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Historical Bibliography Updated: June 16, 2026

Cardiac failure and sudden death.

Publication Details

Brit. med. J., 1, 6-8. 1889 CE.

"Physiologists and physicians had proposed various theories to explain transient and fatal cardiac standstill in animals and humans who were apparently healthy. MacWilliam defined two distinct mechanisms depending on whether recovery was possible. He offered experimental proof that “fibrillar contraction” (later termed ventricular fibrillation) was the cause of irreversible cessation of the heartbeat and sudden death. Writing in 1889, he argued that

'Sudden cardiac failure does not usually take the form of a simple ventricular standstill in diastole...It assumes, on the contrary, the form of violent, though irregular and incoordinated, manifestation of ventricular energy. Instead of quiescence, there is a tumultuous activity, irregular in its character and wholly ineffective as regards its results.'
"He explained that a variety of pathological conditions could predispose to ventricular fibrillation, including “degenerative changes of a fatty or fibroid nature in the muscular walls” and “diseased conditions...of the coronary arteries.” MacWilliam demonstrated that the fundamental electrophysiologic properties of the hearts of cold-blooded amphibians could be reproduced in mammals. He also extended the time an isolated mammalian heart preparation remained viable by combining artificial ventilation and rhythmic manual compression of the ventricles with the administration of pilocarpine.10 In 1889, MacWilliam published an article in The British Medical Journal announcing his conviction 'that ventricular fibrillation rather than cardiac standstill (asystole) was the cause of many, if not most cases of sudden death in humans' (Silverman & Fye, "John A. MacWilliam: Scotish pioneer of cardiac electrophysiology," Clin. Cardiol, 29 (2006) 90-92.)
Catalog MetadataReference Information
Entry Number#12267
Permanent Linkhttps://staging.historyofmedicine.com/entry/14484
Author Bio LinkWikipedia ↗
External URLcardiac-failure-and-sudden-death