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establishing what some call interstitial pneumonia and others fibroid phthisis. In the earlier stage of all this class of cases the systematic daily practice of full, deep inhalations of pure atmospheric air, coupled with a judicious exercise of the muscles of the chest and arms, will do more to remove all symptoms of bronchial disease and preserve the general health of the patient than all the medicines that have been hitherto devised. There is much evidence in favor of using compressed air for inhalation in these and some other cases of bronchial inflammation. The late F. H. Davis of this city, who during his brief professional career gave much attention to the treatment of diseases of the respiratory organs, and had good opportunities for clinical observation, says, when speaking of the same class of young subjects, that “the inhalation of compressed air for from five to ten minutes once or twice a day produced marked and rapid improvement in all the cases. The size of the chest on full inspiration was increased from one-half inch to one inch in the first month, and a habit of fuller, deeper breathing and a more erect carriage was established." But he adds, with proper emphasis, that the inhalations to be permanently curative must be continued faithfully for many months, and be accompanied by a judicious regulation of all the habits of life.

Every physician of much practical experience knows, however, that, in defiance of all the remedies and methods of treatment hitherto devised, there are many cases of chronic bronchial inflammation which will continue, and be aggravated at every returning cold season of the year, so long as the patient lives in a climate characterized by a predominance of cold and damp air with frequent and extreme thermometric changes. And yet a large proportion of these, by changing their residence to a mild and comparatively dry climate, either greatly improve or entirely recover. Consequently, in all the more severe and persistent cases such a change is of paramount importance, and should be made whenever the pecuniary circumstances of the patient will permit. Probably the best districts in our own country to which the class of patients under consideration can resort are the southern half of California, the more moderately elevated places in New Mexico and the western part of Texas, Mobile in Alabama, Aiken in South Carolina, and most of the interior parts of Georgia and Florida. My own observations lead me to the conclusion that the unfortunate invalid, suffering from any grade of chronic bronchial inflammation, can find in some of the regions named all the relief that could be gained in the most celebrated health-resorts on the other side of the Atlantic. But adherence to strictly temperate and judicious. habits of life, with regular daily outdoor exercise, is essential to the welfare of the invalid in whatever climate he may choose to reside.

In the foregoing pages I have said nothing concerning the management of those cases of asthma, emphysema, interstitial pneumonia, etc. which often occur either as complications during the progress of bronchial inflammations or as sequela, simply because they will all be fully considered in the articles embracing those topics in other parts of this work.

1 See paper read before the Chicago Society of Physicians and Surgeons, April, 1877, on "The Respiration of Compressed and Rarefied Air in Pulmonary Diseases."

BRONCHIAL ASTHMA.

BY W. H. GEDDINGS, M. D.

SYNONYMS. Asthma convulsivum (Willis); Spasmus bronchialis (Romberg); Asthma nervosum; Krampf der bronchien.

DEFINITION.-A violent form of paroxysmal dyspnoea, not dependent upon structural lesion; characterized by wheezing respiration, with great prolongation of the expiration, and by the absence of all symptoms of the disease during the intervals between the attacks.

HISTORY.-Derived from the Greek ac0paw, to gasp for breath, the term asthma was employed by the older writers to designate a variety of affections of which embarrassed respiration was the most prominent symptom, thus including a great number of diseases which a more extended knowledge of pathology has since distributed among other nosological groups. By the earlier authors simple embarrassment of breathing was designated as dyspnoa; if attended with wheezing it was called asthma; while those forms in which the difficulty in respiration was so great as to prevent the patient from lying down were appropriately styled orthopnoea (Celsus). Ignorant to a great extent of pathological anatomy and unprovided with the improved methods of physical diagnosis which we now possess, they described as asthma not only the dyspnoea due to cardiac and pulmonary diseases, but also that occasioned by affections of the pleura and greater vessels. Covering such an extensive range of territory, it was found necessary to subdivide the disease into a number of varieties, each author classifying them according to his conception of the cause, seat, and nature of the trouble. Some of these-e. g. a. dyspepticum-still find a place in medical literature, but the vast majority of them, having ceased to be of any practical significance, have been discarded, and are now only interesting as examples of the crude and fanciful notions which prevailed in an age during which science rather retrograded than advanced. Of the writers of this period, Willis in the seventeenth century is especially worthy of notice as being the first to describe the nervous character of asthma. Without discarding the accepted forms of the disease, he mentions another variety, characterized by spasmodic action of the muscles of the chest, to which he gave the name asthma convulsivum. The improvement in physical diagnosis resulting from the brilliant discoveries of Auenbrugger and Laennec greatly curtailed the domain of asthma. 1" Van Helmont, discarding the ancient doctrine of the four humors, attributed asthma to an error of the Archeus, which he conceived to be enthroned in the stomach and to constitute the source of all diseased as well as of all healthy phenomena. This principle, he supposed, sent forth from the stomach a peculiar fluid, which, when it became diseased, gives rise to a morbid state of the parts to which it was conveyed. He moreover imagined that this fluid sometimes mixed itself with the male semen, and thus formed a compound which, as one of its constituents is the means provided by nature for the propagation of the species, possesses the power of generating a disease of hereditary character. Thus, when this compound was conveyed to the articulations, he affirmed it produced gout, and when it took its direction to the lungs it then occasioned asthma" (Baltimore Med. and Surg. Journ, and Review, Baltimore, 1833, p. 300).

With the aid of auscultation and percussion it was discovered that most of the cases hitherto regarded as asthma were only symptoms of some organic disease. Many distinguished authorities, particularly of the French school, went so far as to declare that there existed no such disease as asthma, and that in every case the dyspnoea and other phenomena described under that name were merely symptoms of some organic affection.

Although very generally received at first, it was not long before this toosweeping reform encountered opposition from various quarters. Cases were observed with marked asthmatic symptoms in which, after death, the most careful examination failed to reveal the slightest trace of textural lesion. The discovery by Reisseisen of muscular fibres even in the minutest bronchi, and the demonstration of their electric contractility by Longet and Williams, afforded a ready explanation of these cases, and led to the opinion—which has since been generally received that asthma in the modern acceptation of the term is simply a neurosis. The more recent theories in regard to the nature of asthma will be more fully discussed in the portion of our article devoted to the pathology of the disease.

SYMPTOMS AND COURSE.-The following description of an attack of asthma by Trousseau, who was himself an asthmatic, is perhaps the best that has ever been written: "An individual in perfect health goes to bed feeling as well as usual, and drops off quietly to sleep, but after an hour or two he is suddenly awakened by a most distressing attack of dyspnoea. He feels as though his chest were constricted or compressed, and has a sense of considerable distress; he breathes with difficulty, and his breathing is accompanied by a laryngotracheal whistling sound. The dyspnoea and sense of anxiety increasing, he sits up, rests on his hands, with his arms put back, while his face is turgid, occasionally livid, red, or bluish, his eyes prominent, and his skin bedewed with perspiration. He is soon obliged to jump from his bed, and if the room in which he sleeps be not very lofty he hastens to throw his window open in search of air. Fresh air, playing freely about, relieves him. Yet the fit lasts one or two hours or more, and then terminates. The face recovers its natural complexion and ceases to be turgid. The urine, which was at first clear and was passed rather frequently, now diminishes in quantity, becomes redder, and sometimes deposits a sediment. At last the patient lies down and falls to sleep."

The next day the patient may feel well enough to pursue his accustomed avocation, and may remain free from all symptoms of the disease until another attack comes on; but more frequently he is confined to the house, if not to bed, the slightest exertion being sufficient to cause dyspnoea; and during the following night there is a repetition of the paroxysm.

If unchecked by treatment, the disease may continue for days, weeks, and in some instances even for months, the paroxysms often increasing in severity until, as in other nervous affections, it ultimately wears itself out.

There is no regularity in the occurrence of the attacks. In some cases they recur every few days, while in others there may be an interval of weeks or months between the seizures. Even in the same case, although the individual paroxysms of the attack may come on at the same hour, there is, except in rare instances, no regularity in the recurrence of the attack itself; and when it does recur at a certain time it is almost always due to some cause which, as in hay asthma, exerts its influence only at that particular period.

In the great majority of cases asthma comes on without any warning whatsoever, but occasionally it is preceded by certain sensations which to the experienced asthmatic are a sure indication that an attack is impending. With some it is only a feeling of ill-defined discomfort; others complain of various disorders of the digestive system-a sense of dryness of the mouth and pharynx, uncomfortable distension of the epigastrium with eructation of

gases from the stomach, and more or less obstinate constipation. A troublesome itching of the skin often precedes the attack. Some experience a feeling of constriction around the throat; a profuse secretion of clear urine is a symptom of this stage. Frequent gaping, frontal and occipital headache, are mentioned; but far more constant than all of these are certain symptoms indicative of a mild grade of acute catarrh of the respiratory organs-coryza, with swelling of the Schneiderian membrane and discharge from the nostrils, sneezing, redness of the conjunctivæ with increased lachrymation, and later, as the irritation extends downward, more or less cough.

The attack almost always comes on after midnight, and, as a rule, between the hours of two and six o'clock in the morning. Salter states that nineteen out of twenty cases occur between two and four A. M. There are, however, occasional exceptions to this rule; sometimes the patient is attacked soon after retiring, and Trousseau cites the case of his mother, who always had her attacks between eight and ten in the forenoon, and also that of a tailor, whose paroxysms invariably came on at three o'clock in the afternoon. Indeed, there is no hour of the twenty-four during which the seizure may not take place. Various attempts have been made to explain why it is that the paroxysms of asthma almost invariably occur during the latter half of the night. Many attribute it to a stasis of blood in the lungs caused by the recumbent posture of the patient, while others claim that it is due to a dulling of reflex impression, the patient during sleep failing to perceive the necessity of breathing. Germain Sée, who discredits both theories, inquires why, if the above explanations are correct, does the attack not come on soon after retiring, as is the case with the dyspnoea of cardiac diseases.

The paroxysm of asthma develops very rapidly, but not so suddenly as is claimed by many authors, several minutes to half an hour or more elapsing before it attains its full height.'

The patient, experiencing an urgent desire for breath, instinctively places himself in the position most favorable for the ready admission of air into the lungs. If in bed he sits up, and, resting on his hands or grasping his knees with them, he so fixes the body that the muscles of respiration may work to the greatest advantage. The shoulders are drawn up and the head thrown back. The expression of the face is one of great anxiety-pale at first, then red, and as the attack increases in severity assumes a dusky, bluish tint; the mouth is partially opened, the nostrils are dilated; the eyes, the conjunctiva of which are much injected, are prominent, with a wild, staring look; and the forehead is moist with perspiration. Others in their desperate struggle for breath spring from the bed, throw open the window, and, regardless of everything save what they believe to be impending suffocation, recklessly gasp in the cold night air. Sometimes the sufferer prefers to kneel before a table or some other article of furniture, supporting his head with his hands. Whatever posture he assumes, he is actuated by the one impulse of placing himself in the position that will enable him to use to the greatest advantage the muscles of respiration and their auxiliaries. The sterno-cleido-mastoid muscles are contracted to the utmost, and, projecting like hard cords, with the aid of other muscles draw the chest upward. The patient instinctively avoids every unnecessary exertion as having a tendency to aggravate his dyspnoea; he speaks but little, and when questioned usually replies with a motion of the head.

In ordinary respiration the inspiratory movement is twice as long as the expirium, the latter, except in forced expiration, being a purely passive act. In asthma this rule is reversed, the expiratory movement being four or five times as long as the inspirium, and is often so slow that it fills the whole of 1 Germain Sée in Nouveau Dictionnaire de Médecine et de Chirurgie, tome iii. p. 617, Paris, 1865.

the pause which usually intervenes between the completion of one respiration and the beginning of another. It is sometimes so slow "that it seems as though the lung would never empty itself." In the desperate struggle for breath the respiratory muscles are exerted to the utmost in futile endeavors to expand the chest; with each inspiration there is an elongation of the thorax, but no lateral movement. The chest moves up and down, but there is no expansion; "the muscles tug at the ribs, but the ribs refuse to rise" (Salter), the walls of the chest remaining immovable.

Notwithstanding the all but tetanic contraction of the diaphragm, there is during each inspiration a sinking in of the epigastrium, and in severe cases also of the spaces above and below the clavicles. During expiration the abdominal muscles, especially the recti, are hard and tense, the pressure thus exerted being sometimes sufficient to expel the contents of the lower bowel and bladder. The transversus is also tightly contracted, and a cross furrow above the umbilicus indicates that the contraction of its upper half is opposed to the contents of the abdomen forced down by the distended lung (Biermer). Although the dyspnoea is great, there is no increase in the frequency of the respirations so long as the patient remains quiet, but, on the contrary, they are often less frequent than in health. This slowing of the respiration is also observed in the dyspnoea from laryngeal stenosis in croup, etc.; but in these cases we do not have the prolonged expiration which is so characteristic of asthma (Biermer). At every breath which the patient takes there is a peculiar wheezing sound which may be heard distinctly all over the room; it is usually heard only during expiration, but some authors (Biermer) claim that it is also audible during inspiration.

On auscultating the chest it will be found that the ordinary vesicular murmur is either entirely absent, or if heard it is only over very limited areas. In the place of it we have an endless and ever-changing variety of dry sounds, such as whistling, cooing, mewing, snoring, etc., technically styled sibilant or sonorous ronchi. They are usually equally diffused over both lungs, but are sometimes confined to one. The sibilant râles afford an index of the degree of spasm, being in mild cases equally audible during both inspiration and expiration, while in severe attacks they are louder during expiration (Biermer). That the vesicular murmur cannot be heard is due not only to its being masked by the louder ronchi, but also to the absence of the condition necessary for its production, the spasmodic constriction of the bronchial tubes or their plugging with tough, viscid mucus preventing the entrance of sufficient air to produce the sound. Sometimes a hitherto occluded tube becomes pervious, and we have vesicular respiration where a moment before only dry sibilant râles were heard. Usually at the close of the attack, when cough sets in, there are occasional moist râles. These become more frequent as the expectoration becomes more abundant. Frequently, however, the paroxysm terminates much more abruptly, the spasm relaxes, and the air rushing through the tubes gives rise to puerile respiration.

During the paroxysm there is, even in the early stages of asthma, more or less distension of the lungs, measurement of the chest showing that its circumference is four to eight centimeters greater than before the attack (Beau). This transitory emphysema, which must not be confounded with that due to structural changes observed in old cases, disappears with the attack, and the lung returns to its normal condition. This distension causes the exaggerated resonance obtained by percussion which is one of the most constant sympAt the base of the lung, especially posteriorly and laterally, there is a peculiar modification of the percussion sound to which Biermer has applied the name Schachtelton, from its resemblance to the note produced by striking 1 Bamberger's case, as quoted by Riegel, Ziemssen's Pathologie u. Therapie, Leipzig, 1875, Band iv. 2, S. 282.

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