![]() |
![]() |
| Doctor Zebra > Presidential health > List of Presidents > Thomas Jefferson | [Text Version] |
| The Health and Medical History of President | ||||||||
Thomas Jefferson |
||||||||
| President #3. |
|
|||||||
| Timeline: | ||||||||
Maladies = severe headaches · smallpox inoculation · arm fracture · right wrist fracture · dysentery · back injury · depression · jaw infection · reading glasses · rheumatism and constipation · buttock boils · wrist and arm fracture · weakening · hearing loss · prostatic enlargement · teeth · Asperger Syndrome? · sleep · slaves · timing ·· Odds & Ends ·· Resources |
||||||||
| Maladies and Conditions | [Top] |
![]() ![]() severe headaches |
From age 19 on, Jefferson had a tendency to develop prolonged incapacitating headaches, usually at 7-8 year intervals, usually correlated with stress or grief, complicated by indecision and deeply buried rage [1a]:
|
![]() smallpox inoculation |
Jefferson was inoculated against smallpox [1d]. He himself inoculated his own family -- a procedure not to be taken lightly, as the experience of his contemporary, John Adams, illustrates. |
![]() ![]() arm fracture |
In late June 1781, Jefferson (apparently) broke his arm [which one?] after being thrown from his horse [1e]. |
![]() ![]() right wrist fracture |
Jefferson broke his wrist in Paris in summer 1785. This seemingly minor event was to cause him grief the remainder of his life. There are three versions of the incident: (1) He was trying to jump a fence while touring Paris with a married woman, (2) He was trying to jump over a kettle, and (3) He fell while walking with an (unidentified) friend [1e]. One account described the fracture as compound and poorly treated by the Parisian doctors. The wrist remained swollen, painful, and useless for weeks [1e]. Despite taking the waters at Aix-en-Provence, it remained deformed and bothered him the rest of his life [1f]. |
![]() ![]() dysentery |
Jefferson developed severe dysentery (bloody diarrhea) in 1802. He consulted no doctor, feeling that horseback riding helped [1b]. (This seemed to be Jefferson's cure-all therapy.) Bumgarner wonders if tension played a role in this illness [1b]. |
![]() ![]() back injury |
After perfoming extensive manual labor at Monticello (his estate) in late summer 1794, Jefferson became almost totally disabled by a back condition for two and a half months. The nature of the problem is not fully known [1b]. Repeated bouts of back pain assailed Jefferson after this initial episode, e.g. in 1797 [1b]. |
![]() depression |
Jefferson's back problems (see above), financial troubles, and personal vicissitudes depressed him ca. 1793-1797. He believed his physical health was so poor that death was near [1b]. |
![]() ![]() jaw infection |
A severe jaw infection occurred in January 1808 [1g]. Bumgarner believes this was most likely due to a decayed and infected tooth, but Jefferson's 1819 statement that he head never lost a tooth to age gives pause [4a] [1c]. |
![]() reading glasses |
From "middle age on" Jefferson required spectacles to read [1g]. In his 70s he wore spectacles at night "but not necessarily in the day unless in reading small print" [1c]. |
![]() ![]() rheumatism and constipation |
Jefferson was disabled by "'rheumatism" in summer 1811 [1g]. Again, the exact nature of the illness is obscure. (I am not clear if it was related to his back problems mentioned above.) In 1818 he had his most severe attack of rheumatism ever. It was accompanied by life-threatening constipation. [1h]. Taking the waters at Warm Springs, VA helped the rheumatism [1g]. |
![]() ![]() buttock boils |
In the third week of taking the waters at Warm Springs (1818) Jefferson developed boils on his buttocks. (The 50+ mile ride to the spa plus possibly unsanitary conditions there may have predisposed to the illness.) As may be imagined, his homeward return ride was a trial. Once home, for several weeks he conducted his correspondence lying down. He did not ride a horse for several months. "Jefferson always believed that this experience had greatly injured his health" [1g]. |
![]() ![]() wrist and arm fracture |
Jefferson fell from a broken step at home in 1821 (age 75), fracturing his left arm and wrist. Now both wrists were significantly impaired (see above). He wrote less, even into 1822 [1h]. |
![]() weakening |
In 1819 (age 75) he was "too feeble to walk much but riding without fatigue six to eight miles per day, and sometimes thirty or forty" [1c]. Comment: This seems like a remarkable dissociation between exercise tolerance while walking and while sitting. Dr. Zebra wonders if Jefferson had spinal stenosis because these patients are limited in their walking, but may have much better capacity for bicycling and other forms of exercise when seated. Jefferson had a history of back problems. Jefferson's strength declined further in winter 1822, but he remained in generally good health. (He dreaded the winters at this age.) He could walk "only [to] reach my garden, and that with sensible fatigue" [1h]. |
![]() hearing loss |
In 1819 Jefferson wrote "My hearing is distinct in particular conversation, but confused when several voices cross each other, which unfits me for the society of the table" [1c]. (This experience is a classic manifestation of high-frequency hearing loss.) By 1825, however: "This [hearing] dullness of mine causes me to lose much of the conversation of the world and much a stranger to what is passing in it" [1h]. Comment: Dr. Zebra suspects that Jefferson's fondness for shooting as a form of exercise caused the hearing loss. |
![]() prostatic enlargement |
There are statements (without a description of symptoms) that Jefferson had prostatic enlargement in at least the final year of life [1h]. |
![]() teeth |
At age 75 Jefferson wrote: "I have not yet lost a tooth to age" [4a]. Comment: Having great teeth is a sign of hereditary fructase deficiency, but swift consultation of a few Jefferson biographies fails to disclose an aversion to sweets, the other cardinal symptom of the disorder. |
![]() Asperger Syndrome? |
It has been postulated that Jefferson had Asperger Syndrome, a type of autism compatible with high achievement [3]. Dr. Zebra has not evaluated this hypothesis, but his first impulse is that distinguishing disease from eccentricity is very difficult 200 years out. |
![]() sleep |
Slept propped up in a bed that was otherwise too short for him. (Dr. Zebra heard this on a tour of Monticello around 1990.) |
![]() slaves |
Recent stories about genetic "proof" that Jeffersion fathered a child by one of his slaves are not proof. The technique used in the testing cannot determine whether Jefferson or one of his close male relatives fathered the child(ren). |
![]() timing |
Jefferson became comatose on July 2, 1826. On the third he awakened and asked, "Is it the fourth?" He died 50 minutes into the next day, the 50th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence [1i], a few hours before his onetime rival John Adams. Adams' last words, "Thomas Jefferson still survives" were mistaken. [4b]. |
| Odds & Ends | [Top] |
Unfortunately, it appears that Jefferson's fondness for shooting damaged his hearing (see above).
But Jefferson was not above practicing medicine himself. His "practive" included: suturing the wound of a severely bleeding slave, inoculating his family against smallpox (see above), and treating his daughter's typhoid fever (with Madeira wine) [1d]. He used the Madeira regimen on dozens of his neighbors as well [1m].
| Resources | [Top] |
| Alternate index terms: Medical history of President Jefferson. | [Top] |
| Dr Zebra | Prez Home | Search | Contact us | Back | Top |