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cases, and, being probably equally effective, produces less disorder of the nervous system and digestive functions than the salt of cinchona. Judging from what we have seen of its effects in other fevers and inflammations, fifteen to twenty grains repeated about four times in the twenty-four hours should keep the temperature very near normal.

For the second indication milk and raw eggs constitute the best diet. Brandy or whiskey in the form of eggnog or milk-punch is useful, and in the latter stages indispensable. It should not be forgotten that according to the latest observations muriatic acid disappears from the gastric juice of fever patients, and that its power to digest animal food is therefore very much impaired. This should be supplied, therefore, by giving after every ingestion of milk, eggs, or other animal food ten to fifteen drops of dilute hydrochloric acid in a sufficient quantity of water. Peptone will also aid in the proper digestion of protein substances, and should therefore be added to the acid. Some of the liquid peptone sold by manufacturing chemists contains hydrochloric acid, and would therefore meet both these indications.

By these means we may doubtless prolong the life of the patient and promote his comfort or at least diminish his suffering, and if a cure is possible secure it. Tuberculosis of the mesentery and peritoneum, as well as tuberculosis of the cerebral meninges, will generally prove fatal, the one by impairing the chylo- and hæmatopoietic functions, the other by injury to the central nervous system, though Hartshorne of Philadelphia reports one case of the latter in which temporary recovery lasting one month took place, and quotes two cases by Guersant in the Dictionnaire de Médecine (1839) in which also partial recovery, lasting five weeks and two months respectively, occurred. "May we not imagine, however," says Hartshorne, "that if such convalescence could last two months, it might in a case affected with nearly similar lesions be prolonged indefinitely?" I am informed that a case of permanent recovery has been reported in England, but I have not been able to obtain the reference. To these I have to add a case of my own in which recovery has been maintained for a little more than nine months. In this case, a boy of twenty-six months, the convulsions were controlled for many days by hypodermic injections of morphia, while quinia was given by the mouth when possible, and otherwise by the rectum; and, though he had left hemiplegia and was for a time both blind and deaf, he recovered entirely in about six weeks, and has remained well.

In pulmonary miliary tuberculosis the treatment is by no means so hopeless if the disease is promptly recognized and actively treated. The thing to be accomplished in this case is to prevent secondary eruptions and the softening of the tubercles already formed. We know that this last can be done in cascous deposits resulting from catarrho-pneumonia, and we also know that tubercle can be maintained in a quiet state or be made to dry up by calcareous impregnation or degeneration for an indefinite time, since post-mortems often show old tubercles in one or the other of these conditions. We know of one man who carried a caseous lung for nineteen years, coughing more or less during all that time, but in a sufficiently good state of health and strength to follow his occupation of ship-carpenter, but who died at last from phthisis; while another, a farmer living in one of the Southern States, has lived in fair health, with his left lung indurated from top to bottom, for twenty-four years. There cannot be a doubt, therefore, that if secondary crops of tubercles are prevented, and a perfect state of health and general nutrition maintained, the tubercles may remain quiescent in their cheesy condition or may undergo calcareous degeneration and dry up into inert and innocuous masses incapable of further harm.

The first and most important indication, therefore, in the treatment of 1 Reynolds's System of Medicine, Am. ed., Philadelphia, 1880, vol. i. pp. 826, 827. VOL. III.-31

tuberculosis is to suppress the fever; for as long as this continues new tubercles will continue to form, since the fever is both a predisposing and exciting cause. Quinia, therefore, or antipyrine, should be given as directed in general tuberculosis. The patient should be put to bed and not permitted to go about until the arrest of fever seems permanent. Nutrition should be supported and promoted also by the same means already indicated. As soon as the fever is permanently arrested (but not before) the patient should be permitted to take gentle exercise in the open air, and should be encouraged to spend as much time as possible out of doors, and if able to do so should be sent during the winter to that climate or place where, on account of its warmth and dryness, the most time can be spent in the open air.

Hypophosphites of lime and soda should be given constantly, and cod-liver oil also if the stomach can tolerate it. Large doses of the oil are useless, and often hurtful, a dessert-spoonful being quite as much as most stomachs can bear without exciting unpleasant eructations and nausea. The appetite and digestion are best excited by tincture or extract of cinchona and nux vomica. Iron we have found to be of little use, and often hurtful. We much prefer small doses of arsenic (two to five drops of Fowler's solution), and if there is much bronchitis this will be found especially useful. Some persons, however, cannot tolerate arsenic in any dose. The patient should carry a clinical thermometer, and as soon as the slightest fever is detected he should go to bed and active antipyretic treatment should be instituted, the tonics and altera tives being meanwhile suspended. If cough is troublesome (but not otherwise), one to two grains of codeia should be given two or three times a day or as often as may be found necessary. This is much preferable to morphia or other preparations of opium, which constipate the bowels, dry the mouth, impair the appetite, and so stupefy the patient that all inclination or even ability to take exercise in the open air is destroyed. Codeia is amenable to none of these objections.

Guided by these principles, we think we have successfully treated many cases of primary pulmonary tuberculosis-many in which the hereditary predisposition was strongly marked and the diagnosis unquestionable. It is true that many of these cases have relapsed and died after a variable period, but others have remained well for several years, and still others permanently.

DISEASES OF THE PLEURA.

BY FRANK DONALDSON, M. D.

Pleurisy.

DEFINITION.-Inflammation, partial or general, of one or both pleuræ. SYNONYMS.-Pleuritis (supits) morbus lateralis; Morbus pleuriticus (Celsus); Pneumona pleuritis (Cullen). Fr. Pleurésie; Ger. Seitenstich. HISTORY.-Pleurisy derives its name from the accompanying pain in the side, usually its most prominent symptom. In the sense in which Hippocrates used the word supíris, it meant all kinds of pain in the side, especially such as are of a violent character. Pleurisy was mentioned by Celsus, and was still better defined by Galen. Ectæus, however, was the first to describe it with precision and to speak of its treatment. These ancient authors viewed the disease as seated in the layer of the pleura lining the ribs or external parietes of the chest. More modern writers contended that the disease was more frequently in the expansion of the pleura over the lungs and other parts. Boerhaave and Van Swieten contended for the separate and distinct affection of the pleura. Sydenham, Hoffman, and Morgagni believed that the pleura and the substance of the lung were generally both implicated. Pinel was the first to definitely establish the difference between pleurisy and pneumonia from the anatomical lesions. Laennec laid the foundation of our present knowledge. He was followed by Andral, Chomel, Louis, and Cruveilhier in Paris, and by Forbes and Williams of London and Stokes of Dublin. They demonstrated, by the physical signs and general symptoms during life and by the post-mortem lesions, that inflammation may commence in and be limited to the pleura in some cases, and in others that it may extend to and involve the lungs. Again, they showed that in some instances the lung may be inflamed without involving the pleura generally, yet that in the large proportion of cases the disease may originate in one organ and extend in a greater or less degree to the other, thus implicating both of them. Previous to Laennec the incomplete anatomical knowledge of the nature of the serous membrane, the pleura, as a capsule of the lungs, and the thoracic organs and walls, as well as the theoretical views of the nature of inflammation as a morbid process, led to erroneous views. Their diagnoses were made from general symptoms only. Pleurisy was considered the more common disease. Avenbrugger, Corvisart, and Laennec, by their discoveries of the accurate physical modes of exploration of chest diseases, gave far more reliable data for differential diagnosis. Now we have, in addition to the general symptoms, the modern refinements in auscultation and percussion, the delicate measurements of Woillez's cyrtometer, Ransome's stethometer, and Pravaz's and Alex. Wood's hypodermic exploring-needles to enable us to attain great accuracy in the diagnosis.

CLASSIFICATION.-Pleurisy is one of the most common diseases of the

respiratory apparatus. Though apparently simple, careful study shows it to be extremely complex. It occurs in very different forms and in a great many modifications, according to the producing causes and the numerous lesions which follow its course. We might classify the forms of pleurisy, according to their causes, as primary or secondary, tubercular, traumatic, etc.; or we could designate them according to their anatomical lesions, as dry pleurisy, pleurisy with effusion, general or parietal pleurisy, encysted, multilocular, purulent, hemorrhagic, etc. A methodical classification of all these forms is difficult if we attempt to base it upon the prominent characteristics or the lesions. We prefer a classification which enables us to study separately the clinical varieties which are most frequently met with, and therefore the most important. The symptomatology shows that the inflammatory process in pleurisy is of different degrees of intensity. We propose for our study to divide them into two main groups, according to the nature of the exudation: Fibro-serous pleurisy, Chronic.

Purulent pleurisy,

Acute,

Acute,
Chronic.

They may be local or general. When they result from disease of neighboring parts, they are generally local. Each of these groups comprehends primary and secondary varieties.

In the first, we have an exudation resembling the plasma of the blood. The effusion is not serous, for the fluid is spontaneously coagulable, whereas serum is not. It is not properly termed fibrinous, for it contains more albumen than fibrin. Fibro-serous is the most accurate term by which to designate it. The watery portion gravitates to the lowest part of the cavity, while the plastic deposit is thrown out over the two surfaces of the pleura. In the most acute forms the general symptoms, especially the pain and fever, are well marked. The exudation is at first largely fibrinous, but it is afterward more fluid in its character. In milder cases, the latent variety of the older authors, frequently designated as the subacute form, the subjective symptoms are so slight that the individual is not aware of his condition until the exudation, which is largely sero-fibrinous, mechanically interferes with his respiration. When first recognized these cases are really often chronic. They frequently remain sero-fibrinous in their character for a long time. Sometimes they become sero-purulent (the intermediary variety), and later purulent. Purulent pleurisies (empyema) are those where pus is the product of the inflammatory action. They may be acute (empyema d'emblée) or the result of transformation of acute or chronic fibro-serous pleurisies.

By this division we shall be able to take into consideration the fundamental causes of all the forms of pleurisy. Starting from the simple primary form, we shall be able to study special varieties of secondary pleurisies, such as tubercular and rheumatic.

Next, we shall examine separately the hemorrhagic variety as distinct from hæmothorax. The localized forms, such as the interlobular, diaphragmatic, and mediastinal, will be studied as varieties caused by their development in different localities.

The simplest plan to elucidate the whole subject of pleurisy is to analyze carefully, in the first place, the unquestionably acute disease, primary pleurisy, and afterward to connect with it the study of the several forms and varieties. Acute primary pleurisy has a sero-fibrinous exudation, and is the most common form of the disease. In it are best defined the usual characteristics of this inflammation. We consider this the principal type of this class, and with it shall study the development and character common to all the varieties of inflammation of the serous membrane of the thoracic cavity.

PATHOLOGICAL ANATOMY OF FIBRO-SEROUS PLEURISY.-The anatomical

changes in all forms of pleurisy begin by hyperæmia of the vessels of the serous membrane and of the subserous connective tissue. This is followed by an exudation of a liquid, a pseudo-membranous deposit. In acute primary cases this is first noticed on the costal pleura. The pleura itself shows, by puffiness and oedema with red points and small ecchymosed spots, that the inflammatory process has affected it. In a few hours, in acute cases, there is found a thin deposit of fibrinous lymph of a reddish-yellow tinge, with more ecchymosed spots, resulting from the rupture of fine capillary vessels. The pleura is somewhat thickened and loses its transparency, and is studded with very fine granulations. Under the microscope it is shown that the epithelial cells are swollen, that their number has been largely increased by prolif eration, and that they have been detached in' great quantities. The granulations are scattered over the pleural surfaces, and separate the pleura from the fibrinous deposit. The connective tissue is loaded with liquid, in which are found in increased quantity leucocytes which have migrated through the walls of the blood-vessels.

Over the surface of the pleura there is a tissue of granulations composed of embryonic cells, which are derived from the proliferation of the elements of the connective tissue. In this tissue of new formation we find new bloodvessels coming from those belonging to the subserous tissue, which advances through small points, even to the free surface of the granulations. These vessels are very thin and brittle. They sometimes rupture and cause ecchymoses of the pleura and of the false fibrinous membranes-sometimes effusions of blood, which, becoming mixed with the serum in the pleural cavity, cause hemorrhagic pleurisies. This new tissue is susceptible of organization, and of transformation progressively into a tissue analogous to that of a cicatrix. Under the plastic exudation we find abundance of embryonic cells, which become elongated and spindle-shaped in the formation of new connective tissue. This is at first tender, but may become dense and fine over circumscribed points, so as to produce bands which enclose and touch the effusion. This is the origin of the organized neo-membranes which are found on the surface of the pleura. It is, moreover, this tissue of granulations which constitutes the bands which unite the parietal to the visceral pleura, the adhesions being produced by the contact and the union of vegetations or neomembranes developed on the two opposed layers of the pleura. The membranes form the filamentous thin bands which draw obliquely together portions of the pleural sac. These lesions are very often slight and rudimentary in simple acute pleurisy, but are found well developed in purulent pleurisy, especially when it is chronic. These are hyperplastic parenchymatous lesions of the pleura. Acute inflammation of the pleura gives rise to two distinct forms of exudation-the plastic, deposited on the free surface of the serous layers or formed in flakes in the fluid; and the serous, which falls into the dependent portions of the cavity. The plastic may exceptionally exist alone. Their formation together is the rule. Anstie questions whether the serous effusion ever occurs without the fibrinous. The plastic exudation takes the form of granulations more or less prominent, constituting a bed of very irregular rough points. So long as the period of inflammation continues, new plastic deposits are formed over the old ones. They thus increase in thickness. The neo-membranes which play such an important rôle in the natural history of pleurisies increase very rapidly. Little by little, they are transformed into firm, very resisting tissues. They may become fibrous, cartilaginous, or even calcareous in their structure. These false membranes develop more freely at first when the opposing surfaces are kept apart by the effused liquids. The rubbing of the two pleure together seems to impede the process of organization. According to Wagner, the lymphatics are dilated and contain a liquid poor in corpuscles. The newly-organized and vascular

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