unconscious. A physician was called,
another, and another, and his case was diagnosed as
Dementia Praecox. Violent in character. He
wanted to kill his doctor, or commit some rash act.
One of the first acts was to try and give away all
of his land and stock as well as corn and feed.
It was unsafe for his wife and children
to be near him. Men remained with him, day and
night. Finally his guards had to tie him in bed.
His arms and feet were securely fastened, as well
as his body, to a heavy iron bed. Application
for his entry into the state institution had been
made when I was called. With the assistance of
neighbor men he was conducted into my hospital here.
Immediate gland transplantation was performed, and
three days after said operation he asked me to remove
his irons so that he could rest comfortably.
He informed me that he was in his right mind and we
need have no further fear of him. Soon afterwards
he was permitted to roam around the building and over
town. He went home more than a year ago and is
transacting his business as a sane man should.
No evidence of his former trouble has occurred.
He did not know until the day that we discharged him
what my line of treatment had been. Another notable
case was that of a man who had spent 11 years of his
life in three state institutions for the insane in
New York. He left here entirely cured and is
now holding an important position in New York City.
Another case was that of a young man who became insane
suddenly. His first act was to try and murder
his father and mother, his greatest bitterness being
directed towards his mother. He attempted to kill
me when I approached him, and it was necessary to
open a bottle of chloroform and stand at a safe distance
and throw the anesthetic in his face and eyes.
Less than a week after the operation he was in his
right mind, and has been so since. Another case
of a young man who became insane and was violent.
He secured a number of rifles and shotguns and barricaded
himself in a corn field. When he learned I had
been sent for he was worse than ever, and if it had
not been for his mother I would have been killed.
I operated upon him immediately, and for one week
after the operation I could not visit him. However,
he soon was in his right mind, and when it was told
to him what he had done he went to Indianapolis, Ind.,
and secured a position. His shame was so great
that he could not remain where he was known.
After two years he returned home and resumed work
where he had left off. The fifth case was just
as interesting as the above.
I have operated upon and cured 5 cases
of locomotor-ataxia. It is almost impossible
for me to get cases of locomotor-ataxia. When
a man writes me he also asks his family physician,
who very quickly informs him “there is nothing
to it; it’s all bunk!”
My cases have ranged in age from 18
to 75 years. My patients that are from 60 to
75 years of age write me they feel as they did when
they were boys 18 years of age. I have transplanted
glands for almost every conceivable disease and have
received splendid results in almost every case.
All cannot be cured, but all of them can be greatly
benefited. At this writing I have with me as
a patient a noted United States Senator from Washington,
D.C. He has been treated by Dr. Cary T. Grayson,
the president’s personal physician, as well
as taking 3 years of treatment at Johns Hopkins Hospital.
He is depressed and discouraged. He speaks of
suicide. He has been operated on only two days
and I venture to say that before his week is passed
he will be a different man.
My greatest number of men come for
impotency, next for prostatitis, and many for a general
improvement in health. Many come with but one
purpose to prolong their lives. I believe
that those who receive gland transplantation will
live much longer than without it. Possibly as
much as from 10 to 25 years can be added. Then
successive transplants can be made, and we have no
idea how long they will live. Their skin takes
on the appearance of youth. I know that after
the ovaries have been transplanted into women who
have none their menses return on a 4-day period regularly.
Women who had passed the menopause have a return flow.
Hardening of the arteries as well as high blood pressure
are returned to normal in 100 per cent of the cases.
Eyesight is improved from 50 to 100 per cent.
A well-known judge was operated upon by me a short
time ago, and his eyesight was so much improved that
he could no longer wear glasses of any kind.
Men who had not heard for 16 years write me that since
gland transplantation they can hear the tick of a watch.
In women a development of the bust is noted and the
wrinkles disappear from their cheeks. Chronic
constipation is cured as well as old chronic skin
diseases, such as psoriasis, eczema, etc.
With the best will in the world I
am unable to describe on paper just how my fellow
practitioners should perform this operation, because
I never meet with precisely similar conditions in
any two cases. I can say positively that I do
not know just what I shall do until the case itself
is under my hands in the operating room. The operation
is simple in itself, but in my early days of operating
I made a number of mistakes because I was on new ground,
and there was no authority from whom I could learn
the technique. Now, after my six hundred operations
have taught me what to do and how to do I am able
to avoid these earlier mistakes, and as a consequence
I hardly ever have an operation that is not a success.
Not very many months ago I was called to San Francisco
to re-operate on a number of cases which had gone
wrong in the hands of a fellow practitioner.
I re-operated on these cases successfully. The
surgeon who had performed the operation in the first
place is skilful and experienced in all lines of surgical
work, but in this particular line of transplanting
of goat-glands into human bodies in such wise that
the tissue of the goat will blend with and nourish
the human tissue no living man except myself has had
the necessary experience to teach him through his
successes and failures, what to do and how to do it.
Nor should I be successful if today, in spite of all
the work I have done with the Goat-Glands, I should
relinguish the goat-gland in favor of the human-gland
or the monkey-gland. Results have taught me that
I made a wise choice in pinning my faith to the young
goat as the healthiest possible animal from which
tissue could be used for transplanting into human
bodies. The goat is immune to practically all
diseases. The human being and the monkey, on
the other hand, are liable to tuberculous or some
tropical disease. For his splendid work with human
glands I give full credit to Dr. Frank Lydston of
Chicago, who was not only the pioneer in this use
of human glands, but actually made his first transplantation
upon himself. This is but another instance of
that fine confidence in our beliefs and convictions
which is typical of the medical profession as a whole.
In the use of the human-gland Dr. Lydston is as supreme
as I am in the use of the goat-gland, and you must
understand that in saying this I am not throwing bouquets
at myself in idle vanity. I have a clear cold
reason for saying this. I have devoted my life
to this particular work, and have brought it to a point
where I can speak with authority upon it. I foresee
that because of the marvelous results obtained by
the transplanting of the goat-glands at my hospital
there will be a great awakening of interest in this
operation on the part of the public and the medical
profession. A great many operations of a similar
character will be performed not alone in this country,
but all over the world. A great many of these
operations will be unsuccessful because the experience
of the operator will not have taught him what to do
under certain unusual conditions, or rather, what
to do under any and all conditions. In the face
of an unsuccessful operation this work will be blamed,
and the theory upon which I work, namely, that the
sex-energy is the basis of all human energy, physical
and mental, will be given a setback, and scouted as
untrue. But I am constantly proving its truth
by the results I get, and find its confirmation in
the effect of successful goat-gland transplantation
in both men and women. Therefore I am urgent
in saying that the work must be rightly done in the
first place to obtain right results.
Briefly, the operation for men means
that the glands of a three weeks’ old male goat
are laid upon the non-functioning glands of a man,
within twenty minutes of the time they are removed
from the goat. In some cases I open the human
gland and lay the tissue of the goat within the human
gland. The scrotum of the man is opened by incision
on both sides under local anesthetic. Conditions
of the case may show that there are adhesions of tissue
which must also be broken down before the new gland
can function. I find that after being properly
connected these goat-glands do actually feed, grow
into, and become absorbed by the human glands, and
the man is renewed in his physical and mental vigor.
The operation upon women means that
the ovaries of a female goat not more than twelve
months of age are removed and inserted into the woman.
If the woman’s organs are sound and merely inert
and atrophied, the new ovary will find its way to
its proper position and begin the work of restoring
the arrested functions, so that the act of menstruation,
for example, which has ceased because of the atrophic
condition of the woman’s ovaries, begins again
and continues on a normal twenty-eight day period.
The effect of the new glands upon women is even more
noticeable, if such a thing were possible, than upon
men, since in their case the rejuvenation is more
striking in the changed appearance. But though
I claim much, and with good reason, for this operation,
I warn against undue expectations. In many cases
I advise against the operation as a sure waste of
time and money. In many cases I explain that the
results will be experimental only, there being nothing
in my experience to warrant assurance of success.
For instance, in blindness and deafness I have no
faith that this operation will remove the disease in
spite of the fact that in almost every case operated
upon there is great improvement in the sight and hearing.
But I have no certain knowledge why this improvement
followed. It partakes, therefore, of the nature
of an accident. In the case of very fat people
the operation trims them down to normal weight.
Very thin people are built up to normal weight by
it. Barren women and impotent men become mothers
and fathers. But in no case do I permit a grandfather
or grandmother to entertain the hope that they may
be rejuvenated to such an extent that they can procreate
again if they wish. This is mere romance, with
which I have nothing to do. Nor do I advise a
young woman of forty who has not reached the menopause
stage to take the operation if she is in good health,
in spite of her belief that the goat-glands will enable
her to remain indefinitely young. This is experimental
work, and is not in the same class as the case of
the same woman who has just passed through her menopause
and ceased to menstruate. By all means I advise
the latter to take the operation because I feel that
it will rejuvenate her. If a woman has had both
ovaries removed by surgical operation, will this operation
grow new ovaries for her, and enable her to become
a mother? At this stage of my knowledge my answer
is, “Certainly not.” If a man has
lost both glands by surgical removal will this operation
grow new glands for him? Nine times out of ten,
“No.” The tenth time, “Yes.”
I do not know why.
I can use only a certain breed of
goat, a Swiss milk goat, and only animals of a certain
youth. My goats cost me about $75 each on an
average, and that is one reason why it would be impossible
to conduct this work as a free surgical clinic might
be conducted, unless the undertaking were specially
endowed with funds to meet the expense.
Some time in the month of June I expect
to make a trip to London, England, and will be away
possibly until the end of August. Even the month
of May in Kansas is sometimes too hot for this operation
to be successfully performed, and I make it a rule
to suspend operations entirely throughout June, July
and August. Experience has taught me that when
the outdoor temperature is high the operation will
almost certainly be unsuccessful, and on account of
the cost involved, as well as for the saving of time
and trouble for the patient, it is in the highest degree
unwise to go contrary to this rule. If the glands
are transplanted during very hot weather they will
almost certainly slough, which means re-operating
later.
In many cases that are brought to
me I do not operate or even advise that the goat-glands
be transplanted later. I cannot go into details
of such cases in these pages, but might cite the case
of a man, syphilitic, who was sent to me. Certainly
I have never made the statement anywhere, at any time,
that this operation would cure syhpilis. The man
is being treated now for syphilis, and should not
have been sent to me at all.
I quote the case of a woman of forty,
who is normal in every way, and the picture of health
at the present time. Her desire is that she may
never grow to look any older than she does at this
moment, and she asks me if this gland-operation will
hold her at the point she has now reached. Frankly,
this is pure experiment. I do not know. After
another ten years of work in this gland-surgery I
might be able to give her a definite opinion, but
not at this stage, seeing that my oldest cases go
back only three years. On one point only I can
speak with positiveness, namely, if I cannot answer
this question there is no man living who can answer
it, because I am the only man alive who can give an
opinion on this work that is founded on first-hand
knowledge. We learn in this work only by experience,
and we draw just conclusions only from quantity of
experience. No other man alive has had this experience
in sufficient quantity to justify him in forming a
conclusion derived from his facts. This is my
answer not only to those who listen to encouraging
advice regarding the effects of this operation tendered
by surgeons who are embarking in this goat-gland operation,
but also to those general practitioners who inform
patients asking their opinion in the matter that the
operation is useless because the glands are certain
to slough, I hold that they are not qualified to speak
on the subject because they have no knowledge.
I have the most positive knowledge that when the operation
is rightly performed the glands do not slough,
and my knowledge is founded upon the hard facts of
much experience. In another ten years I shall
know more than I know today because I shall have added
to my facts, and among those facts there may be some
which confirm the hope of the woman of forty alluded
to above that this gland transplantation may hold
the condition of youth steady as something static,
which will not be suffered to pass. At present
I do not know, and if I offer an opinion it is to
be understood that it is only a guess. My guess,
then, would be that in this case the operation would
be a waste, producing no effect whatever, neither
adding to nor detracting from the condition of health
and normal function which is present today.