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in its action; it has succeeded in some instances in which digitalis has failed, and in others has been quite without effect. In extreme cardiac failure with great dilatation, lividity, orthopnoea, and feeble pulse, stimulants must be freely given; ether may be employed hypodermically. In this condition of final asystolism digitalis seems to have lost its influence. In the heart failure of pneumonia I have found camphor a valuable adjuvant to the diffusible stimulants. To improve the general nutrition, and with it that of the heartmuscle, iron and arsenic are most valuable adjuvants, especially in the dilatation of anæmia. The treatment of special symptoms, dropsy, dyspnoea, etc., is considered under Valvular Affections.

Aneurism of the Heart.

This term is now restricted to local or partial dilatations of the wall of one of the cardiac cavities. Formerly, dilatation of the heart or of one of its chambers was spoken of as aneurism. This rare condition' is most frequently associated with fibroid degeneration, but other causes of local weakness of the walls, as ulcer, acute myocarditis, and fatty degeneration, have been present in a few cases. An instance is on record where the aneurism followed a stabbing wound of the chest. The left ventricle is usually involved; very few cases occur in the other chambers. The condition may be acute or

chronic.

Acute aneurism is met with occasionally in ulcerative endocarditis, more rarely as the result of local softening due to myocarditis or plugging of a branch of a coronary artery. In severe endocarditis perforation is, I think, more common than the production of aneurism. In one case I saw a deep excavation at the upper part of the septum produce a bulging the size of a marble in the wall of the left auricle, and in another ulceration in one sinus of Valsalva had extended into the septum, the upper part of which presented an aneurismal dilatation which had ruptured into the left ventricle. Legg considers the production of acute aneurism by the rupture of abscesses or cysts as doubtful.

Chronic aneurism is almost confined to the left ventricle, and, as Cruveilhier pointed out, is the result of fibroid degeneration of the muscle. In a few instances fatty degeneration appears to have been the cause. The monographs of Thurnam, Pelvet, and Legg give the most complete account of the disease. They are more common in men than in women, and the majority of the cases occur after middle life.

The situation of the aneurism is most frequently at the apex-59 of 90 cases collected by Legg. They are usually rounded in shape, and may vary in size from a marble to a cocoanut. The sac may be double, as in a case described by Janeway, or, as in a specimen in Guy's Hospital Museum, the whole wall of the ventricle may be covered with aneurismal bulgings. In the simplest form there is a rounded dilatation at the apex, and the lower part of the septum is lined with thrombi. Often the tumor is distinctly sacculated, and communicates with the ventricle by a very small orifice. The pericardium is usually thickened, and calcification may occur in the walls. Rupture seems rarely to occur in only 7 of the 90 cases collected by Legg. Of other 1In the index catalogue there are references to only 18 cases by American authors. In the museums of Philadelphia there are only 5 specimens-3 in the museum of the College of Physicians; 1 each in the University and Pennsylvania Hospital cabinets. Quoted by Legg, Bradshawe Lecture on Cardiac Aneurisms, London, 1883.

3 Anatomie pathologique, Paris, 1835-42.

* Medico-Chirurgical Transactions, vol. xxi., 1838.

Des Aneurysmes du Coeur, Paris, 1867.

N. Y. Med. Journ., 1875, xxi.

6 Loc. cit.

parts of the ventricle, the septum and the undefended space at the highest part of the septum just below the aortic ring are most often involved. This latter situation is sometimes the seat of a congenital dilatation, usually a small, thin, smooth sac without thrombi, which has no pathological signifi

cance.

Cardiac aneurisms rarely produce any symptoms, and in the majority of cases have been found accompanying other conditions which have proved fatal. At the left apex the increase in dulness and area of pulsation could scarcely be distinguished from hypertrophy unless associated with marked bulging. They seldom perforate the chest-wall. Berthold (quoted by Legg) has described one connected with the right auricle which produced a pulsating tumor beneath the skin, the region of the second and third ribs.

Adventitious Products in the Heart.

Tubercle. In general tuberculosis and in tuberculous pericarditis there may be nodules in the heart-substance, but, as a rule, this organ is very rarely the seat of tubercle. Large caseous masses sometimes occur, but unless associated with tubercle in other organs they are not to be regarded as necessarily tuberculous. Miliary granulations have been seen on the valves.

Cancer and sarcoma rarely are primary, and are not often met with as secondary growths. Sometimes a mediastinal sarcoma penetrates along the veins and involves the auricle, with or without great involvement of the pericardium. The secondary tumors may be single or multiple. In a case of cancer of the uterus I found a large mass in the wall of the right ventricle, involving also the anterior segment, of the tricuspid, and partially blocking the orifice. The surface was eroded, and the pulmonary arteries contained numerous cancerous emboli. In another instance the heart was considerably enlarged by the presence of many rounded masses of colloid cancer throughout the walls. In a remarkable case of sudden death in a child I found the tricuspid orifice firmly blocked with a sarcomatous mass which I thought at first had originated in the heart, but dissection showed to have come from the renal vein, which was filled with sarcoma extending from a large tumor of the kidney. Melanotic cancer, fibromata, and myomata have occasionally been seen, and a secondary epithelial growth has been described by Paget.

Syphilis of the heart is met with in the form of gummata or as a specific arteritis leading to patches of fibroid induration. The gummous growths form tumors of variable size, which usually occupy the septum or the ventricles. Possibly many of the caseous and calcified masses not infrequently met represent obsolete gummata. The syphilitic myocarditis probably originates in an affection of the arteries, and leads to patches of fibroid induration more or less extensive. Many authors hold that syphilis plays a very important rôle in the production of fibroid heart.

Cysts. Simple cysts are rare in the heart: I have met with two instances -one, the size of a marble, situated in the wall of the right auricle near the septum, was filled with a brownish fluid; the other, the size of a small walnut, occupied the base of the posterior segment of the mitral, and was filled with a clear fluid. Blood-cysts occasionally occur.

Parasites. The Cysticercus cellulose, the larva of Tænia solium, and the hydatid or echinococcus, the larva of Tania echinococcus of the dog, are sometimes found in the heart. The former, usually single, is extremely rare; in the hog and calf the measles, as the cysts are called, very often exist in the heart-muscle. In the recent paper by Mosler' references are given to 13 cases of cysticerci in the heart. The greatest number present was 19. The 1 Zeitschrift für klinische Medicin, Berlin, Bd vi., 1883.

hydatid is more common: 25 instances are mentioned in the statistics of Devaine and Cobbold, and Mosler's more recent figures only give 29. They occur in the right ventricle more frequently than in the left. Occasionally they attain a larger size and compress the heart and push back the lungs. The cyst may burst and the contents be discharged into the pulmonary artery or aorta, as in a case given by Osterlen,' in which gangrene of the right leg followed the plugging of the femoral by hydatid vesicles discharged into the blood by the bursting of a cyst in the left auricle.

1 Virchow's Archiv, xlii.

ENDOCARDITIS AND CARDIAC VALVULAR

DISEASES.

BY ALFRED L. LOOMIS, M. D.

Endocarditis.

DEFINITION.-Endocarditis is an inflammation of the endocardium, and may be either exudative, neoplastic, or ulcerative in character. While its different varieties are closely connected in their etiology, they are distinct in the extent, duration, character, and course of their pathological changes. They cannot be classified as acute and chronic in the ordinary acceptation of these terms, for they often so merge into each other as to render it difficult, if not impossible, to determine when they cease to be acute and become chronic; and some cases are at no time acute. It has been claimed that an acute endocarditis becomes chronic when its course is prolonged, but the advanced changes are only a stage of the acute process.

So-called acute endocarditis is accompanied by a fibro-cellular exudation into the substance of, and underneath, the endocardium, causing elevations of its surface. The better term for this variety is exudative endocarditis, it being borne in mind that the exudation does not take place upon the free surface of the membrane, but into its substance and underneath it. This form of endocarditis may be entirely recovered from, or it may lead to interstitial changes in the endocardial and myocardial tissue which will correspond to the changes usually described as those of chronic endocarditis.

Interstitial endocarditis is a better term for these changes. The disease may be the sequela of exudative endocarditis, or may be interstitial from its commencement, for the valvular changes of interstitial endocarditis are often found in those who never have had either acute articular rheumatism or exudative endocarditis, but have been the subjects of chronic rheumatism or gout.

Acute exudative endocarditis may, in certain cases, be stamped with an ulcerative process, the result of septic infection, giving rise to those pathological changes which have been described as acute ulcerative endocarditis.

HISTORY.-The history of endocarditis is restricted to modern pathology. It is not spoken of by the older medical writers. Before the sixteenth century knowledge of the structure and functions of the heart was imperfect and scanty, and its diseased conditions were altogether unknown.

The history of the pathology of cardiac disease commenced with Harvey, Lancisi, Vesalius, and Vieussens. They investigated not only the normal structure of the heart and the mechanism of the circulation, but accurately described a few of its valvular diseases.

There is little doubt but that Laennec, Senac, and Morgagni were quite familiar with the valvular diseases of the heart, but Kreisig first traced the relationship between valvular diseases and inflammation of the lining membrane of the heart.

The term endocarditis was first used by Bouillaud, who had the advantage of Laennec's discovery of auscultation. Corrigan first discovered the physical signs of aortic insufficiency. The most important advance in the pathology of endocarditis is due to the investigations of Virchow and Luschka, the former developing its sequelæ or results, the latter its histological changes. Ulcerative endocarditis is of modern date, and its literature scarcely extends back twenty years. The labors of Kirk, Virchow, Charcot et Vulpian, Moxon, Eberth, and Lancereaux are all connected with the etiology and anatomical changes of ulcerative endocarditis.

The relationship of interstitial endocarditis to valvular diseases of the heart and to cardiac murmurs is a subject which at present is engaging the attention of many medical observers.

I shall describe endocarditis under three heads:

1st, Exudative endocarditis; 2d, Ulcerative endocarditis;

3d, Interstitial endocarditis.

That the pathological changes which I shall describe may be readily appreciated, I will briefly review the anatomical structure of the endocardium.

The endocardium consists of connective tissue, with numerous elastic fibrils, covered by and continuous with a layer of flattened cells. Upon this lies the endothelial layer, which disappears in twenty-four hours after death.

Luschka regards the endocardium as continuous with all the arterial tissues, but the majority of histologists consider it a continuation of the internal membrane. Some regard the endocardium and inner coat of the arteries as analogous, since both are non-vascular and have an endothelial covering upon a connective-tissue base. As endocarditis is, for the most part, limited to the valves of the heart, a knowledge of their anatomical arrangement is important.

A transverse section of a segment of an auriculo-ventricular valve shows that upon the superior or auricular surface and upon the inferior or ventricular surface there are flattened cells and endothelium, and that next to each lies a fibro-elastic layer, the superior being the thicker. These two layers are separated by connective tissue.

The layer of flat cells is thickest on the ventricular surface. The fibroelastic tissue is thickest at the base of the valve. The semi-lunar valves have endocardium on one side and the tunica intima on the other.

Although the endocardium has no vessels of its own, the capillaries upon the cardiac walls are in contact with it. The arrangement in the valves is different, as only a few vessels ramify between the layers of the mitral valve, and none are found, normally, in the sigmoid valves.

Acute Exudative Endocarditis.

This variety of endocarditis is met with most frequently in connection with acute articular rheumatism.

In adults it usually has its seat in the left heart; in intra-uterine life it occurs in the right heart. The inflammation commences in, and seldom extends beyond, the valves and the valvular orifices, but it may involve the whole or any part of the ventricular or auricular portions of the endocardium.

MORBID ANATOMY.-The endocardium becomes infiltrated with young cells, the process beginning in the layer of flat cells. The new formative cells are developed not only from the cells of the layer immediately underneath the endocardium, but also from leucocytes. This hyperplasia, this heaping up of embryo-plastic cells, is accompanied by softening of the deeper

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