SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL. EDITED BY HENRY F. CAMPBELL, A.M., M. D., PROKES-OR OK BPECIAL AND COMPARATIVE ANATOMY IN TBI MEDICAL COLLEGK OF GEORGIA ROBERT CAMPBELL, A.M..M.D., DBMOSrtTRATOB OF ANATOMY IN THE MEDICAL COLLEGE MEPICAL COLLEGE OF GEORGIA. YOL. XIV. 1858. NEW SERIES. AUGUSTA, G A: J. MORRIS, PRINTER AND PUBLISHER. 1858. ;.*ff SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL. (SEW SERIES.) Vol. XIV.] AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, JANUARY, 1558. [No. 1. ORIGINAL AXD ECLECTIC. AKTICLE I. A Clinical Lecture upon some of the Effects of Intemperance; de- livered at the Augusta City Hospital, by L. A. Dugas, M. D., aud written out by special request Gextlemex, The case of the woman we have just left in a moribund condi- tion, is well calculated to arrest our attention. This woman, who now seems to be about 40 years of age, and who presents to us so lamentable a picture of the effects of vice, is one of the frail sisterhood, who, having in her youth forfeited her social position, fled from the parental roof to a den of infamy, and has been ever since endeavoring to drown her remorse in alcoholic and other narcotic potations. She was a short time since taken from a miserable negro hovel and brought here to die and to be buried at the expense of the city. You may have observe :1 when we first saw her, a few days ago, that she was still able to speak, although her articulation was slow and somewhat diffi- cult that she lay upon her back without the power to move either her limbs or her trunk, but still retaining her sensibility as well as her mental faculties comparatively unimpaired that she was not laboring under paralysis, properly so called, but that she was suffering from a real exhaustion of nervous power throughout the whole system, which had been gradually pro- s. VOL. xiv. no. i. 1 4 DuGAS^on Effects of Intemperance. [January, gressive, and without any indication whatever of local organic disease. She now appears to be asleep with her eyes half open, but breathes quietly, and presents none of the phenomena of apoplexy. She has passed into this state gradually since you last saw her, and her small and rapid pulse indicates an early termination of this process of resolution. The energies of life, long undermined by dissolute habits, have gradually yielded, and she now dies evidently from mere nervous exhaustion. It is in the presence of cases like these that the physician re- alizes in its fullest force one of the evils perhaps, alas, a neces- sary evil of the social system of refined civilization ; I mean that which condemns to perpetual infamy the unfortunate female, who, in a moment of infatuation yields to the designs of an artful and heartless deceiver ! She soon realizes her dreadful error, and yet dares not, as she had always done before, appeal to the parents who would affectionately overlook any other guilt and endeavor to palliate it for sh* knows that this is an unpardonable sin, even in the sight of those who gave her birth ! Oh, if she could only be allowed to throw herself upon her knees, implore their forgiveness, and receive from them even a look of kindness, she would do so, continue to dwell with them, and probably lead a virtuous life the remainder of her days. But, no ; she must fly, or be driven from the midst of those she loves, and be an outcast among the vilest refuse of society, where, with a broken heart and lacerated conscience, she natur- ally seeks relief in the obtunding use of narcotics of one kind or another! The effects of these are before us we here behold, however, only one of the sad consequences of intemperance, and, if you will pardon me for dwelling upon a topic, perhaps trite, I will take this opportunity to make a few comments upon some of the evils of intemperance to the individual who indulges in this vice, to his offspring, and to his race. I beg leave, Gentlemen, at once to say that I am not one of those who think that a good cause is ever benefitted by exag- geration and by positions unsustained by truth. I would not therefore have you to give credence to the ridiculous stories about alcohol being found in the ventricles of the brain, about the spontaneous combustion of drunkards, &c. nor would I tell you that a moderate and well regulated use of intoxicating 1858.] Dugas, on Effects of Intemperance. 5 beverages is always injurious, when the most casual observation might falsify the assertion. It is of intemperance I wish to speak, and not of temperance, and yet, I am free to say, that if a man cannot drink without drinking too much, he ought not to drink at all. There are two forms of intemperance the one periodical and the other continued. Those addicted to the former will drink profusely for days or weeks, until the stomach rebels and rejects the potations, and they cannot take any more. They will then suffer greatly, mentally and physically, a few da}^s, and gradual- ly get over their "spree," to resume it again after the lapse of weeks, months, or even years. This is the most inveterate, the most incurable form of intemperance. Indeed, I may say that I look upon such cases as utterly hopeless, for I have never known a single instance of permanent reformation, in those ad- dicted to periodical intemperance. The victims of this form are more violent and uncontrolable, more disagreeable and danger- ous to society, more subject to delirium tremens, and more liable to permanent insanity, than habitual inebriates. The continued form of intemperance is that in which the individual habitually takes too much ; some will attend to their business during the day more or less efficiently, and yet be sur- feited every night others are sober enough to attend to business only in the forenoon and, finally, there are many who can scarcely ever be found entirely sober. I recollect a case in court in which a will was set aside upon the testimony of the neighbors that the maker had not been sober enough in ten years to know what he was about ! The will had been executed six or seven years before his death. And yet this man lived seventy-five years, and had been intemperate all his life! I believe it to be a general rule, that the habitually intem- perate live longer than those who are only periodically so. But the habitual inebriate is more liable to liver disease, to dropsy and to rheumatism neither of which affections have I ever known cured under such circumstances. The periodical drunk- ard is more apt to be carried off by an attack of mania-a-potu, or of some other acute disease. "While, with most persons in- temperance induces more or less of plethora and corpulency, there are some in whom it produces an opposite effect, and we 6 Du 'GAS, on Effects of Intemperance. [January, find these pale or sallow, and thin. When it terminates in dropsy, this seems to be in consequence of hypertrophy of the cellular tissue of the liver, by which the portal veins are com- pressed to such a degree as to impede the free passage of blood, and to cause its undue accumulation in the intestinal canal and its investing membrane. In such cases the vessels may relieve themselves by an abundant secretion from the mucous surface, constituting diarrhoea, or by an exhalation into the peritoneal cavity, so as to produce dropsy. Either of these symptoms may be, in general, regarded as the precursor of early dissolution. Intemperance deeply affects the nervous system of animal life, as is evinced by the uncertain gait, the tremulous hand, convulsions, and various painful diseases. But the brain, this great seat of intellect and of the moral perceptions, reveals its baneful influence under the forms of mania-a-potu, perverted reason, and moral depravity. Who has not seen instances in which the noblest intellect and the most refined sense of pro- priety have been thus changed into stupid vagaries and knavish * as well as brutal propensities ? With reason dethroned and the moral perceptions blunted, the victim drags a miserable exist- ence himself, and embitters that of all who loved and esteemed him! Let us now look at some of the effects of Intemperance upon the offspring and upon the race. I think it susceptible of easy demonstration, that the children of an habitual inebriate will have but little stamina that is to say, that their powers of re- resistance to morbid influences will be more or less impaired, and that they will therefore be more liable to disease than they would otherwise have been ; that they will often be scrofulous, and occasionally insane, or idiotic. These effects will, moreo- ver, become more and more apparent the longer the parent has been a drunkard so that if he have a large family during his intemperance, the deterioration of his children will be progress- ive, and the last may be so puny as never to reach maturity, although the first may be comparatively healthy. Nay, there are some drunkards, whose own constitution being poor, will rear a few children, and then lose in infancy or childhood all those they may subsequently have. Just reflect a little upon the condition of the families in your respective neighbourhoods 1 858.] Dugas, on Effects of Intemperance. 7 and I think that each one of you will recall to mind some illus- tration of the correctness of these propositions. Well, Gentlemen, what is true with regard to the influence of intemperance upon the oflspring of the first drunken parent, becomes most painfully so if the offspring himself follow the example of his father and become also a drunken parent. The issue of this second generation of drunkards will, in all proba- bility, be few in number, and their stamina will be so much impaired that it will be with the utmost difficulty that any of them can reach maturity. Let us follow this third generation, and if it perchance also take to the bottle, it will be the last of that family for I do not hesitate to proclaim it as a law of almost universal applicability, that three successive gene-rations of drunkards will leave no issue ! The third generation may have children, but not one of these will be reared to manhood ! This may appear to you a startling announcement; but I believe that you will find it based upon truth. As I have long since entertained these views of the effects of intemperance upon fami- lies, I would like to adduce some of the evidence I have collect- ed from personal observation, were it not manifestly improper to lift the veil from the private history of families who have passed away. But we can, without the least impropriety, study the history of families, in connection with that of the race to which they belong, and if you will bear with me a few moments more, I will endeavor to illustrate my proposition by a reference to the sad history of our aboriginal savages. I need not repeat what you all know that tribe after tribe of the children of the forest have vanished from before the sun and still continue to do so with awful rapidity. Why is this so ? Is there anything in their physical organization that inca- pacitates them for the perpetuation of their species, or race, if you prefer the term ? Certainly not. Then, I again ask the question, why is it so? In order to answer this, let us examine the influences that have been brought to bear upon this race in the different portions of our continent, and let us see if they have suffered equally in these several regions. America has been colonized by two classes of people : in the one we find the Spaniards, the Portuguese, and the French ; in the other the British and their American descendants. Now 8 Dug -as, on Effects of Intemperance. [January, how have the Indians fared under the dominion of these two classes ? Under the former they have increased and multiplied whereas, under the latter they have been annihilated! The Spanish, the Portuguese, and the French, are temperate people, and the British and Anglo-Americans intemperate and while the former have propitiated the good- will of the savages, have fraternized with them, have civilized and christianized them, probably as far as their nature will permit; the latter have done neither, but have, on the contrary, introduced among them their own vices and intemperance, and driven them from their hunt- ing grounds to perish like outcasts. Contrast the history of the Indian in Mexico, with that of the same race in the United States or even in Georgia. Towards the close of the last cen- tury the population of Mexico was about four millions, of which the pure Indian element constituted about two millions. The population of that Eepublic is now about seven millions, of whom at least four millions are pure Indians, two millions mix- ed races, and one million pure castillians. Sixty years ago, one half of the State of Georgia was peopled with savages and where are they now? With the exception of a small remnant of Cherokees and Creeks, who have been driven across the Mis- sissippi, these mighty tribes have ceased to exist! In South America, it is highly probable that the Indian population is fully as great as it ever was, if not greater. Under the French dominion, the Canada Indians prospered as they do in South America ; but they have been deteriorating and dwindling away rapidly ever since the British have acquired those provinces. Look at the influence of the boasted civilization introduced by the drinking races among the Sandwich islanders! The third generation of drunkards is now living there, and it is esti- mated that in fifteen or twenty years more there will not be left a solitary representative of that people. The sailor with his bottle has doubtless had more followers than the missionary with his Bible in that unhappy land. Look at the dissolute and drunken habits of our frontier Indians, and you cannot be long in discovering the true reason of their extinction. The same baneful influence operates upon the free blacks who seek refuge in the large cities at the North. The climate, may, it is true, account in some degree, for the great mortality among them ; 1858.] DtJGAS, on Effects of Intemperance. 9 but intemperance is unquestionably their greatest enemy. The philanthropist will look in vain for a solution of these stubborn facts, unless he attribute them to intemperance, the most potent destroyer of mankind. I hope, gentlemen, that you will pardon the length of the di- gression into which I have been insensibly led from the case under our special consideration, I did not intend to make you a temperance address but I never see a victim of this awful propensity, without feeling that something ought to be done to put a stop to it. I have therefore endeavoured to direct jour attention in as forcible a manner as I could under the inspira- tion of the moment, to some of its pernicious effects. You are destined, I trust, to exert some influence upon the communities in which you may fix your abode. No member of society has it more in his power to do good, than the intelligent and moral physician. The subject before us affords a noble field for the exercise of enlightened benevolence. Unite your efforts to ex- tirpate this, as you will do to stay the ravages of other diseases. Let us look upon intemperance as a disease and treat it as such. Must it not indeed be a veritable mental derangement, that would lead a man irresistibly, as it were, to the destruction of self, of family and of race ? Let us but call it a species of in- sanity^ and the remedy will suggest itself immediately. That intemperance is a disease, will, I think, be very general- ly conceded by enlightened physieians. Like other morbid/ conditions, it may be inherited, or acquired. When derived by inheritance, the patient may not be so much to blame as when it is acquired by improper indulgence. It nevertheless, in all cases, reveals a morbid condition of the brain, not unlike that which constitutes other forms of monomania. The patient is as irresistibly impelled to drink, as some monomaniacs are to thieve, notwithstanding all the influences of education and of other in- centives to good conduct. Some will say that it is only a depraved appetite, or a want of proper self control but this does not change the matter. This depraved appetite, or this inability to control one's propensities, is a morbid state often as much deplored by the patient himself, as by his friends. I have fre- quently heard these patients in their lucid intervals, declare most solemnly that they would cheerfully give all they possess- 10 DuGAS, on Effects of Intemperance. [January, ed to gat rid of this dreadful propensity. And I believe that they were sincere. But how shall we treat such cases ? Place them in an asy- lum as you do those affected with other forms of insanity ; and let them undergo such treatment as may be deemed best adapted to the restoration of the brain and nervous system to their pro- per and normal functions. I am aware that, under existing circumstances, this cannot be done. We- need legislation upon the subject, before we can carry out our views; and I can see no good reason why some men should be sent to the lunatic asylum, and their property be placed in the hands of trustees, until they be relieved of certain forms of insanity, while others equally injurious to society, and unable to manage their affairs, in consequence of intemperance another species of insanity are allowed to run at large, squand- ering their estate, embittering the lives of their family, annoying whole communities, and committing every variety of crime. I verily believe that a majority of the inmates of lunatic asylums would be found less dangerous and less annoying to the commu- nities from which they were sent than any equal number of drunkards. I think that the legislature of New York has taken the initia- tive in chartering a voluntary Asylum for Inebriates. This is a step in the right direction, and may of itself be productive of much good. But inebriates ought to be put upon the same footing as other lunatics. Let a writ of lunacy bring them be- fore a jury and upon conviction, let them be ordered to the asylum, and their estate be placed in the custody of trustees un- til their recovery and I firmly believe that permanent cures may in very many instances be the result. The sufferers from intemperance are entitled to our sympathy, and we should come to their relief, however loathsome they may be in the sight of the non-professional members of society. Let us not apply to them degrading epithets and treat them like brutes ; but on the contrary, extend to them the hand of kind- ness and the offices of christian charity. It is thus alone that we may obtain their confidence and become useful to them. The fact being once established by the legislation of the coun- try, that intemperance is a disease, and that it can only be treated 1858.] Battey, on Sub- Carbonate of Bismuth. 11 successfully in an institution humanely and properly devised for this special purpose, much of the odium that now attaches to this condition, and which might otherwise result from the con- finement, will be removed. I believe that such a system would do more good than all our temperance societies. The combined influence of both, however, would in all probability erase from our national escutcheon one of its foulest blots. If you agree with me, let us unite our endeavors to bring about in our re- spective communities such a state of public opinion as may result in the legal establishment, in every state, of Asylums for the Inebriate. AETICLE H. Sub- Carbonate of Bismuth. New Mode of Preparation. By Rob- ert Battey, M. D., of Rome, Ga. The attention of the Profession having been called to the sub- carbonate of bismuth in connection with the operose process of Prof. Hannon, of Brussels, for obtaining it it would seem de- sirable that a simple and easy mode of manipulation should be more generally known. The repeated fusion of the impure bismuth with nitrate of potassa, to free it from arseniurets and sulphurets, with which it is usually contaminated, may well be replaced by the simple solution in nitric acid, and precipitation (as sub-nitrate) by dis- tilled water. This precipitate, if not absolutely pure, is suffi- ciently so for all medical purposes it should be well washed with distilled water. By this process the impurities are oxidized, and rendered soluble in water, or left behind undissolved by the acid ; in both cases they are gotten rid of very satisfacto- rily. To prepare the sub-carbonate, dissolve the sub-nitrate in a sufficiency of nitric acid to effect the solution when warmed decant the clear liquid, and add it slowly to a filtered solution of carbonate of soda collect the precipitate upon a filter wash well with distilled water, wrap in filtering paper, and dry by a gentle heat. 12 Battey, on Subcarbonate of Bismuth. [January, For the physician, it will be convenient to use the sub-nitrate which he has upon his shelf. If it be entirely soluble in nitric acid, without effervescence, and is not clouded on the addition of a few drops sulphuric acid, it may be esteemed pure ; other- wise, decant the clear solution and precipitate with distilled water to render it so. Eain-water, boiled and filtered, may be used in place of the distilled water. A sample of the sub-carbonate, made by the above process, was subjected to Marsh's test, and found entirely free of arsenic. [By reference to the October number of the 13th volume of this Journal, page 625, Mr. Hannon's mode of preparation will be found. Compared with the above, it is difficult and incon- venient, only practicable to the regular chemist while that proposed and effected by our contributor is easily adopted by the ordinary practitioner, and is therefore, in our opinion, pre- ferable. This sub-carbonate of bismuth, if it answers the expectations which we have every right to entertain from a soluble salt of this metal, is destined to become a most valuable therapeutic agent. The insoluble salt, the sub-nitrate, is every day become ing more extensively and variously applied, and the results of its action, in a variety of cases, are often very surprising even startling to the practitioner. Its action, however, is generally slow, and it is inefficient in many cases on account of its insolu- bility. "The sub-carbonate is soluble in the gastric juice, its action is rapid, it produces no sensation of weight at the stomach, it rarely constipates, colors the stools less than the sub-nitrate, and may be employed for a long time without oppressing the stomach. The action of the sub-carbonate appears to be seda- tive during the first days of its employment, and subsequently to excite all the phenomena which result from the action of tonics." We quote farther, from the article above mentioned, in order that our readers may have before them, in connection with this new mode of preparation proposed by Dr. Battey, the whole amount of facts at present known in relation to the therapeuti- cal action of the sub-carbonate of bismuth. 1858.] Campbell's Classification of Febrile Diseases, &c. 13 "As to its therapeutical action, it may be noted that all cases of gastralgia consecutive upon phlegmasia of the digestive pas- sages, cases in which the tongue is red and pointed, and cases in which the digestion is laborious and accompanied with putrid or acid eructations, or in which there is a tendency to diarrhoea or spasmodic vomiting, demand the employment of the sub- carbonate of bismuth. This salt is also required in the vomiting of children, whether caused by dentition or succeeding to fre- quent fits of indigestion, and in the diarrhoea of weak children, especially when occurring at the time of weaning. One great advantage possessed by the sub-carbonate of bismuth is, that it neutralizes the acids in excess which are found in the stomach. The sub-nitrate, as is well known, fails always in this respect In all the cases where the subcarbonate has been taken, the pain in the digestive passages is first found to disappear ; then the eructations cease, together with the vomiting or diarrhoea; the digestion becomes less and less laborious, the tongue gradu- ally receives its normal form and color ; and if the use of the subcarbonate is continued, the appetite increases from day to day, the yellow tint of the countenance disappears, and the face be- comes colored at the same time as it ceases to be shrivelled. The subcarbonate of bismuth is perfectly insipid, and excites no repugnance. It is given before meals. Adults take it in a little water, and children in honey. It may also be made into lozenges. The dose for adults is from one to three grammes, taken three times a day in increasing doses."] ARTICLE III. Classification of Febrile Diseases by their Relation to the Nervous System* By Henry F. Campbell, M. D., Professor of Anat- omy in the Medical College of Gerogia and Chairman of Committee on Nervous System in Febrile Diseases. During the examination of our subject since the time of our appointment as a special committee, by this Association, we have been, at each step, more and more impressed with its importance, and at the same time with the extreme difficulty attending its full, clear, and thorough elaboration. "A man," says Lord Bacon, " must collect facts, in order to know the law * A partial Report read before the American Medical Association, Nashville, May, 1857. 14 Campbell's Classification of Febrile Diseases, &c. [January, of facts ;" diligently and earnestly engaged for the year past, in collecting and interrogating the facts which have a bearing on the important subject of Febrile Diseases, in the relation assign- ed us for examination, we have scarcely had time to do more than note, here and there, the gleam of truth which has been evolved during a bare hasty collocation of data ; much less to determine satisfactorily any fixed law in relation to the vast subjects involved in the investigation. That such laws will be recognized, and that the careful generalization of the facts will be productive of important, fruitful results, we have already seen enough fully to persuade us. Pleading then the magnitude, as well as the embarrassments of the subject, we ask of this As- sociation the previlege of having our special committee contin- ued for another year, allowing us at present to lay before this body a few conclusions arrived at, as the result of the investiga- tion in its present state of progress. I. As all the normal phenomena of the living organism are known to occur under the superintending influence of the ner- vous system, and are dominated by it, so it is but rational to regard all morbid actions as being more or less influenced in their manifestations by aberrated nervous action. In that class of diseases ordinarily designated fevers, our researches and ob- servations have led us to the confident belief that the above law applies with sufficient prominence to constitute the basis of their classification, and we would here respectfully claim for it, that it is the only reliable basis of their clasification, and further, that in its more extended application, it will hereafter be found to constitute what may be called par excellence, the Law of Febrile Diseases. Simply to assert the recognition of this law, and to suggest a new and more comprehensive classification of Fevers based upon it, is the sole object of the present brief exposition. II. As in the Nervous System, we recognize two grand de- partments, viz : 1st. The Cerebro-spinal System, all the normal actions of which are subject to cessations and interruptions ; and 2dly. The Ganglionic System, all the normal actions of which are of a continuous and ^interrupted character, so in the mani- festations of febrile diseases, do we distinctly recognize two grand distinguishing characteristics respectively typifying the normal actions of these two systems of nerves : thus a character of par- 1858.] Campbell's Classification of Febrile Diseases, &c. 15 oxysm obtains in certain cases, while a character of continuous- ness as plainly marks the others. III. Again : as in the Cerebro-spinal System, we find that its normal action pertains almost exclusively to sensation and to motion, with only a secondary and comparatively somewhat remote influence (which we have termed Excito-Secretory) upon nutrition and secretion, while in the normal action of the Gan- glionic System the entire function is known to be, to preside over nutrition and the secretions ; so in paroxysmal fevers do we find intense pain, modified sensation, and symptoms allying them to neuralgic and convulsive diseases very prominent, while in continued fevers, modified nutrition and altered secre- tion, are the marked and most prominent characteristics. We would, therefore, announce as our classification of febrile diseases, two grand divisions of fevers corresponding with the two grand divisions of the nervous system, thus : I. Cerebrospinal Fevers. All Paroxysmal. The secretions und nutrition only seconda- rily affected. IT. Ganglionic Fevers. All Continued. The secretions and nutrition primarily affec- ted. I. Under the head of Cerebrospinal Fevers, we would place the whole family of Paroxysmal Fevers, whatever type they, may assume,* and also the various forms of neuralgia, which are nearly always intermittent, as well as the sthenic forms of Traumatic Fever, together with the Fever accompanying simple Pharyngitis, Pneumonitis, Dysentery, and many other diseases of malarial districts. II. Under the head of Ganglionic Fevers, or Fevers of the Secretory System of Nerves, we think that we find ample ground for bringing together many diseases heretofore widely estranged from each other. Thus, as the archetypal * The primitive location of these fevers, in the cerebro-spinal system, vras de- veloped by Prof. L. D. Ford, of the Medical College of Georgia, in the Soulhcm - rgical Journal, in 1836, and called by Maillot, "Cerebro-spinal Intermittent Irritations," 16 Campbell's Classification of 1 diseases, skin rather cool. Has retained a little opium, which she thinks has relieved her. 12th, 8 a. m. Is much worse, vomiting as bad as ever, ex- tremities cold, skin wrinkled and withered like a person in col- lapse of cholera. Has very great anxiety, and calling urgently for fresh air. Had to get her bed elevated to the height of the window so that she might have her head in the open air. Pulse 130, weak and variable. As it was evident that death must soon ensue if relief was not obtained, I determined to bring on labor; but before doing so, I requested that Dr. Anderson, a neighbor- ing practitioner, might be sent for. He arrived at 3 p. m., and agreed with me on the propriety of immediately inducing labor. I introduced a flexible catheter into the uterus, ruptured the membranes, and drew off about 8 oz. of liquor amnii. My pa- tient was relieved almost immediately, and the vomiting ceased. I prescribed 1 drachm of tincture of Ergot every two or three hours, supporting her strength at the same time with stimulants and nourishing enemas. She remained easy and comfortable all night, and next morning, about twelve hours after the rup- ture of the membranes, labour pains came on, and continued regarly all day, but at long intervals. About 8 p. m., I admin- istered an enema of infusion of ergot, which soon had a most powerful effect, and within an hour afterwards she was safely delivered of a living child which cried lustily. It, however, lived only about eight hours. My patient rapidly recovered, 1858.] Physiology of the Ear. 47 and in two or three weeks was entirely restored to her usual health. In this case so urgent were the symptoms and so rapid had been the approach of sinking and colapse, that I had no doubt that the delay of the operation for a few hours more would have proved fatal. From the immediate relief experienced after drawing off the liquor amnii, it would appear as if the cause of the vomiting had been the pressure of the gravid uterus. [Medical Chronicler On the Physiology of the Human Ear. By "W. Kramer of Berlin. Our knowledge of the physiology of the auditory apparatus is still very incomplete, partly on account of the difficulty of experimenting on the organs of hearing, and partly on account of the imperfection of the science of acoustics. We are happy, therefore, to record the results of the investigations of Dr. Kra- mer, (Deutsche Klinik, 1855.) whose vast experience in the treatment of aural affections is universally known. In review- ing the researches of his predecessors, this author points out the impossibility of determining what takes place in the living ear from experiments on inert matter. His own experiments have been made upon the ear itself, in the healthy and diseased states. It would be out of the question for us to reproduce the details of these experiments ; we must be satisfied with the author's conclusions : 1. The cartilage of the ear conducts more than a third of the sonorous waves which reach the membrana tympani. 2. The concha is the most important part of the auricula cartilage. 3. The cartilage of the ear, in its natural position, simply re- ceives and conducts the sonorous vibrations to the auditory pas- sage. 4. The cavity of the auditory passage transmits about 500 times as many undulations as the solid parts enclosing it. 5. The curvatures of the meatus and the cerumen have no influence on the sonorous vibrations. 6. These arrangements serve to protect the canal and the membrana tympani from external agents. 7. The membrana tympani transmits the sonorous undula- tions in due quantity and quality, only while its structure is normal. 8. The membrana tympani also serves as a protection to the drum. 9. The ossicula have but little agency in transmitting the vibrations of members of the membrana tympani to the laby- 48 On Rheumatism, &c. [January, rinth. Their office is rather to support the membrane between two strata of air. 10. The membrane of the fenestra rotunda is designed espe- cially to transmit to the labyrinth the vibrations of the tympa- nal cavity. 11. The mastoid cells are of trifling acoustic importance. 12. The Eustachian canal is an open tube. (Dr. Toynbee had announced a contrary opinion.) 13. Through this tube the air of the tympanum is renewed, and the sero-mucous secretion of that cavity eliminated. 14. Hearing is not entirely destroyed by the absence of the fenestra rotunda and the loss of the liquor cotunnii. [lb. On Rheumatism oftlie Epithelial and ISl on- Epithelial Fibrous Tis- sues : Its Sequence to Scarlatina and other Exanthemata. On Rheumatic Grout, Chorea, &c. &c* By H. P. DeWees, M. D. New York. The term "Kheumatism" is derived from a Greek word sig- nifying " a fluxion, or catarrh." It is divided into acute and chronic, although a third form may be correctly added, viz : the flying, or fugitive." The tissues affected are chiefly of the fibrous or sero-fibrous class. But muscular structure itself may become the seat of the affection, from its component elementary fibrous structure. The true disorder consists in a certain more or less altered condition of the blood, from its normal composition. This con- dition may arise from causes apparently most opposite, but which resolve themselves into one and the same action, namely : their power to change the constitution of the blood from its healthful state. The bedside statements confirm this view. By some, the ex- citing cause of the attack is attributed to cold, or to "check of perspiration." By others, to waste of nervous force by long- continued watching, to strains, or over-exertion, to being "out of order" for a long time, though not conscious of having been exposed to damp or cold, to the sudden suppression of a skin eruption, to indigestion after a debauch, and so on, till one would be led to believe that any imprudence might be followed by an attack of rheumatism. In some families it is, apparently, as hereditary as the gout ; whilst in the gouty it is not unfrequently a conjoined affection. _ * Some of the views announced in this paper are so like those given in the ar- ticle on Scarlatina, published in our pages, that our readers may suppose they were suggested by it. It is due to the author to state, that the present paper has been ready for publication three years. [Eds. Monthly. 1858.] On Rheumatism, &c. 4& But the gouty, from their mode of life, are more apt to superin- duce rheumatism, than are the rheumatic to earn gout. Where the parents of the patient have been subject, one to gout and the other to rheumatism, a sort of hybrid attack may sometimes result, rendering diagnosis difficult, whilst relief can only be obtained by conjoining the remedial measures of each. This coalescence, however, is not always the case, as I have seen gout and rheumatism run their distinct course in separate attacks in the same person. Eheumatism may safely be termed a blood disease. This blood condition may arise from causes apparent- ly very different, but which resolve themselves, in their final result, by producing alike morbid changes not only in the cir- culating fluids, but in the nutritive action of the tissues them- selves. Xor does time, or any specific interval, form a necessa- ry element in the anormal production. It may result suddenly, or may be the sequence of the gradual want of integrity in the healthful assimilative functions. The sudden cutaneous sup- pression (so prolific a cause generally,) by which certain excre- tory elements are forced to remain in the blood, loading it with a specific poison, and resulting in the phenomena of rheumatism, may be represented in a like manner by the errors of an organ or organs, by which a similar toxic condition of tlte blood may be induced. Kor is it necessary, that the superficial excretory actions, or the internal assimilative organs themselves be impair- ed both may work in their perfect normal role, yet from the supply, by diet, being improper or in excess, a state of blood similar in its impurities may be produced, with the exhibition of rheumatism or gout as its index. It is only thus that the various accounts as to the origin of the attack can be reconciled. The acute rheumatism of children, in almost all cases, can be readily traced to improper exposure or to damp. The recession of so much highly animalized excretion as is constantly being thrown from their surfaces, loads the blood with excrementitious products, whilst the proper actions of the kidney, liver, &c, are interfered with ; or congestions may be superinduced, which cannot but serve to usher in the disorder. The young are more liable to general rheumatism than are the more advanced ; and heart disorder is more prone to ensue in them than in the latter. This, most probably, is owing to the higher condition of irrita- bility of the cardiac tissues from the altered blood, and from the fact of the exanthematous diseases, as scarlet fever, measles, &c, being of later occurrence ; leaving the great excretory organs in a more or less damaged state. The determination of the disease, both in the young and the more advanced, to become local or general, apart from the considerations just mentioned, is in strict accor- dance to the blood condition, and the resisting power of the part exposed. For example: two individuals of the same age may 50 On Rheumatism^ &c. [January, be subjected to similar atmospheric causes, yet the result may be, and generally is, different : one being attacked with rheumatism of a single part, whilst the other may be taken down not only with the local selection, as in the first, but with every joint in the body affected. Or he may escape the like local manifesta- tion, and be attacked in the knee or feet, although these parts were not only well protected, but not exposed at the time to the impinging draught ; thereby clearly showing the relation of the blood condition to the disorder. In many cases, the selection for the rheumatic outbreak is in some part previously weakened, as by strain or fracture, or by local nervous loss. These cases, however, require great discernment, as local phlebitis or puru- lent deposit in or near a joint may, and has been frequently mis- taken for true articular rheumatism, giving rise to the opinion of its terminating in suppuration, more often than it does. To these and other points I shall again refer in their proper order. Although for the most part the attack of the acute rheumatism is sudden, yet in some, distinct warnings occasionally take place before a " first instalment" is paid in. These premonitions vary in different persons according to the attack dating from exposure, or from its being kindled spontaneously by previous disorder of the blood, without any outward exciting cause of a recognizable kind. Disturbance of the digestive organs, attended by flitting pains through the joints or in the muscles the sud- den eruption on the skin of some herpetic or other disorder, attended with burning, itching, or aching, and its rapid evanes- cence or, the drying up of any chronic discharge, the appear- ance of a singular sour-smelling perspiration whilst in bed during sleep these, with other premonitions, serve as sufficient data of the impending evil, to those who have already suffered, or are remembered with dread at their subsequent appearance, by those who did not translate their bearing correctly. In others, no such unpleasant " avant-couriers" announce the attack; but a peculiar nervous excitability, attended with moist skin, and a sensation of feeling better than usual, is recorded by the patient the attack being generally attributed to check of perspiration on going into cold air from a warm room, although others who were in the same atmosphere did not feel over-heated. Here the disease early manifests itself by the usual sweating, but in advance of the pain. This, however, soon invades the insteps, ankles, knees, or wrists, attended with more or less chilliness, hot flashes, and increased perspiration. The arteries throb quickly through the now swollen, mottled, hot, and shin- ing parts, whilst the superficial veins leave their dark-blue traces through the sensitive skin. As the location is variable, so is the duration of the intolerable agony uncertain. One or both corresponding articulations may be attacked, alternately or 1858.] On Rheumatism, &o 61 simultaneously ; or, shifting from ankle to knee, a running fire from joint to joint may be kept up, till apparently reinforce- ments of the disease arrive, and every joint be tensely invested by the relentless enemy. Voluntary motion now becomes im- possible, or is effected under the greatest torture. Change of position by any aid is rendered agonizing, whilst the desire to move increases hourly ; and the patient is worn out between the increasing sweats, which bring no relief to the severity of the pains, and the sleepless restlessness for change of posture, which adds no comfort. The pulse hammers on, increasing in rapidity and pain-bearing force through the disabled parts. Fever seems firmly established in every essential form, save the dripping skin, whose sour sweatings fail to moderate the heart's over- action ; and that the after effects are unlike those which would be dreaded in other fevers, attended by so much apparent in- flammation, and with local disorder of nutrition of such threat- ening aspect. A respite is generally gained during the sun hours, but the night comes loaded with terror. Sleep is now broken from the startled slumberer, by spasmodic jerkings of the limbs; and the dread of their re-occurrence, robs the pain-snatched hours of their balmy gift. And thus passes night into day, pain into ex- haustion, and labored conversation into incoherent wanderings, or delirium, more or less persistent during the weary night hours. The appetite is gone, whilst the thirst is unquenchable. The countenance, for a time flushed with dark purple blood, bearing evidence of the riot of the heart, and its over-loaded condition from the wasting tissues, becomes at length heavy and pale-sodden, whilst the forehead drips with outstanding perspi- ration, and the sclerotic tissues of the eyes become finely pen- cilled, and the mucous tears drain from the sticky and often shut lids. ' From the seventh to the ninth day such is the course of acute rheumatism, when relief may come permanently, or by shifting the scene of action to other parts, with moderation in degree and duration of the pain ; whilst the limb previously affected be- comes less unpliant,- although aching with an almost paralytic stiffness, as regards progression or action. The patient is a child once more, every motion is uncertain ; he totters with his weight,- and has, as it were, to learn to grasp again. In some, at this period, gloomy inaction, or heart-desponding forebodings har- ass the tedious convalescence. In others, although the recovery seems certain, the hopes are found delusive, and they again be-- come victims to a re-attack. Pain renews its seat, the clothes become drenched in the sour sweats, and the morrows are mort- gaged in nights of agony. Nor is this relapse always to be' dated from imprudence of motion, or of exposure, or of diet, N.S. VOL. XIV. NO. I. 3 On Rheumatism, &c. [January which, from the improving appetite, or greater constitutional demand of the patient, had been more generous. It may and frequently does result from many causes unconnected with mo- tion, atmospheric change, or regimen. Amongst these may be mentioned in this place, renewed blood disorder, encroaching purulent disturbance, the impairment of an organ by a more or less rapid hindrance of action from effusion, or by partial degen- eracy of normal structure, etc., etc. It is here that the skilful physician is required ; not only to guard against present impend- ing difficulties, but to restrain, if possible, the disposition to organic damage in the various organs; which, if allowed to proceed in their stealthy progress, may suddenly shorten life before its prime, or leave it as a dreary tenure to the joyless sufferer. The prognosis, in many cases of rheumatism, depends upon the previous condition of the patient. Whether he has*been more given to vegetable or animal diet, or to alcoholic drinks; also, as regards the state of the primary and secondary diges- tion, if he has had syphilis, or been lately subjected to gonor- rhoea, whether the kidneys have been for a long time diseased or disordered, the origin dating from the exanthemata or not, or if the heart has been affected. In females especially it is im- portant to know whether they have been subject to hysteria, with or without convulsion, or if chorea has at any period of life been present, or if the patient has at any time been affected by Marsh malaria or intermittent, whether extensive suppura- tion had been present, or chronic eruptions been repelled. These, and many other conditions, in connection with the habits, occu- pation, and the history of the parents, have to be fully entered into, before a just opinion can be formed as regards the progno- sis and rational treatment. For no disease does there exist in general a more unsatisfact- ory selection, or a more discrepant account, as regards effective remedial measures, and this amongst medical as well as non- medical observers. The indisposition amongst many to regard rheumatism as a blood disorder, the real difficulty at times in making a satisfactory determination as regards the tissues affect- ed, and the, lithic or lactic acid excesses in the circulation, with an apparent natural skin excretion, or their non -elimination from the blood, with deficient cutaneous action, these, and many other causes, together with the inaccuracy that will attend the diagnosis of even the most skilful, render at times, the treatment vague, unsteady, and in most cases purely empirical. For every one you meet has a remedy with a list of cures. The remedial selection, therefore, often requires much acumen in distinguishing simple acute or true fibrous inflammatory rheumatism, from the affection upon which the various organs 1858.] On Rheumatism, &c. 53 have engrafted their assisting vices ; as witnessed in some dis- guised states of Bright's disease, or after scarlet fever, or spinal derangement, local phlebitis, insidious tumor, long continued and unrecognized constipation, etc., etc. As acute rheumatism does not necessarily resolve itself into chronic, so may it be said that the latter, as a general thing, starts its onward course of injury and disfigurement in a stealthy and insidious manner, without much painful inconvenience in the early steps. There is, as is well known, what may be termed chronic acute rheumatism ; that is, where the patient, after an acute attack, is never entirely free from aching pain or slowly-increasing disablement of the joints, till seized with an- other attack, But, as above remarked, chronic rheumatism, in most cases, begins stealthily. Antecedent impairment of health, at first scarcely noticeable ; fitful pains shooting here and there, stiffness of the back or in the joints, on rising suddenly from the sitting or lying posture ; skin-aching more intolerable whilst warm in bed ; deep, heavy, and weakening pains in the larger' muscles, rendering sleep uncertain and uncomfortable ; frequent desire to urinate, sometimes attended with more or less scalding, and even with muco-purulent urethral or vaginal discharge^ ren- dering a suspicion of, and at times mistaken for, gonorrhoea! disorder, the slow but increasing enlargements of the joints, unaccompanied with desquamation or irregular disfigurement, as in gout ; the general stiff-hinge movements, these, and many others, being the intelligence to the afflicted that the record of their assimilative imperfections, or their imprudence of all hygi- enic rules, is most ineffaceably written in their persons. The symmetrical disposition to disfigurement is peculiarly noticeable in chronic rheumatism, the distortion of one joint, or of its burse, being apt to be daguerreotyped in the corresponding part of the other side, But chronic rheumatism may exist unwritten in joint or mus- cle, and even unsuspected by the practitioner and patient, the brunt of the disorder falling upon organs hidden to view during" life, and whose altered organic condition, with the cause, is only revealed by the knife. For what is true in the diffused form of gout, is also true in chronic rheumatism. The patient may be tortured under the belief of an existing and incurable organic disease of an organ important to life ; whilst, in reality, it is only laboring under the insidious functional poisoning of unrecog- nized rheumatic infection. It has been my frequent opportunity to see both the young and the old treated for organic cardiac disease, attended with disturbance of action, and all the bruits that play their JEolian strains over the strings of the heart, when, by addressing the treatment to the rheumatic condition of the blood, relief has been gained in a satisfactory, and i 54 On Rheumatism, &c. [January, many instances, in an almost magical manner. And the same may be said of the apparent heart-disease in the gouty, colchi- cum and hydriodate of potash being their best friends. In what may be properly termed chronic acute rheumatism that is, in persons subject to frequent attacks of the acute form with slow recuperation the heart is liable to become affected in about thirty in one hundred cases, and this, especially in chil- dren, from seven to fifteen years of age. In the plurality of these cases, the previous exanthemata, as scarlatina or measles, "most likely laid the foundation, or were associated in the rheuma- tic attack. For the valvular lesions so frequently attending rheumatism, are not uncommonly preceded by kidney derange- ments, which date their origin from causes as above mentioned. It therefore becomes needful, whilst seeking into the existence and date of an hypertrophied ventricle, (which, of itself, is so frequently conjoined with disease of the aortic valves, or if di- latation exist, with adhesion to the pericardium,) to enquire if the exanthemata had at any time been suffered from. For it is undeniable that kidney disease, from whatever cause, frequently exists with altered muscular structure of the heart and a high irritability in its serous lining membrane. This state is more frequently found in females than in males, and thus in part, may account for the greater prevalence of choreic disease in them. As regards selection, the left side of the heart, from its greater tendinous structure, is more subject to rheumatic inflammation than the right. From the considerations above-mentioned of the liability of the heart to previous damage from kidney derange- ment, the fact of rheumatic pericarditis being less frequent than valvular inflammation, may be accounted for. In many cases of rheumatic pericarditis, the lining membrane of the heart is found more or less involved, and pleurisy by extension may result. Where extensive kidney disorder has existed previous- ly, suppurative or purulent inflammation may, and frequently does ensue, whilst the ursemic symptoms are prominent ; and this, especially, if the patient has been lately subjected to the scarlati- nal poison. Indeed, pleurisy unconnected with pericarditis, is rare in rheumatism, and in some cases, apparently, will be proportioned to the amount of urea, remaining uneliminated from the blood. The pleuritic effusions sometimes are so great as to displace the lower organs, and especially the liver ; leading, on hasty exam- ination of the abdomen, to the belief of enlargement of that organ, or of tumor, as has been witnessed by me on post-mortem inspection, where the serous or sero-purulent collection in the left side was so extensive, as to cause a large bag to descend low down towards the crista of the ileum ; rendering, during life, all 1858.] On Rheumatism, &c. 55 diagnosis unsatisfactory and obscure. Where the effusion is on the right side in excessive quantity, and accompanied with ascites, the liver may be floated, as it were, and pushed far over into the left side, giving rise, also, to the supposition of a tumor existing there. Hypertrophy of the left ventricle is a most common sequence or associate, of disease of the kidneys; and in these cases is fre- quently independent of valvular disorder, whilst apoplexy forms one of the modes of death. Where rheumatism attacks an individual, who previously may have been laboring under hypertrophy of the heart, the prognosis is of course more unfa- vorable as regards the ultimate result ; as the vessels of the brain are apt to become diseased or degenerated in this condition of the heart. If disorganization of the kidney co-exist, the danger to the patient is also increased ; as the hypertrophic state of the heart has a double association. What exact proportion in these cases have been affected by scarlatina, I do not know, but it appears to me that the number is in greater ratio. The peculiar irritable manner and appearance in the patient at first, but changing to a dull yet anxious expression, in rheu- matism with previously disorganized or impaired kidney, is to be accounted for, by the gradual poisoning of the brain and great organic centres, from the retention of urea and other ex- crementitious matter in the blood. This condition may be par- tially relieved by the occurrence of effusions ; but only for a time, as resorption, fresh accumulation, and functional impedi- ment by dropsical extent, ensue, whilst convulsion, or coma, ends the scene. The absorption of urea is by no means to be measured by the drowsiness of the patient ; in some it acts as an excitant, produc- ing sleeplessness or vivid fancies, as is not unfrequently witness- ed after opiates. Indeed, I have seen the utmost watchfulness persist ; sleep or coma, only ensuing just before death. It is the object of this paper to more than call the attention of the pro- fession, to the fact of the frequency of rheumatism after scarlati- na, or other exanthemata, and to extreme liability of the epithe- lial serous linings of the various parts of the body, to become the seat of the disorder, after the kidneys have been disturbed, or diseased in their epithelial structure. Hence, the frequency of sero-fibrous rheumatism after scarlatina ; and where no kidney disorder exists, the preference of this rheumatic affection to the pure fibrous structures. In the former, purulent effusions are apt to take place, whilst in the latter they are very rarely witnessed, though the swelling, etc., is greater. The student should carefully divest himself of the too preva- lent idea of the metastasis in rheumatism, gout, and other dis- eases not strictly confined in certain regional bounds. ; The 56 On Rheumatism, &c. [January, endeavor should be to classify anatomically, the tissues endowed with the same organic elements, and having alike functions. By bo doing, identity of structure with their liability to functional error will usurp the vague idea of the so-called metastasis ; and the disturbances of other organs, will resolve themselves into their own legitimate actions and re-actions. It is also important to weigh the mechanical association, or situation of parts involv* ed, and their disturbing influences. For instance, pericarditis with adhesion, although highly interfering, still will allow the function of the heart to be carried on better than in endo-cardi? tis with valvular narrowing of the orifices, or where the natural elasticity of the inner mechanism is hampered by thickening, or by restraining adhesions ; or, by roughening vegetations oppos^ jug an obstacle to the uniform current of the blood, etc., etc. The various compounds remaining in the blood from deranged elective balance, may act as other poisons do when introduced from without. These toxical influences may become directly injurious, by completely paralysing the functions of an single organ, highly essential to life; or they may, by inducing a grad- ual degeneracy of all the nutritive centres, so leaven the whole circulating mass, as to render every structure more or less attaint- ed in their vital uses. Nor are these effects subjected to any regularity, as regards their exhibition. In one, paralysis of mo- tion may ensue, whilst in another, disorder of any special sense may result; and blindness, deafness, or insanity, be the product, leading, too generally, to the belief of structural degeneration, rather than of functional derangement. This subject is full of the highest importance, and must ultimately form the platform of future improvement in the treatment of disease, before medi- cine can be safely called a science. These blood poisons act by excess or deficiency of the normal ingredients or by new combinations, not existing in the health- ful state or from the introduction of a specific poison, such as the syphilitic, cadaveric, etc., which have the power either to arrest the natural blood formations, or to impress upon them a new formative growth and self-like, not consonant with the normal organic constitution. Cancers seem to be an illustration of this. Each of these specific entities, or poisons, have a given type -life in some, without the power of reproduction in the same individual (as witnessed in small-pox, measles, scarlatina, etc.), running through their periods of incubation, growth, and decline, in a regular manifestation of events. In other blood poisons no such self-limitation of developement, nor after-inocu- lative exemption exists. A disposition to increase without limit, and to perpetuate their destructive changes in every tissue, forms a prominent feature in them ; as seen in syphilis and cancer. J3ut these latter kinds are more amenable to early treatment, or 1858.] On Rheumatism, dx. 57 to death by remedy ; or, in other words, to cure, than the form- er. It is, however, a curious fact, as regards the development of syphilis amongst the Northern Esquimaux, that even this poison, so frightful in its ravages amongst civilized and warmer- climed people, runs in them from the primary stage to complete eradication, in six months, without treatment of any hind. For this fact I am indebted to my distinguished friend Dr. Kane.* A slight outline of some of the disorderly associates of rheu- matism, and of those affections attended with pain apparently rheumatic, but dating their origin from other morbid conditions, may be proper here. Rheumatism is not only frequently con- joined with scarlet fever, but is exceedingly prone to afflict persons who have been subjected to this disease, or to other of the exanthemata. From the views early mentioned, this might be suspected, since the kidney is also liable to suffer greatly in this fever. "Where the renal derangement is early manifested, the pains in the joints is apt to make a corresponding appear- ance, and will frequently mask the attending scarlatinal affection, or cause it to be entirely overlooked if feebly developed ; the delirium, convulsions, or increasing coma that may attend, giv- ing rise to the surmise of translation of the rheumatic action to the brain, or its coverings. In these cases of apparent rheumatic origin, it therefore becomes important to investigate closely into the exact condition of the child, as to its exposure to scarlatinal infection, or to the epidemic influence at the time prevailing. The subsequent difficulty about restoration to general good health the desquamations the sudden chest difficulties, or dropsical effusions, ensuing shortly after, and even without in- cautious exposure, on the subsidence of arthritic pains these many times serve to point out what has been overlooked. In none of the exanthemata is untimely exposure more severely witnessed than after scarlatina. Another fact is well worthy of consideration, viz : the albuminal persistence in the urine, to- gether with tubular casts, epithelial deposits, etc If this condi- tion is found to exist in a case of sudden but ill-defined rheuma- tism and more especially in children who have never been known to have had scarlatina, attention should at once be di- rected to the probability of the incurrence of this affection, and to the fact of the engagement of the kiclnej'S. The rheumatic symptoms generally do not exhibit themselves in the commencement. The scarlatinal disease may have been declared some time, even to the period of desquamation, before the joints are complained of. But whenever this may happen, and the kidneys are becoming more or less deranged, the danger * This paper, it will be remembered, was written before the death of this noble man. 58 On Rheumatism, &c. [January, is great, not only for the present but for the future ; since the effusions into the joints are at times amongst the lesser evils, the heart and brain being the special organs for anxiety. The effu- sions within the joint, although they may not be great, may eventuate in suppuration (as in purulent synovitis), producing more or less permanent alteration of structure and model, from mere thickening to articular caries. In all cases of diseased joints in children, the strictest inquiry . into the preceding disorders, and especially as to scarlatina, then becomes of vital importance. As is found in the destruction of the aural bony-chain and surfaces, being confined mostly to one side, so, in the articular, is one joint, especially the knee, more frequently injured. Where the history of the case is imperfect or obscure, still, by the careful examination of the urine, even at a late date, much information can be gained ; as by it, we can often obtain a satisfactory diagnosis between the affection being the result of true fibrous rheumatism, to which it may have been attributed, or of the involvement of the articular fibro- serous membrane, with kidney derangement. This portion of the pathology of joint affections is worthy of serious considera- tion, and the prognosis must ever be uncertain without it. Most medical and surgical men can recall cases where the history of the affection, or the successful result of treatment, will prove the truth of these views. It is nothing new to attribute the abscess- ular conditions of the ear, or the ossicular caries, with sloughing of the tympanum, to the after effects of scarlatina. But the in* juries to the joints, and other parts, have not met as ready observation, owing probably to the descriptive statements given of the pain, leading to the idea of simple rhematism of the non- epithelial fibrous tissue, Both old and young have been, and will be time and again, treated for apparent rheumatism, where the affection owed its origin to sub-fascial abscess, or impinging deposits of pus, either of local origin or from purulent absorptions. Scarlatina, typhus fever, local injuries, etc., may all produce this condition, and the errors of treatment may at times be pardonable, but in gen- eral are dependent upon ignorance or carelessness. In children, rheumatism more frequently terminates with suppuration than in adults ; and their more recent exposure to scarlatina readily accounts for this. But in the older, a diseased condition of the kidney, with epithelial-disintegration, frequently takes place. In these, rheumatism of the internal sero-flbrous membranes of the joints is prone to ensue, and pus may be generated. The results, then, are nearly the same, the difference being marked chiefly in the higher nutritive changes which take place in the young. In scarlatinal-rheumatism, the joints are not the only sufferers when the kidney has been damaged. Any parts hav- 1858.] On Rheumatism, d-c. ing the fibro-serous element, may become the seat of derange- ment. Hence heart disease, pleurisy, arachnitis, with intra- cranial effusions, may result ; and the time of their demonstra- tion will be variable. It may be shortly after the attack, or proceed so stealthily or slowly, that even adult age may be reached. For disease is not a running horse, to be timed exactl}*. The modes of death in the child and in the adult are some- what different. In the child, the hypertrophic condition of the heart is less frequently attended with valvular disorder ; and the changes in the vessels of the brain, by which apoplexy, from rupture, is so often accomplished in the adult, rarely proceed to very great disorganization. But a fatal issue may speedily attend with convulsion and coma, from the higher impressibility of their nervous system. The arachnitis of the convexity of the brain is rapidly ushered in with alarming symptoms. The pain is intense, and the sleepless irritability attending from the first, alternates with delirium more or less marked, till convulsion or coma may close the scene. But the symptoms, when the base of the brain is affected, though less prominent, are more on that account, to be dreaded, from their insidious character. Pain is not much complained of, and the delirium, if any, is less pro- found ; but the coma is more sudden and quickly fatal. In the adult, the hypertrophy of the left ventricle, (sometimes of the heart, independent of any valvular disorder,) accompanied by kidney disease, gives rise to, or at least is often associated with, alteration of the vessels of the brain, extending to more or less profound degeneration of their coats. Hence, apoplexy sometimes sudden and fatal, as from the stroke of a hammer is not an unfrequent consequence ; or softening of the brain may come on with rapid strides or stealthy step, rendering life uncertain, or held at expense of motion, or intelligence, accord- ing to the extent and its seat. In the child, the pale, pasty skin, the fretful restlessness, or the listless inactivity, varying according to the greater or less power in the surface and kidney to depurate the blood the errors of motion, or perception, or of any special sense ; these, and many other indications, should always attract to the threat- ening condition. That much permanent benefit can be obtained by any treatment, where organic changes have proceeded so far, is not always to be expected ; but it will be satisfactory to know that the state of the patient had been noticed, and that death did not claim its victim before any rational measures for the pro- mulgation of life, or mitigation of suffering had been entered into. The choreic disturbances in children (and especially if they have been subjected to scarlatinal infection) dating their origin more or less closely after an attack of rheumatism, are well wor- 60 On Rheumatism, Sec. [January, thy of notice. In many cases the chorea is the first symptom attracting notice to the condition of the heart. When rheumatic inflammation has been seated in the lining membrane, St. Vitus's dance has been so frequently a sequence, that it is, by many viewed in the relation of cause and effect. And this opinion, in many cases, seems verified. As above observed, the muscu- lar irregularities sometimes cause the detection of the heart's injury for the first time. The interval between the occurrence of the rheumatic disturbance and the chorea is irregular ; whilst the prognosis as to the subsidence of the choreic motions from heart complications, depends on the power of arresting the damage, and the capability of improving the general nutritive system. If the latter can be accomplished, the remodeling as it were, of the heart, keeps pace with the progress of growth in the patient. At times, however, the heart is so slightly disturb- ed as not to indicate any appreciable organic difficulty, although sufficient irritability is established to reflect upon the spinal nerves the disturbances of relation. It is in these latter cases that the metallic tonics, such as arsenic, zinc, oxide of silver, act so rapidly in cure. But in the graver cases, where the heart is more seriously affected, time forms one of the chief elements, by allowing the reproductive changes to ensue with the growth. In these cases is witnessed the reason of the insignificance of remedies which had proved so beneficial in others. Independ- ent of any heart or kidney disease, the errors in the composition of the blood after rheumatism, or any other blood disorder, may act as frequent causes of disturbances of innervation. Hence, stimulant tonic, or sedative treatment, may be called for : in one the reproductive actions being below par ; whilst in the other, a want of relation between the blood and the assimilative power of the tissues themselves may be at fault. A third cause, ap- parently, may be independent of any blood relation, and exist in the nervous centres, or the nerves themselves. In this way the proneness of chorea to be a one-sided disease may be ac- counted for. The tendency to rheumatic complaints in a family where scarlatina has been irregularly developed, sometimes affords a clue both as to the nature of the attack and its relief. For it is not uncommon to find one child subject to rheumatism, and another having chorea without any apparent rheumatic affection. In these, fright, which in general is a highly productive agent, acts readily and violently. After twelve or fourteen years of age, private abuse, through the reflex actions of the spermatic branches over the heart and the nervous masses at the. base of the brain, may produce alike disturbances. The bellows sound of the heart and in the great arteries in tjiese cases resemble, in a measure, the bruits from more serious organic difficulty. 1858.] On Rheumatism, in either case to prevent the recurrence of a parox; "We would rather adopt the opinion, which attributes its em- to its power of disseminating or equalizing the nervous influence. And if we take into account the known effect of this agent upon enlarged spleen and such like engorgem we might venture tc s a disseminator or equal- izer of the circulation, and acts by dispersing, wherever found, all vascular accumulations, possibly r by giving tone to the vascular tissue, and that it has control over the nerve m, under . drcumstances, by dispersing such engorgements in its centres. Hence, in cong: rr affecting the brain, remark- able results have been often witnessed, from large doses of quinine, Hitroduced into the rectum, during the existence of the coma. jod here we would remark, that it is difficult to convince or even argue with those who shrink from the admin :- tion of quinine in all cases of fever, where there are any " head symptoms" present thu3 denying the patient often, the only means of escape from :_ce and progression into and far more serious and fatal results. Xot to give quinine when there is ion or inflammation of the brain, or its membranes, as well as in acute inflammation of any organ, ac- 1858.] ,3PBKLLrs Lecture on Dysentery. W companied with paroxysmal fever and it is always paroxysmal, if it were but detected is a prejudice, or an error, which is un- pardonable, because of murderous consequence. When did quinine ever produce an inflammation, or increase it? For instance, in traumatic fever, which, in its sthenic form, belongs t: :~e :--:.ii :=: t: ::.r;z~5z:il :':T::;/ ": =::. --rinr :lr tit-: z~=:i^ :i:.- v,-:-.;-_.I ;:: :::::::_ ill ::: ~~i~:::c> : : in ::~ .'^d in :nirii To- ry action, but on the use of quinine, the paroxysm is prevented and the increased action is found to subside. We will say to 5';::::s::-::::r:.;, --;::, lisrlzriiiiird tt.'.-.t. in T^:innr :: some mooted point "get first into the sphere of thought by which it is so much as possible to judge of this thing, otherwise than distractedly ; we may then begin arguing with you?" T_^:7 ii ::.:: I'l^rv ;::::_ L::\l ~e :iii.Lk. :.: ie;,i~, ^T^^7 S:iii- ern practitioner will bear us out in affirming. It is, in the 1st r/n:r. :"_;.: ;.;-. -..;:: n. ^linine ~le~ riTen ririni" in ii'friiifii:- or a remission of fever, prevents the return of the paroxysm ; 2d, that in ordinary doses it wiE not reduce the fever after the rir:z"5n i-ii "::-.-t ".:::: :ci i:L :"_.:.: ii riTrn in '.:"-. ";: Tf i;.=e= during the paroxysm, it will often abate the fever, apparently by overwhelming it Of course we refer to paroxysmal fever alone. It hence does appear, that quinine, in any disease depending on spinal irritation, probably acts by dispersing the cause of that irritation, whether active or passive hyperemia in the spinal c-:r:I ini :lerel~ rriiiTrS :he ^eirril r-fsil:az: :: :: lirion. Tie explanation which we would offer for these phenomena is the following : When quinine is given only during a paroxysm of fever, no opportunity is allowed for the display of its power over the distended, congested or excited vessels; for the universal vascu- lar excitement which pervades the organism, with the heart's i-:Tz.ml :.i-;. m::- ::r:i:le a::::- rnniiing iLe :i:-:-i in ~r:n these, already surcharged local vessels, and maintaining or increasing their derangement, the display of its powers is pre- vented, its effects are canceled. Hence, it is only during the absence of fever, unle^ extraordinary doses are employed, when '. issi&taiioa of Febrile Diseases,9 by their Eelasion to the >~erroa m, in Introdoetion to xoiiame oa "The Secretory mad EmJUhSeerete: tern." By Henry F. CampbdO^lL D.rju5t pohtished. 80 Campbell's Lecture on Dysentery. [February, it has not these opposing influences to contend with, that it readily overcomes the local condition, and thus suspends its symptomatic results, So, may it be perceived, that in the treatment of Dysentery, quinine forms necessarily an essential element we had almost said, without the single exception of a case for in those instances unaccompanied with fever, if they do not yield promptly to that management, of which this does not consitute a part, we believe, that by acting upon the idea of its spinal basis, in ac- cordance with our previous pathological suggestions, its addition to the course would be acknowledged the desideratum in almost every case, We are aware that, as regards the employment of this agent unorthodoxly, or otherwise than for "chills and fevers" there is Borne opposition on the part of the community, who, consulting their own prejudices will, through intentional and covert neglect of the strictest injunctions, cause the failure of its object, to the serious detriment of the patient's safety and the physician's re- putation. We know also and the knowledge is humiliating in our climate, where almost all acute diseases appear to be im- pressed with the type of periodicity more or less decidedly that there are members of our own profession, (charged as it is with so awful a responsibility the arbitership of human life,) whose minds being impregnated with the spawn of that popular medical doctrine, above alluded to, or from some ill-begotten prejudice, or some ill-fated notion, legitimately inherited, per- haps, from some outlandish Alma Mater, some we say, who look upon this invaluable and indispensable remedy, as "danger- ous," something not far short of a poison, and therefore fail to see its applicability to disease, or use it so daintily, as not to allow themselves the opportunity of witnessing its efficacy; whilst the devoted patient, deluded and lulled by the semblance of a systematic course of attack being made upon the disease, is cheated by periodical gradations into irrevocable ruin the malady still raging with increasing fury against him, with every reinforcement of its morbific armament the returns of fever with the accompanying increase of all the other ills derived from its cerebro -spinal ally until life " is sunk amid its foes." Such is an unfortunate prejudice, and melancholy have been its results for which the lives of many patients have doubtless been made to atone. 1858.] Campbell's Lecture on Dysentery. 81 But what argument shall we employ against that stubborn stupidity which, in this late day, still questions the right of this agent to hold the rank it does in the Materia Medica ; or what logic can avail to assure that doubting pusillanimity which yet does not dare, or affects to fear, to use this remedy in efficient quantity, after the mammoth, though innocuous doses, of Mail- lot, of Dundas, and of others. Let such seek the first opportunity by experiment upon his fittest subject, to divest himself of so dangerous and criminal a delusion. Yes, let him take 40 grains of this poison at one dose, (as we had occasion to administer to a forlorn case of congestive fever, which actually recovered,) and if he does not die, he will be convinced of its harmlessness, but if he does well then, his patients in this region will stand the better chance for living. We would not have you, Gentlemen, to understand us to recommend such doses in ordinary practice, as they are unnecessary ; for remember, that the two cases, (both that of the doctor and that of the more pitiable patient,) here coupled, are of a desperate type. But what we say is ; give Quixine in Dysentery ! The most important and efficient adjuvant in the treatment of that element of the disease, embraced in the condition of the great nervous centre, is manifestly to be found in the applica- tion of revulsives along the spinal column ; dry cupping and sinapisms, or if any portion of the cord is discovered to be de- cidedly irritable, by acute sensitiveness on pressure upon the corresponding spinous processes, it may be necessary to resort to vesication or to cupping with the abstraction of blood. TVe have known the whole aspect of affairs in a case, wherein un- controlable tenesmus was a very threatening accompaniment, to be most astonishingly improved by the application of a blister to the lower part of the spine. So much for the consideration of the remedial means, which are necessary for the relief of the cerebrospinal ingredient of this disease ; let us examine now into the demands of the other ex- isting condition that of the large intestine. These are com- prised in the 2nd and 3rd indications, which may be treated of in connection the latter being in this instance, involved in, and forming a necessary condition to, the former that is, whilst the mucous membrane, here, requires the treatment appropriate to mucous membranes elsewhere, here, it is besides 82 Campbell's Lecture on Dysentery. [February, the lining of an excretory canal, which conveys a material of more or less solid consistence ; therefore, it is also necessary to combine with that specific treatment, some peculiar method of procedure to prevent the irritation of the contained solid excre- ment, in its transit through the inflamed canal since it must pass through; and this is best accomplished by reducing its consistency from a solid to a fluid state, preventing its accumu- lation and solidification, and also, by shielding the sore surface, if possible, with some emollient or soothing application. These two indications, then, together with derivative measures, com- prise the treatment of the local or intestinal element of this dis* ease. Now, let us examine briefly into the rationality of a few of the most prominent among the various measures which have been proposed and are much practiced, for the relief of Pysen^ tery, the accomplishment of which can alone be attained, we conceive, in accordance with the specifications just laid down, whatever be the means put into requisition, for their fulfillment The procedure which we have designated the M Opiate and Astringent routine," or the system of giving, indiscriminately, a specified quantity of some opiate and astringent compound, a ter each discharge, mistaking them for passages, in order more fully to clog up the bowels, cannot be too severely reprehended, as it is indicative of pure ignorance or an entire misapprehend $ion of the nature of things, and is in this instance attended with no ordinary amount of pernicious result. For the adminis- tration of astringents, there can be found no shadow of excuse . their avowed attribute, being their capability of inducing, just that condition which already exists as the chief difficulty in Dys entery, and which should be one of the prime objects of the physician, speedily to overcome. But the demand for opiates, in view of their anodyne effect, is rather more plausible, as this disease is attended with much suffering, and the unwary and irresolute might perhaps be decoyed, through so urgent a plea, into disregarding the admonitions of his better judgment, for the sake of temporary respite, at the expense of radically in- creasing the difficulty, even to fatality, or delaying in so much, the fortunate termination of the case. This, Gentlemen, has re- ference to the error of giving opium systematically, as a part of the radical treatment of Dysentery, in the same manner that 1858.] Campbell's Lecture on Dysentery. 83 diarrhoea is treated by it and here let it be well understood, that with this object, opium is never indicated in this disease; because there is constipation already existing as an element of, and a very serious aggravation to it and also as, very unfortu- nately, one of the most prominent effects of this agent, is to induce or increase that very same^condition, But, although opiates are not admissible, as part and parcel of the regular treat- ment, yet there are frequent circumstances under which their pro re nata employment is demanded for another purpose that of procuring rest and sleep, notwithstanding their very incon- venient and pernicious quality, here obtaining, of suspending the peristaltic action of the intestine, and thus increasing constipa- tion ; which effect has to be guarded against and overcome, by the unremitting pursuance of some procedure which will prevent or neutralize this deleterious influence, by keeping the bowels in a relaxed condition that procedure, fortunately, being the proper and only appropriate treatment, under this head, for Dys* entery, as has been indicated and will be further shown. The secondary position assigned to this agent then, will be found to be in the fulfillment of another and far different indi- cation ; not in the treatment of the disease itself, but for the relief of some of the untoward evils consequent upon the disease, and will be noticed in its proper place. And it is to be esteemed a great misfortune, in reference to this class of remedies in this disease, that their valuable anodyne effects cannot be put in requisition, except at the expense of enhancing the diseased condition, through the consequent evil of their constipating ef- fect. Hence, you perceive, that the M opiate and astringent" treatment is worse than no treatment in the end that in fact, the disease demands the reverse interpretation, to what is here evident, as the basis of an opposite treatment. The practice with Cold-water or other soothing enemata, cannot take the place of treatment in Dysentery, but is valuable as an adjuvant in some cases, to allay irritation. This subject has been treated of at length, by Dr. Brown of Alabama, who in regard to it, employs the following extravagant language, viz., u I will now briefly consider the superior advantages of the Cold Water Treatment, as pursued in the foregoing cases, and particularly its topical application by enemata. The immediate effect of its introduction is remarkable the patient generally expressing 84 Campbell's Lecture on Dysentery. [February, entire relief from the pain and burning sensation, which suspen- sion of suffering lasts for a considerable time. Thus, in its anodyne effect, surpassing, by promptness and completeness, all the ordinary means. The nervous irritability which is excited in these cases, with nausea and intense thirst, especially in fe- males, and the high febrile excitement, yield equally to its sedative and cooling effects. The evacuant and cleansing proper- ties of the measure, are unsurpassed by purgatives, and without the danger of reducing the patient by hypercatharsis or inter- ference with nutrition. While hydragogue cathartics may re- duce the inflamed condition, by a draught upon the turgid vessels of the part the cold application, by a more economical process, would suppress the inflammatory action, by contracting these distended vessels, driving out their superabundant blood, and fortifying them against a continuance of the phlogosis." Dr. B. recommends two modes of applying cold water in Dys- entery : 1st. By towels, wrung out of the coldest water, kept constantly to the abdomen, and renewed as often as they assume the temperature of the body ; and, 2ndly, by the introduction into the bowel, with a syringe, of a pint of cold water, after each dejection. The suggestion is certainly a rational one, having afforded much comfort to the patient, under our own observa- tion ; and it is worthy of being borne in mind, to be brought into requisition, to quiet the excessive irritation in the bowel, inducing frequent tenesmus, as an accessory to the treatment of some cases, where there is present no contra-indication. The Mercurial practice has been recommended according to two different modes of application, for the accomplishment of two distinct objects viz: 1st. By the repetition of large doses of calomel or blue mass, for the purpose of effecting continuous mercurial purgation. 2nd. By the administration of small doses, combined perhaps with some opiate, Dover's powder most fre- quently, with the view of inducing ptyalism on account of the supposed virtues of that condition, in controlling inflammation. Now, we conceive the wholesale administration of mercury, in any disease, to be an unnecessary and unwarrantable procedure as also is the indiscriminate and unscrupulous subjection of the patient to its poisonous effects, in the employment of complete salivation, upon all occasions, as is common with some practi- tioners^ small doses of calomel and Dover's powder seeming to 1858.] Campbell's Lecture on Dysentery. 85 be their panacea for every diseased state, supplying with, this convenient compound, the place, often, of diagnosis; and whe- ther the patient suffers through the intentional design of his physician or his want of judgment as regards the danger of in- ducing that state, with this medicine, the injury is the same it is mercurial salivation notwithstanding. We would suggest to those who habitually give mercury, as a routine or mechanically, because they cannot interpret the manifestations of disease, that they might disguise their ignor- ance in some less hurtful manner by giving bread-pills, for instance. And for those who wish to purge the patient in Dys- entery, we would remind them, that they might employ some agent of equal or superior activity, which would not be obnox- ious to the same objections, from untoward consequences, owing to the peculiar therapeutic properties of this article. Hear what Mr. Annesley says upon this subject in his Sketches of the Diseases of India (He performed many experiments with the express ob- ject of testing the true operation of calomel) he says, "These experiments presented uniform results, viz., that while the stom- ach and duodenum of dogs that had taken large doses of this preparation were much paler and less vascular than in ordinary circumstances, the colon and rectum, from the caecum to the verge of the anus, were most acutely inflamed, thereby explaining the re- sults of clinical observation, namely, that although large doses of calomel calm those symptoms usually caused by increased vascu- lar action, or inflammation of the mucous surface of the stomach and duodenum, they lower the vital energy of these important or- gans, and occasion tenesmus, griping pains in the course of the colon, mucous or bloody stools, hemorrhoids ; and if persisted in, many more of the symptoms of Dysentery, or even structural change of the colon or rectum. I am confident that Dysentery becomes chronic ; that an occasional indigestion lapses into a constant dyspepsia ; and that habitual constipation often passes into strictures of the rectum, and hemorrhoids into fistulas, from the frequent exhibition of large doses of this medicine* Ingenuity cannot devise a more successful method of converting a healthy person into a confirm- ed invalid, of destroying many of the comforts of existence, and of occasioning hypochondriasis and melancholy than the prac- tice of prescribing large doses of calomel on every trifling occa- * These italics are ours. 86 Campbeli/s Lecture on Dysentery. [February, sion, or when the bowels require gentle assistance; or because the patient erroneously supposes himself to be bilious, or is told so by those who should know better. The unfortunate word 'bilious,'' is the scape-goat of the ignorant" As to the indispensableness of mercurialization for the cure of acute diseases, generally, the dogma has long since been explod- ed by the introduction of quinine into general use. And with special reference to this disease, it is satisfactorily evidenced that no additional benefit accrues to its employment Dr. Bell re- marks, that " As regards the use of mercury in Dysentery, it is mere empiricism to look to salivation, either as a necessary proof that enough of mercury has been administered, or as an indis- pensable means of curing the disease. Salivation is an occasional result to be deprecated and avoided rather than sought for." Now, gentlemen, we would not be understood to wish to de- tract from this agent, a whit of its value and importance as a remedial means ; but would claim for it, as such, an appropriate place, and for its use, a specific object, with due regard to its potency and its peculiar properties and would have you recol- lect, that we only caution you against its abuse, the deplorable effects of which, there is much recorded testimony to establish. Moreover, after all that has been said, should you ask us if we give mercury in Dysentery we would answer, that we do give it ; not in all cases, but in many though, expressly, with- out either of the objects which we have been hitherto discussing. We use it but as an aid to the treatment yet not as & purgative, for our doses would be insufficient for that purpose : not to sali- vate, for it is given under such circumstances as would render such a result next to impossible. Formerly ptyalism was attri- buted to the patient's taking cold, or drinking cold water after taking calomel; and doubtless many a poor victim has been goaded on his way and been initiated prematurely into the in- conveniences of a warmer climate, by this merciless notion " without one drop of water to cool his parched tongue." For- tunately, for the sake of humanity, this error has subsided, and it has now become an acknowledged fact, that mercury will not affect the system thus, except it be retained from want of ac- tion unless this peculiar property should be determined by idiosyncrasy of constitution. We remember the case of a lady, of our acquaintance, who cannot take the slightest dose of any 1858.] Campbell's Lecture on Dysentery. 87 of the preparations of mercury, although it be followed immedi- ately by an active purgative, without suffering all the horrible realities of a complete salivation. As was premised in our lecture upon the " Pathology of Dys- entery," that, either as a co-incident event, or in consequence of the pyrexic condition which constitutes a part and parcel of this disease the Liver, in some eases, is found to be in a state of disorder or inaction, as is manifested by the yellow, furred tongue, tenderness on pressure over the right hypochondriac re- gion, and by the persistent stubbornness with which the bowels remain in a state of constipation the retained scybala resisting their disintegration and dislodgment. Now, it is well understood in Therapeutics, that the different elements of the Materia Medica are classified from the fact, that they are found to exert their specific agency upon different and particular organs. It is also well known, that among the effects of mercury, is its peculiar property of u stimulating the torpid liver into action ;" and it is as well recognized in Physiology, that the product of this secerning organ,- the bile, is the natural solvent of the heterogeneous residuum of digestion, the faeces, as well as the ordinary excitant of peristaltic action, and thus it has been styled "the natural laxative of the system." Well, in such cases as are here indicated, and only in such, have we found it necessary to resort to the use of this agent. And we use it, not as constituting the basis of the treatment, as others do, but to counteract an embarrassment in the manage- ment of the disease, i. e., the co-incident or consequent derange- ment of an important organ, whose suspension in function materially interferes with the natural processes, which are ordin- arily contributive to relief. With this view, we administer the mildest preparation, in small doses, and repeat them as seldom as the demands of the hepatic disorder will warrant. And we probably anticipate when we say, that in the appropriate treat- ment of the intestinal element of this disease, no opportunity is allowed for its retention in the system and the consequent effect of ptyalism. The preparation which we prefer is the following : ty. Blue mass, . . 3j. Prepared chalk, 3iij. Triturate well together. It forms a blue powder, very similar in physical properties to 88 CAMPBtfLl/s Lecture on Dysentery. [February, the officinal hydragyrum cum creta, to which, we scarcely know why, (as they are almost identical in constitution) ; but, be it fancy or fact, the former seems much superior and more satisfac- tory, in many respects. And this is probably somewhat owing to the fact, that this preparation does not have the effect of sick- ening the stomach, so common to the officinal article. At any rate, the impression has weighed sufficiently with us, to have the effect, for many years past, of substituting the one for the other preparation, with children, as well as in all other cases, wherein its use was formerly indicated. Of this compound, we prescribe 10 grs. morning and night, or 20 grs. at night, as long as neces- sary, irrespective of the other means employed, for the purposes of acting upon the liver, and thereby operating upon the faecal mass contained in the intestinal canal, to effect its evacuation, and we give it with no other design, than thus to assist in the accomplishment of the third indication of the treatment that we have already distinctly laid down, the requirements of whichy being now under our consideration. The Saline or purgative treatment, so strenuously advocated by MM. Bretonneau and Trousseau, is entitled to our consider- ation, as a practice now much in vogue, and which, it cannot be denied, is not without favorable evidence in the result of its operation in many cases. This treatment originally consisted of one or two drachms of the sulphate of soda, dissolved in any vehicle and given in di- vided doses ; and has been said " usually to arrest Dysentery in twelve, twenty -four, or forty-eight hours f and that " any acute, Dysentery which is not suppressed in this time by it, demands the closer attention of the physician, as presenting complica- tions or being of extreme gravity." But this article has been replaced pretty generally, in our country, where there has been ample opportunity for testing the relative value of all the vari- ous practices ever recommended and where, we must say, all the suggestions ever made, have had a full and thorough trial with various results we say that this treatment has been super- seded by the substitution of the sulphate of magnesia, used pretty much in the same way, as less liable to irritate the sto- mach and bowels. A tablespoonful of its saturated aqueous solution is given at various intervals to suit the exigencies of the case. The acidulated solution is sometimes used, prepared 1858.J Campbell's Lecture cm Dysentery. 89 according to the formula, and given as recommended by Dr. Henry of Dublin, viz. " To seven ounces of a saturated aque- ous solution of the salt, add an ounce of the diluted sulphuric acid of the Pharmacopoeias, and give a tablespoonful of the mix- ture for a dose, in a wineglassful of water." Now, the action of these salts is similar, and their modus operandi and effect in Dysentery, precisely the same. That is, they deplete by producing watery stools, or by exciting from the mucous membrane of the small intestines, the exhalation or secretion of large quantities of serum, the fluid element of the blood probably, through the agency of a species of irritation there determined, as the specific therapeutic property of this class of agents. It presents itself to our mind in considering the applicability of this class of remedies to Dysentery, that they must act without any special reference to suitableness, or correspondence of their peculiar therapeutic properties, to this particular diseased state, as well as the ordinary and characteristic requirements of the organ and tissue affected, when used under the operation of this disease; and that the good they accomplish, whenever it is man- ifest, must be by virtue of their depleting properties, as well as that of revulsion or derivation, through the species of irritation which is engendered in one portion of the canal, deriving from that previously existing in another. They also have the effect, during their exhibition, of keeping the canal clear of solid ma- terial, thus, as long as their use is continued, placing out of the question the danger of irritation thereby, to the sore mucous lining of the faecal receptacle, the large intestine, which is the seat of the disease. But it is an observation which has probably presented itself to every practitioner, that as soon as the use of this class of purgatives is suspended, there is a proneness to constipation more determined than ever. Now, let us consider these effects, in relation to the case in question, and with refer- ence to the physiological attributes of the organs involved, with their dependencies, as well as with reference to the natural* pro- clivities of these organs under this condition of disease, which, you recollect, we endeavored to develop to you on a former occasion, when considering the Pathology of Dysentery. And reasoning upon these premises, it is evident, that those cases1 which are relieved (and there are many, when they are treated 90 Campbell's Lecture on Dysentery. [February, thus, in the inception of the attack) are relieved by virtue of dejiletion, as would blood-letting relieve them, and often does. And here let us remark, as we may not recur to this subject, that there are cases which not only admit of depletion by hydra- gogue cathartics, but demand the use of the lancet although these cases are rare. But when the symptoms are extremely violent in the onset of the attack, or where there is enteric he^ inorrhage threatening danger ; or when, after the appropriate management of the two elements of this disease, the symptoms do not relax in violence, in a reasonable time then may re- course be had to blood-letting for their abatement, as under the same circumstances in any other one of the phlegmasia. And we would prefer depletion from the arm, in these rare cases of Dysentery, to depletion to any great extent, from the mucous lining of the small intestine a surface continuous with,- and connected to, the diseased membrane by nervous, reflex associ- tion, as we have endeavored to show for the following reasons, which we may say are borne out by experience. In the first place, after a case has been relieved by the depletion of the sa- line treatment and the medicine is discontinued, the bowels become constipated, as is usual after the exhibition of these purgatives the contained solid excrement passing over the re- cently sore surface, has a tendency to re-establish irritation from that point, restore the difficulty and "tear agape the healing Wound afresh." And we believe that this is the explanation of the frequent relapses occurring in cases treated thus. And again, we have the phenomenon referred to,- in the pathology of this disease, viz : that it has a tendency to run into diarrhoea, in the latter stages the interpretation of which, you recollect, was by attributing it to reflected irritation, producing an excito- secretory result. Now, if this treatment which operates by exciting irritation at this point, which point is also liable to re- flected irritation -should be carried too far, or be continued too long, it must have the effect of predisposing or determining to a metastasis of excitement, or so derange the organization of the tissue, that when it does occur, as to render it incapable of recuperation, and the patient's strength and vitality must speed- ily be exhausted in the diarrhoea which supervenes. We have had the unenviable opportunity of witnessing two cases, which followed this course ad finem, through the patients' or their at- 1858.] Campbeli/s Lecture on Dysentery. 91 tendants' disobeying or mistaking instructions, and continuing the purgation too far. And since then, we must say, that as for ourselves, we have abandoned in toto the saline treatment of Dysentery, without the entertainment of a single regret for its banishment, for another one by which the patients or their attendants can effect no serious injury by mistakes or disobedi- ence of injunctions and more especially without regret, as we have felt that its loss was more than recompensed in the adoption and amendment of a treatment of general applicability, and one more rationally satisfactory to our mind, inasmuch as it supplies fully, what we conceive to be, every demand for the relief of that condition of the organism, which we have endeavored to interpret to you a remedy having none of its disadvantages, but more than its every advantage. Although we have thus spoken of the Saline treatment, and of its rejection by us, for a better plan yet in justice to the re- sult of its action in many cases, and to the somewhat appropri- ateness of the rationale of its operation in which, after all, there is more of the semblance of reason, than in the application of the various other practices, to which we have heretofore re- ferred we deem it but fair, before quitting the subject, to assign to this mode its proper place, in strict accordance with the con- sideration it deserves. * Then, we would say that it is next in importance, and next in reason to that treatment, which it now remains for us to in- vestigate, as supplying fully the requirements of the two indica- tions under consideration : and well deserves to be borne in mind, as second to none other than the latter, in the earlier sta- ges of the disease, when from any cause its practicability is impossible yet its use should be always in subjection to the proper restrictions, that its dangers may not lurk, too long con- cealed, in its more deceptive advantages. The appropriate Treatment of Dysentery will form the sub- ject of another Lecture. 4* 92 Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. [February, ARTICLE VI. Notes to a Report on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. By Joseph A. Eve, M. D., Professor of Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children, in the Medical College of Georgia. Note 1st. Chlorate of Potash, In the July number of the American Journal of the Medical Sciences, Br. Bedford Brown of Caswell county, N. C, proposes chlorate of potash as an efficacious and certain remedy in the treatment of inflammation of the cervix and cervical canal. Dr. Brown says: "The discovery of some simple aud efficient means as a sub- stitute for the uncertain astringent injections in common use, and the tedious and often unsuccessful caustic and speculum, would relieve the physician of an extremely disagreeable duty, and the patient of an almost intolerable necessity. " In those cases of leucorrhoea attended with ulceration of the os uteri or cervical canal, and enlargement of the muciparous glands of the vagina, or simple ulceration without leucorrhoea, I believe the injections of the cKrorate far more certain and effi- cient than the ordinary astringent injections, or the local appli- cation of caustic. In these cases I have not thought proper to give detailed reports of their symptoms and progress." Since reading Dr. B.'s communication, I have several times prescribed the chlorate of potash, and intend to give it a fair trial ; for if nearly as efficacious as he asserts, it would be a valuable addition to our resources in the management of those affections. But when Dr. B. speaks of " the tedious and often un- successful caustic and speculum ;" he shows that he has not a tho- rough practical acquaintance with cauterization, or at least that he has not been sufficiently persevering in his employment of it: for if there be certainty in medicine, it is seen in the treatment of simple inflammation and ulceration of the cervix by caustics, when properly and perseveringly used ; and although oftentimes tedious, it is less so than any plan hitherto devised. Chlorate of potash will probably succeed well in many of the lighter and more recent cases of inflammation of the cervix without or with 1858.] Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. 93 superficial abrasion, and it will I trust prove at least a more valuable adjuvant to caustics than other vaginal injections; but I would rejoice to find it prove as efficacious as nitrate of silver in the more inveterate and serious cases. It would indeed be a great benefaction both to patient and practitioner; and Dr. Brown should be justly regarded as a friend, not only to the ladies, but to his professional brethren. My friend, Prof. Campbell, used chlorate of potash with bis- muth with perfect success in a case of inflammation of the cervix and vagina, in the City Hospital. This patient had an extensive vesico- vaginal fistula, before operating for which, it was neces- sary to remove the inflammation. Dr. Campbell prescribed vag- inal injections of this salt and subnitrate of bismuth, three times per day ; at the end of a few weeks, he examined and found the inflammation had entirely disappeared. This patient, it is true, was favorably circumstanced for the success of any plan of treat- ment, but none could possibly have succeeded better. Patients generally speak of it as pleasant in its effect ; one patient, however, complained of its causing great pain. This was an elderly lady who had for some time complained of symp- toms of prolapsus, for which astringent vaginal injections were prescribed ; as she was not relieved, a digital examination was made, which detected moderate prolapsus, but nothing abnor- mal in the cervix except that the os was somewhat more patulous than usual. A globular pessary was inserted, which caused considerable pain and which she succeeded in removing herself: after which the chlorate of potash was prescribed and its admin- istration followed by much pain, which is only explicable upon the supposition that in consequence of the patulousness of the os, it passed into the cavity of the body of the uterus. "When this patient had used vaginal injections of cold water a few days, a specular examination was made ; the cervix externally was perfectly healthy, but intense inflammation was observed extending from the os deep into the cervical canal. There was in this case a very unusual occurrence, a remarkable exemption from leucorrhcea, which induced me to suppose there could be very little, if any, inflammation, and therefore to defer so long the use of the speculum. In cases wherein there is much prolapsus with relaxation of the vagina, it is very doubtful whether injec- tions of chlorate of potash will succeed as well as alum and 94 Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. [February, tannin in promoting the restoration of the uterus to its normal position. Note 2nd. Dr. Tyler Smith and Dr. Eigby. In the first part of this Keport the testimony of these gentle- men was said to be strongly in favor of the frequency of ulcera- tion of the cervix : a little explanation may be proper. Dr. Tyler Smith certainly recognizes the frequent' occurrence of ulceration, especially of the lighter grades " epithelial abrasion and superficial ulceration " but he considers it to depend on leucorrhoea and not to be a consequence of inflammation. He observes (page 92) : " The loss of portions of epithelium, the first step towards ulceration, is so common in cases of confirmed leu- corrhoea, that there must be some very frequent and simple cause which produces it, and it appears to me that it is far more rea- sonably accounted for by looking to the irritant discharges than in any other way." But for full confirmation, we would refer to . the whole of the fifth chapter in his able treatise on leucor- rhoea. Dr. Eigby, employing the term in its most restricted sense, excluding all except deep ulcers, does say, (page 105,) "Ulcera- tion of the os and cervix uteri, not connected with malignant disease of the uterus, is, in fact, a rare affection." But from the following paragraphs (page 94), and other passages in his work on Diseases of Women, he plainly admits the frequency of in- flammation of the cervix, and what Dr. Bennet and others con- sider, and very properly, lighter degrees of ulceration. " The female generative organs, situated at the lower part of the trunk, supporting the chief weight and pressure of the intes- tines, and subject to such great periodic alterations of vasculari- ty, not to mention the wonderful changes they undergo during pregnancy and parturition, are rendered peculiarly disposed to be affected by any morbid action which may occur, especially in the great machinery of the chylopoietic system, and liable to be fixed upon in the various blood diseases, on which to localize their energy and expend their virulence. " It will therefore be seen that there are few affections of the general health in a female, in which the generative system is not more or less involved ; and although these local affections, which in the first instance are mostly effects of deranged health, react 1858.] Eve's Xotes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. 95 and produce in their turn considerable sympathetic derange- ment, yet it must be borne in mind that, unless a distinct local cause be present, they must be looked upon as "the local manifestations of a general derangement, in order that we may form correct and rational ideas respecting their nature and treat- ment. "Inflammation of the os and cervix uteri seldom occurs as an acute affection, but, in far the majority of cases, in a subacute or chronic form." It is true, he regards them as most frequently secondary or sympathetic affections, depending on the state of the general system, disappearing and reappearing as the patient's health im- proves or declines, for he says, (page 103) : " Allowing for the difference of position, &c, I would say that the os uteri presents as great a variety and frequent change of appearance as the tongue and throat do ; and I, moreover, feel convinced, that if these parts could be as readily inspected, ex- perience would soon enable us to recognize the appearances which they present as indications of the state of the patient's health much as we are accustomed to do in examining those presented by the tongue." How this may be when these affectious are recent and slight, I do not know ; nor can I conceive how Dr. Rigby has arrived at this conclusion ; for when sufficiently intense to indicate and justify a specular examination, they have been found remarka- bly persistent, varying very little, until they have been properly treated ; after which I have never known a case relapse. My experience cannot recall a single instance in which a patient, after having been cured, has had a return of the disease ; although suffering once does not afford any immunity for the future. Dr. Bennet says, (page 277,) "Since I have made it a rule minutely to investigate the state of the cavity of the cervix, and never to dismiss a patient so long as there is the slightest vestige of disease remaining, I am much longer in curing my patients, but when they are once cured, I never have any relapse of the ulcerative disease. The relapses which I formerly used continu- ally to witness in the practice of the French surgeons, were clearly owing to the disease not being followed into the interior of the cervical canal, and thus not being entirely eradicated." From the very first, in employing caustic, I have adopted this 96 Eve's Notes on Diseases of (lie Cervix Uteri. [February, rule with respect to the cervical canal, and therefore I do not remember ever to have had a relapse. Dr. Kigby says, " Inflammation of the os and cervix seldom occurs as an acute affection, but in far the majority of cases, in a subacute or chronic form." Is it usual for chronic affections to present great variety and frequent change of appearance ? Note 3rd. Repetition of Caustics. It is very important not to repeat caustic applications too often once weekly is often enough : every sixth day is the short- est interval admissible. The eschar does not always fall off in a week. After several applications have been made, from four to six, it is advisable to allow a period of two or three weeks to intervene, that the effect of the caustic passing entirely off, the real amount of improvement may appear. If the cauterizations be kept up without intermission, it would be impossible to de- termine when the patient was cured. A physician expressed his surprise, that although he had cauterized the cervix every other day for a considerable time, he had not succeeded in curing his patient he was advised to stop and give her an opportunity to get well. In another, cauterization was repeated weekly for a year : if curable, she ought to have been cured in less time, and with fewer applications. Cauterizatian ought not to be too often repeated, or too long continued. Few cases require more than from five to ten ap- plications. I have known four to suffice, and two, even one, to do much good ; though sometimes from fifteen to twenty have been required. Note 4th. " Dishonest Use of Caustics." Among the causes of inflammation of the cervix, Dr. Rigby mentions what he terms the " dishonest use of caustics," a favor- ite phrase which he uses several times, and which savours more of sensoriousness than of sense. That the injudicious use of caus- tics may keep up inflammation, or may cause it, when through error unnecessarily applied, is highly probable all are liable to make mistakes, especially the young and inexperienced; but I cannot comprehend what he means by "dishonest:" certainly an unscrupulous money -loving physician can charge what he pleases for his advice and visits, without resorting to means so 1858.] Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. 97 unpleasant to practitioner as well as patient ; most assuredly physicians of the great metropolis, Dr. Rigby's confreres, must have much less repugnance to making such examinations and manipulations, unnecessarily, than physicians in this latitude, who are much more apt to neglect them when proper. According to my experience, patients are much more profita- ble, when treated without caustics ; for if relieved at all, they are constantly relapsing and requiring professional assistance. But it is to be hoped no one would, for an instant, be so uncharitable as to suppose that those gentlemen, who adopt such practice, are actuated by a love of lucre. However erroneous their views, it is presumed they do what they conscientiously believe best for their patients. Xote 5th. Effects of Nitrate of Silver in overcoming Sterility. Dr. Tyler Smith says, in reference to his 35th case, (page 164.) "In this case, as in several others, I attributed the result of pregnancy to the application of the nitrate of silver. On both occasions the patient became pregnant after a free use of this ap- plication immediately before the catamenial period. It appears as though the application of the solid nitrate of silver is either followed in a few days by a healthy secretion from the surface to which it is applied, or the irritating discharges are neutralized by its use. Of its influence in removing sterility in leucorrhcea I have had many examples. Some cases of this kind which I have seen in consultation with Mr. Guthrie, and Mr. "Walter Bryant in particular, leave no doubt upon my mind of the effects of this remedy, in cases where the disordered condition of the secretions of the os and cervix is the cause of sterility." This accords with my own observation, for in a review of cases treat- ed by nitrate of silver, as very frequent consequences, are ob- served conception in patients previously sterile, and fortunate gestation in those previously subject to repeated abortions. Its influence in removing sterility probably depends on its curing the leucorrhcea, which usually attends and which in many in- stances is doubtless the principal obstacle to conception. It pre- vents abortion, by removing the inflammation and restoring the natural condition and healthy action of the cervix in which resides the retentive power of the uterus in gestation. 98 Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. [February, Many cases might be adduced in illustration : very few may suffice. Mrs. , from Carolina, had been married 3 or 4 years, and was in wretched health as long. She had been under the care of a number of eminent physicians and had undergone a variety of treatment for various diseases, but as the true pathology of the case was overlooked no relief was experienced. This lady suffered so many severe local and constitutional symptoms that life had almost become a burden, and she had very little hope of ever being restored to health. Upon careful investigation, she was found to have prolapsus, with inflammation of the cervix and cervical canal, to which I thought all her sufferings were fairly referrible, that this was probably the primary affection and the others secondary and sympathetic. The local affection was treated by cauterization with nitrate of silver and astringent vaginal injections. The principal constitutional remedies em- ployed were preparations of iodine and iron and other tonics. Very many intercurrent symptoms and sympathetic affections were met by such medicines, as were severally indicated for them ; these were indeed so numerous that it would be tiresome to attempt to particularize. The treatment of this case, local and general, extended over more than two years. The first cauter- ization was on the3rd of March, 1853, and the last on the 24th November of the same year sixteen in all, through a space of nine months; few cases have ever required as many; but after all traces of uterine inflammation had disappeared, she was under prescription for the secondary affections during the whole of the following year. It often happens, when cases have been of long standing, that the secondary affections do not subside for a long time, and not unfrequently demand considerable treatment. Fewer cauterizations, perhaps, might have sufficed, if they could have been made with more regularity, but as this lady lived at a distance, they were frequently unavoidably deferred too long. After all traces of inflammation had been removed and leu- corrhcea had entirely ceased, this patient was subject to menor- rhagia at nearly every menstrual period until June, 1855, when she became pregnant, and in the following April gave birth to a fine little daughter, since which Mrs. has generally enjoyed 1858.] Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. 99 very good health. And thus a most amiable and excellent couple were rendered as happy as they well could be, who before were perhaps equally miserable the husband from sympathy with his wife in her sufferings, and she, perhaps, less from her own sufferings than from the distress they caused him. Last October this lady was in Augusta, looking as young, and more blooming and happy than previous to her marriage, five years before. This case exemplifies the happy effects of the most patient perseverance under the most adverse and discouraging circum-- stances. It required a longer course of treatment than any I have ever attended, Had this lady not possessed and exercised the most indomitable patience, she would have given up in utter hopelessness,- long before a cure was accomplished. Some two years past, a Scotch lady about 30 years of age* some years married, consulted me occasionally for leucorrhoea^ for which I prescribed medical treatment and vaginal injections.- In 1855 she had an alarming hemorrhage from the womb, which might probably have depended upon an early abortion, but no embryo or ovum was discovered. She had another excessive hemorrhage Nov. 12th, 1856 no embryo or ovum being seem Vaginal examination detected very considerable enlargement and congestion of the uterus, but no evidence of pregnancy .- She was informed that she probably had inflammation or ul- ceration of the neck of her womb, and that as soon as she had recovered sufficiently from the effects of the hemorrhage, she ought to submit to specular examination, by which alone it could with certainty be determined. On the 29th of the same month, the speculum revealed a deep pus-secreting ulcer, extend- ing from the anterior lip into the cervical canal, which was freely cauterized by nitrate of silver* Chalybeate tonics and astringent vaginal injections were also prescribed. Caustic Was applied again on the 12th and 27th of December and on the 10th and 27th of the following February in all, five times. At the last examination, in February j there was great improvement. Having called two or three times afterwards, without finding her at home, and for a long time not having heard from her, I lost sight of the case, supposing that, tired of this treatment, she had sought assistance elsewhere. But, to my surprise, in August she called to inform me that n.s. vol. xrv. NO. II. 5 100 Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. [February, since I saw her last, not only the whites, but "the reds," too, had ceased, that she had no discharge at all for some months re- marking, with perfect artlessness, what alarmed her most was a large lump in the lower part of her stomach, and that her prin- cipal distress was being very sick to her stomach, especially of mornings. Her gloomy apprehensions were very easily and pleasantly dispelled by assuring her that the tumor was perfect- ly natural, and that she was just " as ladies wish to be who love their lords," This worthy lady and her kind husband were made perfectly happy in December by the birth of a little daughter. This case is remarkable for such happy results, from so com- paratively small an amount of treatment affording great en- couragement to patients whose circumstances may not admit of regular systematic treatment. A lady, twenty-two years of age, who had been married about two years, during which time she had one premature birth, came from Muscogee county, and remained in Augusta five weeks, She had been suffering since her labor, some nine months before with the usual functional symptoms of prolapsus and inflamma tion of the cervix, which were verified by digital and instru mental examination. Nitrate of silver was applied four times first, on the 28th day of January, 1854 on the 8th and 22nd of February, and on the 4th of March ; in a few days after which she returned home, with a silver-gilt globular pessary. Some six months after her return, I heard from her friends that she was enjoying good health, with good prospects ahead, which were in due process of time happily realized. This patient also used astringent vaginal injections. As she was very feeble, thin and pale, chalybeate and other tonics were prescribed. She suffered exceedingly from vesical irritation, for the relief of which she took a comp. syrup of buchu, uva ursi, &c, with very good effect. The medical treatment was continued some time after her re- turn home. This case is remarkable for the promptness of its recovery from such a distressing state. Many more cases might be adduced, but it would be unneces- sary and tiresome ; for to me nothing appears more dull and uninteresting than a narration of many cases substantially the 1858.] Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. 101 same. The general rale has been, that married ladies, during the reproductive age, have borne children after having under- gone treatment by nitrate of silver for inflammation or ulceration of the cervix : there are, however, some exceptions ; many of these, we believe, are due to displacements, such as retroflex- ion, retroversion, &c, which sometimes persist after recovery, and are not easily corrected. Note 6th. The Speculum. "Whilst it must be acceded that the speculum, like every other valuable medical or surgical means, has been abused by being employed in cases to which it is not applicable in which it could neither throw light on the pathology, nor prove of any benefit in the treatment. But attemps have been made to throw unjust and undeserved obloquy upon its use, by some from whom better things might have been expected : As an instance in point ; Dr. Eobert Lee makes the following illiberal and ill- natured remark: " The speculum emanates from the syphilitic wards of the hospitals at Paris, and it would have been better for the women of England, had its use been confined to those insti* tutions." It is true, that all of the most important discoveries in patholo* gy, and valuable improvements in practice, have not resulted from experiments and investigations made in the Parisian hos* pitals ; but if physicians, from pride or prejudice, were to ignore or repudiate all that has emanated from that same source, who could calculate the immense loss to science and to humanity ? Admitting, for argument, that the speculum emanates from the venereal wards of Parisian hospitals does not Providence often bring good out of evil ? And on whom could it be more justifiable to make investigations and experiments, that might redound to the benefit of the good and virtuous, than on the vicious and profligate of the same sex ? There is no doubt but that the speculum has often been mis- usedthat is, applied in cases wherein no knowledge could be obtained or benefit secured, as, for example, in some cases of large polypi and other tumors, and of cancer, especially when far advanced, and in the various displacements and malpositions of the uterus. But the speculum frequently reveals much important informa~ 102 Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. [February, tion, which cannot be obtained by the finger alone. Many- morbid changes which are not palpable to the touch are easily detected by the eye. Dr. Churchill (page 29, Dr. Con die's edition) makes the fol- lowing very sensible remarks in reference to the employment of the speculum : "It enables us to ascertain accurately the length and thickness of the cervix uteri, to detect variations from the natural color of the mucous membranes, slight erosions which might be passed over by the finger, elevations on the cervix uteri or walls of the vagina, too little raised to impress the sense of touch ; small vesicular polypi within the os uteri, eruptions upon the cervix, and we are enabled to discover the color of the surface of an ulcer. It will also confirm many characters recognized by the touch. On the other hand, we must be careful that we do not mistake for morbid changes those appearances which are caused by the instrument itself. For instance, pressure en the outer end of the instrument may change the elevation and position of the uterus, and produce swelling and pufrmess of the cervix. There can be no doubt of the great value of the speculum! both for the detection of disease, and the application of remedies ; but it is pos- sible that injury, beyond the violation of delicacy, may be occa- sioned by it. It should never be used, if it be possible to avoid it, in virgins ; or when there is any alteration of tissue, involv- ing its greater liability to laceration, and as rarely as possible with nervous women." Dr. Churchill has omitted inflammation and ulceration ex- tending into the cervical canal, which are of very frequent occur- rence, and, generally at least, are not at all discoverable by the finger. His caution against mistaking "for morbid changes appear- ances caused by the instrument," is very well timed and judicious, especially in using Kicord's four-branch speculum, which he recommends very highly and which formerly I em- ployed much oftener than any other. This speculum pos- sesses the advantages of being very easily introduced when the blades are closed, and of giving a good view by the sepa- ration of the blades in the vagina, but it is perhaps more liable than any other, in expanding, to give pain, and by irritating the vagina and cervix to cause temporary discolora- 1858.] Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. 103 tions, which might deceive the unpractised eye and possibly mislead the more experienced. Another great objection is that if necessary to change its position at all, it must be withdrawn and re-introduced, for otherwise the expanded blades could not fail to irritate and cause pain : it is also very apt to give pain in being withdrawn ; unless closed with great care, the extremities of the blades will almost certainly irritate, and if not withdrawn gradually and cautiously while closing, the mucous membrane of the vagina will be pinched. Having tried and rejected a large number of complicated and expensive specula, I now decidedly prefer the glass mirror spec- ulum, in general at least, to all others. Although it has no obturator, by introducing the projecting lip first carefully, and pressing it gently backward against the perineum, it may be in- troduced almost if not quite as easily as the bivalve or quadri- valve with the obturator ; and then it may be moved freely in any direction after its introduction so as to bring the os and cervix in view, if needs be to hook them up and bring them for- ward, when, as often found, inclined too far back to be readily seen. Much has been said against the speculum on the score of deli- cacy ; but I cannot perceive that it is any more indelicate to make a specular than a digital examination ; it is the necessity of the case that renders either proper, and I do believe a truly sensible and delicate lady would submit to the one as readily as the other indeed, were it not that a digital examination almost necessarily precedes the introduction of the speculum, the spec- ular would involve less indelicacy than the other; for example were it practicable for the speculum to be introduced without the intervention of the physician, as I have known, in a few instances, by the patient herself, or a female friend, and the physician only required to look through it and, if necessary, make an application, would it not wound her delicacy less than a digital examination ? It is said that it involves more expo- sure, but this is not necessary ; for it certainly can, by proper care, and ought always to be avoided. "When the speculum gives much pain, its use ought to be de- ferred, until the patient is better prepared for it, by soothinc and sedative vaginal injections. I cannot conceive that any in- jury can result from the speculum, when used with proper care 104 Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. [February, and caution, and under circumstances to indicate and warrant its application. Dr. Churchill says, il it should never be used, in virgins, if it be possible to avoid it," that is, if at all compatible with the proper treatment of their diseases, and the same may be said in reference to all ; but besides the greater physical difficulty and liability to inflict pain and injury, it is proper, on other consid- erations, to defer it longer in the former, and wait until the necessity is great indeed. But when there is truly a necessity for a specular examination in virgins, the physical obstacle is generally not so great as the objection we naturally feel to subject them to any such investi- gations ; for the long continuance of uterine disease has the effect of so relaxing and dilating the vagina, that an examination is attended with comparatively little difficulty. A respectable young lady had, at 13 years of age, about the time of the first eruption of the menses, been thrown from a horse with great vio- lence, alighting on her pelvis, ever since which, she had been subject to symptoms of prolapsus, "When examined at 17, her womb was very much hypertrophied, and at the orifice of the vagina which was so relaxed, that almost any speculum could be introduced with ease. On a distant visit, in 1856, I was requested to see a married lady, about 20 years of age, who had a decided procidentia, the uterus projecting about two inches beyond the vulva: she and her mother told me, she had had this affection five years before her marriage, which had taken place a few months before I saw her. She was of very respectable family, and of unimpeachable character. These are indeed extreme cases, but more or less relaxation always results from uterine disease of long standing. In any case wherein it may be at all proper to make a specular ex- amination, Whitehead's bivalve speculum may be used with safety. As respects the position ; in many cases, it answers very well to have the patient on her back, or on her side, with the pelvis near the edge of the bed ; but very frequently there is a great advantage in having the patient on her knees and elbows, as recently advised by Dr. Churchill, and many years ago by Pro- fessor Antony. In this position, with the thorax lower than the 1858.] Eve's Notes on Diseases of the Cervix Uteri. 105 pelvis, gravity causes the womb to pass from the floor of the pelvis toward the abdominal strait, elongating the vagina to its full extent, so that, if not shortened by the long existence of prolapsus, the os will be about the centre of the pelvis, and there will be ample room to inspect the whole sub vaginal portion, and to make a satisfactory application to any part of it ; whereas, when the patient is on her back or side, situated, as the womb often is, low down and in the axis of the superior strait, the speculum passing in the direction of the axis of the inferior strait, they necessarily meet at such an angle that it is often im- possible to obtain a good view of the os, or to insert a piece of caustic into the cervical canal. When the uterus has approach- ed so near the vulva, as to have necessarily changed its direc- tion from the axis of the brim to that of the outlet, it is of course most easily inspected while the patient is on her back or side. The position of the uterus in the pelvis and the condition of the vagina, must determine what position of the patient will be most eligible in each particular case. It is utterly futile to declaim against the speculum in cases de- manding its use, when, in Europe and the United States, so many hundreds and thousands of the most interesting and valuable of the sex, whose health was wrecked, and whose lives were ren- dered miserable, with an untimely grave in view, have, by treatment involving its use, been restored to health and to happi- ness, and have become again blessings to their families and to society, without the slightest diminution of purity, or even of delicacy, and in the highest possession of every moral and reli- gious excellence that can beautify and adorn the female char- acter. With such witnesses in its favor, the opponents of the specu- lum will exhaust their disapproval in vain declamation. 106 Report upon the Topography and [February, Dr. Posey's Eeport. [The following very able Eeport was presented to the Ameri' can Medical Association by Professor K. D. Arnold, of Savannah, at its last meeting, in Nashville, J)r, Posey, the reporter, not being able to attend the meeting. Appreciating its deep inter- est to the Southern Physician, and especially those of our own State, in a statistical point of view, we begin its publication in our present number. The balance of the paper, relating to Epi- demic Diseases, will find a place in our March number. Georgia certainly has no reason to complain she has record* ed herself pretty fully in the last volume of our National Trans* actions, Report upon the Topography and Epidemic Diseases of the State of Georgia. By Jo#N F. Posey, M, P., of Savannah, Ga, The State of Georgia must, for purposes of medical topogra* phy, be divided into three unequal parts. The largest occupying more than half the area of the State, extends from the sea-coast and Florida line on the south to the head of navigation of the larger rivers. The second division is separated from the first by a line be* ginning at Augusta, at the head of navigation in the Savannah Eiver, and running nearly west-southwest, by Milledgeville and J^acon, to Columbus, at the head of navigation in the Chatta* hoochee ; and is bounded on the northwest by a line drawn from the northeastern corner of the State, and running nearly southwest till it reaches the western boundary line of the State, about half way between Columbus and Nicajack, on the Ten* nessee Eiver. The third occupies all the space, within the State, lying north- west of the last mentioned line, and is much smaller than the second. The first division is, geologically, of tertiary formation, vary* ing in height and quality of alluvium according to the distance from the sea-coast. Dr. P. M. Kollock describes the part nearest to the sea thus : u The topographical features of this district may be distin* guished into three separate orders, marked by strips or sections extending lengthwise from northeast to southwest. *' Commencing with the Sea Islands on the east, we remark a series of sand-knolls or hillocks, apparently washed up by the gea from its bottom, varying in elevation, intersected by salt- marshes and creeks, and inclosing frequently brackish ponds and lagoons. 1858.] Epidemic Diseases of the State of Georgia. 107 M The growth of these islands is live-oak, water-oak, bay, gum, and pine. The live-oak predominates on the southern parts of the islands, almost to the exclusion of the pine ; while this last is found at the northern end, " The soil is a grayish and yellowish-brown sand, mixed with shells and vegetable mould, without any mixture or substra- tum of clay. This soil, for the most part, is thin, extending only a few inches in depth. " These islands are separated from the mainland by extensive salt-marshes, which are intersected by numerous creeks, and overflowed by every high tide. " The islands are also separated from each other by sounds, or arms of the sea, which are the outlets of the rivers to the ocean. "Leaving the islands, and crossing over to the main, we enter upon another section or strip of country, varying in its topo* graphical features from the islands ; a low pine-barren, intersect- ed with the rivers and swamps before mentioned. "The growth of these barrens is the short-leaved pine, mim gled with scrub-oaks and gums. The soil is sandy, with here and there a sprinkling of red clay. " In wet seasons, while the swamps are full of water, this Eine-barren soil is kept in a sobbed state, the drainage being bad y reason of its flatness. "Passing across this section, inland, twenty or thirty miles in width, we strike a somewhat more elevated and rolling region of sand-ridges and hills, intersected with bay -galls and branches, and sometimes ponds, " The soil is sandy, with a substratum of clay at varying depths. The long- leaved pine takes the place of the short, and predominates, to the exclusion of almost every other tree." The mainland adjoining the salt-marshes, which divide it from the Sea Islands between the Savannah and Altamaha Rivers, usually commences with a line of bluffs, which rises twenty or thirty feet above the level of high water, separated by arms of salt-marsh and small streams of fresh water, carrying the water springing from a line of sand-hills twenty or thirty miles further inland. These streams have a tide flowing a distance of ten or fifteen miles above the bluflfe, and for about the same distance further they are margined by a fresh- water marsh and swamp, from half a mile to a mile in width, with strips of higher land between them, which are of an older formation than the alluvium of the swamps, this last being yet in the process of deposit. Some of these strips of higher ground are remarkable for the growth of plants not usually found growing so near the sea- coast. 108 Report upon the Topography and [February, Between the line of bluffs and the line of sand-hills the great- est part of the rice which is grown in Georgia is produced, and also much of the long-stapled cotton. The line of sand-hills is an abrupt rise from a comparatively level plain, of about sixty feet, which height is very gradually increased as the distance from the beginning line is increased, with a succession of undulations of no great altitude, except near the river swamps. These swamps are like wide, shallow valleys cutting through the undulations, in which the streams meander from one side to the other, without any apparent cause for keeping any particular course. These valleys are filled to their present surface-level with the most recent alluvium, the vegetable mould now forming on the spot, sometimes covered with water and a growth of cypress, and in other places dry, with a heavy growth of such trees and bush- es as delight in a damp, rich soil. Into these swamps and lowlands the above-mentioned undu- lations project more or less, producing an irregular line of river hills, having the valleys between them gradually rising from the level of the river swamps to that of the innumerable ponds that are scattered all over the face of this part of the country. These valleys, which carry off the surface water after rains, wind about among hills of but little height above them, until ap- proaching the river swamps, where they seem to have been washed deeper, but are accompanied in their whole course by that kind of water-drain called by the inhabitants " bay-galls," which are from thirty to sixty yards or more in width ; these are like the river swamps, on a smaller scale, and often resem- ble vast hedges dividing fields of open pine-barren, or dense thickets of low whortleberry-bushes, or species of Andromeda called by the people " tie-tie." When these bay-galls, in their course to the river, meet to- gether, they make considerable streams, which seldom run dry, and in some places have cut for themselves channels with fall sufficient to drain the swamps on their sides for some distance ; these channels are commonly filled more or less thickly with silicious stones, often being casts of some bivalve. What is here called "rotten limestone," probably underlies this whole region, and is found in digging wells, where they have to be sunk deeply ; and where this is the case, the water is commonly impregnated with what seems to be putrid animal matter, which renders it exceedingly disagreeable, and, in the general opinion, unhealthy. At the distance of about one hundred and twenty miles from the sea, the rotten limestone ceases, and mica-schist begins to be found in the beds of rivers and other deep excavations ; here, also, the hills are higher and steeper, and oak and hickory 1858.] Epidemic Diseases of the State of Georgia. 109 are mixed with the pines ; cypresses are no longer found, and the small water-courses have high, steep banks, without swamps; here, also, the long-leaved pines cease, and soon the primitive formation crops out. South of the Altamaha Kiver, after leaving the tide- way, the face of the country is described by Dr. Kollock thus: u The soil varies in its equalities and appearance, " being either a dark-gray or a black mould, and is superficial, with an argillaceous substratum to the depth of five or six feet, and in a dry time becomes so hard that it is almost impervious to the plough or hoe, and cracks in every direction, forming exten- sive fissures of considerable depth." In such localities it is rare to find good water. According to Dr. T. S. Hopkins, of Wayne County, white clothing, washed in this water for a time, will assume a yellowish hue, analogous to that which would be pro- duced by a very weak solution of sulphate of iron. " This section of country, says the same gentleman, is known as the " lowlands," and is invariably abandoned by the plan- ters in the early part of June. "In a very dry or very wet season, the negroes on the plan- tations seem to enjoy almost an entire immunity from the severe grades of bilious remittent and congestive fevers which are common at other seasons, " Immediately above the lowlands, in Glynn County and the great Buffalo Swamp, the land rises at least eighteen feet, the soil is sandy and poor, the growth chiefly pine and blackjack, intersected occasionally by spring branches, which afford at almost all seasons of the year an abundant supply of fine water. The well-water throughout this section cannot be surpassed in purity and coolness even by our mountain springs." On the south, in Ware County, is the great Okefonokee Swamp, of which it is not necessary to say more than that it is but little known as yet ; but a survey, by order of the legislature of the State, is now in progress. On the west, and further inland, "the face of the country," says Dr. H. Briggs, of Troupville, " is level, rolling somewhat in the southern half, interspersed throughout with shallow ponds and bays, some of which are timbered, others destitute of trees ; filled to overflowing with water during the rainy seasons of winter and spring, but usually nearly or quite dry during the latter part of summer and autumn. "There are some ponds of a different kind in the southern part. They appear to have been formed by portions of land settling down, and the water rising to a considerable height above the depressed portions. " These were formed a long time since, as the banks are now very evenly sloped, and covered with trees of mature growth. 110 Report upon the Topography and [February, They are usually round or elliptical, varying in depth from three to fifteen or twenty feet, not very sensibly affected by rain or drought. " There are in almost all sections some evidences of lime un- derneath the clay, such as lime-sinks and sundry subterranean passages, into which the creeks pour a part of their waters ; also some lime-water springs. aThe country lies upon the Mexican Gulf slope, the declivity being from fifteen to eighteen inches to the mile. The water- courses have a general southern course, and are all tributaries of the Suwanne or Ocklockonnee Eivers. The creeks and bran- ches spread far and wide after a rainy season ; and after a long dry summer they are either dry, or nearly destitute of running water. The largest are mere drains for the surface water. " The soil is a sandy loam, underlaid with clay at various depths, from six inches to several feet. " The well water is soft and generally free from lime, except after protracted drought. " The country is generally covered with pine forests, and the wild grasses and flowering plants indigenous to all this region. "There are some isolated portions of country covered with a heavy growth of oak, hickory, magnolia, &c. The bays and margins of the creeks and branches are wooded with cypress, bay, gum, water-oak, live-oak, and a dense undergrowth of evergreen shrubs. " The pine lands are moderately productive, yielding corn, cotton, potatoes, rice, sugar-cane, wheat and oats. " The hammock lands are more productive, but probably not more durable. Very little has been done, as yet, in the way of reclaiming bay or swamp lands. " Oyster and other marine shells abound in the beds of all the larger streams ; they have undergone silicious petrifaction. " In the southern part, along the banks of the streams, speci- mens of chalcedony, large masses of yellow limestone, and orbi- tulite are frequent. " About midway between the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, the temperature in summer, during the day, is often as high as ninety or an hundred degrees ; I have not known it to exceed one hundred and two degrees at any time. The nights are sel- dom oppressively warm after nine P. M. The gales that so fre- quently prove disastrous upon the Atlantic coast, are scarcely observed here, Those of the Gulf coast are sometimes severely felt, particularly in the western part of the district," The second division of the State begins on a line running from Augusta by Milledgeville and Macon, to Columbus, being the head of navigation in the principal rivers of the State, and differs entirely from the first in geological formation, being 1858.] Epidemic Diseases of the State of Georgia.- Ill primitive ; and the face of the country, which is more hilly, and the streams being mostly confined between high banks, and without any marginal swamps, with rocky beds, over which the current is generaDy very rapid. The hills, near the larger water-courses,- are commonly very steep, often with large masses of coarse-grained granite piled up like houses, and rapidly disintegrating, from the effects of the weather. These hills are composed of clay of various colors, red predominating on the higher parts, while in the deep cuts made by the streams, a white, extremly tough plastic clay is found, mixed with a very fine white sand, with white flint stones, often in oblique cubes, with unpolished surfaces. In some places dikes of silex, or of coarse mica, cut into the hills like veins of a mine, as if immense masses of granite had been decomposed into clay, leaving veins of silex or mica in place. The red clay always contains grains of silex, and sometimes mica in very considerable quantities. Transparent crystals of qnartz abound, sometimes single, but mostly covering a mass of agate, or lining a cavity in the same. Small masses of felspar are found on the surface, and geodes, an ineh or less in diame- ter, containing a quantity of red ochre. There are places in the central parts of this division, where the granite lies bare, like an old field of some acres, having banks around it like those of a tranquil water-course, green with moss- es and constantly damp. The soil is a light gray, and strong, and very productive while new, but very quickly destroyed by careless cultivation, such as has been practiced ever since the first settlement of the country, leaving bare the clay, upon which scarcely any vege- table can grow. The most productive lands, and those which are longest in being exhausted by the slovenly cultivation aforesaid, are those called here " river low grounds," where the surface to a varying depth, sometimes more than ten feet, is composed of vegetable matter intimately mixed with the washings from the hills. This land is always highest immediately at the edge of the stream, and gradually becomes lower, until it reaches the foot of the hills, where there is often standing water. A large portion of the cultivated land in this part of the Stater is in what is called "the Flat-woods," being table land on a small scale, at a distance from the largest streams, having a stiff clayey soil, not very pervious to water, and therefore, in a wet season liable to be soaked, and sometimes overflowed, the water- shed not always being very obvious. The forest growth is oaks of several species, hickory, chestnut, black walnut, pine, beach, maple, dogwood, buttonwood, here 112 Report upon the Topography and [February, called sycamore, crab-apple, &c., in the order of frequency here indicated. The northern part of this division contains most of the rich mines of gold, copper, &c, with mineral springs in various places; but the springs and wells in general furnish very pure ' 'freestone" water. The temperature varies much in the different parts of this division ; along the southern boundary line the summer days, in dry weather, are oppresively hot, with little wind, while the nights are cool and pleasant Thunder squalls are frequent, stirring up the atmosphere, bringing down the cold air from above, while the rain washes the dust from the vegetation, re- freshing everything. In the winter the thermometer, seldom below zero, is very variable ; light snows are common, sometimes lying in the woods two or three weeks. Approaching the mountain region, the summer heat is miti- gated and the cold of winter is increased, and the temperature is more governed by the course of the winds, snow lying on the mountains till late in the spring. The third division comprehends the limestone region of Upper Georgia. For information from this region, I am indebted to Dr. Kobert C. Word, formerly of Cassville, now of Borne. "There is no material difference," says Dr. Word, " in the geological features of the several counties. There is in each the same succession of broad valleys of rich fertile land, separated by intervening ridges, from one to several miles across, of various degrees of elevation, rising, in some instances, to the magnitude of moun- tains, originally covered by a dense forest, now rapidly disap- pearing. These valleys are well watered by streams fed by large springs, which gush up from beneath the substratum of limestone underlying the surface at various debths, through- out their whole extent. " The rains of winter and spring fill the stratum of earth above the limestone with moisture, and give rise to innumera- ble temporary fountains (called wet weather springs) at the base and on the sides of the hills, and all over the valleys. These all flow into the permanent streams, and occasion a great dis- proportion in the height of their waters between wet and dry seasons. " The stratum of limestone, and in many places one of alumina above it, presents a great obstacle to the absorption or ready penetration of the superabundant water deeply into the earth, and consequently there is excessive humidity of the surface, and in many places large pools of water, or shallow lakes of consid- erable extent, during the months of January, February, and 1858.] Epidemic Diseases of the State of Georgia. 113 March. The three succeeding months are generally delightful in temperature. The genial warmth of the vernal sun quickly evaporates the excess of moisture the dreariness of winter is dispelled, and its fathomless abyss of cohesive mud forgotten in the contemplation of the gorgeous scene displayed with magical celerity by the luxuriant vegetation. " The summers are by no means so depressing as upon the seaboard, or in the middle portion of the State. The thermom* eter occasionally, in the hottest part of the day, rises as high as 90 or 92 of Fahrenheit, but the nights are cool and refreshing, "The same geological formation which favors the accumula- tion of water near the surface of the earth in winter explains also the remarkable absence of it during the months of August, September, and October, when in dry seasons, the ground is parched and cracked in many places, the atmosphere filled with dust, vegetation languishing, and where the stratum of earth is thin, totally destroyed ; the temporary springs, branches, and lakes all dried up, many of the wells exhausted, and the water in the permanent streams, reduced to its minimum, creeps slug- gishly through the accumulated piles of drift-wood, which par- tially block up the channels through which it flows. " The highest heat of summer is of short duration, and the temperature of the entire autumn is delightful, " The two principal streams in this section of Georgia are the Oostenaula and the Etowah, which, meeting at Eome, in Floyd County, form the Coosa, a stream navigable for steamboats many miles into the State of Alabama. " These rivers drain nearly the whole of the fifth congression- al district, and are of great size, but not different in their cir- cumstances from their smaller tributaries, though much of the alluvial land upon their banks, subject to inundation, is still covered with primeval forest "Throughout all the limestone region numerous sinks and depressions are observable on the earth's surface. Many con- tain water during the winter, but become dry on the approach of warm weather. Others are permanently filled with clear pure water. Subterranean caves are also numerous, especially in the counties of Cass, Waker, and Dade. "The great alternations of moisture and temperature, so com- mon to our winters, are probably due to the character of the prevailing winds, which are exceedingly variable, not unfre- quently shifting their position to all the points of the compass- in a period of less than twenty-four hours, each change in direc- tion being attended with a corresponding change of tempera- ture. The southeast winds, blowing from the Atlantic coast during the greater part of fall and winter, are attended with frequent rains, cold and penetrating in their effects upon the' 114 On Rheumatism. [February, system. East winds are attended with cold drifting rains, and frequently with sleet ; south winds with copious showers, not quite so cold ; southwest winds with frequent showers, rather warm. As the wind approaches the west, the rain ceases, though the clouds continue until it reaches a point north of west, when the weather becomes fair and cool. Due north winds are very cold, though not usually of long continuance. Northeast winds are not common,- and when they do occur, are apt to bring with them snow. In the spring, we have rains and pas- sing showers from the west and southwest. In summer we have showers mostly from the west and northwest. 11 Situated and forming the dividing line between the grains growing sections of Tennessee and the cotton region of Georgia, the limestone counties of Cherokee Georgia, are not wholly un- suited to the production of either. Though best adapted to the growth of grain, grasses, and stock, the more southern counties have been found to produce abundant crops of cotton. The soil on the creek and river bottoms is rich with alluvial deposit. In many places, both in the valleys and more elevated country, the soil is strongly impregnated with iron, constituting the "red" or " chocolate" land, exceedingly fertile, but u thirsty." [To be concluded in March No.] On Rheumatism of the Epithelial and Non- Epithelial Fibrous Tis- sues : Its Sequence to Scarlatina and other Exanthemata. On Rheumatic Gout, Chorea, &c. &c. By H. P. DeWees, M. D. New York. (Concluded from January No. p. 63.) The secondary abscesses following rheumatism, result in most cases, from local phlebitis, or from the detention of minute fibrin- ous plugs arresting the circulation in the small vessels. Some- times, the breaking down of larger plugs with interior pus, causes irritation to be established, with more or less serous infiltration into the adjacent cellular tissue, the abscess varying according to the local arrest. The limits of this paper, however, will not allow more than mention of these conditions. I will merely refer to1 the pathological facts of the vessels becoming inflamed, and sub- sequently thickened or plugged up, so that more or less perfect closure ensues, with resolution into abscess, or into mortification, either local, or at a distal point, if the large vessels are arrested in their circulation. The nature of the gangrene, whether moist or dry, will in great measure depend on the perfection of the closure. Sometimes, however, the surrounding parts become so agglutina- ted by the adhesive action of repair, as to render the neighboring tissues anatomically unrecognizable, and totally unfit for their pur- poses of secretion or of motion. If such deposit take place in the 1858.] On Rheumatism. 115 lungs, the damage is the same, and in this way vomicae may arise perfectly independent of tubercular origin, a plug of fibrin not as large as the head of a pin arresting the local circulation, with consecutive destructive changes; so that rheumatism, by its re- sults, may become the parent of evils, equal, in their destructive tendencies over life, to tubercle in its highest state of develop- ment and disintegration. If the vessels of the brain become the seat of arrest, its nutrition will be more or less interfered with, and local atrophy or softening may ensue, with lesions of motion, or of intelligence, as resultants. And thus paralysis and imbecil- ity may follow in the train of that so-called " simple rheumatism/' * The cases of paralysis after rheumatism of the spinal invest- ments are not unfrequent. On dissection, this apparently high inflammatory action, so complete in its functional arrest as even to eventuate in death, cannot at times be recognized by the eye, as regards structural change. And the same can be said of it when seated in the serous membranes of the brain; the so-called inflammation being a specific poisoning of the very centres of life, leaving neither trace nor residue, In the gouty the blood poison is not always exhibited by the '; big toe" attack, with increasing demand for flannel. The skin may become the beacon of its approach. Lichenous, herpetic, or other eruptions, painful to bear and obstinate to treat, may not only mask the attack, but for a long time keep it in " masterly inactivity." And the same, at times, may be said of the poison of rheumatism. It would appear, from reasoning on the facts adduced in the study of rheumatism and gout, that if the lactic acid formations are in excess, either by over-generation or by non-elimination, that an attack of acute rheumatism is apt to follow, and especially after the sudden drying up of these eruptions. If this does not take place, but the skin disorder recedes slowly, and there is ap- parently but a small excess of lactic acid retained, the rheumatic pains are irregular, flying from spot to spot, or the joints become more or less stiff, not from any difficulty in their opposing surfa- ces, but from muscular inability to apply the necessary force to- wards movement. If, on the other hand, the uric acid is not ex- pelled, or is generated in excess, gout is the frequent successor. At this moment I have two cases that would apparently verify these views. The white fibrous tissue is the chief texture affected in simple acute or true fibrous rheumatism, either as it occurs in the for- mation of the ligaments connected with joints, or in the mem- branous form covering tendons, or in the aponeurotic expansions of the large muscles, as the fascia lata of the thigh, with its deep prolongations, or in the cranial dura mater, sclerotica, &c. It will be necessary to bear in mind that the sheathes of ten- 116 On Rheumatism. [February, d0Ils the bursae (sometimes called the bursal synovial mem- branes) between the tendons of muscles, between tendons and bones, and between the projecting parts of bones and skin, as the olecranon, &c, have no epithelium, although in function they resemble the true synovial membranes, yet they differ from them anatomically and in exact analysis. But this is not the case in the bursa? communicating with the synovial capsules ; these as well as the articular cartilages, have an epithelial layer. These ana- tomical peculiarities are to be remembered, as they form the dis- tinctive features in the pathology, diagnosis, and treatment. Although the synovial membranes are not so prone to the effu- sion of plastic lymph, as are the serous, yet the bursae are at times found not only traversed by adhesive bands, but even completely obliterated. The movements in such conditions are greatly im- peded, but not so completely, as when the sheaths of the tendons are in a like manner affected, the free play of the attached mus- cles being rendered more or less impossible. The fact is not to be lost sight of, that a large proportion of the urea is derived from the disintegration of the body tissues, espe- cially of the gelatinous and albuminous orders, independently of the introduction of nitrogenized food into the system. It is chiefly or at least frequently, in rheumatic disorders which are the off- spring of deranged secondary assimilation, that urea forms so fatal an agency, although nervous depressions and coma arise in non- rheumatic diseases ; as those of the kidney, or from puerperal causes, &c. Indeed, in many diseases involving the serous mem- branes with kidney difficulty, urea forms a dread element, whilst, by its non-elimination, or selective error, it lies at the secret cause of disturbance, not only in the sclerotic membranes, but also in many of the diseases of the aqueous and vitreous humors of the eye. This is now only alluded to, and may form the subject of another paper, or will serve to call notice from other medical ob- servers. Not less important would be a series of observations as regards the action of oxygenated remedies in a high lithic condi- tion of the system, as the uric acid might thus be converted into urea. In the gouty this change of uric acid into urea might take place by the action of oxygenated remedies, and suppuration of the synovial capsules and serous membranes ensue, as in rheuma- tism, whilst arachnitis and coma form the modes of death, espe- cially if kidney disorder exist at the same time. In other cases those in which death is sudden, and the organic lesions are inap- preciable or insufficient to account for the fatal termination the urea, by a re- arrangement of its elements, may be converted into cyanate of ammonia, thus poisoning the centres essential to life. It is not always that in rheumatism there is a deficiency of sur- face excretion, nor in gout that the kidneys are chiefly in fault. The materies morbi may be generated by the imperfect compos*- 1858.] On Rheumatism. 117 tion and quantity of the blood itself, so that the tissues of selection cannot be properly nourished, their structural assimilation being more or less destroyed. The excretion of soda in tophaceous deposits or articular incrus- tations, does not take place in rheumatism as in gout ; it is, how- ever, partially witnessed in the hybrid affection, viz : rheumatic gout. This in part, may be accounted for ; as in the gouty the primary digestion is disturbed, whilst in the rheumatic the secon- dary assimilations are more at fault. Hence, the first are apt to use soda as a corrective of acidity, or " to bring the wind off the stomach ;" whilst, probably, from the inactivity of the liver, the alkali from the salt used at table is not called on in the forma- tion of bile, and thus collects in the blood. In rheumatism, how- ever, we have at times such fusion of the immediate tissues about the joints, rendering anatomical division almost impossible, that it would seem by the excessive attraction of lactic acid to the parts, it possessed the power to act as a solvent of the elementary fibres, as I have found it for many years useful for that purpose in dys- pepsia of animal substances. It is well known that rheumatism more frequently attacks the weakly, the intemperate, the irregular in diet (and especially if of unwholesome nature,) those who may be exposed to vicissitudes of temperature, or who long labor mentally or physically with in- sufficient food, or under anxiety and mental depression. But the strong, well-fed and able-bodied, young or old, are liable to its suf- ferings ; in these, if the exanthemata, or accident, have not engraft- ed a kidney vice, and the blood is not overloaded with nitrogen- ized products, the attack will be of the simple inflammatory type, affecting the nonepithelial fibrous structures or surfaces ; whilst heart disease, and especially of the mitral valve, will be infrequent. On the other hand, if kidney disease, accidental or exanthematous, be present, then structures more important in their uses and ana- tomical arrangements, viz : the interior capsular parts, the heart and the arachnoid serous membrane, &c, are liable to become af- fected, whilst the prognosis is against the patient, either immediately or remotely. Delirium or coma, more or less profound, is the dis- tinguishing feature in these cases. In the others, where the ex- terior cranial fibrous dura mater is attacked, although the suffer- ings are intense and the venous suffusion alarming, yet the chan- ces to the patient are more favorable, and delirium and coma do not follow in so fatal a train if present, unless the effusion be great ; and even here, the disturbances are more of position than of nu- tritive function. The rich or the pampered are not, however, the sole proprie- tors of the gout ; the poor, the half-starved have also their gout ; it is the offspring of their very poverty. Dives, introduces into his blood from without the sreat sources of his evil ; whilst Laz- 118 On Rheumatism. [February arus produces a condition almost similar, by the rapid disintegra- tion of his own tissues, loading his ill-fed blood with uric acid and other compounds, from the wear and tear of his system. There is no compensation by proper supply of food ; and the kidneys and other emunctory organs are too enfeebled, though, perhaps, not diseased, to extract the uric acid or urea from the blood. These cases, though rare, yet take place it is the gout of the impover- ished. They are, in general, inebriate from necessity and from physiological instinct; their systems cry aloud for carbon, for liquor, that the oxygen of the air they breathe shall not burn up their pittance-saved bodies, but attack the free carbon and hy- drogen of the alcohol, and leave in respite their meagre frames. It is the gout of demand and not of supply. And here we find a vivid example of the fact above stated, that the tissues suffer dis- integration, or death, not only from deficiency of nutritive supply, but from defective quality of the blood. In the gout of the impo- verished, nitrogenized food the bane of the rich man and those remedies having the power to retard the decomposition of tissue, as tea, coffee, hop, &c, must be trusted in ; and thus the waste of the system being restrained, the blood will not be surcharged from the structures themselves, and the local disintegration will be arrested, and the organs return to their uses ; but mostly with deformity as an index of their past trials. The urinary deposits, both in gout and rheumatism, sometimes mask the condition of urine as secreted by the kidney the uric acid formations being disguised by the alkaline, or earthy phos- pates. This is chiefly owing to chronic vesical irritation or in- flammation, the muco-pus acting on the urea, and converting it into carbonate of ammonia, which precipitates the alkaline salts. It is thus that the condition of the urine may be masked by the presence of pus, or of a mucoid body, in its rout from the kidneys. Indeed the highly acid state of the secretion may be the very cause by which the bladder may be irritated. The prognosis in these cases depends on the nature of the bladder or kidney irrita- tion, the possibility of calculous formation, the recent or long previous existence of the affection, &c. The space allotted me is nearly exhausted, and will necessarily oblige me to condense the chief features of treatment, with a run- ning statement on some other points. From the preceeding views the treatment almost explains itself. In the acute rheumatism of the robust, at whatever age, the seat of attack is in the white fibrous tissues, the fever high, attended generally with great sweat- ing, the pain and swelling intense, but greater than when the epi- thelial jibro-serous tissues are affected. Venesection is rarely called for, though by some regarded as not only a mitigator of pain, but as instituting a better condition for subsequent remedial action. As a lessener of fibrin it is useless its chief value, if used, being 1858.] On Rheumatism. 119 the relief to the vascular tension, and the rather more rapid ab- sorption of neutralizing remedies. In my own practice I have not used it for many years. The local applications of leeches is warrantable, but more troublesome in general than the affection. A light antimonial emetic, however, answers more fully the desir- ed end, followed, on the subsidence of its action, by an active pur- gative of Hyd. chlor. mit., with Ext. Colocynth Comp. The advantage of early emptying the bowels is realized, when the in- creasing disablement of the joints renders the efforts to rise not only agonizing but injurious. The affected parts should be bathed with a warm mixture of Potassa-bi-Carb. and laudanum, and af- terwards wrapped up in cloths saturated with the solution, and covered with oil-silk or rubber, which can be gradually removed if the heat is complained of. Potato water, as left after boiling the vegetable or its parings, has proved a most soothing applica- tion, when freely sponged quite warm over the swollen and pain- ful joints, which can afterwards be wrapped up in it, as directed for the alkaline wash. The Tinct. Actea Racemosa, in 6 to 12 drop doses, can be given in or followed by a solution of Nitrate, Bi-Carbonate, or Acetate of Potash ; or the Tart, of Potash and Soda, if preferred, can be substituted. Frequently, in children, the Actea alone serves to cut short the attack after a few doses, in conjunction with alkaline fomentations. The necessity for pur- ging generally ceases after the bowels have been well moved in the beginning. At all events, intestinal irritation is to be avoided. It is well to remember that the expectant treatment of acute rheumatism is nearly as favorable in its results as the active. Colchicum, in the acute attack of the strong, who have deranged hepatic action, combined with opium, after due operation from the bowels, also forms a valuable remedy. Its purging and emetic effect is unnecessary and to be avoided. It is more as a chola- gogue and an excretor of lithic acid, than as a specific in rheu- matism. Where the liver is already acting freely, it does not form an agent of trust, and when frequently employed serves to injure the system. Hence the discrepancy as to its value. In alkaline combination it is frequently useful. The Nitrate of Potash, so much lauded of late, will be found beneficial where a high condition of fibrin exists in the blood, its solvent action over that element being called for. Otherwise it is no more, and many times not so valuable a remedy as the other alkaline salts. It is, therefore, not from any specific eliminating power of the rheuma- tic poison that is called for, but from its defibrinating action, and its value as a diuretic, and its probably converting the lithic acid into a more soluble compound, urea. After proper evacuation, the Pulv-Doveri, in full doses, will generally, though not always produce refreshing sleep and quiet the pain. If found stimulant to the brain, watchfulness or flightiness taking place, it either 120 On Rheumatism, [February, must be increased or left off. Opium acts, in many cases, as an expeller of the lithic acid in chronic cases, conjoined with tur- pentine, it sometimes causes immense quantities to be evacuated. All things considered, time, forms as valuable an element in the treatment as the remedies selected. A certain amount of ma- teries morbi, and the disposition to its reproduction, has to be bro- ken up, and time, sweating, and sometimes urination are at work in the process of elimination. Remedies may assist, but if injudi- ciously employed they will retard, the patient suffering from both disease and doctor. The diet should be unstimulating, meat, soups, and jellies avoided, toast and water, with light gruels, being the best regulators. As the attack subsides, vegetable diet should be adhered to, the local applications and internal remedies can be moderated. Clam soup, and raw salt oysters may, after a time, be allowed ; and now, if the blood shows decrease of its red cor- puscles, the mild preparations of iron may be cautiously com- menced on. If loss of flesh be increasing, coffee and tea will prove beneficial as preventers of tissue waste. In the anasarca of the debilitated, squill with quinine will be found most servicea- ble. By these means the immediate re-attack may be warded off, but mental quiet and bodily rest are imperative. The supply being small, the demand should be lessened. But the low diet system is not to be carried too far ; it is well to remember that the fibrin is increased in the blood by starvation, as well as by high feeding. Rest, however, is absolutely necessary. No blood is to be thrown into the parts in and about the joints, by the invitation of exer- cise. Even in the very robust, acute rheumatism sometimes at- tacks the joints after long-continued and violent exercise. But where the parts have been "affected, with the system lowered by diet, remedies, and wear and tear from pain and loss of rest, great caution as to exercise is requisite ; as other structures, and of higher importance, may become involved, and simple acute fibrous rheumatism, be merged into an attack of the epithelial bursal and synovial membranes of the interior of the joint, besides endan- gering the heart, pleura, and other organs, when their liability to become engaged was not at first probable. It is this small point which makes the utmost watchfulness ne- cessary, as regards keeping the system in good general working order, and which has made the pathological statements so variable, as respects the engagement of the heart in acute rheumatism. Every practitioner has observed that, when in the first attack in sound persons, the swelling, heat, redness, and pain have been very great, the heart is not so liable to become affected, as when all the symptoms are more moderate. In some cases, however, both the tissues in and without the joint are attacked, and then the diagnosis is to be carefully viewed, as the renal disturbance 1858.] On Rheumatism. 121 is mostly present, though perhaps later to observation, at the time. The friction with liniments, whilst the thickning, &c, remains, after the subsidence of the acute pain, will be found beneficial. The following recipe I am Jn the habit of using ; $ 01. Origon, |i OL Lavend. Spicat., . . Iss Tinct. Aconite Sat., . . 3 i 01. Amyg. dulc, ... 3 Hi Aq. Ammon. fort., ... 3ii YeL, 5ss M. A light covering, with cotton batting and oil-silk, should be applied, unless the heat is complained of. The gradual reduction of the envelopes should take place after a time, so that chilliness be avoided, which would attend its speedy withdrawal. The treatment in chronic fibrous rheumatism has the same features, differing more in degree than method, excepting in the employment of iodide of potassium in small doses. The system is to be carefully watched, exercise is to be judiciously and regu- larly taken, the surface made to excrete properly, the bowels to be kept soluble but unirritated, sleep should be rather longer than in health, as a promoter of insensible transpiration and nervous recuperation, whilst stimulant embrocations, oil-silk sweatings, and light galvanic applications should be employed to the part. The color, quantity, and specific gravity of the urine should be watched, as giving evidences of approaching danger, or of increas- ing constitutional vigor. In the heart complications in rheumatism, the treatment re- quires great circumspection. The difficulty of breathing, the precordial pain, the out-of-breath manner of speech, the desire to be propped up, the increasing effusions into the legs, scrotum, chest, or abdomen, with diminished urine and rapid pulse these point out the imminent peril of the sufferer, from which nothing but a strong constitution and skillful treatment can save him. The drain on the pent-up fluids is to be made through the bowels, as the kidneys are generally too occluded, or broken down in functional power, to be of any use. The Pulv. Jalapae Comp. with Elaterium, or other hydragogues, with digitalis over the heart, or internally 3 to 6 drops of the Tinct. Veratrum Yiride must be administered, and watched during their operation. Sup- port by brandy or champagne must be proportioned to the exhaus- tion or nervons necessity, but no more. The stimulous, and not the carbon, is wanted now neither lung nor liver can dispose of it. If alcoholic drinks disagree, coffee and camphor can be sub- stituted, sometimes with most excellent results. During purlins:.. the position of the patient is to he kept unchanged^ or even with iht 122 On Rheumatism. [February, head lower if possible at all events, he is not to be raised sudden- ly whilst stimulants should be snuffed through the nostrils, &c. If these means are successful in reducing the effusions, the kid- neys can now be gently invited into action. The palpitation sometimes yields, most gratefully to the patient, after the adminis- tration of champagne, the carbonic acid serving to allay the irri- tability of the heart's action. By conjoining the infusion of the wild-cherry bark or, where its bitter tonic property seems to disagree with the stomach, a few drops of the dilute Hydrocyanic Acid, a most happy effect may sometimes be obtained when the irritability is excessive. But great caution is requisite in the administration of organic sedatives, as will be mentioned further on. In the convalescence, if the liver still should continue at fault, the preparations of iron are to be avoided, as they will serve to induce congestion, and lock up the proper secretions of the organ. At this period, however, the kidneys will sometimes resume their functions, and labor not only for themselves, but, by taking off the purpurates and other highly carbonaceous compounds, so re- lieve the liver, that the system daily rises refreshed from their effects. The urine becomes more and more abundant, and loaded with the urates of ammonia and soda. It is here I would parti- cularly caution the young practitioner, in his testing the urine with nitric, or nitro-muriatic acid, lest he should mistake the very copious deposits of the white crystals of lithic acid, for albu- men. This I have seen done more than once. The deposit of the phosphates by heat, is corrected from wrong interpretation on the addition of the acid, which re-dissolves them. This dense condition of the urine by the urates of ammonia and soda, is the very salvation of the patient. Beware then of administering any acid, either alone or in combination with a vegetable or mineral tonic, as it will serve to neutralize just so much ammonia and soda, and thus prevent the elimination by the kidneys of the very lithic acid so poisonous in its action to the general system, but especially to the serous membrane of the chest, and of the heart, which will be again tortured by the acrid blood into renewal of its exhausting efforts, whilst convulsion and coma stand threaten- ingly near. In the early part of this tumult of the system, when the organic force is consuming by the overtask of the functions, I would strenuously caution against the abuse of opium, or of any narco- tic, to produce sleep or relieve from pain. And I will only reiter- ate a maxim which I have before published, and often repeated, viz : that in all organic diseases attended with pain and excretory impediment, opium and other organic sedatives are to be avoided, as, by paralyzing the organic centres, dropsies may collect in the cavities. 1858.] On Rheumatism. 128 Lemon-juice, in some cases of acute and chronic rheumatism,, is at times beneficial, though rarely to be trusted to alone. Yet I have seen cases where it seemed to act as a perfect specific. It will prove chiefly beneficial in uncomplicated cases, where the urea fails in its urinary quantity, and where an excess of ammonid exists in the blood. Benzoic acid, in these conditions of chronic rheumatism, acts at times most favorably. The children of gouty, rheumatic, and dyspeptic parents, are prone to a lithic condition of the blood, or at least to its elimina- tion by the kidney. It is early marked in them by incontinence of urine, or " wetting the bed." Although the heart does not evidences organic disease in them, yet its motions are violent and frequent whilst crystalline lithic acid is formed in the Urine ; or they are variable in their diet and irritable in their dispositions, the urine being pale, abundant, but free from lithk? acid deposit 07,'in solu- tion. The acid condition of the blood is irritating to the internal membrane of the heart, and the contractions are sharp and fre- quent. There is a loss of true tone in the system, and rheumatism is apt to set in spontaneously, or after violent anger or any undue exhaustion, exercise, or exposure. Here, opium forms a most valuable remedy from its sedative influence and its power to dis- engage the lithic acid from the blood. Children given to masturbation, but whose urine alternates from lithic to the phosphatic, the intermediate depositions of the urates of soda and ammonia taking place, with increase of urea,- are also subject to rheumatic attack or pains. Substantial diet, with opium at night, is the chief remedy. The furtive look, the desire for solitude, the uncalled-for sighing, the vesical irritability,- the irregular languor, and the blowing sound in the heart and large vessels, with more or less palpitation, will serve to direct suspicion to the solitary acts of the patient, which careful watching may verify. Organic changes may, and frequently do, establish them- selves from these long continued functional disturbances. But it is always well to remember, in the disorders of nutrition of the heart, that the young are reproducers their organic desire to re- model is ever at work ; that the hypertrophy, if it exist, is mostly from interstitial deposit, and not a true fibrillar increase of the heart itself. Restraint from the abuse, chemical changes afforded to the blood, and the supply of fresh material by proper food, with attention to moderation of exercise, and sometimes to complete bodily rest, will form not only the treatment, but, in many a new organ. Of this I have seen several most excellent examples. In later life, an individual ceases to be an active remodeler ; he is on the waste account ; his capital has no interest accruing, and he is forced to use it up for the common necessities of his sys- tem. These are distinctions as well as differences. Had these views been more common, so many heart-disturbed children would n. s. vol. xrv. no. n. 6 124 On Rheumatism. [February, not have filled an early grave, or been moored to the stake of life, to waste away an aimless existence in later years. In scarlatinal rheumatism, all treatment at times is rendered impossible by the condition of the patient ; as in scarlatina, the do nothing system is frequently the best. Good nursing, attention to the skin by sponging or moist wrappings, are better than the " nimia diligentia medici." During the fever, the pain is mostly in the wrists, or in one or two joints. The scarlatina and the rheumatic complication are offspring of the same poison. There is pain, as in true fibrous rheumatism, but it is seated in different structures, and attended with different implications as regards the head, the heart, and the chest. In the robust, the diet, or rather the absence of it, forms the treatment. All animal food is to be avoided the blood is yet too overloaded with nitrogenized pro- ducts. If too early indulged in, the articular pains recommence or' increase, chest or heart difficulties are renewed, and convul- sions endanger the life of the patient. Farinaceous and vegeta- ble diet must be continued a while longer. The debility is de- ceptive ; it is more the result of the oppressive action of urea over the great nervous centres, than loss of power from nutritive want. The return, then, to animal food, must be cautiously watched. But in the weakly, these fears have to be in a measure given rap. At the first ingress of the rheumatism, a little abstinence may be enjoined ; but after that, the position is different. Death by debility would ensue more rapidly than by the disease. It is the rheumatism of demand. Food and stimulus must be given. Ulcerations pus makings, about and in the joints, are to be check- ed; food and drink must do it; for specific medicines are useless, unless quinine, iron and other tonics can be so called. Under a lowering plan the coffin is sure to close over the wretched victims ; and life to most of us, is better with a stiff leg or disabled joint, than the kind attention of an undertaker. In the convulsions attending both cases as above stated, the directions should be : for the robust, feet and legs in hot water, with head up, or at an easy reclining angle ; for the debilitated, the horizontal posture, and no warm bath, but cold water sprinkled n the face and chest, in the order of natural respiration. Here, the brain must have blood, though diseased blood it be. From the neglect of this simple precaution, I have seen a child killed as though struck on the head, the feet, and not the brain, being supplied with blood ! In syphilitic, and also in chronic rheumatism, iodide of potas- sium acts more than well ; in the former it is almost specific. Its combination with colchicum and with opium, may at times be required. It is not only diuretic, but possesses the property to re-establish assimilative vigor. Small doses, in repetition, act more favorably than large doses at longer intervals. 1858.] On Rheumatism. 125 In rheumatic gout, especially where the fibrous sheaths of nerves are attacked, the combination of Hyd. Pot. with Colchi- cum acts most favorably, the Tinct. Aconite Sat., with Acid Hy- drocyan. being painted freely over the route of the affected nerves and kept from evaporating by strips of oil-silk or rubber. In the cranial effusions, the Hyd. Potass, is the most reliable remedy. Calomel is chiefly useful as a defibrinator, as a promoter of in- terstitial absorption, and as a specific stimulant to the liver, by which the decarbonation of the blood shall be promoted through the secretion of bile. In the debilitated it is positively harmful, if continued; although the balance at times, even in them, may be in favor of its use, where the brain is oppressed by black blood.- Guaiacum has long enjoyed a reputation in chronic rheuma- tism, and with apparent good right. It seems to possess the power of increasing the excretion of both lithic and lactic acid, by the kidney and skin. In rheumatic dysmenorrhea, in leucorrhoeal discharges attending this disorder in the dermalgia, so painful on pressure or warmth in hysteria and hysteric knee-joint com- plaints, mostly of a rheumatic nature, &c, this remedy, in con- junction with others, or in the form of the Vol. Tincture, will be found serviceable. The cases, however, are to be selected pro- perly, whilst time forms an element in its action. I have known it not only cure, but eradicate some of these disorders. Rheumatic chorea has already been adverted to, with partial mention of remedies. The irritability of the heart, or the ner- vous propagation is, in many cases, to be quelled before any per- manent success can be attained. Arsenic, as in Fowler's solution, in six drop doses, with the endermic application of morphine, and quinine (if after malarial influence) over the cervical spine, is at times very valuable. In the rheumatic form, colchicum and aetea racemosa, in small doses, have been found useful. The same rheumatic condition of the system haVe been attended, in both male and female, with globus hystericus. Stammering, as before remarked, is sometimes the result of rheumatism, in children whose systems have been Weakened, and who are thus more liable to mental emotions, as fright, &c. The heart palpi- tates readily, and the muscular nervous branches to the larynx, and more rarely the hypo-glossal, or motor of the tongue, become the channels of the disordered reflex action. I have many times noticed the sudden hesitancy of speech, from sudden emotion, in the rheumatic, differing from the arrest of power in the organs from emotional acts in the unaffected. In conclusion, I shall only refer to acupuncture in sciatica with effusion into the sheath, and in muscular pains, having been at times serviceable. Chloroform, blisters, the hot button, the ender- mic applications of veratrine, morphine, delphine, aconitine, strychnine, and other alkaloids, have had reputation for a time, 126 Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. [February, but chiefly in neuralgic affections. In the gouty and rheumatic, local applications may relieve temporarily, but it is only by the patient study of the blood changes, with the appropriate antago- nistic remedies, and food, that any permanent benefit can be real- ized, or security against attack be obtained. [American Med. Monthly. Exsection of the Trunk of the Second Branch of the Fifth Pair of Nerves, beyond the Ganglion of Meckel, for Severe Neuralgia of the Face: with Three Cases-. By J. M. Carnochan, Professor of Surgery in the New York Medical College, Surgeon -in- chief to the State Hospital (New York), etc. The accounts heretofore given by authors of neuralgia, or tic douloureux of the face, are of a very vague and indefinite char- acter. Numerous essays and monographs have been written on this subject, since the time of Fothergillr who published,, in 1776, an elaborate description of the disease, which attracted consider- able attention. In all these efforts,, the pathology of tic doulour- eux is described with ambiguity. In practice the treatment has been as empirical as it has proved to be unsuccessful. The seat of the disease has been referred to distant irritations, espe- cially in the splanchnic cavities to- a foreign body acting upon the nerve to the pressure of bone upon some portion of the nervous trunks. By some authorities, it is referred to increased vascularity and thickening of the nerves; while Astley Cooper, on the contrary, states, that the nerves present their natural co- lour, and are rather diminished in size than enlarged. It can scarcely be supposed that beneficial results should follow from treatmant based upon theories so different in character. Tic douloureux of the face, proper, or of the second branch of the fifth pair of nerves, is by far the most common form of facial neuralgia. This may be explained by the more numerous branches, which are given off by this trunk, and by the position which these branches occupy in some places pent up in osse- ous canals, and in others subjected to exposure, to changes in temperature, as well as to the agency of morbific influences, from which the other two trunks of the fifth pair are exempt. The same laws which govern neuralgic disease of one of the branches of the fifth pair, must be applicable to the disease in the other trunks. I believe that the phenomena of neuralgia can be explained with as much precision as in any other disease, when well understood. In cases similar to those described be- low, whatever may have been the original exciting cause, I have no doubt that the real seat of the disease is in the trunk of the nerve, in front of the foramen rotundum in some parts of it, or 1858.] Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. 127 in the whole of it. The causes of the disturbed and changed condition of the trunks of the nerve may be numerous prolong- ed irritation upon the periphery exposure injuries tumours; diseases of the teeth pressure resulting from periosteal or osteal thickening of the osseous foramina or canals sudden suppres- sion of any of the important secretions, as of the catamenial dis- charge. From one or more of these causes, the trunk itself may be primarily affected, or acting upon its ramifications, the irrita- tion may be propagated to it. Prolonged irritation induces in- flammation, and this generally remains passive or chronic. Some of the terminations of inflammation such as the effusion of lymph among the interstices of the neurilemma or the nervous tissue itself may become developed ; leading to a vascular, en- gorged, thickened and enlarged condition of the nerve, or to a softening of it, at one or more points. In fact, vascular engorge- ment, or inflammation, with some of its consequences, of the neurilemma alone, or of it and the nerve together, by whatever cause produced, is the condition which constitutes the patholo- gical changes in the trunk. The three cases related below afford proof of what has just been stated. In each instance, the exsected nerve was found to be red, vascular, engorged and considerably enlarged. The diffused character of the pain can be easily understood, if we take into consideration the numerous ramifications of the second branch of the fifth pair, and the extensive surface over which their ultimate filaments are distributed. The periphery of the nerve occupies not only the superficial parts of the face, but extends deep among the bones of the upper jaw, to the nasal fossae, to the septum nasi, to the hard and soft palate, to the phar- ynx, to the inner ear, to the orbit, and to the temporal and malar regions. It is well established, that if the trunk of a nerve be irritated along its course, the painful sensation will be referred to its pe- riphery. If the ulnar nerve, for example, be struck where it passes behind the internal condyle, a sensation of pain is excit- ed, which is referred to the little finger and to the ulnar border of the ring finger; and if a prolonged irritation be kept up at this point, the skin of these fingers becomes tender to the touch, the sensibility being very much increased. It is by this principle which governs the action of the stim- uli upon the nerves of sensation in connection with the ana- tomical distribution of the nervous ramifications, that the various phenomena of neuralgia can be explained. The disease being seated in the trunk of the nerve, we can readily understand that the pain must be referred to the peripheric extremities of the nerves, and will there be felt, as long as the branches are in communication with the encephalon. 128 Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. [February, From these views, we can perceive how futile the operation of division of the nerve at the foramen infra-orbitale must bef Where the trunk of the nerve is extensively diseased, no opera- tion can rationally lead to a successful result, unless all the branches emanating from the trunk are cut off from communis cation with the brain. I believe that, in such aggravated cases of neuralgia, the key of the operation is the removal of the ganglion of Meckel, or its in^ sulationfrom the encephalon.^-Wheie even a large portion of the trunk of the second branch of the fifth pair has been simply ex- sected from the infra-orbital canal, the ganglion of Meckel con- tinues to provide to a great extent the nervous ramifications, which will still maintain and keep up the diversified neuralgic pains. Besides, the ganglion of Meckel, being composed of gray matter, must play an important part as a generator of nervous power, of which, like a galvanic battery, it affords a continual supply ; while the branches of the ganglion, under the influence of the diseased trunk, serve as conductors of the accumulated morbid nervous sensibility. Case I. Henry Rousset, a French physician, residing in Greenesborough, Caroline County, Maryland, consulted me in the early part of October, 1856, for severe neuralgia, which had for several years rendered him incapable of following his profes- sion. He was of nervous temperament, good constitution, and sixty -nine years of age. The disease first made its appearance in September, 1851, commencing with severe and lancinating pains about the region of the left cheek and orbit. These pains continued for five or six days, and then disappeared, leaving him almost free from them for about four months. At the expiration of that time, the neuralgic pains again returned with more violence, extend* ing over the region of the left cheek, and continuing almost without intermission, for more than a week. After this exacer? bation, the patient again became comparatively free from pain for a short interval ; after which, the attacks returned with in-r creased severity, and were renewed with greater frequency, more especially in the cold season, and in damp weather. As the disease progressed, the pain was not confined alone to the eye and cheek, but would also attack the lip and nose ; each paroxr ysm being of longer duration than the preceding. "With but slight variation, the disease went on this way to harass and dis* tress the patient for four years. About the commencement of March, 1856, the neuralgic exacerbation assumed a more violent form, marked by excruciating and almost unremitting suffering. He was at this time unable to eat, drink, converse, or laugh, without having a most violent paroxysm, causing him to shriek 1858.] Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. 129 in anguish. The paroxysms were more severe during the night than day: sleep left him; his constitution began to give way, and his mind became much enfeebled. The slightest touch upon the surface of the face, a current of air or a mouthful of water acting upon the palate, would throw the patient into a violent paroxysm of agony. During this long period of suffering, all the known remedies which have at times been extolled for neu- ralgia of the face had been tried narcotics, tonics, antispasmo- dics, with counter-irritants, and galvanism, without producing any appreciable result. In this distressed condition, the patient, wearied of existence and unable any longer to endure a life so made up of excrutiating torture, presented himself to me for my advice, at the beginning of October, 1856. He expressed him- self willing to undergo any operation, however severe, which held out the prospect of relief Having no internal remedy to propose which had not already been administered, and having no faith in the^mere division of the nerve upon the face, I proposed to him the exsection of the trunk of the second branch of the fifth pair of nerves to a point beyond the ganglion of Meckel. Being a physician himself, I explained at length my views (as expressed above) in regard to this malady. He immediately consented to have the operation performed, and desired that the earliest time should be appointed. I consequently agreed to perform the operation the following day, the 16th of October. Operation. The principal instruments necessary for this oper- ation are a trephine, the crown of which is three-quarters of an inch in diameter, an elevator, chisels of different shapes and sizes, a leaden or iron mallet, the bone forceps of Luer, small pieces of sponge tied to a stick or a piece of whalebone, and a small fixed trephine of half an inch in diameter, which may be used to perforate the posterior wall of the antrum. The assist- ants being properly arranged, the patient was seated upon a solid chair, opposite a good light, and was put under the influ- ence of chloroform. The head was rested upon the breast of an assistant, who maintained it in this position. An incision was now made on the cheek, commencing near the internal angle of the eye, on the inferior edge of the orbit, opposite the anterior lip of the lachrymal groove. This incision was carried down- wards and slightly outwards, for about an inch, to a point oppo- site to the furrow on the lower portion of the ala of the nose; another incision, which also terminated at this point, was made, commencing about half an inch below the external angle of the eye, opposite the edge of the orbit, thus forming a V incision, in the area of which is situated the foramen infra-orbitale. The flap thus resulting was thrown upwards, and the branches of the second branch of the fifth sought for ; some of these being found, they served as a ready guide to the trunk of the nerve. 130 Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. [February, This was now isolated from the surrounding tissues up to the point of exit upon the face from the foramen. The lip was now everted, and the mucous membrane detached from the superior maxilla along the line of junction between the cheek and the gum. A sharp-pointed bistoury was now inserted at the apex of the Y incision, into the mouth, and carried downwards, so as to divide entirely the tissues of the cheek and upper lip, along a line passing midway between the ala of the nose and the com' missure of the lips, The two flaps thus formed were now dis- sected from the osseous tissue beneath, one being reflected out* wards, towards the ear, the other internally, towards the nose, The whole front wall of the antrum maxillare, with the nerve passing through the foramen infra-orbitale, was thus exposed, The crown o? the trephine was now applied on the anterior wall of the antrum, immediately below the foramen infra-orbitale, ?md an irregular disk of bone removed, so as to expose freely the cavity of the antrum. The circumference of the foramen, the hardest portion of the canalis infra-orbitalis, was now des* troyed by Iter's forceps, and a small chisel, The trunk of the nerve was now traced along the osseous canal in the floor of the orbit, which was broken down with care, so as not to encroach upon the tissues in the cavity of the orbit, Arriving at the back of the antrum, the posterior wall of this cavity was broken down with a small chisel, and the portions of bone removed. The trunk of the nerve was now still further isolated from the other tissues in the spheno-maxillary fossa. The posterior dental nerves being divided, and the dissection being carried still fur- ther, the branches given off to form the ganglion of Meckel were reached, These were divided, and also the branch given off to run up towards the orbit, Lastly, by the use of blunt-pointed scissors, curved on the flat side, the trunk of the nerve was di- vided from below upwards, close up to the foramen rotundum. The hemorrhage was not very profuse, the labial arteries being easily controlled by pressure of the fingers, and the branches of the internal maxillary artery, in the sphenomaxillary fossa, by dry lint, or what is better, the compressed sponge. The lips of the wound were brought together and maintained in place by thirteen points of twisted suture, the German or Carlsbad pins being used. This severe and trying operation is perfectly justified by the fearful nature of the disease for which it was projected. It is one of those operations which could not be supported by the patient without the influence of chloroform, The handling of so large a nervous trunk with the forceps, and the necessary contact with the hard instruments, while separating it from its surrounding connections^ would, I suppose, be beyond human endurance, without the aid of the anaesthetic influence of chloro 1858.] Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. 131 form or ether, For the rest, the effects of the cicatrices upon the countenance can scarcely be called disfiguring, and the pa- tient speedily recovers without suffering from much constitu- tional disturbance. In this operation, and in those connected with the two suc- ceeding cases, I was assisted by my colleague Prof. Cox, by Drs. Proudfoot, Abrahams, Selden, Guleke, and Casseday ; and by my pupils, Messrs, Dougherty, Henry, Scudder, and others. Condition of the Nerve. The trunk of the nerve in this case was much larger than natural in nearly its whole extent. The neurilemma was very vascular, and the nervous tissue proper was also engorged and red ; the trunk, after its removal, was so red as to have somewhat the appearance of muscular tissue. The length of the nerve removed was a little more than an inch and three-quarters. The lining membrane of the antrum was sound, as well also as the bones of the antrum and the osseous wall of the canalis infra-orbitalis. Progress of Union and After-treatment. Oct. lGth. Six hours after the operation, the patient was visited. His pulse was 100; there was a slight fever ; he complained of thirst, and lemonade was ordered. t He spoke of a desire he had to vomit, which he ascribed to the chloroform. He stated that he felt slight twitch- ings on the nose, and at the corner of the lip, 17th (Friday). The patient was remarkably well under the circumstances; sitting up; pulse 90; tongue lightly covered with a white fur ; complained of pain in the wound, also of shooting pains in the left eye ; he remarked that he could stick a pin into the upper lip and cheek without causing pain, there being no sensation in that region. Ordered chicken broth, and wine and water. ISth (Saturday), Patient improving ; wound healing ; pulse natural; no fever; spoke of the numbed sensation in his face. 19th (Sunday). Pulse full and natural ; good appetite ; par- took of a beefsteak; in the afternoon four suture pins were removed ; slight pain in the wound ; no return whatever of the neuralgia. 20th (Monday). Cure progressing; healthy suppuration from wound ; appetite excellent ; general health much improved. (Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday.) During these days the rest of the pins were removed ; patient felt no pain whatever either in the wound or cheek; wound in the antrum syringed with tepid water, 25th (Sunday,) Patient attended church ; feels no pain what- ever ; incision of the upper lip and cheek entirely healed. 28th. Patient entirely well. 30th. Eeturned home to Maryland in high spirits, and deligh- ted at the result of the operation. 132 Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. [February, December 7th, 1857. Fourteen months after the operation he writes to me that he is enjoying excellent health, and has been entirely free from neuralgic pain. Case II. Florence Cordello, a native of Italy, aged 54 years, of lymphatic temperament, chocolate maker by trade, was ad- mitted to the State Hospital on the 14th of September, 1857, suffering from severe lic-douloureux of the left side of the face. The following is the account handed to me by the Assistant Surgeon, Dr. Guleke. In the year 1828, the patient contracted a very severe cold from exposure, and about this time he was seized with the pain for the first time. According to his own description, the pain started from the foramen infra-orbitale, ex- tending upwards to the forehead, and downwards into the teeth ; the paroxysm lasting about ten minutes. He supposed it to be toothache, and had one or two teeth extracted. An interval of eight years took place, when he was again attacked with neu- ralgic paroxysms, lasting from five to ten minutes. Again, after the lapse of a year, the paroxysms reappeared in a more severe form, and at snorter intervals. The patient, still believing his teeth to be the source of the disease, had all of them extracted on the left side of the upper jaw, but without any benefit. During these attacks he had been subjected to many kinds of treatment, both internally and ex- ternally ; he also repaired to some of the mineral springs on the Bhine, but still to no purpose. He continued thus to suffer more or less intensely from the neuralgic paroxysms, for a period of time extending from 1837 to 1846, and with detriment to his general health. In 1846, while passing through the city of Heidelberg, in Germany, he consulted the celebrated Chelius with the hope of obtaining some beneficial result from his ad- vice. That professor divided the nerve as it emanated from the infra-orbital foramen, by incisions from the mouth, and six weeks after, again performed the same operation, without any favora- ble result. During the next six years the patient continued to suffer from the neuralgic paroxysms of more or less intensity. Oppressed by extreme suffering, he again sought relief from an operation, and in 1852 the nerve was again divided from the mouth by forcing up the lip ; the actual cautery being at the same time applied, by pushing the instrument from the mouth upward into the wound as far as the foramen infra-orbitale. This operation appeared to give some relief, and during the two suc- ceeding years, the patient's sufferings were somewhat alleviated. About two years ago, the paroxysms returned in the most aggra- vated form, progressed, and continued without much abatement. He, on the 1st of September last, being in New York, again submitted to an operation for division of the nerve. This time, 1858,] Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair ofXerves. 133 the branches of the nerve were divided by cutting through the integuments directly upon the infra-orbital foramen ; this oper^ ation caused no other effect than insensibility to the touch in the soft tissues near the infra-orbital foramen. Two weeks after this, he entered the State Hospital The condition of the pa- tient was then as follows; Notwithstanding the repeated divis- ion of the nerve, there was sensibility to the touch over the whole region of the cheek; the inner side of the lip alone ap- pearing to be insensible. The patient describes the pain as starting from the foramen infra-orhitale and extending up as far as the lig amentum palpebral internum, and also to the external corner of the eye; from the latter point, the pains shot dowrn in nearly a straight line to a point about one inch to the outside of the left corner of the mouth, and a little below a line drawn hor- izontally on a level with the commissure of the lips. The pains also extended backwards, through the more deeply seated por- tions of the face, shooting from the inner corner of the eye, along the base of the nose, and striking backwards towards the spheno- maxillary fossa. The pain was of the true neuralgic character, and so intense as to drive the patient into a condition verging on delirium. A slight touch on the cheek, the inside of the mouth, or on the hard or soft palate, swallowing, or speaking, excited almost instantaneously the paroxysms in their severest form. The operation. -The operation in this case was performed after the same manner as the preceding, and was modified only by the greater depth of the antrum and face. There was also more hemorrhage from the spheno-maxillary fossa; this was controlled by compressed sponge pressed into the fossa. Sup^ posing that hemorrhage might return, the lips of the wound were brought together by adhesive plaster, one suture only being used. The other sutures were inserted the following day. The nerve wras cut from above downwards. The ganglion of Meckel was drawn out, hanging to the trunk of the nerve. Progress of Union and After-treatment. Compressed sponge was applied in the deeper portion of the wound; the external surface was closed with one suture; an anodyne was ordered for the night. Oct. 11 (Sunday.) Patient slept well during the night; pulse 76 ; no bleeding ; five suture-pins applied ; ordered an anodyne. 12th. Patient slept well ; no pain whatever ; pulse 84 ; com- plained of thirst ; but little appetite ; speaks and swallows with- out pain. 12>ih. Slept badly; had an attack of dysentery; pulse 96; felt a slight pulsating pain in the wound, which, however, was doing well ; states that there is no feeling over the surface of the left cheek from the inner angle of the eye, descending along the 134 Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. [February, nose to the lip, and upwards to the outer angle of the eye, includ- ing the lower lid; ordered opium and quinine. (Afternoon,) dysentery subdued ; pulse 96 ; more cheerful. L&th. Patient improving ; pulse 92 ; a portion of the pins removed. 15th. Kemaining pins removed; wound presents a healthy appearance ; pulse natural ; slight pain felt in the course of the wound. 16^. Eemoved the piece of compressed sponge, which had been placed at the back of the antrum during the operation, to restrain the bleeding from the spheno-maxillary fossa. 18^, Patient doing well ; eats well, and sleeps naturally. 26th. Still entirely free from neuralgic pain ; the whole ex- pression of the face changed from that of suffering and anxiety, to cheerfulness and serenity. 28th. Discharged from the hospital entirely cured, and in good health and spirits. Dec. 8. Visited the hospital ; still free from pain and in good condition. Condition of the Nerve. The nerve in this case, as in the pre- vious one, exhibited a similar appearance. It was thickened, vascular, and engorged. The neurilemma and proper tissue of the nerve were both affected. The length of the trunk removed was two inches. Case III. Mrs. Mary Gr. Stevenson, a native of Portsmouth, England, and who had borne children, 55 years of age, of full habit and sanguineous temperament, consulted me in the month of September, 1857, for severe neuralgia of the left side of the face. She had been a resident of the Northern States for thirty years, and had enjoyed generally, remarkably good health. On the 12th of August, 1851, while eating a plum in her gar- den, she was suddenly seized with a vivid shock of pain, com- mencing on her cheek, and passing through her jaw, as if caused by a sharp-pointed instrument, suddenly driven through her face ; shooting pains of this character, with intermissions of en- tire abatement, continued for several days. A dentist was con- sulted, who attributing the symptoms to the teeth, extracted several of them, but without the slightest benefit to the patient. The paroxysms continued with more or less severity for two months. At the end of this time, they suddenly abated in their severity, and the respite lasted for about six weeks. Upon hearing of the sudden death of a friend to whom she was much attached, the paroxysms were again renewed; they became more frequent ; the intervals were shorter, and the intensity of pain was increas- ed more and more with each succeeding attack. During the 1858.] Exsection of Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. 135 year 1852, the pain and paroxysms still continued with unyield- ing severity. The tic would now last for two and three months, with scarcely any of the intervals which had heretofore occur- red. Cold air, the drinking of fluids, the slightest touch upon the cheek, or any sudden mental emotion, would invariably excite the most fearful paroxysms, Daring the year 1854, her condition was not in any way ameliorated ; the pain, if possible, was more severe, and her general health suffered from the want of rest. During the year 1855, the disease progressed with the same severity, In the early part of the year 1856, the par' oxysms became still more aggravated J the patient, at times, becoming almost delirious starting up, running about her room, and screaming like a maniac. In the latter part of September, she sought relief from a surgeon in this city, who divided by subcutaneous incision the branches of the infra-orbital nerve, as it issues from the infra-orbital foramen. About this time, she also took large quantities of various nar- cotics, and of the carbonate of iron. After the operation, she experienced some relief. The amelioration continued from Octo- ber, 1856, until May, 1857, when the paroxysms were again renewed in their severest form. The pain now became almost continual, depriving her nearly entirely of sleep ; she was unable to eat without torture, the act of swallowing invariably bringing on a paroxysm. During these exacerbations, the pain was diffused in different directions, extending from a point a little below the infra-orbital foramen, or from the ridge of the gums, and striking through the superior maxillary bone towards the deeper portions of the face, and towards the orbit, and sometimes extending towards the region in front of the ear. She described the pain as of a beating character at times; each shock succeeding another in rapid suc- cession, as if keeping time with the ticking of a clock. During this long period of suffering, she had been under the alternate care of several physicians ; the various remedies moet approved of in this kind of disease had all been faithfully and sedulously tried -, stramonium, aconite, belladonna, hemlock, opium, mor- phia, chloroform, carbonate of iron, valerianate of ammonia, and other medicaments had been administered internally ; while ex- ternally, in addition to the division of the nerve, blisters, sinap^ isms, hydrocyanic acid liniment, tincture of aconite, and chloro' form had beeai resorted to- also electricity and galvanism. At the time I was consulted, she was suffering night and day from repeated and excruciating attacks, and, as she herself stated, she had visited the city to have an operation performed at all haz- ards, however desperate it might be, if I could only hold out any prospect whatever of its affording relief. Her general health was tolerably good, and she did not complain of loss of appetite.- 136 Exsectionof Second Branch of Fifth Pair of Nerves. [February, I explained to her the nature of the operation which I believe to be the only one suited to her case. She immediately assent- ed to submit to it as early as possible. The operation was performed after the same procedure. The face Was in this instance,- also,* very deep. The hemorrhage from the spheno-maxillary fossa was considerable, and was stopped by a piece of compressed sponge to which a strong ligature was attached, by which it could be removed. Progress of Union and After-treatment. Nov. 5. (Thursday evening.) As soon as the operation was completed,, the patient retired to her bed. Yomiting came on a few hours after, owing,, probably, to the quantity of chloroform which had been used. 6th, Had slept tolerably Well during the night ; felt very little pain ; pulse 80 ; no fever ; complained of some pain in the Wound, but had no neuralgic pain. 7th. Left side of the face slightly swollen ; puffiness about the eyelids ; has no pain ; has slept well without any anodyne ; states that she feels better than she has for months; pulse 80;- skin natural ; slight thirst ; five of the suture pins removed ; line of incision looks as though union by first intention was going on favorably. Still kept on fluids for nurishment gruel,- rice-water,- ice-water, toast-water, and chicken tea. Ordered a gentle aperient. 8th. Had slept well} tumefaction of face subsiding; com- plains of headache ; cloth wetted with cold water applied on forehead ; same diet continued ; pulse natural ; removed the sponge which was used to stop the bleeding from the spheno- maxillary fossa ; this came away without any difficulty by slight traction,- a little blood following.- Complains of slight pain in the orbit. Eemoved six suture pins, leaving one only that Uniting the free border of the lip.- Fluid diet as before.- 9th. Patient slept well ; headache less ; pulse 78 ; no neural^ gic pain ; a Weak solution of the tincture of arnica ordered, to bathe the cheek with ; removed the last pin ; union by first in- tention, along the line of incision, complete.- From the 9th Until the 16th all has progressed favorably. No neuralgic pain whatever ; sleeps well ; swelling on cheek dimin- ishing; pain has entirely left the orbit ; secretion into the mouth from the wound in the antrum diminished. Ordered a gargle of the tinture of myrrh. Appetite has also returned. Had been sitting up, and walking about her room without any incon- venience. Has taken a little sulphate of magnesia ; has not re- quired any anodyne. Bee. 3. The patient has been progressing favorably up to this time. The wound has healed entirely, the line of cicatrix is becoming effaced ; not the slightest trace of tic douloureux re- maining. There is no paralysis of the muscles of the face upon the side operated on. 1858.] Insanity connected with alleged Criminal Acts. 1#7 In the case of this patient, the nerve was enlarged, very vas- cular, thickened and red. Two inches of the nerve were remc ved.[ American Jour, of Med. Sciences. The Lancet, (Dec. 19th,) is rather severe upon Lawyers, oil account of their ignorance concerning insanity. Hear what the editor says : [American Med Monthly. "On Monday evening, Dr. Forbes Winslow read his paper before the Juridical Society,. " On the Legal Doctrines of Kes-- possibility in Cases of Insanity connected with alleged Criminal Acts.'* There was a much larger attendance at the meeting than usual,- the Vice-Chancellor Sir John Stuart being in the chair, and amongst the members present was Mr. Bramwell, as well as many of the most distinguished members of the bar. This is the first time that the attention of lawyers has been directed to this important subject by means of a paper written by a medical man,- and communicated to a legal society in which free discus* sion is permitted;- and we cannot but rejoice that a Way has at last been opened whereby the views entertained by the medical profession upon what ought to be the legal responsibilities of the insane can be distinctly enunciated and tested by that "touch' stone of truth," oral discussion. We look upon the proceed- ings of Monday night as constituting an era in the history of criminal jurisprudence, and we venture to predict that when a few more such papers shall have been read and discussed at the Juridical Society, it will be impossible for that body to listen with common patience to views to which Mr. Baron Bramwell gave utterance in the course of the debate on Monday. We have always believed that the great differences existing between the doctrines of lawyers and medical men on these subjects de- pended chiefly on the want of practical acquaintance with insan- ity under which the former labor ; but we confess we were unprepared for the appalling ignorance of the first principles of moral and mental philosophy which was displayed by a lawyer who has within the last two years been deemed worthy of ele- vation to the bench. In reference to Dr. Winslow's remarks on the distinction between the intellectual and moral feelings, Mr. Baron Bramwell positively declared that, "for his pari, he doubt- ed the existence of moral faculties, or a moral sense /" We are acquainted with another learned judge who, on being asked to read a well-known medical work on Criminal Insanity, abso- lutely declined to do so, stating that he never read anything of the sort, and in fact rejoiced in his ignorance. With such mate- rials to work upon, progress must necessarily be slow, but it will be sure; and the time is not far distant when the judges 138 Editorial. [February, will shrink with as much horror from hanging a lunatic as they would now do from burning a witch. Dr. Winslow's paper was, as might have been expected, an extremely well-written and philosophical essay, and was listened to with a degree of atten* tion which, at any rate, argued a desire on the part of the mem* bers of the Juridical Society to learn what they could.- It was painfully evident, however, from the discussion which followed, that the minds of the audience were unprepared to grasp the great truths laid before them,- and we therefore hope that the author will follow up this paper with another, in which, by giving copious details of cases, he may furnish the legal mind with a species of food which it can assimilate more readily than the recondite truths of psychological philosophy." Researches on Arsenic. Dr. Blofidlot, of Nancy, has just observed a fact which explains the contradictions encountered by inexperienced chemists in attempts to detect arsenic in connection with organic mat- ters.- It is this: that when substances poisoned have been left to putrefy, some sulphuret of arsenic is formed at the expense of the sulph- uretted hydrogen, and this, as is well known, escapes detection "by Marsh's apparatus. Sulphuret of arsenic also forms when the suspected matters are carbonized by the action of sulphuric acid after the process of Flan- din and Danger. The sulphuret of arsenic may be extracted by washing the carbonized mass with ammonia ; this dissolves the sulphuret ; then convert the arsenic into arsenic acid (AsO5)' by means of boiling nitric acid, so as to obtain a second solution ; this, added to the first, may then be tested in March's apparatus. [Amer. Jour, of Sci. and Arts. EDITORIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS. Meckel's Ganglion. In the January number of the Amer. Journal of Medical Sciences, we find a paper from the pen of Professor J. M. Carnochan, of New York, on the Exsection of the Second Branch (Su- perior Maxillary) of the Fifth Pair of ^serves, for the cure of facial Neuralgia. On account of the originality of the operation, its uniform success, and the heretofore almost hopeless character of this disease in certain forms, we have deemed it proper to transfer from that valuable quarterly, the entire article to our own pages. The operation proposed, and thrice successfully performed, by the distinguished reporter, meets with our unreserved approval. If it is objected by any one, that the operation is horrible, he can be answered, that it is to eradicate a worse than horrible disease, a living and unending agony, to which even death itself is preferable, and that the use of chloroform, insisted on by the 1858.] Editorial 139 surgeon, removes in a great degree, the strongest objection any one can advance against it. It is not, however, simply to signify our approbation, that we have begun the present notice. Dr. C, in his remarks previous to detailing his cases, in endeavoring to account for the success of his operation when other modes of procedure had failed inadvertently, we are con- vinced makes the statement of an opinion in regard to certain points in the physiology of the nervous system, which to our mind, with the experimental facts before him, should have been given with at least, a certain degree of hesitancy, for it involves, either the correctness or the incorrectness of news loner held as among the established truths of the science. After presenting a rapid, but a sufficiently lucid sketch of the many forms of facial neuralgia and of the various operations proposed for their relief and after reasoning, we think very justly, on the several causes operating to produce a continuance or a recurrence of the affection after measures taken for its relief, he says : " from these views we can perceive how futile the operation of division of the nerve at the foramen infra- orbital e must be. When the trunk of the nerve is extensively diseased, no operation can rationally lead to a successful result unless all the branches emanating from the trunk are cut off from communication with the brain. I believe that in such aggravated cases of neuralgia, the key to the operation is the removal of the ganglion of Meckel or its insulation, from the encephalon. Where even a large portion of the trunk of the second branch of the fifth pair has been simply exsected from the infra- orbital canal, the ganglion of Meckel continues to provide to a great extent, the nervous ramifications which will still maintain and keep up the diversified neuralgic pains. Besides, the ganglion of Meckel, being composed of gray matter, must play an important part as a generator of nervous power, of which, like a galvanized battery, it affords a continued supply, while the branches of the ganglion under the influence of the dis- eased trunk, serve as conductors of the accumulated morbid nervous sensibility." Now, the objections which might be urged against the confident state- ment of the above theory, are many and various ; some of which we will here venture to suggest. In the first place, it is at least questionable, whether or not the centres of the Ganglionic System can be productive of sensitive phenomena. Secondly : The nervous ramifications, provided by the Ganglion of Meckel, are not distributed upon parts where the "diversified neuralgic pains are kept up," and especially is this certain, after the trunk of the superior maxillary has been removed ; but they are distributed to surfaces and parts located internally, as the fauces and 6* 140 Editorial. [February, the roof of the mouth, to the Schneiderian membrane lining the nasal fossse, and probably, conjunctiva cornea, &c. at least, so anatomical investigation and experimental physiology have uniformly determined their distribution. [We here introduce a cut, from Wilson's Anatomy, which illustrates the position and some of the branches and connections of this nervous centre.] The Cranial Ganglia of the Sympathetic Nerve. 1. The ganglion of Kibes. 2. The filament by which it communicates with the carotid plexus (3). 4. The ciliary or lenticular ganglion, giv- ing off ciliary branches for the supply of the globe of the eye. 5. Part of the inferior division of the third nerve, receiving a short thick branch from the ganglion. 6. Part of the nasal nerve, receiving a longer branch from the ganglion. 7. A slender filament sent directly backwards from the ganglion to the sympathetic branches in the cavernous sinus. 8. Part of the sixth nerve in the cavernous sinus, receiving two branches from the carotid plexus. 9. Meckel's Ganglion (spheno-palatine). 10. Its ascending branches, communicating with the superior maxillary nerve. 11. Its descending branches, the posterior palatine. 12. Its anterior branches, spheno-palatine or nasal. 13. The naso-palatine branch, one of the nasal branches * The point where Cloquet imagined the naso-palatine ganglion to be situated. 14. The posterior branch of the ganglion, the Vidian nerve. 15. Its carotid branch, communicating with the carotid plexus. 16. Its petro- sal branch, joining the angular bend of the facial nerve. IT. The facial nerve. 18. The chorda tympani nerve, which descends to join the gustatory nerve. 19. The gustatory nerve. 20. The submaxillary ganglion, receiving the chorda tympani nerve from the gustatory. 21. The superi- or cervical ganglion of the sympathetic. But in the third and last place, the most important objection which now presents itself, in our mind, to Dr. Carnochan's ingenious theory is, that the results of both experiment and observation are diametrically opposed to his deductions. The trunks and ganglia and branches, of the ganglionic system, have been the subjects of physiological experiment for a period, now extend- ing over more than a hundred years; since the year 1*732, when Petit made a division of the trunk of the sympathetic in the dog, down to the present day, we find ranged along the whole interval, a number of illus- trious names, whose multiplied and varied experiments have only con- firmed his results, and go to prove that this ganglionic system, has but little agency in either sensation or motion, but has mainly confided to itr 1858.] Editorial 141 the important and more silent processes of secretion and nutrition. Whenever a nervous trunk in any part of this system has been divided, in experiment, or a ganglionic centre disturbed or removed, either by the knife of the physiologist or in the progress of diseased action, there have ever been found, signs of modified nutrition or altered secretion; the only modification of sensation, we are aware of, is that observed by M. Ber- nard and others, where exaltation of temperature takes place in the parts answering to the branches of distribution of the divided nerve, or of the ganglion which has undergone evulsion. (See Archives Generates.) So much for observations and experiments upon the ganglionic system in general. Now let us examine if any experiments can be referred to, as illustrating the effect of the disturbance of Meckel's Ganglion in parti- cular. There may have been others, but recent research has made us more familiar with those of Dr. Alcock, of Dublin, reported in Todd's Cyclopedia of Anatomy and Physiology. "We will premise that Dr. Al- cock did not draw the same conclusions from the results of his experi- ments which we have considered, taking them in connection with analo- gous experiments on other portions of the ganglionic system, as unavoid- able deductions. He instituted the series to determine, as he says, the function of the nerves of Taste ; and yet he more plainly established, than any one had done before him, the function of Meckel's Ganglion. In order to determine the nerves of taste, he undertook the removal of Meckel's ganglion from the dog : he attempted it several times and fail- ed at different stages of the operation ; but in almost every case, the eye of the same side became bleared within the next two days, a whitish pu- riform matter exuded from it, in quantity proportioned to the case ; and in one instance in which the ganglion was removed, it actually produced opacity of the cornea and ulceration in that structure. It will be seen, in the above account, that the effect of the injury or removal of Meckel's ganglion was always well marked, and of an entirely different character from that which results from injury or section of any sensitive nerve. Returning now to Dr. Carnochan's Explanation in his history of the cases reported ; we find in none of the incidents there related, anything which indicates the occurrence of any of those results which uniformly have followed upon the evulsion of Meckel's ganglion. We can account for the absence of these sequences on three different principles of reasoning: 1st. That these results may possibly have obtained in a certain de- gree, but Dr. Carnochan regarding them as only the effect of the injury (traumatic results) inflicted on the adjacent parts, did not deem them worthy of record. Yet, still, the removal of the ganglion should, accord- ing to all antecedents, have produced such an amount of perturbation in 142 Editorial. [February, the nutrition and circulation of the eye, as to have compelled his atten- tion, and if they were present, he certainly would have reported them. 2ndly. We might reason that this removal of Meckel's Ganglion in the human subject, (not previously performed, so far as we know, by any one,) is, perhaps not followed by the same results as when it is experi- mentally done in the case of the lower animals, as the dog, I am suffering from my old complaint, the hay fever (as it is called.) My fear is, perishing by deliquescence ; I melt away in nasal and lachry- mal prorluvia. My remedies are warm pediluvium, cathartics, topical applications of a watery solution of opium to the eyes, ears, and the in- terior of the nostrils. The membrane is so irritable that light, dust, con- tradiction and absurd remark, the sight of a Dissenter anything sets me sneezing ; and if I begin sneezing at twelve, I don't leave off till two o'clock, and am heard distinctly in Taunton, when the wind sets that -way a distance of six miles. Turn your mind to the little curse. If consumption is too powerful for physicians, at least they should not suf- fer themselves to be outwitted by such little upstart disorders as the hay fever; [Ibid. Anaisthesis by " Projection? To avoid the accidents due to excessive inhalation of the anesthetic agent, and especially to insure that the ma- terial should be mixed with the requisite amount of air, Dr. Heurteloup, known in surgery for the invention of Lithotripsy, has contrived an ap- paratus for this end, (having in hi> experiments made use of chloroform). The apparatus is like a syringe with a small bellows for throwing in air in place of the piston, and having a gauze partition on which the chloro- form is poured. The working of the bellows throws a steam out of the small end in a jet, which contains more or less chloroform, according as the discharging tube is brought more or less near to the bellows. The jet is established only on working the bellows, and there is no waste of chloroform during the operation. [American Jour, of Sci. and Arts. Incontinence of Urine. M. Trousseau seems to have most unboun- ded confidence in the efficacy of Belladonna in the treatment of incon- tinence of urine. A girl ast. 19, entered the hospital, who voided her 1858.] - . ' urine two or three times during the night. He commenced with 1 cen- tigramme (gr. .1543 Troy) of the extract, and in the course of a few weeks, increased the dose to 18 centigrammes. He insists upon the continued use of the medicine for several months after the incontinence had ceased, as a return of the difficulty may otherwise be anticipated. [ Western Lancet. A New Property of Camomile. Camomile {anthemis nobilis) is de- scribed in all treatises of materia medica as emollient digestive, fortify- ing. i -.',-:::'. .:/'..",:':: :~ m^m:.m; _"' fli^* l^EKMfcl^ nares alio! \ iesmmmmm ::' me :m__e me: me m>v;.m ....fires :zi m mmmme v.z.: imf me ms:m:f :;m_f 7.-:mm me":mml mi ': mm :i> ~m :m : :: -_r_ .mmm.:- -r~'::^r. mi if ;mmm so.mr:.: mm :07mm r Im m- :re:m mi :m.i iem-ess;::: if .mm mm_ec :~ me :e;:ef:mm :: r- * :-r~ "' sdrl-: mrer. ::me :oi-mse ::' -L^...l. 'm mm :,:-::: mm i.:C mmmm :.: mo mm. :.i:::^:i mi iimmi aspn jnria. The mam point in the treatment k to aajupiMt Ac :..^.i-'i 10-mrs, :t rmmmmif ,:: :::::^ mi :.: meoi: mf mrmi :f:m mmme m :m immmmm :: :m 5r;:: romeom ;mi:m:'s pmu-eos is :m mmm: mm ii_r i;.-f-;mm mi me if- l-:esmm.~7mm ,:o;m: ioime me l-r^v_ :=*. mm:; resm; mm: -o: mmi :01m; mmmmm ,c;v,:C "1 _mmmm ;: me mi- m"_s emmoi .is 1 mmjmi s-mm.m m erem mm _ :. momej believes die tinctnre of a^nkMoride of iron die best remedy. Onf^e Pr&xaJs^^^ By Pm Dbsoubaix Professor Beraobaix, Suigeon to d St Jea% BraoBel^ iiims 1 series ;: imors ';::: mis si mo; "-mi. me :':'_:vz: 1. ItktodnfrofasaigeQmtoaeehv ty the hmpranremart of m memm.-e mm :im<. :.; :"m.me me mms" m:me-is ::' memmim me eiiem:: ;.; mooveo me zem :: irmemim :: me s-:::rv .mi: i mm ~'i:.:z me im rmre imoemm is smi imme imjormism immieo 1; im imis. 2. Ooold the great amgical opemtMins be rendered fern dan- gerens in diomadfo^ inserrentLoa c* szr^rr womb] b? much, more deudy and more fiwjnenisi'T m&sstec i tbe praetiao^ex now often is obfrgnd to remain a :m ;:' i:-;:-ier< v.-r.m imij m-me :m S. Tke dajager of great perij^^ sanaces concerned, bat to the nnmber and Tomine of the 276 Prevention of the Ill-consequences of Operations. [April, 4. When the division of veins proves mischievous, it does so by giving rise, through a mechanism the nature of which it is not always easy to appreciate, to the production of purulent in fection, one of the most fearful consequences of traumatic lesions. The great danger and extreme frequency of this complication justify the efforts made for its prevention or removal. 5. There are two directions, both perhaps equally good, by following which we may succeed in rendering pyaemia of much less frequent occurrence. The first of these consist in improving and rendering less uncertain the process of healing by the first intention ; and the second in so modifying the divided surfaces as to convert them into a lesion of continuity of far less danger- ous character. 6. Metallic caustics, at least in the immense majority of cases, do not give rise to purulent infection ; but they are not applica- ble to certain operations as, e.g., amputations. 7. It is rational, then, when seeking for substitutive or modi- ficatory means for the prevention of pyaemia, to resort to such as most resemble caustics in their mode of action, and yet are exempt from the disadvantages of these therapeutical agents. 8. The tincture of iodine would seem to possess properties en- abling it to fulfil these indications, seeing the deep-seated modi- fication it impresses on the tissues, and the plastic effects it gives rise to. It does not act upon the ligatures, and therefore does not give rise to the danger of secondary hemorrhage. When it is applied to bleeding surfaces after an operation, it induces a general hyposthenic effect of short duration, and a local hypos- thenic effect, which imparts peculiar characteristics to the gran- ulations and cicatrization. 9. The most remarkable results of this hyposthenization are, the much less indolence of the wound, the slight amount of suppuration, the notable diminution of the general reaction, and the maintenance of a condition approaching that of health. These phenomena offer no impediment to rapid cicatrization. 10. The discharge from the surface of the wound is consider- ably diminished as a consequence of the application of the tinc- ture ; but this does not prevent artificial hemorrhage, or the loss of blood from the large veins. 11. The putridity of the wound becomes evidently diminish- ed ; and when the tincture is applied to the divided extremities of the veins, these become corrugated and narrowed, and then agglutinated. If phlebitis arises, it is obliterative and adhesive, not suppurating. 12. The application of the tincture to the sawn surface of the bones does not lead to necrosis. 13. The tincture imparts no preservative power against pyae- mia when an open venous orifice, through which pus may be 1858.] Treatment of Ununited Fracture. 277 easily, so to say, mechanically introduced, exists at any point of the surface. 14. In ordinary cases, even the tincture is no certain prevent- ive of purulent infection. When, after it has been applied, we find the vicinity of the wound remaining very painful, we should suspect a commencement of phlebitis, and the course of the pain should be carefully inquired into. 15. It should be remarked, that as the general hypostheniza- tion which results from the application of the tincture exhibits itself in symptoms, comparable to a certain point to those pro- duced by chloroform, prudence is required in the simultaneous or successive employment of the two substances. Perhaps this is the principal defect of the iodine. 16. The injection of the tincture into the veins is immediately fatal. It induces an entirely peculiar coagulation of the blood, incapable of being confounded with any other pathological or spontaneous coagulation. 17. Nevertheless, this medical substance cannot, when applied to a bleeding surface, be carried in substance into the current of the circulation, unless, indeed, venous orifices be maintained open by adhesions. It is absorbed in the state of an alkaline iodide, and may be found in such a state of combination in the blood and urine. The amount ordinarily absorbed exerts no ill-effect upon the economy. [Presse Med. "Beige, Med. Chir. Bev. and Banking's Abstract. On the Treatment of Ununited Fracture. By Mr. Syjie, Professor of Clinical Surgery in the University of Edinburgh. " When there is merely a slight degree of mobility at the seat of injury, so that, although quite sufficient to prevent any useful exercise of the limb, it may require some care for its detection, there will be a favorable prospect of success, even after the ex- piry of several months, through the employment of means for the complete prevention of motion ; and I have put upon record cases in which even the thigh-bone was rendered perfectly rigid by this simple expedient, in circumstances of apparently a very hopeless character, from the long duration of flexibility. But when the extremities of the bone remain quite separate, or even overlap each other, and are surrounded by a sort of fibrous cap- sule with cellular interstices, so that they admit of hardly less free motion than if there really were a joint between them, it is evident that merely preventing motion could not possibly prove sufficient for the production of an osseous union. It has been supposed, that the difficulty thus presented might be overcome by rubbing the ends of the bones together ; by stirring up the texture connecting them through the agency of needles or teno- 278 Treatment of Ununited Fracture. [April, tomy knives ; by passing setons through the flexible medium of union ; and by inserting pegs of ivory into the respective osse- ous surfaces. But, so far as I am able to form an opinion on the subject, all of these means are absolutely useless, and owe any share of credit that they may have acquired to the preven- tion of mobility which is conjoined with their employment. In short, I believe that the procedures in question cannot accom- plish recovery in any case not remediable by the enforcement of rest, and that they consequently, must always be useless, if not injurious. There is still another mode of treatment, which consists in cutting off the ends of the bone, so as to obtain two fresh osseous surfaces, and place the limb in a condition simi- lar to that of a compound fracture recently inflected; and this, I feel persuaded, affords the only reasonable ground for expecting success in cases not amenable to the influence of im- mobility. It is true that the experience of this method has not hitherto been at all satisfactory, through want of due attention to some circumstances in the mode of procedure, which must in a great measure determine the result. Of these may be special- ly mentioned an imperfect removal of the ends of the bone, and a want of complete immobility after the operation. The follow- ing case will, I hope, tend to illustrate the importance of attend- ing to these points. Case. " J. H , aet. 34, a private of the Foot, while discharging some duty in the Kedan, on the 8th of December, 1855, after the occupation of Sebastopol, was blown up by a Eussian mine, which had escaped detection, and, in addition to some slighter injuries;, sustained a fracture of the left arm be- tween two and three inches above the elbow. He walked up to his regimental hospital, where splints were applied, and re- tained for a month, when, there being no signs of union, the ends of the bone were rubbed together, and supported by a starched bandage. He left the Crimea on the 3d of February, and was sent to the hospital at Eenkioi, where a seton was passed through the seat of fracture, and retained for five weeks without any benefit. On the 20th of May he proceeded home- wards, and, after a long voyage of nearly two months, arrived at Portsmouth, whence he was transferred to Chatham on the 17th of July. No attempt to restore rigidity was made there, and at the end of two months he was dismissed the service, with a pension of one shilling per day, in consideration of his disabil- ity, which was regarded as equal to the loss of a limb. "In the hope that relief might still be afforded, he applied to me on the 22nd of January last, nearly fourteen months from the date of the injury ; and finding that the arm was entirely useless through the extreme mobility of the ends of the bone, which overlapped each other to the extent of more than an inch, 1858.] Reproduction of Bones and Joints in Whitlow. 279 I resolved to adopt the only procedure that, in my opinion, afforded any reasonable prospect of remedy under such circum- stances, which was to remove the ends of the bone, and after- wards maintain the most perfect rest. In preventing the motion of a joint, it is a most important principle, never to be forgotterj, that as most of the muscles pass over two articulations, it is im- possible to keep any one perfectly quiet without placing the whole limb under restraint. Proceeding under this impression, my first step was to have the arm put in an easy position, with the elbow bent at a right angle, and then covered from beyond the shoulder to the tips of the fingers with pasteboard and starched bandages, so as to form a case, which, when it became dry, effectually prevented the slightest movement in any of the joints. This case was next cut up on one side from end to end, so as to allow the arm to be taken out of it, and undergo the requisite operation, which was performed under chloroform. An incision having been made along the outer edge of the tri- ceps, I exposed the upper end of the bone, and sawed off a portion of it sufficient for obtaining a complete osseous surface. The lower end, lying anterior to the shaft in a sort of capsule, could not be subjected to the saw, but was removed, to the ex- tent of more than an inch, by cutting pliers. The arm was then supported by a couple of splints, and the patient lay quietly in bed for a fortnight, when the limb was placed in its paste- board case, in which an aperture had been made over the wound then nearly healed, and discharging a very little matter, that soon ceased entirely. The patient, feeling that the slightest motion was impossible, even if he had wished it, was relieved from any further restraint, and no longer remained in bed. At the end of a month, or altogether six weeks from the date of the operation, which was performed on the 30th Jannary, the limb was examined, and found to be quite straight, with a firm osse- ous union ; so that the patient was able to leave the hospital, not only with his comfortable pension, but also with a perfectly useful arm." [Edinburgh Med. Jour., and Ibid. Reproduction of Bones and Joints after their Removal in cases of Whitlow. Some time ago Dr. Toland, of California, claimed the discove" ry of this important fact in surgery. In the February number* 1858, of the Buffalo Medical Journal, we find, however, that to Professor Dudley, of Lexington, Kentncky, is due the credit of having made the discovery, and to Professor Hamilton, of Buf- falo, N. Y., is due the credit of having first promulgated the idea through the medium of the medical journals. Doubtless we shall soon have some more discoverers in the field. But this is all right. We say, " honor to whom honor is due." 280 Case of Transfusion. [April, During five years practice in the country, it was our lot to encounter a great number of these cases of paronychia among the plantation negroes. Indeed, strange as the idea may seem to some, we are sure of having witnessed the disease once in an epidemic form. Throughout an entire neighborhood the disease was strictly prevalent, and we can now call to mind several ne- groes who lost the first phalanx of two or more fingers in one season. Of course the vast majority of the cases lost the first phalanx, as every overseer and old woman in the country ima- gine themselves fully competent to treat, or rather cure whitlow or bone felon. When the doctor is called in, the bone is loosen- ed from its attachments, and he has no alternative but to remove it. When we first encountered the cases, such was the degree of the disease of the surrounding tissues, we amputated the end of the finger ; but observation soon taught us that this proce- dure materially diminished the value of the cotton-picker, as the finger was not only considerably shortened, but the stump, un- protected by the nail, was continually subject to injury. We then resorted to the plan of picking out the dead bone, and the only deterioration the hand suffered was comparatively slight shortening of the finger. In no instance have we ever seen any thing approaching reproduction of the bone and this notwith- standing we have carefully supported the finger by means of splints and bandages. \N. Orleans Med. News and Hosp. Gaz. On a Case of Transfusion, By John Wheatcroft, Esq., M. R. C. S, L .S. A., Cannock. In the Lancet of October, there appeared a case of transfusion of blood, which operation I again performed successfully on the 25th inst. The following are the particulars : I was summoned to see Mrs. , aged thirty-two, on the 24th instant. I found her in an almost exsanguined condition. A ter- rible gush of blood per vaginam had suddenly occurred, followed by coagula two or three pounds in weight. Her neighbors with difficulty got her up stairs, and again haemorrhage set in frightful- ly. I found her lying on the bed in a state of great exhaustion ; face white and anxious ; lips blanched ; skin and extremities cold ; pulse small, very feeble, and rapid, 120 per minute. I immediately plugged the vagina, administered the yolk of egg with a little brandy, enjoining upon the attendant strict at- tention to the ordinary methods adopted in uterine haemorrhage. On visiting the case four hours afterwards, I found the plug right, and the bleeding had been arrested ; a little more colour in the lips; the pulse 100, but small and thready; complained much of giddiness and severe uterine pain: she was three months ad van- 1858.] Pulmonary and Bronchial Tuberculosis. 281 ced in pregnancy. I then gave her small doses of tincture of opium, but vomiting having supervened, every dose, together with the egg, was rejected. Small doses of sulphuric ether arrest- ed the sickness. I left her, apparently going on favorably, but in four hours was again hastily summoned. She had complained of severe expulsive pain, violent retching accompanied it, and ex- pelled the plug, together with a large coagulum ; the flooding re- commenced, and I found her lying in a large pool of blood. I could detect no foetus either in the bed or the vigina ; the os uteri was too high to be reached ; the skin and extremities had again become cold, the surface of the body as white as snow ; pulse almost imperceptible ; the breathing gasping ; face very anxious ; great restlessness ; loss of vision ; eyes sunk and leaden. Ably assisted by J. Blackford, Esq., and Mr. Samuel Wheat- croft, I transmitted about two pounds of blood from the husband. The change was immediate (I had previously replugged the va- gina;) the colour returned to her lips, the eye became brilliant, the pulse distinct and firm, the restlessness vanished, the breathing became normal, and she now looks, with the exception of her whitened skin, as well as I ever saw her. Although complaining of giddiness and tightness across the brow, she is quite cheerful. The fetus has not been expelled. I have removed the plug, and there is not a drop of blood to be seen. The plug here was as valuable as the transfusion. Permit me to suggest the trial of this operation in the last stage of low typhus and the colapse of Asiatic cholera when every other means have failed. [London Lancet. Pulmonary and Bronchial Tuberculosis. Every physician acquainted with the methods of physical exploration and we readily believe every one is now-a-days ought to know, that tuberculosis is not at all uncommon in chil- dren. The symptoms are generally known ; the prognosis not so unfavorable as in adults. This statement is affirmed by Dr. J. Schwartz, of Berlin, who reports to have repeatedly succeed- ed, by careful regulations as to their diet, and some well-adapted pharmaceutical remedies, in restoring to health children of from two to five years, who were already considerably emaciated, and subject to hectic fever. Against the attack of hectic fever he warmly recommended, as Skoda did before him, the sulphate of quinine, with small doses of Dover's powder. Besides, he gives cod-liver oil and armara, which he says are too little thought of in our time, and have been too readily forgotten. [Journal fur Kinderkrankheiten) and N. Y. Jour, of Med. 282 Editorial. [April, EDITORIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS. Medical College of Georgia Appointment of Professor Joseph Jones. The Chair of Chemistry and Pharmacy in the Medical College of Georgia, recently vacated by the resignation of Professor Means, has been promptly filled by the unanimous election of Dr. Joseph Jones, Professor of Chemistry and Physics in the University of Georgia, and formerly, Professor of Medical Chemistry in Savannah Medical College. Dr. Jones has for years, most ardently devoted himself to original Che- mical and Physiological Investigations. His labors have been crowned with such brilliant success, that to praise them, on the present occasion, could not certainly add to their universally acknowledged merit. His contributions to Chemical and Physiological Science have been present- ed to the Profession in papers bearing the following titles : 1st. Abs+ract of Experiments upon the Physical Influences exerted by Living, organic and inorganic, Membranes upon Chemical Sub- stances passing through them by Endosmose. Read before the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia, October 25th, 1854. [Accompanied by lithographic illustrations from original drawings by the author, from appearances under the microscope.] 2nd. Observations upon the Kidney and its Excretions in different ani- mals. Published April, 1855, in the American Journal of Medical Sciences. [With twenty wood cut illustrations.] Pp. 42, 8vo. 3rd. The Digestion of Albumen and Flesh, and the Comparative Anato- my and Physiology of the Pancreas. Published in the Medical Examiner, Philadelphia, May, 1856. Pp. 20, 8vo. 4th. Physical, Chemical, and Physiological Investigations upon the Vital Phenomena, Structure and Offices of the Solids and Fluids of Ani- mals. Published in the American Journal of Medical Sciences, Philadelphia, July, 1856. Pp. 64, 8vo. 5th. Investigations Chemical and Physiological, relative to certain Amer- ican Vertebrata. Referred by the Smithsonian Institute to Profes- sor Samuel Jackson, Professor Joseph Leidy, and Professor Jeffries Wyman, with Professor Joseph Henry, Secretary of the Institute, as Commissioners ; accepted by them March, 1856, and subse- quently published by the Smithsonian Institute. 4to., pp. 137. [This work is embellished with 27 wood cut illustrations. It was published and distributed at the expense of the Institute.] Prof. Jones is a native of Liberty county, Georgia. He relinquishes his chair in Athens, where his relations have been of the most agreeable 1858.] Editorial 283 and encouraging character, for the sole purposes, as he states, of devoting himself more entirely, than he can at present, to Medical Science in its Chemical and Physiological departments, and with the view of assisting in elevating the standard of Medical attainment at the South. He will make Augusta his place of residence, and his course will be eminently practical and instructive, especially in the important departments of Medical, Physiological and Pathological Chemistry. In the next number of this Journal, we shall present to our readers an elaborate and most valuable contribution from his pen, on the subject of the Chemical and Physiological Relations of the Blood to Diabetes. As Editors, we congratulate our readers and ourselves, on so valuable an accession to our corps of contributors. American Medical Association. The eleventh Annual Meeting of the American Medical Association, will be held in Washington City, on Tuesday, the 4th day of May, 1858. The American Medical Association has, for years, ceased to be an ex- periment ; its wise deliberations, its judicious suggestions for the advance- ment of medical science, and for the improvement of medical education and medical ethics, have fully vindicated its right to be considered, the highest and most authoritative tribunal, in the medical sciences, in the land. The time is past, when it may be doubted that its efforts have wrought an improvement in the status of the profession ; there are too many evidences of the diligent investigation and research, of independent experimentation, directly growing out of the spirit which this body has infused, for it to be longer doubted, that it has done much good. No one will hesitate to admit, that since its establishment, American medi- cine has assumed a form, and presents a character of its own and a spirit of its own, highly progressive, energetic indeed, American. Not only is this change witnessed at home, but is observed elsewhere. The valuable Transactions of this Association are distributed everywhere, and may be now found in the Libraries of the Scientific Institutions, throughout Europe. It is important then, that this body should, in its present dignified position, use great care and judgment in its deliberations. There are many important questions to come up before them at Washington some of these are vitally connected with the interests of the Profession. We have not time nor space at present, however, to present any of these subjects properly, and therefore close our remarks with the confident hope that all questions will be discussed and determined in the best and wisest manner for the general good of the Profession. 11* 284 Editorial. [April, Medical College of Georgia Annual Commencement. The un- diminished prosperity of the Medical College of Georgia, even under the multiplication of institutions throughout the country, we are sure, must be a subject of great satisfaction to its many friends and alumni, and also to those engaged in a liberal competition in the same field. At the last Commencement, the degree of Doctor of Medicine was conferred on sixty-one candidates, whose names we take pleasure in here recording : Toliver Dillard, of Georgia. J. H. Ruddell, oi ' Georgia. Henry Kinnebrew, u tt L. C. Wisdom, tt tt J. J. Denson, it tt Wm. Hadden, tt tt A. G. V. Doney, u tt R. B. McRee, tt tt A. H. Mathers, a Florida. W. A. Childress, tt u R. J. Healey, ra-renal Capsules. The cogenital absence of these organs has been found in a man, who always had a white skin, lived up to 40 years, and died of a malady of the chest. He worked as a joiner, was married, and had three sons. (See Glasgow Med. Journal for July last.) Ibid. Value of a Young Lady's Teeth. The Paris courts value a young lady's teeth at 8,000 francs. An English governess was recently knock- ed down by a carriage, and lost by the accident all her teeth. She brought on an action of damages, and the tribunal awarded that amount. SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOUMAL. (NEW SERIES.) Vol. XIV.] AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, MAT, 1S58. [No. f. ORIGINAL AND ECLECTIC. ARTICLE XII. Case of Diabetes Mellitus. Treated by Joseph Jones, A.M., M.D., Professor of Physics and Natural Theology in the University of Georgia, Athens ; Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacy in the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta ; formerly Professor of Medical Chemistry in the Medical College of Savannah. Irish laborer, entered the Savannah Marine Hospital and Poor House, July 17th, 1857 : age 24 ; height 5 feet 7 inches ; light hair, blue eyes, scanty reddish yellow whiskers ; greatly ema- ciated arms and legs resemble those of a skeleton; ankles cedematous. Weight, in health, 140 lbs. ; now, it cannot be more than 90 lbs. Complained of continued pain in his head and bones, loss of strength, a voracious appetite, insatiable thirst, disordered diges- tion and a continued and exhausting diarrhoea. Had no fever and no enlargement of liver or spleen. Upon physical exploration the action of the heart and lungs appeared to be normal. The attempt was made to arrest the diarrhoea. Hope's mix- ture produced a temporary effect, but did not arrest the waste of tissue. Opium, chalk mixture, and the usual remedies for diar- rhoea were administered. They checked the diarrhoea tempora- rily, but did not arrest the waste of tissue and loss of muscular and nervous force. His diet was strictly guarded. It was found that the greater, portion of the meat which he ate, passed entirely through the ali- N. 6. VOL. XIV. NO. V. 13 292 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. U&&J, mentary canal, and was voided in the form of fetid undigested masses. The patient was placed upon farinaceous diet arrow -root, rice, and boiled milk and rice. Under this regimen, the stools became less numerous, and improved in appearance, but the destruction of tissue and loss of power was not arrested. External applications had no effect whatever upon the pain in his head and limbs. Strychnia, in small doses, failed to strengthen his digestive apparatus and nervous system. This treatment was continued for three weeks, and during this time his progress was steadily downwards. His tissues continu- ed to waste away, and his strength every day grew less. August 7th. Pulse 70. ) Temperature of Atmosphere, 81F. V " " Hand, 96J Kespiration 19. ) " under Tongue, 100 August 8th. Pulse 64. ) Temperature of Atmosphere, 81F. I " " Hand, 97 i Eespiration 18.) " under Tongue, 100 Examination of Urine. Keaction slightly acid. Specific gravity 1040. Of a light straw color, clear limpid, resembling the urine of a female suffering with hysteria. The resemblance extended only to the color and amount passed, The high specific gravity of the urine of this patient, at once distinguished it from the abundant light colored urine often passed by hysterical females. The amount of urine passed by this patient during the 24 hours varied from one to one and a half gallons an enor- mous quantity, considering his reduced state, and the large amount of solid matters held in solution in the urine. Trommer's, Moore's, and the fermentation tests and the rapid formation of the Torula Cerevisiae, gave unequivocal evidence of the presence of grape sugar in large amount. Chemical analysis showed that the specific gravity of the urine was due, in great measure, to the large amount of grape sugar which it held in solution. Examination of Blood. Specific gravity of Blood, . . 1043*2 Specific gravity of Serum, . . 1022#2 Coagulation of the blood commenced in a few minutes after it was drawn, and the clot was firm. 1858.] Jones, on Diabetes Hellitus. 293 Under the microscope, the colored corpuscles were normal in color and form. They had a great tendency to stick together and form rolls, as in the blood of inflammation, and in the blood of the horse. This phenomenon resembled, in all respects, that which oc- curs in well marked cases of inflammation. The colorless corpuscles appeared to be deficient in numbers. Serum of a light straw color. When the serum was mixed with an equal quantity of water, and treated with a few drops of hydrochloric acid, sufficient to neutralize its alkaline reaction, no coagulation took place, even after prolonged boiling. Nitric acid produced prompt coagulation of the albumen of the serum. WATER In 1000 parts of Blood, 838*510 " " " " Serum, 922-341 (l)u " " " Liquor Sanguinis, - - 919*039 (2)" 1000 parts of Liquor Sanguinis, - - 887*339 SOLID MATTERS In 1000 parts of Blood, 161*490 " " " " Serum, 77*659 (1)" " " " Liquor Sanguinis, - - 80*961 (2)" 1000 parts of Liquor Sanguinis, - - 112*661 FIXED SALINE CONSTITUENTS In 1000 parts of Blood, 9*061 u u Serum, 5*319 (1} " " " " Liquor Sanguinis, 5*325 (2) " " " " Liquor Sanguinis, 7*181 " Blood Corpuscles of 1000 parts of Blood, 4*443 " 1000 parts of Dried Blood Corpuscles, 47*916 " " " " Moist Blood Corpuscles, 11*981 " " " " Dried Residue of Blood, ------ 56*108 " " " " " " " Serum, -<---- 68*488 (1) " " " " " " " Liquor Sanguinis, - - 68*493 (2) " " " " " Liquor Sanguinis, - - 63*739 " Solid Matters of Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, - - - 4*519 1000 Parts of Blood Contained Water, 838*510 Dried Blood Corpuscles, 92*702 i !?riecJ W** *** ' 8^9 1 ) b l.xed Saline Constituents, - 4*443 Fibrin, -_.... 2*806 Albumen 40 539 1 Dlied 0ranil- Matters, - 48*157 j Fixed Saline Constituents, - 1*382 Extractive Matters,- - 16-003 1 ^P1?'' "* " 1JJ! [ Fixed Saline Constituents, - 3*137 294 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. [May, 1000 Paets of Blood Contained .) Water 278-106 Moist Blood Corpuscles, 370-808 V Dried Organic Residue, - 88-259 ) Fixed Saline Constituents, - 4-443 ^ Water, - - - - 560-404 Ait ) Dried Organic Residue, - - 48*157 Liquor I DUmen' j Fixed Saline Constituents, - 1-382 Sanguinis, 629-192 f Extractive and ) Dried Organic Matters, 12-866 Coloring Matt'rs, j Fixed Saline Constituents 3-137 Fibrin, 2-606 1000 Parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles Contained Water, 750-001 Dried Organic Matters, --- 238-018 Fixed Saline Constituents, 11-981 (1) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained Water, - 919-039 Albumen .... 59-737 l Organic Residue, - - - 58-110 ' ) Fixed Saline Constituents, - 1-620 Extractive and Coloring ) Organic Residue, - - - 13-670 Matters, - - - - 17-345 j Fixed Saline Constituents, - 3-682 Fibrin, 3*302 (2) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained Water, 886-740 ah, ho ^00 ) Organic Residue, - - - 76*537 Albumen, . - - - 78- ,33 J- Fixsed Saline Con^ituents> . 2-196 Extractive and Coloring ) Organic Residue, - - - 24*484 Matters, - - - - 29*469 ) Fixed Saline Constituents, - 4*985 Fibrin, 4-459 The method of analysis employed in these investigations has been described by the author (') in his Inaugural Dissertation for the degree of M. D. in the University of Pennsylvania, and in his Chemical (2) and Physiological Investigations, published by the Smithsonian Institution, and is similar in many respects to that employed by MM. Becquerel (3) and Eodier, Bowman, (4) and others. (5) (1) Physical, Chemical and Physiological Investigations, upon the Vital Phe- nomena, Structure, and Offices of the Solids and Fluids of Animals. By Joseph Jones. (American Journal of Medical Sciences, July, 185G, p. 46. (2) Investigations, Chemical and Physiological, relative to certain American Vertebrata. By Jos. Jones. Smithsonian Contributions to Knowledge. 1856. (S) Pathological Chemistry, by MM. Becquerel and Rodier. Translated by S. T. Speer, M. D. London : 1857, p. 19, et. sq. (4) Bowman's Medical Chemistry, pp. 145-194. Philadelphia : 1850. (5) Simons Chemistry of Man, p. 142. Philadelphia: 1846. Lehmann's Physi- ological Chemistry. Translated by G. E. Day. Cavendish Society pub. vol. ii., pp. 153-280. London. 1851-1854. See also American ed., edited by Prof. Rogers, vol. 1, pp. 541-648. Manuals of Blood and Urine. By Griffith Reese andMarwick. Philadelphia: 1848. 1858.] Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. 295 All physiological chemists have failed to ascertain with abso- lute accuracy the amount of solid matter in the serum of 1000 parts of blood. The proportion by which this is determined, although the closest approximation to the truth that can be made in the pre- sent state of science, is founded upon the erroneous assumption that all the water of the blood exists in the liquor sanguinis. C. Schmidt has shown that three-fourths of the colored blood corpuscles are composed of water. Hence, to obtain the relation of the moist blood corpuscles to the liquor sanguinis, we must multiply the dried residue of the corpuscles by 4. Physiological chemists possess no method by which the blood corpuscles can be determined with absolute accuracy. It is evident, from these facts, that when we attempt to calcu- late the moist blood corpuscles and liquor sanguinis of 1000 parts of blood, whatever error entered into the calculation of the solid matters of the blood corpuscles, will be increased four fold, whilst the error in the calculation of the constituents of the liquor sanguinis will increase, not only in a direct ratio to the errors in the calculation of the blood corpuscles and solid mat- ters of the serum of 1000 parts of blood, but also in a definite ratio to the actual increase or decrease in the 1000 parts of moist blood corpuscles. That error exists in this method of analysis is rendered evident when we calculate the constituents of 1000 parts of liquor sanguinis, from the data obtained by subtract- ing the moist blood corpuscles from 1000 parts of blood, and considering the remainder liquor sanguinis. The results thus obtained do not correspond with those obtained from the actual analysis of 1000 parts of liquor san- guinis. To render this error evident in the present method of analysis, I have in this and subsequeut analyses, stated the actual an- alysis of 1000 parts of liquor sanguinis, and that calculated from the constitution of the liquor sanguinis determined in 1000 parts of blood, by the subtraction of the moist blood corpus- cles. The former, by actual experiment, is always marked (1) ; the latter, by calculation, is always marked (2). We will now compare this analysis of the blood of our diabetic 296 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. [May, patient with 1st, analyses of normal blood, and 2nd, with analyses of abnormal blood. The following is given by Lehmann,(6) as the standard con- stitution of healthy human blood. 1000 Parts of Moist Blood Cor- puscles contain Water, 688-000 Solid Constituents, - - 312-000 Specific Gravity, - - -1088-5 Haematin, 16-750 Globulin & Cell Membrane, 282-220 Fat, 2-310 Extractive Matters, - - 2-600 Mineral Substances with- out Iron, - - - - 8-120 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis contain Water,- ----- 902-900 Solid Constituents, - - 97-100 Specific Gravity, - - - 1028- 4-050 78-840 1-720 3-940 8-550 Fibrin, Albumen, - - - - Fat, Extractive Matters, - Mineral Substances, - The following are the physiological limits of the variations of the constituents of the blood, as established by the researches of MM. Becquerel (7) and Kodier. In 1000 F 'arts OF Blood, The Water may vary - - - from 760-000 to 800-000 " Specific Gravity of the Blood " Globules may vary " 1055- 1063- u u u 120-000 " 150-000 " Fibrin - u u u 2-000 " 3-500 " Solid Matters of the Serum u u u 90-000 " 105 000 " Cholesterine - u u u 0-075 " 0-150 " Animal Soap, u a u 1-000 " 2-000 " Serolin - -tai:ved Water, --.------. -rv j ti jp i ~c\ A*>-t ) Dried Organic Residue, Dried Blood Corpuscles, 79-43/ > . , ^ ?. n ... ' r $ rixed Valine Constituents, Fibrin - Albumen, Extractive and > Dried Organic Residue, - Coloring Matters, - 79-096 V Fixed Saline Constituents, 840-511 76-023 3-409 0-877 76-703 2-387 1000 Parts of Blood Contained Moist Blood Corpuscles, 317-748 } Water, 18 V Dried ( ) Fixed \ Organic Residue, - Saline Constituents, 1 Water, - Dried Organic Residue, - Fixed Saline Constituents, Fibrin, - 238-271 76-028 3.409 602-240 76-708 2-387 0 677 1000 Parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles Cotalxed Water, .----..-. 749-873 Dried Organic Residue, ...... 239-284 Fixed Saline Constituents, ..-.-. 10-728 302 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. [May, (1) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained Water, -...--.-. 913-022 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, . - - 83-303 Fixed Saline Constituents, - i - - - - 2-647 Fibrin, - - 0-928 (2) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained Water, ...---.-- 882-723 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, - - - 112-433 Fixed Saline Constituents, ------ 3-498 Fibrin, .--.---.. 1-285 Case III. Bilious Remittent Fever. American Seaman, na- tive of Boston, entered the Savannah Marine Hospital Sept. 26th : age 21 ; weight 150 lbs. ; height 5 feet 10 inches. Mus- cular system moderately well developed. This is his first trip to Savannah. Has been sleeping at night, on the deck of the ship in the open air. The captain compelled all his men to sleep on board the ship, which was lying along the low marshy shore below the city. This patient was brought in comatose, and has been passing his urine and feces in bed. Sept. 29th. Jjies in a stupor ; complexion sallow ; teeth coat- ed with sordes; tongue perfectly dry and as rough to the feeling as the surface of a newly sawed board. Pulse 120 ; Eespira- tion 22. Examination of Blood. Blood coagulated slowly. Serum, of a deep golden color. Nitric acid showed that this color was due to the presence of bile. Eeaction of serum, alkaline. Specific Gravity of Blood, Specific Gravity of Serum, 1040 1022 WATER In 1000 parts of Blood, 833-449 " ii c< Serum, 912-386 (1)" "Liquor Sanguinis, - - 910-798 (2)" 1000 parts of Liquor Sanguinis, - - 875-813 SOLID MATTERS In 1000 parts of Blood, 166-551 u u u ( gerum, 87-614 (1) " " Liquor Sanguinis, - - 89-203 (2) "1000 parts of Liquor Sanguinis, - - 124-187 "Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, - - 80-033 1858.] JONES, on Diabetes Melliius. 303 FIXED SALINE CONSTITUENTS In 1000 parts of Blood, " Serum, " Liquor Sanguinis, M Liquor Sanguinis, " Dried Blood Corpuscles, " Moist Blood Corpuscles, " Dried Residue of Blood, " " " M w Serum, Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, - U u (i (1) II H tl (2) m H M m M N u II II u II II 6-314 6*620 6-630 8-759 6-595 1-646 37-909 75-558 5-747 1000 Parts of Blood Contained Water, ......... S33-449 Tk j oi j n i o- nco ^ Dried Organic Residue, - 84-400 Dr.ed Blood Corpuscles, 8o.968 { Fixed ^ ConstitueMs, 0-567 Fibrin, . . . ... . . . 1-450 Albumen, Extractive and ) Dried Organic Residue, - 74-1S6 Coloring Matters, - 80-033 ] Fixed Saline Constituents, . 5-747 1000 Parts of Blood Contained } Water, .... 258-804 Moist Blood Corpuscles, 343-872 V Dried Organic Residue, - 84-400 } Fixed Saline Constituents, - 0-567 ^ Water, - 574-646 | Albumen, Extractive and Liquor Sanguinis, - - 656*128 J- Coloring Matters, - - 74-185 | Fixed Saline Constituents, - 5-747 J Fibrin, .... 1-450 1000 Parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles Contained Water, .-.------- 752-646 Dried Organic Residue, ------- 245-239 Fixed Saline Constituents, ---... 1-648 (1) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained WTater, ....... 910-797 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, . - - - 80-996 Fixed Saline Constituents, ------ 1-587 Fibrin, - 6-620 (2) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained Water, - 875-813 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, - - - 113-064 Fixed Saline Constituents, ..-.-- 8-758 Fibrin, - 2-209 Lender the use of stimulants, sulphate of quinia, and nutri- tious diet, this patient recovered, slowly. He was confined to his bed three weeks, and at the end of this time, exhibited 304 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. [May, the effects of the bilious remittent fever, in his pale, sallow, anaemic countenance, pale lips and gums, and tottering gate. The violent nature of the malarial fever, contracted by sleep- ing in the open air in the low marshy land bordering our fresh water rivers, is forcibly illustrated by the subsequent history of the crew to which this patient belonged. A few days after his admission into the hospital, the captain weighed anchor and sailed for New York. Before getting well out to sea, himself and the whole of his crew were taken sick. There was not a man with strength to work a pump or furl a sail. Fortunately a small vessel perceived their signals of dis- tress, and towed them into Darien. Before reaching this port the captain and five out of seven of the crew had died. There were but two remaining out of eight, and these were extreme- ly ill. If we compare the blood of these cases with that of health, and with the blood of the patient suffering with diabetes melli- tus, we will observe the following points of agreement and disagreement : 1. The colored blood corpuscles are diminished greatly and rapidly in malarial fever. This destruction of the colored blood corpuscles is far more rapid in malarial fever than in diabetes mellitus. 2. The salts of the colored blood corpuscles are diminished to a remarkable extent in malarial fever whilst they are normal in amount in the blood of diabetes mellitus. 3. The blood coagulates slowly, and the clot is soft, in mala- rial fever whilst the reverse was the case in this specimen of diabetic blood. 4. The fibrin is often diminished in malarial fever, and the serum presents a golden color whilst in this case of diabetes mellitus the fibrin was slightly increased and the color of the the serum was normal. That the poison of malarial fever induces profound changes in the colored blood corpuscles, and other constituents of the blood, I have demonstrated by the following facts : (a). The urine of patients suffering with malarial fever con- tains an increased quantity of iron. The increase of the iron in the urine is subsequent to the destruction of the colored cor- puscles in the blood. 1858.] JoXES, on DiuLetes Mellitus. 305 (b). In examinations of the organs after death, from all the forms of malarial fever intermittent, remittent and congestive I have observed that the dark blood of the spleen and liver do not change to the arterial hue when exposed to the action of the oxygen of the atmosphere. After death from phthisis, cirrhosis of the liver, organic dis- ease of the circulatory apparatus, and apoplexy, and mechanical injuries, as far as my observations extend, the blood of the spleen and liver always change to the arterial hue when ex- posed to the action of the oxygen of the atmosphere. (c). Animal starch accumulates in the malarial-fever liver whilst grape sugar, as far as my observations extend, is absent. I have tested the livers of malarial fever for grape sugar and starch. An abundance of starch (9) was obtained, without a trace of grape sugar. The livers were set aside, and examined after intervals of twelve hours. The last examination was made thirty-six hours hours after the first. At every examination the result was the same an abundance of animal starch, and no grape sugar. These facts are important, not only in their bearing upon malarial fever, but also in their bearing upon diabetes mellitus. M. CI. Bernard (! ) has demonstrated that the transformation glycogenic hepatic matter (animal starch) formed by the liver, into glucose, is the result of the action of a special ferment, which is formed and exists in the blood, independent of the liver. From the facts which we have previously stated, it is evident that in malarial fever, this ferment is destroyed, whilst the liver still possesses the power of transforming the nitrogenized and non-nitrogenized elements into animal starch. We have now facts sufficient, to draw important distinctions between malarial fever and diabetes mellitus. (9) So abundant is this animal starch in the malarial fever liver, that if a small particle of the substance of the liver be mashed upon a glass slide, treated -with a saturated solution of iodine in alcohol, and viewed under the microscope, nu- merous beautiful blue masses ot this animal starch, colored by the iodine, will be seen. If the fibrous capsule be torn off from the surface of the liver, spread upon a glass slide, and treated with tincture of iodine, these blue masses will be seen scattered amongst the meshes of the fibrous tissue. With reference to the dis- covery of animal starch, see Ameriean Journal of Medical Sciences, Oct. 1857, p. 549. (10) Moniteur de Hopitaux, April 14, 1857 ; also, American Journal of Medical Sciences, July, 1857, p. 208 306 JONES, on Diabetes Mellitus [May, m m s 4* Eh 03 fo r^ 00 flf) n H$ +* o c3 cy d i/: S o rtMCOWOOOaiOOCOO 1* lOO!OMNlO^OO5M 3O500H^DOO3U5tO 0!13MOHH>IO(N00j>O5W(NtD 3 O(D0iMflOOlSO5l |S >0 CO * r-H CO rl -^ CO CO i-H CO CO I>Oi>CONlOH005 05(0 1-g ^i.-OOrjIlCKM^TjIOO^CT *0505 0 05((MO^W T|(HN(MHOnj-'silM 5S s M - lO O OS Cfl ri* i-t tOOOiO CO CO OS .t- OJ H T)*>OCO r-H CO O OOOOOOOOOOO ^ _5 ooooooooooo fil OOOOOiO^OOOO rH S.2 OOOOOCOOOOiOO 55 -^ (OSH rtH(OIO OOOOOOOOOCOO ! OOOOOtMOOOlO OOOOOOr-tOOOiO g^ dooooisooiodoooo jg O O 00 OQ a p .3" On O, h3 ai Ph h o o oo ^igtj g SP o o o 3 S O O ^ =3 3333* CQ -+J i-rt rrj _ O 2 OJ cp ^ P o '2 "2 '75' ^ '63 5 Q ft a5 3 opq tH - - .. e3 . O - v. - ~ 03^3 3 s X f- - H3 O OS - 5 2 3 J>&" J a. o n^o O 2 ; = 3 03 O " - 3 v. - -4J r- i i *- 3 -3 - 3 CQ oo o U ^ p O >. oo 00 - . _ - o - P e rt - - 2 s a lol 1 ^.^ia 4J - OS OS . J - - - 03 ~ j 013 C d " * " " fl: -g 3 ^^ x - 3 3 3 go OS3SS 1858.] Joxes, on Diabetes Meltitus. 307 ~\Ve have now all the necessary facts for the intelligent treat- ment of this case. The indications in the treatment of this case of diabetes melli- tus are (1). To strengthen digestion. His stomach fails to digest the nitrogenized elements the very substances which he needs, to supply the rapid waste of his tissues. (2). To afford the organic and inorganic materials of structure. (3). To quiet and strengthen the nervous system. (i). To arrest the destruction and transformation of the ele- ments of the blood, tissues and food, into animal starch and grape sugar. (1). To strengthen Digestion. Meat passed entirely through the alimentary canal, without being digested. This is clear evi- dence that the gastric and pancreatic juices do not perform their offices. The active and essential principle of the gastric j uice being pepsine. this must first be supplied. If pepsine and an acid be supplied, digestion will take place in a weak, diseased stom- ach, as well as in the healthy stomach. The truth of this asser- tion has been established by the experiments of Dr. L. Corvisart of Paris, (T l) to whom the profession is indebted for the intro- duction of pepsine into the practice of medicine. Andral, Longer, (12) Billet, Barthez, (13) Grisole, Herard, Togel, Schiff, Josi, Lecointe, (,4) Ballard, (15) Bertholet, (16) (11) "Dyspepsie et Consomption usage de la Pepsine," by Dr. L. Corvisart. Paris, IS 54. " Recherches ayant pour but, d'administrer aux malades qui ne digerent point des aliments tours diffires par le sue gastrique des animaux/' Comptes Rendus, Aug. 16th, 1S52 Sept. 6th, 1S52. Etudes sur les Aliments et Nutriments Xouvelle Methode pour le traitement des malades dont l'estomac ne digere point." L'Union Medicale, 1854, p. 17. (12) In typhoid fever. Bulletin Gen. de Therap. t xlvil p. 320. (13) Sur Tapepsie (on absence de digestion) chez lezenfans. et sur le traitement de cette maladie par la pepsine. L'Union Medicale, Jan. 12th, 1S56. (14) Observation d'un cas de consomption ultime, traitee par la Poudre Xutri- mentive, Bulletin Gen de Therap. L xlix. p. 268. (15) Artificial Digestion as a Remedy in Dyspepsia, Apepsia, and their resulta. By Edward Ballard, M.D., London, 1857. This valuable work contains the me- thod of preparing the pepsine. and also the report of numerous cases of disordered digestion, successfully treated with pepsine, by Dr. Ballard and other practitionere of medicine. (16) In Dyspepsia of a year's duration. 13* 308 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. [May, Cahagnet, (' 7) Parise, (l 8) Huet, (' 9) Chambers,(2 ) Nelson (2 *) and others, (2 2) have testified to the efficacy and value of pepsine in various diseases. The fourth stomach of ruminants (rennet bag) is generally recommended as a source of pepsine. In hospital practice, how- ever, I preferred to employ the stomach of the pig, for two reasons : The pig is an omniverous animal. Its food and digestive process resembles more nearly that of man, and consequently its gastric juice must be better adapted to his wants. For hospital purposes, the stomach of the pig can be much more readily obtained and prepared, than that of the cow or sheep. When pepsine can be obtained pure from the apothecaries, or when the physician has time to prepare it himself, the Poudres Nutrimentives (2 3) of Corvisart is by far the most elegant and portable preparation. (1*7) In Dyspepsia and Vomitings of several years' duration. (18) In Dyspepsia of early Pregnancy. (19) Gastralgia after food of several years' duration. (20) Practical Lectures on the Management of Digestion in Disease, by T. K. Chambers, M.D. London Lancet, Aug., 1857, p. 101 Sept. 1857, p. 180, Am. Ed. (21) On Mellitic Diabetes in reference to its Treatment by Rennet or Liquor Pepticus Prsep., by David Nelson, M.D. London Lancet, Aug. 1857, p. 118, Am.. Edition. (22) Rennet in Diabetes Mellitus, by Dr. James Gray. Glasgow Med. Journal, Oct. 1856. See also American Journal of Medical Sciences, Jan. 1857, p. 2 5. (23) The following are the directions, given by M. Boudalt, for the preparation of the medicine : "Take a sufficient number of rennet bags (the fourth stomach of the ruminants), open and reverse them, and wash them under a thin stream of cold water ; scrape off the mucous membrane, reduce it to a pulp, and macerate it in distilled water for twelve hours ; filter ; add to the liquor a sufficient quantity of acetate of lead, and after separating the precipitate, pass through it a current of sulphuretted hydrogen ; filter again ; evaporate at a low temperature to the consistence of a syrup, which is mixed intimately with starch pulverized, and dried at a temperature of 100 centig. In this state the gentle application of heat will reduce it to a dry mass re'adily reducible to a powder of uniform efficacy. " The power of the pepsine thus obtained, varies, and before the use of a speci- men, we should first test its transforming power. The standard dose is that quan- tity of the powder, which when acidulated with three drops of lactic acid and added to 15 grammes (225 grains) of water, would transfer 6 grammes (90 grs.) of fresh fibrin finely cut up, and kept in a bottle, at a temperature of 40 centig. r for twelve hours, with occasional shaking. The average dose of the "Poudre Kutrimentive" is 15 grains. It may be taken dry or in solution, in unfermented bread, or in a spoonful of soup, or in sweetened water. It should always be ta- ken with, or at the commencement of the meal on which it is to act. Ballard on Artificial Digestion, p. 10. See also, Memoire sur le principe digestif, les prepa- rations nutrimentives, et les moyens propres a reconnaitre et a mesurer leur ac^ tion. Acad. Imp. de Med., Seance du 14 Fevrier, 1854, et Moniteur des Hopitaux, 16 Fevrier, 1854. 1858.] Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. 309 *$. Cut a pig's stomach into thin slices, and pour upon it one pint of vinegar, and preserve from decomposition (if the weather be warm), by surrounding with ice. The pepsine and vinegar will reduce the tissues of the stom- ach to a uniform mass, or rather, fluid. Dose, f 5j. three times a day, mixed with cold mutton or beef soup. This preparation is useful for hospital purposes, because it is easily prepared, and at the same time is more efficacious than the pepsine ordinarily sold in the shops. Chambers^4) and other (25) have shown that much of the pepsine now sold, possesses but feeble transforming powers. Pepsine is not the only substance concerned in the digestion of albumenoid substances. The connective tissues and muscular fibres are disintegrated and softened, but never completely dissolved by the gastric juice. The ultimate fibrilla3 of muscles which have escaped the ac- tion of the gastric juice pass into the small intestines, and are there digested by the pancreatic juice. M. L. Corvisant(2 6) communicated to the Imperial Academy of Sciences, April 6th, 1857, a Memoir on the Power of the Pancreas to Digest Azotized Food, in which he confirmed the assertion of Purkinge and Pappenheim, that the secretion of the pancreas is endowed, like the gastric juice, with the property of The following is the mode adopted and recommended by Dr. James Gray of preparing the rennet: " The stomach of a calf (and the younger it is the better,) is gently washed with water, taking care not to injure the mucous membrane; it is then salted, tied up and allowed to dry. After this, it is cut into small pieces, macerated in a pint and a half, or two pints of water, according to the size of the stomach, for four days or longer in winter, shaking it at intervals ; the fluid is then poured off and bottled, and to test its power, a spoonful may be added to a pint of warm milk, which, if it curdles, it is now fit for use. A little spirits, or decoction of sparrow-grass, may be added to make it keep. The dose of rennet thus prepared is a tablespoonful, three, four, or six times a day, about half an hour after each meal, and during the process of digestion, followed shortly after by an alkali, to neutralize the lactic acid formed. That which I recommend is the alkaline tri- basic phosphate of soda; but the carbonate of potash will answer very well, either alone or combined with the tincture of nux vomica, in five or ten drop doses." Glasgow Medical Journal, Oct. 1856. See abstract of paper in Amer. Jour, of Medical Sciences, Jan. 1857, p. 215. (24) Experiments upon Artificial Digestion, by T. K. Chambers, M. D. London Lancet, Aug. 1857, p. 133, Am. ed. (25) Experiments upon the Action of Pepsine, by Edward H. Sieveking. Med. Times and Gazette, April 4, 1857. See, also, American Journal of Med. Sciences, 26 July, 1857, p. 212. Monitenr des Hopitaux, April 21st, 1857. See, also, American Journal of Med. Science*, July, 1857, p. 206, 310 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. [May, dissolving azotized food, and demonstrated that the pancreatic juice in disintegrating albumenoid elements, effects in them a transformation identical or analogous to that which the stomach produces. The pancreatic juice acts only on those portions of the food which have escaped the action of the gastric juice, and at the same time it has no effect upon the digested products of the stomach. When separated, the pancreatic and gastric fluids exercise their functions in full, and when mingled in their pure state, the two digestions are arrested. The two ferments, pepsine and pancreatine, destroy each other. In the alimentary canal, this is prevented. 1st, by the pylor- ous which separates the two ferments. 2nd, by the gastric digestion during which the pepsine is destroyed. 3rd, by the bile which destroys in its course the activity of the pancreatine. It is evident, therefore, that the pancreatine, or the pancreatic juice, so far from assisting digestion, would retard it. M. S. Corvisart states that he had failed to receive any benefit from the administration of pancreatine for the relief of derangement of the digestion in the intestinal canal. In this case of diabetes mellitus, I employed a preparation of the pancreas of the pig, prepared in the same manner with the stomach. No beneficial results were produced, and it was abandoned and the pepsine retained. (2.) To afford the organic and inorganic materials of structure. As usual in the treatment of diabetes mellitus, the patient was furnished principally with animal food eggs, mutton, beef, &c. Bread and rice were allowed more frequently, however, than in the practice laid down in the books. $ Phospate of Iron, . . " a Lime, . . " Soda, . . " " Potassa, . " iv. Mix and administer three times during the day, in the soup containing the pepsine. These salts were given because they form important constituents of the blood corpuscles, muscles and brain, and nervous system. $ Cod-liver oil, tablespoonful three times a day. grs. 1> u iv. u vi. 1858.] Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. 311 Cod-liver oil is indicated in the treatment of diabetes mellitus for two reasons : To supply the fatty matters which have been consumed. There is a close connection between phthisis and diabetes. Writers upon this disease state that, in the majority of cases, phthisis makes its appearance before death. (3.) To strengthen and quiet the nervous system. The depressed spirits, fretful, peevish temper, impaired mem- ory and intelligence, loss of sexual propensity, and complete exhaustion of nervous power, call for those remedies which will act both as tonics and sedatives to the nervous system. To accomplish these objects, opium and strychnia should be given simultaneously. $ Strychnia, grs. ij. Extract of Gentian, . . . " 3 ij. Mix and divide into 100 pills; one pill three times a day, to be gradually increased, according to the strength of the patient and effects upon the nervous system. Strychnia not only exerts a tonic influence upon the digestive organs, and muscular and nervous systems, but also exerts a direct influence in diminishing the amount of sugar formed. # One grain of opium at bed-time, and one grain in the morning, at 9 o'clock. Opium quiets the nervous irritability of the patient, and con- trols the diuretic influence of the sugar in the blood. It checks the excessive discharge, but does not prevent the production of sugar. Nevertheless, its action upon the nervous system ren- ders it one of the most valuable of the secondary means. As a stimulant and tonic to the digestive organs, f I ij. of bran- dy were administered, three times a day, in a cup of the officinal infusion of quassia and soda. Aug. 10th. Pulse, 74. Temperature of Atmosphere, 88 F. " under Tongue, 98 Aug. 11th. Pulse, 78. Temperature of Atmosphere, 81 F. Eespiration, 16, " under Tougue, 99 J August 12th. Slight improvement of digestion. Bowels are not moved so frequently. He is exceedingly weak, and com- plains of pain in his head and bones. 812 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. [May, August 19th. Complains of great weakness and thirst; is in a profuse perspiration ; says that his digestion improves, but his strength does not increase. The brandy causes him to sleep and perspire too freely, and is probably the cause of the increas- ed flow of urine and loss of strength. The experiments of George Harley, M.D., (2 6) and M. Ber- nard, (2 7) have demonstrated that alcohol, ether, chloroform, methylated spirit, and ammonia, introduced into the duodenum, or injected directly into the portal vein, will excite an increased secretion of sugar. Healthy animals thus operated on were rendered for a time diabetic. This fact is important, not only in the treatment, but also in its bearing upon the causes of dia- betes mellitus. Drunkards are said to be peculiarly liable to this disease. Pulse 84, Eespiration 17, Temperature of Atmosphere, 90 F. " under Tongue, 104 The acceleration of the pulse may be due to the action of the alcoholic stimulants. "We will discontinue the brandy and sub- stitute 10 grains of carbonate of ammonia, three times a day, in a cup of the infusion of quassia and soda. The carbonate of ammonia is administered, first, as a stimu- lant, and second, as a means of diminishing the amount of grape sugar. Some chemists (2 8) have supposed that the occurrence of alka- line carbonates is necessary for the decomposition of sugar in the animal economy, and that in diabetes the passage of glucose into the urine is due to a want of alkalinity in the blood. (26) " Contributions to the Physiology of Saccharine Urine. On the Origin and Destruction of Sugar in the Animal Economy, by George Harley, M.D." British and Foreign Medico-Chir. Review, July, 1857, p. 144. (27) Gazette Medicale de Paris, Mai 10, No. 19, 1856, and Schmidt's Jahrb., vol. xciii. p. 24, 1857. (28) Chimie applique a'la Physiologie et a la Therapeutique, Par M. le Docteur Mialhe, Pharmacien d' l'Empereur. Paris, 1856. In this work, Mialhe, after examining the various hypotheses which have been proposed to explain the nature of diabetes mellitus, comes to the conclusion that its true cause is a deficiency of alkali in the blood. To the objection that the blood of diabetic patients is never either neutral or acid, but always alkaline in its reaction, Mialhe answers that it is difficult to determine the amount of the alkalinity of the blood; and again, that part of the alkaline reaction of this fluid is derived from the presence of alkaline phosphates which possess no power of decomposing glucose. He is inclined to consider that the alkaline carbonates are deficient or absent, the phosphates remaining intact, thus preventing the fluid from exhibiting anything but an alkaline reaction. In the treatment of diabetes he acts strictly u^on these indications, and pre- 1858.] Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. 313 Direct experiment does not supp*::; this theory, for the re- searches of C. G. Lehmanri, (39) Bouchardat and Bernard, (30) have proved on the contrary, that the blood of diabetic persons preserves its alkalinity, and that the alkalies of the blood do not promote the oxidization of sugar to the extent asserted. Direct experiment and clinical facts, on the other hand, have shown that, in certain derangements of the nervous and circu- latory systems and of the constituents of the blood, the produc- tion of grape sugar is increased and it passes into the urine ; and farther, that the alkaline carbonates diminish the proportion of sugar in the urine of diabetic patients. We may then employ the alkaline carbonates in the treatment of diabetes mellitus, although their action upon glucose in the animal economy is not well understood, and probably differs both in degree and kind from that asserted by Mialhe. August 20th. Feels very weak, and complains of a pain in the region of his liver. Bowels are still irregular, but improving. Pulse, ... 72. Temperature of Atmosphere, 83 F. Inspiration, 14 " " Hand, .... 97 " under Tongue, 100 August 26th. Improving in strength and spirits. Digestive function restored. Slowly gains flesh. Digests large quantities of meat with ease. $. Cane sugar ixij. during the 24 hours. scribes lime water, magnesia, vichey water, bicarbonate of soda, alkaline and vapor baths, flannel, friction, exercise, animal diet^ and sometimes sudorifics. M. Mialhe relates the case of an Italian professor of music, afflicted with diabetes mellitus. Under the alkaline treatment the sugar rapidly diminished and the patient recovered. (29) Prof. C. G. Lehmann injected a solution of grape sugar, prepared from starch, into the veins of 37 dogs and rabbits, and in every instance grape sugar appeared in the urine; and the reaction of the urine was acid. The sugar pass- ed so rapidly into the urine, that it was frequentlj* detected five minutes after its injection, and then when only O'l of a gramme was injected. Caustic, alkalies, and their carbonates, associated with grape sugar, were also injected into the veins of rabbits. Notwithstanding the caustic, alkalies and the carbonates, the urine not only- contained grape sugar, but also exhibited an acid reaction. Prof. Lehmann also injected dilute solutions of tartaric and citric acids into the stomachs of rabbits and dogs, fed on food poor in alkalies. Although the blood was thus rendered poor in alkalies, while at the same time vegetable acids were introduced, still not a trace of sugar appeared in the urine. Physiological Chem- i.-try, by Prof. C. G. Lehmann. English Ed., voL hi., p. 233. American Ed., vol. ii., p. 357. These experiments have been repeated by Uhle, with similar results. Dis. Iuaug. Med. Lips., 1852. p. 19. (30)Moniteur des Hopitaux, May 14, 1857. 314 Jones, on Diabetes Mellitus. [May, Hoppe's(3 1) Investigations upon the action of cane sugar upon the animal economy have established the following facts : 1. No trace of grape sugar was found in the urine or feces during continued feeding with cane sugar. 2. When sugar and meat were given together, the weight of the animal increased much more rapidly than when meat alone was given. 3. When sugar and meat were consumed, urea was excreted in smaller quantity than when meat alone was taken. 4. By exclusive sugar diet, the excretion of urea was de- pressed to its lowest amount. 5. By the presence of much sugar in the blood, the albumin- ous substances are preserved from oxidization. The albumen thus stored up appears to be decomposed during the development of fat. In this manner sugar produces fatten- ing, only when, at the same time, albuminous substances are liberally supplied. 6. The temperature of the body was not increased, by the addition of sugar to the allowance of meat. 7. The health of the animals experimented on, was in no way injured by feeding on large quantities of cane sugar, in addi- tion to a liberal supply of meat. September 23rd. Has continued steadily to improve in health and strength, and is now able to walk about the hospital grounds and assist in nursing the patients. The amount of urine voided daily has diminished. October 20th. His muscular and nervous forces have increased greatly. His face and limbs have filled out. His spirits are ex- cellent; and he says that he is now as fleshy as in health. He is able to act as assistant nurse, and often sits up all night with those patients who require his services. The amount of urine excreted daily has greatly diminished, and ranges from seventy to ninety fluid ounces. The grape sugar has diminished greatly in amount, but has not entirely disappeared. At this date I resigned the charge of the Savannah Marine Hospital and Poor House. (31) F. Hoppe, on the Influence of Cane Sugar in Digestion and Nutrition. Virchow's Archiv., vol. x., pp. 144, S. S., 1856. 1858.] DuGAS. New Principle of Diagnosis. 315 It is evident, that sufficient time had not elapsed to warrant the assertion that this case was cured ; nevertheless, the reme- dies used produced decided beneficial effects, and were the means, in Providence, of arresting the disease, when the patient appeared to be in the last stages of diabetes mellitus, and upon the borders of the grave. I have endeavored to give a simple statement of the facts ob- served in this case, the plan of treatment pursued, and the reasons which led me to the adoption of this mode of treatment. Although this is but a single case, the treatment of which was not even conducted to its termination in complete health, or death, still, I am persuaded that, in the present state of Medical Science, every successful effort to arrest so formidable a disease as Diabetes, even for a few months, will be considered worthy of an examination by Practitioners of Medicine. AETICLE XIII. A Xew Principle of Diagnosis in Dislocations of the Shoulder-joint. E y L. A. Dcgas, M. D., Professor of Surgery, in the Medical College of Georgia.* Having for a number of years inculcated in my lectures the principles contained in this paper, I was requested to reduce my views to writing, for the benefit of our classes, and according- ly published an article on the subject in the March number, for 1856, of the Sout/iern Medical and Surgical Journal, p. 131. The object of this communication is to present the American Medical Association with a brief expose of this interesting sub- ject, and to accompany my remarks with pictorial illustrations, calculated to impress the eye as well as the understanding of the reader. The principle of diagnosis to which I refer may be enuncia- ted in the following language : If the fingers of the injured limb can be placed by the patient or by the surgeon upon the sound shoulder, while the elbow touches the thorax, there can be no dis- location; aud if this cannot be done, there must be a dislocation. In other >vords, it is physically impossible to bring the elbow in * The above Report was read before the American Medical Association, and printed in the loth Volume of the Transactions. K.s. vol. xrv. no. v. 14 816 DUGAS. New Principle of Diagnosis. [May, contact with the sternum or front of the thorax if there be a dis- location ; and the inability to do this is proof positive of the ex- istence of dislocation, inasmuch as no other injury of the shoul- der-joint can induce this inability. In order to make these propositions apparent, I beg leave to present drawings taken from the skeleton, showing the relative position of the bones in the natural state, and in the several dis- locations of the shoulder. The evidence thus obtained in sup- port of my principle, would be still stronger if the bones were invested with their normal coverings and attachments. Let us then look at Fig. 1, and we may observe, that while the head of the humerus occupies the glenoid cavity, and the fin- gers rest upon the other shoulder, the elbow and lower end of the humerus lie upon the thorax without difficulty, because of the circumstance that the head of the humerus, when in its natu- ral position, is removed several inches from the ribs. In con- sequence of the rotundity of the thoracic walls it is physically impossible that both ends of the humerus should at the same time come in contact with the chest. We see, therefore, in Fig. Fig. 1. 1, that in the absence of any dislocation, the upper half of the bone does not touch the thorax, and that the lower half does so without the least difficulty. 1853.] Dug AS. New Principle of Diagnosis. 317 Fig. 2. By now referring to Fig. 2, which represents a dislocation into the axilla, we find that, the fingers being placed upon the oppo- site shoulder, the elbow is forced so far forwards that it cannot touch the thorax. In this state of things, the upper end of the humerus alone touches the ribs, while the lower end is propor- tionately removed from the chest. Any attempt to force the elbow against the thorax must be fruitless, unless at the expense of a disruption of all the soft parts by which the head of the hu- merus is held down ; for, as I have already stated, it is physical- ly impossible for both ends of the humerus to touch the thoracic walls at the same time. We have represented, in Fig. 3, a dislocation forwards or be- low the clavicle ; and here again we find the upper end of the humerus resting upon the ribs the elbow being consequently removed from the chest. The upper half of the humerus touches the thorax, and so long as this is the case, it is physically impos- sible for the lower portion of the humerus also to do it. In dislo- cations of this kind, it is very difficult to carry the fingers upon the opposite shoulder, even though the elbow be allowed to pro- ject forward, because of the resistance offered by the strong mus- cles which pull back the humerus. I have, however, represen- ted the bones of the skeleton in this position, for the purpose of 318 DuGAS. New Principle of Diagn osis. [May, showing the effect, in case it could be assumed, in the living subject. Fig. 3. Dislocations of the humerus upon the dorsum of the scapula, although very rare, should still be carefully studied. I have, therefore, represented this accident in Fig. 4, by which it may Fig. 4. be seen that the same principles are applicable also to it. Here, 1858.] Dugas. New Principle of Diagnosis. 319 as well as in the other instances, it is only the upper end of the humerus that touches the thorax, and the elbow projects strong- ly forwards. In this dislocation, it might be possible to bring the elbow against the side of the trunk, by carrying the hume- rus down parallel with the axis of the body ; but any contact of the elbow with the chest is impossible, if the fingers be directed towards, or placed upon the sound shoulder, for then the form of the thorax would offer an insuperable obstacle. Having now, I trust, sufficiently demonstrated the truth of the proposition that it is physically impossible to bring the elbow against the front of the thorax in dislocation of the shoulder, I would simply add, that it is equally true, that no other injury of the shoulder-joint than a dislocation can induce this physical impossibility. It is obvious, that a mere contusion of the soft parts may render motion of the joints so painful as to deter the patient from the effort necessary to carry the fingers upon the other shoulder. But there can be no difficulty on the part of the surgeon in placing the limb in this position, and an anaesthe- tic might be used, if desirable, so as to render manipulation pain- less. The same may be said of fractures of the upper end of the humerus, of the acromion, of the coracoid process, and of the neck of the scapula. In neither of these accidents can there be any physical impediment in the way of bringing the elbow in contact with the front of the chest, for in neither of them can the upper end of the humerus be so fixed against the ribs as to make it impossible for the lower end to touch the chest. Nothing, therefore, but a dislocation can prevent the limb from being placed in the position indicated. If it be justly esteemed a matter of great importance to be in possession of correct principles of diagnosis in occult diseases, it is certainly not the less so with regard to surgical accidents, es- pecially when these demand prompt interference. Our profes- sional records unfortunately establish too conclusively the im- perfection of our diagnostic resources in injuries of the joints, to permit any indifference on the subject. If, therefore, the views here presented may facilitate, in the least degree, the detection of injuries confessedly more or less obscure, my object will have been attained. 320 Supra-renal Capsules and Bronzed Skin. [May, Supra-renal Capsules and Bronzed Skin. By George Harley, M. D., F. R. C. S. London. [The following condensed analysis of the above paper published in the British and Foreign Med. Chir. Review, presents a compre- hensive resume of the various opinions and experimental results upon the subject. It is by Dr. Austin Flint, Jr., and is transfer- red from the Buffalo Journal. Edts.] The Supra-Renal Capsules. By Austin Flint, Jr. Medical practitioners have always occasionally met with a disease affect- ing the color of the skin and accompanied by extreme emacia- tion, of the pathology of which they were utterly ignorant. We ourselves had an opportunity of seeing such a case in the wards of Prof. Flint, at the Buffalo Hospital of the Sisters of Charity. In this case, as far as our memory serves us, the patient was ex- ceedingly emaciated ; had cough and extensive pulmonary disease, and was affected with a brown discoloration of the skin, which was general, with the exception of spots over the body of dazzling whiteness, which were of irregular shape, and varied in size from that of a sixpence to a dollar, or in a few places were even lar- ger. The patient died a few days after his admission into the wards, but no autopsy was made. A short time after this, we saw a notice of a monograph by Dr. Addison, on " The supra-renal capsules and iheir connection with Bronzed Skin." Dr. Addison has made a number of post-mortem examinations of patients who where affected with this peculiar discoloration of the integument, which he denominated " Bronzed Skin" and invariably found associated with it a disease or disor- ganization of the supra-renal capsules, by which their function was entirely abolished. As Addison was the first to point out any connection between bronzed skin and disease of these organs, it has been proposed that the disease shall be called "Addison's Disease," as albuminuria connected with organic diseases of the kidneys was named after its distinguished discoverer, Dr. Bright. Physiologists, as is well known, have never been able to deter- mine definitely the function of the ductless glands or the blood glands, as they are sometimes called ; which are the spleen, thy- noid and thymus glands, mesenteric glands and the supra-renal capsules. These organs have all the anatomical characteristics of ordinary glands, with the exception of ducts ; and, as owing to this, their secretion, if they have any, cannot be subjected to analysis, their role in the economy has remained almost unknown. In none of these, however, has the obscurity been so great as in the case of the supra-renal capsules. The brilliant experiments of Bernard in regard to the Glucogenic function of the liver, 1858.] Supra-renal Capsules and Bronzed Shin. 321 which so surprised and delighted the scientific world, and which made such an advance into the pathology of that hitherto unac- countable disease, diabetes mellitus ; gave a new impulse to the study of the ductless or blood glands; as by these experiments Bernard has shown that the liver, in addition to its office as a bile secreting organ, formed sugar within its substance, which was given up immediately to the mass of blood without the inter- vention of an excretory duct : since this was discovered, it has been shown that the liver also produces fat de novo, though as much is not known about this function as about the production of sugar. Thus the liver, in addition to being an ordinary gland, possessed of an excretory duct, is in reality a blood gland like the spleen, or supra-renal capsules. A great proportion of the energy of the investigations into the functions of the ductless glands hasbeen directed towards the spleen, and it is now supposed, and on pretty good foundation, that the spleen and mesenteric glands have an important office in the for- mation of blood globules. The physiology of the supra-renal cap- sules, however, had still remained buried in its original obscurity. Upon the appearance of the excellent monograph by Dr. Addi- son, observers in all parts of the world set themselves to work upon the physiology of the supra-renal capsules ; the paper of Addison having thrown some light on the subject, and seeming indeed to establish some connexion between these organs and the formation of pigment, or the regulation of its deposition. The Physiologists who have made known to the world the results of their experi- ments, are Gratiolet, Brown Sequard, Philipeaux, and Dr. Harley, of University College, London. The experiments of these gen- tlemen, whose names our readers will recognise as belonging to men eminent in this department, have led them to somewhat dif- ferent results : we had the pleasure of listening to lectures by Dr. Brown Sequard on this subject a year ago, when he seemed to prove that the supra-renal capsules were essential in the highest degree to life, even more so than the kidneys themselves ; as an animal survived for two or three days after the extirpation of the kidneys, but it lived for a few hours only after the removal of the supra-renal capsules. Brown Sequard also showed that animals from whom these organs had been removed, were convulsed and affected with that peculiar nervous phenomenon which is known as " turning," this turning always being in the same direction. He also asserts that death supervenes too rapidly to be due to inflammation of the peritoneum, and indeed, on examining this membrane after death, no evidences of inflammation are observed. Brown Sequard performed experiments in the presence of his audience, and we had an opportunity of witnessing the phenome- na which he described. The most elaborate and satisfactory paper on this subject which 322 Supra-renal Capsules and Bronzed Skin. [May, we have yet seen, is from the pen of Dr. Harley, and appeared in the last number of the British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgi- cal Review. Thk article we have carefully perused, and it was this which led us to make the preceding observations. Think- ing this subject to be of great importance to us as Physiologists and Pathologists, we have been thus extended in our remarks, and will give a brief recapitulation of the more important results at which Dr. Harley has arrived ; this we deem the more appropri- ate, as it is probable that many of our readers do not have an opportunity of seeing the above mentioned periodical. In anatomical structure, these organs present no very striking points of difference from some of the ordinary secreting glands of the economy ; they are formed of a medullary and cortical sub- stance like the kidneys. There is a peculiarity however in their chemical constitution. " In the beginning of the last year, M. Vulpian communicated to the Societie de Biologie the discovery a very peculiar reaction possessed by the super-renal capsules of vertebrated animals. He found that an aqueous solution of iodine brought in contact with the medullary substance gave rise to a beautiful rose color. And further, that the greater portion of oxidizing agents acted like the iodine solution, although in a minor degree. Even the oxygen of the air, under the influence of light, produced the same effect. I have repeated M. Vulpian's experiment on the medullary substance of the supra-renal capsules of sheep with success ; but am equally at a loss with the author to form an opinion as to the nature of the substance which pos- sesses the strange property alluded to. We as yet know so little regarding the nature of color and coloring matter, that it would be futile to attempt to draw any conclusions with regard to the import of the rose colored reaction above spoken of." " Not being able to separate the coloring matter, M. Vulpian, in concert with M. Cloez, proceeded to extract the " immediate principles" of the supra-renal bodies; and these gentlemen have recently communicated to the Institute de France as the result of their united labors, the discovery of hip-puric and tanrocholic acids in the supra-renal capsules of herbiverous animals. But as these substances have been abundantly found in different parts of the animal body, their discovery in the latter organs, although in- teresting, unfortunately throws no light upon the nature of their functions." Dr. Harley has since seen a communication from Prof. Vir- chow, in which he confirms the observation of M. Vulpian with regard to the rose colored reaction, and also mentions that he has found senecine in the medullary substance. The question arises whether the supra-renal capsules are or- gans peculiarly essential to foetal existence and developement. It was formerly supposed that this was the case, and the argu- 1858.] Supra-renal Capsules and Bronzed Skin. 323 ments in favor of this idea, were the great relative size of these bodies in the foetus, and their small size in adults. Meckel states that at the third month, the supra-renal*capsules and kidneys are of equal size, at the sixth month as 2 to 5. at birth as 1 to 8, and in adult life as 1 to 28. Later observations, however, by the author, Brown Sequard, and others, show a different result in the case of some of the mammalia. Dr. Harley has been confined in his observations to the cat, having examined thirteen foetal and six adult capsules. Without giving the figures and calculations, we will give the results at which Dr. Harley has arrived and in which he confirms Ecker, Frey, and others: "The weight of the supra-renal capsule in the kitten at birth is to that of the kid- ney as 1 to 57.3 ; and in the adult as 1 to 54.8. But as so few adult capsules and kidneys were employed, it may be perhaps better to take the average of the whole six that were examined, which would then give us the relative weight of three organs in the full grown animal as 1 to 46.49. " We shall find by a very simple calculation that the kidney was after birth increased 12.35 times in weight, while the supra- renal capsule at the same time has increased 14.87 times in weight. What conclusion are we to draw from this fact ? We here see that the supra-renal capsules increase in size, as age advances, at a greater rate than the kidneys. I must here speak with caution however. Small statistics are dangerous data to draw conclusions from, and perhaps a larger number of observations might furnish us with different results." Thus our readers will see that Ecker, Frey. and Brown Sequard, whose observations are here confirmed by Harley, have develop- ed an exceedingly important fact in relation to the probable com- parative activity of the function of the supra-renal capsule, what- ever it may be, in foetal and adult life: conecting the doctrines promulgated by Meckel, that these organs in the mammalia dimin- ish after birth, both in relative size and activity of function. We now come to experiments, bearing^directly on the function of the supra-renal capsules. The first experiment was on an adult cat, from which the right capsule was removed. The ani- mal survived nine days after the operation, and on post mortem examination, no cause of death could be discovered. Another experiment was made on a white cat, from which the capsules were removed. This died in twenty-four hours, and on examination there were found all the indications of peritonitis. Another experiment was made on a small white coach dog, from which the left capsule was removed. It died on the twelfth day, and on examination, signs of peritonitis were discovered. An experiment was then made on two Guinea pigs, in one of which the abdomen was opened, and the amount of injury which the parts would suffer by the removal of the supra-renal 321 Supra-renal Capsules and Bronzed Skin. [^ay, capsules, was inflicted, the wound sewed up, and the capsules al- lowed to remain; the fellow, which was of the same age, sex, and development, was then deprived of the capsule on the correspond- ing side. Both these animals died within twenty-four hours after the operation. The same experiment was then repeated on two cats. The cat from which the supra-renal capsule (the right,) was removed, lived two days; the other died during the third night. In the abdomens of both, signs of peritonitis were dis- tinctly visible. The next experiment was made on a bull terrier dog, by re- moving one of the capsules without applying a ligature to the vessels, the body being enucleated with the fingers. The dog remained in the author's possession for five months, and did not suffer from a day's illness. The next experiment was of exceeding interest : it was on a large torn cat, in which, on opening the abdomen, the right cap- sule was rough and hard as a stone : it was enucleated with the greatest facility. The same operation was repeated on the other side with a similar result. On making a section of the capsules, it was found that a considerable portion of the medullary, as well as of the cortical substance, had become replaced by a calcareous deposit, consisting chiefly of carbonate of lime. The remaining portion of the gland contained so much fibrous tissue, that the normal structure might be said to have entirely disappeared. iVs the operation on this animal had been performed with the utmost facility, and there had been no haemorrhage, or any apparent in- jury done to the surrounding parts, except the tearing through the vessels and nerves, the author felt sanguine of success. His as- tonishment was great therefore when, arriving at the college next morning, he found the cat dead. The post mortem examination revealed nothing, though the blood was searched for signs of phlebitis, examined for crystals, and for the flakes of pigment des- cribed by Brown Sequard. As it has been found by Ludwig and HafFer, that section of the splanchnic nerves will kill animals in one or two days, and according to Brown Sequard, mere pricking or cutting of the semi-lunar ganglion proves fatal to rab- bits in thirty hours, while division of the sympathetic in the neighborhood of the kidneys causes death in twenty-three hours : in absence of other proof of death, it is probable that it resulted from injury done, in tearing out the capsules, to the ganglionic system of nerves. The extirpation of the right is more fatal than the removal of the left capsule, as it proved by experiments which the author has cited, but which it is unnecessary for us to state. M. Gratiolet thought that this fact was to be explained by the proximity of the liver, and the occurrence of hepatitis; at first Dr. Harley was of this opinion, but he now very justly concludes that it is due to 1858.] Supra-renal Capsules and Bronzed Skin, 325 another cause. The right semi-lunar ganglion, which is much larger than the left, lies (in the dog and cat) directly beneath the supra-renal capsule; while the smaller left semi-lunar ganglion is placed on the left cms of the diaphragm, and internal to the supra- renal body. Thus it will be immediately seen that a removal of the right capsule will do more mischief to this ganglion, and this injury has been shown by Ludwig, H after and Brown Sequard to be sufficient to produce death in a short time. As it is generally the case in the removal of double organs, that if one be left it becomes hypertrophied from being compelled to perform a double function. Dr. Harley was anxious to observe if this was the case as respects the supra-renal capsules. He accordingly removed the right capsule from a cat, which had made an excellent recovery from the operation of removing the left about a month before. Nothing unusual, however, was observed : on the morning of the third day it died, and on open- ing the abdomen, two of the lumbar lymphatic glands were ob- served very much enlarged, and presenting a peculiarly beautiful, semi-transparent, lobular appearance. Dr. Harley performed another experiment on a piebald rat, with reference to the same point. The right supra-renal cap- sule was removed, and the animal made a rapid recovery, being in excellent condition at the end of six weeks. The left cap- sule was then removed, and compared with others taken from animals of the same species and age, in order to ascertain if it had become hypertrophied. But in this, as in the case of the cat, there was no very marked difference in either its size or appear- ance. From the effects of the latter operation the animal speed- ily recovered, and ultimately became very fat and healthy looking. An experiment was made on a white rat, in order to observe if any change would take place in the color of the hair and skin. Both capsules were removed at an interval of nine days. The animal lived sixteen days after the last operation, and during that time the color of the hair and skin was carefully watched, with- out discovering any alteration, excepting that the neck became denuded of hair, was covered with a luxuriant crop of young hair, about an eighth of an inch long. The foregoing experiments, which we have presented in as con- densed a form as was consistent, cannot fail to strike every one as extremely interesting, and leading to some very important conclusions. Brown Sequard has maintained that it is impossi- ble for an animal to live for more than forty-eight hours at the farthest, after it has been deprived of its supra-renal capsules. The experiment of Dr. Harley fully controvert this statement, and in addition, M. Philipeaux, of Paris, has removed the spleen, supra-renal capsules, and the thyroid body from the same animal, 326 Apoplexy and Hemiplegia. pJay, which afterwards recovered.- Dr. Harley brought with him from Paris a young rat, the offspring of a mother which had been de- prived of spleen and supra-renal capsules. Brown Sequard is also probably in the wrong in supposing that the convulsions and turn- ing which followed his experiments, were due to the removal of the supra-renal capsules ; as Dr. Harley has not observed it in his experiments, and is confirmed by a private letter from Profes- sor Virchow, who has also failed to notice this phenomenon. We had the pleasure, from the politeness of Dr. Brown Sequard, of examining certain microscopic crystals, which he invariably found in the blood of animals from which he had removed the supra-renal capsules. These crystals wTere unlike the ordinary blood crystals, being pale and needle shaped. Dr. Harley makes no allusion to this occurrence. Finally we present the conclusions drawn by Dr. Harley from the results of his experiments. 1st. The supra-renal capsules are not solely fetal organs. 2d. The supra-renal capsules are not absolutely essential to life. 3d. The removal of the right is generally more fatal than remo- val of the left capsule. 4th. That convulsions do not necessarily folloiu the removal of the capsule. 5th. That the absence of this function (in rats), is attended neither by great emaciation nor debility. 6th. That when death follows upon the extirpation of the supra- renal bodies, it is in most cases in consequence of the injury done to the neighboring tissues ; perhaps most frequently the mutilation of the ganglionic system of nerves. 7th. Absence of the function of the supra-renal bodies, is not proved to have any special effect in arresting the transformation of hcematin, or in increasing the formation of blood crystals. 8th. The suppression of the supra-renal capsular function is not attended by any increased depjosit of pigment in the shin in its appendages (in rats). 9th. The problem of the connection of b?*onzed skin and supra- renal capsular disease is more likely to be solved in the dead house than in the physiological laboratory. To lohat Degree are the Intellectual Faculties affected in cases of Apoplexy and Hemiplegia f By Benjamin W. M'Ceeedy, M. D., Physician to Bellevue Hospital. This inquiry, irrespective of its medico-legal relations, is of interest and importance to the medical practitioner. Dr. M'Creedy brings to bear upon it the results of an analysis of 1858.] Apoplexy and Hemiplegia. 327 cases collected from different authors, as well as instances falling under his own observation, and communicated to him by medi- cal friends. From an examination of " a collection of cases of apoplexy," by Mr. Copeman, of London, published in 1845, he arrived at the following conclusions : " In all, out of a record of two hundred and fifty cases, fifty cases have been taken in which the patient had recovered from the first effects produced W the apoplectic stroke. They are all the cases contained in the book in which such recovery had taken place, and in which the cases were clearly of an apoplectic character. Yet in no one of the cases is there the slightest indication that the patient was left with a mind, I will not say reduced to a state of imbecility, but impaired in any marked degree. They all as far as the mind is concerned, with the exceptions to be mentioned, recovered ; re- covered perfectly ; were restored to their usual state ; returned to their previous occupations. In two instances the faculty of speech was either deranged or lost, and in those instances their physicians assert that the faculty of language, not reason, was deranged. In the third^rn stance the patient is stated to have recovered with an impaired memory, and with some confusion of thought ; but a merchant, seventy-three years of age, who after partial recovery from a severe apoplectic seizure, is enabled to labor for his support by writing for the weekly papers, may be esteemed to have still possessed a fair share of intellect and energy. The second attack left him yet more prostrate, very much weakened in body, and unable to do anything for the support of his family. From the third attack he never recover- ed ; still there is nothing like imbecility : he lies for months in a feverish condition, alternating between coma and delirium, and even a few days before his death he partially recovered and talked in a rational manner with his wife." The foregoing conclusions are corroborated by the results of an examination of a series of cases contained in Andral's Clin- ique Medicale, and in the Anatomie Pathologique of Cruveilhier. These cases, like the preceding, are quoted in brief detail by the writer. In expressing the results of this examination, the writer says: "Here then, are sixteen cases in which the condition of the intellect before the attack was obscured, in which the nature of the disease was verified by post-mortem examination being all that are contained in the Clinique Medicale of Andral, and the Anatomie Pathologique o Cruveilheir, and reported by men whom every one will allow were competent, careful, and conscientious observers in which the hemorrhage was situated in almost every part of the brain, presenting every degree of severity com- patible with the continuance of life, many of them liviDg for years after the occurrence of the apoplectic seizure, and yet in only two of these was there any decided improvement of the mind noticed." 828 Apoplexy and Hemiplegia. [May, The writer adds : " Perfectly in accordance with this have been the results of my own observations. At Bellevue, the great pauper hospital of the city, there are always a number of hemiplegiacs ; but since my attention has been directed to the subject, I have seen no case in which hemiplegia has been the consequence of a well-marked apoplectic seizure, in which I have found the intellect seriously impaired. In some of these cases the first impression of the observer is wholly unfavorable to - the intelligence of the patients; the distorted countenance, the impaired speech, and the motionless tears or laughter, give them an appearance of utter imbecility ; yet a patient examina- tion will commonly discover an amount of intelligence en- tirely unexpected." * * * - " From the facts given above, no other conclusions can be drawn than that any impairment of mind, as a direct consequence of apoplexy, after the patient has recovered from its primary effects, must be an exceptional occur- rence. That the apoplectic seizure may hasten the approach of senile atrophy of the brain is, as before stated, probable ; when atrophy has already commenced, an apoplectic attack may un- doubtedly quicken its progress, and, in such a case, the friends of the patient would naturally attribute the rapid decay of the mind wholly to the apoplectic seizure. This, I think, I have myself seen ; and as apoplexy becomes more common as life advances, such cases may not be unfrequent. The confusion of mind, the difficulty in pursuing a train of thought, of which apoplectics are apt to complain, is to a great extent the mere result of diminished nervous energy. They comprehend well, and judge correctly, but, before their general health is confirm- ed, they can no more think continuously than they can take a long walk, or perform any other act demanding a considerable expenditure of nervous force. It is not the brain specially that is affected it is the system at large. Of all the faculties, memory, either special or general, is most apt to be impaired, and this impairment patients are always ready to admit and complain of. As the patient recovers, the memory commonly improves ; and if no new attack supervene, this improvement is progressive for years." * * * "Whence, then, arises the number of imbeciles who are to be found in every almshouse? Partly, doubtless, from the cases already mentioned, in which senile atrophy is prematurely caused, or its progress hastened by the occurrence of apoplexy. And let us recollect the state of isolation and neglect from which such persons frequently, often necessarily, suffer, is in itself a main cause of a weakened intellect: the mind rusts out for want of exercise." The writer details a series of cases in which, while the hear- ing remained unaffected, the patient's consciousness entire and no delirium, the faculty of speech was either lost or perverted. 1858.] Apoplexy and Hemiplegia. 329 He remarks on these cases as follows: " Here, it will be seen, are eleven well-marked cases of hemiplegia, three of them com- plicated with epileptic convulsions, and all of them with loss or perversion of the faculty of speech. Besides the cases here re- corded, three more have come to ray knowledge the subjects of which, I believe, are still living. This shows conclusively the loss of speech, as an accompaiment of hemiplegia, to be no very rare occurrence. Of the whole fourteen cases, two have perfect- ly recovered the use of speech; two have recovered it to a par- tial and limited extent ; the others still, I believe, remain speech- less. From the cases recorded in the journals to which I have access, I believe that recovery from perversion of the faculty of speech is more common and perfect than when the power of ar- ticulation is either wholly lost or confined to a few monosyllables. Direct medication, except in so far as it improves the general health of the patient, seems to have no effect on the lost faculty ; more is to be hoped for from careful, long continued, and well- directed exercise of the local organs by the patient himself." The foregoing conclusions are certainly at variance with the views inculcated by medical writers and commonly held by prac- titioners. The general belief is, that after an apoplectic seizure, as a rule, the mind is more or less impaired, and in severe cases the patient is apt to fall into a condition of partial or complete imbecility. Epilepsy is also supposed to tend intrinsically to induce deterioration of the mental faculties in proportion to the frequency and severity of the paroxysms. Assuming that the writer's conclusions are correct, it is in a great measure owing to the pervailing error on the subject that the faculties of the mind are in a certain proportion of instances, permanently damaged ; and it becomes a very important point in practice to enjoin, un- der judicious restrictions, that degree of exercise of the mental faculties which shall secure their healthful if not vigorous activi- ty. This practical point is especially applicable to the manage- ment in cases of epilepsy. The reviewer has long entertained the opinion that, in this affection, the mental deterioration which is frequently observed is not due so much to an intrinsic tenden- cy of the malady as to the isolation and inactivity incident to it. With reference to epilepsy, the author of the highly interesting paper which we have reviewed, states that he has ''repeatedly seen and prescribed for a person who has had epilepsy for thirty- three years, occurring several times in every month, and some- times eight and ten times a day ; in whom, though there is obvi- ous enlargement of one side of the head, and much headache, and the tongue bears the marks of countless lacerations, yet it is impossible to discover in this person the least change in her mental condition." He adds, that "both the medical profys- eion and the judicial bench of the city can each furnish at least 330 On the Medicinal Hypophosphites. [May, one illustration of the distinction and usefulness to which persons who have been, or still are, subject to epilepsy, may attain." [New York Jour, of Medicine. Remarks on the Medicinal Ilypophosphites* By William Proc- tor, Jr. [In our last number, we presented to our readers, a striking article from Dr. Churchill, on the use of the Hypophosphites, in the treatment of Tuberculosis. We here transfer to our pages a paper in which these several salts and their mode of preparation are described. Edts.] The recent researches of Dr. Churchill into the therapeutic character and value of the hypophosphites in tuberculosis, some account of which will be found at page 143 of this number, have attracted much attention from physicians, and many inquiries have been made after these salts ; and it is believed that a notice of the processes for preparing them, and some formulas for their prescription, will be acceptable to the readers of the Journal, es- pecially, as from their hitherto unimportant position among phar- maceutical chemicals, no mention is made of them in works most accessible. The salts which have been used are those of lime, soda, potassa and ammonia. In the sequel a notice is given of these, of the hypophosphite of sesquioxide of iron, and of hypo- phosphorus acid. The hypophosphites, according to Gmelin, are mostly crystal- lizable. They cannot exist without a certain proportion of water, which is equally true of the acid itself, which in its most concen- trated form contains three equivalents of water, one of which is replacable by bases. When heated till decomposed, these salts emit phosphuretted hydrogen. They are permanent in the air as regards oxidation ; but when heated in solution, especially if free alkali is present, they are decomposed into phosphates and hydro- gen gas. They are nearly all soluble in water, and several of them in alcohol, and readily reduce the soluble salts of silver and Sold Hypophosphite of Lime is the most important of these salts, as it not only, by oxidation in the economy, will afford phosphate of lime in a nascent state, if needed, but its reaction with the carbo- nates of the alkalies give a ready means of obtaining the alkaline hypophosphites. When phosphorus is boiled with milk of lime it * The Hypophosphites are manufactured in quantity by Hennell Stevens, of Philadelphia, who is successfully directing his attention to the supply of new chemicals for medicinal use, and fine chemicals in general. 1858.] On the Medicinal Uypophosphites. 331 gradually disappears, with evolution of spontaneously inflamma- ble phosphuretted hydrogen, which explodes as it reaches the at- mosphere with the formation of water and phosphoric acid. When the strong odor of phosphuretted hydrogen ceases to be given off, the liquid contains, besides the excess of lime, nearly half of the phosphorus as phosphate of lime, and the remainder, deducting the considerable portion which has escaped into the air as phos- phuretted hydrogen, as hypophosphite of lime. According to Wurtz, more than one equivalent of water is decomposed, and the phosphuretted hydrogen is accompanied by free hydrogen. If this be true, the source of the super oxidation of so much of the phosphorus is traceable to the resulting oxygen; but Rose is of the opinion that this oxygen is derived from the atmospheric air in contact with the boiling liquid. When the process is conducted in a flask, it requires a constant ebullition of the liquid to prevent the explosion consequent upon the entrance of the atmospheric air. To avoid this result, it has been found safer to employ a deep, open vessel. The constant evolution of gas and vapor, which keeps a froth on the surface, excludes the atmosphere in a great degree, so that the yield is not much diminished, whilst the safety and easiness of the process is greatly increased. The pro- cess should be conducted under a hood with a strong draught, or in the open air, to avo id the disagreeable fumes which are evolv- ed. Take of Lime recently burned 4 lbs. av. Phosphorus 1 lb. " Water, 5 gals. Slake the lime with a gallon of water, put the remainder in a deep boiler, and as soon as it boils add the slaked lime, and mix to a uniform milk. The phosphorus is now added, and the boiling is kept up constantly, adding hot water from time to time, so as to preserve the measure as nearly as may be, until it is all oxidi- zed and combined, and the strong odor of the gas has disappeared. The mixture froths much, and but little of the phosphorus reaches the surface. Then filter the solution through close muslin, wash out that portion retained by the calcareous residue with water, and evaporate the filtrate till reduced to six pints. The concen- trated liquor should now be re-filtered to remove a portion of car- bonate of lime which has resulted from the action of the air on the lime in solution, and again evaporated till a pellicle forms, when it may be crystalized by standing in the drying room, or the heat may be continued with stirring till the salt granulates, when it should be introduced into bottles. Hypophosphite of lime is a white salt with a pearly margarin- like lustre, and crystalizes in flattened prisms. Its composition, according to Wurtz, is CaO ,-|-2HO,PO, the water being essen- tial to the salt. It is soluble in six parts of cold water, and in not 14* 832 On the Medicinal Hypophosphites. [May, much less of boiling water ; it is soluble slightly in diluted alco- hol, but insoluble in alcohol sp. gr. .835. Ilypophosphate of Soda is prepared by double decomposition between hypophosphite of lime and crystalized carbonate of soda. Take of Hypophosphite of lime 6 oz. Crystalized carbonate of soda - - - - 10 " Water, a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the hypophosphite in four pints of water, and the car- bonate in a pint and a half, mix the solutious, pour the mixture on a filter, and lixiviate the precipitate of carbonate of lime, after draining, with water, till the filtrate measures six pints. Evapo- rate this liquid carefully till a pellicle forms, and then stir con- stantly, continuing the heat till it granulates. In this state the salt is pure enough for medical use; but if desired in crystals, treat the granulated salt with alcohol sp. gr. .835, evaporate the solution till syrupy, and set it by in a warm place to crystalize. Hypophosphite of soda crystalizes in rectangular tables with a pearly lustre, is quite soluble in water and in ordinary alcohol, and deliquesces when exposed to the air. Its composition is NO -|-2HO,PO. Hypophosphate of Potassa is prepared by the same process as that given above for the soda salt, substituting 5| ounces of gran- ulated carbonate of potassa, in place of 10 ounces of crystalized carbonate of soda, and using half a pint instead of a pint and a half of water to dissolve it. Hypophosphite of potassa is a white, opaque, deliquescent salt,- very soluble in water and alcohol. Its greater tendency to absorb moisture renders it less eligible for prescription than the soda salt. Its composition is KO-|-2HO,PO. Hypophosphate of Ammonia is prepared from hypophosphite of lime and sulphate or carbonate of ammonia. Take of Hypophosphite of lime - 6 oz. Sesqui-carbonate of ammonia (translucent) 7.23 oz. Water, a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the lime salt in four pints of water, and the ammonia salt in two pints of water, mix the solutions, drain the resulting carbonate of lime, and wash out the retained solution with water. The filtrate should then be evaporated carefully to dryness, then dissolved in alcohol, filered, evaporated and crystalized. This salt is deliquescent in the air, very soluble in alcohol and water, and when carefully heated evolves ammonia, and leaves hyd rated hypophosphorus acid. The composition of this salt is NH3-|-2HO,PO. Hypophosphite of Sesquioxide of Iron. This salt may be obtain- ed in the form of a white gelatinous hydrate, by precipitating a solution of hypophosphite of soda or ammonia with one of sesqui- sulphate of iron. The precipitate should be well washed with 1858.] On the Medicinal Hypophosphites. 333 water and dried at a moderate temperature. It is necessary to avoid using a hypophosphite containing any alkaline carbonate or the precipitate will be contaminated with free sesquioxide. Thus prepared, this salt is a white, amorphous, tasteless powder, like the pyrophosphate, soluble in hydrochloric acid, and in free hypophosphorus acid. Hypophosphorus Acid, So far as we are aware, this acid has not been employed, in a free state, by Dr. Churchill, but it is high- ly probable that it may come into use, should the favorable results claimed for its salts be substantiated by new observations. Any claims which phosphoric acid may possess as an agent to supply the waste of phosphorus and phosphates in the human economy, will be more than equalled by this acid. Hypophosphate of bary- ta is the salt which is most eligible for the preparation of this acid, but it is more convenient to prepare it from the lime salts viz: Take of Hypophophite of lime - - - - 480 grains. Crystal ized Oxalic acid - - - - 350 grains. Distilled water 9 fluid oz. Dissolve the hypophosphite of lime in six ounces of the water and the acid in the remainder, with the aid of heat, mix the solutions, pour the mixture on a white paper filter, and when the liquid has passed add distilled water carefully, till it measures ten fluid ounces, and evaporate this to 8^ fluid ounces The solution thus prepared contains about ten per cent, of terhy- drated hypophosphorus acid (HO-|-2HO,PO) a teaspoonful representing 6 grains of the acid, which contains 2| grains of phosphorus. The dose of this acid solution will probably vary from ten minims to a teaspoonful. It is proposed to give several forms in which the hypophosphites may be conveniently administered, and a few hints to the physi- cian in reference to prescribing them. The soluble salts of mercury and silver are reduced by contact with the hypophosphites. All soluble sulphates and carbo- nates are incompatible with the lime salt, and should not be asso- ciated with it in prescriptions, if phosphate of lime is indicated in the case. The iron salt when dissolved by excess of acid is col- ored black by gallotannic acid and drugs containing it, but is not blackened by the tannin of cinchona, catechu and krameria; hence any preparation containing it may be associated with Pe- ruvian bark. The hypophosphites of soda, potassa and ammonia, are more or less deliquescent, and when prescribed in powder it should be with proper precautions to avoid moisture, as by asso- ciation with a considerable excess of sugar of milk. The lime salt may be mixed with either this sugar or ordinary sugar. None of these salts are soluble in cod-liver oil ; and if given with it, they should be dissolved in syrup, and mixed by agitation. Where 334 On the Medicinal Eypophosphites. [May, lactin and glycerin are indicated in the treatment of phthisis or dyspepsia, any of these salts may be very elegantly associated in the form of syrup. Syrup of Hypophosphite of Lime. Take of Hypophosphite of lime, an ounce. Water, nine and a half fluid ounces. White sugar, twelve ounces. Fluid extract of vanilla, half a fluid ounce. Dissolve the salts in the water, filter, add the sugar, dissolve by aid of heat and add the vanilla. The dose is from a tea-spoonful (3 J grs.) to a table-spoonful (14.,) according to the circumstances of the case, three times a day. Compound Syrup of Hypophosphite. The following formula has been made in view of the double purpose to which these salts are directed by Dr. Churchill, viz : the increase of nerve force, and the elevation of the tone of the several functions concerned in alimentation and nutrition ; and will afford an agreeable means of testing practically their merit. The iron salt is presented in a form well adapted for entering the circulation, whilst the acid, besides exerting its solvent power, adds to the agreeable taste of the preparation. Take of Hypophosphite of lime, 256 grains. Hypophosphite of soda, 192 " Hypophospite of potassa, 128 " Hypophosphite of iron* (recently precipitated) 96 " Hypophosphorus acid solution, q. s. or 240 " White sugar, 12 ounces. Extract of vanilla, \ ounce. Water, a sufficient quantity. Dissolve the salts of lime, soda and potassa in six ounces of water; put the iron salt in a mortar, and gradually add solution of hyphosphorus acid till it is dissolved ; to this add the solution of the other salts, after it has been rendered slightly acidulous with the same acid, and then water, till the whole measures 9 fluid ounces. Dissolve in this the sugar, with heat, and flavor with the vanilla. Without flavoring, this syrup is not unpleasant, being slightly saline, and not at all furruginous. Any other flavoring may be used, as orange peel, orange flower or ginger. It is also suggested to physicians that glycerine may be used, wholly or partially, in sugar when indicated, six ounces and a half of gly- cerine being substituted for twelve ounces of sugar. The object of acidulating the saline solution is to decompose any alkaline */This quantity 96 grains, of hypophosphite of iron is obtained when 128 grains of hypophosphite of soda dissolved in 2 ounces of water is decomposed with a slight excess of solution of persulphate of iron, and the white precipitate will wash on a filter with water. 1858.] Diphtherite or Malignant Sore Throat. 335 carbonates which may be present and which have been noticed by the writer in some of the commercial soda salt. The dose of this preparation is a teaspoonful three or four times a dav. A teaspoonful contains 2 grains of the lime salt, 1| of the soda salt, 1 of the potassa salt, and of a grain of the iron salt, besides a little hvpophosphorus acid. [American Jour, of Pharmacy. Reports of Cases of Diphtherite, or Malignant Sore-throat. By Benjamin Godfrey, M. D., M.RC.S.L. Case 1. J. B , a little boy, aged two years. He had been healthy and strong through life, with the exception of the tri- vial ailments incident to childhood. Five months ago he suffered from discharge of pus from the ear, with occasional epistaxis. These ailments soon passed away, and he continued pretty well until the present attack. Oct. 17th. The child complained of cold in the head; dis- charge of yellow mucoid matter from the nose, with occasional haemorrhage, dyspnoea, and dysphagia; great drowsiness and extreme languor. The tongue was slightly coated, but not in- jected; the skin was moist and comfortable ; the pulse quick and feeble, 120 ; pupils dilated. On examino.tion of the throat, a small, whitish spot was observed on the mucous membrane of the right tonsil, about the size of a pea ; bowels constipated. Ordered the sixteenth of a grain of extract of belladona, with one grain of carbonate of ammonia, every three hours; a rhu- barb and jalap powder at bedtime. 18th. The patient is much weaker ; dyspnoea greater, but dysphagia less. The spot has become of an ashy hue, extending over the right tonsil, and slowly creeping ov;r the uvula. Pulse 130. Kepeat the mixture. 19th and 20th. The discharge from the i?Dse and mouth has -increased very acrid, and of a highly offensive odor; the throat externally is much swollen ; the parotid and sub- maxil- lary glands are much enlarged ; both tonsils are coated with the ulcerative process; pulse 130; tongue coated, white; bowels nicely relieved, but great exhaustion and prostration is apparent. Ordered carbonate of ammonia and tartrate of iron every three hours; port- wine and beef- tea in abundance. 21st. Still getting weaker; almost pulseless; extremities cold; face palid and anaemic; throat very much swollen exter- nally. Ordered warm fomentations; milk, wine, and beef-tea, and ten minims of the tincture of sesquichloride of iron every three hours. 22nd. Less swelling of the throat externally. The black gangrenous mass is sloughing away, and a line of demarcation 336 Diphtherite or Malignant Sore Throat. [May, is visible, of healthy granulations springing up to throw off the dead foetid mass, and to restore health to the diseased part. Dyspnoea less ; dysphagia now but slight. Eepeat the medicine and nourishment. 23rd and 24th. Very much better. Several pieces of highly offensive dead material have passed away. Pulse stronger; tongue nearly clean; bowels relieved; pupils less dilated, but still drowsy and very weak. Day by day the little sufferer improved, and gathered strength each day. The only drawback to his recovery was an occasion- al attack of epistaxis, which blanched the restored color of the cheeks and enfeebled the returning powers. Iron and quinine with strong beef-tea and wine, were freely given, but exhaustion soon set in, and he died on the 3rd of November, a fortnight after the attack, anaemiated and exhausted. Case 2. B. B , residing in the same house. He was a strong, well-built boy, of excitable temperament, and affection- ate disposition. He was taken ill on the 22nd of October. He complained of great languor, chilliness, stiffness of the neck, dys- phagia, and headache. The tongue was white, but the papillae were not more- prominent than they are in irritation of the stomach. The throat was much swollen externally, and on the tonsil a small ashy spot was seen. No heat of skin ; no dryness, but the palms of the hands were moist aud comfortably warm; pul ; 3 quick and weak, 130. Ordered the belladonna and ammo- nia fixture ev^ry three hours. Oct. 23rd. Bowels freely moved; throat much worse; spot very much extended, and the breath extremely foetid ; discharge from the nose great ; pupils much dilated ; urine free and nor- mal. Ordered to gargle well with warm water, alternating with the chloride-of-zinc gargle. Wine and beef- tea to be freely taken, and ten drops of the tincture of muriate of iron every three hours. 24th. Throat more swollen ; dysphagia greater, and dpspncea also increased. Applied nitrate of silver solution, ten grains to the ounce, to the throat with a sponge probang. Small pieces of black disintegrated mucous membrane came away. Com- plains of the wine and beef-tea burning his throat, and causing his ears to tingle. 25th. The throat is one black gangrenous mass, the odour of which is very disagreeable. His powers are fast failing. Takes half a pint of port wine a day, with beef-tea, &c. Milk also in abundance. 26th. Fast sinking. Throat exceedingly swollen ; dyspnoea greater than dysphagia; pupils much dilated; extreme drowsi- ness, yet perfectly sensible when aroused. He continued failing till the 27th, when he expired. 1858.] Diphtherite or Malignant Sore Throat 337 Case 3. J. B. , aged seven years, brother of the patient before mentioned. lie was attacked with the same disease, with precisely the same order of symptoms. He was treated with chlorate of potash and cascarilla the former part of the illness, and nitro-muriaticacid and gentian the latter part; but in seven days from the time he was attacked he also died. Case 4. In the same house was a young lady who had watched over the before-mentioned children, and on the 28th she was also taken ill. The first symptoms were, Shivering, and intense prostration, so powerless that she could not stand; tingling of the throat, back of the nares, and in the ears; the throat became dry, and deglutition became difficult. On exam- ining the throat, there was the plague-striken spot on the left tonsil. Ordered four ounces of port wine and strong beef-tea, with the nitro-muriatic acid and cascarilla mixture. Oct. 29th. The spot is much increased, extending over the uvula. Powers en febled ; pulse 120, very feeble; tongue white eand furred; skin cool and moist; bowels regular; urine scanty, but natural. She can scarcely breathe through her nose. The discharge is increased from the mouth and nose, and the breath is become foetid. Ordered the chloride-of-zinc gargle, and thirty drops of the tincture of the sesquichloride of iron in infu- sion of Columbia root. Strong hydrochloric acid was applied with a glass rod to the ulcerated surface. Several large pieces sloughed away. 30th. Pulse very feeble, and bodily power failing. The whole of the soft palate and back of the throat is covered with the sloughing mass. The ears and Eustachian tubes are very tender and painful. Deglutition is performed with great effort and pain. The nares are extremely painful, and the discharge acrid and disagreeable. Applied again the muriatic acid. Or- dered half a pint of port wine a day, with eggs and beef-tea, and to continue the medicine. 31st. Still getting weaker. Pulse 130, irritable; skin cold and clammy; the wine passes down her threat like liquid fire, giving great pain. Ordered wine and beef-tea ad libitum ; the iron to be increased in quantity, three drachms of the tincture to be taken every day. Nov. 1st. Better; throat less swollen, and dysphagia less; bowels well moved; dyspnoea less. At every gargle, pieces of dead material came away. Steaming her nose and throat over hot water has relieved her much. Skin beautifully warm and moist. 2nd and 3rd. The throat is granulating quickly; several large pieces have been thrown off; fcetor less, and appetite im- proving ; pulse 120, fuller and more regular. 338 Diphtherite or Malignant Sore Throat. [May, From this time she began gradually to improve; each day pieces of morbid material were brought away. The throat healed up in the course of a week or two perfectly, and day by day her powers improved, and she left my care on November 15th, quite recovered. Remarks The disease appears to me to be confined to the mucous membrane, neither touching the muscular nor glandu- lar structure. The glandular enlargement is due to sympathetic irritation, the same as we see often in other parts of the body ; thus a wound in a leg producing an enlarged gland in the groin. The question has been asked " Is it scarlet fever without the rash!" This, I think, is answered 1st, by absence of all fever ; 2ndly, absence of all rash ; 3rdly, papilae of the tongue not en- larged; and 4thly, no desquamation of the cuticle after the disease passes off. Yet, on the other hand, scarlet fever existed in the adjoining house. It differs also materially from cynanche tonsillaris. In that disease the abscess forms within the tonsil, and bursts its way out. But in diphtherite, the morbid change commences on the surface of the mucous membrane, and is con- fined solely to that covering. The extreme and rapid depression is only equalled by the depression of malignant scarlet fever, or the collapse of Asiatic cholera. Each patient that died appeared to sink from exhaustion and partial asphyxia. Treatment. The main point to keep in view is to support the patient's powers, and check as far as possible the inroad of the disease. The former by stimulants and tonics ; the latter by the application of the strong mineral acids. The question may arise, might not tracheotomy have been successfully employed to relieve the dyspnoea. My reply is, that the depression of the patient's powers was far greater than the dj^spncea, so that the operation would have been unsafe. That depression did not result from the blood being imperfectly aerated is shown by the depression appearing before the dyspnoea. The dilatation of the pupil did not depend upon the belladonna given, for it exist- ed as a marked symptom in every case. As regards remedies, I believe the tincture of sesquichloride of iron the best. The essentials of the disease, or the symptoms in the order they occur, are these : Shivering, intense depression ; dryness and tingling of the throat, nares, and ears; external swelling of the glands; a whitish spot on the mucous membrane of the tonsil, gradually deepen- ing in colour as the disease progresses ; dysphagia and dyspnoza ; dilated pupil; impending asphyxia, and death. [London Lancet. 1858.] Case of Tetanus. 839 Report of a Case of Tetanus occurring in Bellevue Hospital under the care of Dr. Jas. R. Woodj Visiting /Surgeon. By J. J. Campbell, M.D., House Surgeon. Eebecca H., aged 38, pretty good constitution, but of intem- perate habits, was admitted into Bellevue Hospital, at 4 P. M., February 7th, 1858, with severe burns of both lower extremi- ties, caused the evening before by getting her clothes on fire. When admitted, she was suffering a great deal of pain, and her stomach was so irritable that she could scarcely retain any of the nourishment and stimulants that were given her. Her pulse was frequent and feeble, and she had slept none the night pre- vious. Stimulants and anodynes were given freelv, and her limbs were ordered to be dressed with cotton soake* in equal parts of linseed oil and lime water. Feb. 8th. Did not sleep any last night, although she had taken the eighth of a grain of morphine every hour since her admission ; her stomach still remains irritable ; her pulse con- tinues frequent and weak, and her limbs feel easier. Sub-nitrate of bismuth, opium, and a small quantity of carbonate of ammo- nia, ordered in pills, to be given with the view of allaying the irritability of her stomach. Beef tea and rare boiled eggs direct- ed to be taken in small quantities at a time. Stimulants and anodynes to be continued as before. This course of treatment was persevered in, but she did not improve much until February 11th, when she was able to retain all the nourishment that was given to her. Her pulse still remained frequent, although it was stronger than when she came into the hospital. She rested better at night, and continued doing well in every other respect from this time until the morning of February 15th, when she was attacked with the symptoms of trismus, that I first noticed by directing her to put out her tongue, which she could not do to any extent, as she could not separate her jaws more than three quarters of an inch. On inquiry, I ascertained that she had some stiffness in the muscles of the back of the neck. I then desired her to swallow a little beef tea, which she did with great difficulty and a feeling of choking. Morphine, in half-grain doses every two hours, was ordered to be given, and her allow- ance of stimulants increased. At 11.30 A. M. she was seen by Dr. Wood, who directed that she should be put upon a stimulant, anodyne and anti-spasmo- dic course of treatment. Twenty ounces of brandy and a pint of madeira wine were ordered to be given in the twenty-four hours. The morphine was given pretty freely by the mouth ; but as she could not swallow as much of the stimulants as was directed, they had to be in part injected into the rectum with two .s. vol. xrv. ko. v. 15 340 Case of Tetanus. [May- ounces of lac assafoetida and one drachm of tincture of opium every two hours. She was also directed to be kept as quiet as possible. *Her pulse at this time was 128, quick and moderate- ly fall, and her respiration a little more frequent than it had been for a few days past. There was not much increase in the severity of the symptoms up to 10 P. M. At 11 P. M. she com- menced sleeping, and continued doing so until 2 A. M., after which she remained wakeful. 9 A. M., February 16 pulse 128, quick and moderately full ; respiration 24; cannot separate her jaws more than one-third of an inch ; has great difficulty in deglutition ; muscles of the neck quite rigid ; head drawn back, and does not appear to suffer much when undisturbed. She has had no spasms except of the muscles of the back of the neck. Same treatment contin- ued. 6 P. M. With the exception of a little more difficulty in swal- lowing, is in much the same condition that she was this morn- ing. Feb. 17th, 9 A. M. Slumbered a little during the night ; pulse 132, quick and weak ; respiration 34 ; rigid spasm of all the muscles about the jaws and neck, and cannot drink from the feeding cup ; and all the fluid she swallows has to be inject- ed into her mouth with a small syringe. Her face assumes a livid hue during each attempt at deglutition. Has to lay on her side, owing to the strong contraction of the muscles on the back of her neck. Loud rales, produced by the air passing through the secretions in the mouth, can be heard while standing by her bedside. Her bowels moved during the night for the first time since the 14th. At 1.45 P. M., was seized with a convulsion that affected the whole body, but more especially the muscles of the back and neck.- Well-marked opisthotonos remains. Her jaws are rigidly closed, and she cannot swallow anything. At 3.40 P. M., has had another general convulsion that lasted for about a minute. At 4.45 P. M., has had another convulsion like the two former. Pulse 120, and weak ; respiration 45, and is perspiring quite freely. Chloroform was tried, and the muscles closing, the jaws relaxed a little. From this time until twenty minutes of six, when she died, she had a great many convul- sions. Just as she was breathing her last, all her muscles became quite flaccid. During the two hours preceding her death, one ounce of the tincture of opium with very near a pint of brandy and wine were injected into her rectum. She remained rational until the last moment of her life. Her burns looked healthy all the time. Post mortem 39 hours after death. Slight rigor mortis. Some venous congestion of the vessels of the brain aud spinal cord. About two ounces of serum escaped on opening into the dura 1858.] Tetanus relieved by Amputation. 3-il mater of the brain and cord. No other condition noticed in these parts. The right side of the heart, especially the right auricle, was distended with black, clotted blood, while the left side contained but very little. This organ felt normal. No ul- ceration could be detected in either the stomach or duodenum. The colon contained a great deal of scybalae. The bladder was empty and contracted. [American Med. Monthly. A Case of Tetanus Relieved by Amputation. By W. W. ANDER- SON, M.D., ofStateburg, S. C. Chavis, a strong, athletic negro man, in the prime of life, the property of Col. Richard Singleton, in the month of January, 18-io, was lifting a long, heavy inch plank, with a ten-penny nail driven to the head through one end of it. The plank acciden- tally slipped out of his hands and fell on his foot. The nail penetrated his great toe near the joint, and between the joint and toe-nail. The next day he went to his work as usual ; but a day or two afterwards his master, passing by, found him sitting by the road-side, and learning the cause of his leaving his work, ordered him to go home and poultice his foot. He did so, but continued to suffer considerable pain and uneasiness until the loth of the same month, when I was called to see him, about five days after the accident. I found him in pain, with symp- toms of approaching tetanus. An incision was made in the course of the wound, and spirits of turpentine applied. The usual remedies, such as mercurial purgatives, blisters, the free administration of opiates, etc., were followed up actively, but to no purpose. Violent spasms came on, accompanied with pain in the back of his neck, and constriction of his chest and abdo- men. The spasms increased in violence and frequency every- day, until the opisthotonos was so great that his head and heels were brought nearly into contact with each other during the spasms, and he was unable to swallow in the intervals of the paroxysms. So great were the debility and exhaustion, that I considered the case hopeless, and expressed this opinion to Col. Singleton, but said I wished to try the effects of amputation, as a last resort, to which he readily consented. Having only a pocket-case of instruments at hand, I rode to a carpenter's shop not far off, and borrowed a fine tenon saw, and immediately on my return began the operation. With a bistoury I made an incision around the toe, through the skin, and immediately over the joint, dissected up the integument, and turned it back; then completed the incision to the bone, and sawed it off between the joints, tied the artery, drew down the skin, and secured it with adhesive plaster, A soft compress over the stump, and 342 Researches on the general Paralysis of the Insane. [May, bandage, completed the operation. After a little rest, he swal- lowed a large dose of laudanum, and was ordered to be kept as quiet as possible. I now dissected the toe, and following the course of the wound, found at the bottom of it, imbedded in the cartilage near the joint, what I at first supposed to be the point of the nail ; but on further examination, it proved to be a hard piece of black leather, which had been punched from the man's shoe by the blunt nail, and deposited there. No inflammation was apparent in the cartilage ; but there is little room to doubt that this minute piece of hard leather was the cause of all the mischief. In a short time after the operation the spasms began to abate, and in a day or two ceased altogether. The patient was now convalescent. The toe healed kindly, and the man recovered his usual health. I saw him from time to time after- wards, for several years, a strong healthy negro. [Charleston Med. Journal. New Researches on the general Paralysis of the Insane. This affection, which has been, for the first time, well described by some French physicians, among whom particularly Bayle and Calmeil, has lately been the object of a very remarkable inaug- ural dissertation by M. Linas. One of the principal questions examined by this young physician, concerns the nature of this disease. Is it the effect of an inflammation of the encephalon or of its membranes, as Bayle, Delaye, Calmeil, Parchappe and others admitted, or is it a purely nervous affection of the brain, as Lelut and others have maintained ? Already Bayle had opened one hundred corpses of paralytic insane, and Calmeil forty-seven. They had found the meninges of the convexity of the cerebal lobes opaque, injected, hardened, infiltrated with serosity, and offering frequently granulations or false membranes. M. Linas has opened one hundred and four- teen bodies of paralytic insane. In twelve cases he has found the pia-mater excessively injected. The cerebral substance was quite full of blood, the grey matter being from an intense red to a dark violet. In twenty -eight cases, besides the preceding al- terations, there were adhesions between the convolutions and the meninges. In seventy-four cases, the meninges were infil- trated, opaqe, and as tough as a fibrous membrane ; the cortical substance of the brain, sometimes violet, sometimes yellowish, according to the degree of the paralysis, always softened, less thick than in normal brains; the white substance injected, and sometimes infiltrated ; the convolutions me.igre, and the whole mass of the brain more or less atrophied. In thirteen cases, besides the preceding alterations, there was 1858.] Transfusion of Blood. 843 one or many small circumscribed places where the encephalitis had been more violent than elsewhere. In eight cases there were also effusions of blood. From these facts, it results positively that the paralysis of the insane depends upon a chronic inflammation of the brain and its meninges. Whether the disease begins in the membranes, as Bayle had said, or in the brain itself; as M. Calmeil maintains, is a question of comparatively little importance. The great point is, that the brain is always inflamed. M. Calmeil has ascertain- ed with the microscope, that in doubtful cases, when the brain did not seem to be much altered with the naked eye, there were, nevertheless, all the microscopical appearances of inflammation. M. Linas relates cases to prove, that an acute encephalitis may cause the paralysis of the insane. As regards the first symptoms of this affection, M. Linas de- clares, that sometimes intellectual disorders first appear, and in other cases, muscular paralysis and insanity appear at the same time. It has been said that there was always what is called by the French, ambitious delirium. But Parchappe, Trelat, Lasegue, have shown that there are exceptions to this rule, and that, there- fore, there is nothing specific or essential in this symptom. M. Linas goes farther, and he calls this opinion a paradox. Ac- cording to him, the delirium of paralytic insane has sometimes the monomaniac form, sometimes the hypomaniac, and in other - the maniac; but he acknowledges that ambitious ideas are extremely common. [New York Jour, of J. ion of Blood. I have communicated several papers on this subject to the rices (see Cbmptei li Not. 185 7, p. 925), to the Societede Biologie, and to the CercU ,ces. It is known that Blundell had found that a dog, bled almost to death, can recover, even if blood of a mammal of another spe- cies, be transfused into its veins; but that after a few days death always comes ; while the blood of another dog being employed for the transfusion, may reproduce a lasting life. Messrs. Prevost and Dumas declare also that mammals cannot be recalled permanently to life after a great loss of blood, if trans- fusion be made with blood of mammals of a species different from theirs. They state also, that the blood of animals transfused in the veins of birds, and vice verso, produces almost immediate death, after having caused violent convulsions. M. Eayer af- firms, also, that the blood of man kills rabbits, after having produced convulsions. DiefTenbach has sometimes seen animals recover after transfusion of blood of animals of other species, but 844 Transfusion of Blood. [May, never when they were in a state of apparent death after a con- siderable loss of blood. Bischoff also has never succeeded in restoring to life mammals that had lost a great deal of blood, in transfusing blood of birds in their veins. An important fact, found by Bischoff, should, however, have opened the way to more successful results in transfusion. He ascertained that the arterial blood of mammals can be injected in the veins of birds, without killing them, while the venous blood causes rapid death. I have found that venous and arterial blood do not differ one from the other, except on account of the different quantities of carbonic acid and oxygen they contain. Both may kill, if they are rich in carbonic acid ; both may not have any injurious influence if they contain a great quantity of oxygen. Numerous experiments have led me to the following conclusions : 1st. That arterial or venous blood from an animal of any one of the four classes of vertebrata, containg oxygen in a sufficient quantity to be scarlet, may be injected, without danger, into the veins of a vertebrated animal of any one of the four classes, provided that the amount of injected blood be not too consid- erable. 2nd. That arterial and venous blood of any vertebrated ani- mal, being sufficiently rich in carbonic acid to be almost black, cannot be injected into the veins of a warm-blooded animal, without producing phenomena of asphyxia, and most frequent- ly death, after violent convulsions, provided that the quantity of injected blood be not below one -five-hundredth of the weight of the animal, and also that the injection be not made too slowly. The reasons for which Blundell, Bischoff, and others have failed to restore a lasting life after the transfusion of blood of an animal of a species different from that of the transfused one, are: 1st, That the blood employed was not fresh ; 2nd, that it was in too large a quantity ; 3rd, that it was injected too quickly ; 4th, that it was too rich in carbonic acid, and too poor in oxygen. The greatest causes of failure were this last one, and after it the quantity of blood. From my experiments I have arrived at the conclusion, that there is no danger in employing the blood of dogs, cats, or other mammals in transfusion in man. Besides, I have ascertained, after Dieffenbach and others, that defibrinated blood is as good as blood containing fibrin. As regards the quantity of blood, I think that four or five ounces would be as much as can be need- ed for an adult man or woman. It is not necessary to warm the blood, but it may be useful to do it in some cases. The blood to be transfused, either that of man or of mammal, should be received in a large open vase, and whipped at once, then passed through a thick cloth. If it is not injected at once, it must be 1858.] Indications and Treatment of Croup. 345 either whipped again, or, at least agitated to be charged with oxygen just before transfusion, wh:ch can be performed with any kind of syringe. The injection must be extremely slow, and if after the injection of two or three ounces, there is increase in the respiratory movements, it is well to stop for ten or fifteen minutes before finishing the transfusion. [New York Journal of Medicine. On Indications and Treatment of Croup. According to Luszinsky, of Vienna, there are four indications to be followed in croup, which are 1st, to alter the peculiar crasis of the blood. This indication requires anaplastics, of which hepar sulphuris, sulphate of copper, and tartar emetic are either too uncertain, or too dangerous, because repeated vomit- ing would be injurious by congestion of the brain, and mercury, which readily injures by producing diarrhoea, salivation and general mercurialisrn. Better than all of them, are alkalies, which Luszinsky seems to have recommended prior to Lemaire and Marechal, of Paris. The hydrate of potash or soda is most antiplastic, but they are not easily tolerated; the bicarbonate is the most digestible, but the abundance of carbonic acid in the chemical composition of the bicarbonate of potash or soda dimin- ishes the medicinal effects of the alkalies; therefore he gives the carbonate of potash or soda, from one half of a drachm to two drachms every day. 2nd To prevent the localization of the inflammation in the larynx. This indication requires no bleed- ing, nor leeches, but in the first stages of the disease, cold ap- plied to the laaynx, and large blistering plasters, kept in suppu- ration for some days. 3rd To remove the spasm of the larynx by narcotics. 4th To destroy or remove the pseudo-membranes which have been formed. The best caustic in these cases is a solution of from four to eight grains of nitrate of silver in an ounce of water, which is to be applied by a brush. Emetics are necessary, where pseudo-membranes are loose, or beginning to loosen, in the larynx or bronchi. {Journal fur Kinderkrank- heiten, and Ibid. On the Abuse of Irritating Applications in certain Forms of Oph- thalmia. By Mr. Ceitciiett. There was recently a case under Mr. Critchett's care, in the Royal Ophthalmic Hospital, in which the greatest benefit has been derived from desisting from the measure which had pre- viously been employed. The patient is a lad of eighteen, to whose eyes, for four years past, stimulating drops had been daily 346 Epilepsy treated by Ligation of Artery. P^&y, applied, on account of chronic inflammation and thickening of the conjunctiva. His eyes had been kept in a state of constant irritation, and when admitted his vision was very imperfect, on account of superficial vascularity of the cornea. He had been sent up from a considerable distance in the country. Mr. Critchett directed the eyes to be left quite alone, a single seton thread being introduced in each temple. The improvement was extremely rapid, and within a week the greater part of the vascularity had cleared away. No doubt the seton has had some good influence ; but, looking at the rapidity of the cure, it seems certain that the chief agent has been the rest from injuri- ous applications. Cases more or less similar are constantly pre- senting themselves, in which, with a perverseness worthy of a better cause, irritating collyria have been employed for periods far too long. \Med. Times and Gaz., and Banking's Abstract. Epilepsy treated by Ligation of the Common Carotid Artery. By C. Angell, M. H., of Pittsburg, Indiana. Dr. AngRl has resorted to ligation of the common carotid artery on one side in two cases of epilepsy. The first operation was performed in July, 1857. The patient, a male, was twenty years of age, about five feet in height, large head, short neck, sanguine temperament, and of full habit. Epilepsy had existed for three or four years, the fits progressively becoming more fre- quent and severe. He had become partially idiotic. He had from fifteen to twenty fits during the forenoon of the day on which the operation was performed. The day after the opera- tion he complained of difficulty in swallowing, and the left side became incompletely paralyzed. The paralysis continued, with difficulty of articulation and swallowing, till the next day, when he died in a comatose condition. The epileptic paroxysms did not recur after the operation. The second operation occurred a few days after the first. The patient, a male, was forty years of age, of a full habit and sanguine temperament. Epilepsy had existed for seven years. For the last three years the paroxysms had recurred almost daily. The mind was much affected. He recovered from the operation satisfactorily, and had no return of the epilepsy for twenty- two days. At the end of that time he had a paroxysm on two suc- cessive days. Seventeen days after this a third paroxysm occur- red, and about a month afterwards a fourth. These four parox- ysms were all that had taken place up to the time of writing the report, a period of a little more than two months. The paroxysms after the operation differed from those which occur- red previously as regards premonitions. Prior to the operation, 1858.] Removal of a Large Uterine Polypus. 347 lie had no warning of their approach; but after the operation, a sensation of dizziness preceded the attacks for several minutes, giving him time to provide against falling. The patient declared that he felt better than at any time during the three years ; some of his friends thought that there was a decided improvement in his general appearance and men- tal condition. The report is made too recently after the operation to warrant any conclusion as to its permanent value in this instance. [Xorth- Western Med. and Surg. Journal. A Large Uterine Polypus removed by the Curved Ecraseur vriih Double Action. A woman fifty years of age, who had been suffering from frequent uterine haemorrhage during the last two years, was ad- mitted into the Samaritan Hospital ten days ago, under Dr. Savage's care. Many examinations had been made elsewhere previously by various surgeons ; but a polypus, if suspected, until the day before her admission, was probably quite out of reach. A swelling could even now be scarcely made out by the finger introduced far into the os uteri. Sponge tents were intro- duced daily. On the third day the tumour became more distinct, and then rapidly distended through the dilated os into the vagi- na. On the fourth day it could be felt in size and shape like a large jargonel pear (its neck not much less than its body,) extend- ing into the uterus to be attached somewhere towards its back part. On the fifth day the polypus was lain hold of by a pair of ring forceps, the loop chain of the ecraseur being passed over the handle of the forceps, slipped up, and was drawn tight, pre- cisely as the cord in the ordinary operation by ligature, and the tumour was brought away without pain or haemorrhage. Dr. Savage observed that the unwieldly look of the instrument was suggestive of much pain and difficulty ; but its curve fell into the hollow of the sacrum with the utmost facility, and its point as readily passed into the uterus as high as he thought necessary. As the chain is flexible only on one side, much careful manipu- lation was required before it could be got where he thought it ought to be. Before working the handle which tightened the chain, the single fore- finger readily ascertained that nothing improper was included. The handle was worked at half-minute intervals as soon as decided resistence showed that contraction had commenced. The tumour came away in six minutes. From first to last the patient said she felt no pain whatever. The haemorrhage has not appeared. Dr. Savage said he had heard of two cases of polypus thus treated in this country, but 348 On the Functions of the Thyroid Body, [May, believed they had not been recorded. He had several times seen M. Chassaignac remove parts highly vascular with his ecraseur without the least hemorrhage, and thought as the plan he had adopted in this case was equally safe as the ligature, without any of its obvious annoyances, he would add his testimony to its value through the Medical Society. Dr. Savage strongly recom- mended an instrument with the double action, the finishing improvement of the inventor, M. Matthieu. [London Lancet. On the Functions of the Thyroid Body. By Dr. P. Martyn. Dr. Peter Martyn has communicated to the Koyal Society some very ingenious speculations as to the use of this remarka- ble body. He first called attention to the necessity of rigidity in all round instructions. This is accomplished, he thinks, by the thyroid gland, which, being pressed upon by the muscles, during the act of speaking, becomes gorged with blood, and presses upon the larynx, rendering it tense. Furthermore, he believes this so-called gland acts as a loader. In musical instru- ments, loaders are used to render the vibrations slower and long- er, and the tone in consequence fuller, louder and deeper. They thus give to the voicing part of a small instrument the power and quality of a large one. The human organ of voice is only three inches long, and yet " has the same power as, and better quality of tone than, the instrument which more nearly ap- proaches it the French horn which is nine feet, or the 'vox humana' pipe of a moderate-sized organ, which is from four to eight feet long. This economy of size in the human organ has always been wondered at, but never, that I know, explained." Finally, the author of the paper believes that by the varying shape, bulk, destiny and pressure of this body, it aids materially in producing the qualities of modulation and expression belong- ing to the human voice. [Amer. Jour, of Med. Science. Treatment of Intermittent Fever. There is a means of treatment of fever and ague, which is by far too much neglected. It consists in applications of the cold shower-bath a little before fever sets in. Although we do not admit, as it might be concluded from a paper of M. L. Fleury, that every case will be cured by this mode of treatment, we think that the facts mentioned by this able physician are worthy of attention. He states that he has treated, during the last ten years, one hundred and fourteen patients, and that they all have been cured, only by cold shower baths, and that there has not been a single return of the disease. Forty-three were recent 1858.] Uterine Haemorrhage. 349 cases, having existed from two days to three months; seventy- one were old and rebellions cases. In all these last cases there was an enlargement of the spleen, or of the liver, or both ; there was anaemia or even a cachectic state. One single shower-bath has often been enough to effect the cure. It has never been necessary to give more than five show- er-baths. Not only is periodical fever cured by this means, but all kinds of periodical affections may also be cured in the same way. When the periodical attacks are stopped, there are irregular ones, in most of the cases, as long as the engaged viscera have not been brought down to their normal volume. In these cases local douches have been applied twice a day, on the hepatic or splenic regions. [Comptes Rendus de V Acad, des Sciences, and New York Journal of Medicine. Injection of Liquor-Ferri Sesquichlorati in Uterine Hemorrhages. Dr. Breslau's case of injection of liquor-ferri sesquichlorati shows the efficacy of this treatment in certain cases of excessive uterine haemorrhage. A woman, 45 years old, had worn a pes- sary for a long time, which she had given up on account of pain and hemorrhages. Examined, there were found five grape- shaped polypi around the os uteri, with ulceration. These were removed by Siebold's scissors, and potassa fusa applied to the ulcerations. The haemorrages remitted somewhat. The uterus was, however, entirely bent upon itself, and the menses returned in great excess. The cavity of the uterus was somewhat enlarg- ed. The return of the menorrhagia reduced the patient to an extreme degree of anaemia. Ergot of rye failed to effect any contraction of uterus or arrest of flooding. Two possible condi- tions presented themselves to Dr. Breslau: 1st, The five polypi attached to the cervix favored the presumption that there exist- ed a similar warty hypertrophy of the lining membrane of the uterus ; 2d, There might be a destructive ulcerative process of a malignant character going on in the same structure. In the first case, the currette of Recamier seemed indicated, in order to scrape the uterine membrane clean from the presumed excrescen- ces. In the second case, it seemed necessary to bring a caus- tic and styptic agent in direct contact with the diseased mem- brane. To answer this latter indication, he selected the liquor- ferri sesquichlorati of the Bavarian Pharmacopoeia. Having first straightened the retroflected uterus by the sound, and in- serted an elastic catheter as far as the fundus, he injected one ounce and a half of the liquor-ferri, diluted with an equal quan- tity of water. The injected fluid was retained in the uterine cavity for a minute and a half by the pressure of the fingers at 350 Statistics of Coiling of the Funis. [^ay the os around the catheter. During the operation, the patient felt a dull labourlike pain which lasted for two hours. The hae- morrhage, which had hitherto been unintermitting, now sudden- ly stopped, and was not renewed. After some days, brown, crumbling clots were discharged, but no fluid blood. Seven months afterwards there had been no return of menorrhagia. The patient menstruated regularly every twenty-one to twenty- four days; and through internal administration of steel and quinine, recovered robust health.' [British and Foreign Medico- Chirurgical Review. New Orleans Med. News and Gazette. Statistics of Coiling of the Funis. By Dr. Weidemann. Dr. Weidemann states that among 28,430 deliveries the funis has been found coiled around the child in 3,379 instances. In 3,230 of these it was coiled around the neck, and in 149 around other parts of the body. Of the 3,230 cases, 2,546 consisted in a simple coil, and in 684 there were severe coils. In relation to the causes of this occurrence, it is interesting to notice that of 1,788 cases occurring at the Marburg Midwifery Institution, the funis was in 80 (1:22.2) under 15 inches, and in 183 above 25 inches (1:9.71) in length ; that in 54 (1.33) there were very little liquor amnii, and in 41 (1:43.6) there was very much; in 165 (1:10.8) the child was under 5 pounds weight, and in 28 (1:61.7) it was 8 pounds. Therefore, among the favoring causes of the occurrences may be mentioned a long funis, abundance of liquor amnii, and a small child. Among 2,930 infants born at Marburg, 182 (1:16.09) were dead, 251 (1:12.41) were still-born. Of 725 born with coiled funis, 45 (1:16.11) were dead, and 72 (1:10.%) were still-born. Of the 45 dead-born, in 18 only could the death be referred to this alone, i. e., only 1:40.2 in the 725 examples of coiling. From an ex- amination of the figures derived from the midwifery institutions at Dresden, Gottingen, Wiirsburg, Berlin, and Marburg, it re- sults that of 13,720 new-born infants, 902 (1:15.21) were born dead ; while in the 1,217 instances of coiling of the funis, 31 children were born dead, whose death could be attributed to that circumstance, giving a proportion of 1:39 to the coilings, and 1:19 to the number born dead. Thus, as (1) the 16th child among new-born children in general, as well as among those in which coiling has taken place, is born dead ; as (2) the 12th child among the new-born in gen- eral, and the 10th among those around whom the funis is coiled is born still-born ; and as (3) in one child in 40 only can this coiling be regarded as really the cause of death, it is evident that this accident does not occupy a very prominent place. [Monatsch. fur Geburtskunde, and Med. Times and Gaz. 1858.] Case of Diabetes Traumaticus. 351 Case of Diabetes Traumaticus. Translated for the Charleston Med. Jour, and Review. Dr. Herman Itzigsohn reports the following case in Virchmtts Archiv, for April 1857: A Mechanic, aged thirty-eight years, unmarried, previously in good health, received a year ago, a blow from the blade of a hatchet on the top of the head, a little to the left of the median line. He immediately suffered from incontinence of urine ; but he could void it copiously on making a strenuous effort. Gradually diabetes manifested itself. Inor- dinate thirst supervened, the patient drinking sixteen quarts of fluid daily, which naturally produced a corresponding flow of urine. He dieted himelf on bacon, which he craved more than any other kind of food. At this time yellow discoloration of the conjunctivas announced disorder of the liver, which condi- tion was further indicated by swelling and uneasiness in the hepatic region. This case is in two respects worthy of notice : firstly, for its traumatic origin ; secondly, for the tardy appearance of the liver affection. In accordance with Bernard's theory, it may be sup- posed that a splinter of bone was driven into the fourth ventricle, or that an extra vasated clot occurred there ; although it is not probable, as there was not the slightest appearance of the brain being injured, either by shaking of the head, or any other irregular movement ; neither was there vertigo nor headache at any time. It remains yet to be proved whether diabetes is to be traced primarily to a diseased brain, and secondarily to the liver, or not. The expression of opinion is desirable on so im- portant a question. Condition of the Nerves in Degenerated Tissues. Translated for the Charleston Med. Jour and Review. In Yischow's Archiv, Band XL, Heft 2, p. 200, we find the following summary of the researches of Fred. Marfels. The author examined the condition of the nervus vagus in four human subjects, the victims of pulmonary phthisis and maras- mus. He ascertained that the fatty degeneration does not attack the nerves immediately; but that the metamorphosis begins in developement of cells, which in the nerve fibres itself should normally proceed. He describes the same as nucleus-holding cells of the size of the small colorless blood corpuscles, which lie in the midst of the fibres, for the most part without any interven- ing granular substance ; and, strange to relate, he finds that neither potash, ether, nor iodine decompose them. Once when examining the ischratic nerve, he found these cells even inside 352 Calcareous Salts in the Treatment of Rickets. [May, the axis cylinders, which observation corresponds with the dis- covery made in some of the lower animals of the existence of cells in the nerves, partly granulated and non-nucleated, and partly transparent, clear and nucleated, strung together in the central cord of the nerves. The author did not find nuclei in the sheath of the primitive nerve-fibres in man ; but in animals he thinks he saw them, where the nerve-sheaths appear to be filled by these fibres. Twice he observed the escape of the nerve contents from the sheath, when at the same time he saw the above alluded to cells. Calcareous Salts in the Treatment of Rickets. Dr. W. Budd, of the Bristol Koyal Infirmary, states (British Medical Journal, Jane, 1857, p. 514) that he has derived better results, in the treatment of rickets, from the compounds of lime, than from any other remedial means. In cases short of rickets, too, where children with large heads, tumid bellies, and pasty complexion, whose spines are too weak to support their bodies, who are slow in intellect, and backward in teething, and have reached the age of eighteen months or more, without showing any desire to take to their feet, the beneficial influence of calca- reous compounds is equally manifest. In such cases, Dr. Budd gives five or ten grains of phosphate of lime, in chalk mixture, thrice daily, adding a simple chalybeate if anosmia is palpably present. At the end of a fortnight, the improvement of the patient is generally conspicuous. Dr. Budd believes that the deterioration in the teeth of the rising generation is due to the insufficient supply of the inorganic constituents of these organs in the food of children, and suggests that children in cities should be fed, in part, during dentition, on biscuits containing a proportion of salts of lime. [Virginia Med. Journal. On Lead Colic. By M. Briquet. Avery interesting communication has been made to the Aca- demie de Medicine, by M. Briquet, physician of the Cbarite hospital. The object of the paper is the nature and treatment of lead colic. What is the seat of the violent pain which then exists f Is it the digestive canal the muscles of the abdomen the diaphragm ? Is the spinal cord affected, as Laennec and Barbier admitted? Is the pain purely neuralgic, as maintained by Andral and Grisolle? M. Briquet affirms, from researches made on forty-four patients, that the pain is in the muscles of the abdomen, sometimes in one, sometimes in many. He says also, that there is in some cases a real hyperesthesia of the skin 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 353 in the neighborhood of the painful muscles. In some patients, however, the reverse exists : the skin is anaesthetic. He affirms that constipation has no influence whatever on the abdominal pain. He proposes in another paper to relate cases to prove that the application of galvanism to the painful muscles usually takes away the pain at once. We can assert that it is perfectly true that the pain may disappear immediately in cases of lead colic, after one application of an electro-magnetic current. [Ibid. EDITORIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS. Editorial. On account of the space occupied this month by an un- usual amount of original matter, and the space given to the minutes of the State Society, our Editorial matter must be deferred for the next month. Minutes or the Annual Meeting of the State Medical Society. Madison, April 14th, 1858. The Society assembled at 10 o'clock, in the Town Hall, in Madison, and was called to order by the 1st Vice-President, Dr. H. F. Campbell, of Augusta. The following regular members were present : Drs. J. G. Westmore- land, M. H. Oliver, John W. Jones, T. C. H. Wilson, Thos. S. Powell, W. T. Hollingsworth, W. S. Meiere, Jos. P. Logan, A. Means, V. H. Taliaferro, G. L. McCleskey, Henry F. Campbell, Eben. Hillyer, J. K Simmons, Juriah Harriss, E. E. Jones, DeSaussure Ford, S. G.Anderson, Win. Louis Jones. The minutes of the last annual meeting, held in Augusta, April 8th, 1857, were read and approved. The rules were suspended, and upon written application, the following gentlemen were duly elected members of the Society : R. T. Pulliam, A. J. Shaffer, J. N. Coe, L. J. Green, A. M. Parker, Isham 'H. Ragan, J. H. Conaly, F. S. Colley, S. J. Saffold, L. T. P. Har- well, L. G. Anderson, J. M. Boring, R. J. Stewart, S. H. Dean, S. H. Smith, L. S. Means, A. M. Boyd, W. F. Westmoreland, H. W. Brown, B. M. Smith, H. J. Walker, Wm. H. Philpot, Wm. B. Crawford, Gasby Night. The election of officers being next in order, a ballot was ordered, and the following gentlemen were elected for the ensuing year : Dr. J. P. Logan, of Atlanta, President ; Dr. H. J. Ogleby, of Madison, 354: Miscellaneous. [May, 1st Vice-President; Dr. John T. Banks, of Zebulon (Pike county), 2nd Vice-President ; Dr. Eben Hillyer, of Rome, Treasurer and Secretary. On motion, a committee of two were appointed to conduct the Presi- dent elect, Dr. Joseph P. Logan, to the chair ; which being done, he returned his thanks to the Society, in a few appropriate remarks, for the honor conferred upon him. Dr. E. H. W. Hunter, of Louisville, was, by ballot, elected to deliver the Oration at the next annual meeting. Dr. G. L. McCleskey, of Mad- ison, as his alternate. The selection of delegates to the American Medical Association being next in order, a committee of five, consisting of the following gentlemen, were appointed to nominate them, and report at their earliest conven- ience : Dr. Ford, Dr. Harriss, Dr. W. F. Westmoreland, Dr. Simmons and Dr. Boyd. Society then adjourned until 2 o'clock P. M. AFTERNOON SESSION. Society called to order by the President. Dr. Hillyer, by appointment, read an essay upon the Physiology of Menstruation. The committee to appoint delegates to the American Medical Asso- ciation, reported the names of the following gentlemen : Juriah Harriss, of Savannah ; W. T. Hollingsworth, of Morgan ; F. S. Colley, of Wal- ton ; W. G. Bulloch, of Savannah ; H. F. Campbell, of Augusta ; H. M. Boyd, of Cave Spring ; Eben. Hillyer, of Rome ; B. M. Smith, of Atlanta ; C. B. Nottingham, of Macon ; R. Q. Dickinson, of Albany ; E. M. Pen- dleton, of Sparta ; James Green, of Macon ; J. F. Banks, of Zebulou. The essay of Dr. Meiere being called for, he responded in a very inter- esting article upon the use of Alcohol in Typhoid Fever. Society adjourned till 7 o'clock P. M. Society met, pursuant to adjournment. Dr. W. F. Westmoreland moved, that the mode of appointing Essay- ists and subjects be changed. That each gentleman appointed be allow- ed to write upon any subject of his own selection. Upon motion, Drs. Campbell, E. Jones Oliver, W. F. Westmoreland, and Dean, wrere appointed a committee to nominate Essayists for the next meeting. The report of the late Treasurer, Dr. Nottingham, for the years 1856- 185V, were received and adopted. A ballot was ordered, to determine upon a point for the next annual meeting, which resulted in the selection of Atlanta. 1858.] Miscellaneous. 355 Dr. J. G. Westmoreland moved, that two hundred copies of the Con- stitution, By-Laws, Roll of Members, (fee., be ordered to be published in pamphlet form, for distribution among the members of the Society. Dr. Meiere moved, as a substitute, that all the medical journals in the State be requested to publish the Constitution, &c, in their columns which substitute was carried. The Committee on Essays reported the names of the following gentle- men, as Essayists for the next annual session of the Society : Dr. H. W. D. Ford, Dr. H. F. Campbell, Dr. Robert Campbell, Dr. Smith of Griffin, Dr. E. Hillyer, Dr. Stewart of Pike county, Dr. G. B. Night, Dr. S. H. Dean, Dr. W. F. Westmoreland, Dr. W. H. Doughty of Augusta, Dr. Juriah Harriss, Dr. J. G. Howard, Dr. R. D. Arnold, Dr. V. EL Taliaferro, Dr. Joseph A. Eve, Dr. A. M. Boyd, Dr. Joseph P. Logan, Dr. H. W. Brown, Dr. J. M. Green, Dr. T. B. Ford, Dr. G. L. McCleskey. On motion of Dr. Means, it was passed, that the report of any inter- esting case, or other communication, would be gladly received from any gentleman by the Society. The following report was received from Drs. Bulloch, and Arnold, a committee appointed by the Savannah Medical College, to solicit the co-operation of the Society in procuring the legalization of dissections, for medical and surgical purposes, and the modification or repeal of the laws now in force against it : To the President and Members of the Medical Society of the State of Georgia : Gentlemen We, the undersigned committee, have been appointed by the Faculty of the Savannah Medical College, and instructed to con- fer with you, asking your concurrence in a movement having for its object the passage of a law by the Legislature of Georgia, legalizing dis- section for the purposes of medical and surgical study. To effect this great object, we would most respectfully solicit the So- ciety to unite wTith us in a petition to the Legislature, at their next session, to pass an Act rendering it lawful for the Professors and Teachers in Medical Colleges and Schools in this State, to receive for Anatomical study the unclaimed bodies of persons dying at public hospitals and other kindred institutions. Such a law is in force in other States. Accompanying this, will be found a copy of the Statute enacted by the Legislative Assembly of the State of New York. The New York law concedes, as you will observe, very little else than the single point of legalizing dissection. Even this may be of immense practical service, by ridding us of the annoyance to which we may be at any time exposed, whilst the possession of a dead body, even for scientific purposes, is, according to the existing law, equivalent to a crime to which, evil disposed persons might at any time call public attention. Is it not the bounden duty of the State to see that the Medical Profess- 15* 356 Miscellaneous. [^a7 ion of the land, who are the true missionaries to suffering humanity, lack nothing needful for their efficiency and usefulness, without the necessity of going out of the State to obtain this knowledge not forgetting that it is this profession alone that can be brought to bear on the waste of human life. The public demands that the medical institutions shall furnish it with good and accomplished physicians and surgeons, yet it has set its face against the only means of obtaining them. But at the present time, un- der its present prosperity and attainment, there is that advancement made in other branches of learning and science there is that enlightened poli- cy in legislation upon all matters of general interest and improvement, that we have a right now to expect and to ask for some measure, some means, whereby we can procure material for dissection in some legitimate manner, that we may be enabled to make that progress and advancement in our profession that will raise it to that rank and standard it so nobly bears in other sections of our land. We wish to be relieved from this false and dangerous position that affixes upon us the stigma of felons, in the acquisition of anatomical knowledge, and all these difficulties and excessive annoyances under which we are laboring, and which we are now obliged to encounter and overcome, to make that progress and advancement in our profession that operates only to favor our more faithful discharge of duty. This is not for the exclusive advantage of me medical man : it seeks no other benefit than that which it wishes all others to enjoy : it is for the common good. Every intelligent man, whether professional or non-professional, cannot but admit that the interests of society imperatively demand the study of practical anatomy. Then why should not the State make a suitable arrangement by law. Is there any reason why we should stand in this matter behind New York, Massachusetts, Michigan, and many other states, in an enlightened policy. Considering the rights of the medical profession, in the just and proper estimate of its value, and in comparison with the privileges that are extended to it in other states, let there be removed from our Statute books those laws repressing the study of Sci- ence laws that should exist only in darker ages that now put a barrier in the way almost ruinous to the pursuit of anatomical investigation, and continually threatens and exposes us to a most disgraceful and ignomini- ous punishment ! We would prefer securing the passage of a more liberal law than that of the New York Act, so that if our views on this subject accord, any petition your honorable body may think proper to make, calculated to facilitate the passage of a bill, through the Legislature, would meet our hearty concurrence. WM. G.BULLOCH, M.D. R. D.ARNOLD, M.D. The following was passed, offered by Dr. Taliaferro, of Atlanta : Resolved, That the thanks of this Society be tendered to Col. C. R. Hanleiter, editor of the National American, for his presence on this occa- sion, and for the interest he manifests in the elevation of Medical Science, by the exclusion from the columns of his paper, the advertisement of all 1858.] Miscellaneous. 357 quack medicines, secret remedies and criminal drugs, which too frequent- ly pollute the public press. The following, passed, offered by Dr. Dean : Resolved, That the thanks of this Society be tendered to the town authorities of Madison, for the use of their Hall to the Trustees of the Presbyterian Church for the use of their Church building to the Physi- cians and citizens, for their courtesy and attention to the members of this Society. The following letter, to the Society, from Dr. Arnold, was presented and read by Dr. Harriss : Savannah, April 11, 1858. To the Officers and Members of the Med. Society of the State of Georgia : Gentlemen My engagements with Savannah Medical Journal have prevented, and will prevent me from fulfilling the appointment of the Society, in writing an article on the Pathology and Treatment of Yellow Fever. I think I can do the subject more justice, in carrying out the plan I have formed, of giving in successive numbers of the Journal a full history of our terrible epidemic of 1854, for which my notes taken at the time are ample. I respectfully request to be discharged from the further consideration of the subject. Respectfully yours, R. D.ARNOLD. The request of Dr. Arnold was granted. On motion, the following was passed : Resolved, That this Society do now adjourn, to reassemble in the city of Atlanta, on the second Wednesday of April, 1859. EBEN. HHLYER,M.D., Secretary. New Febrifuge. Azderach Bark. Dr. W. R. Cornish, of the Bengal ar- my, (Indian Annals of Med. Science, Oct. 1856,) states that the Margosa or Neem tree has long enjoyed a considerable reputation in India as a febrifuge, and that it belongs to the natural order Meliaceae and genius " Azadirachta." It is probably the Melia Azederach of our Pharmaco- poeia, and which under the name of Pride of India is so extensively em- ployed as a shade and ornamental tree in the Southern States. Here the bark is used as a vermifuge. Dr. C. describes the bark as being nearly white internally and purple externally. When chewed, in its recent state, its taste is at first sweetish, followed quickly by a powerful and lasting bitter. Dr. C. employed the bark during six months with nearly all the fever patients that came under his care, in the form of decoction, (the strength of which is not given,) from one to two wine-glassfuls being administered repeatedly before the accession of the paroxysm. Dr. Cor- nish considers that the active principal resides more especially in the light colored inner bark, the dark exterior being highly astringent, owing to a tannin analogous to that in catechu. [American Jour, of Pharmacy. 858 Miscellaneous. P^ay> Ampelopsis Quinquefolia, or Virginia Creeper. The common Am- pelopsis, or Virginia Creeper, so ornamental as a deciduous climbing plant in our woods and on many; walls in this city, is recommended by Dr. J. McCall as a remedy in dropsy. The bark of the vine is the part employed, and it should be gathered late in the Autumn, wThen the berries are fully ripe and the leaves begin to turn red and fall. It should be dried in the shade and preserved carefully from moisture. The Ampelopsis is readi- ly known by the quinate division of the leaf. Its creeping character and frequent occurrence on the same tree with Rhus radicans, or poison vine, should lead the collector to avoid substituting the latter, which has a three-lobed leaf. In its physiological effects it appears to " stimulate absorption and the elimination of matter through all of the outlets of the system rather than to act on any particular secretion, though by some it is stated to be ac- tively diuretic." Dr. McC. esteems the Ampelopsis a valuable addition to the materia medica ; it is not unpleasant to take, though in taste it is acrid and persistent. Its infusion and decoction are quite mucilaginous. [Mem- phis Jour, of Medicine. Cancer in a Woman aged Eighty Years. Soap and Lead Plaster in Schirrus. The same day that we saw the foregoing cases, wre observed a woman, eighty years of age, at the Cancer Hospital, with well-marked scirrhus of the left breast, which appeared about a year ag*o. Notwith- standing her great age, she had the blooming, healthy cheeks of a country girl of eighteen ; her general health was perfect, and under the use of tonic remedies, and soap and-lead plaster spread on leather, with a little camphor, the cancer has diminished in size, and its progress is complete- ly arrested for the piesent. This is by no means an exceptional case of the arrest of the progress of cancer at this hospital ; for we have observed several in whom the disease has been kept stationary for years, with no other inconvenience than the presence of the tumour in the breast, and the knowledge on the part of the patient that it was still there. The soap-and-lead plaster is one of the principal agents in effecting this desi- rable object ; the lead appears to possess some peculiar influence in the disease. [London Lancet. Powdered Chlorate of Potash as an Application to Ulcers, etc. For some time past, at the Metropolitan Free Hospital, Mr. Hutchinson has employed the powdered chlorate of potash as an application to cachectic ulcers. In most cases it appears to exert a very beneficial influence, speedily inducing cicatrization ; and it is very convenient of use. The cases in which it has best suited have been some of ulcers of the leg, open buboes, simple sores on the skin of the penis, and cracked nipples. In the latter it answers admirably. The salt should be powdered very fine and dusted into the sore with the finger. It produces sharp smarting for a short time, but the pain soon subdues. In most cases suitable for its use it is also desirable to prescribe its internal administration; but with a view to making the experiments more conclusive, in the cases upon which Mr. Hutchinson founded his opinion of its efficacy, no other treatment was adopted. [lb. 1858.] Miscellaneous. 359 Ulcerated Larynx in Typhoid Fever, Producing General Emphyse- ma. It was thought to exemplify an occasional complication of ty- phoid fever. The ease was one of a boy who lately died under Dr. Ad- dison's care, at Guy's Hospital. About the twelfth day of his illness his neck was observed* to be emphysematous, and in a few hours the face, arms, chest, &c, were in a like condition. This continued for ten davs, when he died. Besides the usual affection of the ileum, there was found at the back part of the larynx a sloughing ulcer, which communicated with a space between the oesophagus and trachea. Through this line the air had penetrated into the mediastinum, and so to the general sub- cutaneous tissue of the body. Considering the rarity of emphysema from such a cause, the case might be thought to be unique or accidental, but (Dr. Wilkes believed) for various reasons, it was probably not so. In the first place, emphysema had been alluded to by various writers as an occa- sional occurrence in typhoid fever, though the cause was unknown ; and secondly, a peculiar disease of the larynx had been described by various pathologists as a part of typhoid fever. In all probability, then, these two affections stood in the relation of effect and cause, and, therefore, although this was the first case of the kind he had witnessed, it afforded, in all likelihood, an explanation of an occurrence which rarely, though sometimes, happens in the course of typhoid fever. [lb. A Venereal Badge. M. Renaud states the following fact in a feuille- ton of the Gazette des Hopitaux : In Servia, a woman who is found to be suffering from syphilis, can claim admission into an hospital, or has the privilege of being treated at home by any medical man she chooses to call in. When she is attended at her own residence, she is obliged to wear a necklace fastened in front with a seal, which must be broken be- fore the necklace can be removed. The clandestine breaking of this seal is severely punished ; and any one coming in contact with the woman thus marked, must plainly see in what state of health she is. It is to be regretted that like measures are not in force in other parts of the East, where prostitution is carried on without any control. [lb. Case of Congenital Hypertrophy of the Tongue, and Amputation. This case was reported by Dr. Morrogh, of New Brunswick, X. J., and occurred in a girl seven years old. At birth the hypertrophy was moder- ate, but it had increased more or less rapidly till reaching its present dimensions ; the tongue was found protruding two inches outside the jaws. It measured two inches across the teeth, and was of a corres- ponding thickness. The papilla? of the protruded portion were enlarged, and the mucous membrane was thickened and indurated. On the under surface was a ragged, hard ulcer, produced by the pressure of the teeth. These were pressed forward considerably out of their natural position. The horizontal rami of the inferior maxilla were curved downwards so that, when the molar teeth came in contact, a space of about one inch remained between the upper and lower incisors. By this the girl was enabled to masticate and swallow without difficulty. After theexample of Dr. Harris, of Philadelphia, who, after endeavoring to amputate in a similar case by ligature, in 1829, performed the same operation, in 1835 by a double flap incision, checking the hemorrhage by ligature, Dr. Mor- 360 Miscellaneous. [May, rough operated by removing a V shaped portion from the anterior mid- dle part of the tongue, and ligating the ranine artery. Although copious hemorrhages followed, the patient went home well, on the sixth day after the operation. [Medical and Surgical Reporter. Transcendental Medicine; the Divine Unconscious. It is not man who cures disease by means of his conscious spirit ; but it is the divine Unconscious in man. The same power which fashions his organism, and daily recreates it in depths of mystery, is alone that which brings him back from sickness to health ; and all that man's inventive mind has learnt in the healing art, for long centuries, limits himself to providing means to facilitate, to further, and in general, perhaps, to render possible, the task of this divine Unconscious. . . We cannot, by an immediate ex- ercise of skill, cure the most trivial cut of the finger ; the healing of even such a wound as this depends on a formation of new organic substance, of which formation the divine Unconscious is alone capable; at most we can either hinder or further this process, and in the accomplishment of the latter aim lies the essence of the surgical art. [Dr. C. G. Carus : Ueber Lebanmagnetismus. London Lancet. Slitting up the Lachrymal Canals. The practice of slitting up the lachrymal canals and their orifices, originally introduced by Mr. Bow- man, for the treatment of certain cases of epiphora, still continues to be extensively employed at the Moorfields Ophthalmic Hospital. It is adapt- ed to all cases in which either the punctum is narrowed or displaced outwards, and these constitute a very numerous class. In almost all cases of long-continued tinea tarsi, in which, by degrees, the thickening of the lower Jid has everted its edge, this simple procedure relieves the patient of his most troublesome symptom. Mr. Critchett has recently had made some grooved steel probes for this operation, which materially facilitate its performance. The silver ones formerly employed being necessarily very small, were unsteady as guides to the point of the knife. The steel ones, on the contrary, give it good support, and their groove is of great advantage in securing that it shall glide easily in the right direction. To secure smoothness of surface, and prevent rusting, the steel probes are gilt. A Beer's knife is the best, and with these instru- ments the operation is one of extreme ease. [Med. Times and Gazette. Rules Respecting the Treatment of Primary Syphilis. It seems to be now pretty generally acknowledged, in hospital practice, that mercury should be given only in those cases in which the chancre presents marked induration, and that in all others secondary symptoms should be waited for before having recourse to specific treatment. In a large majority of sores not attended by induration, no constitutional phenomena will follow ; and to discriminate'between those likely to be so followed and the harm- less class, is admitted to be impossible. There is, therefore, no altera- tive, except we would give mercury very often unnecessarily, but to wait in these cases until the real nature of the affection shall have been made manifest. In the non-indurated class, local stimulants, as sulphate of copper, lunar caustic, or the acid nitrate of mercury, are the oldand ttll favorite remedies. If the chancre be seen within a week of its origin, 1858.] Miscellaneous. 361 whether induration have already commenced or not, vre believe most sur- geons would destroy it freely either by nitric acid or some other caustic. [Med. Times an:! Gazette. New Antiperiodic. Dr. R. S. Cauthorn, of Richmond, Va., gives an account of the root of Apocynum Cannabinum, as a powerful antiperio- dic. This power of the root was discovered by an herb doctor, by the name of Ragland, and the medicine is called "Dr. Raglard's Root of Man" by the people who had used it. About six grains of the root is administered in the form of powder or pills, preceded in cases of ague by a dose of calomel. Dr. Cauthorn expresses much confidence in the virtue of the Apocynum Cannabinum, and he may be correct in his infer- ences ; but as his own observations were only extended to six cases it may be well to get further information before admitting it to the rank claimed for it by Dr. Cauthorn, which can readily be effected, as the plant is found all over the Middle States. [Richmond Stethoscope. Corrosive Sublimate and Collodion as an Escharotic. Dr. Macke uses a solution of a drachm of corrosive sublimate in an ounce of collodion as an eschrrotic to remove small exerescences, which it is desirable to get rid of without using the knife. It is applied by means of a camel's hair brush. When the inflammation is high, it may be abated with cold water applications without interfering with the action of the caustic, the eschar is then thrown off in from three to six days, with slight pain, and the author has not noticed absorption to take place during its contact. [Hay's Journal. Gelatinized Chlorform. Dr. Massart (Revue de Therapeutique) gives the following process for making chloroform jelly for facilitating its use as a local anaesthetic, viz : Take equal parts of white of egg and chloro- form, shake the mixture and let it stand for three hours. Or take one part of white of egg and four parts of chloroform, put them in a bottle, which is then plunged in a water bath of the temperature of from 120 to 140 Fahr., when gelatinization occurs in four minutes. This prepara- tion is applied by rnbbing the painful part, and its power of affording re- lief is said to be remarkable. Dr. Massart prefers the cold process. If allowed to remain long in contact with the skin, it produces incipient cauterization. [Boston Med. Journal. Foul Ulcers of the Legs. A woman at St. Mary's Hospital, whose entire leg had been in a state of ulceration for years, with islands of skin here andthere, has had it effectually healed up, by Mr. Coulson, by wrap- ping a piece of linen around it wet with a lotion of the sulphate of soda, and a bandage over all. Mr. Coulson thinks the bandaging and rest have proved as serviceable as anything else used. [Ibid. Yeast in Scarlet Fever. Some years ago my attention was directed to the use of yeast in scarlet fever, by an article in your Journal from the pen of Dr. Smith, of Baltimore. I have given it this last winter in fifty- three cases, and all have recovered. These were all the cases in my 362 Miscellaneous, practice. Together with the yeast, inunction has been employed in two thirds of them. I believe that the free use of yeast may prevent a bad type of the dis- ease. It was given, at the outset, every two or three hours, in doses from a teaspoonful to a tablespoonful, and continued until desquamation. [A. S. McClean. Boston Med. and Surg. Journal. Poison Census. The Medical Times states, that in the four years, from 1848 to 1851, the deaths by poisoning ranged from 444 to 447 each year. In the three subsequent years, 52, '53, and '54, the number of deaths by poisoning was 370, 409, and 398. This decrease is attributed by Dr. Farr, to a certain extent, to the effect of the Legislative restrictions from the " Sale of Arsenic Act." [Druggists Circular. Edinburgh Celebrities from an American Point of View. Dr. Simp- son, a short thick man, with what General Massey calls "body of Bac- chus and the head of Jove," really a very fine head, covered with long black curls, seamed with gray, a round Scotch face, high cheek-bones, penetrating mild eyes and curious prim mouth, deep sunk between the nose and chin, like that of Cicero. And there is no reason why it should not, for the doctor, too, is eloquent in his own sphere. He persuades nervous females into good health, and amuses all by his genial humour and stories. He is a bold experimenter, and has hit upon other things than chloroform. Many tales of his benevolence are told. The poor never apply to him in vain. Not a few of his own profession envy him, and assail his reputation for the love of novelties, etc.; while, on the other hand, the disciples of mesmerism and the water cure declare he could say something in their favor, if he had the courage and the good will. Pro- fessor Syme, the first operator alive, is a clean made, gentlemanly man, with a finely formed, baldish head a most concise, decided individual, sharp, curt, and unceremonious as his own knife, but always going direct to the heart of the matter, never wasting a drop of blood or a drop of ink, or a single word. He is not much addicted to giving drugs. He likes to see what he is about, and has no fancy for poisoning people at random with the preparation of chemistry. A colleague of these two, and an opponent of the former in reference to homoeopathy warfare in Scotland, a tall, compact, swarthy, bushy-haired man, dexterous at controversy, and capable of making a clear extempore statement, in a style that many lawyers would envy. [Scottish American Journal. Wendell Holmes on Controversy. " If a fellow attacked my opinions in print would I reply ? Not I. Do you think I don't understand what my friend, the professor, long ago called the hydrostatic paradox of con- troversy? Don't know what that means? Well, I'll tell you. You know that if you had a bent tube, one arm of which was the size of a pipe stem, and the other big enough to hold the ocean, water would stand at the same hight in one as in the other. Controversy equalizes fools and wise men in the same way and the fools know it." The London Lancet says " that Quacks bear the same relation to the Medical Profession, with that of the pediculus to the human being on whom it preys." SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL. (NEW SERIES.) Vol. XIV.] AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, JUNE, 1858. [No. 6. ORIGINAL AND ECLECTIC. ARTICLE XIV. Observations on Malarial Fever. By Joseph Jones, A.M., M.D., Professor of Physics and Natural Theology in the University of Georgia, Athens ; Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacy in the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta ; formerly Professor of Medical Chemistry in the Medical College of Savannah. PRELIMINARY OBSERVATIONS. In the present state of Medical Science, the complete investigation of all the effects and phenomena of 'disease, is impossible. Imperfections in our instruments ; imperfections in our methods of analysis and the complicated nature of the phenomena, render physiological and pathological investigations difficult and uncer- tain. The truth of this assertion may be established by an examina- tion of the relations of animated beings to exterior inorganic bodies, to each other, and to the physical and chemical forces. Organized animate bodies are composed of inorganic elements, and are governed by all the laws and phenomena of inorganic bodies, and are absolutely dependent, for their existence, upon inorganic bodies. They have, however, a new set of phenome- na, dependent upon the vital force; and in animals we have another set of phenomena, dependent upon the existence of the nervous system and intellectual faculties; and in man we have another set of phenomena, dependent upon the combination of the intellectual with moral faculties. K. S. VOL. XIV. KO. VI. 16 364 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, Inorganic bodies, with their properties, form the necessary conditions for the existence of plants and animals, just as the properties of cohesion nnd gravitation form the essential condi- tions for the existence of the universe, in its present arrange- ment. The phenomena of living beings, plants and animals, are therefore more complicated, and less general, than those of inorganic inanimate bodies. Without entering into an enumeration of all the distinctions,- between inorganic bodies and animated beings,- it may be statedr that inorganic bodies are homogeneous in structure, and would remain forever at rest, and unchanged, physically and chemi- cally, unless acted upon by extraneous forces ; whilst, on the other band,, all vegetables from the simple cell, to the most highly developed, and all animals from the simple cell animalcule, to the complicated organism of man, have arisen from cells, and are composed of cells, variously developed, and grouped so as to form organs, and systems of organs, and apparatus, capable of accomplishing definite results, when moved by the proper chemical and physical forces. The acts of development, nutrition, secretion, excretion and propagation are peculiar to plants and animals, and are directed by the vital force which is incorporated with, and presides overr every molecule of living organized matter, directing all its physical and chemical changes, so that amidst innumerable and unceasing changes the individuality of every organ, apparatus and animal is preserved. Physical and chemical forces exist independently of the vital force. The vital force, on the con- trary, cannot exist and manifest its peculiar effects, without matter and the physical and chemical forces. The germination and development of vegetables and animals1 and the maintenance of their life actions, depend essentially upon the correlation of the vital, chemical and physical forces. The study of complicated, highly developed plants, and animals, involves the consideration of their origin, development, structure, and relations to exterior bodies involves the consideration of the chemical and physical properties of the elements, and combination of elements, entering into their constitution, and the relations of the constituents of their bodies to the surrounding medium involves 1858.] JONES, on Malarial Fever. 365 the consideration of the relations of the vital, chemical and physical forces and intellectual and moral faculties involves the considera- tion of die relations of animated bodies to the forces of the sun. These phenomena may be studied with a greater degree of precision in the lowest orders of plants and animals, whose structures are simple. As we rise in the scale of vegetable and animal existence the phe- nomena of life become more complex and less general, and the conditions of existence become more complicated and restricted. The truth of this proposition is illustrated in a forcible manner, by the relation of vegetable and animal existence, to the distribu- tion of the forces of the sun upon the surface of our globe. Thus, as a general rule, after the inorganic elements and moisture have been supplied, the luxuriance and perfection of plants depend upon the intensity of the forces of the sun. The more complicated and perfect the vegetable structures, the closer is their dependence upon the proper supply and balance of the physical forces. The converse of this proposition is also true. The truth of this proposition is established by a reference to the distribution of plants upon the surface of our globe, and upon mountains which rise to a great height in tropical countries. Whilst, in equinoctial and tropical countries, where a suffi- cient supply of moisture combines with the influence of heat and light, vegetation appears in all its magnitude and glory ; on the other hand, in polar regions and upon the summits of lofty mountains, all the more complicated forms of vegetable existence disappear, and lichens and microscopic plants take the place of the majestic forests and impenetrable jungle. In the tropics, the lowest orders of plants are comparatively rare, whilst in the polar regions and upon the summits of moun- tains they form almost the entire vegetation. The plants which first form upon barren rocks and lava streams, and coral islands, are those of the most simple organization. The simply organ- ized lichens covering the bald-granite rocks are familiar to every resident of a primitive region. Along the sides of Etna, Ischia, Vesuvius, and other volca- noes, lava streams are seen stretching in all directions, which have flowed down like rivers. These lava streams are of different agea, and many of them were formed within the memory of 366 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, man. An investigation of these lava streams affords an oppor- tunity of determining the gradual distribution of vegetables. Some are still naked others have only a few plants, scattered here and there, in hollows and crevices, and in others the de- caying plants are forming a soil. According to the observations of Professor J. F. Schouw,^) the plants which first settle upon the naked lava, and form a soil for the more complex, are especially those lower and simply organized plants called lichens. Certain succulent and fleshy plants, as the Indian fig (Opuntia vulgaris), which are nourished chiefly by the carbonic acid and aqueous vapor of the air ab- sorbed by the stem and leaves, are also amongst the earliest inhabitants of the lava streams. Geology also teaches that the lower orders of plants appeared first upon our globe. As the luxuriance and perfection of plants depend upon the tem- perature of the surrounding medium and the intensity of the forces of the sun, so also the perfection of the nervous system ; and of all the organs and apparatus, and the activity and intelligence of animals, correspond, in a great measure, to the rapidity of the physical and chemical changes going on in the molecules of their bodies, and to the relations of the physical and chemical and vital forces, and to the temperature which they are able to maintain, regardless of that of the surrounding medium. As the chemical changes become feeble, and the temperature of animals descends and becomes dependent upon, that of the surround- ing medium, they become more simple in their organization and mode of life, the conditions of their existence become less restricted, and they resemble closely the simple forms of vegetables, and in the twilight of existence, zve can scarcely distinguish between the lowest forms of plants and animals. If we examine the relations of the physical and chemical agents to the animal kingdom, we will find that the most sim- ply constructed animals, many of which are devoid of a nervous system and special organs of sense, as the infusoria, are, as in the case of the simply organized plants, the most widely distributed over the face of our globe, and are at the same time far less dependent for their existence upon the temperature of the sur- rounding medium. (1) Schouw's Earth Plants and Man. Bohn's Scientific Library. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 367 Infusoria occur in immense numbers in every situation : in stagnant pools, in marshes, in mud of rivers, in peat earth, twenty feet below the surface ; in the structures and fluids of living animals and vegetables, in putrifying organic matter, in the bed and waters of the ocean, in snow, in ice, and in boiling springs. Sir John Eoss, in the year 1840, picked up some brash ice, of a brown yellow color, in the Arctic regions, not far from Mount Erebus, which was supposed to contain allu- minous matter, ejected in fine ashes from the volcano. Speci- mens were brought home in sealed glass vessels, and forwarded to M. Ehrenberg. This microscopist found the coloring matter to consist of myriads of infusoria, almost the whole of which reachad Berlin in 1844, in a living state. Here we see that these microscopical animals, after having been frozen and thawed out, lived without food for four years. Certain species of these animalcules have been found living and propagating in boiling springs, and some of them have been observed to recover, after drying in vacuo along with chloride of calcium and sulphuric acid for twenty -eight days, and after exposure to a heat of 248. (2) The infusorial animals were created at an early geologic period, and a large number of the fossil species which compose the Polirschiefer and semi-opal of Bilin, are found at the pre- sent time living and propagating in the seas and oceans. The infusoria form a chain connecting (he organic life of distant ages of the earth, and demonstrating, conclusively that the distribution of animals, and the power to survive physical changes, depends upon their development. The simpler the structures, the feebler the vital, nervous and physical forces, the less complicated the conditions of existence. The gelatinous medusas (Gelly fishes) occur in such vast num- bers in the cold Greenland sea, that they impart an olive-green color to the sea, rendering the water dark and opaque in com- parison with the ordinary cerulean hue. (2) See experiments of Doyere, in Mem sur les Tardigrades, et sur leur propriete derevenir a'la vie, 1842, pp. 119, 129, 131, 133. Also, Ehrenberg's Die lufuSions- thierchen, als vollkomme Organismem, 1838. (3) See Remarks on the real occurrence of Fossil Infusoria, and their extensive diffusion, by Prof. Ehrenberg, J. C. Poggendorffs Annalen der Physik and Chimie, vol. xxxviii., No. 5. Taylor's Scientific Memoirs, vol. 1, 1837, pp. 400 to 413 ; also, vol. 3, 1843, pp. 219-376. 868 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, The space- allotted to this article will not allow us to enter more fully into the consideration of the distribution and relation to the physical forces, of the other members of the invertebrate kingdom. These facts are sufficient to illustrate for this class of animals, this law, which has an immediate bearing upon our investiga- tions. Cold-blooded vertebrate animals, although more highly or- ganised than invertebrate animals, still show remarkable pow- ers of enduring extremes of heat and cold, without death. Fish may be frozen and again thawed out without a destruction of life. The rapidity with ivhich the absence of heat is attended with loss of sensibility and death, is directly proportional to the develop- ment and perfection of vertebrate animals. The relations, between the physical, chemical and vital forces, are strikingly exhibited in certain cold and warm-blooded ver- tebrated animals, which become torpid or hybernate during the winter season. In this state, all the chemical and physical actions are of the most sluggish character. The heart scarcely beats, the frequency and force of the action of the heart, and flow of the circulation, is greatly diminished, if not entirely stopped. The amount of carbonic acid thrown off from the lungs is greatly diminished, and all the chemical and physical changes of the elements of the tissues, and fluids and organs of these an- imals, are retarded. If the temperature of a warm-blooded animal be reduced in like manner, all its physical, chemical, and vital actions will be depressed, and the active animal will be reduced to the condi- tion of a sluggish cold-blooded animal, and death will rapidly ensue. There is, however, this great difference between the cold and warm-blooded animal the conditions of the existence of the latter are far more restricted than those of the former. The chemical changes of the cold-blooded animal are slow, and it can exist without food for weeks and months, whilst a few days starvation is fatal to the warm-blooded animal. These facts demonstrate conclusively that the conditions and phe- nomena of life are complicated and restricted, in exact accordance with the development and perfection of the organs and tissues of an- imals, and the rapidity of the chemical and physical changes of the molecules of their bodies, 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 369 To understand the bearing, complication and imperfections of pa- thological investigations, ice must take a general view of the most important phenomena and relations of man. Those who would at- tempt to investigate pathological and physiological phenomena, must first form clear concepAions of the phenomena to he investigated, and the perfection of the methods and instruments capable of being em- ployed in these investigations. Man is composed of inorganic elements, prepared and grouped into definite compounds in the vegetable kingdom, by the com- bined actions of the vital force, and the physical and chemical forces of the sun. Man is governed by all the laws and phenomena of inorganic bodies, and is absolutely dependent for his existence upon the existence and mutual relations of inorganic bodies. As all the motions, in the various forms of inorganic matter upon the surface of our globe, are excited by the forces of the sun, in like manner, all the forces of man, are dependent through vegetables, upon the forces of the sun. As there can be no creation of force in inor- ganic matter, independent of the Deity, so man, although an active being, cannot create any force, however feeble, any more than he can create or annihilate a particle of matter. His forces are the result- ants of the chemical changes of those substances, which, in the veget- able kingdom, have been elevated into a state of force by the action of the sun. The mechanical power which man, or any animal, is able to exercise, is exactly proportional to the amount of food consum- ed, assimilated and chemically altered in the production of the nervous and muscular forces. The power of a well-constructed steam-engine, is exactly proportional to the amount of fuel con- sumed, or, in other words, is exactly proportional to the amount of chemical action. The amount of chemical action is exactly pro- portional to the amount of force derived from the sun, and expended in grouping the molecules of matter, in such a manner, as to be capa- ble of chemical change and development of physical force. The power of falling water which turns the water-wheel, and accom- plishes various mechanical operations, is the resultant of the combined actions of gravity, and the heat of the sun. The laws of physics apply as well to the human machine in action, as to the changes in Oie exterior universe. 370 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, Man is the most perfect engine that has ever been constructed for the same amount of chemical combinations and decomposi- tions, he produces a much greater amount of work than the most perfect engine. Man has other phenomena besides the physical and chemical. He is a machine and something more. The generation, devel- opment, constitution, and structure of man is similar to that of all vegetables and animals. Man, in common with vegetables and animals, is endowed with vital force, and like them is dependent for his existence and action upon exterior bodies, and the physical and chemical forces. Man, in common with all animals, and in contra-distinction to vegetables, possesses a nervous system, endowed with special sensibilities. The nervous system is the apparatus which relates man and animals to the exterior world, and also relates the various or- gans and apparatus to each other, in such a manner, that amidst an innumerable number of complex actions, unity and harmony result. Man possesses not only a vital force, an organism composed of inor- ganic elements, perfect in its mechanical structure, and material arrange- ments of its parts, and a nervous system endowed with special sensibili- ties ; but he also possesses an intelligence endowed with special faculties, capable of receiving impressions from the motions of exterior bodies, and of exciting the forces by which it is surrounded, and a moral nature which relates him in a peculiar manner to the universe. The possession of moral and intellectual faculties combined, distinguishes man from every other form of matter, and every other being upon our globe. The immaterial, intellectual, moral soul of man has no direct communication with the exterior world. The mind receives impressions, transmits its volitions, and excites the mechanical structures of the engine by which it is environed, through the nervous system which is endowed with special sensibility. The impressions of exterior bodies, upon the nervous system, is always attended by a change of the structure of the nervous system. All the organs of sense are excited by changes of matter. The excitement of the nervous system and transmission of the 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 371 impressions are attended by a change of matter. Every act of the mind which excites the nervous sytem, is attended by a change of the chemical elements of the nervous system. Every action excited in the mechanical apparatus by the nervous system is commenced and sustained by a physical and chemical change of the elements of the muscular system, and nutritive fluids. The intellectual and moral faculties of man work only through and by the physical and chemical forces ; they are distinct from matter, they excite matter to action, they direct and control the actions of matter. By his intellectual moral nature, man overcomes all the barriers and obstacles of nature, not by a suspension or alteration of her immutable laws, but by peculiar applications of those forces and laws. The material portion of man is composed of the same elements as the ex- terior world. It is governed by all the astronomical and chemical and phys- ical laws of inorganic bodies, and comprehends within itself all organic nature. The size of his organs, the strength of his muscles and bones, and the vigor of his forces, have all been constructed with exact reference to the force of gravity, the size of our globe, and its relations with the sun, and all other worlds in the universe. Man revolves with the earth and planets around the sun, and the whole system moves forward in space at the annu- al rate of one hundred and fifty millions of miles, around a dis- tant unknown centre. Like plants and animals, his existence is dependent upon the length of the day, and of the year, which are dependent upon the adjustments of the solar system. His existence, through plants, is absolutely dependent upon the intensity of the forces of the sun. If the distance from the earth to the sun be increased or diminished, the structure of many inorganic bodies w^ould be changed, the conditions of. ex- istence would be correspondingly altered, and all vegetable and animal life would be destroyed. The molecules composing the structures of man, like the im- mense masses of matter which are scattered through space, are in a state of unceasing activity. As each star has its own ap- propriate motions, its own peculiar offices to perform, so each molecule of matter, each organ and tissue in the body of man, has its own peculiar motion, its appropriate office to perform. A$ the universe is governed by a Being, infinite in wisdom and in power, who constructed, controls and directs matter and 372 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, all its chemical and physical actions, so the material part of man, this little world, is governed by an intelligence distinct from matter, which works by and through matter, and moulds exte- rior material nature, after the ideal creations of its own interior immaterial nature. Man then is a type of the universe. It is evident, therefore, that to understand the phenomena of man in health and disease, and his relations to the universe, we must comprehend the phenomena and mutual relations of all animate and inanimate bodies, terrestrial and celestial If the phenomena of man in health be thus complicated, how much more complicated must they be in disease, where the com- plex constitution of his solids and fluids may be altered in many ways, and the relations between the vital, chemical and physical forces deranged. Any one of the normal constituents of his body may be deranged, and occupy different relations to each one of the other constituents. As these constituents are numerous, the resulting derangements may be correspondingly numerous. The forms of this class of diseases may be as numerous as the different positions which the elements may be made to assume towards each other. Any one of the elements of his body may be in excess or deficiency, and the diseases may be as numerous as the elements themselves, and at the same time totally different from the diseases arising from an alteration in the relative positions of the elements. Foreign morbific agents may be introduced into the fluids and solids, which will excite abnormal changes in the elements of the solids and fluids. The number of diseases of this class will correspond to the num- ber of distinct morbific agents. Combinations of these morbific agents may produce still more numerous and complicated diseases. The Creator has associated the vital force with a definite constitution of matter. Whatever interferes with this constitution, interferes with the action of the vital force. Whatever interferes with the vital force, neces- sarily disturbs its relations with the physical and chemical forces. If the balance of the forces, their correlation be disturbed, the chemical ac- tions between the elements may not only be deranged in kind, but also in degree, and the generation of the physical forces which work the machine- ry, and the manifestation of the intellectual and moral phenomena will be correspondingly altered. One or two, or all of these causes of disease may act atpnce, or successively, and thus render the results still more complex. 1858.] JoXES, on Malarial Fever. 373 The relative intensity of the effects of disease will depend upon the perfection of the constitution and relations of the organs, tissues and ap- paratus, and upon the power and correlation of the vital, chemical and physical forces. As no two human countenances are exactly alike, as no two temperaments are exactly alike, as the chemical actions and forces of different individuals vary, so also will the effects of disease vary. The nervous system is the last and most perfect work of the vital force, and thus the index of the power of the vital force. The nervous system not only forms the medium of communi- cation between the intellectual faculties and the exterior world, but it also forms the medium of communication between the organs and apparatus, solids and fluids of the economy. That the nervous force is nothing more than a higher development of the vital force, is evident, from the fact that plants, and the sim- ply constructed animals, which are devoid of a nervous system, are capable of carrying on the offices of generation, develop- ment, digestion, assimilation, nutrition, secretion, excretion, and preserving a definite form amidst unceasing changes. Many of the simply organised animals, although without a nervous sys- tem, still possess sensation and voluntary motion. The nervous system appears only when the parts of the machinery are com- plicated, and need a special means of communication. The development and perfection of the nervous system cor- responds exactly to the development, perfection and complica- tion of the organs and apparatus. This fact is true of the animal kingdom in its successive degrees of development, and also of the successive stages of the development of the solids and fluids of each individual highly organized animal. Physical and chemical actions take place in a similar manner in all animals, simple or complex ; they differ only in intensity. The higher the animal, the more complicated its parts, the more rapid the chemical changes and consequent generation of the forces, and the greater is the necessity for some special apparatus endowed with a high vitality, which will bring all these complex organs and actions into relation. Unless the actions of different organs can be telegraphed (so to speak) to each other, confusion in a complicated organism will necessarily result. Thus, if the amount of blood circulating through any 374 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, organ, and the chemical actions, are too great, how can they be regulated without some medium of communication with the other parts of the system, and some means of regulating the chemical and physical actions ? To the nervous system is dele- gated this property of regulating the actions of the organs and apparatus, and thus regulating the amount of oxygen and blood supplied to the organs and tissues and apparatus. The blood supplying the nutritive elements of the tissues and organs, and the materials for the secretions and develop- ment of the forces, and oxygen being the active agent in all the chemical actions of the bodies, it is evident that whatever disturbs the constitution of the nervous system, necessarily disturbs the functions of the apparatus and organs and pro- duces corresponding alterations in their secretions and excre- tions. As the integrity of the nervous system depends upon the integrity of the blood, in like manner, whatever alters the constitution of that fluid, will produce aberrated action in the nervous system, and in turn, this disturbance may extend itself indefinitely. Disease then, whether arising in the organs, or in the blood, or origin- ally in the nervous system, will always be attended by aberrated nervous action. The most prominent symptoms of disease therefore will be con- nected with the nervous system. In all our investigations into the causes and effects of disease, we should always remember, that the origin of the disease may be connected with derangements in the constituents of the blood and all the organs, independent altogether of the nervous system. Thus in malarial fever, the poison, whatever it be, is rapidly destructive of the colored blood corpuscles, and destroys the ferment in the blood, which converts the animal starch into grape sugar, it also produces profound alterations in the struc- ture of the spleen and the blood which it contains. Now, these effects, in the beginning, may take place entirely indepen- dent of any alteration in the nervous system. The nervous system will be secondarily affected, and its ac- tion seriously disturbed, and this disturbance will give rise to a distinct set of phenomena, but it is evident that the cause and origin of the disease lies back of this disturbance. In the investigation of the origin, causes, effects and treatment of disease, the constitution of all the fluids and solids of all the organs and 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 375 tissues, of the blood, secretions and excretions, should be carefully as- certained and compared with the standard of health. All the chemical and physical changes, and the relations of the vital and physical forces, should be ascertained. The temperature, the amount of chemical change, the alterations in every organ and tissue should be determined How can these things be accomplished when physiologists and pathologists are not acquainted with many chemical changes going on in the body : when they dispute about the origin and offices of some of the most important constituents ; and know little about the origin and offices of the extractive matters of the blood and urine: when they are ignorant of the offices of the spleen, supra-renal capsules, tlrymus and thyroid glands : when they cannot even explain the mode of origin, propagation and death of the solitary gland cells of the blood, which elaborate the materials for the nervous and muscular systems : when they possess no absolutely accurate method of analyzing the blood, or of determining the amount of the products thrown off from the lungs and skin ? It is important that we should know and acknowledge our ignorance and weakness. At the very outstep, I acknowledge that these physiological and pathological investigations, which I hope to present from time to time, are imperfect in many respects. They could not be otherwise in the present state of science, and especially when I had to act as physician and surgeon to one hundred patients, and at the same time, conduct the investigations. I have determined to present them in their imperfect con- dition, because they were instiuted with a desire to discover the truth, and with the hope that I might acquire during their prosecution, sufficient knowledge to point out to the young mem- bers of the profession, the difficulties and methods of conducting such investigations ; and because they were conducted at a sacri- fice of much time, money, and health. " Art is long and time is fleeting, And our heaits though stout and brave, Still like muffled drums are beating Funeral marches to the grave." / think and hope that they will at least demonstrate the impossibility of the successful investigation, of all the phenomena of disease, by a single individual, and lead to unity and concert of action amongst investigators. 376 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, In pathological investigations, we need in this country, above all things, an organised corps, who would make a division of labor. We should have a separate investigator for the careful examination of each one of the following subjects : The analysis of the urine (1); blood (2); determination of animal temperature (3) ; functions of skin and lungs (4); record of symptoms and treatment (5) ; meteorologic, geologic* and topographical investiga- tions, and record of mortuary statistics (6) ; examinations chemically and microscopically of the structure and alterations in the nervous system after death (7) ; and of the liver and bile (8) ; of the alimentary canal with its secretions and excretions (9); and of the kidneys and the other organs (10). _ If a corps of intelligent, generous-minded observers would act with zeal and unity, the results' for medicine would be of the most momentous character. It would, in time, rank amongst the exact sciences, and the physician would become a true pro- phet ; and instead of the frequent disagreement between theory and practice, and between rival schools, we would have harmo- ny; instead of distrust in the public, and even in the minds of physicians, themselves, we would have confidence. These investigations were conducted in the Savannah Marine Hospital and Poor-house, and two hundred and fifty patients suffering with the different forms of malarial fever, came under my observation. I would here acknowledge my obligations to my friend and former colleague, Dr. Eichard D. Arnold, Professor of the The- ory and Practice of Medicine in the Savannah Medical College, for his kindness in resigning into my hands, the charge of the Savannah Marine Hospital and Poor-house. I would also, return my thanks to Theodore McFarland, M. D., and Mr. Eobert Myers, student of medicine, in the Savan- nah Medical College, for valuable assistance during post-mor- tem examinations. The medical topography of Savannah will be considered more fully hereafter. The following brief statement will give a gen- eral idea of the medical topography. Savannah is situated on the Savannah river, eighteen miles from its mouth, upon a sandy plain, elevated forty-two feet above half tide. On the north, this plain is terminated abruptly by the Savannah river, a turbid stream, pursuing its sluggish 1868.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 577 course through the low-grounds and rice-fields of South Carol i- na and Georgia. On the east and west, the city is flanked by extensive tide-swamps, formerly under wet culture, at the pre- sent time under dry culture. The sandy plain extends for sev- eral miles beyond the city. Savannah, therefore, is surrounded on all sides, except the south, by malarious districts. Section I. Intermittent Fever. Case I. Seaman, entered Savannah Marine Hospital Sep- tember 29th, 1857; native of New York; age 22; height 5 feet 4 inches; weight 140 lbs. ; black hair, and florid complexion; handsome, intelligent countenance; sanguine nervous tempera- ment. Has never been sick before. Has been in Savannah two weeks, and this is his first visit. Slept on board the ship the first week, and the last week slept at the "Sailor's Home,"" on the bay. Says that he was taken sick four days ago, with chill, vomiting, and pains in all his bones, and has had a chill every day since., commencing regularly at 12 o'clock M. Had a chill this day, commencing a few minutes after 12 o'clock M. Says that he took three blue pills and castor oil, night before last. This medicine operated twice. 7 o'clock P. M., Sept, 29th. Has fever, and complains of pains in his joints. Slight tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium ; tongue clean, moist, red at tip and edges; papillae enlarged and of a bright red color. Eeaction of saliva decidedly acid. Pulse 120. Respiration 32, full, thoracic. Temperature of Atmosphere, 79F. 11 Hand, 10333' 11 under Tongue, 106 $. Calomel, grs. xij.; sulphate of quinia, grs. vij. Mix, and administer immediately, and follow with castor oil in four hours. As soon as fever remits, give sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xxv. During fever, give soda powders (pulveres effervescents tartarizati). Diet, gruel and flaxseed tea. Sept. 30th, 1 o'clock P. M. Medicine operated freely, and says that he is much better, but complains of weakness. Tongue presents the same appearance; skin cool and relaxed; face not so much flushed. Pulse 70, regulafr. Respiration 22, regular and gentle. Temperature of Atmosphere , 68F. " Hand, 92 " under Tongue, 99 5' Amount of urine passed the last 18 hours, grains 23,220. Amount of urine excreted each hour, grains 1,290. Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, grains 30,952. Reaction of urine decidedly acid. 378 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, This is characteristic of the urine df fever ; the acidity is in pro- portion to the severity of the attack. The acidity is more intense in remittent than in intermittent fever, and still more intense in conges- tive fever, than in intermittent and remittent fever. Color of urine, light orange. Urine passed last evening and night up to 11 P. M., specific gravity 1011, color a shade higher than that passed this morning. Specific gravity of urine passed from 11 o'clock P. M., last night, up to 1 o'clock P. M., this dav, 1008. Uric acid in whole amount of urine passed in 18 hour, (grs. 23,220). grs. 1-0035 " " calculated " " " " " 24 " (grs. 30,952). " 1-3376 Uric acid in 1000 parts of the night urine, (sp. gr. 1,011) 0-0494 " " " " " " morning " (sp. gr. 1,008) 0*0396 Up to this time, 1 o'clock P. M., has taken 20 grains of sulph- ate of quinia, and the action of this medicine may be connected with the marked diminution of the uric acid. The urine was set aside and examined under the microscope after successive intervals. After standing 48 hours, there was a small light yellow deposit, which, under the microscope, was found to consist of small vegetable cells of several shapes glo- bular, elliptical, and acicular. When viewed under a low mag- nifying power, these cells resembled a collection of globular and acicular cystals of the urates of ammonia. A careful examination under the microscope, with the appro- priate chemical re-agents, demonstrated that they contained no uric acid or inorganic salts, but were of vegetable origin. The size of the cells were many times less than those of the torula cerevisiae. 5 o'clock P. M. Half an hour ago was taken with chill and vomiting. Now the chill appears to be subsiding, the shaking and contraction of the muscles is diminishing. Extremities cool, whilst the head and trunk are hot and pungent to the hand. Pulse 108. Kespiration 30, labored, thoracic. Temperature of Atmosphere, 74 F. 11 Hand, 91 " under Tongue, 1055' Instead of a reduction of temperature in the trunk and head dur- ing chill, there is a decided elevation. The sense of cold arises from a want of circulation in the capillaries of the extremities. The patient had taken 20 grains of the sulphate of quinia be- fore the chill came on. This did not arrest, but delayed the chill for several hours. 3. Spirits of Mindererus f I iss. in sweetened water. 8i o'clock P. M. Says that he is more comfortable. Pulse 108. Eespiration 32, not so thoracic and labored as during the chill, but still thoracic and labored. 1858.] Joxes; on Malarial Fever. 379 Temperature of Atmosphere, 73F. " Hand, 103.5 11 under Tongue, 105 Slight tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium. Eeaction of saliva decidedly acid. Tongue red at tip and edges; papillae enlarged and red. Amount of urine passed from 1 P.M., (8 hours), grs. 5,100. Calculated amount for 2-i hours, grs. 15,300. Amount of uric acid in 5,100 grs. of urine, grs. 2. " ii ii a u 15^00 " 6. Uric acid in 1000 parts of urine, 0-3921. Specific gravity of this specimen of urine excreted during the chill, 1020. Color normal. Reaction decidedly acid. The uric acid has increased in amount during the chill and commencement of the fever : when compared with the former specimens of urine, it is, however, still below the standard of health. If the diminution of the amount of uric acid be due to the action of the sulphate of quinia, it shows that this action of this remedy pointed out by Ranke, 3 is not necessarily attended with a disappearance of the chill. Amount of urine excreted hourly during last 24 hours, grains 1,180. Amount of urine passed in the last 24 hours, ending Sept. 30th, 8 o'clock P. M.. grs. 28,320. Amount of uric acid in grs. 28,320 of urine, grs. 3.0035. $. As soon as fever remits, give sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xx. Diet, gruel. October 1st, 11 o'clock A. M. Says that he is better, and has no pain, except a slight headache, and was in a perspiration all night. Fever intermitted at 12 P. M. Skin cool. Pulse 76. Respiration 23. Temperature of Atmosphere, 70 F. " i " Hand, 95 " under Tongue, 985' Has taken 15 grs. of sulphate of quinia since the intermission of the fever. $ . Continue sulphate of quinia up to grains xxv. Diet, mutton soup, gruel and tea. Reaction of saliva slightly acid. Reaction of urine decidedly acid. Urine clear, no deposit, and a shade higher colored than normal. Specific gravity of the urine passed during the first half of the night, 1010. Specific gravity of the urine passed subsequent to 12 M., last night, 1012. - . . i* (3) Medical Times and Gazette, May 30, 1857, p. 54a n.b. vol. xrv. no. vi. 17 380 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, Amount of urine passed during the last 15 hours, grs. 19,209. Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, grs. 30,734. Amount of urine excreted each hour, grs. 1280. October 2nd, 11 o'clock, A.M. Says that he feels badly ; had no chill yesterday evening, but the fever came on at 7 o'clock, P. M. Suffered with headache, and was restless, without sleep during the night. Skin soft and moist ; slight tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium; tongue redder and dryer than yester- day, but still soft and moist ; reaction of saliva, acid ; face flushed. Pulse 84. Respiration 32. Temperature of Atmosphere, 74 R " Hand, 100. 5' " under Tongue, 102 The fever is subsiding. Urine of a deep orange color : higher colored than yesterday ; turbid, with slight deposit. Reaction, alkaline, after standing 20 hours; it was acid when first voided. The deposit is due to the precipitation of the alkaline and earthy phosphates, in combination with the ammonia, generated during the decomposition of the urea. As far as my experience extends, the rapid change from the acid to al- kaline reaction of the urine is, in malarial fever, a sign of convalescence. Every specimen of urine excreted during the active stages of malarial fever, which I havd examined, gave a decided acid reaction, and the in- tensity of this reaction corresponded to the intensity of the disease. As the disease declined, the reaction of the urine oecame less acid, and the tendency to fermentation, and the development of an alkaline reaction increased. Amount of urine passed during the last 24 hours, grs. 15,810. " of uric acid in 15,810 grs. of urine, grs. 9.300. Specific gravity, 1020. Uric acid in 1000 parts of urine, 0.588. Amount of urine excreted hourly, grs. 658. Has not had a movement of his bowels since the operation of the calomel. ^ Calomel grs. vi; sulphate of quinia grs. vi; castor oil in four hours. After the action of the calomel, commence with sulphate of quinia, grs. v, every three hours up to grs. xv. October 3rd, 11 o'clock, A.M. Says that he feels much better, and has " no pain, except a slight soreness in his bones." Tongue clean, moist, and only a shade redder than normal. Papillae still enlarged, red and distinct. Reaction of saliva, acid. No pain upon pressure of epigastrium. The fever intermitted yes- terday afternoon, and he has had no return. Pulse 62. Respiration 20. Temperature of Atmosphere, 74 F. " Hand, 96 " under Tongue, 985' 1858.] JOXES, on Malarial Fever. 381 Color of -urine a shade lighter than normal, and in 22 hours after it was voided, let fall a copious light yellow deposit of tri- ple phosphate and urate of soda. 20 hours after it was voided, its reaction was decidedly alkaline. It was acid when first voided, but much less acid than during fever. The urea has also undergone decomposition much more rapidly, because it has become decidedly alkaline in the same time in which the fe- brile urine remained decidedly acid. When first passed, the urine was clear, devoid of sediment. The deposit in the urine which had stood over night, was due in a great measure to the precipitation of the phosphates, by their union with the ammo- nia generated during the decomposition of the urea. Amount of urine passed during the last 24 hours, grs. 18,180. Specific gravity 1010. Amount of urine excreted hourly, grs. 757*5. Uric acid in grs. 18,180, of urine, grs. 8*100. Uric acid in 1000 parts of urine, 0"445. $. Officinal infusion of Virginia snake-root, fixviii. ; sulph. of quinia, grs. xv. Mix. Tablespoonful every three hours. Diet, mutton soup and boiled rice. October 4th, 11 o'clock A. M. Much better. Has had no return of chill and fever. Tongue clean and papillae not so dis- tinct and red. Bowels opened twice. Pulse 60. Respiration 20. Temperature of Atmosphere, 725'F. " Hand, 96 " under Tongue, 995' Reaction of urine after 18 hours strongly alkaline. It emits ammonia. "When a rod dipped in hydrochloric acid is held over the urine, it emits heavy fumes of hydrochlorate of ammonia. Heavy light yellow deposit. Amount of urine passed during the last 24 hours, grs. 20,520. " " " " hourly, grs. 855. Specific gravity, 1018. R. Officinal infusion of quassia and soda. Continue snake- root tea. October 5th, 11 o'clock A. M. Has had no return of fever, and complains of nothing except weakness. Tongue clean, moist and soft; papillae still redder and more enlarged than normal ; skin soft and cool ; reaction of saliva acid. Pulse 62. Respiration 21. Temperature of Atmosphere, 70DF. " Hand, 96 " under Tongue, 9933' Urine normal in color. Specific gravity 1015. Amount of urine excreted hourly, grs. 1268. 3S2 Joxes, on Malarial Fiver. [June, Amount of urine passed in last 24 hours, grs. 30,450. " " Uric acid in grs. 30,450 of urine, grs. 15,000. Uric acid in 1000 parts of urine, 0*492. After standing 12 hours, alkaline reaction and a light yellow deposit. This patient continued to improve, and left the hospital on the following day. He returned to the same locality on the bay, and was exposed to the damp north-east winds blowing over the river and low grounds of South Carolina. He returned to the hospital October 18th, with an attack of chill and fever, of the same type as the one we have just describ- ed. The chill came on every day. The annexed Table will present a condensed view of the phe- nomena observed. In this case there was a close relation between the state of the skin, pulse, respiration and temperature of extremities and trunk. A rapid full pulse, hurried thoracic respiration, and dry shin, was attended with a corresponding elevation of temperature. If the functions of the organs and apparatus be properly per- formed, a full and rapid vigorous circulation and respiration must be attended by the rapid absorption of oxygen, and exha- lation of carbonic acid gas, and correspondingly rapid chemical changes, and development of heat. A slow pulse and respiration, and cool moist shin, was accompa- nied with a lovj degree of heat. During the cold stage (chill) there was a rapid feeble pulse, full thoracic rapid respiration, and a hot trunk and cold extremities. During the rapid thoracic respiration, oxygen is supplied in abundance, and enters into the blood, which is confined during the cold stage, almost entirely to the trunk and large organs. The temperature of the trunk is correspondingly elevated. This elevation of temperature does not extend to the extremities, be- cause the circulation of the blood in the blood-vessels and capil- laries is feeble. The surface of the extremities look bluish dur- ing the cold stage, because the supply of oxygen being withheld in great measure, the change from the venous to arterial hue does not take place. We hope to demonstrate hereafter, by numerous careful ob- servations, that the determination of the relations of the circula- tion, respiration, and temperature or chemical changes in mala- rial fever, is of the greatest importance, in enabling the practi- tioner of medicine to understand the nature and treatment of the different forms of this disease, and predict with a great degree of certainty its course and termination. Whenever, as in congestive fever, there is a want of corresponaence between the circulation, respi- ration and chemical changes, the patient is alvjays in danger. A patient with a rapid feeble pulse, and rapid thoracic respiration and 1858.] Joxes, on Malarial Fever. 383 Calculated amount of Uric Acid excreted in 24 hrs. Calculated amount of Urine excreted in 24 Lours. Uric Acid. Specific Gravity. o -< 00 o CO o o o oo oo Temperature of Hand. c o o o o CN .-I C3 0 Cft o o> o o SO SO OB C5 Temperature of Atmosphere. , o o o o x :t C W3 o o o * jt * ' '~ bC ^ 60 W>- 5.2 ^ ja 3 g^ = - 0 '>-= "3 f2\S*o boaa an "c O Hour of Day. 00 .-H i-i Day of Month. Month . 384 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, low temperature {sluggish chemical- changes), is always in great danger. A full rapid pulse, and rapid thoracic respiration, and correspondingly high temperature, are always favorable symptoms, provided there be no complication, as congestion of the brain. The severity of malarial fever is by no means proportional to the height ' of the fever {animal temperature). Asa general rule, the higher the fever {temperature), the more readily does the attach yield to treat- ment, and the less serious the effects. High temperature signifies active chemical changes, and an effort on the part of nature to break up and consume the poison, and a power of resistance. It is the want of a high temperature which is the most dangerous symptom in malarial fever. In this case, the amount of urine excreted corresponded with its specific gravity, or degree of concentration. Considering the situation and diet of the patient, the amount of urine did not differ greatly from the standard of health. The urine is affected by so many varied external and internal conditions, that the amount excreted exhibits great fluctuations even in health. No two observers agree with reference to the amount excreted in definite periods. Thus, Lecanu, from examinations of the urine of 16 individuals, living upon mixed food, estimated that the amount of urine discharged in 24 hours, ranged from 8085 grains to 84,973 grains. Becquerel found that the mean daily quantity passed by four men, was 19,511 grains, and that by four women, was 21,130 grains. Lehmann, from experiments instituted upon himself, estimat- ed the quantity discharged daily, at from 18,829 grains to 22,299 grains. According to the valuable experiments of Dr. William A. Hammond, instituted upon himself, the amount of urine excreted under a mixed diet, ranged from 19,684 grains to 22,756 grains, with a mean of 20,898 grains; under a diet of albumen, from 12,325 to 21,592, with a mean of 17,738 grains ; under a diet of starch, from 14,339 to 23,352, with a mean of 18,427 grains ; and under a diet of gum, from 20,516 to 23,721 grains, with a mean of 21,538 grains. The only accurate method of determining whether or not the urine be increased or diminished, is, to refer it to the standard of health, in the individual examined. In hospital practice this is, in the majory of cases, impossible, and we are compelled to be content with approximate results. In this case, during fever and under the action of sulphate of quinia, the uric acid teas greatly diminished, and on the other hand, when the fever declined, and the action of the sulphate of quinia ceased, the amount of uric acid increased beyond the normal standard. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 385 From the microscopical and chemical examination of several hundred specimens of urine excreted during the different forms of malarial fever, I found it, as a general rule, to be true, that in the mode of treatment which I adopted, the uric acid appears in much larger quantities in the urine of convalescence, than in that excreted during the fever, even when the sulphate of qui- nia had been withheld, or sparingly administered The major- ity of specimens of urine excreted during fever, which were set aside and examined, under the microscope, at successive inter- vals, gave no deposits of the crystals or salts of uric acid, whilst specimens of the urine of convalescence very soon gave evidence of the presence of uric acid, by letting fall deposits of urate of soda and ammonia. These facts explain the nature of the so-called critical discharges of malarial fever. The urine excreted during fever is generally de- ficient in uric acid and the earthy salts, whilst its acidity is increas- ed, and it will remain for a great length of time ivithout undergoing decomposition. flfe The urine of convalescence, on tJte other hand, is rich in uric acid and the earthy and alkaline salts, and readily undergoes decomposi- tion. The deposit of the urates of soda and ammonia, and the pre- cipitation of the triple phosphate, by the ammonia generated during decomposition of the urea, form the so-called critical discharges. As a general rule, the urine excreted during the hot stage of intermittent fever, is poorer in uric acid than the urine of remit- tent fever, and I have known cases in which, daring fever, the uric acid disappeared almost entirely. In several cases of congestive fever, the urine contained only traces of uric acid, and in one case, which terminated fatally, the disappearance of the uric acid was attended with the disappear- ance of the urea. Dr. Ranke (4) slates in Ms article vjpon the physiological action of sulphate of quinia, that according to all observers, there is in ague an in- crease of uric acid. My observations do not correspond with this asser- tion, if it is intended to apply to the active stages of intermittent, remittent and congestive fevers. The fact that uric acid increases during conva- lescence from malarial fever, demonstrates conclusively that the diminu- tion of the amount of uric acid by sulphate of quinia is an attending circumstance, and not necessarily one of the beneficial, remedial modes of the action of this medicine. Case II. Englishman : entered the Savannah Marine Hos- pital Oct 9th, 1857 ; age 27. Has been in America thirteen years. Height 5 feet 10 inches ; weight 145 lbs. ; muscular sys- (4) Medical Times and Gazette, May 30, 1858, p. 537. 386 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, J tern well developed ; sanguine temperament. Occupation, stew- ard on ship. Has been in Savannah three weeks. Says that he was taken yesterday at 12 o'clock M., with cold feelings and headache. The chilly feelings lasted four hours, and were succeeded by fever, which continued until 4 o'clock A. M. this morning. Two and a half hours after the subsidence of the fever (8 J o'clock A. M.), he shook violently. This chill was followed by fever. Now, 8 o'clock P. M., fever is subsiding. Pulse 98, full but soft. Temperature of Atmosphere, 72F. " " Hand, 1025' " under Tongue, 103 Tongue moist ; skin in a profuse perspiration. Says that he took, last evening, a dose of salts and cream of tartar, which operated twice this morning. 3. When fever goes off, give sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xx. October 10th, 12 o'clock M. Vhere was a complete intermis- sion of the fever about 2 o'clock A. M. this morning. At this time the sulphate of quinia was commenced, and he has taken grs. xv. Amount of urine passed the last 16 hours, grs. 6,144. " " " hourly, grs. 321-5 Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, grs. 9,216. analysis i. In grs. 6,144 of Urine (16 hrs.) In grs. 9,216, cal- culated for 24 hrs. In 1000 parts of urine, Urea, Uric Acid, Fixed Saline Constituents, 226-980 0-600 40-200 340-470 0-900 60-100 36-943 0-097 6-542 Specific gravity of urine 1024 clear, no deposit, light red color. Keaction decidedly acid. Microscopical examination of urine. After Standing 12 hours, no deposit. " " 36 " a very slight, light yellow deposit. After standing 60 hours, the surface was covered with a pel- licle, which under a magnifying power, of 210 diameters, was found to consist of small oval cells, about the size of the human blood corpuscle. There were also other elongated elliptical cells, the short diameters of which did not differ from those of the globular cells. Many of the elongated cells had a vibratory motion. The deposit at the bottom consisted of these globular elliptical acicular cells, and a few crystals of triple phosphate. That these cells were organized bodies, was demonstrated by 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 387 the action of chemical re-agents under the microscope. Not a trace of uric acid was found in the pellicle and deposit. The bottle containing the urine had been kept closely stopped. 12i o'clock, P.M. A chill is just coming on. The thermo- meter, placed in his hand, indicated 91^ F. Simultaneously with the increase of the chill, it commenced to descend, and in 15 minutes stood at 87j. In 15 minutes his hand lost 4 F. He feels very cold, but does not shake. The extremities feel cold, whilst the surface of the head and trunk feel hot and pungent. When the bulb of the thermometer was simply placed between the skin and flannel shirt, and gently pressed against the surface of the chest, it commenced to rise rapidly and in a few moments indicated 103 F. i When placed in the arm-pit, it rose rapidly to 107 F. Pulse 100 ; not so full as during fever, but small and threaded. Eespiration 26, full thoracic. Temperature of Atmosphere, 685' F. 11 Hand, 875; in Axilla, 107 Tongue pointed, but moist, and not much redder than usual. Skin dry, with a purplish mottled appearance, as if the circula- tion in the capillaries was retarded. Says that he has " dull pains wandering around his loins up to his chest." Complains of great thirst. His stomach is so irritable that I could not ascer- tain the temperature under his tongue. I made seven un- successful attempts. At every trial the contact of the bulb of the thermometer, with the base of the tongue, excited violent retching and vomiting. I applied a sinapism over the region of the spinal column, 18 inches in length, and 3 inches in breadth, also, one over the epigastrium, and administered brandy and snake-root tea, f 5ij. The brandy and snake-root tea were vo- mited up in a few moments. In half an hour alter their appli- cation, the mustards aroused the capillary circulation in the extremities. His surface does not present the mottled appearance ; the heat has in a great measure returned to his extremities, the cold sensations have disappeared, and "he feels warm all over." The temperature of his hand is now 99. In half an hour, the temperature of his extremities has risen 115'. The temperature under the arm pit is still 107. The temperature of the hand does not correspond fully with that of the trunk, and reaction is not yet fully established. Has just passed urine. Clear, limpid, of a light straw color. Reaction acid. Specific gravity 1003. Amount of urine void- ed, grains 7021. 388 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, ANALYSIS II. 7021 grains of Urine contained, lOOC parts of Urine contained, Urea, Uric Acid, Fixed Saline Constituents, 39-551 0-420 9-800 5-650 0-059 1-395 J Nitrate of urea remarkably silky and white. Microscopical Examination. The urine was poured into a closely stopped bottle, and set aside for 60 hours. At the end of this time the surface had a pellicle, and there was a small, light yellow deposit. The pellicle consisted entirely of the globular, elliptical and vibrating cells, observed in the former specimen. The deposit also consisted of these cells, and a few, beautifully formed, prys- matic crystals of triple phosphate. The fact, that the bottle was kept closely stopped, does not prove that the germs of these cells originated in the urine, for the bottle, in which the urine was first deposited, remained open during the voiding of the bladder, and the germs of these vegeta- ble bodies were, without doubt, then received from the atmos- phere. This specimen of urine is interesting, because it was passed at the close of a chill, and was probably excreted by the kidneys, during the existence of the cold stage. It was much lighter in color than that passed during fever : in fact, it resembled the urine of hysterical women, in its light color and low specific gravity. The urea and uric acid were diminished, whilst the fixed sa- line constituents were relatively increased. If the diminution of the uric acid was due to the action of the 15 grains of sulphate of quinia, which he took this morning, then the fact is demon- strated that the diminution of the amount of uric acid oy the sulphate of quinia, has nothing to do with the cure of intermittent fever. v $. During fever, give soda powders. As soon as fever re- mits, give sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xxx. Do not wait for the complete intermission of the fever. Diet, gruel and flaxseed tea. 7 o'clock P. M. The fever is abating, and his skin is in a slight moisture. The circulation is fuller and more regular, and the temperature more equally distributed. Temperature of Atmosphere, 67F. " Hand, 102 Amount of urine passed since 12| P. M., (6^ hours,) grs. 5,075 ; high colored, resembling new madeira wine. Keaction decided- ly acid. Specific gravity 1015. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 389 Nitrate of urea white, silvery. Amount of urine excreted hourly, during last 6} hours, grs. 780. Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, grs. 20,300. Actual amount of urine excreted during the last 24 hours, grs. 18,240. Amount of urine excreted hourly during the last 24 hours,, grs. 760. ANALYSIS IIL 5075 grs. of Urine, passed in 61-2 hrs. contained grains. Urea, . . . Uric Acid, . Fixed Saline Constituents. 99-425 0-250 28-500 20,300 grs. calculated amount of Urine for 24 hrs. contain'd grs. 397-700 1-000 114-000 1000 pts. of Urine, con tained grs. 18,240 grs of Urine, passed during last 24 hrs. cont'd grs. 19-586 0-049 5-615 365-956 1-270 78-500 Microscopical examination of the last specimen of urine ex- creted during the last 6} hours, up to 7 o'clock P. M. After standing 60 hours a slight deposit fell, consisting of the vegetable cells, previously described, and prismatic crystals of triple phosphate. Chemical reagents failed to give any evidence of the presence of uric acid in this deposit. His fever still continues. This specimen of urine therefore was excreted during fever. The patient has taken no sulphate of quinia since 11 o'clock A. M., this morning. It is important to note, that, in this case, the uric acid is diminished, both in the cold and hot stages. October 11th, 10} o'clock, A.M. Says that he is much better. There was a complete intermission of the fever this morning, at 5 o'clock, A.M. The subsidence of the febrile excitement was attended with a profuse perspiration, which continued up to 8 o'clock, A.M. At the present time his pulse is 88, and respira- tion 22. Tongue moist and soft ; skin relaxed and soft ; bowels were moved this morning. Has taken 20 grains of sulphate of quinia since the intermis- sion of the fever. ty Sulphate of quinia, grains v. ty Snake-root tea f Sxviij, sulphate of quinia grains xv : mix. One tablespoonful every four hours. Half diet: beef soup, rice and tea. Amount of urine passed during the last 15} hours, grs. 9144. Specific gravity, 1^16. Amount of urine passed hourly during the last 15} hours, grs. 590- Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, grs. 14630. 390 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, ANALYSIS IV. 9144 grains Urine excreted during last 15> hours, contained, grs. 14620 grains Urine calculated for 24 hours, contain- ed, grains, 1000 parts Urine contained Urea, Uric Acid, Fixed Saline Constituents, 157-140 3150 40-500 251-424 5-040 64-800 17-185 0-344 4-429 Chemical and microscopical examination of the urine passed during the last 15 hours. Specific gravity 1016. Color, deep orange inclining to red, with a heavy, light-yellow deposit. Eeaction alkaline. It has changed rapidly from acid to alkaline since it was voided. This is characteristic of the urine excreted dur- ing convalescence from intermittent fever. During the active stages of malarial f ever, the urine is always decidedly acid, and retains this reac- tion for many hours, and in severe cases, for several days, even in the heat of summer. When the fever intermits and the skin is moist and re- laxed, and the patient is convalescent, the urine then excreted, rapidly undergoes decomposition, dnd in a few hours the reaction changes from acid to alkaline. I believe this to be one of the most certain signs of convalescence in malarial fever. The deposit in this specimen of urine was found, under the microscope, to consist of well formed, prismatic crystals of triple phosphate, and globular acicular crystals of urate of soda, and the globular and elliptical cells previously described. When the deposit was treated with hydrochloric and acetic acids, un- der the microscope, an abundant crop of crystals of uric acid appeared. This is the first specimen of urine in which the de- posits have contained uric acid. The chemical analysis of the urine also shows that the uric acid is more abundant than in the urine of the hot and cold stages, notwithstanding that the patient was under the influence of 20 grains of sulphate ofquinia. October 12th, 11 o'clock, A. M. Continues to improve. Missed the chill, but had a slight fever in the evening. Pulse 84. Eespiration 20. Countenance, complexion, skin, and temperature, normal. $ Quassia and soda. Continue snake-root tea : full diet. The urine through mistake was not preserved for examination. 1\ o'clock, P. M. Pulse 92; skin moist and cool. Amount of urine passed during the last 9 hours, grs. 15120. Specific gravity 1008. Orange color. Amount of urine passed during each hour, grs. 1680. Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, grs. 40219. October 13th, 10 o'clock, A. M. Says that he is quite well. Had no fever last night, and rested well. Tongue and skin normal in appearance ; reaction of saliva slightly acid ; during the height of the fever, it was decidedly acid. 1858.] JoXES, on Malarial Fever. 391 Respiration 16. Pulse 68. Temperature of Atmosphere, 78F. "Hand, 98 " under Tongue, 99 Amount of urine excreted during last 14^ hours, grs. 13662, Specific gravity, 1012. Amount of urine excreted hourly, grs. 942. Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, grs. 21859. Amount of urine excreted hourly during the last 24 hours, grs. 1199. Actual amount of urine excreted during last 24 hours, grs. 28782. ANALYSIS V. 13662 grs. of Urine excreted in 11% hours, contain- grains, 21859 grs. of Urine calculated for 24 hours, contained grains. 100 parts of Urine contained, Urea, Uric Acid, Fixed Saline Constituents, 101-850 2-025 29-700 162-960 3-240 47-520 7-188 0-148 2-173 Reaction of the urine alkaline, in 12 hours; color normal; light yellow deposit. Under the microscope, this deposit con- sisted of a few prismatic crystals of triple phosphate, globular crystals of urate of soda, and vegetable cells. October 15th. Dressed up and walking in the hospital yard. Pulse 64. Respiration 16. Reaction of saliva, slightly alka- line. Amount of urine passed during the last 24 hours, grs. 16320. Color normal ; no deposit in 18 hours. Specific gravity 1020. Reaction acid. Urine excreted hourly, grs. 680. ANALYSIS VI. Grains 16820 of Urine ex- creted in 24 hours, contained, grains, 1000 parts of Urine con- tained, Urea, Uric Acid, Fixed Saline Constituents, 488-880 9-600 115.200 29-818 0-588 7-058 The patient had no return of fever, and was discharged the / next day. The following table will present a condensed view of the re- sults obtained. 't^UOJ^ cnto ton TflUOJ^ JO ^UQ 00 O o> o o to o o ^TABJf) OUlDedg "B9JX1 ppy ouq oo *- oo to o to o o to tf*. l-1 H-" O rf- oo to <3 S: S 'S^TOtVjpSUOQ 8UITB g p9XTj[ ^j.moq p9^9aox9 anjjQ sanoq t3 UT paiiaaox anufi jo ^utb pg^popQ sxivao sanoq f% J0J pa:jTllOTt?0 'B9Jl skivhd sanoq f 5 ioj p^BTnoj'eo ppy oij_q ainoq j> aoj paiitf jtiotbd Kin^tHriSUOQ 9Ul[1?g P9XIJ / , .' ! 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 393 The most striking phenomena in this case were those mani- fested during the cold stage. The temperature of the extremi- ties was 19^ degrees below that of the trunk. The temperature of the trunk was elevated 8 degrees above, while the tempera ture of the extremities was depressed 10 degrees below the normal standard. Similar phenomena have been manifested by every case of intermittent fever which I have examined during the cold stage. The phenomena of the cold stage will be illustrated by the following cases, which were carefully examined, just as they occurred in the hospital, without any selection. Case III. Seaman : aged 55, height 5 feet 4 inches, small, spare man. Has been in the hospital for several months, suffer- ing with an affection of the eyes. This case has originated in the hospital. Chill came on one hour ago : he is still shaking violently, and his lips and hands look blue. Pulse 100. Kespiration 36 to 50, varies with each quarter of a minute ; irregular, thoracic, labored. Temperature of Atmosphere, 715' F. " Hand, 92 '' under Tongue, 104 Case IV. Seaman: aged 38, height 5 feet 8 inches, light hair, blue eyes, sallow complexion. Looks as if his liver was out of order. Says that he " has had chills off and on from the 16th of July to the present time, October 12th." His first attack of intermittent fever was contracted in the swamps of the Peedee River, S. C. Tongue clean and pale ; lips pale, anaemic. This patient presents the true malarial hue, and his blood is deficient in colored corpuscles. In the present attack of intermittent fever, he has a chill every day. October 12th. This morning had a chill, followed by hot fever. During the febrile excitement, his pulse was 108 and his respiration 32 to the minute. As soon as the fever remitted, xx grs. of sulphate of quinia were administered. The sulphate of quinia delayed the chill ; it did not appear at the regular hour on the 13th inst., but came on at 4 o'clock, P.M., on the 14th inst. I commenced the examination about 15 minutes after the com- mencement of the chill. Lips and fingers pale, and of a bluish color ; extremities cold, whilst the trunk is hot to the touch. Patient is shaking all over. Pulse 92, feeble. Respiration 32, thoracic, labored. Temperature of Atmosphere, 77 5' F. " Hand, 91 " under Tongue, 103 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, A small amouut of urine was excreted at the close of the cold stage, and commencement of the general elevation of tempera- ture, (equalization of the actions of the general and capillary circulation,) which had a normal color. Specific gravity 1023, and decided acid reaction, and under analysis exhibited a large increase of uric acid. Analysis viii. 1000 parts of urine contained Urea, 21-825 Uric acid, 1*467 Fixed saline constituents, 7436. This specimen of urine is in striking contrast with that ex- creted, under precisely similar circumstances, in Case ii. During the sweating stage the reaction of his skin was neutral. As a general rule, I have found it to be acid in the various forms of malarial fever. Eeaction of saliva, as usual, acid. October 15th. Complete intermission of fever. Pulse 80, fuller. Respiration 20, regular. Temperature of Atmosphere, 715'F. " Hand, 96 " under Tongue, 98 / "1/ Case V. Frenchman, aged 45 : brown hair and eyes ; height 5 feet 7 inches; weight 130 lbs. Thin, spare man. Had an attack of intermittent fever, commencing Sept. 15th. This case was treated in the Savannah Poor House, and yield- ed to the ordinary remedies, and the patient was discharged in the course of ten days. He returned to a miasmatic situation, on the Savannah river, and was attacked again with intermit- tent fever. He entered the Hospital and Poor House Oct. 7th, and stated that for the last four days, he had had 'dumb ague," which came on every day at the same hour, (11 o'clock A. M.,) and lasted two hours. A purgative, followed by xxv. grains of sulphate of quinia, was administered. This delayed the "dumb ague" until Oct. 9th, 3i o'clock P. M. (28 hours). Examination commenced half an hour after the commence- ment of the " dumb ague." Lips and fingers purplish ; extremities cold ; head and trunk warm. Complains greatly of the sensa- tions of cold, but shakes far less than in the former cases recorded. Pulse 92, so feeble that it is with difficulty felt, and with still greater difficulty counted. The vibrations of the pulse resemble those of a fine thread. Respiration accelerated and irregular. Temperature of Atmosphere, 75 F. " " Hand, 83 " under Tongue, 101 5' 6| o'clock P. M. Reaction has taken place, and he now has fever. Pulse 96, much fuller than during the chill, but weaker than in a frank open case. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 395 Temperature of Atmosphere, 70 F. " " Hand, 101 75' under Tongue, . . 102 75' In this case, which was far more serious than any which we have yet recorded, the urine was of a high color and specific gravity, and correspondingly rich in urea and extractive mat- ters. The uric acid was slightly increased. Oct. 10th. Intermission of fever. Temperature of Atmosphere, 70 F. " Hand, 97 5' " under Tongue, 98 5' Case YI. Irishman ; black hair, black eyes ; height 5 feet 10 inches ; weight 150 lbs. In health, florid cAnplexion. Has been suffering with intermittent fever for four days. Chills have been slight. The present chill (Sept. 23d) is slight. Temperature of Atmosphere, 79F. " " Hand, 90 " under Tongue, 102 Case VII. Seaman Englishman : brown hair, brown eyes ; florid complexion in health, now his complexion is anaemic ; weight 146 lbs. ; age 25 ; height 5 feet 6 inches. Sept. 10th. Entered the Savannah Marine Hospital, with bilious remittent fever, and from this date until the 19th inst. was extremely ill. This patient recovered so as to be able to walk about the hospital yard. jSTotwithstanding the administration of tonics and iron, his complexion was pale, anaemic, and he complained of a severe and continual pain in his head. Cut cups, external applications and internal remedies, failed to relieve the pain in his head. On the 4th of October he was taken with a severe chill, followed by high fever. This returned every day. Oct. 6th. The chill has been on him one hour, and the hot stage is just coming on. Pulse 110, feebler than after the com- plete reaction, but stronger than during the lowest depression of the cold stage. Kespiration irregular, thoracic, panting 45-50. Muscles trembling violently. Temperature of Atmosphere, 70F. " Hand, , ... 97 " under Tongue, 104 Case VIII. Irish laborer : stout, well formed man ; sanguine temperament ; light hair, blue eyes, florid complexion ; height 5 feet 9 inches ; weight 190 lbs. This is his second attack of chill and fever this season. V. B. VOL. XTV. FO. VI. 18 396 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [June, Sept. 18th, 11 A. M. Chill is now just going off. Pulse 112. Respiration 28. Temperature of Atmosphere, 90 5' F. " Hand, 100 " under Tongue, ..*.,... 104 Sept. 19th, 2 P. M. Apyrexia complete. Pulse 68. Respi- ration 24. Temperature of Atmosphere, 91 F. " Hand, 97 5' " under Tongue, 99 Recovered from this attack commenced work upon a steam Tug, and slept on board, in the Savannah river, at night. Re- turned to the hospital with a third attack of intermittent fever. October 2nd,^ P. M. Has a chill and is shaking violently. Pulse 120, in sitting posture. Respiration 22, in sitting posture. Temperature of Atmosphere, 79 F. " Hand, 89 " under Tongue, 102 25' Oct. 3rd, 2 P. M. Has high fever. Pulse 100. Respiration 26, thoracic. Temperature of Atmosphere, 77a 5' F. " " Hand, 105 11 under Tongue, 106 Oct. 4th, 2 P. M. Apyrexia complete. Pulse 58. Respira- tion 20. Temperature of Atmosphere, . . . . . . . . 76 F. " " Hand, 96 5' " under Tongue, 98 5' From these and many other examinations of the phenomena of intermittent fever, I have deduced the following conclusions, the importance and bearing of which will be more fully pointed out hereafter. (1). The higher the temperature of the trunk, during the cold stage, the more rapid will he the equalization of the circulation and temperature. (2). The higher the temperature of the trunk, during the cold state, and of the extremities and trunk during the subsequent hot stage, (stage of equalization of the circulation and chemical action,) the milder and shorter will be the attack. A high temperature in imiermitteut fever is then a favorable symptom. Whether the high temperature signifies an effort on the part of nature, to break up, chemically alter, destroy, and throw off the malarial poison ; or whether the high temperature be signi- ficant of nothing more than vigorous, vital, nervous, physical and chemical forces, nevertheless the determination of the cor- relation of the respiration, circulation, and temperature (chemi- , cal action), affords the most valuable information to the medical practitioner. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 397 Having already extended this article over much more than the space allotted, I will leave the discussion of these subjects to a subsequent article. Before closing, it is necessary that I should state the methods by which the Temperature, Pulse and Eespiration were deter- mined. The pulse and respiration in these and subsequent investiga- tions, were, unless stated otherwise, always determined in the recumbent posture. All the temperatures recorded in these and subsequent inves- tigations, were determined by the same instrument. This ther- mometer was compared with standard instruments, and found to be accurate. The thermometer was always allowed to remain under the tongue, in the hand, or under the arm-pit, for some time after it was stationary, and all the observations were taken and recorded at the bed-side, under my own hand and eye. The greatest care was exercised in determining the tempera- ture ; the patients were in all cases, unless stated otherwise, lying quietly in bed, and protected from all currents of air. The importance of attending to these circumstances, are strikingly illustrated by the following experiments, which I performed upon myself. Athens, January 23rd, 6 o'clock A. M. Lying in bed, just after waking from sleep. Pulse 76. Respiration 15. Temperature of Atmosphere of Chamber, . . . 45 F. 11 " Atmosphere 28 11 Hand, 95 in Axilla, ; . . 98 Dressed myself and took a walk of two miles, over several hills, in thirty minutes. The ground was frozen and covered with frost. During the walk, my hands were bare and freely exposed to the atmosphere. At first, the sensation of cold was unpleasant, but towards the end of the walk, reaction appeared to take place and they felt much warmer. Pulse 90. Respiration 20. Temperature of Atmosphere, 30 F. " Hand, 78 " in Axilla, 98 During the walk, the pulse had gained 14, and the respiration 5, to the minute. The temperature in the hand had fallen 17, whilst that in the axilla had remained stationary. The respira- tion, in bed, was gentle and regular. The respiration, after walking in the cold, was accelerated, full and vigorous. Here we see that a diminution of the temperature upon the ''exterior was attended by a corresponding change in the move- 1 ments of the circulatory and respiratory systems. They became 398 On the Use of Iron. [June, more active, in order to receive, and distribute more rapidly, the oxygen, and remove, with corresponding rapidity, the increased products of the increased chemical changes. It is also worthy of note, that the increased circulation and respiration was not attended with a rise of temperature, because the radiation of heat from the surface of the body, more than balanced the increased generation of heat, consequent upon the increased chemical change. I took breakfeast, and then walked three miles over several hills, in 40 minutes. My hands were kept in the over-coat pocket during the walk. Pulse 88. Eespiration 26. Temperature of Atmosphere, 45 F. " Hand, 97 of Axilla, 985' January 24th, 4 o'clock, P.M. After sitting and writing for several hours in a cold room, without fire, my right hand, which was freely exposed moving over the paper, felt very cold and stiff. Pulse 76. Eespiration 16. Temperature of Atmosphere, 48 F. "Eight Hand, 75 " in Axilla, . 985' In this experiment the right hand lost 22 in the course of two hours. These experiments demonstrated, conclusively, the absolute necessity of adhering rigidly to a uniform method of ascertaining the pulse, respiration, and temperature in health and disease. In comparative investigations, the truth will not be obtained without the most scrupulous and unremitting attention, to the position and state of the patient, and all the surrounding cir- cumstances. (To be continued) On the Use of Iron. By Isaac Casselberry, M. D., Evans- ville, Indiana. A brief notice of the anatomy and physiology of the blood will make its morbid changes during fever more evident. Anatomy. The blood is a living fluid tissue, which is formed and matured by the organizing force of the automatic nervous system out of the organizable constituents of the maternal blood during embryotic life. After birth, the organizable elements of the blood are derived from the food, which is decomposed by the gastric juice. These 1858.] On the Use of Iron. 399 elements are then transformed and rearranged by the organizing force of the automatic nervous brandies of the stomach, and constitute chyme. This is conveyed into the duodenum, in which additional or- gnnizalJe elements are received from the liver and pancreas. The whole mass is then transmuted and reformed by the organ- izing force of the automatic nervous branches of the duodenum into chyle. This is absorbed by the lacteals, in> which it undergoes a con- tinued series of molecular changes and combinations, until it is deposited in the subclavian vein. The blood consists of a vast number of cells, which are the agents the automatic nervous system employs to perform its func- tions in the human organism. These differ in form, size, and functional endowments, according to the varied duties they are designed to fulfil. For practical purposes, they may be arranged into two classes ; one of nutrition or reproduction, the other of secretion or removal. When the human organism is at maturity and in health, these processes should maintain a relation of exact equivalence. Physiology. The cells of nutrition are endowed with an elec- tive force, by which they select and attract the nutritive elements of the blood, which they transform and rearrange into molecular combinations. These combinations undergo a continued series of molecular changes and recombinations, until they attain matu- rity, when the elements they have elaborated are appropriated and form constituent parts ot the tissues, with which they possess identity of elementary composition and arrangement. The cells of secretion are, likewise, endowed with an elective force, by which they select and attract the effete or worn-out elements which they transform and arrange into molecular com- binations. These combinations undergo a continued series of mutations, till the elements they possess are completely elabora- ted in the capillaries of the depuratory glandular systems, in which they are coalesced and removed from the blood as secretory products. The form of force by which they are coalesced is a specific endowmenj of each of these glandular systems, by which this important change is produced. One depuratory system can- not, therefore, compensate for deficient function in another only so far as the elements conveyed to it are identical with those of its own secretion. The blood gives each tissue the means of repairing itself: first, by furnishing it with material of new growth ; secondly, by re- moving from it those elements of its composition which have become worn out and useless. Were this the whole history of the blood, its investigation in disease would be comparatively easy. But it undergoes progressive changes analogous to the 400 On the Use of Iron. [June,. growth of the solid tissues. The new materials it obtains from the food are not blood at the time of their addition; they are crude immatuie products which subsequently mature. The automatic nervous system endows the blood with a power to resist changes, convert crude material into its own elements, and perpetuate its own elementary composition and molecular arrangement. Physiology teaches that the abundance oi cell developement measures the activity and constancy of growth ; and that this developmental activity in the blood is infinitely greater than in any other tissue. Cell-germs abound in the fluid of the thoracic duct. But they attain their maturity and fulfil the purpose of their creation only when received into the blood. Not only does the blood grow, but its growth must precede that of every other tissue in the organism. It grows, then the other tissues grow at its expense. Its functions in health will show sufficiently what peculiar dif- ficulties attend any investigation of its changes in disease. The extreme rapidity with which all its changes transpire, and the minute quantities in which several ingredients exist, oppose great obstacles to the research ; but these are greatly enhanced by the physiological fact that all the elements of the blood correspond to different periods of time, to different degrees of developement, and to different developemental cells. Viewed as an object of scientific research, human life exhibits itself in a series of manifestations, the connection and recurrence of which are determined by the changes which the food and the oxygen absorbed from the atmosphere undergo in the organism under the controlling influence of the automatic nervous system ; for the first condition of life is the assimilation of nutritive mate- rial, and the second is that of a continual absorption of oxygen from the atmosphere. The intensity, the integrity, the quantity, and the quality of the molecular combinations and rearrange- ments of the elements of the blood depend on the mutual action of the oxygen of the atmosphere and the elementary constituents of the food. The most convincing experiments have proved that the human organism is absolutely incapable of producing an elementary con- stituent, such as carbon or nitrogen, out of substances which do not contain it; therefore it follows that all kinds of food, to pro- duce the tissues and maintain them in a normal relation with each other, must possess the elements of which the tissues are composed. Fibrine and albumen, the chief ingredients of the blood contain seven chemical elements, among which are oxygen, carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulphur. The se- rum retains in solution sea salt and the salts of potassa and soda, in which the acids are carbonic, phosphoric, and sulphuric. The globules of the blood contain fibrin and albumen, with a 1858.] On the Use of Iron. 401 red coloring matter in which iron is a constant element. They are formed out of the elements contained in the serum; because it is the atmosphere, and supplies the material for cell develope- ment, which is constantly taking place within this fluid. Hence it is the most important branch of hematology. The chief constituents of the blood are compounds, in which, the relative proportions are invariable. These compounds are the nascent state of the tissues, and maintain a relation of mutual dependence on each other. The blood could not become organ- ized, nor could it promote the growth of tissues without the existence of albumen in the serum; because the globules are de- veloped in this fluid at the expense of its albumen, and they carry the oxygen which they absorb from the atmosphere into every tissue of tf:e organism, where it determines the changes which may transpire. Oxygen is necessary to the growth and maturity of the tissues ; it is necessary for their conservation ; and it is necessary for their conversion into lifeless compounds ; but it can only be introduced by the agency of the globules. These can only attain a condi- tion favorable to the reception and conveyance of the oxygen at the expense of the primary elements of the blood, which are obtained from the elementary constituents of the food. The absorption of oxygen and the secretion of carbonic acid gas constitute the visible functions of respiration, and the vast ab- sorbent and secretory capacity of the lungs depends on the im- mense expanse of absorbent and secretory cells brought in prox- imity to the oxygen of the atmosphere at each inspiration, and on the quantity and quality of the molecular combinations of the elements of the blood which are developed during that period. The food must contain and supply the elements of which the blood is composed ; they must undergo normal transformation ; they must grow and mature normally, before the necessary quan- tity of oxygen can be absorbed to consume them by combination. For a more enlarged consideration of this interesting subject the reader is invited to an essay in the American Journal of the Med- ical Sciences, for July, 1855, on the Physiology of the Automatic Nervous System, in which 1 maintain the unity and mutual con- vertibility of all the different forms of external force and of all the different forms of the automatic nervous force, and to another essay in the same Journal for April, 1856, in which I endeavored to show the causes of fever, and explain the mode in which they produce diseased transformation of the tissues. Pathology. From these physiological facts, it is evident that fever may assume a vast multiplicity of forms, which are mani- fested by characteristic symptoms. These have often been mis- taken for the disease itself; and the error has been magnified and perpetuated by giving them names which have been commemo- 402 On the Use of Iron. [June, rated by learned authors. Symptoms are like sentinels on duty ; they guard the organism, evince the existence of disease, indicate the avenues of its approach, and the degree of resistance offered by the organism, manifest its progress, portray its pathology, and proclaim its triumph or announce its extermination. Clothed in the attire of fancy, marshalled by the mandates of theory, mantled by the nomenclature of authors, they are often received and en- tertained in the mansion of affliction instead of the disease. Fever is a diseased transformation of all the tissues , but the fluid tissues suffer the most, because the solid tissues are formed in them and of them. The blood contains not only -the nutritive elements, but also the effete constituents of the transformed solid tissues. Both the nutritive and the effete elements are formed, matured, and appropriated by cellular combinations. These are the agents of the automatic nervons force acting on the organizable constituents of the food, and blood, or upon the organizable elements of the transformed tissues. The activity, the quantity, and the quality of the molecular combinations depend on the intensity and integrity of this force, manifested as nutritive attraction, molecular affinity, and effete repulsion. The nascent state of this force in any of these forms are easily transmuted ; and both the developmental cells and the molecular combinations, to the formation of which it contributes, as the formative or organizing force, will partake of the abnormal mutation. Hence the vast number of symptoms which arise during the incipiency and course of fever. The cells of nutrition neither grow nor mature normally; nor are their constituents appropriated to the nutrition of the tissues normally. From the diminished quantity and feeble intensity of the organizing force of the automatic nervous branches of the digestive and assimila- tive organs, the organizable elements of the food are not decom- posed, transformed, rearranged, and absorbed in normal quantity and quality ; only a small amount of nutritive material is receiv- ed by the lacteals out of which blood may be formed and devel- oped ; and the molecular combinations of the cells, containing this, are so imperfect, that they cannot undergo mutations with normal force and celerity. Imperfectly developed by molecular combination, the nutritive constituents of the blood often aggregate in some of the capillaries, in which they then constitute excessive and perverted nutrition, or inflammation. This is of frequent occurrence during the progress of fever, and merits the anxious and careful considera- tion of the physician. During fever the secretory cells are neither formed, developed, nor matured normally ; nor are the elements which they should normally aggregate and elaborate depurated from the blood; be- cause the nutritive elements neither absorb a normal quantity of 1858.] On the Use of Iron. 403 oxygen from the atmosphere, nor does that which is received undergo normal molecular combinations on account of their im- perfect molecular developement. The imperfectly combined oxygen, when it is not consumed by molecular combination with the protein elements of the blood, acts upon those elements of the solid tissues exciting the sensa- tion of pain, when it consumes branches of the sensitive nervous tissue, producing irregular and involuntary muscularactions, when it consumes those of the excito-motory, and creating the sensa- tion of thirst oppression, and suffocation, when it consumes only those of the automatic nervous system. During the incipiency of fever, the effete elements of the blood, therefore, undergo a series of abnormal transformations, and are chiefly retained in the blood ; a lesion of nutrition and secretion exists, the organizing force of the automatic nervous system, which in a normal state, creates, maintains, and governs the cellular formation and coalescence of the elementary constituents of the blood is increased, decreased, or perverted ; there is a lesion of capillary circulation ; the blood recedes from the external capil- laries and accumulates chiefly in the portal venous system ; a diseased transformation of all the tissues is present; Fever exists; it is manifested by symptoms; these assume a great multiplicity of appearances and forms, according to the pathological condition of the tissues. There is no longer a perfect equilibrium between the processes of waste and repair ; neither a normal quantity of food is desired, nor could it be assimilated, were it ingested; every tissue, therefore, suffers for appropriate nourishment. Those more immediately concerned in the processes of nutri- tion most early evince the requirements of food, or the necessary elementary constituents for the repair of their tissues. As the automatic nervous system creates, governs, and main- tains all the tissues by ils organizing force acting on the organi- zable elements of the food and blood, it is the first tissue to manifest the want of nourishment by lesion of the different forms of its force. Quinine supplies nutritive elements to this tissue, and by this gives its different forms of force increased intensity. Its phys- iological effects on the organism are an increase of the develop- mental intensity and celerity of the cells, and a promotion of their molecular combination and coalescence, by which the transfor- mation of the nutritive cells is increased, and those of secretion augmented. When a diseased transformation exists, it should, therefore, be carefully administered, and its effects sedulously investigated. In the June No. of the Cincinnati Medical Observer for 1857, I have given my views of the use of quinine in fever; and in the 40 J: On the Use of Iron. [June, July No. of the American Journal of the Medical Sciences for 1857, I have discussed, at some length, the use of water in fever. In the latter essay I have maintained that the hydrogen of the water combines with the imperfectly combined oxygen in the blood, forms water, and is removed from the blood in the form of sweat or perspiration ; while the oxygen of the water com- bines with the carbon of the blood, evolves heat, and is secreted in the form of carbonic acid gas. The attention of the reader is invited to each of these essays. After the employment of appropriate remedial agents, and the removal of the more manifest symptoms of fever, there often re- mains an impoverished condition of the blood, which is a fertile source of local dependent forms of disease, especially when, during the progress of fever, a chill from time to time occurs. The condition of the blood is sensitively evinced by lesion of nutrition, loss of nervous energy, want of appetite, muscular debility, and more or less perversion of secretion ; and it is caused by deficient developmental intensity of the molecular combinations of the elements of the blood. The large proportion of albumen generally found in this morbid condition of the blood, is the result of defective cell-growth ; because there is more nutritive material in the serum than could have remained there, if the normal proportion of blood-cells had been developed out of it. The evidence is, therefore, almost conclusive, that the albumen which exists in the blood does not grow and mature normally, or it would be consumed by molecu- lar combination. The causes of fever, how slight soever they be, retard the developemental intensity and activity of the blood cells; and if they be long continued, frequently repeated, or of great disturb- ing force, they impair the normal molecular changes of the blood, and transmute them, with more or less celerity, into the different forms of chemical force, when life may soon become extinguish- ed. If the abnormal mutations be arrested, a period of time must transpire before the different forms of the organizing force of the automatic nervous system can attain normal tranquility and intensity; because the tissue of this system has suffered for normal nutrition; and its different forms of force have been so disturbed and so transmuted, that time is required for them to regain normal intensity and a controlling influence over the mole- cular combinations of the blood. When this is obtained, all the forms of the organizing force are united in purpose, harmonious in action, and conspire to promote the conservation and well-being of the organism. But they require organizable elements to elicit their action; and the lesion of nutrition opposes the attainment of this grand object by not supplying all the constituents necessary to the developmental intensity of the blood-cells. 1858.] On the Use of Iron. 405 Although so minute, these cells always act harmoniously ; they elaborate the constituents of the blood in a continued series of succession ; each performs a definite and distinct duty ; but the blood must contain all the elements, of which the tissues are com- posed, or these cells cannot be normally transformed and rearran- ged ; they cannot grow and mature normally, because the absence of a single organizable element would disturb the unity of purpose and the concert of action between the different forms of the organ- izing force, and thereby impede the molecular growth and develop- ment of the whole. This is precisely what always transpires during the incipiency of fever; and it is perpetuated throughout its course. The lesion of nutrition may be slight, but it is suffi- cient to produce and maintain the continued absence or imma- ture condition of one or more constituents of the tissues. The developement of the blood must, therefore, be imperfect ; and this imperfection will always be commensurate with the de- gree and duration of the nutritive lesion. The dependence of the capillary circulation upon the normal molecular combinations of the elements of the blood always pro- duces a lesion of this circulation proportionate to the abnormal mutations, which transpire from imperfect developement of the globules. There is, therefore, always present more or less anaemia in fever; because the morbid changes of the molecular combinations of the constituents of the blood prevent its introduction into the capillaries in normal quantity by nutritive attraction ; and although the arterial system may be bounding and throbbing, these vessels convey an absolutely diminished quantity of blood to the capilla- ries. The mechanical force of the muscular action of the heart and arteries is derived from the cellular changes of the elements of the blood at the ultimate termination of their muscular fibres ; so that it must be diminished in intensity when these molecular mutations do not take place with normal force and celerity from deficient developement of the globules. Enfeebled action of the heart and arteries is, therefore, always present in fever. Their mechanical force is diminished; they only propel a quantity of blood to the external capillaries equal to their propulsive intensity ; and as this is not equal to the whole quantity of the blood, a certain portion must regurgitate from the heart, at each systole, in the portal venous system. The morbid accumulation of blood in this venous syste^pro- duces an anaemic state of the external capillaries. These abnormal states of the circulation perpetuate fever, be- cause only a small quantity of nutritive material can be elabora- ted and introduced into the blood on account of the capillary lesions ; and the molecular mutations of the blood in the depurato- 406 On the Use of Iron. [June, ry glands are, consequently, so abnormal, that what already exists is very imperfectly depurated. Only a limited quantity of oxygen is absorbed ; but that which is received is not normally consumed by combination. Imper- fectly consumed by combination, it combines with the solid tis- sues, producing their death and decomposition by conversion into lifeless compounds. Fever, attended by the symptoms which arise from these states of the solid and fluid tissues, is called typhus or typhoid. It is frequently observed in the southwestern States in the autumn, when the days are hot and the nights cool, especially if fever with intermittent symptoms prevailed during the preceding sum- mer. Throughout the southwestern States, fever, with chills at irreg- ular periods, is often of protracted duration ; and, during its course, the spleen is liable to become hypertrophied, and the blood poor and attenuated. When the spleen is greatly hypertrophied, and soft and yielding upon pressure, large granular globules, two or three times the size of the natural colourless corpuscles, may frequently be oberved in great abundance in the blood ; and usually the ordinary colorless corpuscles are in great excess in this condition of the spleen. Southwestern physicians, who have unfortunately employed bleeding from a large orifice in the treat- ment of inflammation of the lungs, when the spleen is in this pathological condition, can bear witness to the frequency of these appearances of the blood. When this patholigical state of the blood exists, the hepatic functions are always more or less disturbed by the morbid accu- mulation of blood altered in quality in the hepatic capillaries. This disturbance, when it is of long duration, is usually manifest- ed by a yellow appearance of the skin, clay-colored discharges from the bowels, and scant high-colored urine, alternated with green fetid evacuations from the bowels, and large quantities of yellow sedimentary urine. A serous diarrhoea sometimes supervenes upon these conditions, when the sufferer is rapidly exhausted by the continuous drain of serum. Cruveilhier, Becquerel and Rodier, Andral and Gavaret, have conclusively shown that the attenuation of the blood by bleeding decreases the quantity of the corpuscles, while the other constituents undergo little change in their proportion either to each other or to the entire mass. Thp same law prevails in respect to hemorrhage and many exhaustive forms of disease. The attention of the profession is particularly invited to monorrhagia, as it affects women who reside on our southwestern alluvial bottoms. With them the hem- orrhage often alternates with serous diarrhoea, when general anae- mia is soon produced and pervades every tissue of her organism. 1858.] On the Use of Iron. 407 The human female has a peculiar law of blood-development. During about thirty years of her life she forms biood enough for herself and an infant. If she be pregnant or suckling, this redun- dant blood formation fulfils its purposes by nourishing her organ- ism and that of her infant; but if she be neither pregnant nor suckling, the large blood formation, which is normal to her for these purposes, becomes excessive in their absence, and tends to effect its own cure by means of recurrent hemorrhage for the mu- cous membrane of the uterus, which attends the discharge of unfertilized ova from the Graafian vesicles, and constitutes men- struation when it is normal, and menorrhagia when it is abnor- mal from the excessive quantity of blood discharged. Lesions of this process most usually occur from general causes affecting the development of the blood ; and among these, in the south- western States, the most universal are those vicissitudes of the atmosphere which produce fever. The morbid influences of the climate or locality impoverish the blood and produce the patho- logical conditions which arise from the want of cell development of the blood-corpuscles. The anaemia which so often takes place about the period of puberty in young women in the western States, consists essential- ly in deficient growth of blood-cells ; and it is of much more fre- quent occurrence than is generally apprehended. During the autumn, teething children often suffer of a serous diarrhoea of protracted duration. This is perpetuated by the want of develop- mental activity of the globules. The plysiological effects of iron conclusively evince, that it promotes the development of the blood cells and accelerates their maturity. This is in accordance with a general law of the human organism, that the specific stimulants of cell growth in every tissue are elements identical with the natural contents of the cells, or convertible into them. The globules of the blood contain increments of iron obtained from the food ; and from the physiological facts that these are always present in normal blood, it is self-evident that iron is absolutely necessary to animal life. From the physiological fact that the globules do not contribute to the nutrition of the tissues until they have attained maturity ; that they will not mature normally without certain increments of iron: that when these are normally present they greatly pro- mote the developmental intensity and activity of the blood-cells ; that they increase the capacity of these cells for the absorption of the oxygen of the atmosphere and for the secretion of carbonic acid gas from the blood, by which the gobules assume a bright- red colour ; that the blood in this manner oxidized is conveyed and introduced into the capillaries, in which its elements are transformed, matured, and appropriated to the nutrition of the 408 On the Use of Iron. [June, tissues, evolves animal heat, and absorbs the effete constituents of the transformed tissues ; and that the pathological states which are produced are those which are dependent on imperfect mole- cular development of the globules, and the consequent deficient oxidation and depuration of the blood; we can appreciate the cause of the perverted condition of the different forms of the automatic nervous force, the abnormal forms this force assumes in the molecular combinatian of the elements of the blood, when all development is deficient, and the best means to effect its tranquility and early restoration. Iron is the most efficient agent to promote the normal restora- tion of these lesions, because it supplies the element required to promote the growth and maturity of the protein globules. The effects of few medicinal substances are more immediate or more remarkable than that which results in disease from deficient cell development from the exhibition of iron. Every physician has observed how soon, under the influence of this remedy, patients recover their normal complexion. A chemical analysis of the blood explains this sufficiently. F. Simon relates a case in which, after a few weeks of treatment, the proportion of blood globules rose from 32 to 95 in the thou- sand ; Herberger, one in which it rose from 38 to 98 ; Andralr one in which it rose from 46 to 95. Iron is seldom administered in a metallic state. It is usually oxidized, and combined with a vegetable or mineral acid. The compounds formed by combination of iron with the vegetable acids are less powerful and efficient than those by mineral acids. The citrate and tartrate of iron are mild in their action, and they may, therefore, often be given before the stronger compounds. We not unfrequently observe that the stronger compounds of iron, when first administered, apparently increase all the anaemic symptoms, especially those referable to the stomach and head. The potassio-tartrate of iron may be given along with the bitar- trate ofpotassa, when there is oedema of the ankles, or of the cel- lular tissue generally. This is a valuable compound of iron in the anaemia of females, when there is local effusion in the cellu- lar tissue. Several of the compounds of iron are often given in larger doses than is necesary when the design is to promote the absorp- tion of the iron into the blood. This observation applies espe- cially to the carbonate, sulphate, and mutriated tincture. The regeneration of the globules, when much diminished in quantity and altered in quality, must require considerable time. That the efficacy of a ferruginous compound is not in propor- tion to the quantity of iron it contains is shown by the fact that many mineral waters are very powerful, though they contain less than a grain in the pint. This fact clearly evinces the necessi- 1858.] On the Use of hua. -AU9 ty of the greatest care in the selection of the compound we are about to employ ; because the efficacy of iron often depends on the compound used and its mode of administration. Deficient cell-growth, which occasions the necessity for the employment of iron, causes a vast multiplicity of symptoms, which are pro- duced by the functional disturbance of the visceral glands. The compound of iron should, as nearly as possible, be adapted to the particular state of the digestive organs, that it maybe readily absorbed and elaborated with the nutritive elements of the blood ; for this is the only mode by which iron can promote the growth and maturity of the blood. Sir James Murray first recommended the administration of iron in the following mode: Dissolve one drachm of the bicarbonate of soda in four ounces of water; then add to this one drachm of the muriated tincture of iron. The draught should be taken during effervescence. It should be re- peated three or four times a day. Although the quantity of iron is small, yet it is in a state of subdivision so minute as to favour greally the absorption of each increment. The double decompo- sition which takes place forms, as one of its products, muriate of soda. This saline is most congenial to the development of the globules. During the protracted continuance of fever, diarrhoea, dysente- ry, or any other form of disease, during the autumn or winter in the Southwest, the use of iron according to this suggestion of Sir James Murray, is often attended with the greatest efficacy, espe- cially when the fever, or other form of disease, assumes what is usually termed a typhoid form. The iron should be administered every three or four hours, alternated with other appropriate reme- dies. The minute quantities of iron and muriate of soda thus presented to the digestive and absorbent glands, which have been so long deranged and weakened, stimulate and promote the growth and maturity of their cells, and thereby favor the diges- tion and accelerate the absorption of any nutritive or medicinal substance. This will be celarly evinced by the increased secre- tion, which will take place in a day or two from the beginning of the use of the iron. The biliary, uninary, and cutaneous secre- tions will be greatly augmented ; the tongue will become more moist, the thirst less urgent, and the sleep more tranquil. When inflammation exists, iron should be used cautiously and carefully. When fever, dysentery, or diarrhoea assumes what is called a typhoid state, iron is of the greatest efficacy, because it stimulates and promotes the growth and maturity of the blood- cells. The matured blood-cells absorb and elaborate more oxy- gen from the atmosphere ; an increased transformation of the elements of the blood ensue ; the capillary circulation is accelera- ted and augmented, and increased secretion from all the depura- torv glandular systems takes place. 410 Treatment of. Menorrhagia with Ergot. [June, When a typhoid state exists in any form of disease, western physicians have often prescribed for several days without observ- ing scarcely any effect from the medicine they had directed. Let them employ iron, as here directed, and in a day or two, each medicinal article will begin to manifest its characteristic effects on the organism. Muriated tincture of iron is a very efficacious compound in the treatment of menorrhagia. Its use should be continued for a considerable time. It may often be employed with the greatest advantage in fever with typhoid symptoms. Iodide of iron is a preparation which combines in some degree the properties of iodine with those of iron, though the latter pre- dominate. It seems to promote the secretions more than any other compound of iron. When it is not too stimulating it is one of the best tonics in the anaemia of phthisis and scrofula; and from my experience of its effects in these affections in this climate, it is never too stimilating. It may be advantageously employed in all cases of anaemia combined with enlargement of the lymphatic glands. It changes the molecular condition of in- durated glands and promotes their absorption. It may be used advantageously in the chronic form of many diseases, in which calomel should have been employed during the acute state. The citrated aromatic wine of iron possesses the most agreea- ble odor and taste of any medicinal compound of iron. It is seldom rejected by the most delicate stomach. I have directed it for children and young persons in various forms of disease with debility, and I never found it disliked or rejected, and its repeti- tion is more generally desired. When excessive secretion from a relaxed state of the mucous membrane in chronic bronchitis exists, combined with wine of ipecacuanha, it is of peculiar efficacy. In all diseases which arise from deficient developmental activity of the blood-cells, it is a remedy of great value. There are many other compounds of iron of peculiar value and great efficacy ; but I cannot extend the limits of this paper by a definite notice of them. When we contemplate the effects of the climate of the alluvion districts in the southwestern States in the production of an im- poverished condition of the blood, the frequency with which this state of the blood is met with in these localities, and its injurious consequences to the organism when allowed to continue, the value of iron in the promotion of the growth and maturity of the blood- cells, and the consequent removal of this condition of the blood, can scarcely be sufficiently appreciated. 1858.] On Chorea arid Myelitis of die Chord. 411 Lecture on Chorea and Myelitis of the Chord. By Thos. Addisox, M. D., F. E. C. P., Senior Physician to Gay's Hospital. Gentlemen. There is that case in the bed, No. 15, that boy, J. B , aged 11 years a delicate, strumous boy that moves about like a frog or a lizard thrown into half a hundred contor- tions, and which you recognise at once as hemiplegic chorea. There is that poor boy, I say, so curiously afflicted ; the case is one of great interest. You observed, no doubt, some of you, when first I saw him, how carefully we listened to the action of the heart, and how I felt the skin. I will explain why I did so as we go along. Now, whenever I see a young subject the victim of chorea, I always suspect that it had its origin in rheumatism. I felt this boy's skin to discover if he had that sweaty surface, so characteristic of rheumatism. I listened to the heart, and what did I find? Loud mitral bruit. And what do we learn in going over the previous history, as noted by the clinical clerk? "We find that about three years ago he had rheumatism ; and here I may tell you> that you will often find, under the name of severe "growing pains," that you have had, in point of fact, a veritable attack of rheumatism. Are we to believe this mitral bruit was the result of rheumatism, or not? Believe me, rheumatism is a very eccentric disease ; I know none more so. There is no disease, perhaps of which we know really so little as rheumatism in its pathological essence and nature! An old physician of considerable experience was asked What cure is for rheumatism? His answer was laconic: "The cure for rheumatism is six weeks/" In other words, rheumatism must be let cure itself. I have cut rheumatism and rheumatic gout short in less than half the time with colchi- cum or the powdered cormus and sulphate of magnesia, and other things; but I am not so certain that cutting rheumatic gout short by potent measures is quite the same thing as curing it. Let us, however, at all hazards mind the heart in these cases. Eheumatism is a queer or eccentric disease, I have said. Now, it is my belief that rheumatic disease, whatever it is, some- times attacks the skin alone. It is my firm belief that it some- times attacks the heart alone. I know the rheumatic skin well ; and I am satisfied also about the ravages committed by this so-called rheumatic inflammation in the endocardium and peri- cardium, and that, too, without any pain to attract attention. I see the rheumatic skin ; and when I do, I almost with cer- tainty predict rheumatism, which is sure to supervene. One may sometimes find the heart inflamed, by itself, but you will do well to look out for rheumatism in the joints and their syno- u. 8. vol. xiv. vo. vi. 19 412 On Chorea and Myelitis of the Chord. [June, vial or ligamentous tissues. This pericarditis is of a marked kind, with no pain about the heart. But you say, What has all this to do with chorea? Well, what the relations are is not clearly made out; but that there is a connection or relation is perfectly evident. If we look at it in this way, we find, for instance, in acute endocarditis, the patient's manner is often very remarkable, more so than *in pericarditis; he may be even quite delirious or laboring under decided cerebral complications. Some ability and ingenuity are shown by Dr. Kirkes and others in tracing certain clots or shreds of fibrinous matter, as washed from the endocardium into the brain, causing irritation there. On the continent, I find they look on the matter in a less mechanical way, and they say a poison say, like that of some other serous effusions is carried to the brain from the rheumatic deposit in the endocardium. I am afraid we have too many analogies in pyaemia and other affections to give stabil- ity to this hypothesis.* There are several curious associations, I have said, between the brain and heart, epilepsy, for instance, affects the heart. Sometimes, a fit of epilepsy extends itself in a violent tumult of the heart. I was consulted some time ago by a gentleman a manufacturer at Huddersfield, or somewhere down there for some curious functional derangement of the heart. I told his family doctor it was epilepsy of the heart ; and I believe my friend thought I did not know what I was saying, and smiled at me ; but the epilepsy of the heart, with those curious fits of un- consciousness he could not understand; and how puzzling they are you will find when you get into private practice ; so that you cannot give too much attention to them. Well! these anomalous fits of unconsciousness and tumultuous palpitation ended, nevertheless, in regular fits of epilepsy some of the most marked, perhaps ever seen. I do not pretend to explain how this is brought about; I only know the practical bedside fact. The relations of the fit in epilepsy itself are very peculiar ; but emotional influences will produce palpitation of the heart; and, I suppose, in some such way, epilepsy produces it as a * Chorea is derived from the word choros, a dance. During the middle ages, we learn from Hecker, sundry choreic ravings attacked the peasants at Kolbig, Erfurt, and Utrecht, in 1374. At Aix-la-Chapella the sick thus seized "appear- ed to have lost the control over their senses, and were only relieved by swathing the body," and various incantations common at the time. These choreic ravings were mixed up with various religious ravings, evidently the reflection of sundry broken images, as from the broken mirror of some popular impression of the day. The name "St. John's Dance" was given to chorea, as it was at one time thought chorea, originated in the revels of that festival and St. Vitus's dance, because of the cures effected at the celebrated chapel of St, Vitus. This disease continued two centuries. Paracelsus (no very reliable authority) give9 a long description of the epidemic, and the Arabians called it a palsy. 1858.] On Chorea and Myelitis oftiu 413 sort of first of three warnings." Emotional influences or fright will cause chorea : in fact, it is the most common of all causes of the disease. A dog runs after a child ; a ghost story is told by a foolish nurse; a house takes fire, and child is exposed to danger; the child, perhaps, is seized with chorea: some horri- ble agitation * is set up in the emotional (or central) parts of the brain, and chorea tits are the result. The complication or connection of chorea and heart diseases is so common that I always look for it. See in that case of gout, on the other hand, in that poor woman in the other part of the ward, you can scarcely tell it from rheumatism : she has renal disease, with gout in her foot; but her heart is perfectly free, and, in all pro- bability will continue free. How curious these peculiarities are ! Yet gout and rheumatism are pathological first cousins; but why does one affect the heart, the other not? I cannot tell you. Well, we gave this boy a mild mercurial first, to settle all right in the prim* vice, and we shall follow that up with the sulphate of zinc, in which I have great faith as a remedy in chorea. At Guy's at least, we have not yet hit on any thing equal to it. These poor patients with chorea are often very ludicrous, but very distressing to observe. I have seen four or five deaths from the excessive exaggeration of the chorea spmptoms ; like lizards or eels, such patients are contorted into a myriad of forms ; they glide* and twist and tumble about the floor and out of bed or into the fire! I have known chorea to begin with pregnancy, and go on increasing as the poor big-bellied woman got bigger and more unwieldly, and only yield when the uterus became empty again ! Dr. Hamilton once thought purgatives cured chorea : but I do not believe this is invariably found. Sulphate of zinc or oxide of zinc is the remedy we have made out as most valua- ble at Guy's. I have known a patient take of sulphate of zinc (not oxide, mind) so much as eighteen grains four times a day. My attention was once drawn by the late Dr. Chambers to a peculiar cast of countenance such patients acquire who are taking these very large doses of zinc : you know, of course, the dark tint or tinge produced by nitrate of silver, the dark line of the gums by lead, kc. We were attending a patient for another disease altogether, and though Dr. Chambers could not describe what it was, he said, to one in the apartment, ;'Why you are taking zinc, are you not?'' and it turned out that he was. The nearest idea I can give you of the zinc complexion of the face is. that it is destitute of the freshness and cherry redness of rude health, and the skin of the face assumes a glossy sameness of * It was recently stated that a young man dropped dead of fright, at a theatre, on seeing the Ghost in 'Hamlet' stalk forth for the first time on the stage; and a similar case of death from fright, not long since formed the subject of a coroner's inquest. 414 Causes of Pneumonia. [June, tint very like pewter; in fact, Dr. Chambers knew the "pewter face" very well ; it requires the light to fall in a particular direction, and then you will see it : the hint may be of use to you. We will now say a few words about the patient in the bed No. 20. He has been in the habit, he tells us, of carrying heavy loads on his head ; this I need not say, produces a strain on the muscles about the neck, and pressure on the veins. Well, lie has had fits of unconsciousness, and now has excessive pain of a neuralgic character in his limbs. We had a man not long since under care, you recollect, with what I called, " ligamen- tous rheumatism." I have seen more than once this sort of liga- mentous rheumatism attacking the delicate ligaments, the odon- toid, and others of the articulation of the axis occipital bone and others of the axis and atlas ; in one case of a boy it threatened to end in universal paralysis, as the thickened membranes no doubt pressed on the medulla oblongata, producing a somewhat common disease, myelitis of the medulla oblongata or chord, or perhaps mechanical pressure. In a woman with the same disease I verily believe we saved her life by keeping the head, almost in splints, perfectly quiet. We will adopt the same plan in this poor man ; we shall support him and prescribe cod-liver oil and tonics, and you will see the result. [Medical Circular. On the Causes of the Pneumonia which supervenes upon Laryngo- tomy. By Professor Schuh. All surgeons of experience are aware that pneumonia is some- times observed after the performance of laryngotomy or trach- eotomy : but observers are by no means agreed upon the causes of this. Most persons, however, seem of opinion that the opera- tion itself does not bear any direct casual relation to this occur- rence. Professor Schuh entirely differs from them, and the per- formance of a very large number of operations upon the air-pas- sages, during his twenty-three years' attendance at the Vienna Hospital, enables him to speak with authority upon the subject. Although a great advocate for these operations under a variety of circumstanses, he is convinced that the altered position and amount of the column of air that is admitted into the lungs is not unfrequently the sole cause of the supervening pneumonia. The following are the grounds for this opinion: 1. The air, after the operation, enters the lungs by a shorter passage, and by one that is straight in place of being curved, as before ; and it does not pass through an aperture which is alter- nately widened and contracted, as is the case with the rimaglot- tidis. The column of air, too, which passes through the canula is larger than that which traverses the glottis, for if a smaller 1858.] Causes of Pneumonia. 415 canula were employed, it would be liable to dangerous obstruc- tion. We have thus two important changes in the mechanical conditions of respiration ; and the lung becomes exposed to the pressure and impulse of a large column of air, arriving more rapidly bv a shorter passage. This, so tender and vascular an organ will not always support, and inflammation may be easily excited, just as it may when, in the operation of paracentesis thoracis, the fluid is too rapidly drawn off, and the lung is too suddenly exposed to the pressure of the air. 2. Experience confirms what a priori might have been expected. Any one who has very frequently performed the operation, must have met with cases in which the patient has complained of the admission of too large a quantity of air, and has only felt at ease when the opening of the canula has been diminished a third or a half by sticking-plaster. If such an indication of an intelli- gent and observant patient be neglected, pneumonia will follow. 3. The author has lost several patients in whom, at the time of its performance, no signs of pneumonia could be detected, and who seemed to be going on very well to the tenth or even twenty-first day. ]S"ot only did no other cause for the devel- opment of the pneumonia exist, but this was also always found on the right side this being on account of the greater width and shortness of the right bronchus more exposed to the impulse of the air. The disease does no come on actively, but is indi- cated by some -acceleration of respiration and slight fever. Physical examination, however, shows that very considerable infiltration has taken place; and the neglecting to institute this may be a cause that many pneumonias have been overlooked. 4. Cases of cut-throat, in which the larynx is wholly or partially divided, also strikingly exhibited the danger of opening into the air passages, such patients not infrequently perishing in a few days of pneumonia, this ahvays commenced on the right side, and in even fatal cases being usually confined to that side. It may also spring up in smaller wounds of this part, if these be not kept carefully closed either by sutures or suitable dressings and bandages. To the question whether pneumonia after laryngotomy can be prevented, the answer is, that it can in many cases, but not in all. For this purpose no wider canula should be employed than is necessary to maintain uninterrupted respiration ; and as soon as the patient can breathe freely enough through the mouth, and can both breathe and speak when its orifice is closed, it should be changed for a smaller one, or its opening should be partly closed by plaster. When the breathing continues per- fectly easy, the canula being stopped, before this is entirely removed it should be allowed to remain in, completely stopped, during twentyfour hours, care being taken that it should not 416 Causes of Pneumonia. [June, project inwardly, so as to narrow the normal passage for the air. The temperature of the room should never be allowed to sink below 66^ Fahr. It is often exceedingly difficult to determine the time when the canula should be finally removed. After such removal, the patient may continue to breathe quite easy for from two to eight days, when the difficulty gradually returns, until it be- comes as bad as ever. If even a couple of days have passed, the re-introduction of the canula can seldom be accomplished, and then only by first passing through the canula a conical obtur- ator, which can better overcome the elasticity of the edges of the cartilage. The longer the canula has remained prior to removal, the more readily may it be re-introduced. The recurrence of dyspnoea is especially to be apprehended when we have reason to suspect ulcer of or around the rima, open abcesses, and sinuses beneath the mucous membrane. Tumefaction rapidly diminish- es, and the normal permeability is soon re-established; but on the admission of the stream of air to the diseased part by the withdrawal of the canula, the former difficulties may soon be reproduced. Hence, when the diagnosis can be established, the canula in such cases should be retained during several weeks, in order to give the surfaces time for healing. According to Professor Schuh's experience, pneumonia never comes on after the first twenty-one da}'s are passed, and the canula may then be worn for months or years without inj ury. On the other hand, the Professor has lost cases by removing the canula too late, pneumonia unexpectedly appearing. The sensibility of the lung to the unusual arrival of air, is especially great when the difficul- ty of breathing that has given rise to the operation has been of long duration, and the organ has become enfeebled by venous congestion and a diminution of the contractile powers of its cells. In a case in which Professor Schuh performed laryngotomy in order to facilitate the removal of a large pharyngeal polypus, the patient who had suffered for months from a difficulty of breathing, was quite well on the day of the operation. The canula having, however, been left in during twenty-four hours, pneumonia was detected by auscultation within this period. Thus, it results from what has been said, that pneumonia is sometimes a consequence of breathing through an artificial opening ; and by due regulation of the size of the volume of air, the temperature of the room, and the timely removal of the canula, it may usually be prevented. This, however is not always the case, for the condition of the patient may require a long retention of the canula, the lung may be excessively sen- sible to the changed mechanism, and art has as yet furnished no apparatus as a substitute for the alternated dilatation and contraction of the glottis. [Wien Wochensch., and British and Foreign Med. Chir. Rev. 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 417 EDITORIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS. THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. This National Medical Congress of our Republic held its eleventh annual meeting in Washington, (D. C.,) beginning May 5th, 1858. The Association met in the Lecture-room of the Smithsonian Insti- tute, and was called to order at a quarter past 11 o'clock A. M., by Dr. Condie, of Philadelphia, when the Chair was taken by the President, Dr. Paul F. Eve, of Nashville, Tennessee. Vice-Presidents, Breckenridge of Kentucky, Reese of New York, and Campbell of Georgia, were also on the platform ; and at their table were the efficient Secretaries, Drs. Fos- ter of Tennessee and Semmes of this city [Washington]. Rev'd Byron Sunderland, D. D., at the invitation of the President, offered an eloquent and appropriate prayer, invoking the blessing of Almighty God upon the Convention. The meeting was then addressed by Dr. Harvey Lindsley, of Washing- ton, Chairman of the Committee of Arrangements. His welcome was warm and open-hearted, and expressed in language chaste, beautiful and appropriate; and was indeed but the earnest of that abundant hospitali- ty the members were to receive during their sojourn at the Capital. The number. of delegates and permanent members present was larger, we think, than ever assembled on any similar occasion, excepting, per- haps, the meeting in 1853, held in the city of New York. The names amounted to over four hundred, on the calling of the roll at the first session. On the calling of the roll by the Secretary, State by State, as it had been made out, up to the commencement of the meeting, the following number of delegates responded : Maine 2, New Hampshire, 8, Connecticut 18, Vermont 1, Massachu- setts 40, Khode Island 5, New York *73, New Jersey 25, Pennsylvania 66, Delaware 4, Maryland 24, District of Columbia 25, Virginia 8, North Carolina 8, South Carolina 10, Georgia 12, Alabama 1, Kentucky 0, Tennessee 7, Indiana 6, Illinois 12, Michigan 3, Iowa 3, Missouri 4, Ohio 14, California 1, American Medical Society of Paris 1, U. S. Navy 2. [When the name of Dr Harvey, who has come from California expressly to attend this convention, was called, there was a loud applause.] Other members were announced at different times during the day, and when the Association adjourned there were four hundred and six names regis- tered. Dr. David M. Reese, of New York, now presented and read a written apology for having recommended for a position in Blockley Hospitalr 418 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [June, Philadelphia, Dr. McClintock, who had been expelled from the Associa- tion for a violation of the ethics and the etiquette of the Profession, by- lending himself to the quackery of Patent Medicines. On motion of Di;. Condie, of Philadelphia, the apology was accepted, and ordered to be entered upon the minutes. Dr. Bryan, of Philadelphia, who had also recommended Dr. McClin- tock, made a verbal adoption of Dr. Reese's apology, the reception of which was warmly debated. Dr. C. C. Cox, of Maryland, opposed, and Dr. Condie advocated the reception. Dr. A. B. Palmer, of Michigan, moved the previous question on a motion to refer the subject to a com- mittee, which was lost. The apology of Dr. Bryan was then accepted. [It was rumored in the hall that Dr. McClintock will be reinstated during the session of the Association.] The President, Professor Paul F. Eve, of Nashville, Tennessee, then delivered, in a clear voice and with pleasing oratorical effect, his annual address to the Association. This paper, which is a most able review of the history of the Association from its beginning to the present time, most eloquently and conclusively vindicates that body from the charge of having accomplished but little, and is eminently calculated to inspire its members with pride in view of what they have accomplished in the past, and with energy and determined high purpose for the future. It is fortunate that, by the unanimous action of the Association, such a paper is to be recorded in the next volume of the Transactions and every journal should record it, as an encouragement and a stimulus to the American Medical Profession. It shall be presented to our readers in our next number, as a separate paper. Dr. Grafton Tyler, of Georgetown, D. C, chairman of the committee on prize essays, reported that the essays received were three in number, each of which had been examined with great care ; considering, first, the intrinsic merits of each essay, and then their merits in relation to each other. The first prize was awarded to " an essay on the clinical study of the heart's sounds, in health and disease," bearing the motto "Clinica clinice demonstrandum." The second prize was awarded to " an essay on vision and some of the anomalies as rendered by the oph- thalmoscope," bearing the motto " Dux kominum medicus est." Dr. Tyler then proceeded to open the sealed envelopes bearing the above-named mottoes, and containing the names of the writers of the essays. The first was written by Dr. Austin Flint, of Buffalo, New York ; and the second by Dr. Montrose A. Pallen, of St. Louis, Missouri. This is the second time Dr. Flint has won this distinguished honor, and the third time that it has been awarded to Buffalo since the association was organized, eleven years ago. 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 419 On motion, the report of the committee was accepted and adopted. Doctors Flint and Pallen were then invited to give resumes of their essays, which they did, and each of the gentlemen was listened to with marked attention on the part of the association. Among other gentlemen, Dr. Peter Parker, ex-commissioner to China, and assistant-surgeon Frederick A. Rose, of the British Navy, were unani- mously elected '* members by invitation." The latter gentleman, Dr. F. A. Rose, of the British Navy, who so no- bly volunteered his services on boafd the United States ship Susquehan- na, at Port Royal, and who came in her to New York, devoting himself to the sick crew, was unanimously elected a "member by invitation," and invited to take a seat upon the platform. [Applause.] It was an- nounced that Dr. Rose had left the city. Dr. Francis G. Smith, of Philadelphia, chairman of the committee on publication, made his report, showing the expense of publishing the an- nual volume. Dr. Caspar Wistar, of Philadelphia, presented his annual report of receipts and expenditures, showing a balance on hand of $806. Accom- panying the Treasurer's report was a resolution providing that the back volumes on hand, when over two years old, shall be sold at two dollars a volume, and that volumes V, VII, VIII, and IX, of whieh there are a surplus, be sold at $5 a set to any member. A report was made by the committee on nominations, which was ac- cepted ; and the association then elected the following officers : President, Dr. Harvey Lindsley, of Washington City. Vice-Presi- dents, Drs. W. L. Sutton, of Kentucky ; Thomas 0. Edwards, of Iowa ; Josiah Crosby, of New Hampshire; and W. C. Warren, of North Caroli- na. Secretary, Dr. A. J. Semmes, of Washington City. [The other Secretary will be elected when the location of the next association is selected.] Treasurer, Dr. Caspar Wistar, of Philadelphia. On motion, Drs. Flint, of New York, Gross, of Pennsylvania, and Gibbes, of South Carolina, were appointed a committee to conduct the President elect to the chair. Dr. Lindsley, having been introduced to the association by the retiring President, Dr. Eve, made a few pertinent remarks, acknowledging the honor as the highest he had ever been called upon to receive, and the highest that any medical man in America can receive. [Applause.] Unaccustomed to preside over so large a body, and having had but little practice in presiding over smaller assemblages, he must throw himself upon the forbearance of the association, and look to the members for support in the discharge of his official duties. [Applause.] On motion, the thanks of the association were voted to the retiring x. 8. vol. xiv. yo. vu 20 420 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [June, officers for the able and impartial manner in which they have discharged the duties of their respective offices. [Applause.] On motion, the ex-presidents of the association present were invited to take seats on the platform. The committee on medical topography and epidemics was called by States. A paper from the member from Maine stated that he will report next year. There was no response from New Hampshire, Vermont, Rhode Island, Connecticut, or Massachusetts. Dr. Smith, of New Jer- sey, read an able report on New Jersey, and the association then ad- journed until this morning at nine o'clock. Evening Hospitalities. At eight o'clock in the evening the dele- gates and the ladies who have accompanied them paid a visit by invita- tion to the Executive Mansion. The East Room, with the adjacent suite of drawing rooms, were brilliantly lighted, and were filled by about five hundred gentlemen, representing all sections of the country, and a hun- dred or more ladies. One of the delegates had seen upwards of four score years others have but just entered upon the practice of their profession. The President received his guests, as they were successively presented by Dr. Cornelius Boyle, chairman of the committee of arrangements, with his accustomed cordiality, and afterwards moved about in the East Room, engaging in conversation with the gsoups there gathered. The entire cabinet was present, with J. B. Henry, Esq., Marshal Selden, and Com- missioner Blake. From the Executive Mansion the delegates generally proceeded to Georgetown, where they were hospitably entertained at the residences of Dr. Grafton Tyler, at the corner of Gay and Washington streets, and of Dr. Riley, No. 91 Gay street. A cordial welcome and good cheer awaited them at the houses of each of these distinguished practitioners. There was a large number of arrivals at the different hotels last even- ing, and an interesting session may be expected to-day. SECOND DAY. The Association was called to order by the President, Dr. Harvey Lindsley, and A. J. Semmes, one of the Secretaries, read the minutes of the first days proceedings ; which were adopted. On motion of Dr. Watson, of New York, Dr. Delafield, of New York, one of the first officers of the association, was invited to take a seat on the platform. On motion of Dr. Atkinson, of Virginia, an amendment to the consti- tution was received, providing that no person shall be recognized as a member or admitted as a delegate at meetings of the association who has been- expelled from any State or local medical association, until re- lieved by action of such State or local association. [Applause.] 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 421 An abstract of the report on medical literature was then read by Dr. A. B. Palmer, of Michigan ; which report was, on motion, accepted and referred to the committee of publication. On motion, Dr. N. Bozeman, of Alabama, was elected a member by- invitation. The report on medical education was now presented by the chairman, Dr. James R. Wood, of New York. This is an able and judicious paper, of which we can at present only give a summary, hoping, in some future number, to transfer the whole of it to our pages. Dr. Wood, in our opinion, acted with good judgment, in referring many of the details of medical education to a convention of professors of colleges. This, certainly, instead of disfranchising the schools, as was apprehended might be attempted at the present meeting, is decidedly a step taken the other way. This measure is the more to be appreciated, coming as it does, from Dr. Wood, who, though not connected with any college, knows well how to estimate the exigencies and the requirements of medical teaching, in our country, from his long and intimate relation to this de- partment, in the position he has so creditably filled in Bellevne Hospital. The subjects discussed in this report are the following: 1st, primary medical schools ; 2nd, the number of professorships in medical colleges ; 3rd, the length and number of tenns during the year ; 4th, the requisite qualifications for graduation ; 5th, such other subjects of a general char- acter as to give uniformity to our medical system. Having reviewed these propositions at length, the committee have arrived at the following conclusions : First. Primary medical schools should be encouraged ; but, as office nstruction will continue to be sought by students, practitioners should either give them necessary advantages of demonstrations, illustrations, md recitations, or if not prepared to do so, they should refer them to such primary schools, or medical men, as will give them proper instruc- tion. Second. The number of professorships should not be less than seven viz : a Professor of Anatomy and Microscopy, Physiology and Pathology, Chemistry, Surgery, Practical Medicine, Obstetrics, and Materia Medica. Third. There should be but one term annually, which should com- mence about the 1st of October, and close with the March following, thus lengthening the term to six months. The commencement of the term, in October, should be uniform in all the colleges throughout the country. During the session there should never be more than four lectures given daily. Fourth. The qualifications for graduation, in addition to those now required by the schools, should be a liberal primary education, and at- tendance upon a course of clinical instruction in a regularly organized hospital. In order to give our medical colleges an opportunity to consider the 422 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [June, recommendations here advanced, and that this body may have the ad- vantage of their wisdom and their mature views, before any definite action is taken upon them, your committee submit to the association the following resolutions : Resolved, That the several medical colleges of the United States be requested to send delegates to a convention to be held at on the day of for the purpose of devising a uniform system of medical education. Resolved, That the present report af the special committee on medical education be referred to such convention for its consideration. Resolved, That said convention of delegates from the several colleges of the United States be requested to submit to the meeting of this asso- ciation in May, 1859, the result of their deliberations. On motion, the report was accepted and referred to the committee on publication, the accompanying resolution being laid on the table. The committee on nominations reported Louisville, Ky., as the place of meeting in 1859, and nominated Dr. S. S. Bemis, of that city, as se- cond secretary. They also nominated the following standing commit- tees: Committee on Publication Dr. F. Gurney Smith, Pa., chairman ; Drs, Caspar Wistar, Pa. ; A. J. Semmes, D. 0. ; S. M. Bemis, Ky. ; S. L. Hol- linsworth, Pa. ; S. Lewis, Pa. ; H. F. Askew, Del. Committee on Medical Literature Dr. John Watson, N. Y., chairman; Drs. L. A. Smith, N. J. ; C. G. Comegys, Ohio ; R. W. Gibbes, S. C. ; W. M. McPheeters, Mo. Committee on Prize Essays Dr. J. B. Flint, Kv., chairman ; Drs. M. Goldsmith, N. J.; H. Miller, Ky.; Calvin "West, Ind. Committee on Medical Education Dr. G. W. Norris, Pa., chairman ; Drs. A. H. Luce, 111.; E. R. Henderson, S.C. ; G. R. Grant, Tenn.; T. S. Powell, Ga. Committee of Arrangements Dr. R J. Breckenridge,Ky., chairman ; Drs. G. W. Ronald, B. M. Wible, D. W. Goodall, D. D. Thompson, N. B.Marshall, G. W. Burglass, R. C. Hewett, and A. B. Cook, all of Kentucky. The report was accepted, the nominations were confirmed, and the committee received permission to sit again. After considerable discussion, it was decided that the meeting go into a committee of the whole, to reconsider the acceptance of the apology presented on the day previous by Dr. Reese. Dr. T. O. Edwards, of Ohio, now took the chair. It was now moved, to read the remonstrance of the Philadelphia Medi- cal Society, in which all the circumstances of the recommendation of Dr. McClintock by Dr. Reese, and his appointment to office in Blockley Hospital, were fully set forth. Dr. Biddle, of Philadelphia, protested against the reading of the re- monstrance, as a violation of plighted faith. 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 423 The remonstrance was however read. It was a long document, giving a detailed account of the recommendation by Dr. Reese of Dr. McClin- tock for a position in Blockley Hospital, after the last-named gentleman had been guilty of selling quack nostrums, and had thus committed an offence against the ethics of the profession. Dr. Humphries of Indiana, moved that each member of the commit- tee of the whole be restricted to five minutes, allowing Dr. Reese what- ever time he wished to defend himself in. Dr. Phelps showed that a ten-minutes rule was now in force. Dr. Cox moved, as an amendment, to make the time fifteen minutes ; which amendment was lost, and the original motion of Dr. Humphries was then carried. Dr. Reese then ascended the platform, and made a statement of his position from the commencement of the controversy. He considered his apology of the day previous a satisfactory one, but was willing to make it more so if it was objected to. He had not brought the subject before the association ; but had been given to understand that if he made the apology which he had made, the remonstrance would not be offered. During his remarks there was a demand for the reading of the apology ; which was read, as follows : To the Officers and Members of the American Medical Association : The undersigned, one of the vice-presidents of the American Medical Association, having during the interval since our last annual meeting, certified to the professional fitness for the charge of the Blockley Hospi- tal, at Philadelphia, of an individnal who had been expelled from this body for a violation of our code of ethies, after consultation with the other officers, and yielding to the advice of other personal friends, desires to say to the association now assembled 1st. That in giving said certificate, he was prompted solely by motives of sympathy and humanity to a fallen brother, who had been a personal friend prior to his offence ; and that he did not realize, acting under the impulse of the moment, that hMs individual act could be construed by the profession as indicating hostility to his brethren. 2d. That while his own mind is clear that his certificate contained only the truth, and that under his peculiar relations to the party con- cerned, he could not withhold his certificate, of medical qualification, consistent with conscience and duty, yet he is ready to concede that he had no abstract right to relieve the party from the censure of the association until this body had restored him to his fellowship. 3d. That so far from intending any disrespect to the association, or to its act of discipline, the undersigned had publicly sustained and de- fended both. He therefore disclaims the inference from his certificate 424 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [June, that he intended to recommend to a high professional office a man whom the association had excluded, and thereby nullify the action of this body. And, finally, with these statements and disclaimers, the undersigned, while retaining his own opinion of the rectitude of his motives, and of his duty, under the peculiar circumstances of the case, is nevertheless prepared to defer to the judgment of those whom he knows to be his friends, that he erred in doing what he had no right to do, in view of his official position in the association, and is hence called upon to offer this explanation and apology to his brethren. (Signed) DAVID M. REESE. It was moved to refer the apology and remarks of Dr. Reese to a spe- cial committee of seven, to report to-morrow morning. Dr. Atlee, of Lan- caster, and other gentlemen urged delay. Dr. Condie hoped that a committee would be appointed to give the subject a careful consideration. Dr. Cox, of Maryland, after complimenting Dr. Reese as an able prac- titioner and an experienced editor, whose labors have been of great value to the profession and to the country, said that he did not consider the statement full and satisfactory. The offence was not an unpardonable one, but the violation of that code of ethics which is the life of the pro- fession should be properly atoned for. [Applause.] The apology was good enough, but it carried as its sting the mental reservation which Dr. Reese persists in. Nay, in his journal, issued simultaneously with this meeting, and circulated here, he says : " Having done right in certi- fying to the labors of our quandam friend McClintock, we resented the unmerited censures of our Philadelphia brethren." This completely stul- tifies the effect of the apology. Dr. La Roche, of Philadelphia, explained his action and that of the Philadelphia county society in the matter. Dr. Pain, of Vermont, Dr. Cox, and Dr. Bond made some rather sharp remarks. Dr. Davis of Massachusetts, thought that Dr. Reese had but to admit that he had done wrong, and ask pardon without any mental reservation. Dr. Reese said that he had intended to make a satisfactory apology. Such was his earnest wish and desire, and he wished to frankly state that he had no mental reservation, neither did he attempt to conceal anything. He made the statement which had been read without reser- vation and without evasion. [Applause.] Dr. Conte expressed his entire satisfaction, as did numerous other gen- tlemen, several crossing to where Dr. Reese was sitting and shaking hands with him. 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 425 The committee of the whole then rose, and the chairman reported to the president that the committee had heard and discussed the apology of Dr. Reese, and that they considered that it was "ample, full, complete, and satisfactory." On motion, the report of the committee was received and adopted. The case of Dr. Bryan then came up, when it was suggested that his apology should be in writing, he expressing a willingness to make one as ample as was that of Dr. Reese.. Dr. Reese then drafted an apology, but several gentlemen insisted that he should insert the word " regret." Dr. Reese declined, stating that no gentleman would apologize for that which he did not regret, and that he would never be dictated to by any gentleman, even if the prison- door stood open on his right hand, and the stake was at his left hand. Dr. Wood (who was greeted with loud applause) stated that he had been with the side which had offered the apology, but he did not con- sider the apology complete without the insertion of the word " regret." Drs. Bonner, Clark, of New Jersey, Hard, of Illinois, Parker, of New York, and other gentlemen participated in an exciting debate on the necessity of having the word " regret" inserted. Dr. Reese added the following sentence, " and regrets that he has in- curred the displeasure of his brethren." This was not favorably received. Dr. Boyle, chairman of the committee of arrangements, here announ- ced that arrangements had been made by which delegates who had pur- chased tickets on their way to the convention over the following roads could return free by exhibiting their cards of membership : Pennsylva- nia, Wilmington and Manchester, Illinois, Central, Northeastern South Carolina, and Richmond and Petersburg. The apology of Dr. Reese was again taken up, and discussed with spirit, although there was no manifestation of bad feeling on either side. At length he presented the following : " The undersigned regrets that he certified to the professional quali- fications for Blockley Hospital, Philadelphia, of an expelled member of this body, and hereby offers this apology for his departure from the ethical code." This was received with loud applause, and on motion of Dr. White, accepted as an ample and satisfactory apology. Dr. Bryan submitted a similar apology, which was also accepted, and then the committee adjourned until to-day at nine o'clock, A. M., evidently well pleased that this question was finally disposed of. THIRD DAY. The President, Dr. Lindsley, having called the Association to order at half-past 9 o'clock, Dr. Grant, of New York, asked leave to present a 426 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [June, complaint against the New York Medical College, but on information by Dr. Edwards, that a Committee on Ethics would be recommended by the Nominating Committee, he withdrew the request. The appointment during last year of Dr. George Hayward, of Boston^ as a delegate to represent the American Medical Association, in kindred societies in Europe, was announced by Dr. Eve. Medical Education. Dr. Hamilton, from the Committee of Delegates from medical schools and colleges, to whom was referred the report of the Special Committee on medical colleges, reported the following pre- amble and resolution: Fully appreciating the value and importance of the resolution under which they were appointed, but a majority of the gentlemen constituting this committee not being authorized by the medical faculties of the sev- eral colleges with which we are connected to act as their representatives in this matter, and therefore regarding it quite impossible to secure a convention of delegates in the interim of the meetings of the association : Therefore, Resolved, That we recommend to all the medical colleges entitled to a representation in this body, that they appoint delegates, especially instructed to represent them in a meeting, to be held at Louis- ville, on Monday, the day immediately preceding the convention of the American Medical Association, for the year 1859, at ten o'clock, at such place as the Committee of Arrangements shall designate. The report was accepted, and the preamble and resolution were pass- ed ; after which, several gentlemen claimed the floor, but the president decided that the reports of special committees were in order, the reports of committees on Medical Topography and Epidemics having previously i)een referred to the Committee on Publication without reading. Dr. Foster Jenkins, of New York, read a report on the Spontaneous Umbilical Hemorrhage of the newly born ; which was read and referred to the Committee on Publication. Marriages of Consanguinity. Dr. S. .M, Bemis, of Kentucky, read an able and learned report on the " Influence of Marriages of Consan- guinity upon Offspring. Stone contributed to the Washington Monument. Dr. John L. Atlee, from the committee appointed at the annual meeting at Richmond, in May, 1852, to procure a stone with a suitable inscription to be insert- ed in the Washington National Monument, made a final report. It stated that Mr. Haldy, a marble mason of the city of Lancaster, Penn- sylvania, had in his employment a young man, Mr. J. Augustus Beck, a native of Litiz, Pennsylvania, who had given unmistakable evidence of genius as a sculptor. At the suggestion of the late lamented Dr. A. L. Pierson, of Salem, Massachusetts, (made at the meeting in New York, just ten days before his death,) the design of the celebrated painting of Girodet Tricoson, representing Hippocrates refusing the presents of the 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 427 Persian king, Artaxerxes, and his invitation to leave Greece, and reside and practise among her enemies, was selected. This was sculptured upon a block of Vermont marble, with the motto, " Vincet Amor Patrice" and the stone is now at the monument grounds. The entire expense was $1,000, of which one half was paid to the young artist. The amount contributed by members individually was 8501.30; the bal- ance was voted from the treasury of the society. Accompanying the report was a letter from the Secretary of the Washington National Mo- nument Association, and a resolution of thanks to the railroad compa- nies by whose liberality the stone was brought from Lancaster to Wash- ington, free of charge. The report was accepted, and the resolution was Dr. Palmer, of Buffalo, read a report, made by Dr. E. Andrews, of Chicago, Illinois, on the " Functions of the different portions of the Ce- rebellum." Dr. Campbell, of Georgia, read a report on " The Nervous System in Febrile Diseases," which was accepted, and referred to the Committee on Publication. Dr. J. Marion Simms, of New York city, read an abstract of his report on the "Treatment of the Results of Obstructed Labor," illustrated with a series of magnified illustrations. Committees for the ensuing year. Dr. Edwards, from the Commit- tee of Nomination, offered the following list of committees for the ensu- ing year, which was accepted, and the committees were chosen : Special Committee on the Microscope. Drs. Holsten of Ohio, Dal ton of New York, Hutchinson of Indiana, Stout of California, and Ellis of Massachusetts. Special Committee on Medical Jurisprudence. Drs. Smith of New York, Hamilton of Buffalo, Crosby of New Hampshire, Purple of New York, and Mulford of New Jersey. Committee on Quarantine. Drs. Harris of New York, Moriarty of Massachusetts, La Roche of Pennsylvania, Wragg of South Carolina, and Fenner of St. Louis. Committee on Surgical Pathology. Dr. James R. Wood of New York, chairman. Committee on Diseases and Mortality of Boarding Schools. Dr. C. P. Mallengly of Kentucky, chairman. Committee on thevarions Surgical Operations for the Relief of Defect- ive Vision. Dr. Montrose A. Pallen of St. Louis, chairman. Committee on Milk Sickness. Dr. Edward A. Murphy of Indiana, chairman. Committee on Medical JEihics. Drs. John Watson of New York, Dal- ton of Massachusetts, Emerson of Pennsylvania, Hamilton of New York, and Gaillard of South Carolina. Dr. Edwards also reported from the Committee of Nomination, the following resolution, in reference to the restoration of Dr. Bailey : 428 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [June, Resolved, That a committee of nine be appointed by the chair to wait on the Hon. Howell Cobb, Secretary of the Treasury, and respectfully to request the restoration of Dr. M. J. Bailey, as inspector of drugs and medicines for the port of New York. Dr. Edwards followed his resolution by an elaborate and eloquent ar- gument, giving his opinion of the importance of the office of inspector, and urging that it was obligatory on the association to insist on the re- instatement of Dr. Bailey, as one eminently qualified to discharge its duties. Dr. Tyler, of Georgetown, rose to reply to the remarks of Dr. Edwards, he acknowledged the important service Dr. Edwards had rendered the pro- fession in procuring in Congress the passage of the law for the inspection of drugs and medicines, but when it was proposed to appoint a committee to wait upon an executive officer of government, and dictate to him, he felt that it would be turning aside from the purpose for which this associa- tion was organized. A rather protracted argument here succeeded, in which substitutes were offered for the first resolution, and in which the following gentle- men engaged : Dr. Bolton of Virginia, Dr. Cox, of Maryland, who offered the following substitute : Resolved, That the appointment of inspectors of drugs and medicines in the various ports of the United States, should, in the opinion of this association, have regard to the essential, moral, and scientific qualifica- tions of the candidates, and not to considerations of personal favoritism or political bias. Dr. Tyler, of Georgetown, supported the resolution of Dr. Cox as a fair compromise. He believed that the appointment of the committee would transform the association into a mere political machine, and con- cluded by strongly urging the passage of the resolution offered by Dr. Cox. Dr. Dunbar, of Maryland, strongly opposed the resolution of the Nominating Committee, and asked if it was the duty of that committee to nominate a candidate for inspector-general of drugs at New York. [Laughter.] The discussion of this question here became very general, and rather noisy, the following gentlemen engaging Dr. Bachelder of New York, Dr. Parker of Virginia, Dr. Wilcox of Connecticut, Dr. Jew- ell of Pennsylvania, Dr. Wood of New York, Dr. Rodgers of New York, and Dr. Sayer of New York. The resolution as amended was then carried by a vote of 79 ayes to 52 noes. Resolved, That a committee of nine be appointed by the chair to wait on the Hon. Howell Cobb, Secretary of the Treasury, and respectfully to request the restoration of Dr. M. J. Bailey as inspector of drugs and medicines for the port of New York at the same time disclaiming all political considerations. 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 429 Dr. Gibbs, of South Carolina, moved that Professor Henry be request- ed to favor the association with his views on Meteorology, at such time during the session as he may select : carried. Dr. Campbell, of Georgia, moved that the Secretary place on record an expression of the regret with which this association has learned the death of Dr. Marshall Hall of London, Dr. Claiborn R. Walton of Au- gusta, Dr. S. W. Granton, Dr. T. Y. Simmons of Charleston, S. C, Dr. J. K. Mitchell of Philadelphia, and other members deceased, since the last annual session : carried. Vote of Thanks. On motion of Dr. Phelps, the following resolutions were passed unanimously, the members rising : Resolved, That the thanks of this association are eminently due to the Regents and Professor Henry, of the Smithsonian Institution, for the ample and convenient accommodations afforded for the transaction of business. Resolved, That the Committee of Arrangements are entitled to our praise and highest appreciation of their exertions to promote the comfort of the members and best interests of the association. Resolved, That to the physicians of Washington and Georgetown and the faculty of Georgetown College we accord the homage of our sincerest thanks for their elegant hospitalities extended to the members from abroad, by which the pleasure of their sojourn here has been so greatly enhanced. Resolved, That we feel assured that the impressions on the tablet of memory received here, in our national metropolis, in this the first year of the second decade of the association, will long remain an evidence of the urbane attentions received, not only from the Chief Magistrate and other public functionaries of our glorious Union, but of private citizens and the community at large. Resolved, That the manifestations of union of heart and purpose in the action of this session, inaugurate a new era, and call for devout acknow- ledgement to Divine Providence, and presage, as we trust, not only a bright future for the association, but also as contributing to the perpe- tuity and prosperity of our great national confederation. On motion of Dr. Anderson, of New Jersey, it was unanimously re- solved that the thanks of the medical association be presented to Rev. Dr. McGuire and his faculty of the College of Georgetown for their very cordial reception and entertainment of the association at the College yesterday. Dr. Arnold, of Georgia, then exhibited specimens of a new method of medical preparations of some membrane incomprehensible to the report- er, but which was evidently very interesting to the association. On motion of Dr. Foster, of Tennessee, it was resolved that after 1860, Dr. Hamilton have the privilege of using his report on H Deformities after Fractures," published in the Transactions, for a work which he proposes to publish. 430 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [June, Dr. Campbell, of Georgia, was not aware, until he had just heard permission granted to Dr. Hamilton, that he had trangressed in repub- lishing in a work a report which he had contributed to the Transactions of the association. [Cries of " regret it," " regret it."] He did regret it, and asked the sanction of the society : which was granted. Dr. Dunbar moved to reconsider the vote appointing a committee to request the reinstation of Dr. Bailey, and Dr. Morgan seconded it, but as Dr. Parker had been invited upon the platform, the motion was ruled out of order. Dr. Parker's Chinese Hospital. Dr. Peter Parker, ex-commission- er to China, was then introduced, and was received with applause. He exhibited some curious specimens of calculi, as the results of thirty-eight operations upon Chinese. They were of various shapes and composition, and weighed from a few drachms up to three, seven, and eight ounces, his description of the operations by which these calculi were removed was deeply interesting, and it was gratifying to learn that out of the thir- ty eight patients all but five or six recovered perfect health. Dr. Parker proceeded to state that he has treated in China, at the hos- pital under his charge, fifty-three thousand cases. Pictures of the most curious cases he had brought to this country, and they were on exhibi- tion in the room below. At no very distant period he hopes to place in a permanent form the results of his labors, with illustrations. [Applause.] Among other cases, he had probably performed upwards of a thousand operations for cataract. On one day he operated in sixteen cases, the youngest being a mere child, and 'the oldest on old lady seventy-nine years of age. She came, led by a servant, submitted heroically to opera- tions on both eyes the same day, and in a fortnight had her sight per- fectly restored. [Applause.] In acknowledging a vote of thanks, Dr. Parker said he had among his patients all classes, from members of the imperial family down to beggars. His greatest difficulty had bee to persuade his patients that he could not cure all diseases. Reconsideration of the Dr. Bailey Resolution. Dr. Dunbar claimed the floor, and urged the reconsideration of the vote appointing a committee to wait on the Secretary of the Treasury, and solicit the reinstation of Dr. Bailey. Dr. Payne, of Virginia, opposed the reconsideration. Dr. Tyler advocated it, and asked if this association was formed to wait on executive officers, and to dictate to them who they shall remove, and who they shall appoint. Many gentlemen around him, he was assur- ed, had voted for the resolution without due reflection, and he trusted with confidence in their sober second thought. [Applause.] The press and the profession, he felt confident, would denounce this association if it 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 431 entered into the wide field of politics. It was instituted to promote the great cause of science, not to join issue with government. [Applause.] Dr. Morgan also advocated a reconsideration. He was not a partisan. Although he resides in Washington, he has no personal acquaintance with the President or the Secretary of the Treasury, but he was confi- dent that they would not have m^e the change without good reason, and it was not the mission of this association to criticise or to attempt to change their views. Dr. Palmer, after stating how little regard he had for the opinions of the press, inquired as to the present incumbent of the office. Is he capa- ble? Dr. Watson, of New York, said that Dr. Bailey had had his circulars out since his "rotation," and the subject had been twice before the Academy of Medicine, who have ignored it. Dr. Burns of Brooklyn, said that he was not a politician, and that he was a personal friend of Dr. Bailey, but he hoped that the vote would be reconsidered. A member from California relates his experience there on a question as to the superintendent of a lunatic asylum. In his opinion the less the association had to do with politics, or with expressions of opinion on political appointments, the better. (Applause.) Dr. McXulty, of New York, said that the question had been twice before the New York Academy of Medicine, and twice been voted down. The present incumbent, whom it is sought to oust, is a German by birth and education. He can read the invoices in whatever European language they may be sent, and he makes his own analyses, which it is reported the ex-inspector did not do. After some il parliamentary'' skirmishing, it was decided to reconsi- der by a vote of 51 ayes to 32 noes. And, on motion, the subject was then indefinitely postponed. The association then took a recess of two hours, for dinner. Evening and Closing Session. The association was called to order at five o'clock, P. M., by Dr. Sutton, one of the vice-presidents, who took the chair. The amendment to the constitution, proposed at the annual meeting at Nashville, had been made the " special order." They were 1st. Amend the third article of the constitution, in relation to meetings, by inserting after the words " first Tuesday in May," the words kk or the first Tuesday in June ;" and also inserting after the words M shall be de- termined," the words " with the time of meeting." 2d. In article 2, omit the words "medical colleges," and also the words "the faculty of every regular constituted medical college, or chartered school of medi- cine, shall have the privilege of sending two delegates." 432 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [June, Each amendment was separately discussed, and each was lost by a large vote. An amendment proposed at Philadelphia in 1856 providing for ihe establishment of a permanent secretaryship, was lost by a vote of 53 ayes to 84 noes. On motion of Dr. Foster, of Tennessee, the secretary was directed to collect all the by-laws, and have the^i printed in the next volume. An attempt was made to introduce a motion endorsing the accoustics and ventilation of the new Capitol extensions, but it was ridiculed by Dr. Sayer, and was withdrawn. Various additional votes of thanks were passed, and, at ten minutes of seven, the association adjourned sine die. The account of the 11th aunual meeting presented in the foregoing pages, we have condensed mainly from the very accurate report found in the Daily Washington, Union, adding such passing comments as the performance of the hurried task would allow. Many of the measures therein developed, receive our hearty approval, while others, did we have time and space, would have received from us, comments conveying a far different opinion. Whatever may be our opinion of the deliberations of the association, all are constrained to admit that it has vindicated its power and influ- ence in the profession all over the land, and the opinion which we ex- pressed some months ago, that " to trangress its wise and benevolent counsels is to suffer loss of position," could not have been more fully verified, than by the results of the session just closed at Washington. Books, Journals, and Pamphlets received. "We have received a large num- ber of Books, Pamphlets and Journals, besides communications for our own pages, the notices of which, together with almost our entire miscellany, have been ex- cluded by the space devoted to the minutes of the annual meeting of the Ameri- can Medical Association. We shall endeavor to do justice to these works in our next issue. Coffee and Lemon Juice in Ague. M. Von. Holsbeek draws attention to a mode of treatment he has found useful. Infuse an ounce of well- roasted coffee in three ounces of boiling water, and having strained the fluid, acidulate it with lemon-juice. The whole is given at once, five hours before the paroxysm. ' Presse Beige,1 and Med. Times and Gaz. Local Application in Eczema of the Face in Children. Dr. Behrend in a note on the treatment of eczema, recommends the employment of the following combination as a remedy for the numerous scales which frequently cover the face of children : Cod-liver oil, half an ounce ; car- bonate of soda, half a drachm. Mix. Gaz. Hop, and Dublin Hospital Gazette. 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 433 A New Anaesthetic. The subject of the following letter we deem of such deep interest, in a surgical point of view, that we have inserted it, although we have not space for those comments which its great importance evidently demands. Should electricity take the place of chloroform and amylene, in Surgery, how incalculable will be the result of the experiments here detailed. Electricity in Extracting Teeth. By D. S. Cuase, M.D., D.D.S., of Augusta, Ga. To the Editors of the Southern Medical and Surgical Journal : Gentlemen, HaviDg been experimenting with electricity in some of the more painful operations of Dental Surgery, and believing the subject to be new to most of your readers, I send you, in a few lines, the result of my observations made in extracting more than fifty teeth, for different persons, within the last two weeks. The Eirst Case in which I tried it, I removed seven teeth, all firmly set five molars and two cuspidati or eye teeth. In extracting the first tooth, too much electricity was applied, and the patient complained of pain from the shock, but not from the removal of the tooth. In the second tooth too little was applied, and the tooth itself gave pain. After this, we were able to regulate the quanti- ty, so that neither the electricity nor the extraction of the tooth gave much pain. Patient not at all nervous, and frequently expressed herself highly pleased with the operation. The feeling experienced during the extraction of the teeth, as she expressed it, was a benumbing sensation about the tooth, which appeared to be attached only to the gum. Second Case. Extracted six teeth. Patient somewhat debilitated from previ- ous suffering with her teeth, and quite nervous. Suffered considerable pain during the operation, but would not allow one to be extracted without electricity. Third Case. Extracted four teeth. Patient suffered but little pain. Fourth'' Case. Extracted a molar tooth, that had been previously broken, for a highly intelligent gentleman from a neighboring village. He was much pleased witli the operation, and was very enthusiastic in his praises of electricity as applied to Dental Surgery. Fifth and last Case, that I will report at present Extracted ten teeth for an elderly lady. Expressed no fear during the operation, and seemed to treat the affair as a mere trifle, which might be attended to any morning, without much inconvenience. The general expression by those who have tried it, seems to be in favor of electricity in extracting teeth. In some of the cases mentioned above, the gums were lanced by the same pro- cess, by connecting one pole of the battery with the handle of the lancet, while the patient held the other the hand of the operator being protected by a silk glove. I would here suggest that electricity may prove a valuable agent in the hands of the sprgeon, in mitigating the pain of surgical operations. Who will try it? The machine in use by myself, at the present time, is the compound magneto- electric machine, the same as used by physicians for medical purposes ; but I have no doubt that voltaic or galvanic electricity will answer the purposes of the surgeon, better than the magneto-electric current, as the shocks of the former follow each other in such rapid succession, as to appear like one continuous current, while the latter is more or less interrupted, causing some trembling, and jerking of the muscles. 434 Editorial and Miscellaneous. How to keep Rooms cool in Summer. Lord Rosse has denied the absurd prediction, that the approaching summer will be an extraordina- ry hot one. Still, it may be well that medical men should be forearmed with the means of cooling their own and their patients' rooms. A flat vessel rilled with water, and on which are floated branches of trees covered with green leaves, is a very pleasant and efficacious means, and is much employed in Germany. The suspension of Indian matting, previously damped, at the open window, tends much to diminish the heat. The matting may be imitated by any kind of plaited glass. London Lancet. Pressure in Phlegmasia Dolens. In relating the case of a young woman who had suffered from phlegmasia dolens, and in whom the superficial veins continued much swollen, M. Trousseau cautioned his pupils against applying in similar cases firm bandages. The deep-seated veins being obliterated, this enlargement of the superficial ones is a necessary conse- quence, and compressing them by a firm bandage would completely in- terrupt the circulation of the limb. A moderate degree of pressure, however, is admissable, as giving support to the walls of the superficial vessels, and preventing their becoming varicose. Ibid, and Med. Times and Gazette. Death of Dr. R. Q. Dickenson. We deeply regret that it becomes our duty to record the death of our worthy and now lamented friend, Dr. R. Q. Dickenson, of Albany. The following notice, we (for want of space and on account of its late arrival) have been obliged to condense from a well written sketch prepared by one, who, like ourselves, knew him well and loved him well. Obituary. Died, recently, in Albany, Baker county, Dr. Roger Q. Dickenson, aged 61 years. Dr. Dickenson was born in Spottsylvania, Virginia, and was a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania of the year 1826. He was one of the oldest and most successful practitioners in our State, having been for more than thirty years en- gaged in the humane and benevolent ministrations of our Profession. Some five years ago he was elected President of the Medical Society of the State of Georgia, the duties of which post he discharged with dignity and honor. None enjoyed the annual meetings more than he did, for his heart and soul were fully enlisted in every measure which could advance and elevate the Medical Profession. The medical men of his own community will feel, sensibly, his loss : there, he was personally and intimately known. Being the oldest physician in the community, he was revered and honored by them all ; his kind and gentle manners won their hearts, and they must feel that, in the death of their elder brother, each has lost an able counsellor a kind and warm hearted friend. Albany, Dougherty Co.. Oa., May 20th, 1868. S. S. C , M.D. SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL. (NEW SERIES.) Vol. XIV.] AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, JULY, 1868. [No. 7. * ORIGINAL AND ECLECTIC. ARTICLE XV. Observations on Malarial Fever. By Joseph Jones, A.M., M.D., Professor of Physics and Natural Theology in the University of Georgia, Athens ; Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacy in the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta ; formerly Professor of Medical Chemistry in the Medical College of Savannah. [Continued from p. 398 of June No. 1848.] In the preceding article we stated briefly, some of the difficul- ties attending pathological' and physiological investigations, and acknowledged the imperfections of the present researches. We are about to present numerous analyses of the urine ; and before doing this, we would candidly acknowledge the sources of error in attempting to determine the amount of urine excreted during any stated period, as 24 hours. When the bowels are frequently moved, it is almost impossible to ascertain, even approximately, the amount of urine excreted. When the patient is delirious, and passes his urine and feces in the bed, it is impossible to ascertain either the amount or character of the urine. Even when the bowels are not moved, and the patient retains his faculties and a considerable amount of strength, it often happens that, during the night, the nurse will neglect to attend to the passage, and preservation of the excretions in the proper vessels. It often happens, from a combination of such circumstances, that the urine of the most fatal, important and interesting cases escapes our examination. These difficulties, in hospital investigations, cannot readily be overcome, and will often invalidate the conclusions drawn from individual cases. Our duty, then, is to obtain as wide an induc- tion of facts as possible, and thus eliminate or equalize, as far as N. 8. VOL. XIV. NO. VII. 21 436 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [Jutyj possible, the errors, and draw our conclusions, not so much from individual cases as from the whole assemblage of facts. From our copious notes on "more than two hundred cases of malarial fever, we have determined to present a condensed statement of those which presented points of interest to the physiologist, pathologist and practitioner of medicine. Our limits will not permit us to enter into a minute account of the method of analyzing the urine. In view of the numerous excellent treatises upon this subject, accessible to all, this would involve an unnecessary consumption of space and time. We will simply state the method, with full references to the appro- priate authors. The urea was separated in the form of the nitrate,^) and (1) Lehmann's Physiological Chemistry, Eng. Ed., vol. i., p. 159. Amer. Ed., vol. i., p. 149. Mitscherlich in Annalen derPhysik und Chemie, Von Poggendorff, Bd. 31, S. 303. Kidneys and Urine, by J. J. Berzelius. Translated by Boyle & Learning, M.D. Philadelphia, 1843, pp. 66-83. Hand Book of Chemistry, by Leopold Gmelin. Translated by H. Watts, Cav. Soc. pub. London, 1852. Vol. vii., p. 363. Simons Chemistry of Man. Philadelphia, 1846, p. 39*7. Becquerel's & Rodier's Pathological Chemistry. Trans, by Speer. Lond. 185*7. The student of medicine desirous of entering into similar investigations upon the urine and blood, will find not only all the details of anatysis, but also invaluable information in the following works and articles: Anleitung zur Qualitativen und Quantitativen Zoochemischen Analyse, Von E. Von Gorup Besanez. Nurn- berg, 1854. Anleitung zur Qualitativen und Quantitativen, Analyse des Harns, Von Carl Neubauer. Wiesbaden, 1854. Heintz: Lehrbuck der Zoochemie. Ber- lin, 1853. Schlossberger : Lehrbuch der Organischen Chemie mit besonderer, Rucksicht, auf Physiologie und Pathologic Stuttgart, 1854. Robin et Verdeil : Traite de Chimie Anatomique et Physiologique, ou des Principes immeditas Nor- maux et Morbides que constituent le Corps de l'Homme et de Mammiferes. 3 vols. Paris, 1853. " A Course of Practical Chemistry," arranged for the use of Medical Students, by Wm. Ordling, M. D.. London, 1854. Bird, on Urinary Deposits. Philad. 1854. Bowman's Medical Chemistry. Philad. 1855. For Leibig's valuable memoir " On Certain Urea Compounds, and a new me- thod of determining the Chloride of Sodium, and the Urea in the Urine," see Ann. der Chem. und Pharm., vol. lxxxv., pp. 289-328. See translation of this memoir in vol. vi. of the Quarterly Journal of the Chemical Society. Limpricht, on the Influence of Allantoin on the determination of Urea by the method of Liebig. Ann. der Chem. und Pharm., vol. lxxxvii., p. 99. Kletzinsky, " On the Comparison of the Values of the Different Methods of Determining the Quantity of Urea." Heller's Archiv. fur Chem. und Mikrosk., p. 252. Jahrgang, 1853. " A New Method of Determining the Amount of Urea, by Dr. E. Davy." Phil. Mag., June, 1854. Medico-Chir. Rev., Oct. 1854. "The Detection and Estima- tion of Urea, by Ragsky." Ranking's Abstract of Med. Sciences, 1845. Part II, p. 90. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Urinabsonderung bei gesunden. Inaugural Abhandlung. Von Aug. Winter. Giessen, 1852. Beitrage zur Kenntniss der Urinabsonderung bei Gesunden schwangern und kranken Personen. Inaugural Abhandlung. Von Friedr. Mosler. Giessen, 1853. Klinische Untersuchungen uber den Stoffwechsel, bei gesunden und kranken menschen uberhaupt und den durch den Urin insbesondere. Von Prof. J. Vogel. Gottingen, 1853. Studien zur Urologie. Von Dr. F. Fr. Beneke. (Archiv. des Vereins fur gemeinschaft- liche Arbeiten. Band i., Hefte 3 and 4.) Gottingen, 1853. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 437 every care was taken to secure accuracy in the results. The amounts of the constituents in all these analyses, from the causes previously stated, will be under-rated, and never over-rated. The urine was always analyzed a short time after its passage. This precaution is necessary in a warm, moist climate, like that of Savannah. In the heat of summer the urea is often, espe- cially in the urine of convalescence, rapidly decomposed into carbonate of ammonia. In one case of malarial fever, where the patient was suffering with a stricture and irritation of the bladder, every trace of urea disappeared from the urine in twelve hours. I have endeavored, scrupulously, to exclude from these pa- pers, every analysis the result of which was influenced by changes, in the urine, subsequent to its excretion by the kidneys. Uric acid was determined in the usual manner, by precipitation with hydrochloric acid. The inorganic matters of the urine were determined accord- ing to the simple and accurate method of M. Lecanu. The amount of the coloring and extractive matters was obtained by substracting the weights of the urea, uric acid and inorganic matters, from the solid matter of the urine, carefully and accu- rately determined. The analyses of the blood were conducted according to the method previously described by the author. Case IX. October 9th, 8 o'clock, P.M. Seaman : age 40, height 5 feet 10^ inches, weight 170 lbs. Auburn hair, blue eyes, florid complexion ; sanguine temperament ; well developed muscular man. Native of Sweden. Has been in New Orleans, Panama, and other southern ports, but has never been sick be- fore. This is his first trip to Savannah ; has been sleeping on the bay; was taken with chill and fever two days ago, and has suffered much with painsin his head. Yesterday vomited bile. Tongue slightly coated with white fur. Now his skin is in a good perspiration. Twenty minutes ago, his skin felt very hot and dry to the touch. Supposing that his temperature was several degrees above the normal standard, I hastened to the la- boratory to obtain my thermometer ; I was detained twenty minutes, and when I returned, to my surprise, his skin felt moist and cool under the hand, in comparison with the previous ob- servation. 438 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [July, Pulse 86 ) Temperature of Atmosphere, 72 F. [ " " Hand 100 Respiration. ..23 ) " under Tongue 10175' The rise of the thermometer in his hand (the hand as usual was kept carefully- closed around the bulb,) was irregular. It rose to 100, and at this point was stationary for several minutes : it then fell gradually to 98, and again rose gra- dually to 100. In this case we see that the reduction of temperature was simultaneous with the relaxation of the skin and flow of perspiration. Is the remission of the fever due to the restoration of the functions of the sudoriparous glands, which collectively expose a surface of tubing 1,570,000 inches, or nearly 28 miles in length? Is the morbific agent, or agents, which have disturbed the chemical actions and correlation of the forces eliminated by these glands? If the intermission is due to the restoration of the functions of the sudoriparous glands, what excited them to action ? Is the phenomena connected with the nervous system alone, or with chemical and physical changes in the structure of the morbific agents, and of the blood and secretions and excretions ? If the reduction of temperature be not dependent upon the restoration of the functions of the sudoriparous glands, what retarded the chemical actions by which the physical forces are generated? If the chemical actions developing an unusual amount of heat were excited by the introduction of foreign elements, may not the foreign elements themselves have entered into these chemi- cal actions, and been so altered, that they have been for a time rendered inert? That a special end is accomplished, in malarial fever, by an elevation of temperature is proved by the fact that the cases which manifest the highest temperatures, are as a general rule attended with little or no danger, whilst in those cases, as con- gestive fever, where there is a depression of temperature, the danger is always imminent. It is true that the sudoriparous glands have much to do with the regulation of the temperature for the water which they elim- inate from the blood during its evaporation, abstracts one thou- sand degrees of heat from the surface of the body and the surrounding atmosphere. This heat is expended in the mecha- nical action of keeping asunder the particles of water, and is hence insensible to the thermometer. The experiments of Dr. South wood Smith, (2) at the Phoenix Gas Works, and of MM. Berger, Delaroche, (3) Fordice, Blag- den, (4) and others, (5) have shown that when animals and man (2) "Philosophy of Health," vol. II. pp. 391396. (3) " Experiences sur les Effets qu'une forte Chaleur produit sur l'Economie." Paris, 1805, and Journal de Physique, tomes lxxiii., lxxi., et lxxvii. (4) "Philosophical Transactions." 1775. . (5) Magendie's Experiments upon the Influence of Hot air on Animal Life. Ana. Jour. Med. Sciences, January 1845, p. 183. M. Constantine James, on the effects of the hot moist air of the baths, or 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 439 were subjected to great external degrees of heat, the tempera- ture of the body was regulated by the evaporation from the surface of the skin and lungs. When the air was dry, individ- uals were able to endure, for a considerable length of time, a temperature of from 250 to 350 degrees, without injurious ef- fects, and without any great elevation of temperature. The loss of water from the surface of the body was correspondingly great, and by its evaporation maintained the temperature of the interior at the normal standard. If, however, this evaporation be interfered with, by saturating the air with aqueous vapor, the temperature rose rapidly, and the individuals died in a short time. The rapidity and force of the circulation and respiration also, have much to do with the increase or diminution of temperature in the active stages and in the intermission of malarial fever. This will be established in future by numerous examples. Examination of Urine passed one hour after these observations, when the sweat- ing stage was fully established. Reddish orange color, scant. Reaction acid. Specific gravity, 1028. 1000 parts of Urine contained: UnVAcid\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\'20^6U^e imo"nt * lr.on Weired to be Fixed Saline Constituents. .16-245 ) shShtly lnci>eased- Microscopical Examination. After 18 hours, no deposit, reaction still acid. After 60 hours, a light yellow deposit of a few prismatic crystals of triple phos- phate, and numerous globular acicular crystals of urate of ammonia, and small globular and elongated vegetable cells and vibrones. When this deposit was treated with hydrochloric acid, numerous crystals of uric acid appeared under the microscope. Has no pain upon pressure of epigastrium, but has a tendency to vomit. fy Apply sinapism to epigastrium. Calomel grs. xij., sulphate of quinia grs. vi., mix ; administer and follow with castor oil in four hours. As soon as fever intermits, give sulph. of quinia grs. v. every three hours, up to grs. xx. October 10th, 1 o'clock, P.M. Medicine operated well ; much better, sitting up; skin and tongue normal; pulse 64; respira- tion 24. Has taken 20 grains of sulphate of quinia. I> Quassia and soda. Full diet. 8 o'clock, P.M. Had a chill one hour ago, which lasted thir. stoves, of Nero, at Pozzuoli, Gazette Medicale, 27th Avril, 1844. "W. F. Edwards on Animal Heat. Cyclopedia of Anatomy and Physioloy, vol. ii. pp. 649 684. John Davy, on Animal Temperature. Philosophical Transactions, 1814. Edin- burgh Philosophical Journal, Jan. 1826. See also, Researches Physiological and Anatomical, by Dr. John Davy, London, 1839, vol. i. pp. 141 248. Experi- ments of Tillet and Duhamel. -experiments on the servants of a baker at Roche- foucault in Angoumois. Mem. Acad. Scien. pour 1764, p. 186, et seq. Experi- ments of Dobson at Liverpool ; Phil. Trans, for 1775, p. 463, et seq. Observations on the effects of High Temperatures, by Bell of Manchester. Manchester Mem. vol. i. p. 1, et seq. Currie on application of Water at different Temperatures. Phil. Trans, for 1792, p. 199, et seq. Experiments of Delaroehc, Jour. Phys. t. lxiii. p. 207. Nicholson's Journ., vol. xvii. p. 142. 215. Jour. Phys., t. lxxi.'p. 289, and t. lxxvii. 1. Lavoisier on Transpiration, Mem. Acad., pour 1790. John Reid on Respiration, Cycloped. of Anatomy and Physiology, vol. iv. pp. 325 368. 440 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [July, ty minutes. His extremities are just recovering their normal temperature, $ As soon as fever remits, give sulph. of quinia up to grs. xx. Urine light orange color, scant and concentrat- ed. The amount was not determined on account of the action of the medicine. October 11th, 11 o'clock, A. M. Had fever all night, and vomited three times. Fever intermitted this morning, at 4 o'clock, A.M. Suffered greatly with pain in his head during the fever. This moderated greatly after the subsidence of the fever. No tenderness of epigastrium; tongue clear and a little redder at its tip and edges than normal. Pulse 70. Respiration 20. Has taken 10 grains of sulph. of quinia this morn- ing. ~fy Continue sulph. of quinia up to grs. xxv. Diet, beef soup and tea. Urine passed during fever, of a deep orange color. Specific Gravity 1020. Reaction decidedly acid. Amount of Urine passed during the last 15 hours, 10200 grains. " hourly " " " 680 " Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, 16320 " Urine excreted in 15 hours, grs. 10200 contained, grs. ANALYSIS IX. Calculated am't of Ui ine for 24 hours, grs. 16320, contained grs. 1000 parts of Urine contain- ed, Uric Acid,. . . Fixed Saline stituents. . , Con- 0-800 9*7-000 1-280 155-200 0-078 9.509 We see that, notwithstanding the diminution of the uric acid under the action of the sulphate of quinia, the chill and fever returned. After standing 40 hours, the urine let fall a moderately heavy deposit of triple phosphate and vegetable cells. Oct. 12th, 11 o'clock A. M. Says that yesterday afternoon, between the hours of 3 and 6 o'clock P. M., he "had cold chills running over his body, which did not, however, amount to a regular shaking chill." These chilly feelings were not followed by fever, but by a profuse sweat. Pulse 76. Respiration 20, soft and gentle. Tongue clean ; skin moist and cool. fy. Quassia and soda. Snake-root tea. Full diet. Urine passed during the last 24 hours of a deep orange color, with a heavy light-yellow deposit of triple phosphate and vegetable cells. Sp. Gr. 1020. Amount passed during the last 24 hours, grains 12,240 (I it hourly, " 510 ANALYSIS X. Urine excreted in 24 hours, grs. 12,240 contained grs. 1000 parts of Urine contained Uric Acid, 1-200 48-000 0-098 Fixed Saline Constituents, . . 3-921 The uric acid is still far below the normal standard. 8 o'clock P. M. Has no fever ; skin moist and cool ; pulse regular. Urine orange colored, and of high specific gravity. Oct. 13th, 11 o'clock, A. M. Up and dressed. Says that he "had no fever last night, but did not rest well ; his dreams trou- bled him. After rising this morning suffered with vertigo, and 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 441 vomited mucus." Tongue normal ; skin cool ; pulse 60 ; respi- ration 16. Amount of Urine passed during the last 15 hours, grains 4136. J Orange color'd. Calculated amount for 24 hours, " 6617. >- Specific gravi- Amount of Urine excreted hourly, ' 275.7 ) ty 1034. Reaction, after standing 15 hours, decidedly alkaline. N05 and Hcl. produced a powerful effervescence by the liberation of the carbonic acid from the carbon- ate of ammonia resulting from the decomposition of the urea. Up to this time the reaction of the urine, after standing the same length of time, has been acid. Uric acid in urine of 15 hours, (grs. 4136) 0'800 " " Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, (grs. 6617) 1.280 " 1000 parts of urine, 0193 A few hours after its deposition the urine let fall a heavy light-yellow deposit of penniform and prysmatic crystals of triple phosphate and globular and elonga- ted vegetable cells. The weather has been damp and cloudy for two weeks, and the wards of the hospital are crowded with patients, and this will account for the rapid propagation of these vegetable organisms. This patient left the hospital on the succeeding day. Case X. October 5th, 11 o'clock A.M. American seaman, age 16 ; weight 125 lbs. ; light brown hair, blue eyes, florid complexion ; sanguine temperament. From cutter Taney, which has been lying at the ship-yard in the low lands east of the city. Four nights ago he slept on the Savannah river in an open boat. Has not felt well since, and thinks that this was the cause of his sickness. The next morning he felt badly ; had pains in his bones and back, but no chill. These uncomfortable feelings were followed by fever, which intermitted yesterday morning. This morning he had a slight chill, followed by fever. Has high fever now. Xo tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium, Pulse 120. Respiration 40. Temperature of Atmosphere, 72 F. ) Skin hot, dry and pungent to the " " Hand, 10575' > hand; lips parched and dry ; tongue " under Tongue,. .. . 106 ) red, dry, and rough to the feeling. Reaction of saliva acid. Here is a bounding, rapid pulse full, heaving, rapid respira- tion, and a correspondingly high temperature. These symp- toms, together with the hot, pungent skin dry, parched lips red tongue, and flushed face, although striking, as a general rule, should never alarm the practitioner, as long as they are not complicated with obstinate vomiting, or cerebral symptoms. In cases of malignant (congestive) malarial fever, on the other hand, there is, as far as my observations extend, a want of co- ordination between the actions of the circulatory and respiratory systems, and the rapidity and character of the chemical changes. The heart attempts to propel the blood it beats rapidly, (flut- ters 140 to 160 times in a minute,) but the blood does not flow readily through the capillaries, because the chemical changes are in a great measure arrested, and in many cases perverted. In the present case, on the other hand, there is a correspondence in all the actions, the rapid circulation and respiration are attended with correspondingly rapid -chemical changes and high temperature. 442 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [July, R; Calomel grs. viij., castor oil in 4 hours, fy Bicarbonate of potassa, 3iv. Citric acid 3ij., water ffxxiv., mix and drink ad libitum during fever. Diet Gruel and flaxseed tea. $: As soon as fever remits, give sulp. of quinia grs. v. every three hours, up to grs. xx. October 6th, 1-J- o'clock, P. M. Says, that he is much better, feels very well, and has no pain anywhere. Medicine operated twice, freely. No tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium. The fe- ver intermitted last night, and he rested well. Tongue moist, soft, and clean; papillae slightly enlarged and distinct; skin moist and relaxed. Pulse 64. Res- piration 20. Temperature of Atmosphere, 73 F. " Hand 945' " under Tongue 99 Urine light orange color. Sp. Gr. 1022. Reaction of saliva acid. Has taken 15 grs. Sulph. of quinia. R; Sulph. of quinia grs. v. October 7th, 1 o'clock, P. M. Deci- dedly better, up and dressed. Tongue clean and normal. Pulse 62. Respira- tion 20. Temperature of Atmosphere, 72 F. " " Hand 9475' " under Tongue 9920' fy Snakeroot tea, tablespoonful every four hours. ty Quassia and soda. Full diet. Amount of urine passed during the last 24 hours, grs. 8240. Sp. Gr. 1030. Am't of urine passed hourly grs. 343-3. Reaction acid when first voided. In 16 hours the reaction changed to alkaline, and a heavy light yellow deposit was thrown down. Octr. 8th, 2 o'clock, P.M. Continues to improve. Tongue and skin normal. Pulse 52. Respiration 24. Temperature of Atmosphere, 73 F. " " Hand 982' " under Tongue 995' Ri Continue quassia and soda. Amount of urine passed in the last 24 hours, grs. 8721. Sp. Gr. 1026. Amount of urine passed hourly, grs. 363.3. Re- action changed from acid to alkaline in 14 hours . The patient states that he ordinarily drinks but a small quantity of water, and hence the concentrated state of his urine. Spec. Gravity of Urine.. . Urine excret- ed hourlv . . Urine excret- ed in 24 hours. . . to * o o ec eo o <> co eo JT- OS oo o Temperature under Tongue. . . . Temperature of Hand O O 1Q 1Q o o os cs OS Ci O O OO CO OS OS Temperature of Atmosphere. . Respiration . . o o o CO ering violently: hands feel very cold. " under Tongue 10225' ) The intermissions between the chills have been about 16 hours. $ Mustards to extremities. Ifc Spts. of Mindererus and brandy and snakeroot tea, of each a tablespoonful every half hour until re- action is established. Ifc Calomel grs. xii., sulph. of quinia grs. vii., mix and administer as soon as reaction is established, and follow with castor oil in four hours, fy Sulph. of quinia grs. v. every three hours, up to grs. xxv., commence as sdon as there is the slightest tendency to a remission. October 3rd, 2\ o'clock, P.M. Mustards and stimulants cut short the chill, and hastened the febrile action. Medicine oper- ated well, and he feels much better. Has taken 22 grains of sulphate of quinia. Complains of ringing and pain in his head. Pulse 100, full. Eespiration 26, thoracic, labored. Temperature of Atmosphere . . . .776'F. ) Tongue red at tip, but moist and " Hand 105 [-soft. Reaction of saliva, slightly " under Tongue 106 ) acid. Skin dry. fy Stop sulph. quinia until the fever intermits. ^ Soda powders. Diet, gruel. October 4th, 2 o'clock, P.M. Has no fever: feels much bet- ter. Pulse 58. Eespiration 20, regular and gentle. Temperature of Atmosphere. . . .76 F. ) Urine of a deep orange color, and " " Hand 965' > decided acid reaction. Am't passed " under Tongue 985' ) in the last 24 hours, grs. 14112. Am't passed hourly, grs. 588. Sp. Gr. 1008. Says that during the night he was in a profuse perspiration. Has taken 15 grains of the sulphate of quinia this morning. October 5th. Has had no chill. R; Quassia and Soda. Urine reddish orange color. Sp. Gr. 1016. Amount of urine passed in the last 24 hours grs. 15290 hourly " 635 Eecovered sufficiently to act as nurse and servant about the Hospital. Although apparently well and capable of much mus- cular exertion, this patient complained of a continual pain in his head. October 14th, 2 o'clock, P.M. Chill came on at 11 o'clock, this morning. Now has high fever. Pulse and respiration much accelerated, and skin hot. fy Calomel grs. xii., sulph. of quinia grs. vi., castor oil in four hours. # Citrate of potassa mixture during fever. October 15th, 2 o'clock, P.M. Apyrexia complete. Skin relaxed and cool. Pulse and respiration near the normal stand- ard. Urine excreted during the febrile excitement, normal in color. Specific gravity 1002. Amount of this urine voided during the last twelve hours, grains 35,070. Says that " during the nightfhe 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 447 drank large quantities of water, and felt a constant desire to urinate." ANALYSIS XVI. Grains 35070 of Urine excreted during 12 hrs. of febrile excitement, contained grs. 1000 pte ofU- rine contained Urea, 166-005 A trace few small crystals. 58-360 4-743 Uric Acid, A trace. Fixed Saline Constituents, 1-696 This attack also yielded readily to the sulphate of quinia, and up to the time that I resigned the charge of the Savannah Ma- rine Hospital and Poor House (October 20th), this patient had had no return of fever. This case presents several points of interest. The phenomena of the cold stage have been noticed and compared with similar phenomena in a former article. (See page 396.) At the pre- sent time we will call attention to the fact, that during the fe- brile excitement the uric acid diminished greatly in amount, with and without the action of the sulphate of quinia, and in the last analysis (xvi.) disappeared almost entirely, notwithstanding that only vi. grains of sulph. of quinia had been administered, and that in conjunction with an active purgative. The follow- ing cases will show that the uric acid is frequently diminished during the febrile excitement of intermittent fever, independent- ly of the action of the sulphate of quinia. Case XIII. Irish laborer, age 40 ; height 5 feet 8 inches ; weight 145 lbs ; brown hair ; grey eyes ; sallow complexion ; occasionally indulges too freely in ardent spirits. Was in the hospital ten days ago with intermittent fever. After leaving the hospital, he obtained work along the river, at Fort Pulaski, and was much exposed to the* sun. "Was taken with pains in his head and back, and fever, yesterday afternoon at 4 o'clock P. M. Now, Aug. 17th, 12 o'clock M., there is an intermission. Pulse 66: respiration 20, skin moist and cool, tongue slightjx furred. $. Castor oil. Aug. 18th. Complains of great thirst, and pains in his head and back. Tongue coated in the middle with yellowish fur, pointed and red at the sides and tip ; skin hot and dry. ( Temperature of Atmosphere 90 F. Pulse 100. Respiration 36. -j " "Hand, 106 ( " under Tongue 106 fy. Calomel grs. vi, Tartrate of Antimony gr. i, Xitrate of Potassa grs. xxx. Mix, and divide into six powders one powder every three hours. 8 o'clock P.M. Skin hot, but softer, with a tendency to moisture. Pulse 104 ; respiration still thoracic and labored. Aug. 19th. Fever intermitted this morning about 2 o'clock A. M. Now, 12 o'clock M., pulse 70 to minute, soft and nor- mal. Respiration 22, normal. 448 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [Juty* Temperature of Atmosphere, 90 F. j Tongue normal in size, papillae not " under Tongue, .. . 98 (enlarged, covered with yellowish fur. Urine passed last evening and night, during the fever, clear, of a light yellow color, resembling the urine of hysterical females. This resemblance extended also to its densit}T. Specific gravity 1005. Amount passed during six hours of febrile action, grains 7035. When one thousand grains were carefully tested for uric acid, only a small trace, just evident to the eye, but inappreciable in weight, was exhibited, after the most careful manipulation. Urine passed this morning, after complete subsidence of febrile action, orange colored. Sp. Gr. 1014. When concentrated, it exhibited the extractive matter in much larger amount than in the urine of fever. As a general rule, the extractive and coloring matters are less abundant during the active stage of intermittent fever, than during the intermission. They appear to be consumed during the active chemical changes of fever. The nitrate of urea form- ed from the urine excreted during the active stages of intermit- tent fever, is silvery white. The nitrate of urea formed from the urine excreted during the intermission is dark, discolored with coloring matter, and the crystals are not so well formed. The former kind of urine, when evaporated and concentrated, generally has a yellowish or brownish color, whilst the concen- trated urine of the intermission, assumes the color of a very strong decoction of over-parched coffee. Amount of urine passed during 7 hours of the intermission, grs. 6084 Uric Acid in " " " " " " " 0.48 Uric Acid in 1000 parts of urine, 0.08 The microscopical examination of these specimens of urine resembled in most respects, the examinations of urine excreted under similar circumstances. & Sulph. of quinia and snakeroot tea. $ Cut cups to small of back. August 20th. Complains of pain in his back, and restless- ness. Skin moist, tongue slightly coated with white fur, flat, papillae not enlarged. Pulse 86. Eespiration 27. ( Temperature of Atmosphere. .87F. Urine high colored, Sp. Gr. 1017. -J " "Hand 100 ( " under Tongue. . . 101 Amount of urine passed during the last 24 hours, grs. 14120 " Uric Acid excreted " " " " " 5.600 " # " " in 1000 parts urine 0.400 August 21st. Much better. Pulse 72. Eespiration 17}. Urine normal in color. Sp. Gr. 1009 ( Temperature of Atmosphere. .80F. Amount passed during the last < " "Hand 96 24 hours grs. 14126 ( " under Tongue 98 Heavy deposit of prismatic crystals of triple phosphate. When held in the sun-light, the urine appeared to be glittering with thousand particles of bright shining silver. August 22nd. Skin, pulse, tongue, respiration, and circula- tion, normal. Urine normal in color. Specific Gravity 1011. Amount excreted during the last 24 hours grs. 11132 Uric Acid " " " " " " 6.500 " " in 1000 parts of urine " 0.500 Concentrated urine of a dark, almost black color. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 449 Case XIV. American seaman, age 40 ; weight 160; height 5 feet 9 inches ; florid complexion ; light hair ; sanguine nervous temperament. Has been in the Hospital for two months, with stricture of the urethra. There were several strictures, and the passage of the catheter painful and difficult. The urethra and bladder were so irritable, and the sufferings of the patient so great, that the catheter could be passed only at intervals of several da}rs. The passage of the catheter was al- ways followed by an attack of chill and fever. During the last two months, this patient was treated for five attacks of intermit- tent fever, each one of which succeeded, and appeared to have been excited by the irritation of the bladder and urethra. The Savannah Marine Hospital and Poor-house is situated in a malarious district. Three hundred yards to the southeast opens a large sewer from the city, and a short distance beyond, where this sewer discharges its contents, is a body of low, swampy land. The situation of the Hospital is also lower than that of a portion of the city, and during a hard rain, a large body of water flows down and accumulates in the street between the hospital and the park. This statement is farther sustained, by the fact, that nearly all the inmates of the hospital suffering with other diseases, even the consumptives, were attacked during this season with malarial fever. Although this patient was not acclimated, still, in health, the dose of malaria was not sufficient to produce general disturbance of the chemical actions and physical and nervous forces. Whenever his system was excited and enfeebled by the irritation of the urethra and bladder, then the characteristic phenomena of the action of the malarial poison were manifested. October 11th. This patient left the hospital several days ago, became intoxicated, and slept all night in the open air. He was taken to the guard-house by the mounted police, and remained there until this morning, when he was sent to the hospital in a state of great febrile excitement. Says that he " had a severe chill this morning at 9 A. M., which lasted four hours, and was attended with vomiting. Pulse 140, full, bounding. Inspira- tion 32, thoracic, panting. Skin hot, pungent; face flushed. The temperature was not determined, but it must have been at least 107 under the tongue. Urinary secretion abundant, and orange colored during the febrile action. Specific gravity 1008. After careful manipulation, with more than 1000 grains of urine, only a trace of uric acid was discovered. The decomposition of the urea was far more rapid in this case, than in any other which I have thus far examined. Every trace of urea disappeared in 24 hours. This rapid change was due to the catalytic actions of the perverted secretions of the urethra and bladder. [To be continued] 450 McDaxiel. Tapping in Ovarian Dropsy. [July, ARTICLE XVI. Tapping in Ovarian Dropsy. By E. McDaniel, M. D., of Laurens District, So. Ca. Mrs. B., 34 years of age : of strong constitution the mother of seven children was attacked with ovarian dropsy in 1841 ; died the 4th of January, 1858, making sixteen years from the commencement of her disease to the termination. Mrs. B. was treated by several experienced physicians, for upwards of two years. The accumulation, still increasing, and the disease becoming more alarming, a consultation was called November 10th, 1843, and the operation of tapping was per- formed, for the first time, by Dr. E. C, with the evacuation of thirteen quarts of water. From that time to the termination of the case, she was tapped two hundred and nineteen times, with the evacuation of four hundred and ninety five gallons of water. Dr. E. C. continued to perform the operation of tapping, for a number of times, when the instrument was given up to the Eev. Mr. B., her husband, a very intelligent man, who perform- ed the operations up to the time of her death, and who kept a correct statement of the number of times that she was tapped, and the amount of fluid evacuated at each operation. Mrs. B. gave birth to two daughters during her illness the first one, March 22nd, 1843, which lived and did well ; the se- cond, was born June 19th, 1845, which lived a few hours, and expired; the operation being performed twelve times up to this date. Four years previous to her death a tumour made its descent into the vagina, filling the whole vagina, which interfered very much with the convenience of the patient in a sitting position. A physician was called in the tumour, or sack, was pierced, with the evacuation of eight quarts of water, to the great alle- viation of the patient. During her illness, she was tapped twenty-nine times, per vaginam, yielding from five to twelve quarts of water at an operation. For the last few years, being the family physician, and being called to see Mrs. B., who suffered much in the latter period of her disease, I found that, after the operation of tapping, inflam- 1858.] Green. Case of Malformation. 451 mation of the sack had ensued several times, but was combated, successfully, by a strict antiphlogistic treatment inflammation ensuing again after the two hundred and eighteenth operation, proved rapidly fatal. At the earnest solicitation of the patient, she was tapped a few hours before she expired. I report this case to the Profession, on account of the frequent number of tappings, and the aggregate amount of water that was evacuated. As far as my knowledge extends, such a case is rare, if it does not exceed any on record. ARTICLE XVII. Remarkable Case of Malformation. Reported by Wm. A. Green, M. D., ofStarkville, Ga. Was called to Mrs L , Monday, January 5th, 1858. Had been in labour with her second child. Nothing unusual occur- red during gestation or parturition. She gave birth to a child, over the average size, which cried lustily, seeming to indicate every function was regularly and properly performed. Upon a close examination, the following deformities were found to exist : The spine began a curvature at the superior third of the cer- vical vertebra?, in a direction towards the right h}. it may with a confided. By its recent acts, proclaimed throughout the length and breadth of this wide domain, this body has denounced all fellowship with irregular pra I erected a barrier impassable to honor and .ct ability. Having learned wisdom from a more careful examination of the statis- 50-1 Miscellaneous. [July, tics and results of deformities after fractures, the question occurs if we have not ourselves unwittingly made patients expect too much from remedical agents. Disease in itself is a destructive process, which we can only prevent or relieve, and as of course, we can not create or restore, should we not therefore be more chary of the little word, " cure ?" The monument erected to Ambrose Pare, the father of surgery, bears the modest inscription, in reference to the wounds he treated, * " Je les pan- sey et Dieu les guarit." Empirics may boast that they cure, and doctors of divinity may sustain them ; but the physician knows it is God who healeth all our diseases. On that branch of ethics which relates to ourselves, that of encour- aging emulation and concert of action among physicians, and fostering friendly intercourse in the profession, the Association has been eminent- ly successful. It has far exceeded the most sanguine expectations in overcoming all opposition ; in creating an admirable code now adopted everywhere ; in organizing State, county and city societies ; in bringing together physicians from the remotest parts of our immense territory ; in awaking the whole profession to its true interests; and in blending us into a common harmonious fraternity. Without law or authority, but by moral suasion have we been united as one man, and possess this day the power to be felt over this entire continent. There never has been a more propitious period for medicine in America ; never greater evidence of vitality and extended usefulness in our ancient and benevo- lent calling ; never better feeling or more confidence of success than now, by our united effort to do good in the great cause of suffering humanity. We have seen, gentlemen, how much this Association has achieved in its infancy to elevate honorable medicine. A wide field for scientific in- vestigation is before us ; much territory still remains to be redeemed ; the wilderness is yet to blossom as the rose ; and the leaves to be gath- ered for the healing of nations. The hygienic condition of the nation, of such immense interest to our people ; that first, all-important ques- tion, ever before the profession the prevention of disease isjto be im- proved. We are to search after truth, and when found it is to be gener- ously applied for the good of mankind. The work is a self-sacrificing and benevolent one, but it is grand and sublime, even God-like; for it has to do with pain and disease, life and death. And we rejoice to know that whenever or wherever called upon, the members of our profession and of this Association have never failed in any duty, and have been faithful to the end. Yea, many of them have stood alone between the living and the dead, and cheerfully laid down their lives to stay the pes- tilence and destroyer. The very waters at our feet, as they sweep onward to the ocean, pass in sight of a city where three years ago no less than four-fifths of our profession in that community, swelled too as their ranks had been by volunteers from this body, fell manfully contending with disease and death : and on a late occasion, when one of our steam-packets having been injured by a collision, went down in an instant, carrying every soul * Ancient French, 1858.] Miscellaneous. 505 onboard into the depths of the ocean, among the passengers was a mem- ber of this Association. To the inquiry where was be during the heart- rending scenes of a sinking ship, freighted with human lives, promptly came the affecting and sublime eulogy from one who knew him well, that so long as a woman or child remained unprovided for. he* never left the ill-fated Arctic. How near akin was his gallant spirit to that of him, who during a subsequent and similar occurrence, after seeing every woman and child committed to his care safely rescued from his founder- ing bark, after sending the last parting message to his family, and dis- charging every duty without one lingering ray of hope, calmly assumed his commanding position on the deck of his vessel, and as she glided from under him into the yawning billows, instinctively uncovered to meet his fate and his God. While the wild waves are sighing a requiem over the unseen burying places of these illustrious dead, the benedictions of a grateful people are continually ascending over the forty graves of the martyred heroes of Xorfolk. These were our companions, who died in the noble service of that calling, to promote the best interests of which has assembled us together. Gentlemen of the American Medical Association, we have convened for important purposes ; great events ai _ before us ; the interests of humanity are here ; the hopes of the profession are in this meeting; the eyes of the medical world are upon us. May we then so act in view of surrounding circumstances, that "The skill of the physician shall lift up his head ; and in the sight of great men he shall be in admiration." Puerperal Convulsions. Dr. James M. Xewman presented a report on this subject to the Buffalo Medical Association, at a late meeting, which is published in full in the Buffalo Medical Journal, comprising some accounts of 33 cases collected from various sources. Of these 17 were priimparae, 9 multiparas, 7 not stated. Recovered, 24 ; died, 9. Described as anasarcous, 7. The urine was albuminous in 12 cases; not albuminous in 2 ; dark colored in 2 ; no secretion of urine in 2 ; and condition not noted in 19. Ether or chloroform was employed after bloodletting in 19 cases and of these, 16 recovered and 3 died; em- ployed without bloodletting, 9 and of these, 6 recovered and 3 died. Con- vulsive movements modified and controlled by anesthetics, in 23 cases ; convulsions not diminished by them, in 6 cases. Two cases proved fatal in which chloroform was administered without previous treatment being indicated. [Boston Med. and Surg. Journal. Platinized Charcoal. The power of charcoal in inducing chemical combination is greatly increased by combination with minutely divided platinum. In this manner a combination may be produced possessing the absorbent power of charcoal (which is much greater than that of spongy platinum,) and nearly equal, as a promoter of chemical combi- nation, to spongy platinum itself. In order to platinize charcoal, nothing more is necessary than to boil it, either in coarse powder or in large pieces, in a solution of bichloride of platinum, and, when thoroughly impregnated, which seldom requires more than ten minutes, or a quar- * Pro Carter P. Johnson, of Richmond, Ya. 506 Miscellaneous. ter of an hour, to heat it to redness in a close vessel, a capacious platinum crucible being well adapted for the purpose. ****** Platinized charcoal seems likely to admit of various useful applications; one of the most obvious of these is its excellent adaptability to air-filters and respi- rators. From its powerful oxidizing properties, it may also prove a highly useful application to malignant ulcers and similar sores, on which it will act as a mild but effective caustic. [Ibid. On the Discrimination of Albumen. The detection of albumen in urine is very simple. A small quantity of the urine is to be heated until it boils, in a test-tube, over the flame of a spirit-lamp. As soon as the temperature of the liquid becomes raised over 170 Fahr., the albumen will become coagulated ; and if the test-tube be set aside for a time, it will become deposited, when it may be collected, dried, affd weighed. The precipitate albumen is soluble in solution of potash, but insoluble in nitric acid. [Dr. HasseVs Lectures. Ibid. Increase of Insanity in England. It would appear, by the following statement from the London Lancet, that the United States is not the only country in which insanity has been on the increase during the last few years. "There are 1000 patients in Hanwell Asylum ; the house is to be en- larged so as to accommodate 2000. There are 1200 pauper lunatics in the house at Colney Hatch. Yet there are still 1100 pauper lunatics in Middlesex unprovided for. 'A few years ago lunatics were in the pro- portion of one to rather more than 800 of the population, while now they are in the rate of one to 700 an increase of one eighth to an in- creased population.' " [Ibid. Death of Dr. Hare. We find in the American Medical Gazette, the following notice of the departure of a distinguished man : indeed, one of the fathers of American science. Let us remember him, not as the star whose brightness was dimmed, as it sank, behind the horizon, but ra- ther as when in the ascendant, or at his meridian, he shed a glory and a resplendence upon American Medicine. Died, in Philadelphia, May 16th, 1858, Dr. Robert Hare, in the seventy-seventh year of his age. He was for a series of years Professor of Chemistry in the University of Pennsylvania, and by his discoveries and improvements acquired high distinction at home and abroad, rank- ing justly among the first chemists of the age. The latter years of his life have been beclouded by mental infirmities, terminating in senile im- becility, under the influence of which he was ensnared by the vagaries t>f clairvoyance, and thus led into the mysticism of the modern spiritual- ists, endorsing by his high name the wildest of their speculations. Hu- manum est errare. SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL. (NEW SERIES.) Vol. XIV.] AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, AUGUST, 1858. [No. 8. ORIGINAL AXD ECLECTIC. AKTICLEJ.VIIL Observations on Malarial Fever. By Joseph Jones, A.M., MD., Professor of Physics and Natural Theology in the University of Georgia, Athens ; Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacy in the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta ; formerly Professor of Medical Chemistry in the Medical College of Savannah. [Continued from p. 449 of July Xo., 1858.] Case XV. Irishman, age 18 ; brown hair, brown eyes ; height 5 feet 6 inches ; weight 125 lbs. ; well developed chest. Occupation bar-keeper in a sailor's boarding-house on the bay. Five days ago, attended a boat race at Thunderbolt, and slept for two nights in an open boat. The second morning, after waking, felt very badly, and vomited. Sept. 11th, 8 o'clock P.M. Tongue slightly furred, not redder than normal. No tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium. ( Temperature of Atmosphere, .... 80 F. Pulse 116. Respiration, 30 thoracic. -j " "Hand, 1025' ( " under Tongue, 103 #. Calomel, grs. xii. Castor oil in four hours, ty. Soda powders, Flaxseed tea. Diet, grueL fy. As soon as fever remits, give sulphate of quinia grs. v. every three hours, up to grs, xx. Sept. 12th, 12 o'clock M. Says that he feels much better; medicine acted four times. Skin cool; tongue very slightly coated with white fur; papillae not enlarged; pulse 84, soft and regular ; respiration 24, gentle. Says that the fever went off about 1 o'clock this morning. n.s. VOL. XIV. NO. VIII. 26 508 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, Temperature of Atmosphere, 83 F. (-,-,, , . ,. ,, n i e " " Hand 985' ) s ta^en ten grains * t"e sulphate of under Tongue,'.'.'.'. 99 ( high colored a shade lighter than that " under Tongue 103 9' ) passed this morning. Sp. Gr. 1022. Amount of urine excreted during the last 8 hours, .... grains 6138 " " " calculated for 24 hours, " 18414 " " " excreted hourly, 767 Sept. 13th, 11 o'clock A. M. Did not rest well during the night. Tongue moist and slightly coated with fur. Pulse 98. Eespiration 26. Eespiration irregular, every half minute draws a long, full inspiration. Temperature of Atmosphere, 82 F. ) fy Citrate of Potassa, - - gss. "Hand, 102 25' [ Water, f^xvi. " under Tongue,. . . . 103 ) Dose, wineglassful every three hours. # As soon as fever remits, give sulph. of quinia grs. xx. Amount of urine excreted during the last 15 hours, grains 7154. " " calculated for 24 hours, " 1 1446. Amount of urine excreted hourly, " 477. High colored, clear. Specific Gravity 1020. 5 o'clock, P. M. Pulse 90. Eespiration 28. Urine high colored. ( Temperature of Atmosphere, 85 F. Specific Gravity 1022. \ " " Hand, 101 ( " under Tongue, 1029' Amount of Urine passed during the last 7 hours, . . . .grains 4092 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, " 14029 Amount excreted hourly " 584*5 September 14th, 1 o'clock, P.M. Tongue slightly coated with white fur, moist and natural in appearance. Skin moist and cool. Pulse 65} regular and soft. Eespiration 24, regular. Color of urine much lighter. 1858.] Joxes, on Malarial Fever. 509 {Temperature of Atmosphere, 85 F. " Hand, 96 " under Tongue, 98 Amount of Urine passed during the last 20 hours, grains 10210 10210 ) 12252 [ 510-5 ) Jfc Quassia and soda. Calculated amount for 24 hour; Amount of Urine excreted hourly, September loth, 10 o'clock, A.M. Much better; dressed and walking about the Hospital grounds. Pulse, skin, respiration, and tongue, normal. Urine orange colored, much lighter than the former specimens passed subsequent to the first stage of fe- brile action. Specific Gravity 1019-7. Eeaction after twelve hours, alkaline. Heavy light yellow deposit of urate of soda, and prismatic crytals of triple phosphate. The crystal of triple phosphate numerous and beautiful. Up to the present time, the reaction of the urine has been very acidr and it has remained without deposit for many hours. Amount of urine collected during last 20 hours, grains 11726 Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, " 14071 Amount of urine excreted hourly, - - - " 586*3 ANALYSIS XYIII. Grs. 11726 of urine 1 Grs. 14071.8 of urine excreted during 20 calculated for 24 hrs hrs., contain'd grs. | contained, grains, 1000 parts of urine contain- ed, Water, 11291*844 435-206 161-047 8-624 204-291 60-644 13550-613 521-247 200-016 10-350 237.109 72-772 962-887 Solid Matters, 37-113 Urea, 13-792 Uric Acid, 0-735 Extractive and coloring matters. Fixed Saline Constituents, 17-332 5154 The patient left the Hospital a few hours after these observa- tions. He entered the Hospital again on the 18th of October, with a severe attack of remittent fever. Case XVI. Irish seaman : black hair, black eyes, and florid complexion ; height 5 feet 11 inches ; weight 175 lbs. Has been staying on board the light ship and running up and down the Savannah River, at all hours of the day and night. Says that he resided six years at Panama, but was never sick. Was taken with chill and fever two days ago, and the captain of the light ship gave him several doses of drastic medicine. September 5th, 7 o'clock, P.M. Has fever. $ James' pow- der, grs. xviij., nitrate of potassa, grs. xxx. Mix and divide into six powders, one powder every three hours. September 6th, 1 o'clock, P.M. Has just had a chill, which in fact is not yet entirely off. He is still shaking. Tongue coated with light yellow fur, pale at its edges. Complains of pain in his head. "Epigastrium tender upon pressure ; extremi- ties cool ; head and trunk warm. Pulse 118. Respiration va- ries from 20 to 32. 510 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, ft Three cut cups to epi- i Temperature of Atmosphere, 85 F. gastrium. ft Spts. Mindere- < " " Hand, 96 rus grs. ss. every half hour. ( " under Tongue, 1015' 6 o'clock, P.M. Cupping relieved the tendency to vomit. Skin hot, although moist. Pulse 120. $ Soda powders. $ Sulph. of Quinia, grs. xv. September 7th, 10 o'clock, A.M. Did not rest well; "bow- els are quite loose." Has taken ten grains of sulph. of quinia. Pulse 98. Eespiration 28. Urine clear, high colored. Speci- fic Gravity 1021. Temperature of Atmosphere .. 80F. ) ft Opium, gr. 1. " Hand 100 V " under Tongue. . . 104 ) Diet, arrowroot and flaxseed tea. The whole amount of urine passed was not collected, on ac- count of the affection of his bowels. After standing 36 hours, there was a small deposit of crystals of triple phosphate and urate of soda. 1000 parts of Urine contained Water, 936'047 Soliid Matters, 63-953 \ Urea, 34-995 Uric Acid, 0-705 Extractive and Coloring Matters, 21 277 Fixed Saline Constituents, 6 976 Sept. 7th, 7 o'clock P. M. Skin warm and moist ; tongue slightly coated ; no pain upon pressure of epigastrium. Has ta- ken 15 grs. of quinine and 2 grs. of opium this morning. Bowels have not been moved since this morning. Pulse 108 ; respira- tion 24. Temperature of Atmosphere. ... 82 F. } Urine clear, high colored. After " " Hand 1037 5' > standing 39 hours, there was a small " under Tongue 105 ) deposit of the urate of soda. Spe- cific Gravity 1020'8. Amount of urine passed during the last 9 hours grs. 2552* Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, " 6803* Amount of urine excreted hourly, " 283'6 ANALYSIS XIX. ANALYSIS XX. Urine excreted in 9 hours, grs. 2552 contained grains Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, grs. 6803 contained grains 1000 parts of urine con- tained "Water, 2402-683 149-317 81-660 1-000 54422 12-235 6405-664 397-968 217-705 2-666 144-986 32-611 941-490 Solid Matters, 58*510 Urea, 31-976 0391 Ext. and coloring matters, Fixed Saline Constituents, 21-356 4-787 Sept. 8th, 9 o'clock A. M. Says that he feels much better. Rested well during the night. Bowels have been moved twice. Tongue clean at tip and edges, superior portion slightly coated with fur ; color of tongue paler than normal ; skin cool, moist and relaxed. Pulse 78 ; respiration 18. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 511 Temperature of Atmosphere ... . 75 V.) Urine high colored- Sp. Gravity " Hand 985' V 1C18-7. After standing 26 hours, " under Tongue 1005' ) urate of soda and prismatic crystals of triple phosphate were deposited. Amount of urine passed during the last 14 hours, grs. 12224 hourly " " " " " 873 Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours, " 20903 Actual amount of urine excreted during the last 24 hours, " 14776 " " hourly, " " u M " 615 ANALYSIS XXI. Water, Solid Matters, Urea Uric Acid, Extractive and co- loring matters, Fixed Saline Con- stituents, Grs. 12224 of Urine passed during last 14 hrs., contain- ed grains 11613-180 616-220 279-360 3-240 272-388 56-232 Grs. 20903 of U- rine, calculated for 24 hrs., con- tained graius 19856-093 1047-631 477*705 5-540 466-885 96-157 Grs. 14776 ofU- rine, actual am't excreted in 24 hours, contained grains 14015-863 760-537 361-020 4-240 326-810 68.467 1000 pts. of Urine con- tained 950-000 50-000 22-852 0*265 22*283 4-600 12 o'clock, M. Has just exhibited a rising upon the buttock When lanced, f sii, of fetid black matter flowed. # Sulph. of quinia, grs. v. Diet, beef soup and tea. 6 o'clock, P.M. Complains of great weakness. Pulse 88. Eespiration 18. Extremities are much colder than the head and trunk. The phenomena resemble those of chill. He does not, however, complain on any chilly sensation. Temperature of Atmosphere. .. .76 F. ) Urine high colored. After twenty- " " Hand 93 > four hours, a heavy deposit of urate " under Tongue 1045' ) of soda and triple phosphate. Amount of urine excreted during the last 9 hours, grs 6127 " " " hourly " 680.7 " " " " during the last 24 hours, " 18351 " " " hourly " " " " 764.4 Calculated amount of urine for " " " 16335 Hourly " 680 Specific Gravity 1021 -2. ANALYSIS XXIL Water Solid Matters, Urea, Uric Acid, Extractive and co- ) loriLg matters, j "Fixed Saline Con- ) stituents, f Grs, 6127 of Urine, passed during last 9 hrs., contain- ed grains 5830-238 286962 113-490 4320 126-498 42-654 Grains 16335 ofj Urine calculat'd 1000 parts of'U for 24 hrs., con- urine contain tained grains ed 15570-075 765-040 302-564 11-517 337-244 113-715 953165 46-835 18-521 0-705 20-647 6-962 Gre. 18351 of rineexcret'd during last 24 hrs., contain- ed grains 17453-472 898128 392-850 7-560 398-886 98-886 512 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, September 9th, 10 o'clock, A.M. Continues to improve, but complains of great weakness. Pulse 76. Eespiration 20. Skin cool and moist; bowels regular; urine high colored; deposit of urate of soda and triple phosphate, after standing a few hours, and acid reaction changed to the alkaline. C Temperature of Atmosphere. .75 F. Specific Gravity 1018' 2 { " "Hand 9775' ( " under Tongue 99 5' Amount of Urine passed during the last 16 hours, grains 9163 " " " hourly, " 572.6 Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours " 13745 Actual " " " " " 15291 hourly " " 628.7 ANALYSIS XXIII. Grs. 9163 of Urine passed during iast 16 hrs., contain- ed grains Grs. 13745 of Urine calcula- ted for 24 hrs. contained grains 1000 parts of Urine con- tained Grs. 15291 of U- rine, actual am't excreted in 24 hours, contained grains Water, 8677-223 486-567 237-456 0-720 215*955 32-436 13015-850 729-850 356-084 1-080 324-032 4S-654 946-903 53-097 25-912 0-078 23-568 3-539 14517-471 Solid Matters, Urea, 773-529 351-946 Uric Acid, 5-040 Extractive and co- ) loring matters, ) Fixed Saline Con- ) stituents, ) 341-453 75-090 September 9th, 6 o'clock, P. M. Tongue and skin normal. Pulse 76. Eespiration 22. Urine orange colored. Specific Gravity 1022. Slight deposit in 15 hours of urate of soda and triple phosphate. Temperature of Atmosphere 87 F. "Hand 975' " underTongue 998' Amount of urine passed during the last 8 hours, grains 6135 " hourly " " " 766' 8 Calculated amount of urine for 24 hours " 18405 Actual amount passed during the last 24 hours. . " 15298 Hourly amount of urine passed during the last 24 hours, grs 637.4 ANALYSIS XXIV. Grs. 6135 of Urine excret- ed during last 8 hrs. contain- ed grains Grs. 1S405 of Urine calcula- ted for 24 hrs. contained grs. 1000 parts of Urine con- tained Grs. 15298 of Urine, excreted during last 24 hrs., contained, grains Urea, 113.490 4.440 340 470 13-320 18.498 0-723 350*948 Uric Acid, 5-160 September 10th, 10| o'clock, A. M. Pulse 68. Eespiration 19. Color of urine only a shade higher than normal. After twelve hours a slight deposit of urate of soda and triple phos- phate. 1858.] JOXES, on Malarial Fever. 513 ( Temperature of Atmosphere 79 F. Specific Gravity 1021'5-j " "Hand 965' ( " under Tongue 98 Amount of urine passed during the last 16 hours, grains 5107 " hourly " * " " 319 Calculated amount for 24 hours " 7661 Actual amount of urine passed during last 24 hours, " 11242 Amount passed hourly " 468*4 ANALYSIS XXV. Grs. 5107 of Urine passed during last 16 hrs., contain- ed grains Grs. 7661 of Urine calcula- ted for 24 hrs. contained grs. 1000 parts of Urine con- tained Grs, 11240 of Urine excreted during last 24 hours, grains Urea, 63-050 1-000 94-575 1-500 12-362 0.196 176540 Uric Acid, 5-400 The diminution of the frequency of the action of the respira- tory and circulatory systems, and the reduction of the tempera- ture, have been attended by a diminution in the amount of urine excreted, and also of its constituents. 7 o'clock, P.M. Dressed himself and walked in the Hospital yard. Still feels weak ; is now in a profuse perspiration. Pulse 68. Inspiration 20. Temperature of Atmosphere, . .80 F. ) Sp. Gr. of urine 10204. Deposit in " " Hand 97 > 12 hours of urate of soda and prismatic " under Tongue 989' ) crystals of triple phosphate. When held in the sun, the whole mass sparkled with the crystals of triple phosphate. Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, grains 10209 " " hourly " " " 425 '3 during " 9 " " 5102 ' " " hourly " " " 566.8 Calculated amount for 24 hours " 13601 ANALYSIS XXYL Urea Uric Acid- . Grs. 5102 of| Urine passed during last 9 hrs. contained grains 63-040 2 300 Grs. 13601 of Urine calcula- ted for 24 hrs. contained grs. 169-091 6131 1000 parts of Urine con- tained 12-352 0-450 Grs. 10209 of Urine excreted during last 24 hours contained grains 126100 3-300 "Sept. 11th, 11 o'clock A. M. Pulse 74 ; respiration 18. Temperature of Atmosphere, 82 F. 1 Color of urine a shade higher than nor- " Hand, 97 >mal. Specific Gravity 1021-2. In 12 hrs. " under Tongue, 98 2' ) a small deposit of urate of soda and triple phosphate. Amount of Urine passed during the last 16 hours, grs. 7148. i hourly " " " " 446.7 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, "10722. Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, " 12250. u u hourly " " " " ' 510.4 514 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, ANALYSIS XXVII Urea, Uric Acid, Fixed Saline Constit. Grs. 7148 of U-| rine passsd du ring the last 16 hours contained grains 137-095 4200 41195 Grs. 10722 cal- culated for 24 hours, contain- ed grains 205-642 6 300 61-792 1000 parts Urine con- tained 19 490 0 587 5037 Grs. 12250 pas- sed in 24 hours contained grs. 200145 6500 6J o'clock P. M. Has been walking in the Hospital yard. Pulse 67 ; respiration 22. Urine normal in color. Sp. Gravity 1026*5. Fermentation proceeded so rapidly, that in the course of 24 hours, the whole of the urea was converted into the car- bonate of ammonia. Deposit consisted of prismatic, stellated and plumose crystals of triple phosphate, and globular and aci- cular crystals of urate of soda. Temperature of Atmosphere, 7875' F. " " Hand, 97 83 " under Tongue, 99 Amount of Urine passed during the last 1\ hours, grs. 4106 hourly, " " " " " 534 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, " 13139 Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, M 11254 " hourly, " " " " " 4689 Uric acid in grains 41 06 of Urine. (7 hours) grs. 4-720 " " " " 13139" " calculated for 24 hours, " 15.104 " " " 1000 parts of Urine, 1149 " " " grs. 11254 " " excreted in 24 hours, 8-920 Sept. 12th, 12 o'clock M. Pulse 60', respiration 20. Sp. Gravity of urine 1022*15. Heavy deposit of urate of soda, and prismatic and plumose crystals of triple phosphate. Temperature of Atmosphere, 83 F. " " Hand, 97 " under Tongue, 988' Amount of Urine passed during the last 17 hours, grs. 4088. i k hourly, " " " " 2405 Calculated amount for 24 hours. " 5768. Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, . . .grs. 8194, " " hourly, " " " " " 341.4 Uric acid in grs. 4088 of Urine passed during 1 7 hours, grs. 5.400 n u 5768" " calculated for 24 " " 7.619 " " " 1000 parts of Urine, " 1.320 " " 8194 " " passed during 24 hours, "10.120 Fixed Saline Constituents in grs. 4088 of Urine, (17 hours) grs. 40.880 " M 5768 " u (collected in 29 hrs.) " 57.688 " m * " 1000 parts of Urine, " 10.000 "grs. 8194 " " (24 hours) ' 10.120 Sept. 13th, 11 o'clock A. M. Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, grs. 16.962. Sp. Gr. 1025. k (. hourly " * " " 706.7 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 515 Sept. 14th, 4 o'clock P. M. Amount of Urine passed during the last 30 hours, grs. 31.669. Sp. Gr. 1021-6 ii u n K u u it 24 " " 25.335 it ii hourly, " " " " M 1.055 , ANALYSIS XXVIII. Water, Solid Matters. Urea, Extractive, Col'g Mat- ) ters, and Uric Acid, ) Fixed Saline Constituents Grs. 31669 of Urine, passed during 30hrs. contained grs. Grs. 25335 ot Urine, passed duri ng 24 hrs. contained grs. 10U0 parts of Urine, contained 29965 178 1703-822 630 470 690 510 382-842 23971 943 1363 057 504-376 552-406 306 275 945 455 54-545 19 940 22-484 12121 In this case the uric acid was diminished during the active stages of the malarial fever, and increased during convalescence. The temperature of the body was slightly depressed below the normal standard, during convalescence, and this depression was attended by a corresponding diminution of all the urinary con- stituents, except the uric acid. The phenomena, during the cold stage, resembled in all res- pects, those previously described. The consideration of many other points of interest is deferred until we institute a general comparison of all the various forms of malarial fever. The annexed Table No. IV. (on pages 516-17), will present a view of the foregoing results. Case XVIII. Frenchman: age 45; weight 130 lbs.; thin and spare ; nervous temperament; complexion pale. Has been in Savannah three weeks. Has been acting as nurse in the Hospital for the last two weeks. Occupation, nurse in an in- sane asylum. September 15th, 12 o'clock, M. Was taken with a chill this morning, at 8 o'clock, A.M., which was attended with vomiting and followed by high fever. Urine passed during the height and decline of the fever, orange colored, and diminished in amount. September 16th, 12 o'clock, M. Apyrexia. Amount of urine passed during the last 24 hours, grains 4086. Sp. Gr. 1021*5. Amount of uric acid passed during the height and commence- ment of the intermission of the fever (24 hours), grains 0'400. 1000 parts of urine contained Urea, 20-425 Uric Acid, 0097 516 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, TABLE IV. 3ept'r, 1 P.M. 6 " 10 A.M. 7 P.M 9 A.M. 6 P.M. 10 A.M. 6 P.M. lO.^A.M. 7 P.M. 11 A. M. 61 P.M. 12" M. 13ill A.M. 14 4 p.m. US 80 82 75 76 75 87 79 80 82 7875' 100 10375 98-5' 93 97J75 97^5' 96u5 97 97 97-~83 97 101c5' 104 105 100 5: 104^5' 99-5' 99c8' 98 989' 9802' 99 9S8' 14776 18351 15291 15298 11240 10209 12250 11254 8194 637 341 706 (885-1055 14015 17453 14517 23971 1363 4.24 7.56 5.04 350 5.160 176 5.400 200 504 6.500 8.920 10.120 o a GRS. GRS. 326 6S.0 398 98.8 341 75.0 552 2552 12224 14 6I27i 9 916316 6135 8 510716 5102 9 714816 41067* 408S|17 1020.8 1018.7 1021.2 1018.2 1022 1021.5 1020.4 1021.2 1026.5 1022.15 1021.6 ANALYSIS XXIX. Sept. 17th. Urea, - - - - - Uric Acid, - - - - Specific Gravity, - - Ara't excreted hourly, Grs. 6641 of Urine, excreted during 24 hours, contained 252-200 2-275 1021-700 276-800 1000 parts of Urine contained 38-001 0-342 ANALYSIS XXX. Sept. 18th. Urea, Uric Acid, - - - - Specific Gravity, - - Am't excreted hourly, Grs. 6640 of Urine passed during 24 hrs. contained 136-188 13-845 1023-000 277-000 1000 parts of Urine contained 20-470 2-082 Sept. 18th. Temperature of Atmosphere, 88. Temp, of Hand, 935'. Temp, under Tongue, 99. Sept. 19th. Amount of Urine in 24 hours, grs. 7530. Amounnt hour- ly, grs. 314. Temp, of Atmosphere, 895'. Temp, of Hand, 965'. Temp, under Tongue,98. Continued to improve, and was discharged from the hospital Sept. 23rd. October 7th, 3| o'clock P. M. Has returned. Says he has been "keeping bar" on the bay, and was taken with a "dumb 1858.] JoXES, on Malarial Fever. 517 TABLE IV. c a P < > > 13 X 3 p 2 g r " Q - M g Q c = X O p. o ? & -> p - - 8 | x a : e 0 - ^ rl 3 c E 0 p [ ^ ? J * c O p_ g S - - f e ? I o > = -. & 5 "~ e Calculated amount Saline Constltue houra Calculated amount < tive and Color ters for 21 hour 4 p 6 cc 0 ; 0 . "- \ s : 1 d 0 p 5 0 G > 0 0 0 M H = 1 1 s ? 2 = - 7 0 0 1 i * s i cc 5 0 B = = O * E c fd : 5" ; n : x E" C ST o c O o :x c = ~- B o o : d ? ff : e '. <* - ? j C E" cc : c s c r. : - - : * 79 : =. d "5 . OB ; c 5 S 0 d '. O. GRS. GRS. GRS. GRS. GRS. GRS. GRS. GRS. GRS. GRS. 1 GRS. s GRS. !".**!! """""! '936 63 '9 941 5S.5 *34.9 31.9 0.705 0.391 21/27' 21.35 *6!976 4.78 81 6 1.00 54.4 12.235 6S03 6405 397.9 217.7 2.666 144.9 32.61 2S3 279 3 3.24 272.3 50.2 20903 19S56 1047. 477. 5.54 466. 96.15 950 50. 0.265 22.2$ 4.600 566 113 4 4.32 126.4 42. 6 163:351 15570 765. 302.5 11.507 837. 113.7 953 46. S I8.fi 0.705 20.6 6.962 6^0 887 4 0.72 215.9 32.4 13745 13015 729. 306. 1.05 324. 48. 6 946 53.0 25.9 0.078 23.5 3.539 572 113.4 63.0 63.0 137.0 4.440 1.000 2.300 4.200 1S405 7661 13601 10722 340. 13.32 18.4 12.3 12.3 19.49 0.723 0.196 766 468 566 446 94.5 1.50 169.0 205.6 6.131 6.300 0.450 0.5>7 41.19 61.792 5.087 4.720 5.400 13139 15.104 7.619 1.149 1.320 534 240 706 1055 576S 680. 690.0 945 54.5 19.9 22.4 12.1 ague'' on the 5th inst., which lasted two hours. The "dumb ague:' has returned at the same hour, 11 o'clock A.M., on the succeeding and this day. Now has fever, with pain in all his limbs, and vomiting. Calomel, grs. xii., sulph. of quinia, grs. v. were administered, and followed by castor oil. 20 grs. of the sulphate of quinia were also administered. This delayed the chill until Oct. 9th, 3^ o'clock, (27j hours.) The following tables will present the most important phe- nomena observed: October 9th, 31 o'clock P. M. Phenomena of Cold Stage. Pulse 92, very feeble, resembles the vibration of a fine thread with difficulty counted. Respiration ac- celerated and irregular. Lips and fingers blue. Temp, of Atmosphere, . . 75 F. u " Hand, 83 " under Tongue, . . . 101 5' R. Mustard to extremities. Bran- dv & snake-root tea, until reaction. 61 o'clock P. M . Hot Stage. Pulse 96 ; much fuller than dur- ing the chill. Respiration fuller. Pulse not so full as in milder cas- es. Temp, of Atmosphere, . . 70 F. " Hand, 101 8' " under Tongue, . . . 102 8' R. Citrate of Potassa mixture. Oct. 10th, 11 A. M. Febrile excitement has almost entirely subsided. BL. Sulph of quinia, grs. xxv. 518 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, 5 o'clock P. M. Apyrexia. Pulse and respiration near the normal standard. Temp, of Atmosphere, " " Hand, . . . " under Tongue, ... 98 Oct. 12th, 3 P.M. Pulse, respiration, skin and tongue, normal. 70 F. 9V 5' at ANALYSIS XXXI. Oct. 10th, 11 AM. Urea, - - - - Uric Acid, - - - Fixed Saline Contit' Am't of Urine excreted dur- ing 15 hours of febrile ex- citement, grs. 8687. Sp. Gr. 1022. Am't excreted hour- ly, grs. 579. Grains 342*167 5-950 28-050 Grs. 13899 calcu- lated for twenty- four hours, con- tained grains 547-388 9-520 44-880 1000 pts. of Urine con- tained 39-388 0-684 43-228 ANALYSIS XXXII. Oct, 12th, 3 o'c. P.M. Urea, - - - - Uric Acid, - - - Fixed Saline Conslit'* Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours of Apyrexia, grs. 15330. Sp. Gravity 1022. Am't passed hourly, grs. 638. Grs. 349-200 11-250 76-500 1000 pts. of Urine con- tained 22-678 0-733 4-990 Urine was high colored, like new Madeira wine. The appro- priate tests exhibit the presence of iron in abnormal amount. The coloring matters were in such abundance that hydrochloric acid changed the color of the urine into a purplish black. When evaporated to the consistence of a syrup, the urine assumed a dark brown, almost black color. After standing 50 hours, pris- matic crystals of triple phosphate, vegetable cells, urate of soda, and carbonate of lime were deposited. This patient had no return of fever, but suffered for some time with great weakness, and exhibited in his pale lips, pale gums, and sallow complexion, the effects of the malarial poison on the colored blood corpuscles. In this case the uric acid was not diminished during the hot stage. If we compare the first with the second attack, it is evident that the urea was more abundant in the second, than the first. The first attack of intermittent fever was slight, while the se- cond was severe. When we consider the weight and condition of rest, and almost complete starvation of this patient, it is evi- dent that the urea was greatly increased. Case XIX.- -English seaman age 25; weight 160 lbs.; height 5 feet 6 inches ; black hair ; florid complexion ; muscu- lar system well developed ; powerful chest ; short stout neck. Has just returned from Jacksonville, Fla. Has been sick one week. 1858.] Joxes, on Malarial Fever. 519 August 18th, 11 o'clock, A.M. Skin hot and dry ; face very red ; pulse 106 ; respiration thoracic ; temperature of atmosphere 88 ; temperature of hand 105. Complains of pain in his head. Urine high colored. Specific gravity 1021. $ Bloodletting in the standing posture to produce relaxation of the system. 2 o'clock, P.M. Preparations were made for blood-letting. The patient appeared to be alarmed by the preparations ; and when I appeared with the specific gravity bottles, beaker glasses and capsules, to receive the blood, he fell back into the arms of the assistant, and in a few moments before the lancet was ap- plied, the perspiration stood in large drops upon his face and hands. During the bleeding, he perspired freely, and fainted before f $ x, were abstracted. The pulse and respiration were diminished in frequency and force, and the patient fell into a profound slumber, during which his clothes were completely saturated with a profuse perspiration. Examination of Blood. Blood of a dark, almost black color, commenced to coagulate in about ten minutes. After remain- ing for two hours exposed to the atmosphere, the surface of the blood exposed, changed to a bright red arterial hue. Specific gravity of blood, 1042 ; Specific gravity of serum, 1018. Serum of a light golden color. The color was not so deep as in severer cases of malarial fever. ANALYSIS OF BLOOD, I. Water, In 1000 parts of Blood, 830-509 " " Serum, - 929-287 (1) " " Liq. Sang. 927-194 (2) " " Liq. Sang. 887-328 Solid Matters, In 1000 parts of Blood, 169*491 " " Serum, - 70-713 (1) " " Liq. Sang. 72-806 (2) " " _ Liq. Sang. 112-672 Sol. Matters in Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, 64*158 Fixed Saline Constituents. In 1000 parts of Blood, 7-532 " " Serum, - 5*000 (1) " " Liq. SaDguinis, 5*332 (2) " " Liq. Sanguinis, 8'245 " " Solid Matters of Blood, .... 44.439 " " " " " Serum, .... 77*931 " " " " " Liq. Sanguinis, - - - 73*345 " " Blood Corpuscles, - - 28*500 " " Moist Blood Corpucles, - 7*258 In Blood Corpuscles of 1000 parts of Blood, ... 3.002 In Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, 4.530 o20 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, 1000 parts of Blood contained, Water, 830-509 tv a x>\ j n i 1no ,oo ) Organic Matters, 100-431 Dried Blood Corpuscles, - - 103-433 J- Meral ' 3.002 Fibrin, - 1-900 Albumen - ^4-1 86 1 0rSanic Matters, 54-426 Albumen, 4 186 [ Mineral " 2*760 Extractive and Coloring Matters, 8972 [ jg M^> * 1000 parts of Blood contained, J Water, - - - 310-219 Moist Blood Corpuscles, 413-732 V Organic Matters, - - 100-431 ) Mineral " - - 3-002 Water, ... - 520-210 A11 ) Organic Matters, 51*426 Albumen, Kt*Li 0.7An Liquor Sanguinis, 586-268 Mineral " 2-760 Extractive j * n i > f Organic Matters, r6-902 and Colore V ,rb , n^n Matters, gj Mineral 2-070 Fibrin, .... 1-900 1000 parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles contained, Water, ---------- 749-996 Organic Matters, - - - - . - - - - 242*746 Mineral Matters, 7.258 (1) 1000 parts Liquor Sanguinis contained, Water, 927-194 A1, e_ onn ) Organic Matters, 56-762 Albumen, .... 59*809^^ u 3.Q47 Fibrin, 2-093 Extractive and Coloring Matters, 10*904 ! .= , u ' 0.005 (2) 1000 parts of Liquor Sanguinis contained, Water, 887*328 . nn AnA ) Organic Matters, 87*717 Albumen, .... 92*424^^ u ^ Fibrin, 3*242 Extractive and Coloring Matters, 15*310 ! . , u ' 3.538 8 o'clock, P. M. Much better; pain in his head has disap- peared ; in a profuse perspiration ; skin much cooler. Pulse 96 to the minute, soft and natural. Kespiration regular and nor- mal. August 19th, 10 o'clock, P.M. Skin moist; urine high co- lored ; Pulse 82 ; Kespiration 2-i. Temperature of Atmosphere 1858.]] JONES, on Malarial Fever. 521 89F. Temperature of Hand 100. Temperature under Tongue 10225'. August 20th, 12 o'clock, M. Skin and tongue normal; urine high colored. Specific gravity, 1015. Pulse 80; Respira- tion 21. Temperature of Atmosphere 85F. Temperature under Tongue 101. August 21st. Pulse 80 ; Respiration 20. Temperature of Atmosphere 80 Temperature under Tongue 988/. This case yielded readily to the action of sulphate of quinia, and the patient was discharged on the 23d. This has been a mild attack of malarial fever, and the blood corpuscles were but slightly diminished. At first sight this case would seem to prove the efficacy of blood-letting in malarial fever. The fact that the mere prepar- ations for bleeding, caused the patient " to break out into a profuse perspiration," demonstrated that the sweating stage was nigh at hand and the bleeding was the occasion and not the cause of its appearance. It is probable that this patient would have done just as well, without, as with this bleeding. The next patient suffering with malarial fever, which I bled, was a stout German, with high fever, scarlet face, and M distracting pain in his head," presenting similar only severer symptoms. This case terminated fatally. I have used local blood-letting (cut cups) in scores of cases of malarial fever, and always with apparent benefit. Over the epigastrium it often arrests obstinate vomiting, and over the temples and back of neck, and over the spine, it often relieves distressing pain. Local differs from general blood-letting, in two essential degrees. First, the quantity of blood abstracted is much less, and second, the number of colored blood corpuscles is less in proportion to the amount of blood abstracted, in local than in general blood-letting. The colored blood corpuscles rush along principally in the centre of the streams, and in general blood-letting they are lost, more rapidly than the other elements of the blood. The malarial poison, whatever it be, destroys rapidly the colored blood corpuscles. Whatever therefore diminishes the colored blood corpuscles acts in concert with the malarial poison. The malarial poison reduces rapidly the forces. General blood-letting reduces rapidly the forces. The two, in this particular, again act in concert. These views will be sub- stantiated by facts, and more fully discussed hereafter. Case XX. Frenchman, laborer;' height 5 feet 8 inches; weight, 110 lbs., in health, 140 lbs. Has been in America, ten years, and in Savannah, six months. Has been living and working in a low miasmatic situation on Thunderboldt road, 522 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, one mile from Savannah. Has been sick with chill and fever five weeks, and has had no medical attendance. He is much reduced in flesh and strength. Complexion sallow, anaemic. Lips and gums pale the effects of miasmatic fever are well marked. August 19th. Pulse 72 ; Eespiration 24. .Temp, of Atmos- phere, 90F. ; Temp, under Tongue, 98. Complains of great weakness, and constant pain in his head. August 22nd. Examination of Blood. The blood coagulated in the usual time, and the clot was firm. After standing four days in a stoppered bottle, in the heat of summer, the clot ap- peared firm, un decomposed, and the serum was clear. The blood of a patient who was suffering from the effects of remit- tent fever, and severe salivation, placed by the side of this, in the same time, and under the same circumstances, had its clot completely disintegrated, and commenced to putrefy. ANALYSIS OF BLOOD II. Specific gravity of Blood, - - - 1034 "Water, In 1000 parts of Blood, 850.888 " " Serum, 920-820 (1) " " Liq. Sang., 918-072 (2) " " Liq. Sang., 892-859 Solid Matters, In 1000 parts of Blood, 149-112 " " Serum, 79-180 (1) " " Liq. Sang., 81-928 (2) " " Liq. Sang.,1 07-424 In Serum of 1000 parts of Blood,- - - 73.167 Fixed Saline Constituents, In 1000 parts of Blood, 7*692 " Serum, - 5-119 (1) " " Liquor Sanguinis, 5-120 (2) " " Liquor Sanguinis, 6'696 " " Solid Matters of Blood, - - - - 51-586 " " " " Serum, - 64-648 " " " " " Liquor Sanguinis, - - 62-493 " " " " Blood Corpuscles, - - 40-351 " " Moist Blood Corpuscles, - - - - 10-087 In Blood Corpuscles of 1000 parts of Blood, - - - 2-962 In Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, 4-730 1000 parts of Blood contained, Water, 850-888 Dried Blood Corpuscles,- - 73-405 [ gSJ Mat|T' 7* Fibrin, : 2-540 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring ) Organic Matters, 68-405 Matters, - 73-167 f Mineral " 4-730 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 528 1000 parts of Blood contained, ) Water, - - 220-215 Moist Blood Corpuscles, - - 2 9 3*G 2 0 V Organic Matters, 70-411 ) Mineral " 2-962 Water, - - 630-705 T. c . . h~Q OOA Organic Matters, 68'405 Liquor Sanguinis, - - - Y6,380 f Mineral 4-730 Fibrin, - - 2540 (1) 1000 parts of Liquor Sanguinis contained, Water, 918-072 Albumen and Extractive Matters, - 74*050 Mineral Matters, 5'120 Fibrin, 2'748 (2) 1000 parts of Liquor Sanguinis contained, Water, 892*859 Albumen and Extractive Matters, 96-838 Mineral Matters, 6-696 Fibrin, 3-890 1000 parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles contained, Water, 750-000 Organic Residue, 239-803 Fixed Saline Constituents, 10-087 This analysis confirms the statement, that the malarial poison (either directly or indirectly) destroys the colored blood corpus- cles. They are diminished one half, the dried corpuscles being only 73*405, and the moist corpuscles 293*620, whilst in health the dried corpuscles generally average 135'000, and the moist corpuscles 540*000. This patient improved very slowly under the action of sul- phate of quinia, chalybeates, and alteratives, and on the 2nd of September had a return of chill and fever. September 3rd, 12| o'clock, P.M. Chill has just commenced; he is shaking violently. Pulse 96, very feeble, can scarcely be felt. Eespiration 82^0, irregular, spasmodic. Extremities cold; trunk warm. Temp, of atmosphere 83; temp, of hand 9375' ; temp, under tongue 1005'. 3 o'clock, P.M. Skin hot and dry; pulse 108; respiration 28 ; temp, of atmosphere 85F.; temp, of hand 104 ; temp, un- der tongue 105. 7 o'clock, P.M. Fever is subsiding; pulse 90; respiration 26; temp, of atmosphere 78F.; temp, of hand 1015' ; temp, under tongue 103. September 4th. Apyrexia. September 5th. No return of fever. y. s. you xiv. no. vhi. 27 524 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, September 6th. Pulse 76 ; respiration 20 ; temp, of atmos- phere 80F.; temp, of hand 98 ; temp, under tongue 100. Examination of Urine passed during the febrile excitement and the intermission, Sept. 3rd. ANALYSIS XXXIII. Urea, - - Uric Acid, - Grs. 7084 of Urine passed j during 16 hrs. Sp. Crav. 1012-4. Am't pass'd hour- ly, grs. 442 7. Grains 151-077 2-243 Grs. 10613, calculated for 24 hours, contain ed grains 226-616 3-365 1000 parts of Urine, contained 21-08& 0-326 Case XXI. Irish laborer ; light brown hair, brown eyes ; has been in America seven years, and in Savannah three years ; age 22, medium height. Has been living and making bricks in a low miasmatic situation. Says that he has suffered with chill and fever for six weeks. Complexion sallow and anaemic; lips, gums, and tongue pale. He is exhausted by slight exertions, and complains of great weakness. Sept. 16th, 12| o'clock P.M. Pulse 88, respiration 24. Tem- perature of atmosphere, 875'F. ; Temp, of hand, 1005' ; Temp, under tongue, 10125'. Sept. 17th, Hi o'clock P. M. Pulse 72, respiration 20. Has just awoke from sleep, in a profuse perspiration. Temperature of atmosphere, 86 F. ; Temp, of hand, 90 ; Temp, under tongue, 98 ANALYSIS XXXIV. Water, Solid Matters, '* - - Urea, Uric Acid, - - - - Extractive and Color- ) ing Matters, j Fix'd Saline Constituents Grs. 16027 ot Urine excreted in 24 hours. Sp. Gr. 1001-7. Clear, limpid. Amount excreted hourly 667-7. Grains 15958-568 68432 42'680 1-280 18-776 5696 1000 parts of Urine, contained 995-730 4-270 2-664 0-079 1-171 0-356 The reduction of the nervous and physical forces was attend- ed by a reduction in the amounts of the solid constituents of the urine. $. Snake-root tea, 1 pint; brandy, flvi. ; sulph. of quinia, grs. xv. Mix. Take a wine-glassful six times a day. $. Citrate of Iron, grs. iv. three times a day. Sept. 17th, 12 M. Pulse 72, respiration 20. Temp, of atmos- phere. 88 F.; Temp, of hand, 985'; Temp, under tougue, 995'. Amount of urine excreted during last 24 hours, grs. 14645. A- mount excreted hourly, grs. 610. Sp. Gr. 1010. Urea in grs. 146459 of urine, 196.910; Uric acid in grs. 146459 of urine, 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever, 525 7.975; Urea in 1000 parts of urine, 12.445; Uric acid in 1000 parts of urine, 0.544 The snake-root tea and sulph. of quinia and citrate of iron, have produced an increase of the solid constituents of the urine. Sept. 19th, 2 o'clock P. M. Pulse 76, respiration 24. Temp, of atmosphere, 89 F. ; Temp, of hand, 98 ; Temp, under tongue, 99. Sp. Gr. of urine, 1012 ; Urea in 1000 parts, 10.270 ; Uric acid in 1000 parts, 0.247. Sept. 20th. Pulse 96, respiration 24. Temp, of atmosphere, 83 F.; Temp, of hand, 100; Temp, under tongue, 102. A- mount of urine passed during last 24 hours, grs. 20400. Specific Gravity 1010. Examination of Blood, No. II Blood watery in appearance, and coagulated slowly. Reaction decidedly alkaline. After standing twenty hours, the clot contracted but little, and it was soft, possessing but little consistency. In the specific gravity bottle, the colored blood corpuscles gravitated towards the bottom, and left above a light yellow, transparent clot. Serum of a light yellow color. Specific gra- vity of blood 10305 ; specific gravity of serum 1021*3 Water In 1000 parts of Blood, 877-553 " " Serum, 927-757 (1) " " Liq. Sang. 925725 (2) " Liq. Sang. 911-124 Solid Matters. In 1000 parts of Blood, 122-447 " " Serum, - 72-243 (1) " " Liq. Sang. 74-275 (2) " " Liq. Sang. 88-876 Serum of 1000 pts. Blood, 68-435 Fixed Saline Constituents. In 1000 parts of Blood, " " Serum - (1) " " Liquor Sanguinis, (2) " " Liquor Sanguinis, - In Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, " 1000 parts of the Solid Matters of Blood, u u a n . Serum << u a ( 4< u (< " " t" Liquor Sanguinis, u " " " '" Blood Corpuscles, Blood Corpuscles of 1000 parts of Blood, - 1000 parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles, 3316 3-326 3-328 3 965 3141 27083 45-901 44-790 3-240 0175 0 841 1000 Parts of Blood Contained, Water, -------.. 877-553 t^ j m j m i ci no7 ) Dried Organic Residue, 51812 Dried Blood Coipuscles, 51-987 > r. , ^ & .. [ _ ,** ^ ) Fixed Saline Constituents, 0175 Fibrin, ......... 1-925 Albumen, Extractive and Color- ) Dried Organic Residue, 65*194 ing Matters, - - 68-335 \ Fixed Saline Constituents, 3-141 52ft Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, 1000 Parts of Blood Contained, ) Water, - - - 155861 Morgt Blood Corpuscles, 207*948 V Organic Residue, - 51-812 3 Fixed Saline Constituents, 0175 Water, .... 721-692 Albumen, Extractive & Co* > 65-194 loring Matters, $ Fixed Saline Constituents, 3*141 Fibrin, - 1-925 Liquor Sanguinis, 792*052 J000 Parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles Contained, Water, --......- 749*519 Dried Organic Matters, ...... 249*154 Fixed Saline Constitueuts, ...... 0-841 (1) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained, Water, ......... 925*725 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, - - . 68*817 Fibrin, -...-.... 2*032 Fixed Saline Constituents, - - - - 3 326 (2) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained, Water, ......... 911*167 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, - - - 823 1 2 Fibrin, ......... 3 965 Fixed Saline Constituents, 2*430 This analysis shows that the continued action of the malarial poison has reduced the colored blood corpuscles to 51.987 dried, or 207.948 moist, which is a little more than one-third of the normal standard. The fixed saline constituents of the colored blood corpuscles are also, not only correspondingly, but absolutely diminished in amount. I have derived much benefit in the treatment of the effects of malarial fever, from the phosphates of iron, lime, soda, and potassa. It is probable that they act beneficially by supplying those salts which are deficient. If the hypophos- phites of lime, soda, potassa and ammonia, act with as much power and in the manner asserted by Dr. Churchill,* they will ?rove valuable remedies in the latter stages of malarial fever, have employed them upon myself, this winter, after an attack of intermittent fever, with apparent benefit. * " On the Proximate Cause and Specific Remedy of Tuberculosis," by Dr. John Francis Churchill. Dublin Hospital Gazette, Aug. 15th, 1857. Ranking's Abstract, No. 26, July to Dec, 1857, p. 47. Dr. Churchill has employed the hypophosphites, in the treatment of tuberculosis, with success, and asserts that they increase nervous force, and are infinitely superior to all other medicines as bsematogens. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 527 Case XXII. German laborer, age 30 ; height 5 feet 5 inches ; weight, in health, 112 lbs.; light hair, blue eyes; small, delicate man. Has been in the United States three years and in Savan- nah three months. Has been "keeping store" on the river, near the rice mill. Was taken sick with chill and fever two months ago. Complexion anaemic. Complains of great weak- ness. Lips, gums and tongue pale ; tongue coated with white fur. Sept. 10th, 11 o'clock A. M. Says that he had his chill yes- terday. $. Sulph. of quinia grs. v. every three hours, up to grs. xv. Sept. 11th, 12 o'clock, M. Skin cool; in a profuse perspira* tion. Pulse 76 ; respiration 19. Temperature of Atmosphere, 85 F. " Hand, 94 " under Tongue, 98 Amount of Urine excreted during last 17 hours, grs. 5072 u .. u u hourly " " " " 298-9 Calculated amount for 24 hours, " 7157 Specific gravity 1014*5. Color a shade higher than normaL Grs. 5072 ot Urine, Grs. 7157 calculated 1000 parts of ANALYSIS XXXV. excreted in 17 brs., for 24 hours, con- Urine contain- contained grains, tained grains,"- ed, Water, - - - - 4886-160 6895-783 963-462 Solid Matters, - - 185-340 261-514 36538 Urea, 65-475 92-385 12-907 Uric Acid, - - - 2-750 3-880 0-552 Extractive & Color- ) ing Matters, j 102-485 144-607 20-225 Fixed Saline Constit's, 14-631 20-642 2-884 In this case, as in the preceding, we see that the depressed state of the forces, consequent upon the continued action of the malarial poison, was attended by a marked diminution of the solid constituents of the urine. Sept. 12th, 12i o'clock, P.M. Pulse 72; respiration 19. Skin cool. Temperature of Atmosphere, . . . 64 F. 44 " Hand, . . . . 97 25' " under Tongue, .... 99 9 Amount of Urine excreted during the last 24 hours, . grs. 13652 " " " " hourly " " " " . . 568-8 Specific gravity 1011-3. After 16 hours, a copious deposit of urate ef eoda and triple phosphate. 528 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, ANALYSIS XXXVI. Grs. 13652 ot Urine, excre- ted in 24 hours, contained grains, 1000 parts of Urine contained, Water, Solid Matters, Urea, Uric Acid, Extractive and Col'g Matters, Fixed Saline Constituents, - 13242-437 409-563 209-520 19-710 158-485 20-265 970-000 30-000 15-316 1-443 11-676 1-567 Under the action of the sulphate of quinia, the urea, uric acid and extractive and coloring matters, have been increased in amount. Sept. 13th, 12 M. Much better. Amount of urine passed in last 24 hours, grs. 10,100. Amount of urine passed hourly, grs. 420*8. Sp. Grav. 1010. fy. Quassia and soda, and snake- root tea. Sept. 14th. Amount of urine passed in 24 hours, grs. 14084. Amount of urine passed hourly, grs. 587. Sp. Gr. 1006. Sept. 15th. Pulse 64 ; respiration 18. Temp, of atmosphere, 85 F.; Temp, of hand, 98; Temp, under tongue, 99. Spe- cific gravity of urine 1007*1. Grs. 13631 of urine contained, urea 96*400; uric acid 6*151. 1000 parts of urine contained, urea 6*003; uric acid 0*446. Urine excreted in 24 hours, grs. 13631 ; urine excreted hourly, grs. 568. Case XXIII. Irishman ; height 6 ft ; black hair, black eyes. This patient had been in the Savannah Poor House for three months, suffering with phthisis pulmonalis in its advanced stages. For the last two months he had been confined to the ward and recently he had been confined to his bed. August 23d. During the night, was taken with chill, follow- ed by fever. Had chill and fever four nights in succession, until the paroxysm yielded to the action of the sulphate of quinia. The chill and fever returned several times after this. Under the combined actions of pulmonary consumption and intermit- tent fever, the patient lost strength rapidly, and died Sept. 4th. (1.) Autopsy 12 houks after death. Exterior. Body much emaciated, universal sallow color, marked cadaverous rigidity. Head. "When the skull cap was removed, about f iss. of serum and blood escaped from the base of the brain. Dura- mater normal. Arachnoid membrane slightly opalescent in several spots, especially in the neighborhood of the larger blood vessels. The greatest part of this membrane, however, was trans- parent and normal.in appearance. Subarachnoid fluid appeared to be more abundant than usual. Bloodvessels of pia mater filled with blood. The venticles of the brain contained small 1858.] JONES, on Malarial Fever. 529 quantities of serum. The cortical and medullary substances, the cerebellum, pons varolii, the medulla oblongata, and the spinal marrow, appeared natural to the naked eye. Chest. Tubercles of various sizes, in various stages of devel- opment and disintegration, were deposited throughout the sub- stance of both lungs. Many of the largest were broken down into a pus-like matter, mingled with portions of the cheesy tuber- culous substance. Heart normal in size; weight grains, 6557. Portions of the right heart showed the commencement of fatty degeneration. The right auricle was filled by a large light yellow clot, which was attached to the tricuspid valves and cordae tendinae, and sent a large cylindrical branch down the vena cava. The surface and whole structure of this clot was of a light yellow color and appeared to be entirely free from colored blood corpuscles. In the right auricle and venticle were several other smaller clots, which resembled ordinary coagulated blood, and must have been formed posterior to the light yellow fibrinous clot. The lower portion of the vena cava contained coagulated blood. No clots were found in the left auricle and ventricle. The carotid arte- ries contained flattened cylindroid, light yellow clots, which sent off branches to the smaller arteries. These clots appear to have been formed before death, when the circulation was greatly diminished in force. Abdomen. Stomach small, contracted; small intestines and colon inflated with air. Mucous membrane of stomach of a pur- plish red color, in spots, presenting a mottled appearance. Blood- vessels upon the exterior filled with blood. The small intestines contained fecal matters colored by bile. Internal surface of a dark purplish and reddish yellow hue. Blood vessels upon the exterior and through the structures of the intestines were filled with dark blood. Glands of Peyer, normal, not enlarged. Brunner's glands did not attract attention. Liver. The form of the liver was abnormal; it had no left lobe, and in its general shape resembled a spleen. The color was purplish red. The structure was unusually firm. It required considerable force to tear it asunder. It cut toughly under the knife, and the lobules started out from the cut surface, as if they had been bound down. The fibrous capsule surrounding the exterior of the liver, forming a sheath for the large vessels lying in the portal canals, was thickened. The individual lobules of the liver were surrounded with fibrous tissue. The lobules of the liver have been described by Malpighi, (') Kiernan, (2) Mul- (1) Malpighi. De Yiscerum Structura Bologna. London: 1699. (2) The Anatomy and Physiology of the Liver, by Francis Kiernan. Philoso- phical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. 1833. P. 714. 630 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [August, ler, (3) Leidy, (4) and others as isolated from each other, and each invested with a layer of areolar or fibrous tissue. In the pig, in which these lobules were first noticed, and in the Polar bear according to Muller, and in the octodon cummingii, accor- ding to Hyrtl, (5) the lobules are invested by fibrous tissue, but in the liver of the human subject, and in that of vertebrate ani- mals generally, the lobules are not separated from each other by a fibrous partition, and there is no areolar or fibrous tissue or prolongation of Glisson's capsule between them or in their interior. Yogel, Henle, (6) Bowman, (7) and Beale, (8) have failed to detect any fibrous tissue in the interlobular fissures of the normal human liver. In cirrhosis of the liver, on the other hand, there is a remark- able development of fibrous tissue in the parenchyma of the liver, and the individual secreting segments become prominent, or even form isolated lobules. The increase of fibrous tissue in the liver of this subject, was manifest to the eye, and especially when the liver was subjected to the action of a stream of water, and gently mashed between the fingers. The softer parts were washed out, and the fibrous tissue remained. The character of this was determined by microscopical examination. The portions of the liver surrounded by the indurated fibrous tissue appeared to be but little altered and could be readily scraped away. The cirrhosed condition of the liver was not the result of malarial fever, for the microscopical examination showed that the fibrous tissue was abundant and well formed. The whole structure of the liver could not have been pervaded by fibrous tissue in the course of a few days. It is reasonable to conclude with Dr. Budd, (9) that the remarkable changes in cirrhosis, are mainly the consequence of adhesive inflammation in the areolar tissue about the small twigs of the portal vein, and in the areolar tissue of the portal canals, by which serous fluid and coagulable lymph are poured out. In this stage/the liver may be enlarged. The serous part of the effusion is next absorbed, the lymph contracts, becomes converted into dense fibrous tissue, which divides the lobular substance of the liver into well-defined masses, and gives great density and toughness to the organ. (3) Muller. De Glandularum Seceinent Struct. Penit, Berlin. 1830. Ele- ments of Physiology, by J. Muller, M.D. Translated by Wm. Baly, M.D. Lond., 1840. Vol. 1, p. 493. (4.) Researches into the Comparative Structure of the Liver, by Joseph Leidy, M.D. American Journal of the Medical Sciences, new series, vol. xv., 1848, p. 18. (5) Hyrtl. Lehrbuch der Anatomie des Menchen. 1850. (6) Huf eland's Journal. 1838. P. 8. (7) Article, " Mucous Membrane," in Todd's Cyclopaedia of Anatomy and Physi- ology, by W. Bowman. Vol. iii., p. 497. The Physiological Anatomy and Physiology of Man, by Todd ad to recovery. 'The supervention of labor the evacuation of the liquor amnii these, in their order, are the great bulwarks of a flooding woman, no matter where the placenta is implanted. It is a maxim in obsteterics that a con- tracted uterus cannot bleed ; it might, I think, be amended and enlarg- ed, by adding that neither can a contracting uterus bleed when it is emptied of its waters, or at any rate, if it bleed, the hemorrhage is no longer dangerous." In conclusion, we can only express our regret that we cannot do full justice to this excellent book, by presenting larger extracts, in an ex- tended review. We can only now say that, we have derived much pleasure and benefit from its perusal, and that we cordially recommend it to the profession, both to practitioners and to pupils. J. A. E. 570 Editorial [August, The Institutes of Medicine. By Martyn Paine, A.M., M. D., L. L. D., Professor of Institutes of Medicine and Materia Medica in the Univer- sity of the City of New York, &c, &c. 4th Edition, pp. 1095. Harper & Brothers: New York, 1858. The above work, together with the volumes of the Medical and Physio- logical Commentaries, and a pamphlet of Essays on Vitality and Remedial Agents, was acknowledged in the last number of this Journal, as sent us by their distinguished author. We wish to notice briefly, at present, the " Institutes of Medicine," regretting, that in our monthly journal space is allowed only for a bibliographical notice, rather than for a re- view, which the character of the work richly merits. Of all American writers, no one has been more indefatigable and laborious than Professor Paine, and the works of but few, either in this country or in Europe, display a greater amount of learning than we find enriching both the Institutes and Commentaries of this perhaps most recondite of American authors. On opening any of his works, we may be said to be, at once " lost in a sea of erudition," and his copious refer- ences to the authors of every country and every language, attest his familiarity with the general literature of the science to an extent rarely evinced by cis-Atlantic writers. Although, in the beginning, we must affirm our thorough dissent from both the tenor and the tendency of Professor Paine's peculiar physiological tenets, we cannot justly withhold our cordial recommendation of the work before us, as one presenting a most valuable collection of physiological and medical facts, accompanied, in many instances, with very just commentaries upon the phenomena of life ; but we must say, that his reflections have not always led their author to such principles of practice, as we can wholly approve : for instance he quotes, with approval, a number of authors who strongly recommend profuse bloodletting in typhoid diseases, and endorses Dr. Parry as hav- ing "introduced the only successful or philosophical treatment, that of bloodletting, in purpura hemorrhagica* This treatment may have been applicable in some particular form of purpura, and in some peculiar epidemic ; but our own experience, and that of most practitioners of the present day, will attest the virtue of an opposite course, and the extreme hazard of depletion. From our examination of the work, we receive the impression that its pervading spirit will be found expressed in the first line of the initial page ; " Solidism and vitalism will form the basis of these Institutes," says our author, and we find, upon every page, that it is most uncompro- misingly carried out. Vitalism is for Dr. Paine, the Procrustean bed upon which every fact, every phenomenon, and every medical theory are placed, and with his determined hand laid upon them, they are length- 1858.] Editorial DTI ened or shortened into a consistency which is often almost unanswerable. For this vitalism, he contends with the most unyielding pertinacity, and the chief objects of his horror, appear to be, the chemical and humoral doctrines, in whatever form they may be presented. To the humoral pathology he specially devotes but a small number of pages (about 35) of the present work, but he maintains a sharp skirmishing warfare with this class of medical philosophers, from his very first to his very last page. This vitalism, which in earlier times, and even as late as the days of Boerhaave and Cullen, was a wonderful advance upon the unsettled no- tions about physiological action, has become, in these later days, when all our discussions of the phenomena of organic action are conditioned, by a definite understanding of the nature of the elements with which we deal, too vague a principle to "form the basis" of our physiological and pathological reasonings. Vitalism, in its technical sense, has ever ap- peared to us, to sustain the same relation to medicine, that the searchings after the nature of the soul do to theology. The existence of both is evident indeed undeniable, and must be admitted as being in close rela- tion, the one with all our moral and intellectual, and the other with all our physiological and organic acts, but still neither of them, when we attempt to seize upon and define it, can be made the basis of satisfactory and conclusive argument. As in theology, it has scarcely ever yielded a"hy thing to investigate the ultimate nature of the soul, so in medicine, beyond the full admission of the vital principle and its acceptance as a dominant influence in all our organic acts, nothing has been gained by the most elaborate investigation into the exact nature of the force by which these organic acts are accomplished. Physiology, like all the other inductive sciences, has for its basis, a bun- dle of facts indeed, in the present day, it has become an ocean of facts. These facts, are of no one kind : many, it is true', relate to the nervous system, and indicate its sway over all our vital acts, but then others as fully shew that humoral, chemical and atmospheric influences are at work in modifying, supplying and controlling the power exercised by the nervous system, and so intimately blended here, are cause and effect, that when we would attempt to say of any one of them, " here is the beginning," we become involved in labyrinths interminable, and are forced to look back, to that Beginning of all beginnings, that source of all power, the Creator of man and the universe. Notwithstanding we have thus candidly considered those parts of Prof. Paine's work which have appeared, to ws, objectionable, we repeat, that we can still cordially recommend it as a valuable addition to the medical literature of our country. In an age when Humoralism and 572 Editorial [August, Organic Chemistry are threatening to displace all other views of physiolo- gical and pathological action, this work, because it is ultra in its vitalism and solidism, must exert a most salutary influence upon the history of the medical opinion of the present, and the rising generation. It requires no half-way assertion of the power of nervous action to gain its admission ; but he who would advocate its unmodified sway, as Dr. Paine does, must be as firm and as uncompromising even as he has been, throughout the comprehensive work before us. The present edition has been prepared, apparently with great care, and, with a few marring exceptions, the typographical execution very well sustains the reputation of the Harpers. A most copious analytical index much enhances the value of the volume, and attests well, the per- severance and industry of the author. In regard to what may be called, par excellence, the controversial por- tion of this work, viz., "The Rights of Authors" in the appendix, we do not intend to make any extended remark : For although some of Dr. Paine's reclamations, strangely enough, appear to refer pointedly to the labors of one of the editors of this journal, still, printed beside them on the same page, is the unanswerable decision of Dr. Marshall Hall, the acknowledged Father of the great principle of Reflex action, awarding the merit on the other side, and declaring that ." the field is indisputably His Own." With his originality thus asserted, he may well be content to add, not even a single word, for himself, no matter from what source the denial may come. Under these circumstances, we do not feel called upon to select this one, from the thirty-nine ! distinct claims recorded in this appendix, in or- der to make it the subject of particular discussion. PROFESSORIAL CHANGES, HOSPITALS, COLLEGES, &c. In our last number, we recorded several changes in various Faculties of Medical Colleges throughout the United States. Our exchanges sup- ply us with the following in addition : Professor Daniel F. Wright, the former able Professor of Physi- ology and Pathology in the Memphis Medical College, has been elected to the same Chair in the Shelby Medical College. Professor W. is also editor of the Memphis Medical Recorder, one of our ablest and most valuable exchanges. We sincerely hope that his change of residence will not deprive us of our valued confrere. Dr. J. H. B. McClellan of this city, (Philadelphia,) has been elected to fill the vacancy in the Medical Department of Pennsylvania College, 1558.] Editorial 573 caused by the removal of Dr. T. G. Richardson to New Orleans. Medi- cal and Surgical Reporter. Dr. Richardson held the Chair of Anatomy in the above College. "Professor S. G. Armor," says the K. 0. Med. News and Hos-pital Gazette, u requests us to announce his resignation of the chair of Path- ology and Clinical Medicine in the Missouri Medical College of St. Louis. Dr. B. L. Jones lias been appointed to the vacant chair of Che- mistry in the Oglethorpe Medical College." The New Orleans Medical News and Hospital Gazette, thus re- gretfully refers to the resignation of Dr. Thomas Peniston from the chair of Clinical Medicine in the X. 0. School of Medicine : " We are record- ing an event which only gives us pain, and we shall do it in as few words as possible. Impaired health has forced our worthy and most highly esteemed colleague to tender his resignation, and he has gone across the water to seek repose from his labors, and that restoration for which he shall have our heartfelt prayers." Professor Austin Flint, the distinguished author of Clinical Reports on Typhoid Fever, the most accurate and reliable since those of Louis, has been elected to fill the chair vacated by the resignation of Dr. Penis- ton.. As Philadelphia has recently been making inroads into a Southern Faculty by calling Prof. Dickson from Charleston, it seems but fair that New Orleans should make reprisals on the North ; this has been done by the New Orleans School of Medicine securing Dr. Flint from Buffalo, and the University, Dr. Richardson from Philadelphia. Also, Dr. J. F. Grail has been appointed Demonstrator of Anatomy in the New Orleans School of Medicine. L'niyersity of Louisville. This excellent Institution which a year ago had the misfortune to lose its edifice by fire, with an energy truly surprising and highly commendable in its Faculty, was able to gather the same season, quite a large class. The following changes have oc- curred in its Faculty : Prof. Benjamin R. Palmer has been transferred from the chair of Anatomy, so long and so ably filled by him, to that of the Principles and Practice of Surgery ; and Prof. J. B. Flint, the form- er Professor of Surgery, occupies the newly created chair of Clinical Surgery, while the chair of Anatomy thus vacated is filled by the elec- tion of Dr. J. W. Benson. Prof. Henry Miller having resigned the chair of Obstetrics, his place has been judiciously supplied by the election of Dr. Llewellen Powell. Dr. S. M. Bemis, favorably known to the profession by his contribu- 574 Editorial [August, tions to the American Medical Association, has been elected to the chair of Clinical Medicine. The other members of the Faculty occupy their old positions, viz., Prof. T. S. Bell, Theory and Practice; Prof. L. P. Yandell, Physiology and Pathological Anatomy ; Prof. Robert J. Breckenridge, Therapeutics and Materia Medica; and Prof. J. L. Smith, Chemistry and Toxicology. With the above excellent organization, the University may reasonably expect the same distinguished success in her new edifice, which marked her progress in the old. Shelby Medical College. The unprecedented success of the Uni- versity of Nashville, has encouraged others to establish a second Medical Institution at this point. The following gentlemen have been elected to fill the respective Chairs : J. F. May, M. D., Principles and Operations of Surgery ; E. B. Haskins, M. D., Theory and Practice of Medicine ; J. P. Ford, M. D., Obstetrics and Diseases of Women and Children ; T. L. Maddin, M. D., Descriptive, Histological and Surgical Anatomy ; J. H. Chandler, M. D., Materia Medica and Therapeutics ; R. 0. Currey, M. D., Chemistry and Medical Jurisprudence ; Daniel F. Wright, M. D., Physiology and Pa- thology ; H. M. Compton, M. D., Demonstrator. The circular of the new college evinces a conciliatory spirit, and de- precates strongly any suspicion of unworthy rivalry or desire to cripple the valuable organization already existing in Nashville. " Its success is a source of gratification to all who take pride in the public institutions of the city and the state, and, without affectation, they desire it to con- tinue." Recognizing the names of several of our valued friends in the above Faculty, we can cordially wish them success; but with friends equally prized by us, in the University, that success could be no longer gratifying to us, should it be secured at the expense of that noble and liberal Insti- tution. Nashville Medical Society. The Physicians of Nashville, Teun., have recently organised themselves into a society, adopted a constitu- tion and chosen officers for the current year. Meetings are appointed to be held monthly. Dr. A. H. Buchanan is President, Dr. S. S. May- field, Vice-President, and Dr. G. S. Blackie, Secretary and Treasurer. [Boston Med. and Surg. Journal. Ohio Medical and Surgical Journal. Professor J. M. Hamilton has become associated with Prof. John Dawson as joint editor and proprie- 1858.] Editorial 575 tor of the Ohio Medical and Surgical Journal, published at Columbus in that State. [Ibid. " We have room merely to announce," says the Medical and Surgical Reporter, " that Dr. R. K. Smith has been re-elected Chief Resident Physician to the Philadelphia Hospital, Blockley thus effectually re- deeming that Institution from the disgraceful position which it has for some time occupied." We learn also from the Reporter, that a new- college hospital has been established at Brooklin. NEW JOURNALS. Journal de Physiologie de l'Homme et des Animaux. We have the pleasure of acknowledging the first number of this valuable Journal whose existence is due to the energy and zeal of the distinguished ex- perimental physiologist, Dr. E. Brown-Sequard, so well known in this country, as well as in Europe. We believe that this is the first, and at present the only periodical exclusively devoted to that most interesting and progressive branch of Medical Science Physiology. The " Annals of Anatomy and Physiology," published in Edinburgh, by John Goodsir, was of a different character, and so far as we know, did not reach its third number. Dr. Brown-Sequard is assisted in his editorial labors by Drs. Ch. Robin, Ch. Rouget, and Tholozan, and he has the promise of original communications from many distinguished contributors in America, England and Germany. Besides Physiology proper, the journal will treat of "1. Organic Chemistry, hygiene, toxicology, and legal medicine, in their relations to physiology. u 2. Descriptive anatomy, comparative anatomy, teratology, and nor- mal and pathological histology, so far as they may be connected with physiology. " 3. The application of physiology to the practice of medicine, surgery, and obstetrics. "The numbers will be issued four times a year on the first day of January, April, July, and October each number containing about 200 pages. "The contents will be classified in the following manner : "1. Original communications, forming more than one-half of each number. " 2. Articles published abroad, entire or in part. " 3. Critical analyses of books published in France and other countries. " 4. Accounts of the progress of physiology in France and other coun- tries. "The subscription price in this eountry'will be twenty-five francs, or $5 per year." 576 Editoriul and Miscellaneous. [AugustT American correspondents will please address, post paid, Mons. J. B. Baillaire, et fils, or Dr. Brown-Sequard, Rue de Dragon, 16 a Paris. We place the above journal, with pleasure, on our exchange list, and hope to make it valuable both to ourselves and to our readers. The Maine Medical and Surgical Reporter. We have received both the first and second numbers of the above promising new journal. It is edited by W. R. Richardson, M. D. and R. W. Cummings, M. D., who are also the proprietors. It is published monthly, at Portland, by Sanborn & Carter. Both numbers are filled with valuable matter, ori- ginal and selected, and the typographical execution and style of the journal does credit to both the editors and the publishers. We welcome the new comer to our sanctum, and with pleasure place it among our exchanges. Symmetrical Morbid Action. We copy the following from the Buf- falo Medical Journal. The fact is certainly worthy of record, however darkly hidden may be the explanation. Lockport, May 31st, 1856. Prof. Hamilton : Dear Sir, I send you the following report of a case that occurred in my practice, and which may possess interest enough to entitle it to a more extended publicity. You are at liberty to do with it as you see fit : In the summer of 1853, Mr. Monroe Levally, wagon-maker, age 46, called at my office and requested me to examine his arm. I did so, and found immediately over the point of the olecoron process an encysted tumor of the size of a robin's egg, and which made its appearance a few days previous. I made a few incisions in the sack with an abscess lancet, and obtained about 3iii. of a thick fluid. Introduced into the sack a pledgit of lint, and in a few days a perfect cure was effected. But the next week I was not a little surprised, when he returned, with another tumor on the other arm, an exact counterpart of the previous one in every particular. It made its appearance in the same manner ; in locality it was the same, (except on the other arm,) of the same size and form. I treated in the same manner, and the result was the same. How far this goes to prove the existence of a sympathetic action be- tween the corresponding points of the human system, we leave for others to decide ; but it does certainly go far to prove that, under certain cir- cumstances, one elbow at least has some sympathy with the other. Yours, ever, A. M. Leonard. Dr. Elint, "Symmetrical diseases" are known to occur often in eruptive affections, and occasionally in rheumatic and syphilitic affections, but this is the only example which I have known where an encysted tumor, or a true tumor of any kind, has illustrated this curious law of affinities between opposite portions of the body. Yours, F. H. Hamilton. 1858.] Miscellaneous. 577 Pertussal Glucosuria. In the }Tear 1855, the fact was first pointed out by Dr. Gibb, that the urine in almost every case of hooping-cough is saccharine, the quantity of sugar varying, generally but small, and some- times a trace only being present. A considerable quantity he has, how- ever, found on several occasions, the specific gravity being at the same time high, and in general characters the urine has been similar to that of diabetes. A case of pertussis, with urine in this last condition, was recently under Dr. Gibb's care, at the St. Pancras Royal Dispensary, in a child of six years, who had reached the spasmodic stage of the com- plaint, without any complication, unless the glucosuria be considered as such. The remarkable feature of this case was the rapidity with which the quantity of sugar diminished under the usual plan of treatment re- commended by Dr. Gibb in this disease namely, nitric acid in large doses. The specific gravity of the urine became lower, the quantity of sugar diminished, and, as a cure was established within three weeks, not a trace of it was to be found. It is an interesting fact, that nitric acid should so rapidly diminish the glucosuria. This may be effected in one of two ways either by its curing the purtussis, and a condition with it, which must hereafter be looked upon as symptomatic of it; or else the assimilation of the acid prevents the formation of the sugar. To the last view Dr. Gibb inclines, but he says large doses only will produce this, as experience has proved in his hands. This condition of the urine in hooping-cough is well worthy of record. We shall refer at a future time to the explanation given of its appearance, but we take this opportunity of throwing out the suggestions of a trial of the influence of nitric acid in cases of diabetes mellitus. [Lancet. New Method of Amputation. M. Maisonneuve read lately a paper before the Academy of Sciences of Paris, on a new method of amputa- tion, which he calls the diaclastic method. It consists of a contrivance for fracturing the bone at the precise point required ; after which the muscles are strongly compressed by mechanical means, so as to reduce them to small diameter. They are divided, and the member separated from the trunk. In consequence of the compression, all hemorrhage is effectually prevented. M. Maisonneuve quoted six cases of amputation by this astonishing procedure five of the leg, and one of the arm ; in all of which complete cures were effected. No unsuccessful cases, he says, have occurred to him. [Lancet. "The Sands of Life11 "Played Out." Under this caption the New York Times gives an account of the legal means lately adopted in that city to put a stop to the disgraceful system of quackery for some years carried on by a reckless swindler representing himself, in his advertise- ments, as a physician " whose sands of life have nearly run out." It seems that he, with other quacks of the same sort, have been arrested, and the letters which are daily flowing into them by mail are sent on to the Dead Letter Office at Washington, whence the money contained in them will be returned to the deluded victims of this last and boldest of the medical humbugs. [Boston Med. and Surg. Journal. 578 Miscellaneous. Glycerine with Alum and White Precipitate. Dr. Anciaux recom- mends the following formula in the local treatment of erysipelas, obstinate eczemas and atonic ulcers : alum, in impalpable powder, 30 parts; white precipitate, 1 part. Triturate them well together, put them in a phial and add glycerine, 90 to 100 parts. Shake the phial, until the mixture assumes the consistence of cream, each time it is applied. [Ibid. Painless Caustic. M. Piedagnel, after various trials, has succeeded in producing a caustic that may be employed, causing little or no pain. It is formed of three parts of the Vienna caustic in powder and one part of hydrochlorate of morphia, intimately mixed together, and then made into a thick paste by means of chloroform, alcohol, or water. It is ap- plied to the skin on diachylon. A black eschar is produced in fifteen minutes, increasing in thickness with the duration of the application. The morphia mixed in the same proportion with powdered cantharides, prevents pain during the rising of a blister. M. Piedagnel, who at present has only used this means for the production of issue and blisters, states that the action of the morphia is merely local. [Druggists'' Circular. A Specific for Scabies. At the last meeting of the Academy of Scien- ces, Paris, M. Bonnet ofEpinal, sent in a paper announcing that benzine is a specific for the itch. The author of the paper states that if benzine be rubbed on the parts affected, and also very slightly on the other parts of the body, a cure will be effected in the course of five minutes, after which time the patient may take a warm bath for half an hour. Never- theless, in cases where the itch is accompanied with a secondary eruption, the latter will require a separate treatment. [Ibid. Hydrocele treated by Electricity. Rodolfi of Milan, has applied elec- tricity for the cure of hydrocele in four cases, and reports very favorably concerning its effects, not only the fluid disappearing in all, but its re- production being prevented in three of the cases. Bunsen's or better still, Daniel's* pile should be employed. [Ibid. New local application in Erysipelas. M. Anciaux speaks in high terms of the following application for erysipelas and some other cutane- ous affections. Alum reduced to impalpable powder, 30 parts ; white precipitate, 1 part. Rub up well together, and place the powder in a bottle, and then add from 90 to 100 parts of glycerine. Shake the bottle until the mixture assumes a creamy consistence, and repeat the shaking whenever the application is about to be employed. [Ibid. Infants found dead in bed, are not generally killed by being laid on by their mothers, but by being suffocated under the bedclothes, with carbonic acid gas exhaled from their own lungs and re-inspired. They die without pain, in a profound sleep. Mothers, give your babes more air. Let them sleep with their heads uncovered. Do not let them go to sleep on or under your arm, for when you cover yourselves, in the half unconciousness of partial sleep, you will cover your darlings' heads also, and in the morning may find them still in sleep a sleep from which your caresses cannot awake them. [Pacific Med. and Surg. Journal. SOUTHERN MEDICAL AND SURGICAL JOURNAL (NEW SERIES.) Vol. XIV.] AUGUSTA, GEORGIA, SEPTEMBER, 1858. [No. 9. ORIGINAL AND ECLECTIC. ARTICLE XXX. Observations on Malarial Fever. By Joseph Jones, A.M., M.D., Professor of Physics and Natural Theology in the University of Georgia, Athens; Professor of Chemistry and Pharmacy in the Medical College of Georgia, Augusta ; formerly Professor of Medical Chemistry in the Medical College of Savannah. [Continued from page 538 of August No. 1858.] Section II. Remittent Fever. In the preceding articles upon Intermittent fever, but few comparisons were made but few conclusions drawn. A simple statement of the phenomena was made, and they were placed in a situation for future analysis and comparison. A similar course will be pursued, with Remittent and Con- gestive fevers. When we have examined the phenomena of the varieties of Malarial fever, then analysis and comparison will be instituted: then the similar will be combined, and the dissimilar separated; and thus we will endeavor to establish the relations, or laws, of the phenomena of Malarial fever. Our knowledge of Malarial fever, and in fact, of all fevers, is imperfect*. Many phenomena have never been analyzed, and it is probable that there are many which have escaped observa- tion entirely. It is necessary, therefore, that we should proceed upon the strict principles of induction. We must establish a true knowledge of Malarial fever, in the X. 8. VOL. XIV. NO. IX. 31 580 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [September, same manner that all sciences have been constructed. By ob- servation, experiment and reason, facts must be observed, re- corded, accumulated, compared : complex phenomena observed, recorded, analyzed, decomposed, and their component elements, arranged and compared: the errors of the senses corrected, and thus fundamental laws or relations established. By analyzing phenomena, and connecting them by the natural relations of succession and resemblance, fixed laws or relations are discovered. The end of knowledge is fore-sight, fore-knowledge; and when perfected, it will enable us to predict with absolute cer- tainty the future course of events. Thus the great object of the Astronomer is to determine the fixed relations or laws of the universe, so that the precise condi- tion of the heavenly bodies, at any future time, may be deter- ., mined with absolute certainty. The great object of the Physician, should be to determine the fixed relations or laws of the animal economy, and the definite action, constitution, and relations of morbific and remedial agents, so that he may be able to predict the results of the ac- tions of these agents, and also to control and direct their action. This is our object and this our method. But our instruments and means of investigation have been imperfect. The pheno- mena themselves were obscure, and it is probable that many, of great importance, entirely escaped our observation. Imperfections of the senses, imperfections of the mental facul- ties, imperfections in our materials and instruments, of experi- ment and analysis, will necessarily render the results imperfect. My object is to assist in the establishment of the truth, and it is my fervent hope, that whatever results, relations, or laws, I may deduce from these observations, will be tested, and weighed by careful, conscientious observers. Thus, we hope, that in time, the errors will be eliminated, the imperfections removed, the results enlarged, and the truth established. Case XXIII. English seaman : age 25, weight 140, height 5 feet 6 inches ; black hair ; florid complexion. Sailed from New York to Darien, Georgia. Eemained in Darien five days ; dur- ing which time, he slept on board the vessel, lying in the Alta- maha river. Sailed from Darien, and arrived in Savannah 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 581 twelve days ago. During the day has been running on a steam tug, up and down the Savannah river, from its mouth to the city, and has slept, during the night, on the bay. Was taken with a chill, September 6th, 10 o'clock A. M. September 10th, 7 o'clock P. M. Took salts and senna, this morning. This operated five times. Has taken no other medi- cine. Pulse 90, full; respiration 48, panting, thoracic. Tem- perature of atmosphere, 80 F. ; Temp, of hand, 103 ; Temp, under tongue, 105. Tongue pointed and red at tip and edges, superior portion coated with black fur; skin dry. Complains of great thirst and pain in his head. Face flushed. September 11th, 11 o'clock A. M. Pulse 88;' respiration la- bored, thoracic, panting, irregular, varying from 34 to 40. Tem- perature of atmosphere, 82 F. ; Temp, of hand, 10325'; Temp, under tongue, 105. Says that he did not rest well last night, and complains of great pain in his head. Intellect clear. Has been vomiting yellow and green matters. Bowels have not been moved during the night. Skin dry and harsh to the feeling. Tongue red, dry and glazed. To the finger the tongue feels as dry as the skin. The state of the tongue would lead us to sus- pect tenderness of the epigastrium, but there is none. Complains of great thirst ; says that he felt very cold and weak this morn- ing at 5 o'clock. The nurse states that at this time his pulse was 65, and his skin cool. $. Sulphate of quinia, grs. v. every three hours, up to grs. xxxv. If the stomach rejects the sulphate of quinia, administer the following injection: $. Sulphate of quinia, grs. xx.; Starch, f^ij.; Tincture of opium, n\ x. Mix. Eepeat in three hours. $. 5 cut cups to epigastrium. $. Soda powders. Diet, gruel and flax seed tea. grams, 8160 12240 510 Amount of Urine passed during the last 16 hours, " " " calculated for 24 " " " " excreted hourly, - Urine clear, high colored, like new Madeira wine. Specific gravity 1020. Reaction decidedly acid. After standing 40 hours, threw down a small deposit of regular prismatic crystals of triple phosphate and vegetable cells. Calculated am't of Urine for 24 hours, grs. 12240, contained grains, ANALYSIS XXXVII. Water Solid matters, Urea, Uric Acid, Extractive St! raj S3- 2 "3^o2tS-c2.H> J?oM,og^p:;8s'g S ? S ^^ n ex a :S to to to to to -- 1 ^ CO CJ 00 00 00 00 & g U0{^JidB8a ajaqdsorajy jo ajn^BJaduiaj; paBH jo ajn^aadmajQ oo o tO 05 tO to to to to i-1 to weiSKufkOf o W COW 05 tO tOO 00 CO w osw coco cooo en as ^ O W OS toe t-< anSuox aapnn ajnjujaduiai a ) Suunp w -< pajajoxa auijQ jo :}unouiy sanoH g ( Xiatioq a> j -pa:jajoxa auijQ jo lunotay toto I to to oo > w c3 to o anjjfl jo AlAJ0 y!9(JS ;fc oS^ . -* CO OS W OS i&- J3*Ai &S3 : 8i 6J3WK PilS 2 B9Jl Oi On w g?*r pioy oun 4- 4- OS oo ot-o ww co j sMW I Sui-inopo pnB 3A!pt?j}xa j "s^uanwsuoo auiig paxij; oo to 5SK H* . W SJtioq f% joj auijfi jo ijunouiy paiBinopjQ a os woo sanoq yz J0J jareAl J Qnnoiuy paiTqnoiBQ sjnoq fg .ioj sja^iiK P!IS J ?unouxy paveinapsQ tOh-i *>. to rz > rJ s.inoq fz JOj uajfl jo ^unouiy pa^inoiBQ 05 o on -4CS b ^1 gjnoqfg joj P!V sanoq fz JOj sja^Bj^ 100 y 8^xa ?(ray pa^inoia ssr s is gjnoq fz joj s^uan^wsaoo 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 591 ries of the superficial parts of the tongue. The secretions of the mucous membrane have been^checked ; the moisture is evapora- ted by the elevated temperature; the circulation in the superfi- cial capillaries, is thus retarded, and they become filled with colored blood corpuscles, which give the bright color to the tongue. The question arises, what checked the secretions of the mucous membrane of the mouth ? The consideration of the chemical alterations of many elements and secretions enter into the solution of this question. We will mention only five and acknowledge that this is nothing but a statement of the manner in which the changes may take place, and not a direct absolute answer to the question. 1. Theftells of the mucous membrane. 2. The capilliaries of the mucous membrane. 8. The serum of the blood. 4. The blood corpuscles. 5. The nervous system presiding over the elaboration of the blood, the circulation of the blood in the capillaries, and the formation of the secretions. We have before demonstrated that the malarial poison, pro- duces profound chemical and physical alterations in the colored blood corpuscles, destroying many, and in all inducing chemical changes which result in a great diminution of the fixed saline constituents. The blood corpuscles, collectively form an immense gland, which elaborates the materials of the serum into compounds for the nervous and muscular system, and probably for the various secretions. Whatever therefore destroys or alters the chemical changes of the colored blood corpuscles, must produce corres- ponding changes, in the secretions and excretions, and in the structure and action of the nervous system. There is a portion of the nervous system which presides over the circulation and chemical changes in the capillaries and thus over the secretions. The malarial poison may act upon the nervous system directly, or indirectly, by the changes induced in the blood corpuscles and the constituents of the serum, or it may act upon the nervous system in both ways combined at the same time. Whatever acts directly or indirectly upon the nervous system, will produce corresponding changes in the secretions, excretions and nutrition. 3. In this case we cast aside the advice of many of the older writers and administered the sulphate of quinia freely in the outset of the disease, regardless of the glowing parched tongue, tenderness upon presure of the epigastrium, and severe headache and high fever, and rapid bounding pulse, thoracic respiration, and hot dry skin. Under the action of the sulphate of quinia, the dry red tongue became moist, clear and pale ; the circulation and respiration abated in force and frequency, the dry harsh 692 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [September, skin was covered with perspiration, and all the symptoms sub- sided. The advantage of this mode of treatment will be illus- trated subsequently. 4. The increase of the action of the pulse and respiration was attended by an elevation of the temperature. The elevation of the temperature corresponded more accurately with the increas- ed action of the circulatory and respiratory systems in intermit- tent fever, than in this case of remittent fever. That is., the pulse and respiration were more accelerated in remittent fever, whilst the temperature did not rise higher than that of intermit- tent fever. 5. The urea was increased during the active stages of the fever, not only above the normal standard during rest and a depriva- tion of food, but also above the standard of intermittent fever. 6. The increased temperature and correspondiugly increased chemical changes, were attended by an increase of the urea. When the temperature fell below the normal standard, in both intermittent and remittent fever, the urea was decreased in amount. 7. The uric acid was diminished in the active stages of inter- mittent and remittent fevers,and increased as the diseases subsi- ded. 8. The changes in the acidity of the urine in this case, resem- bled in all respects, those during intermittent fever. 9. The coloring and extractive matters, were diminished during the active stages, and increased during the subsidence of the fever. Case XXV. Irish seaman : aged 21; height 5 feet 4 inches; weight 125 lbs; brown hair, brown eyes, sallow complexion. Has been in Savannah three weeks, and has been sick three days. This is his first trip to Savannah, during the summer season. October 12th, 12 M. Complains of great weakness and pain in his back and bones ; says that he has had no chill and no fever during the three days of indisposition, previous to his entrance into the hospital. Pulse 80, full. ty. Sulph. of quinia grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xv. October 13tb, 12 M. Did not rest well last night; complains of pain in his head and bones. Had a chill two hours ago. Tongue clean, red, dry, and rough ; papillae enlarged. Some tenderness of epigastrium. Skin hot and dry. Pulse 118 ; res- piration 24-26, irregular, thoracic. $. Calomel, grs. x., castor oil in four hours. $. Soda powders during fever, ty. After fever remits, give sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xx. October 14th, 12 M. Medicine acted twice; tongue clean and very red ; patient is not so restless ; complains of great weakness. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 593 Has taken xx grs. of sulphate of quinia ; temperature of skin normal. $. Brandy, Oviij.; sulph. of quinia, grs. xv.; snake- root tea, f^viij. Mix. Tablespoonful every four hours. October 15th, 12 M. Had an increase of fever yesterday after- noon, which was accompanied with severe pain in his head and bones. Now he is restless and nervous; countenance uneasyy anxious. All his motions are indicative of restless, uneasy, anxious, feeling; complains of great thirst; tongue as red as scarlet. At 9 o'clock A. M., this morning, it was dry and glazed; at the present time, (three hours afterwards), it is a little moister and softer ; lips dry, red and rough. Epigastrium very tender upon pressure; trunk and head very hot, extremities only moderately warm. Complains of pain in the small of the back, and in the knees and bones of his legs. Pulse 106, feeble; res- piration 30-40, irregular, labored, thoracic, panting. Temp, of atmosphere, 74 F ; Temp, of hand 101 ; Temp, in axilla, 105. The temperature under the tongue could not be taken on account of his restlessness. Eeaction of saliva acid. There is a great want of co-ordination between the circulation, respiration, and temperature of the extremities. The capillary circulation and chemical changes are impeded. ^, 4 cut cups to epigastrium; 4 cut cups over the lumbar regions and spine. $. Mustard to extremities. $. Soda powders. Urine high colored, of a deep brownish red color. Sp. Gr. 1028 ; reaction decidedly acid. Amount of Urine passed during the last 30 hours, grains, 15430 u a u u u l u u 94 u " 12344 u u u u hourly, " " " " " 514 ANALYSIS XLV. Grs. 15430 of Urine passed during 30 hrs. contained grains Grs- 12344 of Urine passed during 24 hrs. contained grains 1000 parts- Urine con- tained Urea 727-500 9-300 75-000 582-000 7-440 60-000 47*178 Uric Acid 0-60& Fixed Saline Constituents, 4-863 7^ o'clock, P. M. Lies in a stupor, muttering to himself, and is with great difficulty aroused. When aroused, answers inco- herently, and says that he feels very well. Temperature of ex- tremities below the normal standard cool ; temperature of head and trunk normal; tongue of a bright red color ; great tender- ness of epigastrium, pressure here arouses him more quickly than violent shaking; pulse 100, feeble; respiration 32. ty. Two cut cups to each temple. $. Apply a blister over the epigastrium 6 inches by 4 inches, and another to the back of the neck 4 inches by 5. R. Apply mustard to extremities. #, brandy and snake-root tea, and spirits of mindererus, f 5ss. of each alternately every half hour, until reaction is established. $. Sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours up to grs. xly. 594 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [September, Amount of Urine passed during the last 7 J hours, grains, 4072 u u hourly, ' " " " 543 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, " 13030 Urine high colored and strongly acid in reaction. After stand- ing 50 hours there was no deposit, and the reaction was still decidedly acid. Sp. gr. 1018. ANALYSIS XLVI. Grs. 4072 of Urine passed during 7 -J- hrs. contained grains Grs. 13030 Urine cal- culated for 24 hours, contained grains 1000 parts Urine con- tained Urea 151*320 1-888 483-224 6-036 37-161 Uric Acid 0*461 October 16th, 9 A. M. Much better, intellect clear. The cups, blisters, and stimulants, and sulphate of quinia have re- stored the capilliary circulation to its normal state. 12 1 o'clock P. M. Continues to improve. Urine high colored, of a deep orange red ; reaction strongly acid, after standing 15 hours, a slight deposit of mucous corpuscles, and after 100 hours a small light yellow deposit of mucous corpuscles, urate of am- monia and vegetable cells. The presence of the mucous corpus- cles in the urine is due to the absorption and action of the can- tharidin upon the mucous membrane of the genito-urinary apparatus. In several severe cases of remittent fever, I have discovered after the action of blisters, numerous spermatozoa in the urine. Sp. gr. of urine, 1021. Grs. 11231 of Grs. 16746 of Grs. 15303 of Urine passed Urine calcula- 1000 parts Urine excret- ANALYSIS XLVIL during last 16 ted for 24 hrs. Urine con- ed during 24 hrs. containedj contained grs. tained hrs. contain- grains ed grains Urea 357-445 5-500 53-900 535 667 8-250 80-850 31-826 0*489 4-799 508*760 Uric Acid. 7*380 Fixed Saline Constituents, 64-680 Amount of Urine passed during the last 16 hours, grains, 11231 " " " " hourly, " " " " " 702 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, " 16746 Actual am't of Urine excreted during the last 24 hrs., " 15303 " " " " " hourly, " " " " " 637 3 o'clock, P. M. Skin dry but soft. Has taken xlv grs. of sulphate of quinia. This has not as yet exerted its character- istic effects upon the skin ; tongue red, but moist and soft; blis- ters have drawn well serum from blistered surfaces of a golden color ; patient complains of difficulty in passing his urine. This is due to the absorption and action upon the mucous membrane of the bladder and urethra, of the cantharadin absorbed from the blistered surfaces. Pulse 84 ; respiration 16 ; Temp, of at- mosphere, 695'F. ; Temp, of hand, 99 ; Temp, under tongue, 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 595 995'. $. Sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours up to grs. xv. fy. Continue spirit of mindererus and brandy, and snake-root tea, f I ss of each alternately, every two hours. Diet, mutton soup and arrow root. October 17th, 12 ML Continues to improve; tongue red, but clean and soft. Pulse 70 ; respiration 16. Temperature of atmos- phere, 67F.; Temp, of hand, 9733; Temp, under tongue, 985. Color of urine deep red, reaction decidedly acid. Sp. gr. 1022. Eeaction of saliva strongly acid. Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, grains, 8176 " " " " hourly, - " 382 ANALYSIS XLYIIL Urea Uric Acid Fixed Saline Constituents Grs. 8176 of Urine excreted during 24 hrs. cont'nd grs. 185-240 4*400 40*000 1000 parts of Urine con- tained 22-578 0*538 4-892 The reduction of the temperature and of the action of the res- piratory and circulatory system, has been attended by a corres- ponding diminution of the constituents of the urine. October 18th. Continues to improve, "feels quite well, with the exception of great weakness". His appetite has returned; tongue clean, moist and soft, and not so red. Pulse 72 ; respira- tion 18. $. Continue brandy and snake-root tea. Color of urine orange, much lighter; reaction in 20 hours decidedly al- kaline. Sp. gr. 1020. Heavy light yellow deposit after stand- ing 20 hours. Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, grains, 20400 " " " " hourly, " " " " " 850 Diet, soft boiled eggs, milk punch, arrow-root, and mutton soup. October 19th, 12 M. Skin, pulse and respiration normal. Urine orange colored. Sp. gr. 1020 ; reaction alkaline in 12 hours ; heavy light yellow deposit in 20 hours. Amount of Urine excreted during the last 24 hours, grains, 15300 u u u u hourly, " " " " " 637 October 20th. Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, grains, 17374 " " excreted hourly, - " 724 1000 parts of Urine con- ANALYSIS XLIX. Grs. 17374 of Urine passed during 24 hrs. cont'nd grs. Uric Acid Fixed Saline Constituents, 11-730 93-500 tained 0-675 5-381 Specific gravity of urine 1022 ; reaction alkaline in 12 hours orange color. After standing 24 hours, a light yellow deposit of triple phosphate and urate of soda was thrown down. N.8. vol. xrv. no. ix. 32 596 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [September, October 21st, 9 A. M. The patient is dressed and has been walking about the hospital grounds. His pale sallow complex- ion and feeble gait, show the effects of malarial fever. Urine of a light orange color, only a shade darker than normal. Sp. gr. 1024. Keaction just after its deposition, acid in 10 hours after- wards alkaline. This change gave evidence of the formation of ammonia, and was attended by the formation of crystals, presenting, when the urine was held in the sun, a sparkling appearance, like particles of silver. Under the microscope, these crystals were found to be well formed prismatic crystals of triple phosphate. The microscope also revealed a few crys- tals of the urates of soda and ammonia. ANALYSIS L. Grs, 9234 Urine ex- creted during 12 hrs. contained grains Grs. 18468 Urine cal- culated for 24 hours, contained grains 1000 parts Urine con- tained Urea 229-599 7-740 91-800 458-198 15*480 183-600 25-128 Uric Acid 0'935 Fixed Saline Constituents, 9-941 AmouDt of Urine passed during 12 hours, - - grains, 9234 " " " " hourly, 769 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, " 18468 This case confirms all the conclusions which were drawn from the preceding case of remittent fever. Case XXVI. Irish seaman, aged 38 ; weight 160 lbs ; height 5 feet 6 inches ; stout muscular man : first trip to Savannah, Has been in Savannah 10 days, during which time he has worked on a ship lying along the shore of the river, and has slept on Bay-street at night. October 14th, 2 P. M. Was taken sick four days ago with pain in his head and in all his bones, accompanied with fever, which has continued unabated up to the present time. Has had no chill. Took a dose of calomel three days ago, which acted freely. Now his face is much flushed ; skin hot and dry ; head very hot ; complains greatly of pain in his head ; eyes look heavy and stupid; tongue bright-red and dry; voice hoarse and gut- teral ; says that he has been vomiting, and can retain nothing upon his stomach. $. Cut cups to each temple, and two to back of neck, and four over the region of the stomach. If the cut cups do not relieve the vomiting, administer a table- spoonful of equal parts of milk, lime water, and the aqueous solution of the acetate of morphia. October loth, 11 A. M. Says that he feels better; the cut cups over the temples and back of neck relieved the pain in his head, and the cut cups over the region of the stomach checked the vomiting. Face is not so much flushed ; tongue still very 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 597 red, dry and rough; no tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium, although the state of his tongue would lead us to look for it ; skin soft and not so hot. This morning at 3 A. M., the fever remitted with a perspiration. Pulse 76 ; respiration 20. Has taken xxvi grs. of sulphate of quinia. $. Neutral mixture; drink ad-Ubitum. 8 o'clock P. M. Has been vomiting this evening. This was arrested by milk and lime-water, and acetate of morphia. Tip of tongue for three-fourths of an inch, clean, dry, glazed, and of a brilliant red color the remainder of the tongue is coated with brownish-yellow fur, which is dr\r and harsh to the feeling; face flushed and hot ; skin, upon all parts of the body, hot, pun- gent and dry; no tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium. The calomel has acted several times, and is still acting. Pulse 94; respiration 26. $. Soda powders. Urine, high colored, like new Madeira wine. October 16th, 1 o'clock P. M. Did not rest during the night; was tossing about, and getting up out of the bed every few mo- ments, and was and is now tormented by unquenchable thirst; appears to be completely exhausted. Tip of tongue clean, dry, scarlet-colored, glazed, shining posterior portion (base) of tongue coated with brown and black fur, dry, harsh, and as rough as sand-paper. The under surface of the tongue is dry, glazed and shining. There is no more moisture in his tongue, and in the walls of the mouth, than if they were made of glass. Skin hot, dry, and harsh to the feeling. The temperature under the tongue, cannot be taken, on ac- count of the dry condition of the lips and tongue. Bowels are loose stools watery and yellow ; no pain upon pressure of epi- gastrium. Complains of no pain anywhere. There is a great tendency to stupor. Although his tongue is glowing red, and his face is flushed, and there is an inclination to stupor, still I will administer sul- phate of quinia and stimulants, because he is exhausted, and the appearance of the mucous membrane of his mouth and tongue is indicative, not of inflammation, but of derangement of the capillary circulation, and of alterations in the structure of the nervous system and blood. $. Brandy, f 3 viij.; Snake-root tea, f 3 viij.; Sulphate of qui- nia, grs. xv. Mix. f 5J. every hour. $. Spirit of mindererus, f 3 j. every hour. 3. Mustards to extremities. $. Sulphate of quinia, grs. v.; Camphor, grs. ij. Mix. Every three hours. %. Soda powders. Amount of Urine passed during the last IV hours, grains, 10210 " k- hourly, " 600 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, - - u 14406 Sp. gr. 1020 ; reaction decidedly acid ; urine high colored, like 598 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [September, new Madeira wine. No deposit after 30 hours ; after 60 hours, a slight deposit of mucous corpuscles and triple phosphate. Crystals of nitrate of urea, silvery and well formed. Hydro- chloric acid showed the presence of coloring matters in large amount ANALYSIS LI. Grs. 10210 Urine ex- creted during 17 hrs. contained grains Grs. 14406 Urine cal- culated for 24 hours, contained grains 10C0 parts Urine con- tained Urea 320-980 0-200 30-000 452-581 0-382 40-330 32*305 Uric Acid 0-019 Fixed Saline Constituents, 2-938 Oct. 17th, 11 o'clock A. M. Much better. Tip of tongue clean superior portion coated with fur; tongue moister, softer, and not so red as on yesterday ; face much less flushed ; the burning thirst has almost entirely disappeared; has no pain anywhere, and says that he has an appetite ; no tenderness of epigastrium. Has taken grs. xxx. of the sulphate of quinia since 1 o'clock P. M., October 16th. Pulse 68; respiration 18. .Pulse much fuller respiration more regular and soft. Tem- perature of atmosphere, 68 F. ; Temp, of hand, 98 ; Temp, un- der tongue, 99 5'. Here we see, that under the action of the sulphate of quinia and stimulants, his respiration has become regular ; his pulse slower and fuller ; his burning thirst diminished; his glowing tongue and flushed face, paler ; his parched mouth, moister ; his intellect brighter ; his exhausted forces more active ; and all the secretions and functions more regular. Urine, high color- ed. Decided acid reaction. Sp. gr. 1022. No deposit after standing 30 hours. After 80 hours, a small light-yellow depo- sit of triple phosphate and urate of soda. Amount of Urine excreted during the last 24 hours, grains, 12264 " " " " hourly, " " " " " .511 ANALYSIS LII. Grs. 12264 Urine passed during 24 hrs. cont'nd grs. 1000 parts of Urine con- tained Urea 315 250 5 200 34-800 30 846 Uric Acid 0-440 Fixed Saline Constituents. 2-84G $. Continue camphor and sulphate of quinia, and brandy and snake-root tea. Diet, milk punch, wine whey, arrow-root, and mutton soup. October 18th, 12 o'clock M. Eested well during the night had no fever, and his skin was in a good perspiration. The great thirst has entirely disappeared. Tongue still redder than normal, but moist and soft, and the yellow fur coating the pos- terior portion is breaking up and cleaning off; skin moist, and normal in temperature and feeling. Pulse and respiration nor- 1868.] Joxes, on Malarial Fever. 599 mal. Dressed himself, and has been walking in the ward. Urine of a deep orange color, several shades lighter than that voided yesterday. Sp. gr. 1019. Reaction slightly acid. Amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hours, grains, 12737 " " hourly, " " u u " 614 R. Continue brandy and snake-root tea, table-spoonful every three hours. Diet, soft boiled eggs, milk punch, mutton soup, arrow-root and rice. October 19th. Dressed, and walked about the ward. October 20th. Walked about one mile into town, says that he feels well; urine orange color. Sp. gr. 1020. After stand- ing 12 hours, a heavy light yellow deposit of triple phosphate and urate of soda. 1000 parts of urine contained uric acid,0-607. Fixed saline constituents, 3*529. October 2 1st. Says that he took a slight cold yesterday during the walk into the city ; urine orange color. Sp. gr. 1019. Amount of Urine passed during the last 17 hours, grains, 13247 M u u u hourly, " " u u " 770 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, * 19495 ANALYSIS LIU. Grs 13247 Urine ex- creted during 17 hrs. contained grs. Grs. 19595 Urine cal- culated lor 24 hours, contained grains 1000 parts of Uri ne contained Urea 181 5GS 6 110 96 900 290-5H8 9 770 154 040 12 992 Uric Acid 0461 Fixed Saline Constituents. 7- 199 This patient had no return of fever and was discharged a few days subsequently. This case sustains not only the conclusions, but also the treatment of the two preceding cases of remittent fever. Case XXVII. Seaman, native of Scotland; age 21; height 5 feet, 5 inches ; weight lo4 lbs. This is his first trip to Savan- nah. Has been in this port three weeks, and during this time, has slept on board ship in the river. Two of the crew from the same ship are now in the hospital with remittent fever. October 13th, 12 M. Was taken three days ago with a chill and pain in his back, head and all the bones. This was followed by fever. Has fever now. Skin hot and dry ; pulse 108 full ; respiration 38, thoracic; tongue pointed, red at tip and edges; coated with brownish yellow fur dry and harsh, rough to the feeling; no tenderness of epigastrium. $. Calomel grs. x.; sulphate of quinia, grs. v. Mix. Administer, and follow by castor oil in four hours. The patient must be closely watched during the action of the medicine, and if he appears to be undu- ly exhausted, apply sinapism and administer stimulants. 9 P. M. Appears stupid, is aroused with difficulty. Tongue 600 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [September, dry and rough; face flushed; skin hot and dry ; pulse 100. R. Brandy and snake-root tea, tablespoonful every hour. R. Sul- phate of quinia, grs. v. every three hours, up to grs. xxx. October 14th, 12 M. Much better ; medicine operated freely ; tongue soft and moist; pulse not so frequent; skin soft and much cooler; no tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium. Com- plains of pain in back, in the region of the lumbar vertebrae and cannot bear the slightest touch over the seat of the pain. R. Four cut cups over the region of the pain in the back. R. Con- tinue brandy and snake-root tea, and sulphate of quinia, table- spoonful every four hours. October 15th, 12 M. Cut cups relieved the pain in the back. Apex of tongue, for about half of an inch, clean, red and dry; the remainder of the tongue is coated with rough, dry, brown- ish black and yellow fur. No tenderness of epigastrium ; skin hot, dry and pungent ; pulse 90 ; respiration 30. Temperature of atmosphere 74 F. ; Temp, of hand, 105 ; Temp, under tongue, 106. Eeaction of saliva decidedly acid. 8 o'clock P.M. Face still flushed, and expression of coun- tenance stupid ; intellect dull and heavy ; skin in a slight moist- ure ; tongue presents the same appearance, only a little moister. The head and trunk are hot, but not pungent. Temperature of extremities above the normal standard, but cooler and not so pungent as at 12 o'clock. Pulse 90 ; respiration 22-26, irregular. R. Sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xx. Soda powders. Amount of Urine excreted during the last 8 hours, " " " hourly, " " " " Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, - ' - grains, U 5610 101 u 16830 ANALYSIS LIV. Grs. 5610 Urine ex- creted during 8 hours contained grains Grs. 16830 Urine cal- culated for 24 hours, contained grains 1000 parts of Urine contained Urea 125-372 4 675 29-150 376 047 14 025 87-450 22 147 Uric Acid Fixed Saline Constituents. 0 833 5-196 This urine, which was excreted during fever, and under the action of sulphate of quinia, differs from the former specimens, excreted under similar circumstances, in that the uric acid was greatly increased. Sp. gr. of urine 1020. Orange colored nitrate of urea, silky, silvery. No deposit after 30 hours ; at the expi- ration of this time the reaction was still acid. October 16th, 12 o'clock M. Toogue dry and rough ; com- plains of pain in his legs and left side. Countenance is more easy. Urine, high colored, red. Sp. gr. 1020. Eeaction acid. After standing 15 hours, a light yellow deposit of triple phos- phate, and urates of soda and ammonia. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 601 Amount of Urine passed during the last 16 hours, grains, 11220 u u u u hourly " " " " " 101 Calculated amount of Urine for 24 hours, " 1G830 Actual amount of Urine passed during the last 24 hrs. " 16830 " " " " hourly, " " " " u 701 ANALYSIS LV. Grs. 11220 ot Urine excret- ed during 1G hrs contained grains Grs. 16830 or Urine calcu- lated for 21 hrs., contain- ed grains Grs. 16830 ol Urine excret- ed during 24 hrs., contain- ed grains 1000 parts Urine con- tained Urea 341440 4-400 512- 160 6-600 466 812 9 070 30 906 Uric Acid 0 392 ft. Brandy and snake-root tea, and spirit of raindererus, f 5j. of each, alternately, every two hours, ft. Sulph. of quinia, grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xxxv. 3 o'clock P. M. Tongue moister and softer, tip and edges not so red posterior portion still coated with brownish-yellow fur. Slight tenderness upon pressure of epigastrium. Pulse 75; respiration 20. Temperature of atmosphere, 70 F. ; Temp, of hand, 10133'; Temp, under tongue, 1015\ R. Continue brandy and snake-root tea, spirit of mindererus and sulph. of quinia. October 17th, 12 M. Much better ; has been dressed and about the ward this morning ; tongue soft, moist ; the yellow fur is soft and rapidly disappearing ; reaction of saliva decided- ly acid; pulse 54; respiration 18; Temp, of atmosphere, 68F.; Temp, of hand, 96 ; Temp, under tongue, 99. Urine much lighter in color, only a shade higher than normal. Sp. gr. 1020. 1000 parts of Urine contained, Urea, - - - - 20783 Uric Acid, - - - A trace a few small crystals. Fixed Saline Constituents, - 2156 The disappearance of the uric acid is, without doubt, due to the action of the sulphate of quinia. This patient continued to improve and was discharged on the following day. This case illustrates, in a striking manner, the beneficial effects of stimu- lants and large doses of sulphate of quinia in remittent fever. The prompt administration of sulphate of quinia and stimulants, not only cuts short the disease, but also supports the strength of the patient, and he comes through a severe attack with com- paratively unimpaired forces. (To be continued.) 602 Doughty. Report of Hospital Cases. [September, ARTICLE XXI. Report of Cases in the City Hospital. By W. H. Doughty, M.D., Augusta, Ga. INTERMITTENT FEVER, ATTENDED WITH A SWELLING OF THE TESTICLES. J. 0., was admitted March 10th, for injuries (fractured ribs) which he had received by a fall upon the deck of a steamboat. When examined, it was found that he also suffered from a swelling of the testicles. He was not sensible of any injury having been inflicted upon them, but thinks that no violence has been done them by the fall, since he is subject, upon expo- sure, to this peculiar malady. The ordinary mode of manage- ment of fractured ribs was pursued, attention being also paid to the swollen organs. In due time, these latter were restored to their natural size, and his condition, otherwise, so much im- proved that he was permitted to leave the hospital for a short time. He became intoxicated soon after his departure, and lay out that night in the street, exposed to a very damp atmosphere and an exceedingly heavy dew. April 6th. Keturned at 7 o'clock A. M. Was taken with a chill at 10 A. M., which lasted about four hours, and during the continuance of which his testicles became enormously swollen. Having been interrogated concerning his liability to intermit- tent fever, and whether or not this glandular swelling was a common attendant, he replied, that whenever he had a chill or was much exposed to cold and damp, his testicles almost invari- ably swelled, the engorgement, at such times, producing excru- ciating pain. He was visited during the chill; and being struck with this unusual feature in ague and fever, the testicular en- gorgement was closely watched, in order to ascertain whether or not it would subside with the termination of the paroxysm. Treatment. ty. Spts. camphor gtt. xxv. ; Chloric ether 3j.; Tr. opii. gtt. x. to be given occasionally during the cold stage ; also, mustard to spine and extremities. April 7th. Patient in a profuse perspiration ; bowels confined ; testicles swollen and painful ; tongue furred, yellow. 1858.] Intermittent Fever, &c. 603 Treatment. Mercurial cathartic immediately ; quinine, 3 grs. every three hours ; cold applications to testicles. April 8th. Patient better ; no chill ; swelling of the testicles diminished. Treatment Same as yesterday. April 9th. Swelling of the testicles disappeared ; patient up, moving about. Discharged 10th. Eemarks. Perhaps no principle in pathology is more univer- sally received by the practical part of the profession, than that of a congestion of the organs, which repose in the three great splanchnic cavities of the body, during the cold stage of an inter- mittent. Indeed, whilst they differ widely among themselves, as to its determining cause or causes some attributing it to a state of poisoning of the blood, and others to primary lesion of the nervous system, yet they agree, that this cold stage is the result of a sudden retreat of the blood from the surface to the internal organs and structures. No exception to this fact is recognized, for we never read or hear of a congestive deter- mination, to either of the four extremities, unless we regard as such, the rare instances upon record of a concomitant con- gestion of the genital organs. How far the occasional, perhaps accidental, determination of the vital fluid to these organs, constitutes it an example of an external or peripheral ten- dency, we are not prepared to say, since, like the arms and legs, in the language of Hunter, they "are not necessary for the existence or support of the individual, but have a reference to something else." The exceeding great rarity of these cases, entitles them to peculiar interest, if for no other reason, than the opportunity which they present of beholding an organ under the congestive influence of an intermittent. The penis, in this case, was unaffected, being entirely relaxed, notwith- standing the violent congestive determination in its immedi- ate vicinity. All of the cases, affecting the genital apparatus, that have come within the scope of ray study, have been confined entirely to the penis. The, following is from Dr. Dick- son * of Charleston. " We had in our museum, a long while, sthough now lost, the preparation of a penis, which suffered * Dickson's Elements of Medicine, page 214. K. 8. VOL. XIV. SO. IX. .33 604: Doughty. Report of Hospital Cases. [September, during a protracted attack of intermittent, the same, or analo- gous, engorgement, enlargement and induration which usually derange the spleen in ague, being obviously the seat of the congestive determination, familiarly taking place in that vis- cus. They possess an erectile structure in common. The case occurred in our almshouse, and was witnessed by a large number of physicians, none of whom, I belive, entertained any doubt of its nature." Further on, he states, that a similar case had been reported to him, as having occurred in the state of New York, "in which the same organ was attacked with con- gestive or vascular turgescence, during the paroxysms." No- thing is said concerning the adjoining organs (testicles) in these cases, but we are justified in the belief, that the determination was confined entirely to the penis. In the case reported, it will be observed, that the patient had just recovered from an attack of orchitis, f and doubtless the predisposition to a recurrence still remained. The history of this case might justify us in laying stress upon secondary influences, in producing such a deter- mination ; but in regard to those quoted, we cannot say, since nothing is mentioned as to their previous condition, whether diseased or not. A point of dissimilarity between the reported case and those quoted, exists in the fact, that the state of priapism of the latter, is said to have existed, "during the paroxysm," whilst the testicles in the former, remained swollen for several days, and were subjected to treatment. This dis- similarity becomes reconciled at once, we conceive, by a refer- ence to the difference in the anatomical structure of the two organs and their physiological functions. PHTHISIS PULMONALIS. R N., has been an inmate of this institution since Feb. 8 is about 45 years of age has been subjected to great hardships, and undergone the numerous privations of poverty : is also ad- dicted to drunkenness and its associate vices. Has been labor- ing under this disease since 1854. During this time, has had numerous hemorrhages, not, however, very profuse. At present, she evinces all the common symptoms of consumption viz., cough, purulent expectoration, hectic fever, diarrhoea, etc. The f There was no venereal infection. 1858.] Phthisis Puhnonalis. 605 most distressing symptom seems to be a difficulty of breathing, apparently asthmatic in character and referred to the right side. Physical Examination of the Chest. Heart. The action and sounds of this organ are natural in their evolutions. Auscultation of Right Lung. Broncho- vesicular respiration established throughout the king is everywhere prominent, but most so in the infra- scapular and scapular regions. Inspiration high in pitch tubular and blowing in quality intense and shortened in duration ; also, a sound, as of dry crackling, dis- covered at the end of inspiration in the scapular region and at its apex. Expiration high in pitch, being remarkably loud, bronchial in quality, and longer than the act of inspiration. The natural rhythm of the respiratory acts destroyed, being very irregular. Left Lung. A modified (broncho-vesicular) respiration exists only in the apex of this lung: the vesicular respiration in the middle and lower lobes seems to be simply exaggerated, without noted deviations as to quality. Auscultation of the Voice. Right Lung. Bronchophony very prominent at the point of the scapula, and radiating in a more or less marked degree, all over the right side, even to the apex. Auscultation of the Voice. Left Lung. The normal vocal re- sonance slightly modified in the apex. Auscultation of the Speech. Right Lung. Perfect pectoriloquy at the point of the scapula not discoverable at any other por- tion. Auscultation of the Speech. Left Lung. No departure appre- ciable. Percussion of Right Lung. Marked dulness over the entire lung more tympanitic than otherwise, in quality, about the point of the scapula, denoting, with its correlative signs, the presence of a cavity. Percussion of Left Lung. Appreciable dulness over the apex ofthe left, with tenderness. Treatment. Blisters, from time to time ; syrup superphosphate ferri, 3iij. three times daily. Remarks. The principal treatment of the above case con- sisted in the use of the syrup superphosp. ferri. Indeed, having noticed at that time, frequent allusions, in the various medical 606 Doughty. Report of Hospital Cases. [September journals, to the treatment of consumption with phosphorus, this course was adopted with an experimental view. It was given in such a manner, that from 5 to 10 grs. of the salt (superphos- phate ferri) were taken daily it was continued up to the time of the death of the patient (May 12th). She would frequently express herself benefitted by it, but no beneficial effect could be perceived by myself. The only good which it possibly accom- plished, was an exhilaration of the system, which but increased the fatal delusion of the sufferer, that she was better physically. The preparations of phosphorus recommended by Dr. Churchill, the hypo-phosphites of soda or lime, could not be obtained, and this being at hand was substituted. Of courser no inference would be safe, much less conclusive, in regard to the use of this therapeutical agent, from a single case of phthisis,, but, as far as this case goes, it at least serves to negative, to some degree, that recent special pathology of consumption, which ascribes it to a deficiency of phosphorus in the system. It would be considered, neither unwise nor unnatural to suppose, that a deficiency of this chemical element did exist, amidst the outspread and almost illimitable devastations of this disease ; but such a conditition, if it exists, should be regarded in the light of a consequence or coincidence, rather than the cause. I am not aware, that this ideal pathology is supported by the chemical proof of a material diminution, not to say absence, of this element of the numerous salts, excreted by the various emunctories of the body.. Molli- ties ossium is a disease, attributed to a deficiency of a salt, one element of which is phosphorus. Would not persons, subjects of this disease oftentimes for years, present more or less of this condition, as an ultimate symptom, if this pathology be true? More than this : organic chemistry teaches, that the brain and osseous system contain the greater part of the phosphorus of the system. Physiologists also state, that "the quantity of phos- phorus which may be found in the nervous matter varies con- siderably at different periods of life, and is very small in idiocy-." " The minimum of this element is found in infancy, in old age and idiocy." Now, this being true, intellectual development would seem to keep pace with it, increasing with its increase, and declining with its decline. Should we not, with consistency look for a decided failure of the intellectual man, coextensive with the diminution of this substance in the .progress .of _the dis- 1858.] Bronchial Phthisis, &c, ' 607 ease ? Does the practical history of the consumptive teach this ? There is no evidence upon record, to the end, that consumption produces greater prostration of the mental energies, than any other cachectic disease. On the contrary, examples are not wanting in history, showing the highest mental abilities, in con- sumptives, some of whom have distinguished themselves and left their mark upon the age in which they lived. To deny any benefit to alkaline phosphates or those tonic in their combina- tion, in phthisis, would bespeak ignorance ; but we think, that time and experience will prove that they are not curative, and will determine the circumstances under which they are to be used. In the above case, it produced no effect, other than an increased buoyancy of spirits, with a commensurate cheerful- ness. Seasoning from its physiological importance to the sys- tem and its therapeutical action, as far as is understood, it is perhaps better adapted to the condition of certain dyspeptics. BRONCHIAL PHTHISIS, WITH DISEASE OF THE HEART. Edward M. was admitted March 14th, for cough: is about 26 years of age ; dark hair and eyes states that he has had a cough for five months ; has never spit blood ; is not hereditarily pre- disposed to consumption, but thinks that a brother of his died with disease of the heart. Symptoms. A violent, convulsive cough ; scanty and frothy expectoration during the day, but consists, early in the morning, of pus and hardened mucus; shortness of breath, confined to the left side of the chest ; frequent palpitation of the heart; the least exercise readily excites the attacks of palpitation ; cannot lie upon the left side, from the violence of the cough, which is ex- cited thereby; no pain in the chest; is not subject to headache; left cheek flushed; pulse natural in frequency, but rather full; bowels regular, and appetite and digestion good. Physical Examination of the Lungs. The respiratory murmur on the right side, normal in its various features ; on the left, the vesicular murmur is somewhat exaggerated in the upper lobe, whilst a broncho- vesicular respiration is observed in the other lobe an expiratory murmur, however, only occasionally per- ceptible. Auscultatum-of Voice and Speech.No variation. 608 Doughty. Report of Hospital Cases, [September, Percussion. Normal vesicular resonance observed throughout the chest. Physical Examination of the Heart In the supine posture, its impulse is. very strong, being felt and heard everywhere on the lower part of the left side, in front, and in the infra-clavicular region of the right; in the erect, in the supra-scapular region of the left, also. The sounds appear to have a muffled quality or tone, and with the impulse, are distinctly audible in the supra- scapular and tapper inter-scapular region of the left side. In no other part of the superficies of the chest, can the sounds be heard, than in the immediate vicinity of the heart and in this particu- lar region. Percussion shows a larger area ef dulness over the cardiac region, than is usually found in healthy persons. Treatment. Blister 2 by 6 inches to chest, (leftside), running obliquely towards the spine; alkaline cough mixture. March 19th. Patient somewhat improved ; cough less fre- quent and violent since the drawing of the blister, has lost its convulsive character; expectoration more loose. Treatment continued. March 23rd. His condition the same, except that the cough has regained its convulsive character, since the drying up of the vesication. Treatment. Blister renewed ; ext. belladonna?, in suitable doses, added to the alkaline cough mixture. March 29th. Cough less frequent expectoration still contains pus early in the morning. Treatment. Cod-liver oil, Iss. three times daily, in conjunc- tion with the above remedies. March 30th. Physical Examination of the Chest. Broncho- vesicular respiration more general in the left lung sonorous rkonchus sometimes observed in the same ; the other characters, the same as were noted at the first examination. Percussion over the left lung shows an appreciable dulness in the infra-scapular region. A close examination of the heart was prevented by the recent vesication : so far as was observed, the result confirmed the pre- vious one. April 20th. Patient is decidedly better coughs but little, and only when he first awakes ; general health improved can walk 1858.] Bronchial Phthisis, &c. 609 up and down stairs, without being distressed by palpitation; is gaining flesh; still expectorates pus. Treatment, same. May 10th. This patient was so much improved, that he left the hospital for New York. We regret, not having had another opportunity of examining him physically, which was prevented by his sudden determina- tion to return to the north. Remarks. In the differential diagnosis of diseases of the chest, from a frequent association of disease of the different or- gans, contained in the cavity, it is exceedingly difficult, if not impossible, always to distinguish the one primarily affected ; for they all present such a community of symptoms as to require the nicest tact and the most accurate judgment to determine, une- quivocally, the order of the diseased actions. In the case above the patient had entered the institution to be treated for a cough which, as is usual among the unprofessional, when protracted he considered as an evidence of consumption. Happily, physi cal exploration, by the absence of certain landmarks, when associ ated with the history of the individual, as to predisposition and the previous occurrence of haemoptysis, was sufficient to decide in favor of a bronchial affection, without tubercular complica- tion. Having determined this point, another presented itself, viz: With the heart and the bronchiae, both diseased which is the primary lesion? This, to the patient, became a question of great moment; for, if the lung be primarily diseased, with its cure, which might reasonably be expected, the sympathetic af- fection of the heart, now assuming an organic nature, might also be expected to retire. But if the heart be the primarily diseased organ, notwithstanding the bronchial affection yield to treatment, yet, to say the least, recovery would be more than doubtful, such condition of the organ, as we suppose this to have been, seldom, or never, proving amenable to treat- ment. Without mentioning, in detail, the reasons which im- pelled us to the conclusion, we are satisfied, that the heart was primarily diseased, and that the bronchial affection was second- ary, being kept up by its proximity to the former, its increased action and the want of proper treatment. What the particular diseased condition was, we have not stated, and is still a matter of doubt, but we suppose it to have been, one of hypertrophy, 610 Doughty. Report of Hospital Cases. [September, with, perhaps, dilatation of its cavities its various signs and symptoms pointing more particularly to this. The most remark- able feature presented by the case, and the one which induced its publication, was that of a distinct appreciation of the impulse and sounds of the organ, without solidification of the pulmonary tissue, at the supra-scapular and upper part of the inter-scapular region of the left side of the chest. In healthy persons, this latter phenomenon is not observable at any point on the poste- rior aspect of the chest, but is confined to an extent of surface between the right infraclavicular region and the anterior aspect of the left side of the chest. The only conditions of the thoracic viscera which have been proposed for the interpretation of this phenomenon, are an increased conducting capacity of the pul- monary structure from solidification, as in pneumonia, carcino- ma, pulmonary apoplexy, compressions of pleuritic effusions, and tuberculous deposits ; also, in cases of emphysema, where the conduction of sounds seems to be abnormal in one lung from the diminished capacity of the other. In this case, no evidence of a consolidated condition of the lung was observed ; on the contrary, the normal vesicular resonance was unmodified beyond that which occurs in ordinary cases of bronchial disease. No materially increased conductibility of sound could be attri- buted to this organ under this condition of things. It could not have been produced by emphysema of the right, since no evi- dence to this effect existed, and, moreover, the left was the dis- eased one. How, then, are we to explain its production? We have no satisfactory answer to the query, unless it be, that under the increased action of the heart, the enlarged extent of its sur- face, which came in contact with the chest, the thoracic parietes became the instruments of this greater transmission of its sounds. On the other hand, if this be so, would not every case of hyper- trophy, with dilatation, even unassociated with diseased lungs, be characterized by the same observation ? In connection with the production of this phenomenon, it may not be amiss, to present the following quotation :* " Dr. Walshe states, that in a case of intense emphysema of the left lung in which the disease was limited, and especially marked at the posterior aspect of the chest, he found the heart * See Flint, on the Respiratary Organs, p. 291. 1858.] Bronchial Phthisis, &c. 611 sounds considerably more distinct posteriorly on the right, than on the left side, there being no evidence of induration of the right lung to intensify the sounds on that side. The disparity here was attributed to an abnormal diminution of the transmis- sion of the sound to the posterior surface of the left chest, the right remaining in a normal condition in this respect. AVithout knowledge of the fact that the transmission may thus be abnor- mally diminished, a normal intensity may be mistaken for a marked sign." An obvious inference from this quotation is, that this trans- mission of the sounds of the heart to the posterior of the chest, may take place even in health ; but so far as our reading and observation extend, it is at variance with other authors, for the vesicular structure of the lungs produces such a diffusion of the sonorous vibrations, as effectually to prevent such a perfect transmission, as will be appreciated by audition. Being analo- gous to the production of the physical sign, pectoroloquy, it necessarily requires a more solid conducting medium, than the porous, vesicular tissue of the lungs. It will be remarked, that the phenomenon was only distinguishable at a particular part (the supra-scapular and upper inter-scapular region of the left side): if it had been owing to a natural transmissibility by the lung, it would not have been so circumscribed. The only alternative, to which we may resort, by which to account for the morbid sign, viz., transmission by the thoracic walls, is, when we examine strictly the circumstances of the case, perhaps ful]y adequate to its accomplishment. In health, dur- ing the alternate contraction and dilatation of the heart, no part of the organ touches the thoracic walls, except its apex, and that only during the contraction of the ventricles. The im- pulse, the result of this action, is most distintly felt between the 5th and 6th ribs. Again, those parts, the various valves, which are the agents in the production of the two sounds, occupy a position in this organ higher up, being situated beneath the 3rd 'and 4th ribs, whose spinal attachments are in the supra-scapular and upper inter-scapular regions. Now, when the heart is of its natural size, it is entirely separate from these ribs (3 and 4), therefore, whatever of sound is transmitted by them, must be derived indirectly from the impulse below, through the muscu- lar septum of the intercostal spaces. Now, if the heart be en- 612 On Headache. [September, larged, and at the same time dilated, it has a greater extent of surface in contact with the parietes of the chest, increasing the space over which the impulse may be felt, and favoring a more direct transmission of the valvular sounds by the same, to dis- tant parts. Bearing in mind the spinal attachments of the 3rd and 4th ribs, and their relation at their sternal extremities to that portion of the heart which contains the valves in conjunc- tion with the increased action of this organ, producing greater intensity of sound, may we not find in their direction the key to the solution of the problem under discussion. Their firm, dense structure, receiving direct impressions, render them better conductors of sounds, and perhaps point to a reason why the sounds were not heard in other directions of the same side. Perhaps the worthy editors of this journal can give some additional reflections, valuable to its readers, upon the point involved. On Headache. By John Addington Symonds, M. D., F.R.S.E., Consulting Physician to the Bristol General Hospital, etc. It is an interesting but a difficult investigation to ascertain the mode of production of some of these sympathetic pains in the head. Here, for instance, is a question. What is the cause of a so-called bilious or sick headache in a person who suffers such an attack once in a year or so? In him there cannot be any great susceptibility on the part of the cerebral nerves, or it would occur oftener. But what is the course of events when it does occur? We need not stop to ask whether it is some imperfectly chymified substance in the duodenum, or some depraved secretion which begins the mischief. We will assume it to be some dis- turbing impression on the nerves of the alimentary tube. This impression may or may not. produce a sensation of indi- gestion before the headache. If it does, we might suppose that the impression has passed by extension from the parts of the sen- sorium in relation with the nerves of the stomach to that which is in relation with the nerves of the head, and that the pain is, so to speak, reflected on the latter nerves. If this is the course, I think it must be presumed that there must have been some pre- vious disposition in the centres related with the nerves of the brain to be so affected. I doubt if this hypothesis is so tenable as the supposition that the impression is communicated along the sympathetic chain to the nerves of the brain, and there excites the disturbance. 1858.] On Headache. G13 Whatever may be the function of the sympathetic nerves as to sensation, motion, and reflex action, it is impossible to observe their intricate nexus, as well as their distribution, without suspect- ing that one part of their duty must be internuncial between the viscera, and that they must be the agents of that consentaneous operation without which the functions of organic life could not long continue. Order in time must be as necessary in the human microcosm as in the macrocosm of the universe. Were the processes of digestion, sanguifaction, respiration and circulation, to go on in- dependently, the vital machinery would soon come to a stop. The heart beats at definite intervals, the respiration keeps a pro- portionate time, food should enter, and its residue leaves the sys- tem at regular periods. But the rates are perpetually changing, from the variations of daily or even hourly life, and the changes must be announced from one part to another, in order that the requisite adjustments may take place. Without entering, however, more minutely into speculations as to the final cause of the inti- mate nervous connexions of the viscera, we may content our- selves with pursuing the way of exclusion. The cerebro-spinal nerves mixed up with the ganglionic nerves account for as much of sensation and emotional influence and reflex action, as we meet with in the viscera. The contractions of the muscular fibres of organic life, probably have special relations with true ganglionic fibres and ganglionic centres, uni-pular, bi-polar, etc. Still there are a large number of plexuses and nerves, entering and departing from those plexuses, whose function is scarcely accounted for, unless we infer that their office is to keep up a con- nexion of some sort between the viscera. A general survey of the ganglionic system and the connecting nerves, impresses us with the unity of the whole system. But without the a priori assumption that organs so connected must work together, we have strong a 'posteriori evidence of the con- nexion in the events of disease. One organ, the variations of whose actions may be considered typical of the rest, is more easily observed than the others. I need not say that J allude to the heart. Much has of late years been done to prove the dependence of its rhythmical action on ganglionic centres. Since these re- searches, I think we can no more definitely understand than ever we could understand before, the readiness with which the rate of the cardiac pulsations is affected by disorders of anv organs within the ganglionic chain. The intermittent pulse of indigestion, the alarming rapidity of the heart's action from inflammation of the peritonaeum, or the depression of its action from injuries without loss of blood or severe pain show that this regulating central power of the circulation, not only receives tidings of distant organs with great quickness, but also that it is seriously perturbed 614 On Headache. [September, by them. There is every reason from analogy to infer, that, although we have not such ready means of noting the influence of other ganglionically connected organs on each other as in the case of the heart and the other viscera, yet that communications are continually going on in health, and that the same links of com- munication produce the association of morbid phenomena. That the connexion in health is quite irrespective of sensation is obvious, from the fact that in perfect health individuals may live for long periods of time unconcious of internal viscera, and, therefore, that their harmonious action had not been indebted to sensation. The sensory nerves of the viscera seems to have no other function than that of denoting unusual states of the organs. But if this be the function, the question arises, What possible good can accrue from the transference of the sensation from the sick organ to one that is well, or comparatively so? a common enough occurrence in sympathetic disorders. The good would certainly appear to be beyond our discovery ; but we may endeavor to learn the course of transmission. Do the sensory fibres convey the impression direct to the sensorium ? and, before its conver- sion into a sensation, is the impression transferred to another part of the sensorium, related with sensory ganglial fibres from some other viscus ? Is the impression which has been made on the gastric nerves by a lump of ice, allowed to pass over the ence- phalic cells related with those nerves without being converted into a sensation, while on reaching the cells related with the sensory fibres of the first branch of the fifth nerve, it causes a state which is felt in this nerve as neuralgia? Is this the, probable route? or is there not another equally probable ? If we admit that impres- sions are exchanged between the different ganglia, may we not conjecture that the impression made by the ice on the gastric nerves, instead of running along the nearest rami communicantes to the spinal ganglia, and thence up the sensory tracks (whatever they are) to the sensorium, or, if you please, by the more direct course of the vagus; instead of either of these courses ; I say, may we not conjecture that the impression takes its route up the chain of sympathetic ganglia, making no disturbance till it reaches the ophthalmic ganglion, which being in a susceptible state, un- dergoes a certain change, which change, on being imparted to its sensory nerves, excites a sensation of pain referred to the parts over which the sensory nerves of that ganglion are disturbed ? In this hypothesis I assume the ophthalmic ganglion to be predis- posed to disorder, because an organ sympathetically affected with disease, implies a readiness for disease in some part of its struc- ture. A sympathetic disorder is. so to speak, not forced on the sympathizing organ it is invited by the readiness of the latter to take offence. Let us endeavor to apply some of these considerations to 1858.] On Headache. 615 another particular instance bearing on our immediate subject. A gentleman had for many years been liable to attacks of head- ache on the slightest provocation. Long-continued intellectual exertion, the excitement of an agreeable party, a journey, any erro* of diet, would inevitably lead to an attack of headache. During the same period he suffered at different times from pain in his teeth, which decayed rapidly, and at last were removed, and replaced by false ones. This change happened more than a year ago, and since that time he has been almost exempt from pain of the head. In other respects, his health and mode of life have been unaltered. What was the connexion between the diseased teeth and the headache ? The morbid impressions on the ganglionic fibres of the fifth pair might, without any stretch of hypothesis, be reasonably presumed to induce a morbid state of the Gasserian ganglion, whether the impressions on the senory fibres did or did not reach the sensorium, and induce a painful sensation referred to the teeth. The Gasserian ganglion is con- nected by marked fibres with the cephaiic ganglion, from which a large number of nerves pass to the cerebral arteries. The cepha- lic ganglion probably partook of the morbid condition of the Gas- serian, and hence might have arisen so susceptible a state of the ganglionic nerves of the brain, that they may have become dispo- sed to ache under the influence of impressions which, without the predisposition in the nerves, produced in the manner I have des- cribed, would have had no effect. It seems to me that if this ex- planation cannot be accepted, there is no alternate but the sup- position that morbid impressions on the dental nerves (not crea- ting pain in those parts) arriving at the central extremities of the nerves, are passed on to that part of the sensorium which is rela- ted with the sensory fibres of the ganglionic nerves of the brain, and maintain in that part of the sensorium a morbidly susceptible condition ; and that this condition is brought into such action as constitutes pain, whenever the said part ot the sensorium receives impressions transmitted from nerves which have been offended by causes acting directly upon them in the brain itself, (as in over- study or anxiety,) or when it has received like disturbing impres- sions from the nerves of other parts of the ganglionic system. I confess that the first of these views, which I have ventured to propound, is the one that seems to me more admissible. The course of communication traced in that survey is more direct, and involves less complexity of causation. I should feel myself to be taking an unwarrantable liberty, were I to occupy the time and attention of such an audience as that which I have the honor of addressing, with hypothetical sug- gestions if the case would admit of a theory. We have not the means of subjecting ganglia and their nerves to satisfactory exper- imental observations in reference to sensation. When the 616 On Headache. [September, vivisector has made his way to the base of the cranium, external- ly and internally, though he might obtain satisfactory information as to the conduits of motor influence, I know not how it would be possible, in the midst of such tearing and severing of tissues, to determine degrees of sensation, which can only be demonstra- ted by cries or quiverings. Allow me to try the hypothesis by another example. A gen- tleman, after playing at bowls one evening, awoke in the night with slight haemoptysis. The source was referred by his own feelings and his physician's examination to the upper lobe of the right lung. Whether or not a tuberculous nodule was the nucleus of the disease, there was evidence for a short time of a portion of the lung in the right infra-clavicular region, and in the same part pain was felt for a long time afterwards, when the patient laughed vehemently, or made any strong muscular exertion. But after awhile he observed that pain would occasionally come on in the same part whenever his stomach was at all deranged, and that it would subside after a slight eructation of wind. What was the chain of events in the production of this obviously sympathetic pain ? Was the morbid impression, which had been made by gas in the stomach on the gastric nerves, transmitted by sensory nerves to the sensorium, and instead of being transformed into a sensation in the part of the sensorium related with the gastric nerves, passed on to the central cells related with the sensory nerves belonging to that portion of lung which was formerly dis- eased? Or is it not more probable that the gastric impression was transmitted by ganglionic nerves to the pulmonary plexus belonging to the spot of lung in question, and that the impression, acting on the morbid susceptibility left in that plexus by old disease, excited in it another impression, which, having been transmitted to the sensorium, produced a sensation referred to the lung ? There is, however, another element to be considered in that curious process, by which, when impressions are being made on many sensory nerves, some in particular will be converted into sensations, and which may easily lead to a fallacy. It is a famil- iar fact that, amid the din of confused sounds in a street, or at a dinner party, the only auditory impression which become sensa- tions, that is, which are presented to the consciousness, may be the words of a friend in colloquy. The cause of this appears to be simply the predominance given to one cluster of impressions by the desire, or the compulsion of the will, in other words, the expectant attention. If of two impressions, starting severally from the gastric ganglionic centre, and its related pulmonary centre, one is more intense than the other, it will become the sen- sation perceived in the sensorium. Or supposing the intensity to be equal, the prevalence may be determined by the expectant 1858.] On Headache. 617 attention. If. for example, the pulmonary impression has been linked with apprehensions as to the nature of the illness, or with previous suffering, it will be perceived to the exclusion of the gastric. This subject of morbid sympathy as to sensation may, perhaps, be still further elucidated, if we consider the sympathy between the tegumentary surface and the internal organs. What, for in- stance, is the order of events in catching cold, in the common occurrence of a catarrh? A person, liable to such attacks, may have been standing at a corner of a street, or at an open window,, conversing with a friend. According to the degree of interest in the conversation, he may or may not feel chilly ; but in twelve or twenty-four hours he has the symptoms of incipient catarrh. What has happened during that period of incubation? What did the current of cold air do to him? It may be said that the insensible perspiration was interfered with, and that matters were thereby retained in the blood which ought to have been elimina- ted ; and that the blood, thus contaminated, excites disease in any predisposed organ the Schneiderian membrane, for instance. This may be the case ; but another view might present itself. It might be inferred that, an impression has been made on the nerves belonging to the cutaneous blood vessels, reaches the gan- glionic centres, and in its further diffusion, extends to the grey ganglionic nerves belonging to the blood-vessels of the Schneider- ian membrane, and, through them, so alters the circulation and secretion of the membrane, as to produce what is called catarrh. The one view seems at least as likely as the other. But suppose the cold to have operated on some limited portion of the body, say the scalp ; or suppose the outward cause to have been damp ground operating only on the feet. It is not easy to presume, in this case, a general defect of elimination. The more probable presumption is, that an impression is made on the nerves belonging to the blood-vessels in the skin, and that they transmit the impression to the visceral ganglia, and disturb such parts as are most prone to disorder. Or we may take another case for investigation. I have a patient who frequently suffers from severe attacks of headache, and who tells me that one of the most frequent causes is driving in an open carriage in a cold wind. She has no general chill, for she is well clothed, but some morbific impression must be made on the face. In a few hours, the headache comes on. There is here no general interference with elimination, but an impression is made on the skin of the face, which mav be transmitted to the Gasserian ganglion, and thence to the cephalic ; or it may travel by the route of the arteries to the nerves of the brain. But the road which the sympathy travels may be traced in the reverse direction. Thus a patient is the subject of headache, attended 618 On Headache. [September, with heat of the scalp, dilated and with throbbing temporal arteries. Cold is applied to the forehead and scalp, and the pain is lessened or removed. How is it thus sedative to the nerves of the cerebral vessels? Its operation on the vessels of the scalp is to cause their contraction ; and I presume that this is effected by its operation on the vascular nerves. The impression on them, transmitted to their ganglion and plexus, must reach the nerves of the brain. We cannot think that the cold penetrates the bony case, and so redu- ces the vascular disturbance within it; or, should any one think that this is not impossible, let us suppose that instead of cold lotions, leeches have been applied. No influence is in this way transmit- ted through the cranium ; the quantity of blood lost is too small to affect the heart or the general circulation, and it is a clear case of sympathy. The relief is afforded here unequivocally through the blood-vessels and their nerves, the latter nerves being the only media of communication between the vessels of the scalp and the vessels of the brain and pia mater, whatever communication may be traced between those of the scalp and the cranium and dura mater. An analogous train of argument might be pursued, as to the action of anodynes applied to the surface. The phenomena of a coup de soleil also illustrate the principle ; for, unless it be thought that the sudden elevation of temperature in the scalp is extended to the cranium, and thus directly irri- tates the vessels of the membranes and the surface of the hemis- pheres, there seems no other way of tracking the influence than that which I have already pursued, along the nerves of the exter- nal blood-vessels to those of the corotidal plexus. Cerebral Circulation. Having thus far considered the relation which painful affections of the head bear to impressions on dis- tant nerves, let us turn our attention to their connexion with the cerebral circulation. The intimate connexion of the nerves of the brain with its blood-vessels, enables one to account for the difficulty which is often presented to our diagnosis that of distinguishing the pain which is purely nervous, from that which is the effect of vascular disorder. The peculiarity of the intracranial circulation enhan- ces the difficulty; for though the researches of Dr. Burrows have settled the question as to whether the qnantity of blood in the ves- sels can vary, having proved that it is variable, yet the nature of the outward barrier indicates plainly that the compression of the vessels, and consequently of the nerves, must at times be very con- siderable. Suppose the nerves be in a normal state, the pressure of distended vessels may occasion pain, as in the inflammation of the pulp of the tooth. Or suppose the nerves to be hyper-aesthe- tic, very slight changes in the force and the volume of the circu- lation will distress them. The aggravation of a nervous headache by palpitation, by interruption to the venous circulation, in cough- 1858.] On Headache. 619 ing, straining, or other muscular exertion, must be familiar to most persons. I have just supposed the case of the nerves being in a normal state, and then distressed by the hydrostatic pressure ; but, on consideration, I doubt whether pain is ever due to simple vascular distension, unless the latter has been extreme and long- continued. It is difficult to find a combination of circumstances exactly like that of the vessels and nerves of the brain. Some resemblance may be found in a limb compressed by an article of dress, as a foot by a tight shoe, which in the evening, under the influence of heat and long dependence, begins to swell. The pressure of the shoe makes the swelling painful; but here, again, there is a want of strict similarity. For the pain comes from the superficial nerves of the skin, which are directly compressed. The pain is not like that which ensues when the vascular nerves only are affected. That mere compression of healthy nerves by their distended ves- sels should occasion pain, is rather negatived by the freedom from pain during violent muscular exertions and strains, which put the vessels of the head under the highest degree of pressure. And again when the accumulation of blood takes place in the other direction, whether attracted into the capillaries by unusual func- tional exercise, or injected into them by emotional excitation of the heart, or by the more composite influence of alcohol, there is often an entire exemption from pain, and in the latter instance a feeling of great enjoyment. I think it may be inferred that when fulness of the vessels gives rise to pain, there must be an accom- panying or preceding unhealthy state of the nerves of the part, or that the congestion must have been long continued enough to beget such textural disorder as the nerves will necessarily partake of. In inflammation the nerves are for the time injured by the changes in which the process consists, as well as by the first action of the exciting cause. The headache which follows an epileptic paroxysm, and that which attends or ensues on prolonged dyspnoea, or violent fits of coughing, might seem to be examples of pain occasioned by simple disturbance of the brain-circulation; but the latter cases are exceptional; that is, it so often happens that both long-contin- ued dyspnoea and cough occur without producing headache, that we cannot but infer that some nervous element must be in- troduced into those cases in which pain attends upon difficult breathing and cough. As to epilepsy, though we have much to learn respecting its pathology, yet a paroxysm presents unambigu- ous evidence that the vessels are enormously strained ; and the pain after the attack and the functional disturbance of the brain bear a direct ratio to the severity and frequency of the attacks. It was while I was considering the relation of headache to altered states of the circulation in the brain, and speculating on the pos- n.s. VOL. XIV. NO. ix. 34 620 On Headache. [September, sibility that the duration of a fit of headache might be connected with the time requisite for the adjustment of the disturbed balance, and especially for change in the distribution of the cerebrospinal fluid, which has been supposed to play an important part in such adjustments it was with the view of confirming or correcting this supposition that I determined to make some experiments on animals. In the performance of these I had the valuable assist- ance of my friend, Mr. Michell Clarke, a gentleman well versed in anatomy, and expert in operating. If the cerebro-spinal fluid replaces blood withdrawn from the intracranial vessels by gravitation, or if, conversely, the recession of the fluid makes room for congestion of those vessels, it appeared to me that were an animal kept some time in a certain position, the cerebro-spinal fluid ought to be found accumulated either in the cranial or in the vertebral cavities; if erect, in the ventricles and subarachnoid space of the brain ; if inverted, in the theca vertebralis. Three rabbits were selected. One was suspended by its ears and fore-legs, another by its hind-legs, a third was kept for com- parison. The two suspended rabbits were poisoned with prussic acid after about half an hour, their position having been strictly maintained. The post mortem examination was made immediataly, and with the bodies kept steadily in the same position. In the rabbit inverted during suspension the eyes were very prominent, and the membrana nictitans was congested (but there had been no manifestation of distress during life). The vertebral canal was first laid open. All the tissues in the lumbar and dor- sal regions were bloodless; those of the neck and cranium were gorged with blood; the membranes and the substance of the spinal cord in the lumbar and dorsal regions were quite pallid. In the cervical portion of the theca there appeared a slight accumu- lation of sanguinolent serum. On opening the cranium, the bony tissue was full of blood ; the meninges were highly congested, and the puncta sanguinea in the cerebral substance were numer- ous and strongly marked. There was no serous fluid in the ven- tricles, and none external to the convolutions. The rabbit which had been suspended by its ears and forelegs was of course examined in an erect posture. The tissues of the head, neck, and back were exsanguine ; but those of the lumbar region were in an opposite condition. When the cavities were laid open, the membranes of the spinal cord in the same region were found injected, while those of the brain and the vessels of the brain substance were extremely pallid. Serous fluid was anxiously and carefully looked for in the ventricles and between the convolutions, and at their base, but none was found. The third rabbit was poisoned with prussic acid, and examined 1858.] On Headache. 621 immediately in the horizontal position. There was a pretty equal distribution of blood, and nothing remarkable was observed, ex- cepting the absence of anything like cerebro-spinal fluid, either in the cranial or in the vertebral cavity. These experiments, while they entirely confirmed the observa- tions and conclusions of Dr. Burrows, as to the production of an increased or lessened quantity of blood in the brain by gravitation, were negative as to any adjustment affected by cerebro-spinal fluid. I thought it well therefore to repeat the experiment on two full- grown and very strong rabbits. They were suspended for an hour. The rabbit which hung by the ears and forelegs was found dead. The other, quite vigorous, was poisoned with prus- sic acid. They were examined with the same results, excepting that in the inverted animal there was not the same appearance of sanguinolent exudation in the cervical portion of the theca vertebralis which had been found in the first case. The rabbit which had died suspended by his ears and fore-legs was examined with particular care and interest. No serous fluid was discover- able in the ventricles, and none beneath the pia mater none in any part of the cranial cavity. But the membranes and brain- substances were absolutely blanched. The appearances corres- ponded with the plate in Dr. Burrows' work, representing those of a rabbit bled to death. As this observation was interesting in proof of the fatal effects of a posture which diverted blood from the brain, it was repeated on two other rabbits. One was suspended by the ears and fore- legs, the other by the ears only. Death occurred a few minutes earlier in the former than in the latter case. The appearances within the cranium were similar to those described in the former instance. In order to meet the supposition that the animals might have been distressed by the weight of the body, and the strain on the ligaments of the neck, the weight had been taken offby a support applied to the haunches. Thinking it desirable to ascertain whether the inverted position would occasion death, if continued longer than in the cases of the animals suspended in that posture, a strong middle-sized rab- bit was hung up by his hind-legs and kept in that situation for more than four hours. After being cut down, he looked for a moment astounded, then gave his head a shake, and seemed to have recovered his self-possession. He was in fact quite well, and began to feed quite heartily. Rabbits are known to hold their lives on a slighter tenure than do many animals. We thought it right therefore to try the effect of the erect posture in one of another order. A cat, being pro- verbially tenacious of life, was selected. 'Mr. Clarke found it 622 On Headache. [September, difficult to keep her head constantly upright. She died in three hours and a half. The brain and its membranes were perfectly bloodless, but there was no fluid in the ventricles, nor under the pia mater, nor in any part of the cranial cavity. Neither could more than a very few drops be discovered in the vertebral cavity, Whatever may be the physical agency by which the brain deprived of its blood is still capable of filling its bony case, the proof given by the experiment of the degree to which blood may be drained from the cerebral vessels by posture only, has, it seems to me, some considerable value. We see that, independently ol the neutritive relation between blood and neurine for the perform- ances of brain function, one of the conditions under which this function is performed is a certain amount of pressure, a greatei or less amount of which may produce distressing or even fatal re- sults. In the rabbit the circulation is not so arranged as to main- tain even for a short time an adequate supply to the brain undei the disadvantageous circumstances of erect posture. While the egress of blood is helped by gravitation, the afflux is to be kepi up by the exertion of a heart not vigorous enough to overcome the difficulty presented by gravitation. The heart soon becomes further weakened by the reflected influence of that very state ol the brain which its own incapacity has engendered, and fata) syncope is the result. The fact teaches us also how important to man, with his "os sub- lime" is a sufficiency of strength in his left cardiac ventricle. Il may be that in him there is a larger amount of cerebro-spinal fluid normally existent, and that he is furnished with adjustments for his greater variety of postures. But still nothing is more to be apprehended than the result of diminished afflux and pressure, from a failure of the cardiac impulse. And the observation is, ] think, confirmed by all clinical and pathological experience. I need scarcely say that in these experiments it was a surprise to Mr. Clarke and myself that no appreciable quantity of fluid should have been found corresponding to the cerebro-spinal fluid, though it was carefully looked for. Mr. Clarke was at the pains of examining under every precaution the vertebral and cranial cavities in a cat, and in dogs poisoned with prussic acid, but with the same negative results. The examination of a dog was made in the presence of Mr. Henry Clark, an accomplished anatomist, and myself. The whole quantity of fluid collected on bibulous paper from the theca vertebralis, the ventricles of the brain, and the cranial cavity, amounted at the most liberal computation to no more than seven drops. It is not difficult to reconcile these negative results with the fact that one finds more or less serous fluid in the cranial and spinal cavities of the human subject, because the latter is always examined several hours after death, and when there has been 1858.] Conical Cornea and its Treatment, &c. 623 abundance of time for the transudation of fluid in these as well as in other serous cavities. And, a priori, a large proportion might be expected from the exceeding vascularity of the pia mater, which represents sub-serous cellular tissue. But it is more diffi- cult to explain the absence of the fluid in the animals examined by us, when we consider it in relation to the experiments of Magendie, Cruveilhier, Ecker, and others, on the living animal. It would be presumptuous, as it is unnecessary to question the ac- curacy of such practised observers. And without other evidence I shall come to the conclusion that the presence of true cerebro- spinal fluid is confined to the living animal, and that when the quantity of blood in the vessels is diminished by death, the fluid passes into them by endosmotic action. But I have before me the note of an experiment made by Mr. Clarke on a living dog, previously rendered anaesthetic by chloro- form, which fully corroborated those of Magendie and Cruveilhier. The dog was of smaller size than that which was examined after death, yet nearly sixty drops escaped from the puncture through the occipito-atloid ligament, though from a dead animal of the same size the sum total of serous fluid obtained from venticles, cranium, and theca vertebralis amounted at the outside to seven drops only. I have already said that it also remains to be explained how the brain all but emptied of blood, still fills the cranial cavity. Two cats were killed, especially with a view to this point The brain was drained either by posture, or by division of the cervical ves- sels, but on opening the cranium the dura mater was found as tense as if the vessels had been full of blood, and yet no serous fluid was discoverable. As there is no ground for attributing resilience to the cerebral substance, we are forced to speculate upon the possibility of some interstitial fluid or serous halitus. As the experiments have proved that the cerebro-spinal fluid of the living animal is not to be found, after death, can it be that this fluid instead of being extra-membranous becomes interstitial ? Or is there some aeriform substance in the vessels, such as prevents the coats of many of the arteries from collapsing after death, though they no longer contain blood ? I have already suggested some experiments to Mr. Clarke in elucidation of this subject, some of which he has already performed, while others are still in progress. [Xew Orleans Med. News and Hosp. Gaz. Clinical Lecture on Conical Cornea and its Treatment, and on Gonorrheal Iritis. By W. Lawrence, F.R.S., F.R.C.S., &c, Senior Surgeon to St. Bartholomew's Hospital. Gentlemen, We have had, since Summer Session, commen- ced various instructive " eye" cases in the hospital, to which I 624 Conical Cornea and its Treatment, &c. [September, wish to direct your attention to-day. Several severe cases of syphilitic iritis, with, and, I may say, without complications, as also a most unique case of that very singular disease "conical cornea." Iritis is a very ordinary disease in practice, so that your attention cannot be drawn to it too early in the session ; it is also 01V3 seen under unexpected circumstances. The first case of which I may speak is that patient suffering under INFLAMMATION OF THE EYE WITH GONOERHCEA. You will remark, I say, inflammation of the eye attended with gonorhcea not gonorrhoea! ophthalmia; the diseases, in fact, are quite different, as well in their pathological seat and import as in their mode of treatment, constitutional or otherwise. In cases of gonorrhoeal ophthalmia, of which I speak hereafter, it seems as if a patient laboring under gonorrhoea conveyed much of the puriform discharge immediately to the conjunctivitis, of which, no doubt, you have all read in your books; but in this patient now under our notice, with a gonorrhoeal history of a somewhat like kind, the infection from some constitutional cause or peculiarity, probably of a rheumatic character, extended from the conjunctiva to the sclerotic coats of the eye: from thence even to the iris, causing great intolerance of light, with remark- able dullness of colour in the iris itself. To these signs of this affection were added profuse lachrymation, and what I consider almost as pathognomonic of this class of cases, most severe supra- orbital pain pain of a most remarkable kind, extending round the orbit, and, no doubt, in some measure engaging all the fibrous tissues of that part. Now I wish you to remark that both these diseases arise under similar circumstances ; yet this is, you see, quite a different thing from gonorrhoeal conjunctivitis, or a conjunctivitis of any kind, properly so called. The supra-orbital pain of sclerotitis is absent in the disease oi the conjunctiva. The appearance of the patient himself is also peculiar; you can, in fact, scarcely mistake these cases when once you have studied them. Fortunately, this serious thing gonorrhoeal ophthalmia is not very often seen in this hospital ; but if any cases do offer themselves I shall take the opportunity of showing them to you.* The treatment of these cases differs, also, so that a propel diagnosis is not a matter of idle curiosity or ingenuity, but oi necessity. In this patient we had to combat the inflammatory symptoms in the sclerotic coat with much vigour. Depletion and cupping on the temple were ordered and mercury used night and morning: calomel and opium, not for any specific * Mr. Wilde, of Dublin, as previously stated in the Circular, has recently discov- ered that simple leucorrhoea in a married female produced as marked infection in the conjunctiva a& gonorrhoea. 1858.] Conical Cornea and its Treatment, d*c. 625 action, so much as to stop inflammation. To these remedies we added a blister on the nape of the neck ; yet all did not answer, and we were obliged to have recourse to the wine of colchicum ( 3 ss., sex tis horis). This affected his stomach a little, as col- chicum very often does, so that it is a drug requiring much caution in its administration. In my experience, however, I find that when the pain and sickness are induced, the action of the medicine is more certain and specific ; still great caution is also necessary, for very serious results have followed overdoses of this powerful agent. If the colchicum* be used without due caution, even fatal results might arise, so that it will be necessary to watch its action with great care. I am not going now to enter into the minute diagnosis of sclerotidis, we shall see it as we go through the wards during the summer, and it will be better to point it out to you in the wards. the next case I wish to speak more in detail about, is a patient suffering under what is termed, (TOXICAL CORNEA. The patient is E. TV , a poor woman, it seems, who has been led about the streets quite blind. She is a comparative- ly young woman, only aged thirty six years; she has occasion- al flashes of light, she says, but with that sole exception she has been now thirteen years totally without vision of any kind. This is a most singular disease, one of the pathology or nature of which we know absolutely nothing. As far as I have seen it during fifty years' experience (if possible to add to its anoma- lous character) it usually takes place in young and healthy sub- jects who have not suffered in any manner irom excessive use of the eye, like watchmakers, needlewomen, printers, &c. This young woman, our present patient, you see, is perfectly healthy ; she tells us nothing of any previous disease of her eyes ; in fact, it is a gradual change occurring over a long space of time in a cornea otherwise healthy. I have seen the cornea in this state become in shape quite like a cone; the rays of light, too, present a most unusual appearance in conical cornea; the patient does not present the vacant, dull eye of the amaurotic patient, who holds his head towards the sky whene'er he may chance to catch a glimmer everything dark, dark, " Amid the blaze of noon Irrecoverably dark, total eclipse." * It may be prudent to observe that very few surgeons share Mr. Lawrence's 4read of the use of colchicum, at least in Hospitals. Mr. Hancock, uses tiuct of aconite in such cases, which is nearly the same medieine, and probably aconite, and atropine will, ere long, supersede all the routine plans of calomel and opium, belladonna, 100 L ; reaction slightly acid ; color, very light yellow, like diabetic urine. $. Continue brandy, infusion of snake- root and sulphate of quinia. Sept. 21st, 1 o'clock P.M. Continues to improve. Countenance and intellect bright. Tongue has altered greatly in appearance it is moist and pale, and very slightly coated with white fur; pa- pillae slightly enlarged; face not so flushed. Pulse66; respiration 18. Temperature of atmosphere, 83 F. ; temp, of hand, 98; temp, under tongue, 100. Skin cool and relaxed. Amount of urine passed from Sept. 20th, 1 o'clock P.M., up to 11 o'clock, (hours 10,) grs. 13013 ; light yellow color; sp. gr. 1001 ; reaction alkaline after standing 15 hours. Amount of urine passed from Sept. 20th, 11 o'clock P.M., up to the present time, grs. 5030: sp. gr. 1006. Deep orange color. Amount of uric acid in grs. 654 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, 5030 of urine, grs. 1.050; amount of uric acid in 1000 parts of urine, grs. 0.200. Sept. 22nd, 12 o'clock M. Tongue moist and normal in ap- pearance; skin cool; face of natural color. Pulse 65; respira- tion, 18. Temperature of atmosphere, 845F. ; temp, of hand, 93; temp, under tongue, 99a5. $. Quassia and soda; continue infusion of Virginia snake- root and sulpli. of quinia, tablespoon ful every six hours. Ain't of urine passed during the last 24 hoursy grs. 20.800 ; normal in color ; sp. or. 1001. 7 o'clock P. M. Pulse 57; respiration 16. Temperature of atmosphere, 8i; temp, of hand, 98; temp, under tongue, 99-5. Amount of urine passed during the last 8 hours, grains 7021; sp. gr. 1003 ; light colored. Sept. 23rd. Examination of Blood No. V. Clot appeared to- be softer than normal. Serum of a light yellow color. Specific gravity of blood 1042.4; sp. gr. of serum 1021.3. Water In 1000 parts of Blood, 827-901 " " " " Serum, 928-370 (1) " " " Liq.Sanjr., 926937 (2) " " " u " 887-034 Solid Matters In 1000 parts of Blood, 172-099 " " " " Serum, 71-630 (1) " " "Liq.Sang., 73-297 (2) " " " " " 112-965 Solid Matters in Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, 62*789. Ftxed Saline Constituents, In 1000 parts of Blood, 4-041 " " Serum, 4-035 (1) " " Liquor Sanguinis, ------ 4-045 (2) " " " " 6-246 " " Solid Matters of Blood, ----- 23-202 " " " " " Serum, 56-338 " " " " " Blood Corpuscles, - - - 4-584 " " Moist Blood Corpuscles, - - 1-119 In Blood Corpuscles of 1000 parts of Blood, - - - 0-490 " Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, 3-551 1000 Parts of Blood Contained, Water, - 827-901 Dried Blood Corpuscles, 107-877 } Sj Maers* J 10*> Fibrin, 1-433 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring ) Organic Matters, - 59*210 Matters, - - 62-789 [ Mineral " - 3*551 1000 Parts of Blood Contained, ) Water, - - - 323*631 Moist Blood Corpuscles, 431.508 [ Organic Matters, - - 107*320 ) Mineral " - - 0*490 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 655 Liquor Sanguinis, - 568*492 Water, - - - 504-270 Organic Matters, - - 592 10 ^Mineral " - - 3-551 Fibrin, - - T433 1000 Parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles Contained, Water, 750-000 Organic Matters, - 248-709 Mineral Matters, -------- 1-119 (1) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained, Water, 926-703 Organic Matters, 67-380 Mineral Matters, -------- 4-035 Fibrin, - 1-667 (2) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained, Water, 887-034 Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, - 104 000 Mineral Matters, - - - 6-246 Fibrin, 2-520 A few days after this observation, numerous small boils ap- peared over all parts of the body of this patient. These were productive of nothing but pain and uneasiness, and disappeared in the course of two weeks. The patient continued to improve, and was discharged from the hospital. This case exhibits the following points of interest: 1. The cerebral symptoms were strongly marked. There was a constant tendency, in the active stages of the disease, to pro- found stupor. The flushed face and hot head and torpid intel- lect, indicated congestion of the brain. Sinapisms, blisters, cut cups and purgatives, diminished the apparent congestion of the brain, and relieved the intellectual faculties temporarily, but not permanently. Stimulants and sulphate of quinia, so far from increasing the apparent congestion of the brain, diminished it permanently, and relieved the intellectual faculiies. Under their action, the red, dry, rough tongue, became pale, moist and soft under their action, the circulation and respiration were equalized, and diminished in frequency; the temperature was diminished and the intellect restored to its normal exercise. As the sinapisms, blisters, cut cups and purgatives, were used in conjunction with the stimulants and sulphate of quinia, we cannot assert that the restoration of the functions were due solely to the action of the stimulants and sulphate of quinia. It is evident, however, from the history of the case, that the action of the former was temporary, whilst that of the latter was per- manent. It is probable that the recovery of this patient would have been doubtful in the extreme, if cither of these modes of i treatment had been omitted. 656 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, During the height of the disease I had no hopes whatever of his recovery. The brain was more affected than all the other organs. Long after the pulse and respiration, skin and digestive functions were restored to their normal actions, the patient was scarcely able to stand or walk on account of the condition of the brain. His first efforts at walking resembled those of an infant just learning to stand and walk alone. This was not due to the loss of muscular power, for there had been but a slight reduc- tion of the size of the muscles. It was due rather to the dis- ordered state of the cerebro-spinal system. 2. The urine was abundant of low specific gravity and light color. In these particulars this excretion presented a marked difference from the urine of the cases recorded in previous num- bers of this journal. 8. The uric acid was diminished during the active stages of the fever, and under the action of sulphate of quinia. 4. The analysis of the blood shows that the organic matters of the blood corpuscles were diminished slightly, whilst the min- eral matters were greatly diminished. The fibrin was dimin- ished in amount, and appeared to be softer than normal. The albumen and extractive matters of the serum were somewhat below the normal standard. When we consider that this patient was in a state of almost complete starvation, during the height of the disease, it is evi- dent that the malarial poison acted but slightly upon the con- stituents of the blood. The malarial poison appeared to act almost entirely upon the brain and nervous system. This ac- tion may have been greatly increased by circumstances as peculiarities of constitution, irregularities of habit, and continu- ed exposure to the hot sun on the light-ship. I was afterwards informed that this boy was in the habit of using ardent spirits freely. It is probable that one or all of these causes may have pre- disposed the brain to congestion, and converted a light attaek into a severe and dangerous disease, It is probable that the dose of malaria was small, and, aside from these circumstances, would have produced only a mild disease, We are led to this conclusion by the fact, that its effects upon the blood and excre- tions were comparatively slight, Case XXIX. American seaman, native of Philadelphia: age 30 ; weight 150; heights feet 8 inches; brown hair; brown eyes; dark complexion. August 7th, XL o'clock A.M, Has entered the hospital in a stupid, torpid condition. It is difficult to arouse him, and then his answers are incoherent. His companion states that " he has been running up and 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 657 down the Savannah river in a steam-tug. One week ago, was attacked with chill and fever^ which was treated with sulphate of quinia, by one of his companions. Two days ago took blue piil and castor oil. He is of intemperate habits, passing much of his time in a state of intoxication." Skin hot, but in a pro- fuse perspiration ; tongue coated with light yellow fur; pulse 112, moderately full; respiration 38, hurried, thoracic chest heaving. Temperature of atmosphere, &1F. ; temp, of hand, 103; temp, under tongue, 104. The patient breathed through his mouth, was restless and stupid, and hence it was difficult to determine accurately the temperature under the tongue. Has just passed a considerable quantity of clear, limpid, high-colored urine. #. Castor oil, f I ss. Diet, gruel. August 8th, 9 o'clock A.M. Skin hot and dry; pulse 120. Continues stupid. Urine passed during the night arid this morning, clear, high colored, (reddish orange). Sp. gr. 1013. Nitrate of urea well formed silvery white crystals. ANALYSIS LVIIL 1000 Parts of Urine Contained, Water, 957-282 Solid Matters, 42 618 Urea, 7-108 Uric Acid, 0*394 Extractive and Coloring Matters, - -, - - - 32-570 Fixed Saline Constituents, - ' 2-621 11 o'clock A.M. Skin moist; pulse 112. During the last three hours the pulse has lost 8 beats to the minute. Respira- tion 36. Temperature of atmosphere, 80 F. ; temp, of hand, 103. Temperature under the tongue could not be ascertained, on account of the stupid condition of the patient. Castor oil acted six times stools very offensive; breath offensive acid. His body has a peculiar, disagreeable smell. Epigastric region .somewhat tender upon pressure. $. Blister to epigastric region ; soda powders. Diet, gruel. Aug. 9th, 11 o'clock A. M. Worse: stupid. When aroused by shaking, cannot converse intelligently attempts to pro- nounce words and fails. Passes his urine and feces in bed. Skin hot and dry. Has a pustular eruption over the surface of trunk and limbs most abundant over the chest and abdomen. Pulse 112; respiration 40. Temperature of atmosphere, 80; temp, of hand, 10oo. Stools dark colored and fetid. Blister has drawn, and he has torn off the cuticle with his hand sur- face red and raw. Urine of a bright reddish brown color cloudy, with epithelial cells from the mucous membrane of the .kidneys, ureters, and bladder and urethra, and with mucous corpuscles and spermatozoa. The deposit at the bottom of the vessel consisted of spermato- G58 JONES, on Malarial Fever. [October, zoa, epithelial cells, mucous corpuscles, prismatic crystals of triple phosphate, and small acicular crystals, soluble in hydro- chloric acid. The acicular crystals were in such small numbers that I was unable to determine accurately their chemical constitution. The presence of the epithelial cells, mucous, corpuscles, and spermatozoa in the urine, were due to the action of the canthara- din, absorbed from the blistered surface. ty. Calomel, grs. xij. ; James's powder, (pulvis antimonii cornpositus,) grs. xxij. Mix, and divide into six powders. Ad- minister one every three hours. Diet, gum-water and gruel. $. Apply blisters to the calves of his legs. 6 o'clock P. M. No improvement of symptoms. Yery rest- less. Intellect wandering. Bowels are loose has several stools daily. Passes his urine and feces in bed. Pulse 104, weaker than this morning; skin not so warm; tongue dry ; blistered surface of the epigastric region red, and without any discharge of serous fluid. The blisters upon the legs are very slow in their action. #, Camphor water, f^viij.; Oil of turpentine, f 3 i j . ; Sugar, 3 ij. ; Powdered gum-arabic, 3ij.; Carbonate of magnesia, 3j. Mix. Administer a tablespoon ful every three hours. Stop the calomel and James's powders. Diet, arrow-root and a small quantity of brandy. August 10th, 9 o'clock A. M. No improvement of symptoms. Passes his urine and feces involuntarily. Urine of a bright red color; sp.gr. 1012*6; reaction decidedly acid contains small quantities of albumen. It has been carefully tested for grape- sugar, without the discovery of a trace. Amount of uric acid in 1000 parts of urine, 0-296. 11 o'clock A. M. Countenance has a peculiar look of stupidi- ty and anxiety, or rather horror. These two apparently incom- patible expressions are combined. Has had two stools this morning. Pulse 120, feeble ; respiration, 40 ; blistered surfaces red and dry ; complexion pale, sallow. $. Continue the mixture. Administer brandy and arrow- root every hour. Urine a shade lighter in color than that passed during the night after standing a few hours, gave off numerous small bubbles, which coated the sides of the glass vessel. After stand- ing 12 hours, a heavy deposit of crystals of triple phosphate, of mucous corpuscles, and of spermatozoa fell. August 11th, 10 o'clock, A.M. Stupid, almost insensible; expression of countenance, vacant. When aroused, mutters lomething, inarticulately, for a few seconds, and then relapses into his former state of stupor. ...,.,, The eruption, alluded to before^ is oat, quite thickly, on the 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 659 back, and is distinctly pustular. Some of the pustules are com- mencing to slough. His elbows and shoulders, and hips, upon which the weight of his body has rested, are or a dark purplish color, and the skin is commencing to slough at those parts most exposed. This patient has a peculiar disagreeable smell. Tongue dry and rough ; teeth coated with sordes. Pulse 132 ; respiration 47. Temp, of atmosphere, 80 F.; Temp, of hand, 104; Temp, under the tongue could not be taken with abso- lute accuracy ; it was about 105. $ Continue mixture. Diet, milk-punch and egg-nog. After leaving the ward, the nurse raised the patient and placed him upon the night stool. Immediately his respiration became hurried, he gasped for breath, his head fell upon his breast, and the nurse called out that he was dying. He was immediately placed in bed. It is probable, that if he had re- mained in the sitting posture a few moments longer, death would have resulted from the exhaustion. 12 o'clock, M. Examination of Blood No. VI. Color of the venous blood when first abstracted, dark purple, almost black. After exposoure to the atmosphere, the surface of the clot changed to a cherry-red color, and not to the bright-red color assumed by the surface of healthy venous blood, when exposed to the atmosphere. Coagulation took place in the course of ten minutes, and the clot was moderately firm. Under the micro- scope, the colored blood corpuscles were found united together, forming rolls as in inflammation, and in the blood of the horse. Many of the colored corpuscles appeared to be altered in form and appearance. The colorless corpuscles appeared to be more numerous than normal. Serum, of a golden color, like that which escaped from the blistered surfaces. Specific gravity of blood, 1035; specific gravity of serum, 1021. Water In 1000 parts of Blood, 860*976 u u u u Serum, 923-786 (1) " " "Liq. Saner., 921-233 (2) " " " M " 900-473 Solid Matters In 1000 parts of Blood, 139-024 u u u u serun]? 76-214 (1) " " "Liq.Sang., 78767 (2) " " " " " 99527 k Solid Matters in Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, 71-032. Fixed Saline Constituents, In 1000 parts of Blood, 7*317 " " " " Serum, 5-480 (2) " " " " Liquor Sanguinis, .... 6-489 u " Solid Matters of Blood, - - - 52-631 " " " " u " " Serum, - - - 71-902 " " " " " " " Blood Corpuscles, - 42-751 u " " " " " " Moist Blood Corpuscles, 10-649 " Blood Corpuscles of 1000 parts of Blood, - - - 2-795 " Serum of 1000 parts of Blood, .... 4*522 660 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, 1000 Parts of Blood Contained, Water, ---_.. 860*976 Dried Blood Corpuscles, - 65-612 i ?rrganif Matters, - 62-703 r j Mineral " - 2*795 Fibrin, ---.-_ 2-380 Albumen, - - 60-105 I ?/Sani? Ma*ters> " 67'985 , WU LVO | MlneI.al U m g-OlO ExtractiveandColor'g Matters, 10-927 i ^f Mf erS' " ?"?}S to ) Mineral " - 2'ol2 1000 Parts of Blood Contained, ) Water, - - 196*836 Moist Blood Corpuscles, 262-448 > Organic Matters, - 62-703 J Mineral " - 2-795 Water, - 664-140 Albumen, j Organic Matters, 57*985 60-105 \ Mineral u 2-010 Liq. Sanguinis, 737-552 y Ext. and Color'g j Organic Matters, 8-415 Matters, 10-927 ( Mineral " 2-512 J Fibrin, 2-380 1000 Parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles. Water, 750*000 Organic Matters, 239-296 Mineral Matters, --- 10l64& (1) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained, Water, 918-57& Albumen, - - - 64.632 i ^ani? Mfers' " *?" 9 ) Mineral u - 2-010 Fibrin, - 2-553 Ext and Coloring Matters, 14-236 [ ^ Maers- ; "Jg (2) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained, Water, 900-473 *>- - - 81M^ : 'SE Fibrin, 3-206 Ext. and Coloring Matters, 14*815 I ^iferlf ^^% ' 11-409 3-405 Examination of Urine passed just after the Abstraction of the Blood. Urine a shade higher than normal ; reaction acid ; spe- cific gravity 1013'2 slightly cloudy from mucous corpuscles and spermatozoa. After standing 12 hours, the urine threw down alight yellow, almost white, deposit of triple phosphate, urate of soda, epithelial cells, mucous corpuscles, and sperma- tozoa. 1858.] JONES, on Malarial Fever. 661 ANALYSIS LIX. 1000 Parts of Urine Contained, Water, ------ 961-112 Solid Matters, ------ 38888 Urea, ------- 12304 Uric Acid, ------ 0-592 Extractive and Coloring Matters, Mucus, &c. - - 22-259 Fixed Saline Constituents, - 3333 August 12th, 7 o'clock A. M. Kespiration hurried. Patient is entirely insensible, and is evidently dying. Urine passed at this time, normal in color; reaction acid ; sp. gr. 1011*5. When treated with nitric and hydrochloric acids, there was considera- ble efferescence. Crystals of nitrate of urea, well formed and of a white, silvery appearance. ANALYSIS LX. 1000 Parts of Urine Coxtained, Water, ------ 972-728 Solid Matters, ------ 27-272 Urea, ------- 5-228 Uric Acid, - - - - - - 0-158 Extractive and Coloring Matters, - 18543 Fixed Saline Constituents, - - - - 3 030 This patient died one hour and a half after this observation, at S J o'clock A. M. (2) Autopsy four hours after Death. Exterior. Muscles full, well developed. Body appears to have 2ost but little flesh during sickness. Universal sallow color. Head. Dura mater perfectly natural ; arachnoid membrane opalescent (pearl colored) in most parts. There were different degrees of this opalescency, from almost perfect transparency to semi-translucency. This change was especially evident in the neighborhood of the large blood-vessels, and in those portions of the arachnoid which covered the depressions between the convolutions. Blood-vessels of pia mater somewhat more distended with blood than usual, but not so much, however, as to account for the cerebral symptoms during life. Substance of brain firm, and not more congested with blood than normal. Weight of brain without membranes, grs. 21000, which equals ozs. -18 : equals lbs. 3, avoirdupois. The appearance of the structure and condition of the brain, and its blood-vessels and membranes, do not correspond to the condition of congestion, effusion or softening, which the cerebral symptoms led us to ex- pect. The brain was not examined microscopically, and there may have been minute changes in the delicate structures, chemi- cal or physical, which escaped the observation of the naked eye. This is possible, but not probable. It is hardly probable, or possible, that profound alterations could take place in so deli- 662 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, cate an organ as the brain, without some changes in its color or consistence, palpable to the naked eye. Chest. Lungs normal in appearance and structure; lower portions more congested with blood than the superior. Old ad- hesion of the pleura in several places. Weight of lungs 10,320 grains. Heart. Normal in size. Eight auricle and ventricle present- ed the appearance of incipient fatty degeneration. Columnoe carneaeof left ventricle remarkably well developed. Weight of heart, 4440 grains. Abdomen. Liver externally of a slate color. When cut, the surface of the incision was of a dark bronze color, and appeared to contain more blood and bile than normal. The liver pre- sented the true malarial color. Gall bladder filled with bile of a greenish, black opaque color, when seen in mass, and of a gamboge yellow color, when spread out in thin layers. Structure of liver, with reference to firmness, appeared to be normal. I did not discover any softening. Liver cells appear- ed to be normal in structure, under the microscope. Their color appeared to be a shade darker than usual, inclining to a light green. Blood of liver dark, and did not change to the arterial hue when exposed to the atmosphere. Filtered decoction of the liver of a bright golden color, and resembled, in this respect, the serum of the blood. After this yellow colored decoction of the liver had remained twenty -four hours, it changed to a dark brown color. When the liver was boiled with a strong solution of potassa, it dissolved rapidly and completely, and the solution resembled in color venous blood, when viewed in mass. In thin layers, the color was of a bright purplish pink. The liver also dissolved completely and rapidly when boiled with concentrated nitric acid. The same complete dissolution took place, but more slowly, when the liver was allowed to re- main in cold solutions of potassa and nitric acid, without boil- ing. The decoction of the liver was carefully tested for grape sugar not a trace was discovered. Weight of the liver, 25,642 grains, equals 3 lbs. 11 J ozs. Spleen. Externally of a dark slate color, two shades darker than the liver. Enlarged, lobulated. There was a small addi- tional spleen of the size of a rifle ball. This presented the same slate color, as the large spleen. Structure of the principal spleen, soft. When pressed gently between the ringers, the tissues appeared to give way. The contents of the cells of the spleen (pulp or mud) was of a dark reddish brown. When exposed to the atmosphere, this oolor was not altered. Under the microscope, the pulp was 1858.] JONES, on Malarial Fever. 663 found to consist of numerous colored and colorless corpuscles and granules. Weight of spleen, 7,920 grs., equals 1 lb. 2 ozs. The lymphatic glands in the region of the liver and spleen, were larger and darker and more congested with blood, than normal. Judaeys. Normal. Weight, 5,760 grains, equals 13 ozs. Alimentary Canal. Stomach. Internal surface of stomach, colored yellow with bile. As far as the unaided eye could as- certain, the mucous membrane was continuous and unaltered in structure. The blood-vessels of the mucous membrane were filled with blood, and several spots were more engorged with blood than the rest of the surface, presenting an ecchymosed appearance. The mere stagnation of the blood in the vessels and capilla- ries of the mucous membrane is not a pathological condition. To the naked eye, there were no pathological alterations in the structures of the stomach. Intestines. The color of the intestines, externally and inter- nally, was darker than usual. The small intestines contained fecal matters, epithelial cells, mucous corpuscles, and mucus, colored yellow with bile. Blood-vessels of the mucous membrane of the small and large intestines injected with blood. The mucous membrane was most injected with blood, and presented a purplish color, in the last eight feet of the inferior portion of the ileum. This engorg- ment of the blood-vessels was greatest in the immediate region of the ilio-caecal valve. The solitary glands were numerous, enlarged, elevated and distinct, and of a brown color. When the intestines were held up to the light, blood-vessels, engorged with blood, were seen passing to each gland. The blood-vessels supplying the solitary and Peyer's glands, were more engorged with blood than those supplying the mucous membrane generally. These solitary glands were most numer- ous in the neighborhood of the ilio-caecal valve, and were found scattered over the superior portion of the colon, and over the caecum, and over eight feet of the inferior portion of the ileum. Peyer's glands were enlarged and elevated. These glands were of various sizes, from one quarter of an inch to three inches in length, and from a quarter of an inch to half an inch in breadth. They occurred at intervals of from one to two inches from each other, and extended from the ilio-caecal valve, along the mucous membrane of the ileum, for about nine feet. The blood-vessels around these glands were engorged with blood. This part of the mucous membrane of the ileum, studied with the solitary and Peyer's glands, was far more injected with blood than the stomach, jejunum, or superior portion of the 66$: Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, ileum. Although these glands were enlarged, elevated, and injected with blood, still they could not by any means be com- pared to the condition of these glands, in an advanced stage of typhoid fever. It is however interesting that a small dose of castor oil caused an unusual action upon the bowels, and also that the fever re- sembled, in the continued elevation of the temperature, and pulse, and respiration, typhoid fever. We will now state the points of interest presented by this case: The Pulse was feeble, and varied from 104 to 132 beats in the minute. The Respiration was hurried, thoracic, and varied from 36 to -47 in the minute. The Temperature under the Tongue varied from 101 F. to 105. The Temperature in the Hand varied from 103F. to 104. 'The temperature of both the trunk and extremities was remark- ably uniform. When we compare the rapidity of the circula- tion and respiration, and the temperature of this case, with these phenomena manifested in the cases of intermittent fever, report- ed in former numbers of this journal, (see pp. 377, 393, 436, 449) it is evident that the elevation of the temperature corres- ponded more accurately with the increased action of the circu- latory and respiratory systems in the latter, than in the former. The pulse and respiration were more accelerated in this case, whilst the temperature did not rise higher than that of inter- mittent fever. The state of the Skin varied : sometimes dry, and at others, bathed in perspiration. Tongue dry and coated with fur; and towards the termination of the disease, the tongue and teeth were coated with sordes. It is evident from these facts that there was no distinct remis- sion of the febrile excitement. The Urine was copious : of low specific gravity : of higher color than normal in the earlier stages of the disease. Twenty hours before death the urine changed to its normal yellow color. The urine contained small quantities of albumen. The urea was diminished relatively to the extractive matters. We can- not say absolutely, because the whole amount of urine excreted was not determined. The extractive matters were increased relatively to the other constituents of the urine. The uric acid was normal in amount. The Blood exhibited profound alterations. The dried colored corpuscles were only 65*612, and the moist colored corpuscles, 262*448 in the the " thousand parts. They were, therefore, di- minished more than one half. Many of the colored corpuscles- were altered in shape and appearance, and had in a great meas- 1858.] JONES, on Malarial Fever. 665 ure lost the power of changing from the venous to the arterial color. Many of them united together and formed rolls, as in the blood of inflammation!. The fibrin was not diminished. The serum was of a golden color, and low specific gravity. The albumen was diminished, whilst the extractive matters of the serum were increased. The mineral matters of both the blood corpuscles and liquor sanguinis were diminished relatively, but not absolutely. That is, their diminution corresponded with, but did not exceed the diminution of the other elements of the blood the diminution of the mineral matters appeared to be due solely to the diminu- tion of the solid elements of the blood the remaining elements of the blood possessed the usual amount of mineral matter. The pustular eruption, the offensive smell, the stasis of the blood in the parts of the body exposed to pressure, and the ten- dency of these parts to slough all indicated alterations in the constitution of the blood, and derangement of the capillary circulation. The loss of muscular power, exhaustion, stupidity, coma, low muttering delirium, insensibility to pain all indicated de- rangement of the cerebro-spinal system. The alterations in the actions of the capillary and general circulations, and of the respiration the profound alterations in the blood the alterations of the secretions and excretions, and of the structures of the liver and spleen, and of Peyer's and the solitary glands of the intestine, were all indicative of derange- ments of the sympathetic system of nerves. Our knowledge of the early symptoms, and pathological changes of this case, do not permit an arbitrary decision as to which system of nerves was affected primarily. The fact that the post mortem examination revealed (to the naked eye) no prominent lesions of these two systems of nerves, would seem to indicate that the poison or poisons acted primarily upon the blood, destroying and altering the blood corpuscles, the active agents in the elaboration of the elements of the secretions, and of the muscular and nervous systems. When the proper chemical changes in the blood were altered, when the compounds for the secretions, and nutrition, of the nervous system were altered, or not elaborated, then both, the cerebro-spinal and sympathetic systems, manifested aberrated action. As the circulation and respiration, and the secretions and excretions, and the action and integrity of the organs de- pend, in great measure, upon the integrity of the nervous sys- tem, it is evident that the derangement of the cerebro-spinal and sympathetic systems, through the derangement of the blood and secretions and excretions, would in turn act in concert with the disturbing agent or agents, and thus still greater derange- ments of the solids and fluids would be produced. 666 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, Another theory may account for the changes, and that is, that the poison or poisons acted primarily upon one or both the grand portions of the nervous systems, and the cerebro- spinal and sympathetic systems, singly or combined, in turn al- tered the actions of the organs and apparatus, and the secretions and excretions, and chemical and physical actions, over which they presided. In the present state of Medical science, we are not able to de- cide positively upon the truth of these theories, because the ultimate facts are wanting. What is the poison or poisons which we have assumed to exist and act upon the organs and tissues, solids and fluids? What is the relation of these substan- ces, physically, chemically, physiologically and pathologically, to the cerebro-spinal and sympathetic systems, to the blood cor- puscles and elements of the blood, organic and mineral, and to the organs, tissues, and secretions and excretions? In other words, what physical, chemical, physiological and pathological changes are they capable of producing on the solids and fluids of the human body, and what effects would these changes have upon the development and action of the vital and nervous forces? These questions have not as yet been answered. Until they are answered, we will broach our hypotheses as hypotheses, and not as truth.* The destruction of the colored corpuscles the golden color of the serum the slate color of the liver upon the exterior, and bronze color in the interior the color of the bile the absence of grape sugar from the structures of the liver the slate color of the spleen and the disorganized state of its tissues, and the inability of its pulp to change from the dark reddish-brown to the arterial color, gave decided evidence that this was a case of malarial fever. There were, however, other symptoms and other lesions, which indicated that there was something besides malarial fever. The cerebral and nervous symptoms the continued febrile excitement without intermission the loose state of the bowels the unusual action of a small dose of castor oil the enlarged and congested glands of Peyer, and solitary glands of the intes- tines indicated the presence of typhoid fever. The history of the case, (the recent attack of intermittent fe- ver,) and the fact that the glands of Peyer showed the marks of recent, only partially developed, inflammation and pathological * These relations of the Nervous System to Febrile Phenomena have been dis- cussed, at length, in an Essay, (now in type for the 11th volume of the Transac- tions,) read before the American Medical Association, at Washington, D. C, May 5th, 1858, by Henry F. Campbell, M. D.[Edts. Southern Medical and Surgical Journal. 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 667 changes, and not the changes produced by typhoid fever of only moderate standing, lead us to the conclusion that the remittent fever preceded, or was at least simultaneous with the appearance of the typhoid fever. The treatment of this case was radically different from that of all the cases of intermittent and remittent fevers, which we have as yet recorded. The typhoid symptoms, masked to a great extent those of remittent fever, and our diagnosis was partially, but not wholly incorrect. The plan of treatment was correspondingly partial and incorrect. We considered; and treated the disease as un- complicated typhoid fever, when we should have considered and treated it as typhoid and remittent fevers combined. The ma- larial fever was left entirely out of view, and marched on speed- ily and unchecked to a fatal issue. The true mode of treatment would have been the free admin- istration of sulphate of quinia, stimulants (brandy, carbonate of ammonia, and oil of turpentine,) and nutritious, stimulating diet (wine-whey, milk-punch and beef and mutton soups, and arrow-root), and the application of revulsives. Purgatives should have been rigidly avoided. If this mode of treatment had been pursued, it is probable that the patient would have had a chance of recovery. We will now proceed to consider several cases, which illus- trate in a forcible manner, the fact which we have stated, and demonstrated in several previous articles in this journal, that in malarial fever the blood undergoes profound alterations. Case XXX. Irishman age 26: height 5 feet 11 inches; weight 170 lbs. ; black hair; black eyes; full, dark-brown beard and mustache. Has been in America (New York) nine years, and in Savannah three months. During this time, he has fol- lowed, steadily, the occupation of a baker. Sept. 11th, 12 o'clock M. Has just entered the hospital with remittent fever. His pulse is accelerated, but feeble, and his complexion shows the effects of malarial fever. Says that he has been sick for one week: has been living near the Albany and Gulf railroad, in a low, malarious situation. Under the action of sulphate of quinia and stimulants, the febrile excitement disappeared in the course of four days. The patient, however, was left in a very feeble condition complain- ed of great weakness; his pulse was feeble, the action of the brain slow, and he had a peculiarly disagreeable smell, which was not permanently removed, either by water or by a change of clothing. Under the action of tonics, he recovered sufficient- ly to walk about the ward ; but continued, however, weak, low . spirited, and indisposed to action. y.i. vol. nv. vo. x. 37 663 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, Sept. 27th. Complained of a want of action upon his bowels. A mild cathartic was administered. Sept. 28th. lias a cough. The wind has been from the North- east for some time, and the weather has been cool and damp, and epidemic catarrh is prevailing. About two-thirds of the patients in the hospital are suffering with the influenza. This patient was up, and about the wards, assisting and nursing the patients, all this day. He was up and about, when I went the rounds of the wards, at 9 o'clock P. M. Shortly after this he complained of oppression, difficulty of breathing, and loss of muscular power. Sept. 29th, 9 o'clock A. M. During the night, took a sudden and remarkable change for the worse. Respiration spasmodic, and sounds as if the air-cells, bronchial tubes and trachea, con- tained lar^e quantities of fluid loud rattling sound in the throat. The churning, rattling, gurgling, crackling sounds of the lungs and trachea, are very loud, audcan be distinctly heard over the upper wards of the hospital. Muscular power com- pletely exhausted, lies upon his back, and is unable to turn upon either side. Surface of extremities cold ; surface of trunk cool, several degrees below the normal standard. The temperature of the extremities does not differ essentially from that of the sur- rounding medium. The expression of his eyes and counten- ance, and his efforts to converse, show that he is intelligent. He is, however, entirely unable to articulate or expectorate. Sinapisms were applied to the extremities, epigastric region and chest, and stimulants were administered freely. These did not produce any beneficial effects did not arouse the circula- tion, and did notincreasc the animal temperature, because the supply of oxygen, necesrary for the chemical changes which generated the pl^sical, muscular and nervous forces, was cut off. The mustards scarcely reddened the skin. The patient continued in this state, with a gradual diminu- tion of power, until 1 o'clock A. M. the next morning when the painful respiratory sounds were hushed in death. (3). Autopsy 8 hours after death Exterior. Body in good condition, not emaciated limbs full and round ; muscles of trunk and extremities covered by a thick layer of fat; face and hands sallow and sun-burnt; surface of the skin which had been covered by the clothes was fair. Head. Dura-mater presented the usual appearance. Arach- noid membrane transparent; blood vessels of pia-mater filled with blood. When the dura-mater was removed, an ulcer in the substance of the brain was discovered, occupying a position near the centre of the superior surface of the left hemisphere of the cerebrum. This ulcer was three-fourths of an inch in length, 1858.] Joras, on Malaria! Fever. 669 half of an incli in breadth, and about one-eighth of an inch in depth. The walls were thickened and much harder than the surrounding brain. The blood-vessels of the surrounding pia- mater and brain were congested with blood, and there was an effusion of a small quantity of bloody serum betweeu the arach- noid and pia-mater, in the immediate neighborhood of the ulcer, but nowhere else. The appearance of the ulcer, and the conges- tion of the blood-vessels around, by no means accounted for the death of the patient. The ulcer appeared to be of long stand- ing. Tne thickened walls, the absence of pus, and the sound state of the structures of the brain around, show, not only that the ulcer was of long standing, but also that it was rapidly healing. The existence of this ulcer will account, in part, for the dull, lethargic state of the intellectual faculties, but not for the death of the patient. The ventricles of the brain contained a small quantity of clear serum. The structures of the brain presented the usual consist- ence and appearance. C/iest. Heart, normal in size: the left ventricle contained a large, light yellow fibrinous clot, attached to the chordae ten- dineoe and earn eae column a?, and extending through the ariculo- ventricular opening into the auricle. This clot was firm in texture, and weighed one ounce. The left ventricle contained a small light yellow clot. The aorta also contained a small flattened, riband-like, light yel- low clot. These clots were evidently formed previously to death, when the circulation was exceedingly feeble. Lungs. The lungs were greatly inflated, and did not collapse in the slightest degree when the air was admitted into the pleura. They were congested with blood, and resembled liver. When handled, they were fouud to be remarkably heavy, and felt more like liver than lungs. When cut, the air-cells, and large and small bronchial tubes, were found to be filled with serous fluid and numerous fine bubbles of air. When the lungs were squeezed, pints of this serous fluid flowed out. In many por- tions of the lungs the serous fluid was clear in others it was reddish. The fluid resembled serum in all respects, and was not mucus. Here, then, we have the cause of the death of this patient. He was drowned. Abdominal Cavity. Stomach, pale and perfectly healthy in appearance. Intestinal canal, from the stomach to the anus, pale and healthy in appearance. Liver. The normal reddish-brown color of the liver was changed in most parts to a mixture of light bronze and light olive. In several places the color of the liver resembled the 670 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, normal color. In two circular spots, about three inches in di- ameter, the liver was of a dark-bluish, slated color, like that of a recent case of malarial fever. The cut surface of the liver ap- proached more nearly to the normal celor than the exterior. The blood of the liver, after exposure to the atmosphere, assum- ed a red, arterial color. It is evident, from this examination, that the structures of the liver were recovering from the effects of the malarial fever, and the organ was regaining its normal color. Spleen slate colored, enlarged and softened. The pulp of the spleen dark purplish brown. It did not change to the red arterial color, so rapidly as the pulp of healthy spleens. The change of color, however, was much greater than that of the pulp of the spleen in a recent case of malarial fever. This organ, like the liver, appeared to be recovering from the effects of malarial fever. Kidneys healthy. We believe that we have now all the facts necessary for a rational explanation of the phenomena presented by this case. The malarious poison and its effects had produced profound alterations in the blood and capillaries, and liver and spleen, and secondarily affected the nervous system. The patient, al- though weak and lethargic on account of these pathological alterations, and the ulcer upon the brain, was nevertheless in a fair way of recovery. The alimentary canal had resumed its healthy actions, the liver and spleen were fast recovering, and he was gaining strength daily. We can safely assert that, if no other disease had occurred, the lesion of the left hemisphere of the brain, and the effects of the malarial poison, would not have proved fatal. In this state of slow convalescence, the patient was suddenly seized with the prevailing influenza. The mucous membrane of the bronchial tubes and air-cells was irritated. The irritation of the mucous membrane was followed by congestion of the blood-vessels and capillaries of the lungs. The capillaries were in an enfeebled state, and the blood in a watery, altered condi- tion. Healthy limited inflammation was impossible. Diffused inflammation of all the structures of the lungs resulted. The serous portion of the blood poured into the air-cells, bronchial tubes and trachea the supply of oxj-gen was in a great measure cut off the chemical changes of the solids and fluids, in a cor- responding degree, checked the physical forces, heat and elec- tricity, and the nervous force, developed by these chemical changes, were, as a necessary consequence, correspondingly di- minished. The immediate cause of the death of this patient was a depri- vation of oxygen, and perhaps the partial retention of the 1S58.] JONKS, Oil Malarial / 071 carbonic acid gas. We may Bay with truth that he was drown- ed. The attack of malaria] fever appeared at the time to be mild, and it is highly probable that all its effects were aggravated, and a fetal issue determined bv the injurious effects upon the con- stitution of this patient, of his occupation and previous habits. He was a baker. As a general rule, this elass are unhealthy, and easily succumb to disease. This will be illustrated at a fu- ture time, by another fatal case of remittent I'cxvr, occurring in this cl The only two bakers which entered the hospital whilst it was in my charge, died from the effects of malarial fever, and their occupation. The following remarks of C. Turner Thackrah, have an inter- esting bearing on this case: ''Bakers are generally pale and unhealthy. The temperoture in which they are placed is seldom below 80, and often as high as 100. The heat of the oven is rarely lower than 180. "Bakers are subject to disorders of the stomach, to cough and rheumatism.* The two former of these two affections arise, I conceive, from the dust which is largely inhaled. "In the Plague of Venice, we find, from Mercurialis, that the bakers, and other persons in similar employments, suffered most. In the Diet, des Sciences Medicales, it is stated that during the Plague at Marseilles, in 1720, all the bakers died. The debility produced by great heat, probably induces this susceptibility to disease. "Bakers work by night; and from this change in the time of sleep, they have been supposed to suffer as much as from the dust of employ. Observation, however, on the health of watch- men, and others, does not support the opinion." {TJte Effects of Arts, Trades and Professions, on Health and Longevity, by 0. :r Thackrah, Esq. London, 1832, pp. 133-134. Cask XXXI. Irishman laborer and boatman: age 30; height 6 feet; weight 150 lbs.; tall, spare frame, light hair, blue i\ pale, sallow complexion. Has been running on (lat-boats and rafts, up anddownthe Savannah river, between Savannah and Augusta, for the last twelve months. Habits irregular addicted to the use of ardent spirits. Says that his constitution has suffered much from the exposure to the hot sun and night air on the river, and also from the intemperate use of ardent spirits. * In a report ofa Huml. . IOD, it aj[).-:i!s that rlu-umat '< t I the boken l one-fourteenth of the c&binet*makere, and one- f the tailors, Raadicei graredii morbi, at plearitidet, imonue JUmazzim. MenU says a great number of bakers ai -j.itaU." 672 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, Sept. 20th. ."A flat, laden with wood, which he was bringiug to the city, was sunk in shoal water." He was all day in the water, up to his waist, fishing out the wood. This night had a chill, followed by fever. The fever went off before morn- ing, and on the next day was employed again in the water. The chill returned at night, and was followed by fever. Has been sick, without any medical attendance, until the present time, September 27th. Pulse 106 ; respiration accelerated, la- bored; skin hot and dry; countenance distressed has a hag- gard, anxious look; complains of great thirst, of pains in his back and bones, and of great exhaustion. His pulse, although rapid, is feeble, and his forces appear to be completely exhaust- ed. His fever remitted slightly on the next day, but returned on the 29th inst. Under the action of large doses of sulphate of quinia, stimulants, sinapisms, snake-root tea, and milk punch and wrine whey, and brandy and arrow-root, the febrile excite- ment subsided, the urine regained its normal hue, and on the 4th inst. his pulse was 70, and respiration 18 temperature nor- mal, and function of skin normal ; and although apparently very feeble, was able to be up and about the ward. During tnis attack, the saliva was acid, and the urine copious: from 20,000 to 25,000 grains were exereted daily. The specific gravity was correspondingly low, from 1012 to 1014. The abundant discharge of urine was due to the large quantities of water which his thirst led him to take, and also to the diuretic action of the infusion of snake-root. Throughout the attack his pulse was feeble and his forces greatly exhausted, and he required close attention and the free administration of stimulants. October 5th. This morning absconded, clandestinely, from the hospital. Oct. 8th. Has returned. Pulse 120; skin hot and dry; res- piration accelerated, labored; complains of great pain in the back of his head and neck these parts are swollen, and painful upon pressure. As the 5th inst., on which he left the hospital, was the day of election of the city officers, it seems probable that he may have received a blow upon the head. This, however, he stoutly de- nies. $. Cold-water dressing to back of head and neck. Oct. 9th. His head has been shaved, and the tissues above the occipital bone, and above the left temporal and parietal bones, are swollen, and the skin looks black and is ulcerated in several places. The swelling extends down along the neck, and reach- es the superior portion of the left shoulder. To the finger, the swollen parts feel as if there was a collection of fluid beneath the skin. Says that he is suffering intense pain. Countenance distressed and haggard; pulse 128; skin hot and dry; respira- tion thoracic, labored, accelerated. 1858.] JoXES, on Malarial Fever. 673 Oct. 10th. Pulse 160, feeble; skin hot; respiration spasmodic and labored. In addition to the intense pain in the back of his neck and left side of the head, he complains of intense pain in his chest. The pain in the chest cuts short the respiration and renders it spasmodic. His countenance is expressive of great agony and terror. Oct. 11th. Pulse 140, rapid and very feeble; respiration 24r labored, thoracic, spasmodic. The pain in his chest is intense: lie groans and cries out at every breath. The expression of his countenance is indicative of great agony, terror and horror. AVas restless and delirious during the night, and during his de- lirious visions spoke and acted as if he was engaged in mortal combat. Has no hope of himself, and refuses all medicine. The back of neck and back and side of head is much swollen, and when pressed with the hand there is a distinct fluctuation. Hoping that a discharge of the pus, or fluid, would afford re- lief a free crucial incision was made at the most prominent part of the swelling. Nothing but blood issued. The hemorrhage was so great, that it was necessary to check it, by the applica- tion to the wound, of a compress, saturated with the tincture of muriate of iron. Oct. 12th. During the night was delirious would rip out the most terrible oaths, and cry out that the devils were after him had beaten him severely, and were endeavoring to throw him out of the windows. At other times, he would speak and act as if he had been in mortal combat, and was wreaking vengeance upon an imaginary antagonist. These actions excited the sus- picion, that the injury on the back and side of the head was received from a blow. The patient died at 1 o'clock A. M., this morning. (4). Autopsy 9 hours after Death. Exterior. Body much emaciated; back and left side of neck much swollen. The inferior surface of the trunk and neck pre- sented a mottled appearance, from the settling of the blood by- gravitation, in the most dependent parts of the body. On the left buttock, just below the position of the glenoid cavity, was a black, gangrenous spot, about one inch in diameter. An in- cision showed that the change of color was confined entirely to the skin. On the right leg, there were the marks of an exten- sive ulcer, upon the skin covering the tibia. The cicatrix presented a purplish, angry color. When incisions were made into the swollen pans of his neck, * and back and side of head, the spaces between the muscles, the meshes of the fibrous tissue surrounding and connecting togeth- er the muscles and the fibrous tissue of the skin, were found to be completely filled and distended with golden-colored serum. 674 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [October, Head. Dura mater healthy. Arachnoid membrane transpar- ent throughout its extent over the hemispheres of the brain. At the base of the brain, it was slightly opalescent. Blood-vessels of pia mater not\ more filled with blood than usual. The cortical and medullar^ substances of the cerebrum, and of the cerebellum, the pons variolii, the medulla oblongata, and superior portion of the spinal marrow, appeared natural in consistence and color. Ventricles of brain contained f3iv. of golden colored serum. The superior longitudinal sinus of the dura mater contained a golden yellow elongated clot, the diameter of which was about one half that of the longitudinal sinus. Chest. Heart somewhat enlarged. Pericardium contained f li, of golden serum. All the cavities of the heart contained golden colored clots. The right auricle had a large golden colored clot, which was attached to the carneae column ae of the ventricle, and the chordae tendineae of the tricuspid valves, and extended through the auriculo-ventricular opening into the right auricle. The left ventricle and auricle also contained a large golden colored clot, which was in like manner attached to the carneae columnar and chordae tendineae of the auriculo-ven- tricular valves. The aorta, carotids and pulmonary arteries contained elongated golden -colored clots, having diameters nearly equal to those of the arteries. All these clots were firm, and appeared to be almost organised. Lungs. The lungs did not collapse when the cavity of the thorax was opened. Exterior surface of the pleura, covering the lungs and lining the walls of the thorax, covered with co- agulable lymph of a golden color. Adhesions were numerous, but as yet not strong on account of the soft, fresh condition of the coagulable lymph, which was evidently but recently effused, probably within the last 70 hours. This inflammation of the pleura accounts for the severe pain in the chest during life. The lungs were much congested with blood, and when cut they resembled liver. The bronchial tubes and air-cells contain- ed much serum. The amount of serum was much less, however, than in the previous Case XXX. The anterior surface of the middle lobule of the right lung had a dark blackish red spot, about one inch in diameter, which resembled at first sight the wound from a sharp instrument. The examination of the exterior of the chest, and interior surface of the ribs, showed neither wound nor fracture of the ribs. When closely examined, this portion of the lung was found to be more congested and solidified than the surrounding portions, and would in all probability, if the patient had sur- vived, been the seat of an abscess. Liver, Liver of a light bronze color. The color is lighter 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 675 than that of a recent attack of remittent fever, but resembles the color of a liver which was recovering from the effects of re- mittent fever. Cut surface of a light bronze color, and of not such a deep and decided bronze as the liver of a patient who had died from a recent attack of malarial fever. The right lobe of the liver had upon its under surface a slate colored spot three inches in diameter, which resembled in all respects the liver of a recent case of malarial fever. "When an incision was made across this spot, the cut surface presented for one-sixth of an inch, the true malarial hue, below this it ap- proached more nearly the normal hue. The liver appeared to be somewhat enlarged. The weight, however, was not ascer- tained. Its structure did not appear to be materially altered. Spleen. Much enlarged, and of a dark slate color. Although much softer than a normal spleen, it was much harder than a spleen of a recent case of malarial fever. This organ, like the liver, appeared to be just recovering from the effects of malarial fever. Weight of the spleen, grains 13562, equals ozs. 31. Kidneys appeared to be somewhat enlarged. The calices, infundibula and pelvis of the kidney, contained a fluid resem- bling (to the naked eye), in all respects, pus. Alimentary Canal. Stomach enormously distended with gas. Mucous membrane pale and healthy in appearance. Small in- testines and colon healthy in appearance to the naked eye. The following appears to be the cause and history of this last attack : The patient left the hospital when he was in an exceedingly feeble condition, after a severe attack of remittent fever. It is probable that upon election day he indulged his taste for ardent spirits. The wind was from the northeast, and the weather damp and cool, with occasional scuds of rain and mist. Expo- sure to this cool damp wind, fresh from the ocean, and the low grounds and swamps of Georgia and South Carolina, not only during the day, but probably during the night also, in a state of intoxication, induced a severe attack of pleura-pneumonia. The swelling on the back of his head, was due, either to a blow, or to inflammation in the cellular tissue and muscles, an- alogous to the inflammation of the lungs, and probably arising from the same cause. The large amount of golden -colored se- rum which was effused into the cellular tissue of the neck and head, indicated the altered condition of the blood. The deter- mination of the true mode of treating this case was exceedingly difficult. Here was a patient whose blood had been depraved, organs impaired, and forces exhausted, by dissipation, intemperance, and exposure, and by a severe attack of malarial fever, sud- denly attacked with pleuro-pneumonia of both lungs, and a N. 6. VOL. XIV. NO. X. 38 676 Harrison. Case of Extra- Uterine Pregnancy. [October, painful inflammation of the cellular tissue and muscles of the neck and head. The usual treatment for pleurisy and pneu- monia was impossible. A single bleeding would have taken life immediately, or at all evenis hastened the fatal issue. He could bear neither purgation, starvation, nor tartar emetic. The only rational plan of treatment was to support the consti- tution and strengthen and relieve, if possible, the congestion of the internal organs, by revulsives. The only hope was that nature would work her own cure. This was the plan of treatment which we adopted. Many other points of interest in this case might be noticed, but we defer them until a future time, when we hope to gener- alize all the facts and phenomena observed. (To be continued.) ARTICLE XXIII. Medical and Medico-legal Notes of a Case of Extra- Uterine Preg- nancy. By G. Harrison, M. D., of Macon, Ga. On the 10th of June last, I was called to see a servant girl, of one of my patrons, who was suffering from abdominal or uterine pains, at intervals of six or eight minutes, indicating that she was threatened with a miscarriage. I judged from her size, in a lying position, that she was near the full period of utero-gesta- tion ; but on investigation I found that she was (according to her and her mistress' statements) only about the fifth month. Learning these facts, I immediately gave a teaspoonful of lauda- num, which soon arrested the pains. After leaving,. I heard nothing more from her until the month of August, two months after I was first called to the case ; when I was sent for again about three o'clock in the morning, to see the girl, with a request, that I would be in great haste, that she was thought to be dying. On my arrival, I found her dead, A report was soon put in circulation that she had been killed as there had been a difficulty the day before between her and her mistress, who had stricken her several blows. This gave rise to a post-mortem examination. After the necessary pre- parations, the abdomen was opened, by a crucial incision through its walls, exposing to view a great quantity of blood, which was carefully removed by the sponge, when a foetus was seen, sepa- 1858.] HARRI30X. Case of Extra- Uterine Pregnancy. 677 rated from the cord, lying loosely with the other contents of the abdomen. The foetus was removed and examined; no marks of injury could be detected on it, and it was concluded, judging from its size and general appearance, that it could not be more than a five-month child. The examination was con- tinued, and it was found to be an extra-uterine fcetation of the ovarian class. The uterus, with its entire appendages, were re- moved, and we now have them together with the foetus in a state of preservation. The uterus presents no unnatural appear- ance possibly a little enlarged. Two facts connected with this case deserve notice, which I will give, before proceeding to remark upon the general interest of the case. Attached to the placenta were two ligaments, in- dependent of the cord, one about six inches long, connecting with the transverse colon; the other about four, connecting with the body, just above the point of the ilium. How these attachments happened to be made at such remote distances is a matter of some little astonishment, while other parts were so much more convenient, as might have served the same purpose is left as a matter of speculation for the curious. In a medico-legal point of view, this case has become one of some interest from the fact, that Rogers, the owner of the wo- man, refused to pay five hundred dollars, a balance due for the purchase of the woman and her two children, alleging that he had bought her and paid a high price for her, because of her pregnancy, and the future prospects of raising children from her. Rogers alleged in his plea that the woman was warranted to him sound, and produced a warrantee of soundness, a fact which defendant did not pretend to den}-. Yet the seeds of death had been sown anterior to the purchase, and of right he ought not to pay any more. The reason for the plea was not based on the unsoundness of the woman, but upon the fact that she had in her system at the time of sale that which would in- evitably produce death. To prevent a suit the parties agreed to eave it to arbitration, under the late law, known particularly as "Judge Cone's arbitration law." A jury of three very intelli- gent gentlemen was selected, the witnesses were summoned and sworn, and their testimony taken. After which, Thomas P. Stubbs, Esq., attorney for Rogers, proceeded to the investiga- tion of the facts as proved. It was proved by several witnesses 678 Harrison. Case of Extra- Uterine Pregnancy. [October, that the woman was represented by Mrs. JefYers, her former owner, as being pregnant at the time of sale, which induced her' to ask more for her than she otherwise would have done. In addition to the testimony there present, Mr. Stubbs introduced the sayings of the woman to her physician when called to visit her professionally, to show that she was pregnant at the time of sale, judging from the ordinary symptoms usually taken as the best evidence in such casesr viz : suppression of the menstrual flux, which had ceased on her two months before the sale morning sickness, etc. He next proved by Dr. Fitzgerald, who assisted in the post mortem examination, and myself, that the woman was pregnant and of the class above specified, and under such circumstances death was inevitable. Judge Nisbet, the counsel for Mrs. Jeffers, admitted the war- rantee of soundness, but insisted that the negro was sound at the time of sale, and that all the facts taken together showed no breach of warrantee. He showed that the kind of pregnancy was no evidence that she was not sound, but rather good evi- dence that she was a healthy woman. He also proved that a suppression of the menstrual flux was not always an infallible sign of pregnancy, and that most or all of the symptoms men- tioned in this case, might have arisen from a suppression, pro- duced from other causes. He insisted upon the rejection in toto, of all the sayings of the woman, and showed from the sta- tute laws of Georgia, that her testimony was inadmissible and could not be relied on, even in this case. He, therefore, con- tended that the plea was not sustained ; putting it upon its own merits, assuming that the woman was pregnant at the time of sale, a fact which they had failed to establish, insisting that the suppression had been produced from another cause. The examination of the witnesses being through, Mr. Stubbs proceeded briefly to argue the case before the jury: he com mented upon the testimony, showing that he considered that it made out his case, and thought that he ought certainly to be entitled to a verdict, saying nothing about the sayings of the woman, which he contended should be taken by all means in this case. He urged this fact forcibly on the minds of the jury, and in support of his argument, produced cases which had beer decided by the Supreme Courts of Kentucky and Tennessee & 1858.] Harrison. Case of Extra- Uterine Pregnancy. 679 and a case by the Supreme Court of this State, where the say- ings of negroes were admitted to prove the existence of long standing disease the doctors who testified being allowed to use the statements of the negroes when called to visit them, to com- plete their testimony. He concluded his argument by pleading the justness of his cause, and asked the jury to release him from the farther payment of the purchase money, as he thought he had clearly shown that the seeds of death had been sown prior to the sale of the negro. Judge Nisbet commenced his argument by admitting, that if Mr. Stubbs could prove positively that the seeds of death had been sown, in this case, prior to the sale, it would be good grounds for the release of defendant from all liability, but in this he had failed. He said, that he had not proven this fact by any witness, for all had testified according to the sayings of the negro and Mrs. Jeffers, which, as to the negro, was not good, as he would proceed to show. He insisted upon rejection of the sayings of the negro entirely, and would now show from the best authority that the woman could not have been preg- nant at the time Rogers bought her. He read from Ramsboth- am's Midwifery to show that ovarian pregnancies seldom if ever passed the second or third month, rarely reaching the fifth, and never exceeding the sixth. He read a number of extracts from different authors, showing the strength of his position, and con- cluded his argument by a few extracts from Beck's Medical Ju- risprudence and a short comment on the statute laws of Georgia, against the propriety of negro testimony as against white per- sons, as rebutal to the decisions of the courts, read by the oppo- site side ; that the facts set forth in the plea were not sustained ; that Rogers ought to comply with his contract, and pay the balance of the purchase money. I have the opinion of two distinguished gentlemen, both teachers of medicine, one saying that he believed the woman was pregnant at the time of sale; circumstances and appearan- ces, and the woman's statement (which is " good evidence in medicine if not in law,") give sufficient ground for the belief; but think that the arbitrators did right in requiring Rogers to pay, putting it to his charge as a bad and unfortunate specula- tion. The other gives no opinion relative to the pregnancy, but believes that the verdict ought to have been different ; be- 680 La Taste. Remarks on Effects of Honey. October, a cause of the high price paid for the property, and that in justice a division of the loss would have been equitable, since the whole would have fallen on the other party, had she not been fortun- ate in selling. Had the case to be tried again, I would give it as my opinion positively, that it was a seven months' pregnancy, taking all the circumstances into view, notwithstanding most of the author- ities indeed, all which I have consulted, take the opposite grounds and say that ovarian pregnancies rarely, if ever, pass the fifth month. ARTICLE XXIV. Remarks on ike Alleged Deleterious Effects of Honey. By YlCTOR La Taste, Pharmaceutist, Augusta Ga. Gentlemen : I have been making various observations, enquiries, &c, with a view of solving the question, whether honey is, within itself, a poisonous substance, but must acknowledge a total failure up to the present time. I know that there is a prevailing opinion in favor of the affirmative of the question ; but, then, is that sufficient to establish the fact, any more than that turnips will grow better, or soap more successfully made, if the seed of the one are planted, or the ingredients of the other" mixed in parti- cular reference to certain stages of the moon? I hope, in this enlightened age, such superstitious notions are confined to the illiterate. In the progress of my investigations, I addressed a note to the Editor of the " Druggist's Circular," and asked to append his answer, which may be found in the last number oi that excellent journal. "You may be correct in your opinion, that the notion that honey is sometimes poisonous is one of the popular errors of the times. It is perhaps difficult to prove it to ]oe so ; but common opinions have generally some foundation in fact. It is known to most persons that the quality and flavor of honey is modinec by the sources from which it is gathered. It may therefore be logically inferred that the change in quality and flavor may be so great as to render it pernicious to human health, when it it used as food. What the changes are that take place in the or gans of the bee, we cannot know; but that changes do tak< place is extremely probable, as the saccharine matter of the 1858.] Epithelial Cancer of the Anus and Rectum. 681 nectaries of flowers are not exactly identical with the character- istic properties of honey. Yet the change effected in the elabo- ration of honey, is not sufficient to eliminate all the peculiarities of the flowers from which the materials are obtained. "Several cases of poisoning, from eating honey, are recorded in the New Jersey Medical Reporter, for Nov. 1852. A few cases of this kind are not sufficient, certain ly, to establish the fact, but they lead to strong suspicions. The argument, that honey may sometimes be poisonous, is one of the post hoc, ergo propter hoc kind." All that the learned Editor has said may be strictly true ; still I am of the same opinion that honey is quite harmless ; and I tli ink so, because my experience with the bee teaches me that this insect has too much sagacity not to know the difference between those flowers having noxious properties and those that have not. It is also true, that naturalists differ as to whether honey is a secretion of the bee, or whether it exists already formed in plants. I believe that it does exist already formed, and deposited by the bee just as it was gathered. If this were not so, the honey gathered from the buckwheat, and that from the white clover, would have the same appearance whereas, that from the latter is much whiter: proving, also, that whate- ver chemical change may take place in the stomach of the bee, if any, that the quality of the honey does not partake of the change. But leaving all theory out of the question, does it not appear that if honey is poisonous, cases of poisoning ought to be more frequent, taking into account the quantity that is used? And again, when you physicians prescribe the use of honey, do you do it with the same understanding as when arsenic is pre- scribed, or do you recommend it as an innocent adjunct? I would be glad to have your opinion in full. Epithelial Cancer of the Anus and Rectum. By T. B. Curlixg, Esq., F.R.S., Surgeon to the London Hospital. The parts of the body most prone to epithelial cancer are those in which a junction takes place between the skin and mu- cous membrane. We see this in the lips, and in the extrem- ity of the penis, and in the prepuce. The anus, though less frequently attacked than these parts, is nevertheless liable to this form of cancer. Its occurrence, however, at the ver^e of the rectum, and within the bowel, has been scarcely noticed by 682 Epithelial Cancer of the Anus and Rectum. [October, writers, and there are no satisfactory accounts of the results of operations performed for its removal from this situation. This may be owing, in part, to the dise^le being somewhat rare, but is more probably due to the circumstance that epithelial cancer has been distinctly recognised only in recent years. The fol- lowing cases in which growths of this character were successful- ly excised seem deserving of record, as a contribution to our knowledge of this disease : Case 3. Epithelial Cancer of the Rectum cured by Excision after repeated Failures of Treatment. Mrs. M , aged forty, an English lady married to a German, but without having borne children, consulted me in April, 1855, on account of an obsti- nate disease of the rectum. On examination, I found a large, elevated and slightly indurated sore, occupying the whole of the right side and part of the back part of the rectum, just with- in the sphincter muscle, and extending up the bowel the distance of about an inch and a half. The sore was somewhat larger than a crown -piece. There was slight bleeding from the surface after the removal of the finger. The chief symptom she complained of was a frequent smarting pain, which became more severe after an evacuation. At this time there was usually a slight discharge of blood. There was no obstruction in the passage. The lady looked pale and anxious, but in other respects seemed free from disease. It appeared that the complaint of the rectum was first noticed two years before. At that time she was resid- ing in Germany, and she consulted the late Professor Siebold, of Jena (Saxe- Weimar), who excised the diseased part in Sep- tember, 1853, whilst she was under the influence of chloroform. She recovered slowly from the operation, and remained appar- ently well until July, 1854, when a return of the disease was noticed, and the complaint shortly became as painful as before. She subsequently went to Paris, and in August placed herself under the care of a German surgeon practising there. He made repeated applications of a caustic nature to the sore, and finding them unsuccessful, at length proposed the actual cautery, which was used in February, 1855, the patient being placed under the influence of chloroform. She remained under the care of this gentleman, altogether six months, but according to her account, she derived no benefit from his treatment, and was not free from the shooting-pains any part of the time. She was induced, therefore, to come to London for further advice, and at the re- commendation of Swayne of Clifton, consulted me. By getting the patient to strain, and by introducing my fin- ger into the vagina, and pressing in a direction to evert the sore, I managed to get a tolerably good view of the part. It was an irregular, spongy-looking ulcer, of a deep-red colour. 1858.] Epithelial Cancer of the Anus and Rectum. 683 Judging from the characters of the sore, I had little doubt that this was a case of epithelial cancer of the rectum, and that the disease had been only imperfectly removed in the various pro- ceedings for its extirpation. After careful consideration, I pro- posed the operation of excision, but considering the failure of the treatment previously adopted, I advised her husband to take another opinion. Mr. Hilton, a few days afterwards, met me in consultation, and fully agreed with me that the disease could be entirely removed with the knife. The disappointment which they had experienced naturally led both the patient and her husband to distrust a repetition of excision. I consequent- ly saw nothing more of them for a month, during which period they sought other advice, and also communicated my proposal to Professor Siebold, who wrote and recommended her to sub- mit to the operation, when they again applied to me. May 30th, 1855. The bowels having been well relieved by castor oil, the patient took chloroform, and I then excised the growth, taking care to cut wide of the disease so as to extirpate all the morbid parts. In doing so, I removed nearly the whole of the sphincter muscle on the right side. By carrying the point of the forefinger of the left hand beyond the upper margin of the ulcer, and cutting over it, I made sure of excising com- pletely the portion of the disease which was deeply seated in the rectum. Several large arteries which bled freely were at once secured. This was attended with a little difficulty, owing to their depth in the pelvis consequent on the retraction of the levator ani muscle. The wound was afterwards plugged with sponge. My friend, Mr. Hamilton, of the Richmond Hospital, Dublin, being in London, accompanied me to the operation, and gave me his valuable assistance. No unfavorable symp- tom followed. The wound healed very slowly, but steadily; and by August 9th, had quite closed. For some weeks after the operation, the patient lost the power of retaining the faeces; but it was regained by the time the wound closed, except when the bowels were much relaxed. The contraction at the anus was less than might be expected considering the amount of sub- stance, and of the sphincter musele removed. The aperture admitted the passage of the forefinger without difficulty. Nearly three years have elapsed since the operation ; and during this period I have repeatedly examined this lad}', who has naturally remained anxious respecting a recurrence of her disease. In February this year, the parts were quite sound. There was no warty growth, nor any appearance of a return of the disease. She experiences no pain in the part, and the pas- sage is free and ample. The diseased part, when examined in the microscope, exhib- ited the characters of epithelial cancer. 684 Epithelial Cancer of the Anus and Rectum. [October, Case 4. Epithelial Cancer of the Anus and Rectum removed by Excision. E. C , a stout, married woman, aged forty- nine, the mother of several children, of pale complexion, but in tolerable health, was admitted into the London Hospital, Janu- ary 11th, 1855, in consequence of a disease of the rectum. It appeared that she had suifered from what she believed to be piles for about sixteen years, and had been subject to bleedings. About three months before her admission, her surgeon, the late Mr. Aitkin, of Kiugsland, excised a tumour from the anus, which she described as being the size of a hen's egg. The part healed, but ofterwards ulcerated, giving rise to the present dis- ease. Since its formation, she had suffered sharp irregular pains in the part, and soreness during the passage of stools. None of her family had suffered from cancer. On examination I found an ulcerated sore occupying the right side of the anus, and extending some distance into the rectum. It was about the size of a crown -piece, and not very hard. Its edges were raised, ragged, and slightly overlapping; its surface irregular. A small piece detached from the sore, and examined in the mi- croscope, exhibited the characters of epithelial cancer. There were also some warty growths in the vicinity of the large sore, and on the opposite side of the bowel, but they were neither hard nor ulcerated; and I did not regard them as cancerous. On the day after her admission, the bowels having been well relieved, I excised the cancerous growth, taking away a consid- erable portion of the sptjincter muscle on the right side. There was smart haemorrhage from several vessels, their orifices being retracted and deeply seated. With some trouble they were secured, and the wound was afterwards plugged. She bore the operation very well without chloroform, which she objected to take. An astringent draught with opium was given after the operation, the bowels remaining unrelieved until the fifth day after the operation, when they were acted on by castor oil. She quite lost the sharp pains, and the wound soon began to heal. The soft warts about the anus were touched with potassa fusa, under which application, repeated three or four times, they gra- dually disappeared. She was discharged from the hospital on the 14th of April, the wound being quite healed. The anus was contracted, but it readily allowed the passage of the fore- finger, and no difficulty was experienced in defecation. She was also able to retain her motions as before. There was still a strong disposition to warty growths about the anus; and after her discharge from the hospital, she returned occasionally to have the potassa fusa applied to them. A lotion of the nitrate of silver was also kept to the part. After a time she ceased to attend; and in January, 1856, she was again admitted in con- sequence of a mass of soft warts having sprung up close to the 1858.] dhelial Cancer of Ote Anus and Rectum. cicatrix at the anus. They were not ulcerated, and caused no pain ; but being apprehensive that they might undergo cancer- ous degeneration, 1 thought it desirable to remove them. Chlo- roform was given, and they were excised on the 23th. The tumour, on minute examination, proved to be simple epithelial growths, or hypertrophy of the normal elements of the part. The wound healed favourably, and she was discharged in the beginning of February, and recommended to keep a rather strong nitrate of silver lotion to the part. The tendency to warty productions in the skin above the anus, though partially restrained by the lotion, was, however, quite remarkable, and in September of the same }*ear she was admitted into the hospi- tal a third time, on account of fresh growths having arisen. They were slightly prominent, and exactly similar in character to those removed in January, and free from ulceration ; but she complained of their being painful. Allowance, however, must be made for their repeated recurrence having made her anxious and apprehensive of a return of the cancerous disease. The warts were removed this time by the repeated application of a caustic composed of muriate of antimony, one part; chloride of zinc, one part, and plaster of Paris, three parts. This composi- tion formed a sort of paste very convenient for use, but it caused a good deal of pain, which lasted some hours, and had to be alleviated by full doses of opium. She remained in the hospital until the middle of November. The warts had not entirely disappeared, but' she was anxious on account of her family, to return home. In February, 1657, I again admitted her on account of large flattened warty growths around the anus, in two considerable masses, and one small one. There was ulceration on the sur- face of one of the former, with some amount of induration, and this was the seat of a good deal of pain. On the 12th, I examined these growths, and at one spot near the verge of the anus, applied some strong nitric acid. The patient was under the influence of chloroform during the opera- tion. In a few days the nitrate of silver lotion was applied to the wound, which healed favourably, without further contraction of the orifice, and all pain ceased. There was afterwards some indication of a rising of fresh warty growths, but it was check- ed by the application of strong nitric acid. I should now have discharged my patient cured, but for some weeks a glandular swelling had been forming in the neck, on the left side, just beneath the lower jaw, and it ended in an a: . hich was opened on March 26th. About a week afterwards she was seized with erysipelas of the face, which unfortunately had a fatal termination on the 686 Epithelial Cancer of the Anus and Rectum. [October, 8tli of April. The body was examined, but there were no en- larged glands, indeed no internal organic disease. About thirty years ago, M. Lisfranc performed, in Paris, some bold operations for the removal of cancerous rectums. Those who witnessed these formidable excisions gave sad accounts of the results, such as death from haemorrhage or from peritonitis, and subsequent obliteration of the passage, but they reported no permanent successes. The operation was generally con- demned by British surgeons, and I know no instance of its repetition in this country. The objections justly made to the excision of cancers of the rectum do not apply, however, to cases of epithelial cancer at the extremity of the bowel, and the cases just related show that a considerable portion, not only of the anus, but even of the rectum itself, may be removed with a satisfactory result. Excision is, indeed, the treatment best adapted to the entire removal of an epithelial cancerous growth of any great size in this part. Powerful caustics, even the actu- al cautery, failed to obtain a cure in Case 3. There is this great advantage in the recourse to the knife, that the surgeon can make pretty sure of thoroughly removing all existing disease; whereas the extent of the operation of a caustic is somewhat uncertain ; it may destroy too much or too little. It may be objected that in Case 3, the first operation of excision was not successful, the disease having returned; but it seems highly probable that Professor Siebold was not then aware of the real nature of the lesion, and regarding it as an innocent growth, was not so careful to excise freely all the morbid parts. We h%ve some ground for this conclusion, not only from the rarity of the disease, but also from the circumstance that the distin- guished surgeon when appealed to, twenty months afterwards, for his opinion respecting a repetition of the operation which I then proposed, advised its performance. The length of time nearly three years in Case 3, and upwards of two years in Case 4 which elapsed after the operations, without a recurrence of the cancerous disease, is sufficient to show that in each instance the growth was entirely removed. Case 4 is remarkable also for the strong tendency which ex- isted to the formation of warty growths a tendency which was limited to the skin in the immediate vicinity of the contracted anus, and which did not implicate the rectum. Dr. Andrew Clark, who. examined the mass removed by operation in Janu- ary, 1856, a year after the excision of the epithelial cancer, had no hesitation in determining the simple character of the growths. They consisted of areolar tissue, hypertrophied papillae, and enormously accumulated epithelial cells of the cutis. From the fact that these elements had preserved their normal relations ; that the cells had not invaded the subjacent tissues; that there 1858.] Diseases of the Coecum. 687 were no nest, or granule cells, and no heterogeneous forms of any kind, it was inferred that the growth was innocent. The warts which sprang up afterwards were removed by escharotics, which caused considerable pain, and my experience of the action of caustic on morbid growths connected with the skin, convinc- es me that they produce, as in this instance, more suffering than the knife. It was very necessar}7 to get rid of these warty growths as they were renewed, not only on account of the irri- tation they produced, but also because of their liability to de- generate into cancerous disease. These cases show that a large portion of the sphincter muscle may be excised without seriously weakening the retentive pow- er of the anus, or contracting the orifice so as to produce any important impediment to the passage of stools. I am not acquainted with any recorded case in which a growth ascertained to be an epithelial cancer of the anus or rectum has been excised. It is very probable, however, that operations have, in some few instances, been performed for this disease. Thus, Mr. Herbert Mayo mentions having removed from a woman, forty years of age, a painful indurated ulcer, which extended round the rectum, half an inch within the anus. She died two years afterwards of abdominal inflammation, when the cicatrix had begun anew to ulcerate.* Dr. Bushe also states that he also excised a cancerous transformation which commenced, apparently at the verge of the anus, and was con- fined to an inch and a half of the intestine. The wound healed rapidly, and the patient's health afterwards improved, f In a future communication I shall adduce some more cases of epithe- lial cancer of the rectum, but which were unfit for operation. They will serve to illustrate further the character and progress of the disease. [London Lancet. On some of the Inflammatory and Obstructive Diseases of the Cozcxim ; with Remarks on the Abuse of Violent Purgatives. By W. R. Rogers, M. D. The author commences by alluding to the slight and cursory notices of these diseases in sjrstematic treatises on medicine, and how frequently they are confounded with essentially different diseases of the intestinal canal. They are of frequent occur- rence, are dangerous, and often fatal, and are characterized by a train of symptoms which render their recognition certain. He believes that the caecum may be the seat of fatal diseases without any other part of the digestive tube being implicated; and that Observations on Injuries and Diseases of the Rectum, 1833, p. 212. \ Treatise on the Anus and Rectum, p. 294. 688 Diseases of the Ccecum. [October, it often is first in the chain of causation of other disorders, with which it has been generally believed to be only accidentally re- lated, these evincing the most marked disturbance, while the caecum apparently exhibits but little disorder. Thus its diseases are not unfrequently mistaken for hysteritis, cystitis, enteritis, peritonitis, puerperal fever, and pelvic abscess. The author quotes Tiedemann and Graelin, Drs. Copland, Carpenter, and others, to prove the importance of the caecum in the animal economy, partaking of the nature of a stomach in the gramniv- orous and ruminating animals, and that it is the viscus in which the last act of digestion is performed, secreting an acid, albumin- ous, and solvent fluid, and also pouring out of its numerous follicles an unctuous and oily material, with hydro-sulphuretted gases, to be eliminated from the economy. Thus, like the lungs, kidney and skin, it is a depurating organ, so that when costive- ness exists there is danger of these excretions being reabsorbed and contaminating the blood. He states that he had within the last twenty years met with not a few cases of these diseases, some of which he would class as "acute," others "chronic," inflammation of the caecum tuphlo-enteritis ; they had not ap- peared to arise from the ordinary causes of inflammation viz., exposure to the vicissitudes of the weather, or alternations of temperature, but seemed to be produced by some mechanical, exciting and irritating cause, the lodgement of impacted, hard- ened feces, undigested food, fruit-skins, and stones of fruit, and concretions of varied and different kinds, and often arise while the person is in good health. The, symptoms may begin mildly, and gradually proceed to greatnr intensity ; or they may, in excitable subjects, be violent from the onset. There is but little febrile disturbance compared with the local pain and suffering; less anxiety of countenance than in enteritis; pulse not small, or much quickened at the commencement ; there is great tension and tenderness over the caecum, so that the least pressure cannot be borne; there are no rigors; the pain is constant, does not intermit, and its area goes on extending till the whole abdomen is involved; but the right ileo-inguinal region is ever the most tender part. There is obstinate costiveness; nausea and^violent vomiting may set in, especially when drastic purgatives have been persevered in; the position is characteristic the patient lies on the right side, body bent, and thigh drawn up ; the countenanc has not the anxious aspect of enteritis. If neglect- ed or wrongly treated, the abdomen becomes tense and tympani- tic, and general enteritis or, peritonitis may supervene. Should the appendix be inflamed or ulcerated, all the symptoms are more acute, and likely to terminate fatally by peritonitis or fecal abscess. In the progress of these diseases, adhesions are often formed in its interior, or to other parts ; the areolar tissue around 1858.] Diseases of the Ccecum. 689 may inflame, suppurate, and give rise to abscess, which may tend upwards and downwards, and require to be opened; they may either open externally, or find their way into other part3 of the intestinal canal, the patient recovering, or may die worn out by the discharge. Should the ulceration open into the peri- toneum, peritonitis of a diffused and fatal character will be set up, as in one of the cases related by the author. This termina- tion is fortunately most rare, though not uncommon in typhoid and dysenteric fevers. When resolution takes place, it is pre- ceded by action of the bowels and gradual subsidence of the pain, tenderness, sickness and fever, about the fourth, sixth, or even the eighth day. This result can only be obtained by most judicious treatmeut; but when mistaken, and treated too ac- tively by large and repeated bleedings, or violent and continued purgatives, there is much danger of a fatal termination, or of a long and protracted convalescence. If fecal abscess forms, the drain on the system is long and exhausting. The author coin- cides very much with Doctor Burne, whose papers in the " Medi- co-Chirurgical Transactions" he refers to. In these acute cases, leeching, fomentations, soft poultices, mild effervescing aperients, and large bland enemata, will often resolve the inflammation; if not, calomel and opium, or opium alone, should be given, but violent purgatives are to be avoided. Dr. Kogers places great reliance on bland mucillaginous enemata, passed into the bowels with a long O'Beirne's tube, with which he has often relieved and cured cases of simple obstruction and constipation that had resisted other treatment; he thinks the use of this instrument is much neglected. The author lays great stress on cautious diet- ing, which should be, for a long time, of the simplest and bland- est form arrowroot, rice, milk, eggs, and subsequently beef tea and jellies. In those forms of acute inflammation that have supervened on some subacute chronic form, long perseverance in this cautious regimen is even of more importance. In chronic inflammation, careful regimen and regulated action of the bow- els are essential ; the symptoms now are all more or less subdu- ed and indistinct: irregular action with colicky pains ; diarrhoea alternating with costiveness and fetid dejections ; hardness and fulness over the caecum, with tenderness on pressure. The au- thor relies on blisters, iodine and liniments, mild saline aperients, and strict attention to dietetic rules : from neglect of these, he has had occasionally to regret the loss of a patient. In simple obstruction, he relies on a large enemata and mild saline aperi- ents, with a sedative, as hyoscyamus, belladonna, &c. ; he quotes cases from different authors on the frequency of these obstruc- tions and the mistakes often committed by the reckless abuse of violent purgatives, which, even in cases of hernia, have been given till death removed the sufferer from his tortures. In the 690 Autopsy of a Woman, &c. [October, more obstinate cases, electricity, dashing cold water, tobacco fomentations over the abdomen, and inflation with bellows, have each been successful. Should all means fail, operative surgery comes to our aid. [British Med. Journal, and Ranking^ "s Abstract. Autopsy of a Woman whose Uterus had been removed thirty years previously. By Dr. G. S. Goddard. In the anatomical collection at Rotterdam a remarkable spe- cimen is preserved: it is the uterus of a woman, in whom inver- sion of that organ had occurred in the year 1821, probably in consequence of forcible separation and removal of the placenta. After repeated but fruitless efforts to reduce the uterus, and when the symptoms had assumed a more and more threatening aspect, the part was tied by Surgeon Nortier thirteen days after delivery; and eight days subsequently the tumor below the lig- ature was removed with a pair of scissors ; in the evening of the following day the ligature lay loose in the vagina, and exhibited the small opening through which the pedicle had passed. A month later the woman had quite recovered, menstruation did not recur, and the sexual passion was wholly extinguished. In the preparation the uterus is seen, of the size of the head of a child at full term, with an internal rough, nocculent surface, which, at the right side, in the neighborhood of the fundus uteri (where the placenta was attached), has an opening with uneven edges, of about an inch and a fifth in circumference. Less ex- tensive on the under side, this sacciform body ends with an opening of about two and a third inches. On the left side of the fundus portions of the Fallopian tube and of the round liga- ment, both, as well as the uterus, still enlarged, are seen ; while on the right side the round ligament appears to be partly destroy- ed, and a much larger portion of the Fallopian tube is evidently also destroyed in its whole length. The woman died in 1850, in consequence of an acute disease, in which the genital organs were not involved. On opening the body the internal genitals, on a superficial inspection, presented a tolerably natural appearance, except that the right broad ligament was rather tense, giving rise to a degree of obliquity ; there was a great accumulation of fat in the connective tissue around the vagina and between the laminae of the broad ligaments, in which no cicatrices, but only modified plaiting, were to be seen. The folds of the mucous membrane of the vagina were very strong and irregular; the vagina itself was much shorter than usual. Of the uterus only the cervix remained ; the cavity of the latter was scarcely large enough to contain a lemon pippin, was very pointed, and was about three inches in length; the palmae plicatae were very 1858.] Fatty Degeneration of the Heart. 691 strongly marked; the walls, which were thicker than usual, ter- minated as cut off; on the surface looking towards the cavity, was a white, firm, cellular, intervening substance, a couple of lines in length, and particularly dense on the right side, which as the cicatrix had filled the space left open in the operation, as well as the truncated substance of the uterus, had become covered with peritoneum. The free extremities of the Fallopian tubes were normal; each terminated in a cul de sac, the right was shorter than the left, and with the ovary was drawn strong- ly downward by a fold of peritoneum. The round ligaments were in great part deficient on both sides ; the right was the shorter, and was surrounded with much connective tissue. The left could be followed a little further. The ovaries were more atrophied than even the woman's time of life should lead one to expect; the ligament of the right ovary was very small ; that of the left still in a great measure existed. On either side there was one of those pediculated hydatid-shaped bodies, which Ko* belt and Follin regard as remnants of the ductis Mulleri in the corpus Wolrianum; the right possessed a short and broad, and the left, on the contrary, a long pedicle. [Nederlandsch Lancet, and Dublin Medical Press. Fatty Degeneration of the Heart Death from the Inhalation of the Tincture of Chloroform. By William A. Hammond, M. D., Assist. Surg. U. S. Army. (Read before the Biological De- partment of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, April 19th, 1858.) Private S , of Company "C," 2d U. S. Dragoons, was ad- mitted into the hospital at Fort Riley, Kansas Territory, on the 23d day of November, 1856, with an injury of the left elbow-joint, caused by his falling from his horse whilst intoxicated on the af- ternoon of the previous day. I did not see him till eighteen hours after the accident, when, owing to the swelling and inflammation of the part, I was unable to determine the exact nature of the injury. Erysipelatous inflammation immediately ensued, and lasted for ten days, requiring absolute rest, and the ordinary reme- dies for its removal. At the end of this period there was still a good deal of swelling, and the motions of the joint were very much impaired. Dr. Coolidge (who in the mean time had joined the post) and myself were unable still to make out the exact condi- tion of the parts; and after repeated examinations, we decided to induce anaesthesia with the view of obviating the great pain caused by the necessary manipulations, and thus to make a more satisfactory examination than had yet been accomplished. A sponge wet with two or three drachms of the tincture of chloroform was placed in a tubulated bell-glass and held to the n. s. VOL. XIV. no. x. 39 692 Fatty Degeneration of the Heart. [October, mouth of the patient, he having previously removed his coat and stock, unbuttoned the neck band of his shirt, and laid down on a bed. He continued to breathe the vapor for five minutes with- out any appreciable result. The pulse, which at the commence- ment of the inhalation was 100 per minute, remained about the the same. The sponge was again moistened with the tincture of chloroiorm, then placed in a towel, and again held close to the mouth. Full, deep breathing was directed, and in two or three minutes some excitement was produced. During this period the face became red and flushed, but not to an unusual extent; the respiration was not affected in any remarkable degree, nor was there any notable variation in the pulse. In an instant, however, all was changed; the eyes were turned up, the face became tur- gid, the muscles became relaxed, and vomiting ensued. My hand was upon his pulse, which, from beating at the rate of 100 per minute, stopped as if he had been struck with lightning. Dr. Coolidge immediately discontinued the inhalation, and judging from the character of the vumited matters, thought at first that' some substance was closing the larynx. Introducing his finger into the posterior fauces, he removed a large piece of cabbage. Subsequent to the vomiting the patient breathed two or three times, but it is probable the heart ceased to act before respiration was entirely suspended. Every means proper in such cases was used to re-excite respi- ration, Marshall Hall's method among others, but without the least success. Stimulants were thrown into the rectum, the body rubbed sedulously, &c, but no evidence of life was perceived, and after persevering for nearly two hours, we abandoned all hopes of resuscitation. Autopsy twenty two hours after death. Body well developed, no- superabundance of fat. Great muscular rigidity, and considera- ble hypostatic congestion of the back of the head, neck and body. The brain and appendages were healthy. The stomach was large but not distended with gas, and contained about three ounces of pultaceous matter, and several large pieces of unmasticated and undigested beef. The spleen was about three times its natu- ral size. The liver presented no unusual appearance ; it was not minutely examined. The thoracic cavity was free from effusion and pleuritic adhesions. The lungs, especially their inferior and posterior portions, were intensely congested, and of a deep purple hue. On opening the pericardium, the heart appeared of unusual size. The right auricle and ventricle were distended with blood and covered with fat. On removing the heart in the usual man ner by dividing the great vessels at their origin, about two quarts of dark, thin, uncoagulated blood escaped. No coagula were found in the heart or large vessels ; the left ventricle was empty, The heart weighed within a fraction of fourteen ounces, ami 1858.] Fatty Degeneration of the Heart. 693 measured in its longitudinal diameter full six inches, and in cir- cumference, at ils base, eleven and a half inches. The wall of the left ventricle at its base was f of an inch in thickness, at the middle f of an inch, and at the apex f of an inch. The extreme thickness was one inch. The thickness of the right ventricle ranged from \ to of an inch, exclusive of its fatty covering, which, near the auricle, was quite thick. The walls of the right auricle were extremely thin, and were loaded with fat. The sub- stance of the heart was of a very pale red or dirty pink color, comparatively soft and flabby, less resisting in the right than in the left ventricle, but easily penetrated in both with the finger or handle of the scalpel. In order to form a more definite conclusion as to the exact pa- thological condition of the heart, I submitted several sections to microscopical examination ; many portions of the right ventricle were thus found to consist almost entirely of fat-cells and oil-glo- bules ; in others, muscular fibres were visible. In the left ventricle both fibres and striae were to be seen, with many fat cells and oil- globules. The more precise results of the examination are as follows : 1st. A piece of the right ventricle taken from the central por- tion of its wall, t. e., midway between its external and internal surfaces, and in which no fat was visible to the naked eye, exhib- ited under the microscope numerous fat-cells and oii-globules. One hundred grains of this character of tissue, when subjected to the action of ether, yielded 32.75 grains of ether extract. 2nd. A section of the right ventricle extending through its en- tire thickness, and in which fatty deposit was visible to the naked eye, yielded 69.92 percent, of ether extract. 3rd. A portion of the left ventricle, in which no fat was visible to the naked eye. was perceived by the microscope to contain a few fat cells, and yielded 9.89 per cent, of ether extract. It is evident, therefore, from tins record, that the heart, besides being loaded with fat. was in a state of fatty degeneration. It is worthy of note that there was no arcus senilis observed in this case, A few words in relation to the anaesthetic employed, will not, I think, prove uninteresting. The anaesthetic issued to the medical officers ofthearmyis (or was at that time), the tincture of chloroform, or chloric ether of Dr. J. C. Warren and others. When properly prepared, it consists of one part of chloroform, and two parts of absolute alco- hol, and such was the preparation intended to be furnished. The contents of the same bottle used in this case had been a short time previously used in six cases; one of amputation of both legs ; one of Chopart's operation on right foot, and Hey's on left foot; one case of delirium tremens following fracture of arm, and complica- 694 Fatty Degeneration of the Heart [October,. ted with severe convulsions; one amputation of great toe; and one excision of a portion of the fibula. In all these cases the anaesthetic had acted unpleasantly, and in that of amputation of the great toe great prostration was produced, and the pulse fell from 60 to 40 per minute. By the use of stimulants, &c, further ill effects were obviated. It did not, however, occur to Dr. Coolidgeor myself, that these consequences were due to the peculiar character of the anaesthetic, but after the death of S I submitted it to a chemical exam- ination with the following result: The specific gravity was 980. The reaction was strongly acid. A solution of nitrate of silver caused a flaky precipitate, solu- ble in ammonia, and precipitable from this solution by nitric acid, showing, therefore, the presence of chlorohydric acid. A portion was put into a glass tube graduated to tenths of a cubic centimetre, and an excess of water added so as to destroy the solvent property of the alcohol. The chloroform thus precipi- tated amounted to but one -sixth of the whole. The alcohol entering into its composition, instead of being ab- solute, was the common diluted alcohol of the Pharmacopoeia. The tincture of chloroform was thus shown to be very impure, and not the article contemplated by the medical department. It had been carefully preserved whilst under my charge and that of Dr. Coolidge, in closely stopped bottles carefully kept from the light, so that it is probable the chlorohydric acid had been present from the time of its manufacture. How far this impure character of the anaesthetic may have tended to cause death in the case related, is difficult to say. I believe, however, that it was not without influence. The condi- of the heart was doubtless, however, the chief cause of death. Persons suffering under fatty degeneration of this organ are pecu- ft liarly liable to sudden death, and it is also true that there are no f\ certain signs from which its presence can be determined during J life. Of fifty-eight cases cited by Dr. Eichard Quain,* death was f sudden in fifty-four. Two cases have recently been published of fatty degeneration ji of the heart, in which death occurred from the inhalation of chlo- b roform. In one of them, that of Mr. Erichsen,f it took place at fco the time of inhalation. The other occurred in the practice oi ^ Dr. Macgibbon,J at the New Orleans Charity Hospital. In this '&: latter case death ensued on the day following the administration of the chloroform. Private S was 23 years of age, 5 feet 6 inches high, o ruddy complexion, gray eyes, and brown hair. He was exceed- k * Medico-Chirurgical Transactions, vol. xxxiii. \ British and Foreign Medico-Chirurgical Review, January, 1855, p. 222. \ American Journal of the Medical Sciences, Janury, 1856, p. 261. L858.] Hernia of the Ovary, 695 ngly intemperate in his habits. He had never, as far as I am iware, complained of any afFection of the heart, and never, to ray knowledge, had any symptoms which would indicate disease of this organ. In the preparation of this paper I have freely availed myself of ;he notes of Dr. Coolidge, especially those relating to the post- mortem appearances and measurements of the heart. [American Journal of the Med. Sciences. History of two cases of Hernia of the Ovary, in one of which there was periodical Mnlargement of this Organ. By Dr. Oldham, Obstetric Physician to Guy's Hospital. These cases are examples of a rare conformation of the female sexual organs, in which the ovaries had descended through the nguinal canal, and become permanently lodged in the upper part :>f the external labia. In both of them it was impossible to detect sither uterus or vagina; and in the first there was a periodical increase of one or other of the ovaria, followed by its gradual re- duction a direct evidence of an ovarian menstrual act. Case 1. The subject of tbis case applied to me in September, L851, for advice on account of never having menstruated. She was nineteen years of age, of a tall figure, symmetrical frame, well-expanded pelvis, and womanly aspect, bearing all the marks of a full completion of the physical changes of puberty ; and her general health, though not robust, was fairly good. She was one of a family of five children, and her sisters had menstruated be- tween 15 and 16 years of age. The principal point which was elicited from her history in connection with her complaint was, that, eighteen months before, a swelling had somewhat suddenly appeared on the right side of the external organs, which had caused her some pain for a few days and had then disappeared. In four or five months a similar swelling again appeared, but was attended with so much suffering that a medical man was consult- ed, who took it for an abscess and ordered it to be poulticed. Again it passed away, again to recur at the end of two months; and so it had gone on at irregular intervals until the time of her seeing me, when the pain of a renewed attack of unusual severity had occasioned her some alarm. On examination, a swelling the size of a goose-egg was found to extend between the external ab- dominal ring and the centre of the labium on the right side, which was very tense and firm to the touch ; and the cellular tissue, skin, and mucous membraue of the labium were cedematous and in- flamed. It was painful, but by no means so painful as a labial abscess, which in its general aspect it resembled ; and there was but little febrile disturbance. A more critical examination de- Hernia of the Ovary. [October, tected the presence of a solid body of an oval shape within the tissue of the labium, which proved to be the ovarium, whose en- largement had so compressed the surrounding tissues as to swell and inflame them. On the opposite side there was another oval body, the size of a walnut, which passed just beyond the outer ring, but readily slipped into the canal. This was the left ovary in a quiescent state. The external sexual parts were normally formed ; but the ostium vaginas was closed, a slight indentation in the median line alone marking its position. Frequent careful physical examinations failed to detect any trace of a vagina or uterus, and the conclusion arrived at was that these central pelvic organs had not been developed. The mammary glands were fully formed. 1 have had repeated opportunities during the six years which have intervened since first ihe case came before me, of examining the organs both during the periods of ovarian excitement and during the intervals. For nearly two years, however, I complete- ly lost sight of her, when I learned, to my amazement, that in spite of my strong admonition both to her mother and herself, that she should lead a single life, she had married. For some time past I have seen her more frequently, and have watched the recur- rence of the ovarian swellings. For the first three years the right ovarium was exclusively en- larged, and the intervals were not so regularly marked, varying between three and six weeks : excepting for the first year, when thev were much longer, occasionally extending to three months. For the last two years the left ovarium has been far more frequent- ly affected, the right remaining quiescent ; occasionally both are painful and tumid, but even then one more than the other. The intervals are now pretty regularly three weeks. The acute in- flammatory symptoms which accompanied the onset of these swellings have long since ceased to recur, which is obviously due to the loose state of the tissues from repeated stretching, so that the swollen organ is no longer compressed. The accession of a menstrual time is sometimes suddenly felt. She will go to bed well, and in the morning the ovary will be swollen : more commonly, however, it is very gradual, augment- ino1 in volume for four days, then remaining stationary for three days, and then gradually declining; the whole process, before the ovary is reduced, generally lasting tenor twelve days. On sepa- rating the ovary, when at its -height of swelling, from the tissues surrounding it, it appears scarcely, if at all, less than double its usu- al volume; its outline is clearly defined, and it is plain that the whole, and not merely a part of the organ, is involved. There is no suffering worthy of notice during the time; the swelling is tender if pressed; and tender, too, in the act of sitting down or rising up ; but she walks about as usual without distress, and 1858.] Poison of the Upas Antiar. 697 there is but little lumbar or hypogastric pain. Neither are there any manifest sympathies excited, either of the mammary glands or other organs. Nor is there any vicarious flux, either of blood or any secretion, with the exception of an excess of saliva, but this is not in any large flow. The ovary alone appeared to be engaged in this periodical act, which it is not too much to sup- pose, in accordance with modern physiological views, would have been attended with a flux of blood, had not the organs which nor- mally supply it been absent. But while this may be said to represent the usual course of a period, yet the volume of the ovary, and the length of time it re- mains swollen, is subject to occasional variation ; sometimes being much less tumid, and dying away in a shorter time. The repeated attempts at sexual union have only had the effect of somewhat loosening the tissues around the vulva, but the vagi- na remains imperforate as before, and is beyond the reach of surgical remedy. It may be added, that the subject of this histo- ry recognizes an increase of sexual feeling at and soon after the periods of enlargement of the ovary. Case 2. This case was that of,a young woman who had at- tained the age of twenty without having menstruated. She was a tall, strumous-looking person, in weak health. There had not been any well-marked efforts at menstruation, but she had suffered slightly from lumbar pain. The mammae was well developed. The pelvis was fairly formed. On examination I found the two ovaviajust appearing beyond the external abdominal rings, and readily returning by pressure into their respective inguinal ca- nals. They were of equal size and similar shape, being ovoid bodies about the size of small chestnuts. They were not tender when touched, although organically sensitive, and she had never experienced pain in them. The external sexual organs were somewhat less perfectly developed than usual ; the vaginal orifice was closed, and no trace of a canal or uterus could be detected by exploration with a catheter in the bladder and the finger in the rectum. These organs, as in the former case, were absent. Du- ring the time I saw the patient, which was only for two months, the ovaria did not enlarge, although her general health improv- ed. [Proceedings of Royal Society, and Hanking1 s Abstract. Observations on the Poison of the Upas Antiar. By Professor KOLLIKER. The results of Prof. Kolliker's investigations into the effects of the antiar upon frogs, are the following: " 1. The antiar is a paralyzing poison. "2. It acts in the first instance and with great rapidity (in 5 to 10 minutes) upon the heart, and stops its action. 698 Puerperal Fever. [October, " 3. The consequence of this paralysis of the heart are the ces- sation of the voluntary and reflex movements in the first and second hour after the introduction of the poison. " 4. The antiar paralyzes, in the second place, the voluntary muscles. "5. In the third place, it causes the loss of excitability of the groat nervous trunks. "6. The heart and muscles of frogs poisoned with woorara may be paralyzed by antiar. 11 7. From all thisit may be deduced that the antiar principally acts upon the muscular fibre and causes paralysis of it. " So much for this time. My experiments with the antiar upon warm-blooded animals have only begun, and I am not yet able to draw any conclusion from them. As soon as this will be possi- ble, I shall take the liberty to submit them to the Roval Society, together with the results of my experiments with the upas teinte, which poison I had also the good fortune to obtain through the kindness of Sir Benjamin Brodie and Dr. Horsefield. With re- gard to the antiar, I may further add that experiments made inde- pendently, and at the same time, by my friend Dr. Sharpey with this poison, have conducted to the same results as my own." [Proceedings of the Royal Society, and Ranking 's Abstract. Puerperal Fever. The Academy of Medicine in Paris has for some time been occupied in a discussion on Puerperal fever, in which the leading obstetricians of the French metropolis have given utterance at length to their opinions. From among the numerous speeches, we translate that of M. Cazeaux, as it gives a very good digest of the different opinions entertained. I think that it would be superfluous, after the speeches you have heard, to revert to the symptomatology and anatomical charac- ters of the disease or diseases collectively described under the names of puerperal fever or puerperal peritonitis. These points in the discussion appear to me to have been sufficiently studied by M. Depaul and M. Cruveilhier. You are aware of the im- portance given by the last named speaker to lymphangitis among the alterations peculiar to puerperal fever; so much so, that he considers it characteristic of that disease. But that opinion has been vehemently disputed by M. Behier, who maintains, on the contrary, that, in autopsies of women who have died of puer- peral fever, he has found inflammation of the veins more frequent- ly than of the lymphatics. This assertion of M. Behier's has surprised me greatly. I have, for my own part, opened a good number of bodies of women who have died of puerperal diseases, and I declare that, like M. Cruveilhier, I have found pus much more frequently in the uterine lymphatics than in the veins. Does 1858.] Puerperal Fever. 699 not M. Behier's error depend on an anatomical confusion ? For it is remarkable that, although he describes the pus as being in other vessels than M. Cruveilhier does, he still finds it in the same parts of the uterus or its appendages ; that is to say, in those por- tions which are particularly rich in lymphatic vessels. But there is one question which has in an especial degree excited the speak- ers ; it is that of knowing what is the nature of puerperal fever, and what nosological rank it is proper to assign to the lesions which it presents. In this respect the speakers have been divided into two camps. In the one, they admit the existence of an essential fever of a pyrexia; in the other, they see only local phlegmasia?. Up to the present moment, M. Beau is the only one who has formally de- clared himself in favor of this latter doctrine. With regard to the doctrine of essentiality, it has found supporters in M. Depaul, who has the most boldly and the most clearly laid down the question ; In M. Danyau, who has also spoken out resolutely enough ; in M. Trousseau, who, after having formally rejected the puerperal fever, has so well generalized it subsequently, that he has admit- ted it not only for women in child-bed, but even for women not in the puerperal state at all, for the foetus, for the new-born child, and for all subjects attacked by any kind of traumatism. M. Du- bois has equally announced himself an essentialist; but he has produced no new arguments in favour of that opinion, and he has enveloped his ideas in such thick clouds, that it is difficult through such a veil to distinguish a pure essentialist. The question, therefore, is solely and entirely between M. Depaul and M. Beau. M. Beau appears to me to have replied victoriously to M. De- paul, invoking the epidemic and contagious characters of the disease as proofs of its essentiality. I will not revert to these arguments; but I will add that one of the characters of pyrexia, viz., the manifestations of the fever some days before the appear- ance of the local symptoms, as is the case with typhus and small- pox, is not what is observed in puerperal fever, in which the pain, which is the sign of local phlegmasia?, shows itself almost at the the same time as the shivering, which is the sign of the general pathological state. I find also a very good argument against i essentialism in the speech of M. Dubois, who nevertheless makes profession of being an essentialist. Have we not heard that hon- ourable professor tell us that the multiplicity, the variety of the lesions in puerperal fever, would be consistent with placing it among pyrexiae, the principal character of which is to present anatomical alterations, constant and always identical. With regard to the negative autopsies quoted by M. Depaul as an argument in favour of essentiality, while I admit, as I do willingly, that they have been well made, 1 can neither consider them as convincing proofs, nor as motives for rejecting the doc- 700 Puerperal Fever. [October, trine of local phlegmasias. In fact, do we not see peritoneal inflammations, traumatic, or by perforation, kill so promptly, that material alterations have not had time to be formed ? Do we not see, also, burns in the first or second degree cause a rapid death the effect assuredly, not of the lesion of the tissue, but solely of the extent and violence of the inflammation ? On the other hand, is it really necessary to find severe organic lesions to explain functional disorders, and even death, in puerperal fever? I do not think it is ; for, in my opinion, the blood in this disease has undergone so profound an alteration as to acoount for all the accidents, and for the usually fatal termination of the disease. The mistake committed by those nosologists who have wished to assign a place to puerperal fever, consists, in my opinion, in their having studied it under its epidemic form. In order to form a true and clear idea of the disease, we must look at it under its sporadic form ; that is, in its condition of simplicity, disengaged from the special elements of gravity necessarily given to it by the epidemic character. Let us then imagine a physician who has never seen a case of puerperal fever, and who has never read a description of this malady. He is brought into the presence of a woman recently confined, in whom a laborious parturition, a pro- longed labour, has produced numerous bruises and lacerations, speedily followed by violent shivering, by very severe abdominal pains, and by a series of other severe general and local symptoms which will rapidly terminate in death. At the autopsy, he finds pus in the peritoneum, in the veins and lymphatics of the pelvis. What idea can this physician form of the nature of the disease, but that it is phlegmasia? Now, must we admit that tbere exists a natural difference be- tween the epidemic and sporadic forms of puerperal fever? By no means any more than that there exists a difference between epidemic and sporadic pneumonia. Nevertheless, M. Trousseau has brought forward one difference which he describes as very essential ; it is the existence of a specific cause, of a kind of virus which would be the essence of the epidemic puerperal fever. Well, a specific cause always produces a corresponding specific disease, announcing itself by signs or lesions always identical; thus, the virus of rabies always produces rabies ; the virus of syphilis, syphilis; the smallpox virus, smallpox; while here we have to do with a disease which presents itself with lesions the most varied, sometimes a metritis, sometimes a peritonitis, some- times a phlebitis, at other times a lymphangitis, a pneumonia, a pleurisy, a suppurating arthritis, etc. We cannot, therefore, al- lege a sole cause for effects so varied. The difference which I admit, for my own part, is not where M. Trousseau has placed it in the nature of the disease; I find it in the very fact of the epidemic, which renders the disease 1858.] Puerperal Fever. 701 more severe, without changing anything of its essence. It is here with puerperal phlegmasia as with cholera, angina, dysenler}-, and a hundred other affections that I might name. Do not think, however, that beyond the local inflammation I see nothing whatever, and that I believe that in that resides the whole gravity of the affection. If, indeed, 1 do not admit a puer- peral fever, 1 do admit a puerperal state, which, in preparation throughout the pregnancy, arrives at its maximum of intensity at the time of the accouchement, and shortly afterwards. This pu- erperal state consists in a notable alteration of the fluids, which is present, in a greater or less degree, in all pregnant women. I have heard M. Trousseau speak to us with some disdain of recent haematological researches. For my part, I think they are destin- ed to open to medicine a way of progress, and to enlighten us on many questions which are still obscure. It is not my place here to recall all the results already obtained ; but I cannot be silent on the very special services rendered by haematology to obstetric physiology and pathology. Thanks to that science, gentlemen., it is now admitted that pregnancy, so far from constituting a condi- tion of plethora, actually, on the contrary, engenders an anaemic state. Thanks to haematologv, we now understand the etiological analogies existing between eclampsia and the epileptiform con- vulsions which terminate Bright's disease. It has been establish- ed very clearly that in both cases the nervous phenomena depend on an intoxication of the blood by urea on an uraemia. It is also in the blood in the blood so profoundly modified in pregnancy that we must seek the first cause and the point de depart of puerperal diseases. Thus, diminution of globules, of albumen, of iron, a notable augmentation of water and of fibrine such are the modifications I ought to say, the alterations of the blood in a woman about to lie in. If in such a condition there supervene an extensive inflammation of an important organ, you may conceive what development it must assume in invading an organism so seriously altered. Who can foresee to what extent these alterations of the blood may go, and what may be the con- sequence of them ? For myself, I do not hesitate to say that, in certain cases, they may be carried to a point at which they will produce a transformation of blood-globules into pus globules; and that without a wound, without phlebitis, without any lesion of the solids. And on this subject, let me recall a fact reported by M. Andral, and which is very well adapted to impart a certain value to this hypothesis. A man was brought in dying, in a most formidable atixo-adynamic state; he died at the end oi three days. At the autopsy, numerous abscesses were found in the brain, in the lungs, in the spleen, in the kidneys; the blood everywhere was like very loose currant-jelly. In the midst of the blood-globules, which 702 Puerperal Fever. [October, were misshapen, strawberry-like (framboise's), a great number of pus-globules were plainly distinguished. Nowhere was there the slightest trace of phlebitis. Collections of pus in many of the solids, and pus in the blood itself, were the only alterations de- monstrable. There is, therefore, in lying-in women, as M. Trousseau has said, a great morbid aptitude, which I will at once call a. pyogenic stale, which not only manifests itself in abdominal phlegmasias, but makes its sad influence felt, whatever be the disease attacking the puerperal female. It is thus that, according to M. Chomel and M. Grisolle. the pneumonias which supervene during the pu- erperal state acquire an extraordinary degree of virulence, which renders them promptly mortal. Be the puerperal fever sporadic or epidemic, it always consists essentially in an alteration of the blood and a special aptitude of certain organs to inflame, and to rapidly produce pus ; with this sole difference, that with epidemics this aptitude finds itself sin- gularly increased by this agent, unknown in its essence, but so manifest in its effect, and to which has been given the vague de- nomination of epidemic influence (genie epidemique) ; whence also the gravity of the disease, and its termination more promptly and more constantly deadly. I will only say this regarding the contagious character of puer- peral fever, that I adhere without p reserve to what MM. Depaul and Danyau say about it. After a demonstration so clear, so peremptory, as that furnished by those two speakers, it is impossi- ble that there can remain any incredulous on the point. M. Danyau has therefore, with good reason, insisted on the precau- tions to be taken to avoid the dangers of contagion. What shall I say of the treatment? The speakers who have preceded me have superabundantly proved the uselessness of the different methods of cure, and the vanity of certain remedies con- sidered prophylactic. For the curative treatment, I will confine myself to the decla- ration that all the means I have tried have failed in my hands, as in those of my colleagues, in cases of virulent or epidemic puer- peral fever. I must, however, say that I have obtained good effects from the employment of mercury. I have seen every case get well in which powerful doses of mercury have produced an abundant salivation ; a circumstance which induces me to think that he who shall find an infallible means of bringing on a copious salivation will have perhaps discovered a specific for puerperal fever. As for prophylactic measures, I see none better at present than such as consist in diminishing the agglomeration of women in lying-in; and on that point, I entirely agree with M. Danyau. The measures he proposes appear to me the wisest, the best un- 1858.] Injection of Urea, '_ Fibrin, ------ Albumen Extractive and Color'g ) Organic Matters, Matters, - - - 79-096 ] Mineral " 1000 Parts of Blood Contained, ) Water, Moist Blood Corpuscles, 317*748 > Organic Matters, - ) Mineral " Water, - - - Organic Matters, Mineral " Fibrin, - - - 1 Liquor Sanguinis, - - 682*252 1000 Parts of Moist Blood Corpuscles Contained. Water, Organic Matters, -------- Mineral Matters, -- (1) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained, Water, Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, - Mineral Matters, - Fibrin, - (2) 1000 Parts of Liquor Sanguinis Contained, Water, Albumen, Extractive and Coloring Matters, - Mineral Matters, Fibrin, 5-796 2-647 3-498 36-341 30-178 42-914 10-728 3-409 2-387 840-511 76-000 3-409 0-877 76-508 2-387 238-271 76-000 3-409 602-240 76-708 2-387 0-877 749-873 239-284 10k728 913022 83-303 2-647 0-928 882-723 112-433 3-498 1-285 734 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [November, This examination reveals the following changes in the blood : 1. The fibrin is greatly deficient. The deficiency of fibrin in the blood was farther demonstrated by the fact, that the blood oozed from the cut-cups upon the temples, for 18 hours, and it was finally necessary to check the flow by cold applications. 2. The colored corpuscles are greatly diminished, the dried corpuscles being 79434, and the moist blood corpuscles 31 7'748. The fixed saline constituents are correspondingly reduced in amount. 3. The color of the serum is changed to a golden color, and the albumen is diminished. It is worthy of note, that the reaction of the blood is alkaline, while that of the saliva and urine is strongly acid. 7 o'clock, P.M. Pulse very feeble ; feels like the vibration of a delicate silver thread. Owing to its exceeding tenuity and feebleness, cannot be counted with absolute accuracy. The number of beats to the minute lies between 130 and 150. Eespiration 34, thoracic, labored. Tongue dry and rough ; feels to the touch like sand paper; skin of trunk and extremi- ties much cooler than normal. Has been taking brandy and the infusion of Virginia snake-root, and milk punch, during the day. ty Apply sinapisms to extremities, and continue the sti- mulants, milk and arrow- root. September 30th, 2 o'clock, P.M. Sinapisms aroused him, and he appears to be more intelligent. Skin warmer; Pulse 112, still feeble, but decidedly better than last night. Eespira- tion 17, full, thoracic. Temperature of atmosphere, 73F.; temp, of hand, 91. Tongue slightly coated with yellow fur, moister and softer ; surface of blister raw and red ; urine of a bright red color; specific gravity 1016. When carefully tested ior uric acid, the urine was found to contain only a trace a few small crystals. Eeaction of urine and saliva decidedly acid. fy Sulphate of quinia, grs. v., every three hours, up to grs. xx. ty Continue brandy and infusion of snake-root tea. October 1st, 2 o'clock, P. M. Eestless and stupid. Pulse 100 ; respiration IB, full, thoracic. Temperature of atmosphere, 79F.; temp, of hand, 88 5; temp, under tongue, 945. The temperature of the trunk is between 4 and 6 degrees below the normal standard. The temperature of the extremities is 10 de- grees below the normal standard. Tongue dry and rough ; teeth coated with sordes; refuses to take nourishment. October 2nd, 2 o'clock, P. M. Intellect more active, but still very slow and dull. When aroused, says that he feels easy ; has a disagreeable smell. Tongue of a brownish yellow color, and as dry and rough as a fresh sawed board ; teeth coated with sordes; pulse 124; respiration 18. The incision in the arm, where he was bled, has not healed. It bled during the night, 1858.] Joxes, on Malarial Fever. 735 and drops of limpid serum are now oozing continually from it. The left side of his head is swollen, and painful to the touch : this compels him to lie upon the right side and arm in which he was bled. $ Tincture of chloride of iron. nix v. three times a day. October 3rd, 2j o'clock, P.M. Pulse 120: respiration 24. The state of his tongue presents a striking contrast with what it was yesterday : it is now moist and soft. Reaction of saliva decidedly acid. During the night his right arm has swollen from the shoulder to the end of the fingers, to nearly twice its natural size; the veins upon the surface are filled with blood; the lancet wound is open and emits a serous fluid. The lancet with which he was bled was carefully washed before its use. The swelling of the arm appears to be due to the interference of the circulation by the pressure of his body, rather than to a poisoned lancet. $ Continue tonics, stimulants, and nutritive diet. Paint the whole arm, from shoulder to tip of fingers with the tincture of iodine, and apply cold-water dressing. October 4th, 2 o'clock, P. M. Says " that he feels badly ; has pain all over." The swelling on the left side of the face, in the region of the ear, and angle and joint of the jaw, continues to increase: it is hard, tense, and painful to the touch. Boils and ulcers are appearing upon various parts of his body. The blister presents a purplish red, unhealthy, raw surface; tip of tongue red and glazed; superior surface coated with brownish yellow and black fur; tongue is so dry that it is protruded out of the mouth with great difficulty; pulse 120; respiration 24. Temperature of atmosphere, 76F.; temp, of hand, 1005. The rise of the temperature in the extremities is probably due to in- flammatory action. October oth, 2 o'clock, P.M. Says that he is better. Face a little flushed : up to the present time it, has been entirely with- out color; swelling in arm stationary ;v swelling on side of face continues to increase, and is very painful; pulse 118. Tempe- rature of atmosphere, 73F.; temp, of hand, 100. fy Paint arm and side of face with tincture of iodine. October 6th, 4 o'clock, P.M. Skin hot and dry; has never been moist since his entrance into the hospital. Complains greatly of his head: carotid arteries are throbbing violently ; pulse 104; respiration 24. Temperature of atmosphere, 72F.; temp, of hand, 101; the temp, of the trunk is about 104F. Since the commencement of the inflammation his pulse has be- come fuller and stronger. Slight moisture about the tongue. $ Chlorate of potassa, 3i.; water, Oviij. Dissolve. Ad- minister during the 24 hours, and continue. $ Compound tincture of gentian, f 3j.; comp. tine. Peruvian 736 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [November, bark, f 3j. Mix. Administer three times a day in f lij. of the infusion of Virginia snake-root. October 7th, 4 o'clock, P.M. Arm greatly swollen, and when bent much serous fluid issues from the lancet wound. Surface of blister shows no disposition to heal; ulcers upon the body are increasing; tongue moister and softer than it has been dur- ing his sickness. Temperature of hand, 102F.; temp, of trunk about 104. $ Continue stimulants, alteratives, tonics and diuretics. Diet, soft boiled eggs, milk punch, wine whey, arrow-root and mutton soup. October 9th, 4 o'clock, P.M. Appears brighter and stronger. Abscess upon the side of his face has been lanced ; it discharg- ed a large quantity of pus ; it had formed a communication into the meatus auditorias externus from which much pus issued ; pulse 163, probably excited by the lancing of the abscess one hour ago. October 10th, 4 o'clock, P.M. Skin hot and dry; tongue dry and rough ; abscess in the region of the ear, and joint and angle of the inferior maxillary bone, continues to discharge large quantities of pus, and masses of cellular tissue. Arm looks badly; the skin presents a greenish yellow, unhealthy appear- ance; the cellular tissue appears to be completely infiltrated with serum ; when it is flexed, and the tissues thus compressed, considerable quantities of this fluid issue from the lancet cut, which has never shown the least disposition to heal ; pulse 130, full and strong; respiration 28. Temperature of atmosphere, 70F.; temp, of hand, 10375 ; temp, under tongue, 1045. October 12th. The surface of the blister has commenced to suppurate and discharge an unhealthy looking offensive fluid. It has' never shown any disposition, either to healthy inflam- mation or healing. The ulcers upon various parts of the body have steadily increased in size, and like the blister, discharge an unhealthy offensive fluid, and show no disposition to heal. . October 13th. The arm looks dreadfully ; the skin over the biceps muscle is black and gangrenous ; digestion bad and bow- els loose. October 17th. The skin over the entire region of the biceps, and over a large portion of the triceps mucle, has sloughed en- tirely away, and exposed the red quivering muscles. There has been no hemorrhage, but a large discharge of the serous fluid which had infiltrated the cellular tissue. The surface of the blister and ulcers, and exposed muscles, emit a disgusting stench. Bowels are moved frequently. October 21st. The biceps muscle has sloughed entirely from its lower attachment. It is impossible to give a correct idea of his distressing and loathsome condition. He is completely ex- 1858.] JOXES, on Malarial Fever. 737 haustcd and worn out by diarrhoea, and by the discharge from the numerous diseased surfaces. This patient died October 22nd, Wo1 clock, P.M. It is surprising, that although the patient has apparently had the exercise of his intellect for the last three weeks, he has never once been heard to utter a complaint. He has been either a man of extraordinary resolution, or else the effects of the mala- rial poison, in conjunction with the changes which it has pro- duced in the nervous system and all the organs and tissues, have tended to blunt the sensibilities and render the patient callous alike to pain, disgusting odors, and the fear of death. He has nothing in his face to denote an unusual amouut of either intelligence or resolution, and the latter appears to be the true supposition. (7) Autopsy twelve hours after Death. Exterior. Trunk and limbs greatly reduced in flesh a skel- eton with the skin stretched over. Head, not examined. Chest. Lungs normal, but very pale and anaemic. Heart, normal. The auricles of the heart contained a quan- tity of fluid blood, which was carefully examined under the microscope. Colored blood corpuscles appeared normal in color and structure. When the blood was treated with acetic acid, the colored corpuscles disappeared and the colorless corpuscles remained behind. The colorless corpuscles appeared to be more numerous than normal. Abdominal Cavity. Liver, of a light slate color, approaching ing in mauy places to purple and purplish-brown, as if it was returning to its normal color. The cut surface was of a bronze and purplish-bronze color, as if its substance also was returning to its normal color. Structure of the liver unusually firm. Blood-corpuscles of the blood of the liver appeared to be normal under the microscope. The liver-cells were normal in shape only a little paler than usual. The Gall-Bladder, was filled with bile of a brownish-yellow opaque color, when seen in mass, and of a gamboge-yellow in thin layers; and with numerous, irregularly-shaped, yellow masses, of various sizes, from an English pea to a grain of sand. These yellow masses formed about two-fifths of the contents of the gall-bladder. These masses were soft and readily crushed between the fingers. Under the microscope, they were found to consist of numerous cells from the mucous membrane of the gall-bladder, and a yellow amorphous matter. The bile duct appeared to be choked up with these cells and this yellow amor- phous matter. Sp. gr. of bile, 1036. /Spleen. Enlarged; surface covered with effused coagulable 738 Jokes, on Malarial Fever. [November, lymph, and bound to the liver and diaphragm by bands of co- agulable Ipmph. A large quantity of pus, of a greenish -yellow color, issued from the anterior border of the spleen, which was firmly attached to the liver. Whether the abscess had opened and discharged this pus before death, or whether the abscess was accidently ruptured during the opening of the chest and abdomen, I was unable to determine. The structure of the spleen felt firm, very unlike the soft, yielding structure of the spleen of the active stages of malarial fever. When cut, many portions of the spleen resembled a dark bronzed and slate colored liver. The pulp of these por- tions was not soft, and did not pour out, like the pulp of the spleen of the active stages of malarial fever. The liver-like substance of the spleen was found to consist, under the microscope, of fibrous tissue, and numerous colored corpuscles, and flakes, composed of granules resembling the dark-colored flakes of the black vomit of yellow fever. These flakes were, without doubt, composed of altered colored corpus- cles. The colorless corpuscles of this portion of the spleen ap- peared to be more numerous than normal. This dark, liver-like substance appears to be nothing more than the pulp (mud) of the malarial spleen, from which the se- rum has been in a great measure removed, and in which altera- tions of the blood-corpuscles have taken place, and fibrous tissue formed. After several hours exposure to the oxygen of the atmos- phere, the color of this portion of the spleen was not altered. In addition to the abscess, opening upon the surface of the spleen attached to the liver, the substance of the spleen contained numerous other smaller abscesses, of various sizes, (two or three largest of the size of a bullet, and the smallest of the size of an English pea,) filled with thick greenish-yellow pus. Portions of the spleen, especially surrounding the abscesses, were altered into a cheese-like substance. Under the microscope, these cheese-like portions consisted almost entirely of pus corpuscles, and large cells, containing granules and other smaller cells, thus resembling cancer cells; and also black masses composed of granules (probably altered colored corpuscles) like those from the dark dense portions of the spleen ; and also numerous oil globules. The bodies resembling cancer-cells were not numer- ous. The pus issuing from the large abscess, resembled ordina- ry pus, under the microscope, and contained a few of these peculiar cancer-like cells. Kidneys, normal in appearance. Bladder contained a small quantity of urine, which was normal in color. Alimentary Canal. The stomach and small and large intes- tines were greatly contracted. Blood-vessels of mesentery, 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever, 739 omentum, and exterior surface of stomach, and small and large intestines, engorged with black blood. The mucous membrane of the stomach presented an appearance, resembling that of chronic inflammation. The exterior of the large and small in- testines was of a purplish color. The mucous membrane did not appear to the naked eye to be altered in structure. Glands of Peyer, enlarged and distinct; some of them were several inch- es in length. The glands of Peyer, however, did not present the appearance of active inflammation, as in typhoid fever. They were even paler than usual. The solitary glands did not attract attention. The lymphatics of the mesentery were much enlarged. Case XXXVI. This case is recorded, not as one of remit- tent malarial fever, but for the purpose of illustrating the path- ological changes of the spleen in malarial fever. Native of South Carolina: age 37 years; height 6 feet 2 inches; weight 200 lbs.; large chest, full, round limbs. Has been living on the river, several miles below the city, in a mi- asmatic situation. Has suffered for some time with oedema of the extremities, and difficulty of breathing, and great exhaustion upon the least exertion. Complexion sallow, bilious; respira- tion 3i to minute, laborious can be heard at a considerable distance; circulation in the extremities very feeble; pulse can scarcely be felt; temperature of extremities below the normal standard. Auscultation reveals a labored, rapid, and strong action of the heart ; the sounds are tumultuous and close to each other; the impulse of the heart against the walls of the chest, and the point at which it strikes is much below the usual point; no abnormal sounds could be heard in the large blood-vessels; dulness upon percussion over the region of the heart. We conclude from this examination, that the heart of this patient is greatly enlarged. Complexion sallow, anaemic; conjunctiva yellow; tongue clean and pale. This patient was treated for hypertrophy of the heart, torpor of the liver, and anaemia, with apparent benefit, from the time that he entered the hospital, August 19th, until August 29th, when he was taken suddenly at night, upon his bed, with op- pression of breathing, followed in the course of half an hour by profound stupor, accompanied by stertorous breathing. He died in nine hours after the supervention of coma. The day .previous to the Altai issue, he had been walking about the hospital grounds, and said that he was decidedly bet- ter. During the whole time that he has been an inmate of tl e | hospital, has appeared dull, stupid, and indisposed to hold a con- versation with any one, and has passed most of his time in sleep. U.S. VOL. XIV. NO. XI. 42 740 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [November, Bowels generally torpid, and when they were neglected for several days, the difficulty of breathing increased, and his lower extremities commenced to swell. (8) Autopsy six hours after Death. Exterior. Trunk and limbs round and plump. A close ex- amination showed that this fulness was due to serous infiltration. On making the first incisions through the skin and superficial facia, serum mixed with blood flowed freely. Head. When the skull cap was removed, a large quantity of blody serum escaped. Dura-mater presented the usual appear- ance. A fluctuation of a large quantity of fluid could be felt between the dura-mater and the substance of the brain, and when an incision was made through the dura-mater, a consider- able quantity of serum escaped. A considerable quantity of serum was also effused between the arachnoid membrane and pia-mater. The arachnoid membrane presented a decidedly opalescent (pearl-colored) appearance. Lateral ventricles of brain contained an unusual amount of serous fluid. Brain much softer than usual. This could not have been the result of changes after death, for the time (6 hours) has been too short. Chest Lungs congested with blood. Heart. Pericardium adherent to the sternum for several inch- es, and distended with golden -colored serum. The heart ap- peared to the eye, when the pericardium was opened, to be as large as the heart of a bullock. All the cavities of the heart were dilated, and the walls thickened. The dilation and thick- ening were greatest in the cavity and walls of the left ventricle. In the right auricle and ventricle, there was a large, elongated, light yellow clot, adherent at one extremity to the columnar carneae of the ventricle, and chordae tendineae of the tricuspid valve. In the left ventricle, there was a similar light yellow clot, attached at one extremity to the columnas carneae, and chordae tendineae and mitral valves, and extended full eight inches up the aorta. That portion of the clot which extended into the aorta, was divided into two flattened cylindrical por tions, fimbriated at each extremity, as if they had been whipped about for a long time in the current of the blood. The clots in both cavities of the heart resembled, in all respects, fibrin from which the red blood corpuscles had been carefully washed, and were, without doubt, formed previously to death. Weight of heart, grs. 10,500 equals ozs. 24 equals lb, 1, ozs. 8. Abdominal Cavity. Liver. Color peculiar, and. difficult to describe: mottled lilac and brownish yellow. Upon near in spection of the lobules, they presented the color and appearance of cirrhosis. The structure of the liver was firm, and cut like soft cartilage. The liver contained such a large amount of 1858.] Jones, on Malarial Fever. 741 fibrous tissue, that after vigorous pounding of slices in a mortar for one hour, they still retained, in a great measure, their con- sistency. Microscopical examination showed that this tough, resisting substance was cellular tissue. This liver, then, was in a cirrhosed condition. Under the microscope, the cells of the liver appeared paler and flatter than usual. The blood-vessels of the liver were filled with blood, which ran in considerable quantities from the cut surface into the dish. This blood readi- ly absorbed oxygen, and changed to an arterial color. Under the microscope, the blood-corpuscles presented the usual appear- ance. They appeared to be diminished in number. The structures of the liver were in tilt rated with animal starch and cellulose. After thin slices had been pounded in a mortar, and carefully washed under a strong stream of water, apparently for a sufficient length of time to remove all the animal starch, and then treated with sulphuric acid, or with liquor potassae, and then treated with tincture of iodine, the large body of it was turned to a blue and purple color, like the cellulose of wood. As far as the examination extended, the cellulose appeared to enter as a constituent of the cellular tissue of the cirrhosed liver. When tested for grape-sugar, 24 hours after death, no evidence was obtained of its existence. Weight of liver, grs. 80,396 equals ozs. 69 1 equals lbs. 4, ozs. o. The fibrous tissue of the gall bladder was infiltrated with serum. The gall-bladder contained f 3iij. of thin bile, presenting the color of tincture of iodine, when seen in mass, and a gamboge yellow in thin layers. Spletn Enlarged and indurated ; color of the exterior purp- lish red. When pressed in the hand, feels dense and firm. When cut or torn, the color and structure resembles that of a healthy spleen, in all respects, except that it has a much larger quantity of fibrous tissue. The pulp of the spleen absorbed oxy- gen readily when exposed to the atmosphere, and changes to a bright scarlet arterial color. The pulp of the spleen presented nothing peculiar under the microscope. Did not discover those black flakes and granules which were so abundant in the spleen of the patient previously described (Case xxxv). The spleen contained, like the liver, animal starch and cellulose. When the fibrous tissue was washed, and treated in a manner similar to that of the liver, it gave the same reaction, with tincture of iodine. Weight of spJeen, grs. 13,343 equal ozs. 30| equal lb. 1, ozs. 14{. Kidneys unusually small. Weight of both kidneys, grs. 3937 equal ozs. 9. Alimentary Canal. Stomach of enormous size: it appeared to be capable of containing two gallons. The small quantity of food which it contained was colored yellow by the bile. Mu- cous membrane presented a healthy appearance. Small and large intestines appeared healthy. 742 Jones, on Malarial Fever. [November,. Passing over, for the present, the discussion of the character of the disease, and immediate cause of death, and many other points of interest, we will confine our attention to the patholo- gical changes of the spleen. A companion states, that this man resided two years ago on the Ogeechee river, in a low, miasmatic situation, and was very ill with fever during the summer season. He is unable to de- scribe the exact nature of the fever. From the situation, it is probable that the disease was malarial fever, and it is probable that the pathological alterations of the spleen were due to the action of the malarial poison during this attack of fever. If it was malarial fever, the spleen during the active stages was engorged with blood, softened, and the trabe- cule in many places ruptured. When the action of the poison ceased, the serum of the extravasated blood was removed, and the ruptured trabecular repaired, and numerous bands of fibrous tissue formed throughout its substance. These changes of spleen during convalescence from malarial fever, were plainly demon- strated in Cases xxxiii. and xxxv. Finally, the colored corpus- cles of the extravasated blood were disintegrated and removed. Case XXXVI. Irishman : pastry cook and baker age 44: weight 150 lbs.; height 5 feet 9 inches; grey hair, blue eyes has an old, feeble, decrepid look. Has followed the occupation of pastry cook and baker for thirty years, and during this time has worked the greater part of the night, and slept during the day. In order to keep up his strength, has used ardent spirits freely. The loss of sleep, combined with intemperate habits, have completely broken down his constitution, and he looks and talks and moves like an old man, 60 or 70 years of age. Eight months ago, had a stroke of paralysis which affected his tongue, right arm and lower extremities. Since this, he walks with some difficulty, and has but little use of the right arm. The temperature of the right paralyzed arm is generally from one to three degrees below that of the left. The following observation was taken on the 7th of July: Temperature ol atmosphere, 82 5 F. ; temp, of hand, (paralyzed,) 965F; temp, of haud, (sound,) 99 F.; temp, under tongue, 100 25 F. Under the action of strychnia and tonics, his condition was greatly improved, and he left the hospital on the 20th of Sep- tember. He resumed, in a short time, his habits of intemperance, and often lay drunk all night on the commons and in the Park. He was taken up as a vagrant, and placed in confinement by the police. It was soon discovered that he was suffering with re- mittent fever. 1858.] JONES, on Malarial Fever. 743 Entered the hospital October 8th, in an exceedingly feeble condition, and died in the coarse of 2-i hours. (9.) Autopsy four hours after Death. Exterior. Not much reduced in flesh. His constitution, en- feebled by his occupation and intemperate habits, did not long withstand the action of malarial fever. Head. Dura-mater normal, f I j. of clear serous fluid escaped from the space between the dura-mater and arachnoid membrane. Blood vessels of brain did not appear to be more congested with blood than usual. Chest. Lungs normal. Heart normal in size. The auricles showed incipient fatty degeneration. Weight of heart, grains 4:6 12 equal ozs. 11. Abdominal Cavity. Liver, upon the exterior, of a dark slate color. The cut surface presented a bronze and olive color. The cells of the liver contained more oil globules than usual. With this exception, the}' presented a normal appearance. The blood of the liver did not change to the arterial hue when exposed to the atmosphere. The liver contained animal starch, but no grape sugar: it was set aside, and at the end of 15 hours, again carefully tested for animal starch and hepatic su^ar. The result was the same animal starch in apparent abundance, but no grape sugar. The cellular tissue of the blood-vessels of the liver appeared to be infiltrated by animal starch. Weight of the liv- er, grains 29,312 equal ozs. 67 equal lbs. -i, ozs. 3. Spleen. Of a dark slate color, enlarged and softened; when pressed between, the fingers, the structures appear to give way. Pulp of spleen of a dark purplish brown and reddish brown co- lor. After exposure for 20 hours to the atmosphere, the pulp of the spleen did not alter its reddish and purplish brown color. The spleen contained animal starch in considerable abundance, both in the pulp and also in the meshes of the fibrous tissue of the trabeculae and blood-vessels. Weight of spleen, grs. 8093 equal ozs. 18^ equal lb. 1, ozs. 2^. Kidneys Normal. Weight, grs. 5687 equals ozs. 13. Alimentary Canal. Stomach. Mucous membrane presented the usual healthy appearance. Small Intestines. Mucous membrane appeared to be healthy. Glands of Peyer, large and distinct, but pale, and without any marks of congestion or inflammation. Several of these glands were three inches in length. The solitar}- glands, especially in the region of the ileo-caecal valve, were enlarged and prominent. They were about the size of millet seed, and of a reddish brown color. (To be continued.) 744 Douglass. Disease of the Mucous Membrane. [November, ARTICLE XXVI. Cases of Disease of the Mucous Membrane. By TlLMAN DOUG- LASS, M. D., of Alexander, Ga. Case I. Mr. A. K. Moore, aged 45 ; stout, well formed, of fair complexion, light hair a farmer, of excellent character: was attacked, violently, with pneumonia, the 9th of March, lfc>44. He had fever the preceding fall, and colds and general ill health during the winter. I relied on tartar-emetic, quinine and blisters, stimulating expectorants, &c, under the use of which he was convalescent in a few days. Some three months after this, Mr. Moore was able to ride about his farm, his usual health nearly restored he came to see me on account of a small tumor, the size of a cow-pea, on the inside of the right angle of the lower lip, which had enlarged and become very painful, within a day or two. I declined to do any thing for it, and advised him to visit Augusta; which he pro- mised to do, but deferred it from time to time, until he thought the tumor ceased to. enlarge. Although it still annoyed him, and sometimes excited his fears, he had very little done for it, until the 13th of April, 1846, just two years and one month after the first attack, when I was called to see him in another attack of pneumonia. The cancer, and other symptoms of bad health, had, by this time, so worn him down, that scarcely any hope of his recovery was indulged. None but the mildest and most supporting treatment could be resorted to. But on the 30th of the same month he was discharged apparently cured. The novelty in this case was, that the very day the pain was felt in the side, and other symptoms of pneumonia were devel- oped, the cancer began to heal, and in a few days the ulcer in the lip was entirely covered over by new cuticle. Nothing could be seen of it except a small excavated cicatrix. How much he and his friends rejoiced at the supposed happy termination of pneumonia and cancer may be well imagined. But how changed the scene, when in a few days, so soon as he was able to ride, Mr. Moore visited me again on account of the same sore ! It had broken out suddenly was swollen, red, spreading, and intensely painful; the new tender cuticle destroy- I 1858.] Douglass. Disease of the Muccms Membrane, 745 ed, it was an open angry nicer. The same motives which caused me to decline to touch the cancer, two years before, of course urged me to the same course now. After suffering all the horrors of this most awful malady, for several months, under the cruel tortures inflicted by the officious ignorance, usual in such cases, death kindly came to his relief. Case II. Mrs. S. G-., aged 22 ; light hair, fair skin, blue eyes, weighing about 150, of fine form, and general good health and spirits the only child of Mr. Moore. Before proceeding to the details of this case, it may be best to state that Mr. G., the husband of this lady, a fine healthy young lawyer, had his knee hurt in the spring of 1857, while driving an unruly horse in his buggy : a very bad ulcer formed in the wounded part, and subsequently not less than twenty almost literally covered the leg, down to the ankle. As soon as one would heal, leaving a deep, dark cicatrix, others would appear near by. The point of interest in this case is, that Mrs. G. had ulcers of the same character, on her leg, last fall and winter, which healed about the time of her confinement. Her child was born the 12th of February of this year, and she had a severe attack of dysen- tery, with discharges of bloody mucus, tormina and tenesmus, on the 14th. Cream of tartar and some mild diuretics relieved her very promptly, and she was soon up. In a few days I was called again to see her, when I found the tongue, mouth and throat red and intensely sore; deglutition very difficult. The disease was confined to the mucous mem- brane would spread over a considerable surface in a short time, and subside as quickly. Fever, which abated in the morn- ing and returned at three in the afternoon, caused an increase of the burning pain. The next day, constant nausea, with oc- casional colic and great prostration, fits of fainting, and lancina- ting pains through the abdomen, made it but too evident that the whole canal was involved. Quinine soon arrested the fever. Solution of creasote as a gargle, and a very weak solution of creasote into the stomach, followed by iodide of potassium, after the fever was arrested, measurably restored her. But then the returning appetite was tempted by a fine perch, which aggrava- ted all the symptoms, and in two days more severe pain was 746 Douglass. Disease of the Mucous Menbrane. [November, found passing down the rectum, followed by discharges of bloody mucus, affording temporary relief. Two days later, the anus, and the vagina and urethra, were invaded by the swollen, pain- ful, burning disease. Emulsion of spirits turpentine and gum- arabic was tried, but thought to be too exciting. She has been taking balsam copaiba with gum arabic, for some time, with de- cided advantage. Since the fever has given way, syrup iodide of iron has improved her strength and appetite. This lady is now, 6th of July, considered well. Case III. Mrs. M. C, aged 25 : slender frame, tolerably tall, sandy hair, fair skin, relaxed fibre and very little stamina; about five years, married ; mother of two children. Her hus- band, a man of feeble constitution, has a troublesome sore on his leg. His lady had ulcers on her leg. She became pregnant the first of last year, lived in a sickly neighborhood, and had two or three attacks of intermittent fever the last, in Sepiember. The bowels were very obstinately constipated, with tenesmus and intolerable tormina. Was relieved by quinine, and an emulsion of castor oil, balsam copaiba and gum-arabic, in small doses. She was confined the 13th of December, just two months after the attack in September. On the second day after the birth of her child, dysentery, of the most violent grade, set in. The tenesmus and tormina were as severe as in September; and in addition to that, the stomach was very irritable, and she pass- ed bloody mucus from the bowels. The stomach, not tolerating the oil emulsion, she was relieved with small doses of cream of tartar. This was the 18th January, one month and five days after the birth of her child. I heard nothing more of her until the 23rd of April, three months from the attack of dysentery, when I was called to see her on account of sore mouth. She said her mouth had been sore almost ever since I saw her before. The soreness did not confine itself to the mucous membrane, as it did in the case of Mrs. G., but penetrated and formed ulcers which secreted pus. They would heal and then come in other places. For several weeks she declined in flesh and strength, until she became so prostrate as to keep her bed constantly. The stomach was irri- table, and the bowels either constipated or excessively loose. The treatment consisted of an emulsion of balsam copaiba 1858.] Diphtheritic Affections. 747 with gum-arabic, quinine, iodide of potassium. Washes of va- rious kinds were tried, but diluted tinct. mur. ferri. seemed to afford her most comfort. The irritable stomach was relieved bj a very weak solution of creasote. Animal broths were pre- scribed as a nourishment. Her strength so improved that on the 26th day of May she was carried to her mother's, out of my neighborhood. All treatment was abandoned, except laudanum given by an old lady, and all rules of dieting laid aside, until the 5th June, nine days from her removal ; when diarrhoea set in, and my friend, Dr. David Perkins, was called, who called me in con- sultation the next day. We found her prostrated, so a noA to 1 e able to raise her head, or even to be raised, without idintmg ; ghastly countenance, nnd passing watery discharges constantly from the bowels with cough and other evidences of the lungs having been invaded by the same disease. The ulcers had left the mouth. The only sore which had remained for any length of time, on the tip of the tongue, had now entirely healed. She lingered on, almost motionless and speechless, till the 30th of June, when she ex- pired. Diphtheritic Affections. A late No. of the Archives Generales de Med. contains an in- teresting paper by M. Isambert on diphtheritic affections and on the malignant angina in Paris in 1855. The following are the authors conclusions: Diphtheritic affections sometimes appear sporadically; they often seem to be endemic, and also epidemic and contagious. Epidemic influences are often the principal causes. Contagion does, however, really exist, as several medical men have been infected. Shall we agree with M. Bretonneau, and believe that diph- theritic is not propagated by the air, but is always the result of a kind of inoculation or actual contact of the morbid secretion with a mucous membrane? The author thinks this opinion too exclusive, as also does M. Trousseau. Diphtheritic affections are generally preceded by initiatory symptoms in the form of bronchitis, with more or less fever. The general aspect of these affections, at an advanced period, is x. s. vol. xrv. vo. xi. 43 748 Epidemic Diphtheritic Angina. [November, of the adynamic kind, except when there is much agitation and convulsive effort brought on by croupy exudation. These ailments are of a decidedly specific nature ; the more they are studied, the more we remain convinced that inflamma- tion is of secondary importance, and is sometimes completely absent. Relapses are not rare in diphtheritis; this complaint therein differs from other specific diseases ; as variola, rubeola, and scar- latina. The general treatment should be directed against the inflam- mation, if it be present, which circumstance is, however, rare. Abstraction of blood should be used cautiously in an affection which so soon assumes a typhoid character. Cutaneous counter- irritation should be completely avoided, as the irritated regions soon become centres of new diphtheritic manifestations. Emetics are extremely valuable; and alteratives, mercury, alkaline car- bonates, and cholorate of potash, are often useful. Local treatment is very important, and consists of an energet- ic modification of the affected surfaces. Calomel, alum, hy- drochloric acid, and especially solutions of nitrate of silver, are always indicated. The patient should, finally, be well sustained, besides taking medicines, as there is a tendency to a typhoid state in this kind of affection. He should also be given tonics, as bark, coffee, and wine; the latter tonic is especially advisable during convales- cence after severe diphtheritis. American Jour, of Med. Sciences. Epidemic Diphtheritic Angina at Lima. By M. Odeiozola. About the close of the month of July, 1851, an epidemic grippe appeared, and suddenly attacked the whole population of Lima, and was fatal, particularly to old people, in consequence of grave pneumonias which were developed in its course. The first cases were observed from the middle to the twenty-fourth of July, and extended rapidly and simultaneously to all the in- habitants of this city, so that, during the height of the epidemic, the streets were deserted for ten or fifteen days. Since that period, we have suffered two other epidemics, one ever memora- ble on account of the great ravages it caused the yellow fever,x the first invasion of which occurred in the summer of the year 18o2, in a benign form, to become grave and fatal in the years '53 and '54; and the diphtheritic angina, which, though not so general or fatal as the preceding, did not fail to secure some victims, notwithstanding the small number of persons attacked. To this last, which still prevails, we devote a few lines. If we may rely upon the few and incomplete records left by 1858.] Epidemic Diphtheritic Angina. 749 our predecessors, relative to the epidemics which have afflicted the inhabitants of Lima, the diphtheritic angina appeared here for the tirst time in the year 1821, and then, as now, merited the epithet epidemic, because it appeared simultaneously in a large number of individuals. Since that date, we have no notice, nor does there exist any document to show its reappear- ance until the year 1850, when it attacked, sporadically, a small number of persons, to whom it proved fatal. Four years passed, and in 1855, it extirminated almost an entire family, without extending beyond the house in which it caused such marked ravages. And, in the mouth of April last, 1858, it appeared again, and from that time to the present, there is scarcely a prac- titioner who has not had at least two or three cases under his care. It is worthy of remark that our estimable fellow-member. Dr. Jose J. Bravo, prognosticated the invasion of this diseass in February last, on the ground that it had appeared a year and a half ago epidemically at Piura, passed to Trujillo, and thence to Huacho, places where it had some victims, and that it was rational to expect so fearful a guest, which, from its origin, was propagated from north towards the south. As the diphtheritic or pseudo-membranous angina now pre- vailing does not differ in its symptoms or anatomical characters from that described by authors under the same name, or from that which we have mentioned as described by Dr. Valdes, we believe ourselves to be excused from entering into details, con- tenting ourselves, for the present, with merely indicating the class of society in which the diphtheritic angina appeared more especially, the proximate number of sufferers, and the treatment resorted to in preference by a majority of the profession. It was natural to expect that, once developed amongst us, th:s disease would find its largest number of victims in the needy class as happens in certain European populations, where it pre- vails with some frequency ; but the contrary has happened, for it has attacked, in preference, persons who enjoy all possible comforts, and in so marked a manner that, in the hospital for men, there has not been a single case, and in that of Santa Ana, for women, there has been only two. The black race, up to this time, has been as resistant to this angina as it was to the yellow fever. It is to be regretted that no data on this point cau be obtained from the history of the epidemic of 1821, above men- tioned. For this and various other reasons, we have character- ized the description by Dr. Valdes as incomplete. We should have been pleased to present an exact statement of the number attacked by the angiua; but it may be readily perceived that such a labor is impracticable, inasmuch as it has not yet ceased, and because it has not occurred in the hospitals, where it might be accurately made. 750 Diphtheria, or Diphtherite. [November, Notwithstanding the many impediments we have encountered, we have succeeded in obtaining, from a majority of the most respectable practitioners, the number of cases they have treated, with the following results : Of 70 cases of diphtheritic angina, 49 were females and 21 males; 55 were cured and 15 died. Of the 15 deaths, only two were adults, the rest between 3 and 12 years of age, much the largest number being between 3 and 5 years old. Of the 55 cured, only 5 were under, and the remaining 50 exceeded 12 years of age. The whole 70 patients belonged to the white race. The total number attacked up to this time is between 80 and 90. The majority of physicians have decided in favor of cauteriza- tions with pure chlorohydric acid, practised two or three times a day, according to the gravity of the case, and emetics of tartar emetic or ipecacuanha, alternately employed. It is not our object, nor is it possible, to decide upon the degree of curative efficacy in diphtheritis which the cauterizations may possess; but we ingenuously confess that this treatment, employed active- ly from the beginning, has yielded happy results in the greater number of cases, and it has been inefficacious in the most of these cases in which it has been applied two or three days after the developement of the disease. We hope that time and experience will determine the true value of this remedy, which is considered impotent by some of our practitioners. We have employed emetics exclusively for their mechanical effects on the pharynx, favoring the expulsion of the false membranes; but it may be said, in passing, that their abuse in children produces more hurt than advantage, and they do not tolerate them as well as adults, in whom we have observed no accident, although fear caused by the gravity of the disease, may have induced us, perhaps, to carry them further than we ought. As purely auxiliary, we have used opiate gar- gles, and the liquor of Labarraque. We know thai some have employed different therapeutic agents in this angina, such as bark, internally, baths, gargles, and cataplasms of a concentra- ted decoction of the same, sulphate of quinine, cauterizations with a concentrated solution of nitrate of silver, or sulphate of copper, &c, &c. ; but we are entirely ignorant of the opinion which should be formed as to their utility. [Gaceta Medica de Lima. Organo qficial de la Sociedad de Medicine, and lb. Diphtheria, or Diphtherite. By David Thompson, Esq., of Lan- caston. About three years since, this neighborhood was visited by an epidemic of this rare disease. The first cases occurred in the 1858.] Diphtheria, or Diphtfierite, 751 town, and no others then appeared for several months, when it again broke out in the district north of this place, where it pre- vailed for several months, whilst the south side was comparative- ly free from it. From the north, it gradually spread, until the whole line of country had been visited by it. There appeared to be no difference in the geological nature of the country, the level, or the aspect, in increasing the severity or granting an immunity from the disease. The premonitory symptoms varied somewhat A few retired to rest comparatively well, and awoke in the morning with the throat sore, and covered with white deposit. In the majority it was preceded by all the ordinary symptoms of pyrexia, of which headache was one of the most severe, followed in the course of a day or two by the usual throat symptoms. An extreme feeling of depression, not to be accounted tor, by the amount of mischief in the throat, was a characteristic symptom in each case. An external examination of the throat showed the tonsil generally to be swollen, hard, and tender to the touch ; while sometimes the parotid gland participated in the swelling. Internally the tonsil was swollen, and either covered with the diphtheritic deposit, which frequent- ly extended over the pharynx, and sometimes into the nares and palate, or else it would be scooped out into an ulcer, with raised violet-coloured edges; the floor exhibiting a dark ash- coloured slough. In some instances there would be no deposit or ulceration at first, but simply the tonsil painful and enlarged. These cases generally changed for a state of ulceration, which began in several distinct spots, and gradually spread over the whole tonsil. In the most severe examples, the tonsils sometimes sloughed en masse. I saw one instance in which this occurred, in an early stage of the disease ; and where now (two years since it occurred) a cavity remains, capable of containing a pigeon's egg, across the surface of which extends a small band of mucous membrane, which did not slough at the same time, and gives great inconvenience, from retaining the food impacted in the hollow during deglutition. I have seen no case in which I could detect the extension of the disease into the oesophagus; but in many it has entered into the air-passages, this being the most frequent and most fatal complication. Of 4b5 cases that came under my own observa- tion, the instances in which the air-passages became involved in the disease amounted to 15; and of this number II died, the greater number within a few hours after the first symptoms of croupy breathing began. The false membrane formed on the tonsil and pharynx extended into the larynx, trachea, and fre- quentlv far into the minute divisions of the bronchi. In one ..nee, a girl aged 17 expectorated, within twelve hours after the first symptoms of croup made their appearance, a complete 752 Diphtheria, or Diphtherite. [November, cast of the larynx, trachea, and bronchial tubes, extending to the fifth division of the bronchi; in a few hours afterwards, a fresh membrane formed, and she died from suffocation. In many instances, I saw numbers of minute casts expectora- ted from the lungs, whilst at the same time a stethoscopic exam- ination gave all the symptoms of capillary bronchitis. A gen- tleman aged 46, died from this condition of the lungs. His throat was first affected. After a few days, the breathing became impeded, with all the ordinary symptoms of capillary bronchi- tis in the first stage, the throat continuing to improve. He gradually sank, constantly expectorating casts of the small tubes, precisely similar to the deposit in the trachea. I kept accurate notes of 125 of the most severe cases, inclu- ding all the deaths. Cases. Deaths. Males 55 9 Females 70 4 Totals 125 13 The deaths, with two exceptions, were all below fifteen years of age; and, with two exceptions, were all from affections of the air-passages. In the two who died from other causes than affec- tions of the air-passages, death occurred in one from the slough- ing of a blister, applied for three hours to the upper part of the sternum; and in the other from extreme debility remaining after recovery from croup. There was a very remarkable tendency for blistered surfaces to take on unhealthy action ; and I fre- quently saw the irritated surface covered with a deposit similar to that on the throat. A strong similarity appears to exist between this disease and scarlet fever, so strong, as almost to lead one to hazard the opin- ion that it may be a modification of that disease. The following are the reasons for considering so : 1. Diphtherite prevailed in this neighborhood as a conta- gious (?) epidemic at the same time as well-marked scarlet fever, and chiefly among children. 2. In the same house, the father and mother had well-marked scaflet fever severely without any ulceration or deposit on the throat; while the three children had all the marked symptoms of diphtherite, without much feverishness and no rash, though attended by the same premonitory symptoms, the cases occur- ring at the same time. 3. In many instances, cases of apparently pure diphtherite were, after some days, attended by a rash, that seldom remained more than a few hours. 4. The disease in most instances commenced with all the symptoms of fever, its duration being similar to that of scarlet. 1858.] On the Prevailing Diphtheritic Affection. 753 5. In cases of apparently pure scarlet fever, the throat be- came, after a few days, covered with diphtheritic deposit. 6. The sequela? of the two diseases nearly resembled each, other; albuminous urine, with casts, being present in eight cases of diphtherite, and anasarca pro viug fatal from convulsions in one. It would occupy too much space to give more than a mere outline of the subject ; but future and more extended experience than mine may prove whether there is any connection between the two diseases. Deafness was a not unfrequent sequela of diphtherite and temporary paralysis; in all instances these were recovered from. 1 have only known one case of diphtheritic ophthalmia to have occurred in the neighborhood. In that in- stance, the deposit extended over the lower half of the conjunc- tiva. The treatment most successful was the early and thorough application of lunar caustic to the throat, together with the use ot a stimulating gargle of nitrate of potass, and capsicum, or so- lution of chlorinated soda (Beaufoo's) diluted. When there was much feverishuess in the early stage, an emetic appeared some- times to benefit. Mild but continued counter-irritation over the upper part of the chest appeared of great service. General treat- ment, beyond keeping the secretions regular, was of little use, and frequently injurious. Depletion of any sort did an infinite deal of harm. Stimulants were often required in an early stage. The chances of recovery when croup set in severely were but small. The only chance seemed to be, in the rapid exhibition of small doses of calomel- and ipecacuanha, with stimulants. Under this treatment, four out of fifteen recovered who were affected with this complication. Tracheotomy was tried, but of no service, as the false membrane extended beyond the trachea. In the number of the Lancet for, I think, the }-ear 1832, there is a most characteristic case described by Dr. Alison, of Edin- burgh, as having occurred in the Royal Infirmary, and which .terminated, as the fatal cases here did, in croup. A careful microscopic examination of the white deposit showed nothing different from the usual appearances of exuded lymph. British Med. Journal and lb. On the lately prevailing DiphUieritic Affection. By Dr. William Camps. This affliction has been variously designated as croup, croupy diseases of the throat, malignant sore throat or cynanche maligna, diphtheritis or diphtherite, throat affection, prevalent sore throat, &c Under one or other of these terms, there could now no longer be any doubt that a disease lately prevailed, and 754 On the Prevailing Diphtheritic Affection. [November, did still exist, with more or less intensity, in various parts of the United Kingdom, including the metropolis. The public health authorities had, in their periodical documents, of late solicited information respecting it, uuder Jhe term diphtheria. Dr. Camps states that his attention was directed thereto, in the first instance, by noticing in one of the quarterly returns of the Registrar- General an unusually large number of deaths from croup, as having occurred in a rural district, with the popula- tion and locality of which he was tolerably well acquainted. It was well known that a form of pharyngeal inflammation had been investigated and described some years ago by M. Bre- ton neau, of Tours, and that to this disease he gave the name of diphtherite. It was probably from the analogy observed between the disease lately prevailing here and that described by M. Bre- ton neau, that the former was now commonly spoken of as diph- therite, diphtheritis, diphtheria, or diphtheritic disease. M. Breton neau and some other French authorities appeared to have regarded it as almost, if not absolutely, identical with the ordi- nary inflammatory croup of this country; and Dr. Watson in his lecture on croup, appeared to regard Dr. West as holding the opinion that diphtherite is a variety of croup an opinion in which Dr. Camps did not concur. Whether in this country or in France, this disease had heretofore appeared rather as an epidemic than as a sporadic affection ; and the author was of opinion that many of the cases of throat disease which proved so fatal not long since at Boulogne, might have been cases of diphtherite. Here it assumed quite an epidemic character ; and in all the severer and fatal instances of the disease in this country that had come to the author's knowledge, such cases had occur- red in tolerably rapid succession as to time, and in tolerably close proximity as to place. He hesitated to commit himself without reserve to the question of its contagiousness, although he believed that practitioners in France entertained that opinion. The type of the disease in its severest forms, he considered to be essentially asthenic or adynamic; and, therefore, attended with more or less languor, depression, and diminution or impairment of vitality, thus indicating most clearly the appro- priate mode of treatment. Of late, in many of the metropolian dispensaries and hospitals, stomatitis had been very prevalent; and in the judgement of the author, there existed between stomatitis and the diphtheritic affection, now under considera- tion, a very close analogy or resemblance. He regarded the former as the standing off into a milder form of the latter, yet both as the result of the same morbific general cause ; so that the difference between the two should be considered as one of degree, rather than of kind. The tendency to the production of plastic, pseudo-membranous exudations, as observed in these 1858.] On the Prevailing Diphtheritic Affection. 755 diseases, was one mode of denoting the existence of an adyna- mic or low form of inflammation ; and the correct appreciation of this condition was of the highest importance in the treatment. A description of the disease, as detailed by M. Bretonneau, was then briefly adverted to by Dr. Camps, who then stated that he was indebted to Dr. H. W. Fuller, of St. George's Hospital, for having drawn his attention to a record of cases of diphtheri- tis that had occurred in 1849 at Haverfordwest, in the practice of Mr. Brown, of that place, and which that gentleman had communicated to the " Medical Times and Gazette." Mr. Brown in that year had had no fewer than two hundred cases, forty of which had proved fatal ; and in some of these death had ensued in a few hours from the seizure, others lingered on for some days. In its course, Mr. Brown said that some of the little sufferers appeared to get through it easily ; while others lingered for weeks with slight but deceitful symptoms. The treatment adopted by Mr. Brown was referred to by the author at some length. He affirms that he did not lose a patient in whom he succeeded in establishing ptyalism. That gentleman advocated the topical application of solution of nitrate of silver; in regard to constitutional treatment, he depended upon calomel in combination with ipecacuanha, in doses varying from half a grain of each, every four or eight hours. He found, moreover, emetics of great service in the first stage of the disease ; they then always relieved the distress in breathing, carrying away large quantities of mucus. The only cases that proved fatal under his care were those in whom the pharynx and the larynx were simultaneously affected. The post-mortem examination of all the fatal cases that had come within the author's knowledge, showed the pharynx, tonsils, larynx, trachea, and upper part of the bronchi, to be more or less coated with plastic, pseudo- membranous exudation. Eeference was made by the author to the occurrence of the disease in various parts of the country; namely, in Essex, Norfolk, Lincolnshire, Staffordshire, Wor- cestershire, Lancashire, Devonshire, and in the metropolis. With reference to the cause or causes of this and similar diseases assuming an epidemic character, it was usual to regard such as the results of some specific epidemic influence or agency, operating upon the human system through the blood. This explanation, or attempted explanation, the author stated, was by no means satisfactory to his own mind, however much so it might be to the minds of others. From all the facts or particulars which Dr. Camps had been able to collect respecting this disease, he was disposed to draw the following conclusions: 1. A disease very analogous to, if not identical with, that des- cribed by M. Bretonneau as diphtherite, had existed in this 756 Some Obscure forms of Nervous Affection. [November, country, and had prevailed with more or less intensity during the iast few years. 2. This disease was mainly, if not essentially, of an asthenic, adynamic type; and characterized in the severer cases by the formation of plastic pseudo-membranous exudations. 3. This disease was primarily pharyngeal as to its seat, and not laryngeal, except secondarily, and by complication; thus differing anatomically from croup. 4. Its difference from stomatitis was a difference of degree or intensity, rather than a difference of kind; and that one chief point of difference from the malignant sore throat, consequent upon scarlatina, consisted in the tendency to the formation of plastic pseudo-membranous exudations. 5. In many instances this disease possessed the characters of an epidemic disease. 6. Its low adynamic type clearly indicated the mode of treat- ment to be adopted ; which in the author's judgement, should be both topical and general. The topical consisting of free ap- plications of a strong solution of nitrate of silver to the parts affected, composed of from one scruple to two drachms of the nitrate to one ounce of distilled water; or similar applications of chlorine or hydrochloric acid ; the general treatment compris- ing the repeated administration of chlorate of potassa, with chlorine, or a combination of cinchona bark, or its alkaloid salts with the mineral acids; and in the severer cases, calomel in repeated doses, so as to produce ptyalism. Emetics in the early stages of the disease have been given in some cases, and with good result. In addition, the vital powers of the system must be well sustained by liberal administration of wine, stout, beef- tea, and other invigoratihg means. [British Med. Journal. On some of the more Obscure Forms of Nervous Affections: their Pathology and Treatment. With an Introduction on the Physi- ology of Digestion and Assimilation, and the Generation and Distribution of Nerve Force. By Harry William Lobb, L. S. A. and M.R.C.S.E. Mr. Lobb, in the first part of his work, advances opinions, both in physics and physiology, which are diametrically oppo- sed to those ordinarily received. One or two examples will convey a notion of Mr. Lobb's matter and manner. Adopting a system of molecular physics (which would seem to have scarcely any other foundation than ingenuity) he makes this the master-key with which to unlock several of the myste- ries of physiolgy. He assumes that "the ultimate atoms of all matter are spheroids in a state of vibration" (p. 6) ; vibration 1858.] Some Obscure forms of Xervous Affection. -* gives rise to certain definite currents ; " currents in the spheroid produce rotation; rotation will continue the currents; they, therefore, contain within themselves the elements of their own existence" (p. 8); the currents are electrical currents, and as a consequence we have the conclusion liat, as no change of an}" description can take place in matter without causing cur- rents of electrical fluid, and as the combinations and disruptions which take place during an act of growth, and which occur through the agency of what is termed vital force, or as Mr. Lobb> prefers to term it, cell force or cell electricity, are always accom- panied by molecular changes, therefore, "Vital force is merely a modification of that remarkable fluid pervading all matter and space, always aiming at equilibrium and yet so easily disarrang- ed" (p. 11). Mr. Lobb's views will scarcely supersede the views of Mr. Groves and Dr. Carpenter, the former of whom has dealt most ably with the physical relations of electricity, and the latter with the physiological. (On the mutual Eelations of the Vital and Physical forces, " Phil. Trans." 1850, Part II.) Mr. Lobb advances a theory of the formation of chyle-cells. He states that the initial step in the formation of the cell is the vibratory movements of certain minute crystals of phosphate of lime. These crystals during vibration become coated with the proteine and oily compounds of the chyle forming molecules. 44 When many of these molecules are formed, they, upon ap- proaching one another, become attached in a line like a small string of beads, vibration still continuing; when a certain num- ber are thus joined, they double one upon another, forming a nucleus, to which minute atoms are continually added until a tolerable aggregation is the result ; this is a mass of molecules. The external atoms now proceed to form a cell wall, which, in this period of its existence is completely invisible : but it consists of minute atoms, between which are still smaller interspaces, which admit of the passage of fluids," &c. (p. 31). A sad short- coming of this theory is the absence of all proof of the process of formation here said to take place. As another example of Mr. Lobb's mode of reasoning, the following may be quoted : " Carbonic acid gas is constantly, day and night, winter and summer, although in varying proportions according to circumstances, being excreted by the blood in the lungs ; the repair of tissue surely does not require this immense waste of material. The most idle man the fat unwieldy inhab- itant of the Eastern harem, who is afraid to move lest she should lessen her value in the eyes of her lord by losing a portion of her obesity, eats largely. Merely to throw off this waste from the lungs? Surely not ; there must be a cause, and it is this. 11 The nutriment absorbed by the lacteals, converted into 758 Some Obscure forms of Kervous Affection. [November, albumen, fibrine, and blood cells, is conveyed into the most minute intensity of the organism by the capillaries; here the oxygen brought by the blood seizes upon some hydrocarbon with which to unite, giving rise to molecular change to currents of electricity ; these currents are collected by the nerves always accompanying the vessels, and serve lo feed the nervous system ; at the same time, some portion correlates into animal heat, &c. It is then to feed the nervous system that this tissue-change, beyond that really required for repair, is constantly going forward, and so much carbonic acid is excreted from the lungs. It is not, then, a wilful waste, 4his apparent carbon ; on the contrary, life could not last without it aervous energy would lessen, the extremities and skin would get cold circulation would become sluggish, and death eventually ensue" (p. 82). It is certainly, a somewhat novel view to regard the cabonic acid given off by the lungs as wasted material, seeing that that gas is commonly regarded as a deleterious product of the decay of some, and the metamorphosis of other tissues, and of the re- duction of the carbon of the food, which reduction has especial reference to the maintenance of animal heat. No question of physiology has been more carefully and successfully investigated than that of the sources of the carbonic acid given off from the lungs, and its relationship to the amount and quality of food taken, and of the degree of metamorphosis going on in the differ- ent tissues of the body ; but Mr. Lobb appears to ignore altogether the results of the researches on this question. Mr. Lobb, moreover, does not seem to be aware that the electrical conditions arising from changes going on in the intimate struc- tures of the body, particularly in the nerves and muscles, have been made the subject of most successful experimental research by M. E. de Bois-Eaymond and others, and that, in consequence, theories upon this subject which are not based upon experiment, are neither necessary nor admissible. When Mr. Lobb makes use of the expression " correlates into," e. g. " some portion {i. e. of the electricity) correlates into animal heat" (p. 83) ; he betrays a singular misapprehension of the signification of the term cor- relation. In the second part of his work, Mr. Lobb treats of "certain affections of the nervous system, the symptoms of which are obscure, and which, if not alleviated, would develop themselves into organic degeneration, fatal disease, or insanity." He ex- presses the opinion that the affections of which he treats depend upon "partial paralysis of some portion of the sympathetic system of nerves, either of their centres or their peripheric ter- minations, thus upsetting the healthy process of digestion and assimilation in some portion of its extended course, causing functional derangements, nervous irritability, and frequently 1858.] Effect of Local Influences on Spasmodic Asthma. 759 sympathetic complication of the most important organs" (p. 124). He discusses the nervous affections which accompany certain morbid conditions of the urine, B right's disease, and diabetes. He discusses, also, spermatorrhoea, stammering, hysteria, chorea, and epilepsy; diet and regimen, certain medicinal preparations, and the therapeutics of galvanism and electro-magnetism. He adds nothing new to our knowledge of the affections of which he treats, and his therapeutics are in great measurs derived from the peculiar views which he entertains on the physiology of digestion and assimilation. That portion of Mr. Lobb's work which is devoted to sperma- torrhoea would appear to be written rather for the public than the profession. [Ranking* s Abstract. The Effect of Local Influences on Spasmodic Asthma. By Dr. Hyde Salter, Assistant Physician to Charing-cross Hospital. The purport of this paper is to show that, in a very large proportion of cases of asthma in which it has been fairly tried, change of locality effects an instantaneous cure, which is perma- nent as long as the asthmatic continues his residence in the place that has cured him. The author remarks that, although the subject of his paper is a single method of cure of a single disease, yet that the efficacy and completeness of the cure, and the pain- fulness and intractability of the complaint, vindicated it from unimportance; and, indeed, that in so distressing and unman- ageable a disease, any remedy that offered even a small percent- age of cures might be considered the greatest possible boon. The paper is illustrated by nearly thirty original cases, and the points that the author considered to be established are as follows : 1. That residence in one locality will radically and perma- nently cure asthma resisting all treatment in another locality. 2. That the localities which are the most beneficial to the largest number of cases are large, populous, and smoky cities. 8. That this effect of locality depends, probably, on the air. 4. That the air that would be imagined to be the worst for the general health is, as a rule, the best for asthma; thus the worst parts of cities are the best, and conversely. 5. That this is not always the case, the very reverse being sometimes so a city air not being tolerated, and an open, pure air effecting a cure. 6. That there is no end of the apparent caprice of asthma in this respect, the most varying and opposite airs unaccountably curing. 7. That, consequently, it is impossible to predict what will be the effect of any given air, but that probably the most opposite to that in which the asthma seems worst will cure. 700 Influmce of Surgical Affections, Sec. [November, 8. That some of these differences, determining the presence or cure of asthma, appeared to be of the slightest possible kind, arbitrary, and inscrutable. 9-. That the mere conditions of locality appear to be adequate to the production of asthma in a person whose disposition to it was never before suspected, and who probably never would have had it, had he not gone to such a locality. 10. That, consequently, probably many healthy persons who never have had asthma, and never may, would have been asth- matics if their lot had been cast in other localities. 1L That possibly there is no case of asthma that might not be cured if the right air could only be found. 12. That the disposition is not eradicated, but merely suspend- ed, and immediately shows itself on a recurrence to the original injurious air. 13. That change of air, as change, is prejudicial. 14. That, from ^he caprice of asthma, the constancy of the result in any given case is often deranged. In reference to the frequency with which London air is bene- ficial to asthma, the author remarked that he was in the habit of putting to country asthmatics the two questions "Have you ever been in London? have you ever had asthma there?" and that, if an affirmative answer was given to the first question, a negative one was pretty sure to be given to the second. In his own experience he had found hardly any exception to this rule. [Lancet. On the Influence of some Surgical Affections upon Animal Heat. By M. 1)emarquay. M. Demarquay observes that although many observations have been made upon the modifications of the temperature pro- duced by internal diseases, with the exception of Hunter's upon inflammation, and some researches upon the effects of ligatures on large vessels, nothing has been done with respect to surgical affections. He treated upon the subject in his inaugural disser- tations in 1847, and since then has continued to pay attention to it ; and the present memoir is an account of some of the results of his observations. The pyrexia following amputations and other operations is accompanied by an elevation of temperature proportioned to the amount of reaction ; but when the case becomes complicated by other phenomena, as phlebitis or erysipelas, the temperature may undergo notable variations. Thus, in a case of amputation, of the thigh, followed by phlebitis and purulent affection, the thermometer has risen from 97 or 99 to 104 Fahr.; and although this increase may seem in itself but trifling, yet the 1858.] Influence of Surgical Affections, &c. 761 observations of Andral and others have noted but a few degrees of elevation only, even in the intensest fevers. If, however, the elevation of the general temperature is inconsiderable, that is not the case with respect to the local temperature. Thus, in phlegmon and erysipelas, comparing the condition of the afflict- ed parts with that of the healthy ones, it has been found that while the general temperature of the body may have undergone a notable increase, exceeding that of the neighboring parts Dy from 2 to 5 C. All serious wounds which produce febrile action induce an elevation of general and local temperature, but when the membrane covering the granulations has become well organized, the temperature is then found to be like that of the surrounding parts ; so that ice applied under such circumstances would abstract normal, not morbid, caloric. Experimenting upon dogs, too, the author has observed that the application of ice leads to a considerable falling of the thermometer in the case of subcutaneous wounds. The same experiments showed that a wound that had undergone such diminution in its temperature, quickly recovered this, and went beyond it, the temperature of the wound thus undergoing a series of elevations and depres- sions, according to the quantity of ice employed, and its degree of fusion. It is evident that such a powerful modifier requires great reserve in its employment ; and most of the Paris surgeons reasonably prefer in the case of great breach of surface, tepid irritations to these freezing applications. As to the temperature in aneurisms, MM. Demarquay and Monneret have on several occasions observed in arterioso-venous aneurisms of the lower extremity, an elevation of from 1 to 2^ C. ; but they have never observed a similar difference in the case of such aneurism existing at the bend of the elbow. When in a limb, the subject of aneurism, the circulation has undergone no considerable dis- turbance, no important variation of the animal temperature is observable; but when complications, such as phlegmon, are present, an elevation of 2 may take place. After ligature of the femoral and humeral arteries, the author has found a dimi- nution of temperature to take place, and the experiments upon animals which he had made with MM. Dumeril and Lecointe demonstrate the accuracy of the assertion, that every ligature of an important artery, performed so as to avoid all injury to the veins and nerves, give rise to a diminution of the temperature of the limb beyond the ligature. A priori, a considerable modi- fication in the temperature of a limb might be expected in limbs suffering from senial gangrene; and the author has been some- what surprised to find only a difference of 1| or 2C. between the two limbs, except in one case, when the difference amounted to 5. The following are the conclusions of the memoir : 1. Purulent 762 Absorption of Medicinal Substances. [November, infection and erysipelas give rise to an elevation of 2 to 3 C. 2. Circumscribed inflammations, as phlegmon or local erysipe- las, give rise to an increase varying from 1 to 5. Ice quickly gives rise to a temporary diminution, but the parts afterwards not only recover their former temperature, but exceed it. 3. A true aneurism, if the limb is healthy, give rise to no change of temperature, but arterioso-venous aneurism, and especially in the lower extremity, increases it by 1 to 2\ C. 4. Hunter and his school have examined into the effects of ligature of vessels on the temperature, but have arrived at contradictory results. From my observations it follows that ligature of the artery and the vein in arterioso-venous aneurism of the lower extremity, give rise to an elevation of temperature ; while when the princi- pal artery of a limb is alone tied, there is always a diminution of temperature. 5. In senile gangrene there is always a diminu- tion of temperature of from 1 to 5 C. in the parts situated above the mortification. \Comtes Rendus. and Ranking 's Ab- stract. On the Absorption of Medicinal Substances by the Large Intestine. By M. Briquet. The object of M. Briquet's two memoirs is the study of the ab- sorption of medicinal substances introduced into the large intes- tine by means of clysters. The following are the general conclu- sions he has arrived at : 1. The fluid constituting the injection may easily reach as far as the caecum, and consequently may be brought into contact with a very large extent of absorbing surface. 2. The mucous membrane and the fluids that bathe its surface do not exert any chemical action upon the subslances so introduced into the large intestine, where all that is absorbed is that which was previously in a state of solution. 3. When a clyster of the soluble salts of quinine, in doses less than 15 grains, is administered, rather more than a third of the quantity so administered is eliminated, and has consequently been absorbed. 4. When large doses are adminis- tered, they are ill-supported, and only a fifth or a sixth of the quantity is absorbed. 5. In whatever dose the the quinine may have been given, it generally gives rise to cerebral symptoms only very slowly and to a slight degree. 6. Traces of elimina- tion and consequently of absorption are only met with an hour after the administration of a clyster, and even then the elimina- tion is incurable. 7. The duration of the elimination is usually short two or three days at the utmost. 8. The greatest or less dilution, within certain limits, the more or less viscous nature of the liquid, or the addition of the salts of morphia to the cinchona alkaloids do not exert any sensible modification on the absorption. 1858.] The Uses of Pain. 763 9. Absorption takes place more readily in the young than in the adult; and is performed with difficulty in the aged of either sex. 10. The salts of quinine, administered in clysters in doses of less than 15 grains, exert the same effect as when given in moderate doses by the mouth, and may be very well substituted for these. 11. But this is not the case with large doses, which are never absorbed in sufficient quantities to produce energetic effects. 12. The large intestine will rarely tolerate a larger dose than 30 grains of the sulphate. 13. These conclusions more or less exact- ly apply to the various substances administered by clysters. 14. The apyrexic is notably more favorable to the absorption of medicinal substances than the pyrexic condition. 15. The typhoid condition favours such absorption less than other states of phlegmasia. Nevertheless it is more energetic than hitherto, supposed, being only about a tenth inferior to the absorption taking place in the pyrexic condition. 16. In diabetes, the ab- sorption of medicinal substances appear to be very feeble in the intestines. 17. In certain diseases, the tolerance or intolerance of medicinal substances may depend upon a special susceptibility rather than upon variations in absorption. Thus, in hysteria the tolerance of opium nowise depends upon an absence of absorption but results from a special susceptibility. 18. The rapidity with which medicinal substances, such as the salts of quinine, are eliminated, is in a direct ratio with the quantity of urine passed. This rapidity is the exact measure of the time which the econo- my takes to rid itself of the greater part of the fixed substances taken medicinally. 19. The absorption of medicinal substances analogous to the salts of quinine is far more rapid in the young. 20. It is less active in females than in males, in the proportion of a sixth to an eighth. 21. Abstracting from a medicinal effect the portion due to the quantity of the substance absorbed, the re- mainder gives the measure of the susceptibility of being influen- ced by the medicinal substance. [Bulletin de I 'Acad, and Ameri- can Jour, of Med. Sciences. The Uses of Pain. Mankind are so accustomed to shrink from pain, and so eager in seizing upon every means to lessen or annul it, that the facts of our having been endowed with it, as with a sense, by a benifi- cent Creator, and with the kindest intent, does not readily impress us. Yet that this is strictly true, daily observation teaches. Without pain to act as a sentinel, the body would almost moment- ly be injured, perhaps hopelessly so, and Death would revel in such wise as that the race would soon be extinct. This is hardly an exaggerated statement ; and a little reflection will enable any n. s. VOL. XIV. NO. xi. 44 764 The Uses of Pain. [November, one to realize the immense amount of evil which would ensue to us all, were the "sense of pain" abolished. A very interesting and instructive article, in a late number of the Quarterly Review, is transferred to the pages of the Living Age of the 24th of April, 1858. It is a critique upon "An Essay on the Beneficent Distribution of the Sense of Pain," written by Mr. G. A. Kowell, Honorary Member of the Ashmolean Society, and Assistant Underkeeper of the Ashmolean Museum. Most of the details are familiar to medical men, but any reader will be delighted with the pleasant style of the review, the entertaining illustrations and the facts communicated. It is a paper calculated to do good to the general reader in many ways ; and not the least by the noble sentiments with which its last two or three pages ieem. We allude to the remarks upon cruelty to animals. Many seem now to believe, as did Malebranche, that dogs, horses, and such like animals do not feel, and that, therefore, any amount of abuse, by means of kicks, blows, goading and spurring is admis- sible. We say many persons seem to suppose this, for although they hear a dog howl if kicked, and know that a horse springs forward under the spur, they do not realize, or do not think, how much unnecessary pain is inflicted by them, in their gusts of tem- per, upon animals almost always innocent of any fault. To recur to our first topic the wonderful guardianship over the bodily organs, so kindly established for us through the agency of pain. How few think of the subject in this light. Accustomed too much, to look upon pain as an unmitigated evil, we are apt to concentrate our hatred upon it, rather than to recognize its function ; and we strive only to remove it, without seeking for its cause. The latter task is, it is true, mainly the province of the followers of the healing art ; yet how much may others learn by properly considering their own sensations. Pain is an evil, then, but it is also a blessing. It is composite in its essence ; and in this it resembles many medicinal agents, which, whilst effecting a certain good, are exceedingly unpleasant in their action. Of course it would be foolish to term pain a good in itself, and therefore not seek to relieve and remove it. The future Sir Humphrey Davy doubtless changed his opinion very quickly and permanently, untler the strong personal application of the argument implied in the story referred to by the Quarterly Review, in the opening paragraph of the article we have cited. " Sir Humphrey Davy, when a boy, with the defiant constancy of youth which had as yet suffered nothing, held the opinion that pain was no evil. He was refuted by a crab, who [which ?] bit his toe when he was bathing, and made him roar loud enough to be heard half a mile off. If he had maintained, instead, that pain was a good, his doctrine would have been unimpeachable. Un- less the whole constitution of the world were altered, our very 1858.] The Uses of Pain. 765 existence depends upon our sensibility to suffering." As the re- viewersays, " without the warning voice of pain, * * * the crab might have eaten off the future Sir Humphrey's foot while he was swimming, without his entertaining the slightest suspicion of the ravages which wTere going on." So he adds. " had he sur- vived the injuries from the crab," he would have been destroyed by continuing the inhalation of carburetted hydrogen, after it had almost caused his death, and yet saved him by inducing painful sensations. The preservation of infancy is alluded to by the reviewer, as often entirely due to physical pain. Of course, in the absence of parents or nurses, thousands of children would perish from mere lack of that experience which suffering gives them by de- grees. Another phase in the "beneficient distribution of pain" is the undoubted total absence of it in what is termed the last struggle. Dissolution is painless ; the agony has been distributed over other hours of existence; the sunset of life, like those of many a stormy natural day, are placid, most generally. The opinion, however, is still commonly entertained that there must be pain whilst the spirit is leaving the body, because of the occurrence of convulsive movements remarked at such times. The suffering is only apparent, not real. What a consolation to friends is this, and what a source of comfort to all poor mortals, who know that they must pass through the gate of death. Upon this point the reviewer says : " In fact, though disease is often painful, the act of dying is not. Bodily suffering would be no protection then, and, consistently with the invariable method of Providence, we are spared a useless anguish." Anaesthetic agents, which have been so mercifully revealed to us, and whose discovery is certainly the greatest boon to humani- ty since that of vaccination, have been questioned in regard to one of their applications, by eminent medical men. We refer to their employment in obstetric cases. There are those who con- tend that the pains of labor, being, in fact, natural and healthy demonstrations, ought not to be interferred with ; that they have an important part to play and that they have such uses as ought not, even partially, to be lost to the parturient woman. Whilst many decry this view as foolish and unfounded, we confess to seeing much truth in it. There can be no dispute as to the bene- fit of ether and chloroform in surgical operations, or their appli- cation for the relief of any pathological condition ; but childbirth is not a pathological state, but wholly a natural act. It may well be questioned how far we ought to interfere with what are termed its " pains." Of course, if the woman in labor begins to sink under their mere endurance, or any morbid element mingles with the process, our authority is at once established, to inter- 766 Analysis and Principles of Human Excrements. [November, pose the state has become pathological. But often, anaesthetics are used in short and easy labors, when the patient would have done as well, or even better, without them. We can refer to several instances in which labor has been undoubtedly retarded by the action of ether on the uterine efforts ; and within a few days, a case has been mentioned to us by a highly intelligent and observing medical friend, where this was distinctly proved. The labor was a first one, and the birth was delayed a long time without any apparent reason. The suspension of the inhalation of ether was advised by the gentlemen referred to, and on comply- ing with the suggestion, the uterus immediately resumed its efforts, which safely and speedily resulted in the expulsion of the child. This aspect of the use of pain deserves closer attention, and it may be well to sift obstetric cases more thoroughly ; using anaes- thesia, only, or chiefly, in such instances as really demand it. We have already extended our remarks beyond the limits we had assigned to them. Pain, as an evil, has of late been placed more than could ever have been hoped for, under the dominion of scientific medicine. As a good, it still is vouchsafed to us in the shape of a watchful guardian ; and it must be ever present on the earth in many forms and with every shade of intensity. It is only in the vision of the Revelation that we read, " and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there he any more pain. [Boston Med. and Surg. Jour. On the Analysis and Immediate Principles of Human Excrements in Disease. By Dr. Marc^t, F. R. S. The object of this communication is 1. To describe an easy and very practical method of analisis to be applied to feces in the diseased condition. 2. To show that the method of analysis in question is essentially anatomical or mechanical, and as free as possible from chemical reactions. 3. To show that in three instances of disease where the bile was prevented from flowing into the duodenum, the feces yielded a quantity of crystallizable fatty acids, (margaric and stearic acids,) which immediate princi- ples are known to be absent from healthy evacuations, except in certain cases depending on a peculiar diet. A few words may suffice for describing the analysis. The evacuations are exhaust- ed with boiling alcohol, and the solution strained through muslin. On cooling, a precipitate or deposite occurs in the fluid, which is separated from the mother liquor by filtration. This deposite, after it has been washed with boiling alcohol, is found in healthy cases to consist of stearate and margarate, or soaps of lime and magnesia, with or without earthy phosphates these compounds existing in the evacuations under examination in the form of im- 1858.] Analysis and Principles of Human Excrements. 767 mediate principles. #The alcoholic washings or solution obtained from the deposit yielded, in case of retention of bile ; considera- ble quantities of free margaric and stearic acids The clear original alcoholic extract being mixed with miik of lime, contain- ing a considerable excess of water, is converted into muddy fluid, when a distinct precipitate will be noticed. After having collect- ed this precipitate in a filter, washed it with water, and dried it on the water-bath, it is to be exhausted with a mixture of alcohol and ether. The clear extract thus obtained deposits on standing, in all healthy cases, impure crystals oi excretine ; a substance easily purified and prepared, perfectly colorless, by repeated crys- talizations in alcohol and filtration through animal charcoal. The author had previously described the characters of excretine in communications to the Royal Society, published in the " Philoso- phical Transactions" for 1850 and 1S57. Diseased excrements do not always contain excretine, as it was absent in those*cases referred to in the present communication, where it was searched for. The lime precipitate exhausted with alcohol and ether, is now to be mixed with water, and decomposed by means of hvdro- chloric acid ; chloride of calcium is formed, and an insoluble* sub- stance remains floating in the liquid ; this he has found very abundant in some diseased cases and also in a few exceptional instances after a vegetable diet ; it consisted of margaric and stearic acids mixed with a considerable portion of oleic acid. Finally, by concentrating the filtrate from the lime precipitate on the water-bath, and decomposing the residue with sulphuric acid, certain organic acids soluble in water are obtained, possessed of a very pungent odor, and whose properties have not vet been in- vestigated ; the castings of carnivorous animals yield in this stage of the analysis butyric acid, a substance not present in healthv human evacuations. It must be remembered that the animal body contains a number of organic acids forming known soluble salts with lime, and consequently the examination of the filtrate from the lime precipitate in diseased cases is not to be neglected. The above description, although necessarily most incomplete, gives a rough sketch of the processes recommended for the analy- sis of feces ; it has been put to the test for the examination of a very great number of human evacuations, and found to yield con- stant results in health ; it is, therefore, perfectly adapted for the investigation of the composition of diseased excrements. Dr. Marcet now wishes to draw the attention to the circumstance that chemical reagents have been used as seldom as possible in these analyses, in order to avoid the decomposition of immediate principles or of compounds, such as they exist in the body. Alcohol and ether, with and without the application of heat, are the principal means employed.* It is not impossible, however, to determine immediate principles by chemical analysis ; and a 768 Statistics of Tracheotomy. [November, remarkable instance of the aid obtained from chemistry in these investigations, is the fact, that by the analysis of the mass deposi- ted in the original alcoholic extract of feces on cooling, he has been able to ascertain that it contains phosphoric acid, fatty acids, lime and magnesia, exactly in such proportions as are required for the substances to combine in the form of earthy phosphates and earthy soaps. These compounds had, therefore, previously existed in the intestines in the form of immediate principles. Dr. Marcet then gives the detail of three cases in which he carried out his exaninations. [Proceedings of the Royal Med. and Chir. Society, and Banking's Abstract. Statistics of Tracheotomy. Tfce statistics of the operations of tracheotomy performed during a number of years at the Hopital des Enfans at Paris, where the effects can be observed upon an extended scale, must always be interesting and valuable. In former years we have frequently entered into practical details on the subject. We now quote from the Journal of Practical Medicine and Surgery the fol- lowing statistics relative to the operations of tracheotomy per- formed during the eight years just elapsed. The following is the list of these operations from 1850 through 1857, with the number of cures obtained: 1850 20 operations - 185131 " ... 185259 " ... 185361 " ... 185445 " ... 185548 " ... 185655 " ... 185771 . " ... 6 recoveries. 12 << 11 7 ( 11 << 10 14 <(. 15 < Total, 390 86 It will be seen by the above table, that the proportion of reco- veries, although very unequal in the several years, presents a very similar general average ; that is, from 1 in 4 to 1 in 5 of the whole number operated on yearly. It should be mentioned that the majority of the children operated on were in the last stage of croup, and were consequently in imminent danger of death. M. Guersant, in whose wards this estimate was prepared, gives the following summary of the indications for and against trache- otomy, based upon the age of the children, the existing complica- tions, &c. Age is an important element to be considered. Amongst the 1858.] Statistics of Tracheotomy. 769 cases which compose the above table, there is one of a child 18 months old, who died with convulsions during tracheotomy. M. Chaillon, the author of the article cited by us from the Journal of Praitkal Medicine and Surgery, states that, he saw. on the 7th of January last, a little girl of two and a half years die during the operation, notwithstanding the well-known skill of the surgeon. He had also seen a similar case in private practice the patient being also a girl less than three years old. Nevertheless, whilst the peculiar difficulties of tracheotomy in subjects under the age of two years are admitted difficulties as- cribable to the restricted relations and volume of the parts at that age ; to the dangers of a minute, long and delicate dissection; and especially to the small size and mobility of the trachea, which often allow of the insertion of the tube only with extreme difficul- ty M. Guersant does not consider the youth of the patient an absolute contra-indication to tracheotomy. The same is true as regards pneumonia, when it complicates pseudo-membranous croup. For a long time, says M. Chaillon, the existence of this complication was thought sufficient wholy to contra-indicate tracheotomy. At present, M. Guersant adopts the opposite opinion ; and he has become convinced that, in es- tablishing respiration by an artificial track, he has favored the resolution of the pneumonia. He admits but one decided contra- indication to opening the trachea in croup and that is, diphthe- ritic infection, or general diphtheritis. When a child whose vocal chords have been invaded by false membranes, exhibits at the same time similar morbid products in the nose, the ears, or upon the skin ; when there are attacks of epistaxis and every sign of extreme debility tracheotomy will be useless ; the child will invariably die. M. Guersant does not, moreover, consider the extremest degree of asphyxia an insurmountable obstacle to the success of the ope- ration, provided the condition is permanent, and has continued for at least an hour, with a persistent character. Slow and continued asphyxia is, indeed, the very state which is the chief indication for tracheotomy, according to M. Guersant. It is, then, the only thing to be done the restablishment of res- piration being that alone which can keep the child alive. There is a sort of asphyxia which does not so imperatively call for the operation viz., the intermittent form. M. Guersant has seen children making violent efforts to breathe and seemingly about to die instantly ; false membrane having been discharged, the nature of the disease was certain. Notwithstanding, the friends having opposed the operation deemed necessary by the surgeon, the usual means were employed such as eme^jcs, calo- mel, alum, and chlorate of potash and the patients have recover- ed. But with the exception of these rare instances and of the far 770 Watery Discharge from the Uterus. [November, more common cases of general diphtheritis, M. Guersant thinks that as a general principle, tracheotomy is distinctly indicated whenever there is continued and increasing embarrassment of the respiration. [Gazette des Hqpitaux, and Boston Med. and Surg. Journal. Watery Discharge from the Uterus During Pregnancy. Dr. Harvey made the following remarks on this affection at a meeting of the Cork Med. and Surg. Soc, Dec. 9, Vobl: "In some books on Midwifery, watery discharge from the uterus is noticed as amongst the diseases to which pregnant women are liable. A clear, limpid, colourless fluid, oozing in quantity from a few ounces to pints daily, flows away, sometimes stopping for a short time, and recommencing; and in the majority of cases it continues nearly, or full to the time of delivery. The abdomen does not appear palpably reduced by these discharges, and a living child is commonly born at or near the full time. In the greater number of instances, also, there is evidence of the usual quantity of liquor amnii being present on the supervention of labor. Dr. Alexander's case, given in the third volume of the Medical Commentaries, shows this very prominently. In a case by Dr. Petel, also, in the Gazette de Bojjilaux of July, I808, the liquor amnii is specially mentioned as normal in quantity. "What is the source of this fluid, discharged as it is, to the amount of hundreds of pints in the course of a few months ? The supposition of its coming from the cervical glands of the uterus, or from the vagina, both of which have been assumed as sources of it by different authorities, appeared altogether unlike- ly from the nature of the fluid, its quantity, and its mode of: coming away in gushes of considerable quantity at a time. That it could come from the. space between the decidua and chorion, or between the chorion and amnion, we have no pathological facts, so far as I am aware, to warrant our suppo- sing such a source for the flow ; whilst in the natural condition of parts such spaces do not exist; as, at a period of pregnancy before these discharges commonly show themselves (say the sixth month, or thereabouts), the cavity between the chorion and amnion has disappeared ; and we know that the chorion and decidua are in contact throughout. " Under these circumstances we seem driven to the conclusion that the amnion must be the source of this flow ; that there may be occasional solution of continuity in this membrane, admitting of discharges from time to time, which either close again, or admit by the mechanical relations of the bag to the neighboring parts of the amnion, refilling to a certain extent by 1858.] Watery Discharge from the Uterus. 771 a fresh secretion of its particular fluid. In confirmation of this view may be mentioned cases recorded by Dr. Denman, Profes- sor Burns, of Glasgow, and Dr. Pentland, of Dublin, in which the amnion is said to have given way from fright or other sudden shock, the water being discharged without labour coming on. All these considerations tend rather to the view that the escaping fluid may be liquor amnii than to any other which has been propounded. In the case which I am going to relate the symptoms were similar to those which were present in the cases of watery discharge which I have been noticing, and in this in- stance, as will be seen, the flow was undoubtedly amniotic. "Mrs. , mother of several children, was for more than a year, the subject of heavy sanguineous discharges, which were so little influenced by the treatment adopted thai the existence of polypus was thought possible. An examination revealed considerable congestion of the os and cervix uteri, with superfi- cial ulceration, which gave way to treatment generally and locally applied. During last summer her health was considera- bly improved, but occasionally menorrhagic attacks, which lat- terly observed more or less closely the monthly periods, showed themselves. Matters were going on thus when she suffered a considerable shock by her eldest boy meeting with a severe acci- dent, in which his arm was fractured. On that day, for the first time (six weeks before deliver), she had a sudden gush of clear watery fluid from the vagina, and since that time to the date of these notes (5th November), she was scarcely free from it ; it would diminish or nearty stop for a few days at a time, to come on again in gushes, and in considerable quantity. The quantity escaping in one of these was seldom less, and generally more, than half a pint; and on the late occasion, when the flow was accompauied by a heavy sanguineous discharge also, she thinks the combined amount was fully a quart. It came on in the horizontal position as well as in the erect, and apparently with- out any cause. The size of the abdomen did not appear much affected by these at any time. "The occurrence of the watery discharge suggesting the probability of pregnancy, notwithstanding the menstrual changes which had been going on with some regularity, and that, if pregnancy did exist, the ovum might have suffered hydatid de- generation, I proposed an examination for the purpose of ascer- taining the point. I found an abdominal tumour occupying the hypogastri urn to above the umbilicus, and on laying my hands over its surface, it gave a good example of the value of a diagnostic indication lately suggested by Dr. Oldham ; it afford- ed distinct evidence of its being uterine by gradually and regularly hardening under my hand. The movements of the ' child were also felt, and foetal pulsation, distinctly heard by the stethoscope, put an end to all doubts. 772 New Remedies in Yellow Fever. [November, " I told the lady that she had passed some six or near seven months of her pregnancy without being aware of it, and that her labor would probably come on prematurely, all of which she entirely disbelieved, and I could not induce her to make the necessary preparations. Two days after, I was called to her the first stage of labour having set in with unusual distress and irritation ; the pains peculiarly sharp and unbearable ; the os uteri was hard and unyielding, and the breech, presenting in the second position, was felt in close contact. I immediately put her on antimonial solution, notwithstanding which the os uteri took over three hours to relax. After a first stage of about four and a half hours, and a second of less than half an hour, a male child, of scarcely seven months' growth, was born. The presenting hip and buttock were perfectly black, evidently from the direct pressure to which they had been subjected, in con- sequence of the loss of the liquor amnii. None whatever escaped with the child, and the sanguineous discharge was also unusually scanty. I do not think I ever witnessed so dry a labour. [Dublin Quart. Journ. Med. Sci., and Amer. Jour. Med. Science. New Remedies in Yellow Fever Chlorine and Veratrum Viride. By E. D. Fenner, M. D. Up to the present time, the treatment of yellow fever may be said to have been almost entirely empirical or based on expe- rience alone ; but empiricism may work on till doomsday and in the hands of skillful practitioners, achieve great success, yet fail to satisfy the demands of the inquiring -and philosophic mind. Science alone can do this ; by which I mean a knowledge of the morbific cause and an explanation of its modus operandi in the production of all the phenomena of the disease, as well when it terminates in recovery as in death. In ignorance of these fundamental desiderata, the practice must necessarily be empirical like one groping in the dark, who might stumble upon a jewel, but at the same time be liable to fall into a pit a thrust with a dangerous weapon by the looker-on of a personal combat, equally liable to strike friend and foe. By observation, much valuable knowledge has doubtless been attained, and likewise, great skill in practice has been acquired from experi- ence ; but all this is still unsatisfactory and incapable of being taught or transmitted to those who are to come after us. Various plans of treatment and all sorts of remedies have been resorted to in yellow fever, but neither plan nor remedy has ever yet attained universal approbation and acceptance. Cases have been known to recover under every plan, and others 1858.] New Remedies in Yellow Fever. 773 to die in spite of every known remedy ; but the most important fact of all is, that persons may recover from the disease without any treatment at all a problem full of instruction, but as yet, remaining unsolved. Of all the remedies for this disease that have gained notoriety, the following four are the only ones that have been supposed to exert a special action on the morbific cause or materies morbi, viz: mercury, quinine, salines and the tincture of the muriate of iron. The virtues of all the rest, such as emetics, cathartics, diaphoretics, diuretics, blood-letting, counter-irritants, etc., are attributable to their generally known therapeutic action. Of the four remedies just named, not a single one has suc- ceeded in commanding general confidence in the powers claimed for it. Mercurial ptyalism is no longer relied on as a protection against the danger of yellow fever; the introduction of salines into the system for the purpose of counteracting the morbid changes of the blood, has been tried in vain ; the once vaunted powers of quinine are fading away, and the tincture of iron has fallen into probably unmerited neglect, after a brief but brilliant career. A correct theory is absolutely necessary to scientific and suc- cessful practice; and the plrysician, if there be one, who has no theory, is a mere empiric. In a case of yellow fever, we see a contest between the inherent conservative powers of the body and a lethific agent ; be it a poison, a ferment, animalcule or vegetable cryptogam. In the course of this conflict, we may suppose that one or more of the following occurrences will happen: The morbific agent may be only capable of causing a perturbation or disease which can be overcome by the conservative powrers of the system, with or without medical aid ; or it may be so powerful as to defy the conservative powers as well as any known remedies, and prove inevitably fatal. 2. It may be neu- tralized in the system by remedial agents, in the way that cer- tain poisons are disarmed by certain known antidotes. 3. It may be eliminated from the system by the emunctories, or secre- ting and excreting organs. 4. By the disturbance of the func- tions which it produces, it may cause the retention of elements in the system which have fulfilled their legitimate purposes and can no longer be retained with impunity ; thus adding fuel to the destructive fire that is already raging. The physician's theory of each individual case, based on its history and sj^mptoms, will direct his practice towards the accomplishment of one or more of the above objects. If nature is doing all that is necessary, of course he will not interfere; but when she appears to be unequal to the task, it becomes his duty to render such assistance as the indications of the case appear so clearly to point out. 774 New Remdies in Yellow Fever. [November, Here we might pause and inquire, what, that is really beneficial, has as yet been discovered ? and wherein, lie the principal de- fects of our practice in this disease ? The answer to these questions would require a critical review of all the various plans and remedies that have been resorted to in the treatment, of yellow fever ; a task which we have neither time nor space to perform at present. The foregoing remarks have been thought necessary as a pre- lude to the introduction of two new remedies in the treatment of yellow fever, which, so far as a limited experience can testify, promise to fulfil in a most satisfactory manner, three of the most important indications, viz : 1. The controlling of excessive febrile excitement : 2. Maintaining the free and continued action of the great eliminating organs, the skin, liver and kidneys: 3. And consequent thereon, the preservation of the integrity of the blood and tissues. These remedies are chlorine, and Nor- wood's iinclare of Ycrairum Viride. I brought myself to the experiment of chlorine by reflecting on the course and nature of this fever, and the want, long felt, of something that is capable of neutralizing the action of the morbific cause, or of assisting the efforts of nature to eliminate it from the system. Secondly, by recollecting the happy effects of the muriated tincture of iron which I witnessed in the epidemics of 1854 and 1855. Thirdly, by the flattering testi- mony in favor of chlorine in malignant scarlet fever, to be found in Watson's Lectures; and lastly, by the therapeutic action of chlorine and the chlorate of potass, as recorded in Pereira's great work, and other late writers. I resolved on using the chlorine mixture mentioned in Watson's Lectures, p. 1002, third Ameri- can edition. The plan adopted was, first to purge the patient moderately with castor oil or some other simple cathartic, and bring on free perspiration by means of the hot mustard foot bath, warm orange-leaf tea and covering with a blanket ; then to give to an adult two table-spoonfuls of the chlorine mixture every two hours. My first experiments succeeded beyond my most sanguine hopes, and every casein which it was timely applied, excepting one, recovered in a most satisfactory manner. The medicine sat well on the stomach, but occasionally caused griping, which disappeared on omitting it for five or six hours or reducing the dose to a single tablespoonful. Under its use the febrile excite- ment soon declined, headache disappeared, and the kidneys and liver acted freely. The dose was diminished or the interval prolonged as the fever went down. In most cases, no other medicine was given till the end of the third or critical day, when the chlorine was stopped and I gave what is called here the 1858.] New Remedies in Yellow Fever. lib Sydenham Mixture, composed of the phosphate of lime and gum arabic suspended in equal parts of orange-flower water and dis- tilled water. The bowels were kept open by enemata, as occa- sion required, and the patient was allowed to drink orange-leaf tea and barley water ad libitum. In this manner, I had treated some eight or ten cases with satisfactory success, and was applying it to all my cases, both in private practice and the Charity Hospital, when I happened to meet one of the most extensive practitioners of our cit}', who stopped to relate to me a very extraordinary case he had just been attending. He then asked me whether I had ever tried Veratrum Yiride in yellow fever? I told him I had not, but had long intended to do so. He begged me to try it in the Hospital, as he did not like to experiment on patients in private practice, yet felt the necessity of our endeavoring to find out some more valuable remedies than any we now have. I promised him to make the experiment very soon, and we parted. On the same day, I learned through the newspapers, that Dr. White and another physician of Charleston, had met with very extra- ordinary success in the treatment of yellow fever with the Vera- tum Viride. In the evening, I went to the Charity Hospital for the purpose of commencing my experiments with this medi cine. This was on the 20th instant. In Ward 16, (under my charge), I selected three cases, two of which had entered since my morning visit. Case 1 Was a fine young Irish sailor, aged 16, who had ar- rived here from Liverpool only five days previously, and was attacked this morning; entered the Hospital at 5 P. M ; had taken a mustard foot-bath and a dose of castor oil, which had moved his bowels freely. He had headache, injected eyes, skin very hot and sweating; great thirst; pulse 120. Ordered cold applications to head, orange-leaf tea, and five drops of [Norwood's tincture V. V. every three hours. September 21st. Found patient sound asleep and sweating freely, eyes less injected, headache much relieved, tongue moist; less thirst, pulse 100. Continued the V. V. every four hours. 5 P. M. Very quiet, but pulse up to 112. September 22d. Cool, quiet and moist, pulse 88. Found the urine acid, but not coagulable. Continue treatment ; move bowels by enema. September 23d. Cool and quiet ; rested well and apparently convalescent; pulse 70. Stopped the Y. V. and allowed chick- en water. On testing the urine, found it albuminous. On the 25th, the patient had slight exacerbation of fever in the evening and took neutral mixture, tablespoonful once an hour. Urine more albuminous. September 26th. Patient does not improve ; has exacerba- 776 Neio Remedies in Yellow Fever. [Novsmbei, lions in the evening; bowels open, sweats moderately ; urine now highly albuminous and bilious ; threatened with haemor- rhage from gums. Put him on my chlorine mixture, tablespoon- ful every four hours. 27th. Has slight haemorrhage ; is improving. 28th. Kested well : is cool, quiet and hungry. Now fairly convalescent. Case 2. Young Irishman, aged 19, was attacked on the morning of the 19th September, 'and went immediately to the hospital. I saw him at my morning visit and prescribed hot mustard foot-bath, and a dose of castor oil. After the bowels are well purged, to take two tablespoon fuls of the chlorine mix- ture every two hours. On the morning of the 20th he was doing well, and ordered to continue the mixture. At my evening visit I resolved to put him on the V. V., and found his condition as follows: Considerable fever; skin hot and rather dry ; pulse 100 ; tongue white, with red edges, and moist; considerable thirst; pain in the head and back; bowels rather loose and uneasy. Ordered five drops of the V. V. every three hours and the chlorine mixture immediately. September 21st. Much better; face and eyes less injected; skin cooler and sweating freely; pulse 72 ; headache relieved; has some pain in the back ; thinks the chlorine gripes. Ordered to prolong the interval of the Y. Y., and to take less of the chlorine. His urine is acid but not coagulable. September 22d. Completely relieved ; clear of fever and pain ; pulse down to 72 ; is quite hungry ; urine acid but not yet coagulable. He continued to improve steadily, and was dis- charged at his own request on the morning of the 26th. His urine was then beginning to show albumen. Case 3. Was a German aged about 30. Entered hospital this evening, September 20th, in the second stage of the disease, (third day), having been vomiting and purging from the com- mencement of the attack. He was very weak ; eyes much in- jected; headache; sweating; tongue moist; still vomits; pulse 100 and feeble. Wishing to see the effects of the Y. Y. in a desperate case, I prescribed five drops every three hours; sinap- ism to epigast. September 21st. Pulse 80; skin cool, moist and of deep red color ; had no pain ; attempts to vomit ; very thirsty ; urine abundant, acid and highly coagulable. At noon his pulse was clown to 54 : has hiccup ; stop the Y. Y. 5, P. M., hiccup checked. Contrary to orders he got out of bed and the hiccup returned. He lingered till the 23d and died. He passed urine to the last day, and it was highly albuminous. In reflecting on these first cases, it appeared to me that case one, had such a lingering convalescence from the want of some- 1858.] New Remedies in Yellow Fever. 777 thing besides the veratrum. This medicine had displayed its wonderful power of subduing febrile excitement, but there was something wanted to act upon the blood, liver and kidneys; that the rapid convalescense of case two, was probably due in some measure to the good effects of the chlorine mixture he took for about thirty hours ; and that case three, could hardly be expected to recover after removal to a considerable distance, in the second stage of the disease. From that time I have continued to use these two remediesin nearly all cases that have come to my charge in the first stage, and at the hospital in all stages while there was febrile excite- ment. I directed the remedies to be taken alternate^, at inter- vals of two hours, i. e., first the veratrum, and two hours afterwards the chlorine ; and so on till the febrile excitement is sufficiently reduced, the pulse of the adult brought down to 70 beats in the minute, when the former is stopped, but the latter continued in small doses. Previous to giving these medicines, the bowels should be well evacuated, but not severely purged. Subsequently, they may be kept sufficiently open by enemata. Sweating should be promoted by mustard foot baths, warm teas and covering with one or two blankets. Yellow fever patients are frequently sweated too severely, but I have hardly ever mown one to do well without maintaining a good perspiration for three days. It is proper that I should mention some of the troubles that may arise in the use of these remedies, for there is no medicine that possesses great remedial powers without being likewise capable of doing injury if improperly administered. The Veratrum viride, as is well known, is a very powerful medicine and liable, when taken in excess, to produce great prostration of the vital powers. It should therefore be very cautiously given, and its action watched with the utmost care. There should be a considerable interval between the doses, so as to allow time for the medicine to display its effects. It will surely reduce the frequency of the pulse and febrile excitement enerally ; but if carried too far, it produces alarming prostra- tion, great restlessness and a peculiar wild delirium, all of which will pass off in a few hours and may be relieved by a little pare- goric and brandy. I have never heard of its producing fatal affects, although it has recently come into very general use in ill parts of the country as a remedy in pneumonia and typhoid fever. The dose I have directed is of course intended for adults, ind must be varied according to the age of the patient. It should be stopped gradually after the pulse falls to 72; and the -emainder of the cure left to the chlorine mixture, with such idjuvants as the particular case may require. In respect to the use of the chlorine mixture, I have as yet 778 Antagonism of Opium and Quinia. [November, met with no other trouble than the occasional griping before mentioned, which has never proved at all serious. This medi- cine certainly acts finely on the liver and kidneys. My experi- ence with this remedy as yet only covers some twenty-five or thirty cases, an extent too limited to justify any farther remarks at this time. In offering these hasty observations to the profession, at the present time, I beg leave to say that my only object is to call attention to some new remedies which I have reason to hope will prove to be highly beneficial in the treatment of this terri- ble Southern pestilence, and to allow physicians residing at places where yellow fever is now prevailing, the opportunity to test their virtues at once. This, I hope, they will do at once, and let us know the results of their observation at their earliest convenience. In conclusion, I must be permitted to say, that if the veratrum viride should ultimately turn out to be as valuable a remedy in yellow fever, as it unquestionably is in pneumonia and tj^phoid fever, Dr. Norwood will be entitled to ihe meed of being ranked among the greatest benefactors of mankind. [New Orleans Med. News and Hospital Gazette. The Antagonism of Opium and Quinia. By M. Gubler. [Translated by J. P. Barrot, M. D. M. Gubler read a paper before the Societe Medicale des Hopi- timx de Paris, on the antagonism between Opium and Sulphate of Qninia, of which the following is a synopsis condensed from the summary published in UL> Union Medicale," of May 20, 1850. Being unwell himself, M. Gubler took sulph. quirria in 0.50 centigrammes doses only and was struck with the fact that they produced humming in the left ear only, although his hear- ing is equally good on both sides. This peculiar effect occurred three days in succession. As at that time he suffered from a head-ache which was most violent on the right side on which side it is always greatest in M. G., he was led to suppose that the evident congestion on the right side, neutralized the effect of the quinia, which effect M. G. considered due to the privation of the brain of blood, (anemier Vencephale decongeetionner le cer veau) the removal of congestion of the brain. M. G. having re covered his health, resumed his attendance in the wards of the Hospital. He there saw a case of acute articular rheumatism in which large doses of sulph. quinia and opium had beer administered for several days without success. M. G. continued the dose of sulph. quinia i. e., 1 gramme 50 centigrammes witl 0.25 centigrammes extract of opium. Finding that the particu 1858.] Antagonism of Opium and Quinia. 779 lar therapeutical effects of both remedies were entirely wanting, he increased the dose of sulph. quinia and diminished that of the opiate, without, however, any better success. Lastly, he left out the opium altogether, and gave 1 gramme 50 centigrammes of sulph. quinia alone, which produced in a marked manner, the peculiar remedial effects of that drug. And from that time the rheumatism diminished rapidly and marked- ly. This and other subsequent cases of the same nature, con- firmed him in his belief that opium was antagonistical to sulph. quinia, or, so to speak, its antidote. M. Gubler enunciates his particular views of the modus operan- di of opium and sulph. quinia. According to him, opium pro- duces congestion and hyperemia, whilst its antagonist, sulph. quinia, produces anaemia and dissipated congestion (anemie et decongeslionne). The following are the conclusions of M. Gubler : 1. Inverse- ly to opium, which exalts organic action, producing sanguine- ous congestion and caloricity, sulph. of quinine acts on the nervous system by condensing the forces there, in such a way as to arrest organic action, the source of waste, and to diminish as much as possible the afflux of blood in inflamed parts. (Sic). 2. This modus operandi once admitted, we can readily under- stand the innocuousness of sulphate of quinia in the cerebral symptoms of rheumatism, which symptoms recent experiments have already tended to show were not due to its use. 3. Moreover, the use of sulph. quinia is indicated in all the inflammatory forms of cerebral rheumatism; opium being ser- viceable in the nervous forms only, and in these only when not complicated by fever. 4. Sulph. of quinine and opium, being antagonistic should not be given together. 5. These two remedies may be used as antidotes to one another. M. Guerard thought that sulph. Quinia did " decongestionner le cerveau" and stated in support of his opinion, that its use produ- ced imminent synchope. Some years previously, while suffer- ing from intermittent fever, he had taken large quantities of sulph of quinia, sometimes for a month at a time, in a single dose daily. As long as he remained in the recumbent position lie experienced no unpleasant sensation, but when sitting, syncope was imminent. He had seen a second similar case. With respect to the antagonism of opium to sulph. of quinia, he was the more ready to believe it, inasmuch as in his tklse de concours for the Chair of Therapeutics, he had shown that the effects of medicines when isolated might be neutralized by com- bination ; and had mentioned that M. Caventou had given strychnia combined with morphia, each in large doses, and that the effects of the combination had been greatly diminished. H. S. VOL. XIV. NO. XI. 45 780 Subcutaneous Operation on Varicose Veins. [November, Substances which are poisonous by themselves, cease to be so when united. Note by the Translator. The conclusions of M. Gubler, on the antagonism of opium and sulph. of quinia, although endorsed in a measure by M. Guerard, fail to convince us. Further trials on a more extended scale, would show the correct- ness or incorrectness of his views. Should his opinions turn out to be correct, quite a revolution would take place in the administration of sulph. of qunine in this city, where either from fashion or e'onviction, it is most generally given in combination with opium. The Haustus Quinice of the Charity Hospital, which has done so much service, would then have seen her last day. [New Orleans Med. and Surg. Jour. The Subcutaneous Operaticnx on Varicose Veins. By Mr. Henry Lee, Surgeon to King's College Hospital. When blood is effused into the cellular tissue in the living body, it undergoes changes varying in different cases. Some- times it is simply absorbed, leaving the surrounding parts as they were before ; sometimes the fibrin becomes separated from the more fluid parts of the blood, and remains after these are removed. Again, the effused blood may remain contained in a kind of sac, of a dark grumous color, for weeks or months ; or finally, it may undergo a process analogous to that of suppura- tion, and be discharged, more or less deprived of its coloring matter, as from an abscess. Blood that remains for any length- ened period stagnant in veins undergoes somewhat similar changes. It may be deprived of its serum, and its more solid parts may remain, obstructing the veins for almost an unlimited period, or it may become dark and grumous, undergoing a kind of slow decomposition ; or again, in the fibrin previously separa- ted from the other constituents of the blood, cell development may take place, and an abscess will form in the vein. In the various operations which have from time to time been practised for the obliteration of varicose veins, the effused and stagnant blood has eccasionally either undergone a kind of de- composition, or has become involved in an abscess; and when the products of these changes have become mixed with the blood, it is now well known with what fatal certainty their presence is manifested. The occasional, although rare occur- rence of the symptoms, now recognized as those of blood-poison- ing, after operations on the veins, had led surgeons from time to time to seek for modes of operating which should be free from the dangers previously experienced. In 1815, Sir Benj. Brodie published a paper in the "Medico- Chirurgical Transactions," in which he advocated the subcutane- ous division of varicose veins. In that paper, the advantages of 1858.] Subcutaneous Operation on Varicose Veins. 781 the subcutaneons mode of operating are clearly pointed out. (A description here followed of Sir B. Brodie's mode of performing the operation.) In this mode of operating, no adequate provi- sion is made against hemorrhage frbm the divided vessel on the one hand, nor against the absorption through the open mouth of the vein of the products of the effused or stagnant blood on the other. If a vein be simpty divided, no one can tell exactly how much blood will be effused ; and if effused in quantity, the changes above mentioned will occasionally take place. These changes may occur either in the blood outside the vein, or in the stagnant blood still within the vessel, or the action may be communicated from one of these to the other. The product of these changes may be localized by the unassisted powers of nature ; the vein may be closed, so that no absorption through its canal can take place. In like manner, an artery, when divid- ed, may spontaneously cease to bleed ; but nevertheless surgeons are not fond of trusting to these unassisted powers of nature. In one case, as in the other, that which may take place from natural causes may be with tolerable certainty effected by arti- ficial means. The vein, like the artery, may be safely and efficiently closed. If this be carefully done before an enlarged vein is divided, the effusion of blood is in the first instance pre- vented, and there is proportionately less risk of any of the mor- bid changes which have been referred to ; and secondly, even should such changes take place, the products of such changes are prevented from entering the circulation through the wounded vein. Such were the considerations which induced Mr. Lee in the year 1853 to try a new mode of performing the operation of subcutaneous division of varicose veins. The plan then adopted was to place a needle under the vein both above and below the part to be divided. A ligature was then placed over the needle in each situation, and allowed to remain for a couple of days. At the expiration of this time the blood was usually coagulated in the vein, which would be felt as a round soft cord on either side of and between the needles. The vein was now divided by subcutaneous iucision, and two days later the needles were re- moved. After three or four more days the parts usually had the appearance of having united b}~ the first intention, and the patient was allowed to go about his usual occupation. In his first attempts to perform this operation, he could not say that his success had been quite such as he could have wished, and indeed expected. One case in particular had some severe local and constitutional symptoms; and he had reason to believe that an abscess had formed in the vein, where it had been traversed by one of the needles. Eeflecting subsequently on the cause of this, he became convinced that the origin of the mischief was, 782 Different Effects of Gaseous Injections. [November, that the needle had pierced the vein instead of being made to pass fairly under it. In subsequent operations this point was attended to, and performed with due precaution, as it has now been by Mr. Erichsen, and various other surgeons, a great num- ber of times, and it has not, so far as Mr. Lee was aware, been attended with danger. During the last twelve months a further improvement, as he conceived, had been effected in regard to this operation. The vein is divided as soon as the needles have been placed under it. The subcutaneons incision heals in about the same time as in the other operation, and the confinement of two days previous to the section of the vein is avoided. In this operation the blood which the vein contains between the two needles is allowed to flow out of the incision ; and thus any ten- dency that there might be for stagnant or effused blood to de- compose is avoided. In performing the operation in the man- ner now described, the blood contained in the veins between two needles escapes ; the sides of the vein necessarily fall together, and are maintained in apposition. The sides of the vein com- pressed by the needles and ligature suffer no violence or injury. The subcutaneous incision is pretty sure to heal by first inten- tion, and even should it not, the vein being closed above and below, no diseased secretion can find its way along its channel. Various cases were given to illustrate the different modes of producing obliteration of veins by subcutaneous division. British Med. Jour., and Banking's Abstract The different effects of Gaseous Injections into the cellular tissue and into the peritoneal cavity. By J. C. Shapakd, M. D. M. M. Laconte and Demarquay communicated a memoir to the Academy of Sciences at its meeting of the 29th of March, 1858, on the pathological, physiological, and chemical phenom- ena produced by the injections of air, azote, oxygen, carbonic acid, and hydrogen into the cellular tissue and into the perito- neal cavity. From facts contained in this memoir, the authors conclude : 1. That air, azote, oxygen, carbonic acid, and hydrogen, do not produce any hurtful effect when they are introduced into the subcutaneous cellular tissue or into the peritoneal cavity. 2. That all these gases are absorbed after a longer or shorter time, and with a rapidity which varies from forty-five minutes (carbonic acid) to many weeks (azote). The rapidity of the absorption is always presented in the following manner: carbo- nic acid, oxygen, hydrogen, air and azote. 3. That the injection of any gas whatever into the cellular tissue or into the peritoneum, constantly determines an exhala- tion of the gases contained in the blood and the tissues. 1858.] Suture of the Exterior Tendons of the Fingers. 783 4. That after the injection of the gases, mixtures are formed that are more easily absorbed than the least absorbable gas con- tained in the injected part. So that the absorption of this last does not commence only when it is already mixed in certain proportions with the other gases. 5. That, in general, the exhalation of the gases of the blood or of the tissues, has been more considerable in the the experi- ments made during the digestion, than in those made during fasting, and more in the peritoneum than in the cellular tissue. 6. The rapidity of the absorption has not seemed modified by the state of fasting or digestion. 7. That of all the gases injected, hydrogen is the one which determines the most considerable exhalation of the gases of the blood when the hydrogen has already disappeared from the mixture, the animal still preserves the volume that it presented at the moment of injection, which would induce the belief of nonabsorption of hydrogen, if a chemical analysis did not ex- plain the phenomenon. 8. The rapidity of the absorption of the gases by the blood is not always in proportion to their solubility in water (azote and hydrogen). 9. If in the injections of air into the cellular tissue and into the peritoneum there is a constant absorption of oxygen, and exhalation of carbonic acid, which in this respect, resembles the phenomenon of pulmonary respiration, the two physiological facts should, nevertheless, not be considered as identical, for in the case of the injections, the proportions between the carbonic acid axhaled and the oxygen absorbed constantly vary. [Nashville Jour, of Med. arid Surg. Suture of the Extensor Tendons of the Fingers, with a Case of Cure by this Treatment. By M. MouRGUE. Suture of the small tendons, like the extensors and flexors of the fingers, is a triumph of modern surgery ; and the happy results which have followed its use have given it a place among legitimate operations. The case of M. Mourgue adds another instance of success to those already recorded. Case. A maker of wooden shoes" received on the back of his left hand, on the 10th of December, a blow of a hatchet, which divided the extensor tendons of the fore and middle finger at the metacarpo-phalangian joint. The lower ends presented at the wound, but the upper were retracted tendons, allowed them to be seized by forceps and pierced by a needle armed with a waxed thread ; this needle was then passed through the corres- ponding ends of the tendons below, and they were thus brought into contact with those above, and tied. The external wound 784 Editorial. [November, was also closed with sutures. The hand was extended on a wide flat splint, and the wound covered with a linen bandage spread with cerate, and compresses wet with cold water. 12th. There is considerable swelling of the wrist and great redness ; it is necessary to remove the sutures from the wound. In a few days the inflammation subsided. 20th. The wound, which is open, but free from redness and inflammation, is in good condition. The edges were brought together with sticking-plaster. The ligatures of the tendons came away on the 24th and 26th ; the external wounds cicatrized at once. On the 8th of January, the splint was dispensed with. Jan. 22d. The man has resumed his work, the Angers having gradually recovered their strength and mobility, and having complete power of extension and flexion. In a word, the suture of the extensor tendons has been attended with all the success which could be desired. [Gazette Medicate, and Boston Med. and Sur. Journal. EDITORIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS. EDITORIAL REFERENCE TO OUR ECLECTIC DEPARTMENT. Quinine and Alum in Diphtheritis. We have here* collected in a body, a number of articles on a most interesting and sometimes fearfully fatal form of disease. As we have seen, it most commonly prevails epi- demically though sporadic cases are referred to. Our object in thus bringing together, in the compass of a single number, various accounts of both the character and treatment of membranous sore throat, is, that our readers may have these accounts to refer to, when, in their practice, such histories may become of particular interest. We are struck with the remarkable uniformity in the character of the disease, in all the descrip- tions presented from various sources and also, by the entire absence of any mention of certain modes of treatment which, in our experience, have been of the greatest practical value which, indeed, have proved almost specific, in the latitude which bounds our practice. Just ten years ago, (in the year 1848,) Augusta and its vicinity, toge- ther wTith several other sections of the State of Georgia, were afflicted sorely by the incursions of an Epidemic Diphtherite, the history of which has never been written. It is not our design to write its history now, but simply to refer to some of the peculiarities which the disease pre- * See pp. 747-'? 56, present number. 1858.] Editorial 785 sented during its prevalence here at that time, and to give a summary of the treatment pursued. The year 1848, in its meteorological character, presented nothing very unusual in this region. Late in the autumn, when intermittent fever was prevailing perhaps to a greater extent than in the earlier part of the year, we suddenly observed, among children, certain cases of this unusual form of "sore throat." Our attention was not call- ed to the first cases until the disease had advanced so far, that remedial measures were unavailing. The fatal croup had supervened, and the two or three first cases soon died without undergoing any modification from the treatment applied. "We were thus early made painfully aware of the serious nature of the affection with which we had to deal, and whenever called early, treated the cases vigorously upon such a plan, as our little personal acquaintance with the affection could devise. Notwithstanding the opportunity afforded by early attendance, the disease rapidly pro- gressed in most of these cases, and several of them died, on the super- vention of the croup. Our description of the cases which occurred in Augusta, will not, we think, differ very widely from that found in several of the articles pre- sented to our readers from the various journals. In a few cases the attack was preceded by premonitory symptoms, as restlessness at night, slight fever and loss of appetite, but seldom with any actual soreness of the fauces which induced the child to complain. More frequently than otherwise, the parent or physician would have the attention arrested by a peculiar, offensive odor in the breath, even before the child had evinced any symptom whatever of any ailment; when, on looking into the mouth, the tonsils and larynx would often be found covered with the white, curdy-looking deposit, peculiar to this form of disease. On closer examination, the upper part of the larynx, the nares, even as far forward as the opening of the nostrils, would be found covered with the same matter, which spread itself in the form of a membrane* over the whole surface of the mucous lining of these more external parts of the air-passages. Often, at this first examination, a croupal hoarseness could be detected, which too plainly indicated the extension of the disease into the larynx. The cases in which the affection proved most fatal were, as may be seen in most of the accounts given of it elsewhere, children under twelve years of age, and death seldom transpired here, in any other way than from the croup. The condition of the subjacent mucous membrane was often the 6ubject of our careful inspection. Excellent opportunities were afford- ed us to examine the state of both the false membrane and the mucous membrane, during the life of the patient, by those cases in 786 Editorial. [November, which the deposit existed in the nostril ; for in them, it often extended forward to the very junction of the skin and mucous membrane, and we could compare the appearance of the three surfaces as they lay in regular order of super-position viz.,* skin, next mucous membrane, and lastly, the false white deposit the skin, even immediately bordering upon the two other membranes, seldom evinced any change, but the subjacent mucous membrane was invariably red, to nearly its entire thickness, and seemed to be the seat of a certain kind of inflammation while the false membrane was perfectly white and seemed to have no vascular connec- tion whatever with the mucous surface. In a few days the first layer of the deposit would be elevated and loosened by the effusion of pus under it and them it was easily separable from the mucous membrane. . In the pharynx it would be often found hanging from the posterior wall, and even from the velum, in the form of a white ragged curtain. While in a certain fatal case which we examined, the child evidently died at the moment of, and directly in consequence of, this kind of separation of the false membrane from the walls of the larynx, the shreds blocking up the rima and producing death by suffocation. The case appeared to us, to die in getting well. Doubtless, many have died in exactly this stage, of what may, in one sense, be called a natural process of recovery. We had many cases among the adult population, but not a single fatal case over twelve years of age indeed the nearer the child approached to infancy, the more imminent, in our mind, was the peril from the croup. From a close observation of many cases comparing the cases of the younger children with those occurring in youths and adults, we came to the conclusion that the greater fatality among young children was not due so much, to any greater susceptibility to the disease, nor to a less power of resistance on the part of the patients of this age ; for many of our most violent cases occurred in children over twelve years of age, whose constitutions were comparatively feeble, and yet they went through even the -croup, and recovered. The circumstance which, in our opin- ion, decided the fate of the patient, for death or for recovery, was of a purely mechanical nature a question simply of space space to breathe. The little advantage in the calibre of larynx which the older children possessed over the younger ones, was certainly the determining accident of their recovery. The deposit on the inner surface of the larynx varied but little in its thickness : it occupied as much space, absolutely, in a large windpipe, as in the smaller ones, but then the smaller ones could not afford this space, and suffered complete, or at any rate, a fatal occlu- sion. We are very confident that the above is the true explanation of the marked influence which age appeared to exercise over the result of the disease. 1858.] Editorial 787 In a recent communication to the American Medical Association,* the nature of Diphtherite became incidentally the subject of discussion, and although we cannot here, without inconveniently extending our remarks, define our belief, or present arguments in its behalf, we yet state that we regard diphtherite as a disease which is eminently under the control of the nervous system, which underlies and governs its phenomena in such a manner, that it is impossible to deny its recognition in all our deliberations upon the nature of this affection. We do not deny the ground which many, doubtless, will take, that the disease is essentially, a peculiar vitiation of the blood, as is clearly mani- fested in its observed phenomena; but from our own observation, which has been ample, this blood affection, or toxaemia, specially affects the pharyngeal plexus of nerves, aberrating the influence which they exer- cise over the circulation and secretions of the pharynx, larynx and trachea, and metamorphosing their normal mucous exhalation into an effusion which forms the material of the false membrane of diphtherite. In the earlier part of our epidemic, the disease was seldom marked by fever, and only local remedies and such as would be rationally sug- gested by the special symptoms presented, were applied ; but later, a few cases were accompanied with decided fever. This fever was inter- mittent, and was found to aggravate the local symptoms very decidedly. Along with the local treatment previously applied, quinine was freely administered to those patients, in order to control the fever, and to our surprise, not only was the fever arrested, but the extension and progress of the membranous deposit was promptly arrested with the breaking up of the fever. From this marked influence of quinine upon the disease, we were induced to apply it in every case, whether fever presented or not ; our mode of giving it was the following: From 5 to 15 grains of quin- ine, according to the age of the child, was given in divided doses, during the earlier part of each day, for several days ; and no less in the apy- rexic than in the few pyrexic cases, did the quinine appear completely to control the progress of the affection. Seldom, after the free use of quinine, in the earlier part of the attack, did we ever find the disease ex- tending into the larynx and producing the croup. In addition to the quinine, we frequently advised, in the beginning, a mild cathartic, con- taining from 5 to 8 grains of calomel, but if called later to the cases, this was omitted. The local remedies applied here were numerous nitrate of silver, both in weak and strong solution, was freely used by many : our own experience with it was not such as to induce us to recommend it. Dr. I* Report on the Nervous System in Febrile Diseases, WftshiDgtoD, D.C., May '58. 788 Editorial [November, L, A. Dugas lias the record of many cases which illustrate the value of strong hydrochloric acid, locally applied, in our epidemic. Pulverized alum (sulphas aluminae) was the local application used by Dr. J. A. Eve, and by several other of our practitioners, with much success. This last was the only local remedy applied by us. The method of using the remedy, was the following : The alum was first ground in a mortar to an impalpable powder occasionally it was mixed with a small proportion of sugar. This was blown against the posterior wall of the pharynx five or six times a day, through a reed or glass tube. The most advantage- ous mode of applying it, was to press the end of the tube upon the mass of pulverized alum, so as to engage a considerable quantity of the pow- der have the child properly held by an assistant, and then with a spoon or speculum, press down the tongue, and directing the tube rather down- wards, blow the powder strongly against the posterior wall of the pharynx. If the tube were directed upwardly, the alum was liable to get into the posterior nares and give the child much pain, and cause it to resist the subsequent applications. Time nor space does not allow us at present to dwell upon the advan- tageous results of the above treatment of Diphtherite, nor upon the peculiarities of the disease as it presented itself in Augusta. In perusing the many accounts of epidemics, in various parts of the world, which have recently appeared in journals, we have, with much interest, sought for the results obtained from the use of quinine, applied in the manner we have herein hastily described ; but we have found quinine but rarely mentioned at all, and only in one of those accounts but incidentally, and not much importance attached to the results of the treatment. Having experienced such beneficial results from the treat- ment, we are now induced to record our views, hoping that it may be found valuable to those of our readers at least, who may have to con- tend with an epidemic of this insidious but terrific affection in a South- ern, or a malarial region. Medical and Physiological Commentaries. By Martyn Payne, M, D., A. M., &c. Vols. 1 and 2, octavo, pp. V 16 and 816. 1840. Essay on the Modus Operandi of Medicines. By the same author. In a former notice, we called attention to the great value of this dis- tinguished writer's contributions to the medical literature of our country. No less now, are we impressed with Dr. Payne's commendable industry, indefatigable labor, and also, with the value of their results, than when we reviewed, a few months since, " The Institutes of Medicine," from his distinguished and prolific pen. Leaving out of sight, that difference .858.] Editorial 789 >f sentiment and belief, which must necessarily exist among medical nen, of the present age, on such long contested questions as Humoral- sm and Vitalism, no one can read the works of Dr. Payne, without :onceding to him. the opinion that, in him, the one has met its most myielding and able opponent, and the other, a most ardent, learned and >owerful advocate. His volumes all evince an amount of erudition and thorough aequaint- mce with the history of medical science, which render his works valua- )le, together with their other points of interest, as a rich repertory of nedical facts and opinions, collected with much judgment and discussed vith great acumen and fairness. But these are far from being the most >rominent recommendations of the volumes before us. In an age when lumoralism has become ultra, and the influence of the nervous system s somewhat overshadowed and obscured by modern chemical doc- xines which are doubtless, in great part, true in themselves, Dr. Payne's jarnest advocacy of Vitalism, which we are free to admit, is itself ultra, proved a valuable defence to the true and more conservative doctrines of nedicine. His urgent appeals for this Vitalism and strong arguments igainst Humoralism, catch the ear and arrest the attention of the pro- fession: and it has begun to be admitted, that though Humoralism may t>e true, as the majority has heretofore firmly believed, yet the nervous system and its influence upon the animal economy, may also have at least \ modicum of truth. In the volumes before us, the authors considerations are embodied under the following heads, to each of which it will be seen he has devo- ted much thought and a goodly number of pages: 1st. "The Vital Powers," 119 pages; 2nd. '-The Philosophy of Blood-letting," 264 pa- ges; 3rd. u The Humoral Pathology," 332 pages which completes the contents of the first volume. During those three extended essays, he applies observation, research and able reasoning to each department of his subjects, and examines them not only as they exist now, but as they are found recorded from the earliest history of medicine to the time at which the author's commentaries were written, 1840. In volume 2, we have 78 pages devoted to " Animal Heat," 44 pages on the " Philosophy of Digestion," with an Appendix of about 20 pages, on "Spontaneous Generation," 74 pages on 4' The Theories of Inflamma- tion" ; while the body of the volume, 426 pages, appears to be devoted to the " Philosophy of Venous Congestion." A paper on the " Compara- tive merits of the Hippocratic and Anatomical Schools," together with a review of the writings of Louis, serve to complete the second volume of the work. The Pamphlet, mentioned at the head of this notice, is a series of 790 Editorial. [November, "Essays on the Philosophy of Vitality as contradistinguished from Chemical and Mechanical Philosophy ; and on the modus operandi of Remedial Agents." This pamphlet constitutes a part of the third vol- ume of the M Commentaries," and fully sustains the character of the two volumes we have had the opportunity of examining. A System af Human Anatomy : General and Special. By Erasmus Wilson, F. R. S., author of " The Dissector's Manual," " A Treatise on Diseases of the Skin," etc., etc. A new and improved American, from an enlarged London edition. Edited by William H. Gobkecht, M.D., Professor of Anatomy in the Philadelphia College of Medicine, Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia, etc. With 397 illustra- tions on wood. Philadelphia: Blanchard k Lea. 1858. Pp.616 octavo. (Through H. D. Norrell, Augusta, Ga.) The great practical value of Wilson's Anatomy, as a manual for the student, the practitioner, and for all who may desire to become acquaint- ed with the subject, is too well attested by the unprecedented success of the work, and the universal verdict in its favor, to render recommenda- tion necessary. The present edition is greatly enlarged, and its value much enhanced by numerous new illustrations. "The extensive addi- tions made by the hand of the author, in successive revisions, are indica- ted by the fact, that it contains fully one-fourth more matter than the previous American edition, rendering a smaller type, and an enlarged page, necessary to keep the volume within a convenient size." The work has heretofore been edited by Dr. P. B. Goddard, but the present edition bears the name of Dr. William H. Gobrecht well known, both as a teacher of Anatomy and as the Editor of works in which he has creditably labored. His valuable initial chapter is an introduction which early bespeaks the interest and attention of the read- er for the balance of his labor upon his author's work. We have ever commended Wilson's Anatomy, without hesitation or reserve, to stu- dents of medicine, and the present edition only increases our approbation. 1 I-. Lectures on the Principles and Practice of Physic. Delivered at King's College, London, by Thomas Watson, M. D., Fellow of the Royal Col- lege of Physicians, late Physician to the Middlesex Hospital, and for- merly Fellow of St. John's College, Cambridge. A new American, from the last revised and enlarged English edition. With additions by D. Francis Condie, M. D., Fellow of the College of Physicians of Philadelphia; member of the American Philosophical Society, etc., etc. With 185 illustrations on wood. Philadelphia: Blanchard & Kea. 1858. 8vo., pp. 1224. (Through H. D. Norrell, Augusta, Ga.) Although we have not room for even a full notice of the above work, we yet call attention to it, and will dwell upon it more fully hereafter. This is truly a splendid edition of a splendid work on the Practice off: 1858.] Editorial 791 Medicine. It comes to us just in time for the opening sessions in the various Colleges. The English work costs eight or ten dollars. This improved American copy only three or four. Dr. Condie has added largely to its value, and has adapted it well, to the various diseases as they prevail in all parts of our widely extended country. This notice is intended particularly for the students in our own and other Colleges. We shall review the work more fullv in our next issue. The Nashville Record of Medical and Physical Science. The face of a new acquaintance is ever agreeable and interesting to us ; but with far more interest and pleasure do we contemplate the countenance of old and familiar friends friends, too, concerning whose fate we had felt somewhat uncertain. The breaking up of the offices of our two valued exchanges, the Memphis Medical Recorder and The Southern Journal of the Medical and Physical Sciences, by the removal of their respective editors to Nashville, certainly, suggested the inquiry What is to become of our interests ? The question has been promptly an- swered the temporary silence of the two parties has been occupied, it appears, in business-like, matter-of-fact courtship, which has resulted in the happy marriage of the worthy couple, and the comely offspring greets us in the Nashville Monthly Record. The name of Professor Daniel F. Wright is familiar to our readers, and not less so is that of Professor Richard 0. Curry. We wish them, in their congenial and j well-assorted union, even more happiness and success than they enjoyed as separate journalists. Medical Journal of North Carolina. The two first numbers of this valuable bi-monthly are before us. Its original, eclectic, editorial rod miscellaneous contents fully assure us that the old North State has ?aked up in medical matters to some purpose, and suggest the idea, hat it may, ere long, not only overtake, but outstrip some of her sisters, nrho had taken a long start of her. The editor of this new comer to our sanctum is Edward Warren, M. D., son of Dr. Edward C. Warren, one >f the Vice-Presidents of the American Medical x\ssociation. Our new jonfrere is well known to the Profession as the successful essayist in a Recent contest for the Fiske fun*d prize. His subject was, we think, The Influence of Pregnancy upon Tubercular Development." It affords us pleasure to place the North Carolina Medical Journal ipon our list of exchanges, and we will endeavor to enrich our own _-s from its valuable fund. It is published bi-monthly, at Edenton, { tforth Carolina, under the auspices of the State Medical Society. 792 Editorial and Miscellaneous. [November, American Dentists in Europe. There are, we believe, from twelve to eighteen American dentists engaged in practice at the present time in the different parts of Europe, and all, so far as we have been able to learn, are receiving the most flattering encouragement. There are two in London, one in Manchester, three or four in Paris, one in Berlin, one in Rome and one in Madrid. There are also others whose places of resi- dence we do not know, and every year adds to the number. We have recently learned that Dr. F. Fuller, of Portsmouth, N. H., intends visit- ing Europe in a few months, but whether he goes merely for purposes of pleasure or with a view of practicing his profession abroad, we are not j informed. A gentleman of his intelligence and professional capacity will scarcely fail to meet with a kind receptiou from the members of his j3i^ession on the other side of the Atlantic. We wish him a pleasant trip and safe return. [American Journal of Dental Science. We, too, have a friend among the American dentists in Europe. Dr. J. W. Spear, formerly a practitioner in this place, but more recently of New York, has, we understand, removed to England, where, we are gratified to learn, he is much pleased with the encouragement he has received. We sincerely wish him that full amount of success which his urbane manners, gentlemanly bearing, and fine professional abilities are so well calculated to secure him. The Cauterization of Strictm-es of the JVasal Canal, by means of Cat- guts impregnated with a solution of Nitrate of Silver. By Dr. Raw, Professor of Medicine at Berne. Ten years ago I conceived the idea of I employing this means for cauterizing contracted or indurated canals ; I first made the experiment on the Eustachian tube, and afterwards on the urethra, and on the nasal canal. Process: The cat-guts are cut into pieces of convenient length, polished at one extremity which is smooth- ed with a very fine file, then washed in a solution of potash to free them from the oil which they contain. They are afterwards plunged into a strong solution of nitrate of silver (1 part to 10 of distilled water), from which they are taken at from four to eight hours, according to their thickness ; they are then dried by suspension in the open air in a dark place. If the cat-gut is left too long in the solution it will become twist- ed and distorted. After drying, the surface and the interior are satura- ted with crystalized nitrate of silver. Should there be any inequalities they must be removed by the file. The pieces of cat-gut thus prepared, are* preserved in blackened glass-tubes. In course of time the color oi the cat-gut becomes darker, without the curative effect being weakened. When we wish to use these cat-guts in strictures of the nasal canal, they are flattened at the upper extremity so that they can be applied and fixed to the fistulous orifice at its outlet. After performing some abstergent injections the cat-gut is introduced, without the coat of oil until it becomes strongly pressed in the contraction. At first thepatiem experiences scarcely any pain, and that which he feels afterwards has never been so great as to compel me to withdraw the cat-gut before th< lapse of twenty-four hours. If the irritation is not too great, introduc< 1858.] Miscellaneous. 793 every day a new cord, after having previously injected with fresh water, or what is better, a solution of sulphate of copper. After the second trial we perceive that we may increase rapidly the diameter of the cords. When the irritation becomes too great, which rarely occurs, we intro- duce cat-guts, not nitrated, nntil the irritation ceases. "When the canal is sufficiently dilated throughout its extent, and the secretion has lost its purulent character, it is well to wear for some time a leaden nail, before allowing the fistulous opening to close. The strictures of the nasal canal not caused by an anomaly of the osseous duct, heal by this method in a few weeks, while we know the other methods often require several months. I have also in several cases successfully used the solution of sulphate of copper. [Charleston Med. Jour, and Rev. Facial Neuralgia Cauterization of the Helix. Our readers will per- haps remember the singular treatment proposed in Sciatique which consisted in cauterizing the helix with iron at a white heat. However strange this process may appear there can be offered in its favor a certain number of well established cures, and it is by no means abandoned by practitioners, although in truth the failures have been thus far quite as numerous as the successes. The same means have just been employed in Facial Xeuralgia, by Dr. Texier, who has published in the Moniteur des Hopitaux, a communication on the subject. Dr. T. had seen the process applied in this affection by Professor Jobert de Lamballe, and he resolved to repeat it on the first occasion. A younoints, and there is no theory which has yet been advanced, rhich has received the entire support and approbation of the 1 rofession ; so that it cannot be said that the physiology of i lenstruation is established upon any definite theory. Menstruation may be defined to be a sanguineous discharge \ *om the uterus of the human female, accruing generally at >f lonthly periods, and continuing from three to six days : it is Dnsidered to be peculiar to woman. The females of other an- il nals are supposed to be in an analogous condition during the A eriod of heat, except that they do not have the discharge. We re told that there is an exception in a certain species of ape ; m some, this exception is not admitted they believe it to be a 3jmp]e flow of blood from the rupture of some small vessel of Le vagina, or uterus, and that it is not true menstruation. N.S. VOL. XIV. NO. XII. 46 796 Hillyer on the Physiology of Menstruation. [December, From the accounts given us of the discharge in the ape, it is very probable that this animal is an exception with the human female, to the usual course of things, during the period of ovu- lation. Its early, or late appearance, depends much upon the climate, the constitution, the habits, and the hardness of living, to which the girl may be subjected. Those accustomed to a luxurious life, to an abundance of nutritious and stimulating food, sleeping upon down-beds, and in warm rooms, etc., will menstruate much sooner than one, who has endured hardships. In the one, the female is hurried on to maturity, as in the hot- house plant, under similar circumstances ; in the other, from her mode of life, the privations she undergoes, etc., the discharge is delayed, as are also other developments, which are signs oi her near approach to womanhood. Her reading of exciting books of romance, and an early association with the opposite sex, will tend to cause her to be early in a condition to men- struate. In warm climates, girls have this function to come or much more early than in a temperate or more northern latitude In Greece, we are told, that girls are subject to this evidence o maturity at eight or ten years of age. As we proceed north the more do we find the function postponed. In Lapland, it i said, that it does not appear until a mature age, and that ii some far northern latitudes, it only occurs in the summer, ano then is very slight, and continues only for a little while. Oj to the other hand, in a more southern region, it is much more pre fuse, and lasts for a longer period. In this latitude, the age which girls usually begin to menstruate, is between the ages o & fourteen and fifteen. At the first period of menstruation, there is a very decide change in the constitution of the female. Her color is mucjtr improved, her cheeks are flushed, her countenance more anin ated and expressive. There is a decided change in the chara ter of her conversation. She ceases to be amused with hcjie dolls, and other childish playthings. Her sympathies are moi easily aroused. Her affections more strongly exhibited. H whole intellectual nature becomes peculiarly sensitive, and ir. prcssible. Her form is more graceful, the contour of her liml is more perfect; her breasts expand, her voice becomes mo harmonious, clear and distinct. With some, the discharge tak I :: 1858.] Hillyer, on the Physiology of Menstruation. 797 place without any premonitory symptoms, but generally, it is indicated by a train of unpleasant feelings, which announce its approach. For some time previous, the female is troubled with a sense of weight, pain, a bearing-down in the pelvic region. The vascular system is disturbed, and there is a determination Df blood to the head, and to the mammae. The quantity of the menstrual discharge is also governed much by the habits, and station in life, of the individual. The amotions and passions of the mind will affect it; stimulating liets and drinks', or the use of a warm foot-bath, will increase it, as will any cause which tends to produce a plethora of the ute- rus. In this country, the quantity of the discharge is estimated at from three to six ounces during each period. At the ap- proach of old age, this peculiar function ceases ; the time of its cessation varies in different persons. As a general rule it may be assumed, that in those cases in which it commenced at an 3arly period, it will disappear sooner, while in those in which it Dccurred after the usual age of puberty, it will continue longer in action. When the time draws near for the menstrual dis- charge to cease, it becomes more uncertain as to the periods of its return ; also, as to the quantity eliminated. Sometimes it will miss one or two periods, or be put off two or three weeks, and then recur with increased violence, sometimes amounting to a dangerous hemorrhage. Then, perhaps, there will be sev- eral successive regular periods, during which it will conform to the functional habit which has been established ; then, perhaps, ^mother hemorrhage, after which it leaves the woman forever, rhis is a critical period in her life ; it is known as the " change :>f life," the " turn of life," etc. In temperate latitudes, men- struation commonly ceases at from forty to fifty years of age. During the menstrual period, the system of the female is more rritable than at other times. Any sudden or irregular check to ihe transpiration should be avoided; also, every kind of mental )r corporeal agitation, or the process may be impeded, or hys- erical or other unpleasant affections be excited. The appearance of the menses is an evidence of the capability )f the woman to become impregnated, and their cessation the oss of such capability ; but there are exceptions to this rule, tforgagni cites instances of a mother and daughter, both of 798 Hillyer, on the Physiology of Menstruation. [December, whom were mothers before they had menstruated. Sir Everard Home mentions the case of a young woman, who was married before she was seventeen, and having never menstruated, be- came pregnant. At four months after her delivery, she became pregnant again, without menstruating. The fact that, with the cessation of menstruation, woman lose the power of bearing children, has been long known to mankind. It was known to the old patriarch Abraham, for when the angel appeared to him, and told him that Sarah, his wife, should bear him a son, he was loath to believe it, and gave as an evidence that it could not be so, that " the ways of woman had ceased upon her." There is usually no menstrual flow during pregnancy and lactation ; in fact, the cessation of the discharge is one of the evidences that conception has taken place ; though it is not un- common for the discharge to occur once or twice after concep- tion; and I have known one or two instances in which it has continued, at regular intervals, throughout the period of gesta- tion. Its absence during lactation is by no means constant, es pecially should the period of lactation be prolonged : but when it does recur, it is an evidence of an aptitude to conception. There has been an opinion prevalent among mankind, which probably had its origin among the Jews, that the menstruous blood of the female had malignant properties. A woman whc had her menses upon her was considered unclean, and anything which she touched was polluted. In the time of Pliny, this no tion was carried so far that her touch was believed to blight corn, to arrest the growth of grafted trees, to corrode copper, tc destroy hives of bees, to drive dogs mad, etc., etc. We are informed by Dr. Elliotson, that many in England be lieved, that meat would not take salt, if the process was con ducted by a woman so circumstanced. There has been for som< time past, much discussion among authors and teachers, as t< the nature of the menstrual fluid ; some contend that it is a se cretion from the internal surface of the uterus ; others insist it i a hemorrhage. Hippocrates declares it to be pure blood. Ma ny, since the days of Hippocrates, believe it to be a secretion Haller, Border, and John Hunter, besides other eminent am learned men of a later day, are of the same opinion. The doc trine that it is a hemorrhage, is at the present time the mos 1858.] Hillyer, on the Physiology of Menstruation. 799 popular. The researches of Yon Baer, Purkinge, Pruchet, Ne- grier, Bischoff and others, have rendered it clear to the minds of many, that the catamenial fluid is blood. From a careful investigation of the subject, I have no hesitation in saying that I am in favor of the hemorrhagic theory. To my mind the evidences of its truth are conclusive. I do not believe that there is a single argument which is used to prove that the fluid is a secretory product, but what can be refuted. Those who be- lieve that menstruation is a hemorrhage, contend that the dis- charge is co-existant with, and a part of, the function of ovula- tion. The rupture of the Graaffean follicle, and the extrusion of the ova, are periodical. Dr. Meigs says : " That at this time the ovaries receive a much larger supply of blood. That their vascular circulation and nervous intensity is much augmented; this state of excitement passing from the ovaries to the uterus and vagina, renders them also the seat of sanguineous engorgement. "Under such circumstances, the uterus increases in weight, acquires a redder hue, is more sensitive, and sinks lower in the pelvis. Probably the glandular tubular matter of its body be- comes thickened. From such engorgement and affluxion it is delivered by means of the mensual hemorrhage, which escapes from the vessels on the interior of the womb, falls into the vagi- na, and thence flows upon the outer surface of the external genitalia, and is called 'Menses,' 'Catamenia,' * Show,' &c." This doctrine is advocated and taught in many of our colleges. [ts most successful advocates are Gendrin, Eacaborski, Lee, Wharton Jones, Coste, and others. That the menstrual fluid is a secretory product is contended for most strenuously by Dr. Dewees. He says " I look upon this discharge as a genuine secretion from the mucous membrane of the uterus with which the cavity of that organ is lined." The reasons which he assigns for his belief, are the same which are generally brought forward by those supporting the same views. He contends "1st. That the color of the discharge is between arterial and venous blood, being less brilliant than the former and more brilliant than the latter. " 2nd. It does not separate into its components. 800 Hillyer, on the Physiology of Menstruation. [December, " 3rd. Does not coagulate, though kept for years, whilst other blood does, when exposed to the air. "4th. Its odour is remarkably distinct from that of the circu- lating mass." To his argument, that its color is between arterial and venous blood, we would reply, that this change is clearly owing to its admixture with the secretions of the cervix uteri and vagina. To his second and third, that it never separates into parts, nor coagulates when other blood does we answer, that the power of coagulation is lost by the decomposition of the fibrin by the vaginal secretions. To his fourth, that the odour is not the same as blood we answer, that it is not reasonable that it should be, passing, as it does, slowly through the vagina and mixing with its secretion, which has a peculiar odour, distinct enough to make the change, and to entirely neutralize the na- tural odour of the blood, We ascribe all the differences which he points out between the menstrual fluid and pure blood, to the effect of the mixture with the vaginal mucous, &c. He asserts, further, that it is from the mucous membrane, lin- ing the uterus, that this discharge has its origin. If so, why does this mucous membrane secrete blood globules ? Can this be possible ? This is not all : there is fibrin found in the dis- charge. Does it secrete fibrin? and all admit that the other essential elements of blood are in the discharge. So now we have all the constituents of pure blood, all that is claimed to belong to it, and secreted from a mucous membrane. No other mucous membrane in the whole body secretes any one, much less all of these ingredients. If, then, this fluid be a secretion, containing these elements, it must be regarded as a perfect anomaly in physiology, forming a single exception to all the laws of secretion throughout the entire system. The uniformity of nature's laws forbid us to accept such a position. The experiment of M. Brierre de Boismont proves that when it first issues from the womb it has all the constituents o1 pure blood, and almost in the normal quantity. In conducting his experiment, " he adjusted a speculum to the cylinder of the cervix uteri during menstruation, A patient of his alio wee" this to be done. He thus carefully collected the fluid, as ii passed from the speculum. It contained fibrin, and by 'analysis 1858.] Hillyer, on the Physiology of Menstruation. 801 was shewn to have all the constituents of blood, and nearly in the same proportion as blood drawn from the arm." There can be no doubt but that the vaginal secretion will decompose the fibrin, and thus prevent coagulation. Women who have passive hemorrhages from the womb, rarely pass co- agula, and when they do, it is when the hemorrhage has become so excessive that the quantity of the vaginal mucus is not suffi- cient to decompose the fibrin. Within the last twelve months, I have made enquiries of many women upon this point, and they all have told me that when they only had a slight hemor- rhage they passed no clots. I know one woman who had a constant hemorrhage for months, and she rarely .passed coagula. What docs this prove? That lite discharge of blood, bting slight, the secretions of the vagina were wholly adequate to produce the changes alluded to by Dr. Dewees. These women do not say that they bleed that they have a hemorrhage, but "they are unwell all the time" that they have their courses constantly upon them. Xo man will admit that this is so. All will agree that, in such cases, the woman has a passive hemorrhage, un- connected with ovulation. Will it not appear from this, that the blood of a passive hemorrhage and the menstruous blood are similar? It is now generally believed, that the cause of menstruation is from the excitement produced by the maturation and dis- charge of the ovulum from the Graaffean follicle. This is sub- stantiated from numerous cases collected by Negrier, Eobert Lee, Eacoborski, and others, of females who die during men- struation, in whom the Graaffean follicle was recently ruptured, and the ovulum just escaped. It is universally admitted, that 3onception is more likely to take place just before or just after menstruation. Hippocrates remarked this fact. Boerhaaveand Haller were of opinion that ovulation and menstruation were coincident. Both functions begin in the female at the same time, and leave her at the same time. From all these facts, I am forced to believe that menstruation is caused by ovulation, and that it is a hemorrhage. There have been numerous theories advanced as to the purposes of the menses: none of them seem to have much weight with physi- ologists. The true purpose which nature intended them to 802 Baker, on the Sources and Qualities of Honey. [December, subserve in the female, is not yet clearly understood, and this point is still open for investigation, by those who are interested in studying this subject. ARTICLE XXVIII. Remarks on the Sources and Qualities of Honey. By Paul De Lacy Baker, M. D., of Eufaula, Alabama. Messrs. Editors: In the October number of your valuable Journal I find dis- cussed, " The question of Poisonous Honey ;" and the importance attached to it by your interesting editorial, induces me to offer to your pages a few brief, and matter-of-fact, observations in reference- to the subject. The chief object of this communication is to combat the erro- neous, yet almost universal impression, that bees "extract" honey from flowers, and that as some blooms possess poisonous properties, the honey extracted from them must, of necessity, be more or less deleteriously impregnated. This impression pre- vails with all, I believe, who have written about bees and honey, and it plainly exists in the minds of the three writers, whose articles, in reference to this matter, were set forth in this Journal. Now, I propose to show that honey is not the juice or nectary of flowers, and that it is never extracted or collected from flowers, but that like dew, it falls from the atmosphere, and is gathered by the bees and deposited in the cells of the honey -comb in pre cisely the same state in which it was collected, and that there fore, in all probability, honey, "within itself," is ever a perfectly innocuous substance. The following experience forced me unavoidably to this con elusion : About the middle of June, 1850, I was at an old hunter's house, in South-Western Georgia, preparatory to start ing with him on a deer drive. This man was a great lover and minute observer of Nature; in his yard there was a great num ber of bee-hives, and he sold the honey in large quantities to the neighboring villagers. While at his house, I heard him com- plaining that there was a honey famine that the hives were all ready for its reception, but that they were utterly destitute of 1858.] Baker, on the Sources and Qualities of Honey. 803 honey, and that the bees would soon starve. I asked him, how such could be the case, when it was then the middle of June, and the country full of flowers, and why the bees did not collect it ? To my great surprise, he replied, that bees did not get honey from flowers, but that it "fell from the clouds." I was amused at the idea, but, of course, wholly skeptical concerning it. He, nevertheless, assured me of its correctness; and to my question, why did we always find bees at work upon flowers ? he answered that, they were gathering pollen, from which they made bee bread for their young, and that they were also collect- ing materials for forming the honey-comb and arranging the cells, to convince me, he exhibited to me a hive, where, sure enough, existed the comb, cells, and all else, perfectly prepared, yet not a particle of new honey, and the old supply nearly ex- hausted. There was prevailing at the time a severe and pro- tracted drought. Of course I had to believe what I saw, but was still an unbeliever as to the "honey falling from the clouds." The evening of the same day we went fifteen miles into the wild woods, where our hunting party camped, far away from any dwelling. The Old Hunter and I slept under two beautiful young hickory trees, and at dawn the next morning he roused me up, exclaiming, with great enthusiasm, "the honey dew has fallen ! get up, you unbelieving Thomas, and see for yourself." Upon rising, the first thing that attracted my attention was the buzzing of bees, and on looking up to the top of the hickory trees, I saw myriads of them working, and coming and going ; the limbs of the trees grew low to the ground, and upon its be- ing pointed out, my astonished eyes beheld, for the first time, the "honey dew," on the leaves, and occasionally actually roping down and dropping from the pendant points of the smooth leaves ; I tasted it frequently, and at once recognized the pecu- liar flavor of the common honey. I saw, and felt, and tasted it, and my mind was convinced by these means, which God had given, to lead it to correct conclusions. The only observable difference, between this substance found on the trees, and honey obtained from hives, was, as to their re- lative consistency the latter being somewhat more inspissated ; but I have no doubt that the difference is produced by time alone, and that if a portion found on the hickory leaves had been col- 804 Baker, on the Sources and Qualities of Honey. [December, lected, and preserved in a test vial, its properties would ultimete- ly have been identical with that found in the hives. My companion remarked that, in ten days all his hives would be ready for robbing, and that the next morning he would show me the bees working at home, and collecting honey from the leaves of the tall black gum trees that grew in his yard. He said, bees only collected it from the smooth-leaved trees of the forest. The same evening we returned to his house, and at day- light the next morning we went out into the yard, and the smooth-leaved black gums presented the same appearance as did the hickories in the woods on the previous morning. The bees filled the air, and I watched them fly from the trees straight to the hives occasionally, those starting from the lower limbs would come to the ground before reaching the hive, and be compelled to take a second and sometimes, a third flight to gain it, some of these we caught and killed and opened, and in every instance were their stomachs filled with the honey. I tasted it, and found it identical with what I saw the morning before. Through a glass in the hive, I saw them storing the honey they invariably backed into the cell and deposited their burden. In less than two weeks I was at this man's house to see the hives robbed. They were full to overflowing, with the most beautiful and luscious honey. If I recollect correctly, there still had been no rain. I am aware that there are flowers, such as the common honey- suckle and woodbine, that contain a sweetish juice, not visible I think, but readily detected by the sense of taste, but the flavor is not similar to that of honey. It is true, as the editor of the " Druggists' Circular" remarked, that " the saccharineematter of the nectaries of flowers is not exactly identical with the charac- teristic properties of honey." I would also observe, that this juice occupies a situation so far down, in the long tube of the flowers, as to be out of reach of the bee, and only attainable by the long delicate bill of the humming-bird, or the proboscis of the butterfly ; and even could it be attained by the bee, it exists in such minute quantities as to preclude the possibility of a swarm's collecting from such a source, twenty or twenty-five pounds of honey in the space of two or three weeks, as was evi- dently done by the hunter's bees. 1858.] Baker, on the Sources and Qualities of Honey. 805 Such is the experience, and such the observations that have taught me, that honey is not the "extract" or product of flow- ers; nor is it the result of any elaborating function of the bee's stomach, but, that it falls like dew, and is collected as ready- made honey, and requires no more extracting or elaborating process, than is necessary in collecting rain water in a cistern. So much, then, as to " whether honey is, within itself, ever a poisonous substance ;" but, what I have related, does not do away with the fact that persons are sometimes injuriously, if not poisonously, affected from or after eating honey ; nor does it explain the why or wherefore of such accidents, but I think it does establish the fact, that such occurrences depend upon ex- traneous matters and accidental circumstances. If it could be ascertained, I think it would be found to be the fact, that when- ever deleterious consequences resulted from eating honey, the honey -comb was masticated, and that no care was used in the selection of it ; in this way, it would be quite possible to intro- duce into the stomach poisonous materials; for it is a well ascertained fact, that there is such a thing in the bee-hive, and among the comb, as " bee-bread ;" that it is a brown, bitter sub- stance collected from the pollen of flowers, as food for the young bees. This might be collected from poisonous flowers, and to it may pertain in full force your philosophic remark, that "the instinct of the bee may, in most instances, preserve him and his race from the toxic effects of the deleterious properties of flow- ers, and yet, what has served as his nutriment may be, for man, a most destructive poison." I have no certain knowledge of the source from which are collected the materials for forming the comb, nor what the na- ture of those materials is ; but I would sooner look to them as the cause of the mischief, than to the honey knowing as I do, the source from which it is gathered. Again :* in considering this matter, it might be well to remember, that it is common to find in honey in the comb dead bees, and that to the sting of each is attached a bag of poison, and should these be accident- ly conveyed into the stomach, might not the circumstance have some connection with the ill effects produced ? Nearly all the cases of sickness or poisoning, /ever heard of, as occurring from the use of honey, resulted from eating wild honey obtained from 806 Farell's Remarks on Formulae. [December, an old hollow tree, and where it was consumed incautiously and in large quantities, during the frolic of robbing the bee tree, which is generally done at night; and it should not be forgotten, that the cavities, of the trees containing the honey, are the abodes of bugs and spiders of very poisonous natures, which by the fall of the tree might possibly be crushed and mingled in the honey, and in that way be conveyed into the stomach. In addition to the suppositions already set forth, I would remark that these old hollow trees are frequently covered with a vine known as the "poison vine," and would suggest the possibility that, cut and bruised as it would necessarily be, in the fall of the tree, it might, in some way, be the cause of the mischief. The frequency of these cases of poisoning is by no means so great as to exclude the possibility of the agency of such circumstances in producing it. It is, however, true, that these accidental and isolated cases afford no explanation of the effect produced upon large num- bers, as for example, on the Grecian army, as related by Xeno- phon. In reference to such examples, all I can say is, that if such an effect should be produced among soldiery at the present day, by the use of honey, there would exist in my mind, strong suspicion, that there was mixed with it an undue portion of " old peachy The only way in which I can imagine that honey could, in itself, possess toxic properties, is in the same manner that the dews of certain latitudes and localities are rendered poisonous. . This is said to be the case ; if so, the same causes and circum- stances rendering the dew nocuous, might also deleteriously impregnate the honey dew. ARTICLE XXIX. Remarks on Formulae. By William Farell, M.D., of Eome, Ga. There is, perhaps, no duty of the physician so badly executed as the writing of prescriptions. I trust, therefore, a few practi- cal hints, from one who has had some experience in deciphering and guessing at these important documents, will not be entirely devoid of interest to those, who desire to furnish their apotheca- 1858.] Farell's Remarks on Formula. 807 ries, and the public, with formulae, creditably written and in an intelligible form. Since there is, probably, no better reason for writing prescrip- tions in Latin, than a sort of veneration for antiquity, it is greatly to be desired, that physicians would employ the English, without contraction, leaving out no important words, nor add- ing those that express nothing, and thus avoid the many glaring errors, to say nothing of the occasional fatal mistakes, which expose them to the just ridicule and contempt of the intelligent. If, however, there are those, who insist on retaining the ancient custom, let them make themselves sufficiently familiar with the language to write their prescriptions correctly. In many works, whose practical precepts are justly entitled to high regard, we observe a jumble of English and bad Latin in the formulae, disgraceful to the merest tyro. For illustration, the following recipes are taken from the pages of most respecta- ble practitioners and professional writers : $. Hydrargys. praecip. alb. . . . 3ij. Ess. lem.. ..... gwt. x. Adeps praeparat 3ij. M. $. 01. Eicini. opt fjij " Terebinth Eecentis. . . f^ss Sodoz Bi. Carb. . . . . 3 jj Pulv. Acacia, opt. " Sacch. Alb, . . . aa Ij Sps. Lavendid. Comp. . . . f j Aquae Camph " Menth Pip . . . aa Hvj M Ft Emulsio. $. Copaibae. Tinct. Cubebae Syr. Uva Ursi . . . aa f5ij Pulv Acaciae opt . . . . I ij Aquae Cinnam .... f 3xvj M Ft Emulsio 3. Pulv. Opii. Pulv. ipecac . . . . aa 3j Sulphate of potass .... 3 viij M The above formulae are medicinally, and pharmaceutical^, admirable, but gramatically, bad. In the first, the syntax would 808 Farell's Eemarks on Formulae. [December, have been greatly improved by the use of lim., and Adipis in- stead of "lem." and " Adeps." In the second, the " Sodas Bi Carb," by the use of the capitals, seems to consist of three distinct words. The word " Acacia," like "lem" and " Adeps," violates one of the simplest rules of syntax. "Lavendul" is a new coinage, neither English nor Latin, and must be guessed at, as no dictionary defines it. The apothecary arrives at the meaning of such mongrel crosses by the following sylogistical process of reasoning. The word lav- ender, and its Latin equivalent, lavandula, both mean the arti- cle we call lavender. The word "Lavendul" lacks nothing of being the one, but what is contained in the other, ergo, it must mean lavender also. The author has displayed his medical latinity by the use of this new version of lavender throughout his work. In the third recipe, if "Syr. Uva Ursi" was intended for English, it is in the wrong place; if Latin, it is in the wrong case. In the fourth, the simple recipe for Dover's powder is com- menced in Latin and finished in English. Much of our medical literature is spoiled with such formulas as the above, to the discredit of the authors and the profession generally. Until we reform in this particular, we shall never hear the last of our dog-Latin. The evil is equally great among a large class of physicians, who, in their practice, in en- deavoring to make a little display of their classical lore, couch their prescriptions in a jargon, neither English nor Latin, leav- ing the apothecary to guess at their meaning, which he will generally do, rather than ask an explanation, and incur abuse for want of proper qualifications. The gross errors of some of these learned gentry are quite amusing. One, in prescribing the citrate of iron and quinia, "comes the Latin" with a grand flourish, after this fashion "Ferri Quinia et Citras." Another latinizes Dover's powders thus: "Pulv. Dov. et Ipecac. Opii. Compos.", seeming much pleased with the length and mystery of his recipes. There are others, again, who pride themselves on the shortness and sim- plicity of their prescriptions. It was one of these who drugged his patients for a long time with saltpetre, by directing simply 1858.] The Medical Uses of Wines. 809 " Nitre," when sweet spirit of nitre was intended. On learning the fact, he abused the apothecary, and made the matter worse by ordering "spirit of nitre," which, the apothecary's apprentice learned to mean nitric acid, and sent it out accordingly. This was too much for the doctor's nerves : he stormed the dispens- ing shop, and had the master of bottles arraigned for his grave error(?), who proved that he had learned a thing or two, besides the detergent qualities .of soap and water, by producing no less authority than Wood & Bache, for what he had done. This medicinal doctor would have done much better to have orna- mented his prescription with "spts. nit. dulc. eth.", which would have been within guessing distance of the true mark. Now, all this confusion of tougues, errors and uncertainty, might be easily avoided by the use of plain English, and thus save the profession from a deal of wit, sarcasm and just blame, which all ages have been disposed to direct against it. Being no Latin scholar, and but little skilled in medical Latin, we in- tend, in our own practice (should we have the occasion), to write our prescriptions in English. As above indicated, we do not seriously object to the Latin, if correctly written, yet must think reform in this particular de- sirable. We are glad to see that this reform has already been commenced by some of ths most respectable professional writers of the day, who are beginning to write their prescriptions either in good Latin or good English. The Medical Uses of Wines. This is a subject thickly clouded with all sorts of prejudices and pre-possessions, as is the discussion of most substances used equally by the sick and the healthy. Persons argue that what is good for themselves must be good for their patients. We have known a plethoric dietician, who himself loved lobster- salad and champagne in the small hours, advise a starveling dyspeptic to follow his custom of taking no breakfast till noon. So a hearty rough stomached doctor will declare one diluted alcohol just as good as another; the ascetic, or the reformed rake, will pronounce all equally bad; the gouty will dread all that is thin and acid ; the aguish will have a predilection for Port. 810 The Medical Uses of Wines. [December, It is very possible that prime wines may be made of all kinds, which may be equally and perfectly wholesome ;v but their rarity will always put them out of the reach of our patients, and what we have practically to think of in naming a wine for use, is at best a second or third-rate article. We must also choose those which are capable of being grown in quantity proportioned to their popularity, or the chances of adulteration are exagerated. When Madeira was on everybody's table, it could not be recom- mended to patients, for in nine cases out of ten it was either an inferier sort or a sour imitation. But now that it has gone out of fashion, a wholesome and often a very perfect wine is to be bought of that kind, and the adulterators expend their ingenui- ty upon Sherry. What we want is a liquor which is either pro- duced in very large quantities, or is not sufficiently known to the million for it to be worth imitating. The medical questions concerning the employment of wine will be put in the clearest light for exhibiting our real know- ledge and ignorance, by considering separately the physiologi- cal effects on the human frame. The effects may be practically included under the following heads: Exhileration, Nutrition, Arrest of Destructive Metamor- phosis, Inebriation, Degeneration of Tissue, Derangement of Digestion. The three first are good the three last bad ; and the object is to secure the former, while avoiding the latter. Exhileration is not merely a minor degree of drunkness. It may be produced by many things besides alcohol, and which do not inebriate such as, for example, the essential oils, pepper- mint, onions, valerian, assafoetida, tea, coffee. Even eating, and the increased circulation of blood, produced the effect to some extent. Alcoholic fluids truly do exhilerate with the greatest certainty and rapidity, but not in direct proportion to the alcohol they contain. A glass of wine will raise the spirits of a healthy person as much as a glass of gin ; a glass of fine claret as much as one of strong tavern port; and this is not merely from the pleasure of taste or association, for the same may be observed in fever patients, whose gustatory nerves are blunted by a thick coating of sordes. The distinction is not only a subjective one, evident to the mind of the recipient, while it is incapable of demonstration to others. There is a real physiological difference in the effects which follow exhilarating and intoxicating doses a difference which in its ultimate results, amounts to a complete contrast. The former mcrease the amount of vital power rendered availa- ble in a given period, and the latter decrease them. Can there be a more perfect antithesis ? This is too important a matter to rest solely on the unassisted 1858.] The Medical Uses of Wines. 811 ienses of patients or observer, and it does not do so, for the ad- nirable experiments of Dr. Bocker having submitted it to the >roof of chemical analysis. Though the whole series of his in- vestigations into the action of alcoholic stimulants bear directly m the present subject, they are too mutually dependent on one mother, and too lengthy for quotation. The general results, lowever, may be stated as follows : 1. The special action of alcoholic drinks is to arrest destruc- ive assimilation to stop the over-active processes of life in their jffects upon the organism ; so that, for a certain period during he stay of the alcohol in the system, less urea, less phosphates, ess water are excreted by the kidneys, less carbonic acid by the ungs, and less digestion goes on in the alimentary canal, ihowing that the muscles, bones, nerves, &c, are not getting rid )f their effete tissue, but retaining it, and making use of it as far is possible. 2. But at the same time they give rise in the body to a defen- sive reaction, which is prominent, first immediately after taking ;he dose, then gives place to the special action, and on this ceasing s again manifested to a greater extent. 3. So that if a suitable quantity be taken, and if both action ind reaction are allowed to exhaust themselves before the dose oe repeated, more manifestation of life, represented by more excretion and more consequent renewal of the body, takes place n a given time with the alcoholic drink than without. There aas been a positive gain in vitality. 4. But if such a large quantity is taken at once that the re- action is overpowered, or if it is arrested by a continuous repeti- tion of the dose, the manifestation of life is kept down ; the body is not renewed, because its effete particles are not removed, and :he amount of vitality must certainly be reckoned at a loss.* The first named state is Exhilaration, in which the alcohol nay be fairly called a food or medicine, a medicinal food or lietetic medicine, for body and mind. The second state is In- ioxication, when it is a poison to both. Now, the exhilarating effects of diluted alcohol are very much ncreased by its admixture with sugar, extractive, vegetable essential oils, ethers, and the allied substances which have been lescribed as producing the aroma and bonquet of wines. With a quantity of alcohol which taken alone would be ineffi- iient, a delicate wine is able to produce a decided impression lpon the nervous system. When, then, this is mainly sought, *Beitrage zur HeiLkunde, von F. W. Bocker, vol. i., sect. 6. Weingeist. We lave introduced the name of this author again in our heading list, because he, md indeed all physiologists of the Schultz-Schultzenstein school, are much less mown in England than they deserve. A collection of translations and abstracts irould make an admirable volume for the new Sydenham Society. jr.s. vol. xrv. ko. xii. -47 812 The Medical Uses of Wines. [December, as in cases of mental depression, hypochondriasis without bodily ailment, nervous exhaustion, over-anxiety, hysterical fainting, vomiting, and the like, or when wine is wanted merely to smoothe down the roughnesses of daily toil, we must remember that the good result may be obtained without the evil ; and we can obtain it with least chance of the evil by selecting liquors richest in their peculiar scented constituents. Bordeaux, Cham- pagne, Khine, and Moselle wines offered a variety of choice, the first being the most perfect and suitable to the greatest number of these cases ; whilst the others have certain inconveniences, hereafter to be mentioned, which often forbid their use in the special case to be prescribed for. The beneficial effects on the nervous system are increased by effervescence; thus, sparkling Champagne will sometimes have a most magical effect in stopping vomiting in cases accompanied with much nervous depression. And even in health, the greater exhileration caused by genuine effervescing wines is notorious. The physiological explanation of this result is not very clear. It cannot be due to the carbonic acid alone, for the inhalation of this gas tends to completely oppose consequences. Perhaps the sudden physical change in the liquid during the extrication of the fixed air developes ethers which in a nascent state are more potent than at other times. Perhaps other gasses are generatedj whose properties are in themselves exhilarating. In the Champagne sent into Wurtemberg from Eheims, Baron Liebig found that for every volume of carbonic acid there were two volumes of protoxide of nitrogen* (laughing gas); and it was assumed, without absolute proof, to have been artificially introduced for the purpose of augmenting the joyous results ofl the bottle. The subject demands chemical investigation on purely scientific grounds; and it would moreover, be useful to know if we could thus at will increase the required exhilaration, while decreasing the quantity of alcohol or carbonic acid. The gladdening effects of alcohol are augmented by its mix- ture with other constituents of wine, but its intoxicating or poisoning effects are diminished, and thus more may be taken, with its advantages and without its evils. So that, for example, if a man drinks a pint of Mr. Branded Marsala, he gets a some what larger dose of spirit than there is in half a pint of gin,f but it is unnecessary to say, without the same bad consequences This is partly to be attributed to the presence of the ethers;}: and * Medical Times, Nov. 1850. | Marsala contains 2603 per cent, of absolute alcohol (Brande); Geneva, 49.4 per cent. (Jones). \ The disinebriating influence of ether is shown by its being actually a remedy for drunkenness. Twenty or thirty drops taken neat on a little oil will restore to temporary sobriety. The knowledge of this fact has been popularized in France,, by its forming a point in a wicked railway novel (Le Troup de l'Enfer), the author of which perhaps owed it to M. Batilliat (Traite sur les Vins de la France, p. 1 90). 1858.] The Medical Uses of Wines. 813 sugar, but also in a great degree to the intimate combination of the alcohol with extractive and albuminous matter, so that it is not absorbed immediately by the membranes, but gradually and during a process of digestion. It is obvious that its local effect on the mucous surfaces and viscera must be thus much modified, and a powerful argument is afforded in favor of the use of wine instead of brandy for invalids. Nutrition is an indirect effect of wine. There is shown by chemical investigation to be very little substance in it capable of building up the body. The phosphates and albumen are more readily found elsewhere, as Franklin has imprinted on our memories by his comparison of a penny roll and a gallon of beer. But alcohol seems to render the alimentary canal more ready to absorb nutriment. Farmers find this, and always try to put some waste beer or fermenting grains in their pig troughs. Physicians find it, too, and give their patients cod-liver oil in a glass of sherry when they would have it fatten quickly. The effect, however, is probably confined to oleaginous food and the adipose tissue, for the digestion of albuminous matter by the gastric juice is certainly impeded by alcohol. t Hence we gain the following rules concerning the administra- tion of wine as an aid to nutrition : 1st. That the alcoholic contents are those of principal importance, and that the amount of solid or nutritive matter in the wine makes little difference. 2udly. That we may hope help from it in increasing adipose tissue, but not muscle. Brdly. That as its agreement with fatty food is the prime object, we must avoid those wines which are likely to make such food unassimilable, as, for example, by making it rancid; and therefore, 4thly. That sound wines with a small proportion of acid to their alcohol, and but little body to cause re-fermentation, should be selected ; the types of perfec- tion may be considered the dry Spanish wines, Amontillado and Manzanilla. And, 5thly. They should be taken along with the fatty food itself, or immediately after it. The arrest of destructive metamorphosis, or what has been pic- turesquely called "the moulting of the tissues," is unquestiona- bly the most important of the medical uses of alcoholic liquors. By them we are enabled to stay the progress of interstitial death in low fevers, till the period of the zymotic poison's virulence is passed, and it has either been evacuated or become inert. By them we can check the exhaustion of the body through exces- sive secretion, as in cases of chronic catarrh, ulcers, abscesses, amputations, &c. By them we can diminish, in ordinary diete- tics, the wearing out of the body by the over-worked mind, which in this busy metropolis throws so many into the hands of the physician. But in the wielding of this two-edged sword the 814 The Medical Uses of Wines. [December, greatest judgment is requisite, lest we carry the effect too far- The destruction of effete tissues is part of life, and necessarily precedes constructive renewal ; if, then, we check it too far, interstitial life is diminished, and the system is overloaded with matter incapable of vitality. It is better, therefore, to give alcohol in a diluted form, even when we wish to produce its most decided action, as in typhus fever, for example. And it is better to give it combined, as it is in wine, with other substances of partially corresponding action, than to administer it merely diffused in water, as is some- times done for economy's sake. Sugar, we know from Dr. Booker's experiments, has a special effect in limiting the destruc- tion of tissues containing phosphates, tissues of no less impor- tance than the bones and nerves. And it is likely that similar investigations into the physiology of ethers may show some special effects belonging to them. The acids, too, and the ex- tractive in wines, seem to prevent better than water those injuri- ous effects upon the mucous membranes which spirituous liquors exhibit. There is, then, no extravagance in preferring wine to brandy and water in the management of low fevers in hospital and parish practice. This is not the place to discuss details in the mode and period of administering wine in acute complaints. But one remainder may be deduced from the view taken of its physiological action viz., to allow intervals to elapse, during which its effects may subside, and the system recovered for a time its metamorphoses, so that the effete tissues may have a due exit. The night is a convenient time for this in general ; but if, from any cause, that is considered inexpedient, some hours of corresponding duration should be selected, during which the administration of stimulants may be discontinued. The wine chosen for fever cases is usually Port ; but the rarity of really good Portugal wine, and the excessive badness of all low-priced imitations now in the market, render it daily more and more incumbent upon us to have substitutes at hand. The best in the London market seem to be the red Spanish wines, Beni Carlo, and Cadiz ; especially the former, which, indeed, is often mixed with spoiled Portuguese wine, and sold as port. It may be had in the wood at a low price, considering its strength, and is highly to be commended for hospital use in a diluted state. Poor people, however, are not the only patients supplied with Port wine unfitted for the sick room. The prepossession in favor of antiquity causes many cellars in wealthy houses to furnish nothing but a damaged article. To find fault with a bottle that cost a great sum a great many years ago, is flat 1858.] The Medical Uses of Wines. 815 heresy ; and the better way is to give it up at once, and order your patient a good full-bodied wine of a different nature, such as Madeira, Burgundy, or Hermitage. Inebriation is a terrible word to meet with in periodical literature. It opens up a prospect of so many social and politi- cal questions, that the reader is apt to close the page in despair. He shall be let off here with a simple remark derived from way- side observation viz, that in all countries where wine is plenti- ful and cheap, drunkenness is almost unknown ; where it is most expensive, that vice is at its maximum. Degeneration of Tissue, as a consequence of drinking, appears to be a chronic state of that arrest of metamorphosis which has been already discussed as a remedy for disease. The effete tissue remains as a useless burden mixed up with the healthy, and is finally converted into the least vitalized of all the organic con- stituents of the body, oil or fat. Careful and valuable observa- tions have been made by Dr. Bocker, on the abnormally retained blood-discs in the circulating fluids of habitual spirit-drinkers, and the appearance of the degenerated hearts, livers, and kidneys of these miserable suicides is familiar to us all. Degeneration arises from the arrest of metamorphosis being too long and continuously kept up. Hence there is little danger of it in acute cases, where the large quantity of alcoholic remedies we find it expedient to administer is necessarily diminished as the disease recedes, and during convalescence is reduced to the ordinary allowance of health!. But in chronic cases it is often a matter for serious consideration whether we shall employ an agent capable of doing along with the gocd we intend, an evil greater than that originally to be combated. If the dose of a stimulant be repeated before the arrest of metamor- phosis has ceased and the reaction of the system has begun, a second arrest indeed takes place as before ; but the postponed reaction is augmented in force each time it is delayed, and when it occurs at last, it is so painfully depressing that it becomes more and more difficult to resist the instinct to put it off, and in the end it is rarely dangerous to do so suddenly. This is the short history of confirmed tippling; and often we fear it may be traced in its origin to the carelessly worded advice of some medical men. Science or practice has taught him that alcoholic action will alleviate certain morbid phenomena, and he recom- mends it without due warning. The patient knows no harm in alcohol except drunkenness, and so long as he avoids that vice, thinks he cannot keep up too steadily the agreeable relief he experiences. Alas ! much safer for him would be the occasional debauch of a man he despises as a profligate, than his own continuous 816 The Medical Uses of Wines. [December, steady course towards death. A drunken bout brings its own cure, and is usually allowed to be followed by reaction after- wards ; but the most alarming symptom in a tipler is that he cannot get drunk. Day by day there is a little less and a little less life in his system, till at last his degenerated body is fit for burial. Now, the result above described are, practically speaking, un- known as the consequence of wine ; it is spirit drinking that leads to them. There are several reasons for this, independent of the chemical differences of the liquors. "Wine is rarely used except at the principal meal, or as a sort of medicine in measur- ed quantity at other hours, so that the effects have time to pass away before another dose becomes due, and no craving for in- creased quantity is experienced. In fact, men go on taking daily for quarters of their life the same identical number of glass- es, feeling daily the same comfort, and never finding it necessa- ry to increase the quantity. But the spirit bottle is opened when its owner "feels to want it," nay it is very often carried about the person under the appropriate name, as regards its dead- ly results, of a "pocket pistol". We have been in the habit, in insurance practice, of omitting the usual inquiries about "sobriety" and "temperance", &c, which give offence and elicit no information, and substituting for them the simple question "Do you ever take spirits between meals"? This is something definite, not to be shirked, and if answered in the affirmative should lead to rejection. The subject of spirit drinking takes up more space in this article than our promise of avoiding temperance common-places perhaps led the reader to expect. But we have two excuses: one is, that it occupies quite distinct ground from the question of drunkenness, has much more to do with the production of disease and is therefore much more the province of a medical reviewer. The other excuse is (we blush to write it), that no class of per- sons who have received a liberal education are so often addicted to it as medical men. Londoners were shocked two or three years ago at the suicide of a highly moral and intellectual sur- geon, who left a paper attributing his despair to the habit of secret tippling; but they would have been less astonished had they known how many practitioners all over the country suffered from the peculiar dyspepsia of alcoholism. The long robe and her Majesty's uniforms are occasionally disgraced by inebriation, clergymen may sit too long at the bottle, but spirit tippling seems left to medical men and the classes below them. They have many temptations: hard mental and corporeal toil, sudden calls for exertion when tired, broken rest, irregular exposure to cold and wet, weary waiting in lone farm-houses for lingering labours, 1858.] The Medical Uses of Wines. 817 the dull company of ill-educated persons, the wish to be sociable and not seem proud, are a few of them. Into these temptations they do fall, and that on a large scale, especially in rural districts. To require of an unfortunate patient and brother practitioner that he should give up at a blow that alcohol which instinct and science agree in teaching him to be necessary, is too great a de- mand. If he becomes a teetotaller, he would probably die all the sooner. Hard common places about the virtue of temper- ance and the evils of its opposite, produce no more effect than schoolboy's themes. "What he wants is first, kind sympathy with his misfortune, and second, a rational means of getting rid of it. Now, nothing contributes more towards the latter than a clear sketch of the chemistry and. physiology of the subject, and a belief that the advantages of alcohol may be had without its disadvantages. He should reflect how wine differs from the spirits which are in it; and again, how it is not so much the quantiey, but the frequency of the dose, which is hurrying him to the grave and his children to poverty. The most complete relief is the substitution of wine for spirits. The very economy which was perhaps the first origin of the habit, will prevent ex- cess in the dearer liquid. If that cannot be accomplished, let at all events drams between meals be avoided as poison ; and let the addition of sugar, and flavors in the shape of lemon, fruit, or a few drops of nitric ether, make the drink approach a step nearer to the juice of the grape, and be daily more and more diluted. Among the Derangements of Digestion arising from wine, it will not be necessary to dwell long upon the immediate conse- quences of a debauch. It is usual, in army medical returns, to report it as " febris," as indeed there is, truly enough, an ephe- meral fever, but, like other fevers, it works its own cure, and civilians are not in the habit of applying to it the same euphe- mistic nomenclature. But, without being taken in such quanti- ty as to be considered an excess as regards alcohol, wines will sometimes cause a disturbance of digestion, which prevents our sanctioning their use in cases where otherwise we might be wil- ling or anxious to do so. This is always accompanied by the presence of a large quantity of acid in the alimentary canal. In some instances this excessive production of acid follows equally all sorts of wines, and even spirits. Then it is due to the mucous membrane of the stomach being so morbidly sensi- tive that it becomes irritable and temporarily inflamed, so that it refuses to secrete its solvent juice, and to perform with suffi- cient activity the peristaltic movements. Hence the alimentary mass undergoes the acetous and lactic fermentations, instead of being digested. These patients ought to abstain from all alco- holic drinks whatsoever till cured of their morbid condition. 818 The Medical Uses of Wines. [December, More commonly it follows only wines, and some sorts of wines more than others. These cases deserve much thought, because they are in danger of falling into the snares of spirit drinking, and also because very often the patient's system especially re- quires a stimulus which yet he cannot take without inconveni- ence. When we reflect on the large quantity of free acid exist- ing in wine, we cannot be surprised at its causing some trouble in the stomach. If a man drinks hall a bottle of hock, he swal- lows one hundred grains of acid, equal to five tablespoon fuls of lemon-juice; in a pint of claret, eighty grains; in sparkling champagne or Madeira, the same amount; in port, if he takes even this comparatively large allowance, he does not get above sixty grains ; but then in the three last there is nearly an ounce of sugar, which, mixed up with the food, has a strong tendency to ferment, and turn into a fresh portion of acid at a more advan- ced period of digestion. Here chemistry steps in with valuable aid. In the simple instrument of a standard solution of caustic soda, we possess a means of testing rapidly the whole acid contents of wines, and rejecting any which are thus declared unfit for our patient. But it makes some difference what sort of acid is contained in the wine. Acetic is to many stomachs much less injurious than tartaric, and it is found that the proportion of these to one another varies very much in the products of fermentation. Thus, in Madeira nearly one-third of the acid contained is acetic ; in port, only one-fourth ; in claret, one-fifth ; in champagne, one-seventh ; and in hock, not one-eighth, whilst the rest is the least digestable, tartaric, or its ally, racemic* Besides these, the tannic must be allowed for, small indeed in quantity, but powerful in operation, as its use in medicine shows. Of course, both the quantity of acid and the proportion of the several acids vary within certain limits, in different specimens even from the same vineyard, and still more in growths classed under a common name in the market. So that to give an opin- ion as to the fitness of a peculiar wine for drinking, we must carry our investigation rather farther than merely the applica- tion of the soda test. The acetic acid may be estimated by distilling it off from the wine slowly, at a moderate temperature, so as not to decompose *See Mulder, p. 202. In 100 grammes of wine there were Milligrammes of Milligrammes of acetic acid tartaric, racemic, w the inference or deduction is natural, philosophical and plausible, that fevers have the same existing, identical cause, if it be admitted that what we have stated is true relative to the locali- ty, temperature, climate and circumstance under which they originate. Moreover it seems equally plausible to admit the identity of fevers, should there exist the great similarity in the initiatory symptoms, exacerbations or paroxysms, and course, con- comitant to the progress and termination of these diseases, des- cribed in this article. We think that the contagiousness of yellow and typhus fevers can be satisfactorily explained, upon the prin- ciple of a vast amount of miasm or malaria in the vascular system, to such a degree that it is given out, emitted or exhaled by the lungs, or excretory ducts of the cutaneous system, etc., so that the poison may be imbibed or received by the nurse or occupants of the sick chamber from the victims of these malignant and alarm- ingly fatal diseases, especially the former, yellow fever. In our next article we will present the identity of the treatment of fevers. Especial attention will be given to the treatment of typhoid fever, the writer believing and knowing that it can be arrested and greatly shortened in its course, having never lost a case of this dangerous malady, or any other fever, though never having treated a case of yellow fever. [Xashville Med. and Surg. Jour. On the Observations of Temperature in Patients. By Prof. C. A, Wuxderlich and Dr. L. Meyer. Already during the last century several eminent physicians endeavored to ascertain the temperature of the body in different diseases. These efforts, however, were soon abandoned again, and only quite recently the thermometric observations in pa- tients have again received that attention which they so much deserve. Prof. Wunderlich has, in this respect, a rich experi- ence at his command ; accurate thermometric observations were regularly made in his clinic in more than 5000 patients during the whole course of their sickness, and also in private practice he has conviuced himself of the practicability and usefulness of this means of investigation. He considers himself justified, therefore, to pronounce the view so generally taken, and recent- ly advanced again by Lasegne, (Arch. Genrr., May, 1856.) that thermometric investigations would never become very import- ant to pathology, as perfectly erroneous. It is true, that for the theory of diseases these observations of temperature have re- mained as yet without direct use, and that they do not throw much light at present upon the nature of fever, inflammation, 832 Observations of Temperature in Patients. [December, etc., but also in reference to theory they have afforded facts which are of great consequence for many important questions in relation to pathological physiology. Of far greater import- ance, however, are they in a practical point ; Prof. Wunderlich considers them even of more value than most of the other means of investigation, provided that also in local diseases the part taken by the whole organism is considered of sufficient mo- ment. As proof of his statement, the author gives the following facts: 1. The observation of temperature offers the most reliable means for deciding the importance of a disease of recent origin ; with normal, or but little elevated temperature, the disturbances of health are, with some exceptions, (cholera, apoplexy, pulmo- nary hemorrhage, strangulated hernia, poisoning, etc.,) first of all of no importance; an elevation of 2 E. or more, announces, however, with certainty, the commencement of a serious disor- der. This circumstance is a valuable guide, particularly in cases of children, in which, as is well known, an insignificant disease is frequently accompanied by violent symptoms, as also in re- ference to the continuation of the patient's business, to his de- parture, or transport, etc. 2. The observation of temperature points out frequently important, though still latent disturbances ; an indisposition with much elevated temperature deserves always particular attention ; in the state of reconvalescence from serious diseases a relapse, or a secondary disease, is frequently indicated first by an elevation of temperature. This is particularly the case in typhus ; but also in intermittent fever an elevation of temperature without any other symptoms is frequently observed after an apparent cure, and a relapse can then only be prevented by continuing the use of quinine. 3. If the disease is developed the observation of temperature offers the most reliable indications for the diagnosis. Diseases in which the diagnosis of particular forms of the same or other of pathological processes can be decided in this manner are, ac- cording to Prof. Wunderlich, the following: typhus, (exanthe- matic; enteric;) intermittent fever: pneumonia; meningitis, (at the base; at the convexity ;) serous and purulent effusions in the pleura or pericardium ; acute exanthemata ; internal suppu- rations; peritonitis, (in lying-in women.) 4. The diagnosis being decided, thermometrical observations are of the greatest use in reference to the prognosis. Intensity and character of the disease, its stage the commencement of a complication which is often not indicated by any symptom, the usual aggravation and increase of the malady, as well as its de- crease, can be recognized, as the author proves by many exam- Observations of Temperature in Patients. 833 pies, the earliest and surest, sometimes even solely by the behavior of the temperature of the body. A certain height of temperature (about 34 R.) indicates, with certainty, a fatal issue: perse veringly high temperature (over 32 '5) makes the prognosis always more serious; a falling of temperature in a proper manner, however, permits predicting a favorable turn of the disease. In the state of convalescence changes of the tem- perature of the body deserve no less consideration as a means by which to recognize deviations from health, otherwise hardly perceptible. Insufficient falling of temperature indicates, in spite of apparent convalescence, an incomplete cure, and gives reason for fearing the development of a chronic disorder; even a small increase of temperature challenges precaution in regard to diet and regimen of the convalescent. 5. Another great advantage derived from thermometric ob- servations is the proof of a regular typic course of numerous febrile diseases; it is true that physicians of a former period supposed it to exist, but it cannot be demonstrated -with certainty but by accurate observations of the changes of temperature of the body. In the same way deviations from this regular typic course are best recognized by the use of the thermometer, and we are thus enabled to avert them by removing the causes, to neutralize their consequences, or also, as many of such irregularities are of a more favorable character than the normal course of the dis- ease, to bring them on by therapeutical means. 6. From what has been said, the importance of thermometric observations for therapeutics is evident enough; they indicate where energetic interference is necessary, and when the disease may be left to itself again. The thermometer gives us, however, also reliable and accurate information in regard to the efficacy of certain remedies and methods of treatment used ; for instance, on the effect of general bleeding, of calomel, digitalis, camphor, an emetic, and other energetic means in febrile diseases. The observations of temperature have, as the author shows, so great a value for therapeutics, particularly for the reason that the in- dications for treatment have more frequently to be derived from the general condition of the patient than from so-called local disturbances which usually disappear spontaneously, and in which direct interference is not of much benefit. [Arch.f. Phys. Heilk., and North American Med. Chir. Rev. Dr. Meyer considers observations of temperature in insane patients of very great use, as they aid the physician in determin- ing whether there exists a direct disease of the brain, or whether the latter is affected merely by reflex action from another organ. In the former case a corresponding change of temperature is ob- 834 Normal Course of Certain Typical Diseases. [December, served ; if the delirium is accompanied by elevation of tempera- ture without remission, a direct irritation of the brain exists. In reflex alienations, however, this change of temperature does not take place; if the temperature rises in these cases, it indi- cates the occurrence of a complicating disease. These statements, the importance of which for the prognosis and therapeutics of mental diseases is very evident, the author proves by a con- densed report of numerous cases, (mania, progressive paralysis.) As the peculiar character of insane patients does not permit a long continuance of the usual mode of observation viz., by placing the thermometer in the axilla, he prefers to insert it into the rectum. [Deutsche Klinih., 1858 ; Schmidt's Jahrbuch. 1858, and Ibid. On the Normal Course of Certain Typical Diseases. By C. A. WUNDERLICH. Professor Wunderlich considers the thermometer (applied to the oral cavit}', the armpit, or rectum) as the best means of de- termining the type of a disease, because its indications are but little liable to be influenced by accidental circumstances; thus, the character of the pulse, though presenting considerable uni- formity in different morbid states, varies too much, and is too dependent upon accidental circumstances, to allow of our using it for the purpose of establishing the types of disease by its aid. The author has not been able to determine any definite laws regarding some acute diseases as acute articular rheumatism, peritonitis, pleurisy, and pyaemia, nor for chronic diseases gen- erally ; but he has found that febrile affections run a definite typical course, which may be represented by the curves obtain- ed by connecting the daily fluctuations of temperature; But even in these typical forms of disease variations occur, which depend upon the bearing of the individual, and upon influences to which he is subjected. But there are certain influences which are so uniform in their effect that this amounts to a law, and thus a new type is established; this is the case with regard to vaccination in its influence upon variola, venesection upon the course of pneumonia, or calomel upon typhoid fever. This knowledge of the typical course of a disease has a practical va- lue, inasmuch as the diagnosis may be established by looking at the curve ; the deviations from the normal condition are recog- nized, and the exacerbations, as well as the commencement of oure, are rendered visible. Moreover, when the typical course of a disease has been demonstrated, a look at the curve will pro- tect from all illusions regarding our therapeutic achievements, while it affords a safe means of judging of really beneficial 1858.] Theory of the Production of Hernia. 835 effects produced by remedial agents; the unusual reductions or diminutions of the course being shown irrefragably in the alter- ed curve. Professor Wunderlich passes successively in review his observations on the following diseases : Ephemeral fevers, which he does well in restoring to nosology ; quotidian, tertian, and quartan agues ; measles ; erysipelas ; scarlet fever ; variola ; typhoid and typhus fever ; and several forms of pneumonia. "Without reproducing the curves themselves, which give an ocular demonstration of the rising and falling of the thermome- ter in the various diseases mentioned, it would be futile to at- tempt giving the details of Professor Wunderlich's elaborate and valuable paper. The following general remarks will further indicate the kind of results which he has arrived at by this me- thod of investigating disease. In some forms, the mode in which the disease commences is characteristic ; the increase of tempera- ture may be very rapid or slow, the maximum being reached in a definite period, or there may be a uniform rate of increase. The period in which the fever arrives at its full development affords numerous important points; the absolute elevation of temperature is determined in part by the special form of disease ; on the other hand, it indicates its degree. The duration of the maximum point is even of more consequence than the absolute maximum, and the larger or less variation between morning and evening, and the number of days on which the tempera- ture retains nearly the same elevation, are also points of import- ance. The duration of maximum elevation varies somewhat, but its duration must be regarded in the main as forming a characteristic feature of the individual type. In some diseases definite fluctuations occur during this period. The termination of the process, and the return to the normal condition, which the author terms defervescence, exhibit a very regular type, which is characteristic for every form of disease ; the phenomena of defervescence are even more precise than those of the com- mencement and elevation of the morbid process, and serve still better to mark the nature of the disease. [Archiv. fiir Physiolog. Eeilkunde. and Brit, and For. Med. Chir. Rev. On the Theory of the Production of Hernia. By Professor Eoser. The views here advanced have already been published by Pro- fessor Eoser, seventeen years since; but as they have not exci- ted the attention he believes they deserve, he reproduces them with the advantage of being able to add, that all subsequent in- vestigation during so long a period of an active career, has only confirmed his conviction of their truth. Debating with a celebrated professor of surgery, he declared n.s. VOL. XIV. NO. XII. 49 836 Theory of the Production of Hernia. [December, that a sudden production of hernia was impossible, according to the laws of mechanics. The professor maintained the possi- bility inasmuch as he had examined persons who had shown no signs of hernia, and yet, after violent exertion, its presence had become manifest. This, Koser regards not as observation, but as a post-hoc conclusion. It is well known how difficult (or when small, impossible) it is to detect an empty hernia sac. We only recognise it when the intestine has entered it, and we can feel the impulse on coughing, &c ; but when such entrance is prevented by various circumstances, the most we can say is, not that no hernial sac, but that no hernia, is present. Why is it not possible, as Scarpa and Cloquet have shown, to produce a hernial sac on the dead body by the use of violent compressing power, aided by apertures made in the tendinous walls of the abdomen ? First, because the peritoneum is not sufficiently elastic to bear the necessary extension ; and, secondly, because compression of the soft and fluid contents of the abdomen acts by hydrostatic law; and although the peritoneum may be stretched, it is not thrust out as it is found to be in hernia, and as it may be to some extent by the finger locally applied. Professor Koser advances these two propositions, that femoral hernia arises from the dragging out (Herauszerrung) of the peri- toneum, and that external inguinal hernia, or more properly its sac, is almost always congenital. First, with respect to femoral hernia, the dragging out of the peritoneum is brought about by nodules of fat, which, appertaining to the subserious tissue, are firmly attached to the peritoneum. These nodules slide between the fibres of the septum crurale, thrust them asunder, and lead to their disappearance. The anterior part of a nodule passes out under the plica, covered only by fascia superficial, and increases in size. Its movements are favored by its pyriform shape, and by the motions of the body, and the peritoneum following it, a sack is gradually formed. In all the instances of commen- cing hernia the author has had the opportunity of examining, ' he has found such fatty nodule at the apex of the sac. We can- not expect to find this in old or large hernias, as it would disap- pear under pressure. Professor Linhart, of Wiirzburg, the only anatomist who has of late years investigated the subject of her- nia, has confirmed these views, stating that he believes that trac- tion exerted on the peritoneum exerts far more influence in the formation of hernia than the pressure exerted by the contents of the abdomen. External Inguinal Hernia. The valvular character and oblique course of the inguinal canal, should have formed a sufficient reason for rejecting the ordinary theory of the formation of this hernia. All subsequent investigation has convinced Professor 1858.] TTieory of the Production of Hernia. Koser that his statement made long ago, that this hernia is almost always congenital, is correct. He has found that the her- nia vaginalis funiculi i. e., an open state of the upper part of the vaginal process occurs much oftener than is supposed. It has been found in almost all the children the subjects of inguinal hernia, whom he has examined ; and he has frequently met in adults hernial sacs so long and narrow, that they could only be regarded as incompletely-developed vaginal processes of the peritoneum, into which intestine had not passed. He has also found the anatomical signs, detailed in his former treatise, ex- hibiting the congenital nature of the affection. Other co-existing anomalies of the peritoneal formation are often met with. Beside the descent of the testis, there is a descent of the ccecum and sigmoid flexure, and disturbances of these often occur at the same time. As the author has feund in almost all the outer inguinal hernias he has examined, such grounds for considering them congenital, he has come to the conclusion that the bulk of cases regarded as accidental do not merit the appellation, inas- much as the sac has been in existence prior to birth. He refers in confirmation of his views to Camper's statement, that of 63 full-timed children in whom the testis had descended, the vagi- nal canal was obliterated only in 7, it being open on both sides in 34, on the right side only in 14, and on the left side in 8. So likewise Professor Engel, whose investigations are now publish- ed in the ' Wien Wochenschrift,' states that in children at birth, or during the first fourteen days afterwards the vaginal canal is found oftener obliterated, or at least considerably shorter, on the left than on the right side a fact agreeing with the prepon- derance of hernia on the right side. He found the canal entire- ly closed at birth in ten per cent. After fourteen days no trace of it could be found on the left side in 30 per cent., while it re- mained open on both sides at the end of fourteen days in 69 per cent. In the adult the presence or the remains of the vaginal canal was observed in 31 per cent, of the bodies examined, on both sides in 37*5 of these, and on the right side alone in 62*5. Outer Inguinal Hernia in the Female. The author long since proposed the question to Professor Meyer of Zurich, whether woman were not liable to a similar descent of the peritoneum as men ; and that writer, in a paper in Muller's ' Archiv,' has shown that in the female as well as the male foetus, a projection of the peritoneum into the inguinal canal does not take place. Its metamorphosis, however, occurs much earlier, as soon as the fifth month ; and it is also less considerable, and therefore less liable to disturbance than in the male sex. Internal Inguinal Hernia. This, Professor Roser observes, may, in some cases, have a fatty origin, like femoral hernia ; 838 Apparent Death during Intermittent Fever. [December, but he believes that other cases arise from a local protrusion of the peritoneum, in aged and relaxed subjects, in whom partial atrophy of the fascia transversalis has taken place. This is a very different thing, however, to the sudden production of her- nia usually admitted. He believes with respect to internal in- guinal hernia, that the fact that it occurs almost exclusively in aged men is not generally known. It takes place indeed much oftener than most authors admit ; and may be almost said to be as frequent in old men as femoral hernia is in old women. The much greater narrowness of the ring is the reason it does not occur often in old women. Umbilical Hernia. This is the only hernia which is produced according to the old theory, viz., by a vis a tergo, and even here the author suspects that in some cases it may arise from a con- genital protrusion of the peritoneum, remaining from the foetal state. As this hernia differs in the mechanism of its formation from other kinds of hernia, so does it in the remarkable fact of its being generally spontaneously curable, as may be seen from the small number of cases met with in the adult, compared with the large number occurring in infancy. In aged and fat indi- viduals, accidental hernia of this form is, however, frequent. Originally commencing his investigation with a purely scien- tific object, Professor Eoser has since found that it has an appli- cation to legal medicine, the question not unfrequently arising, whether a hernia has been produced in consequence of acts of violence in scuffles, assaults, &c, and the culprit risking to be dealt with too harshly in consequence of the off-hand way in which the affirmative is pronounced. [Arch. filr Physiol. Heilk.} and Ibid. Case of Apparent Death during a Paroxysm of Intermittent Fever. By Professor Fkanqois. In the midst of an epidemic of intermittent fever which pre- vailed at Mons in 1822, Professor Francois was sent for to a lady, aged 40, who had a slight attack, which was soon relieved. Two days after, he was suddenly informed she was in a dying state. She had been seized with a new paroxysm, # and after a little shivering and yawning, became almost immediately insen- sible. He could find no pulse ; the pupils were insensible to the action of bright light ; the whole surface was cold, pale and dry, and respiration was suspended to such an extent that a mirror placed before the mouth remained untarnished, and the flame of a candle undisturbed, while the ear applied to the region of the heart could not perceive the slightest sound, or impulse. Every kind of stimulus was applied in vain, and she had so completely the appearance of a corpse that her burial was alrea- 1858.] New mode of treating Purulent Ophthalmia. 839 dy spoken of. Although this state had continued nearly an hour, M. Francois prohibited any such step being taken, believ- ing it possible that he had to do with a case of pernicious inter- mittent, in which the vital process might be merely suspended, not extinguished. Stimuli, in the shape of frictions and glys- ters, were therefore resorted to ; but it was not until about four hours afterwards that a little moisture was observed on the fore- head. Sinapisms and hot applications were again resorted to, and shortly afterwards some slight pulsations of the heart and respiratory movements were observed,, followed by a return of the pulse and complete restoration. Quinine was administered in abundant quantities as soon as possible. On the second day after this another alarming paroxysm occurred, but this was the last, and the cure remained assured. The lady lived for many years afterwards. It is a curious fact that her husband, a fort- night afterwards, suffered from an attack of pernicious fever of the same nature, but less in degree. This case, in which the pulsation of the heart could not be perceived during several hours, forcibly shows the danger of the rule laid down by M. Bouchut, that such complete suspension is a sign sufficiently certain ta allow of interment being safely undertaken. [Presse Medicate Beige, and Virginia Med. Jour. A New Mode of Treating Purulent Ophthalmia. By M. De Coxde. M. De Conde, a Belgian military surgeon, dissatisfied with the present treatment of this disease, which seems to be very preva- lent still in the Belgian army, lays down a new plan, based upon the following considerations: 1. The greatest danger to the eye arises from the contact of the upper lid, which, inflamed and swollen, floods its surface with an acrid and corrosive pus. The excessive heat of the eye- lid, the internal surface of which is rough and unequal, inter- feres with the nutrition of the cornea, while the acridity of the pus leads to its softening and destruction. 2. It is admitted that it is of importance to prevent the contact of inflamed mu- cous membranes by the interposition of an isolating body, such as sharpie or wadding. This is seen in vaginitis, balanitis, and fissure of the anus. 3. This body, which may alone produce great amelioration, or even in some cases a removal of the dis- ease, may exert a powerful effect if impregnated with an active agent. In this way lint, soaked in a concentrated solution of acetate of lead, and placed between the glans and the prepuce, will cure gonorrheal balano-posthitis within forty-eight hours. 4. Cod liver oil exercises a powerful action in disease of the mucous membrane, modifying and then suppressing their secre- 840 Successful Operation on Children Born Blind. [December, tions. It strengthens the fibrous tissues of the eye and the cornea, and tends to prevent ramollissement. It is especially in ulceration and chronic ramollissement of this membrane that this double action is perceived. 5. The red precipitate oint- ment (four parts to fifteen of lard and fifteen of linseed oil) is an excellent substitutive agent, sufficing alone to arrest the disease when employed early. It is the best remedy for cutting short the ophthalmia of new-born infants. 6. A solution of the chlo- ride of lime (thirty parts to two hundred of water) is an ener- getic modifier, neutralizing with certainty the virulence of the secretions. 7. Lastly, perchloride of iron exerts an instantane- ous haemostatic effect upon the hemorrhagic mucous membrane, and an indubitable modifying influence upon the mucous secre- tion. As an isolating body, M. De Conde, after trying various sub- stances, gives the preference to wadding, as forming at once an inoffensive application, capable of imbibing and favoring the flow of the secretions, and of being impregnated with medicinal agents. A slip of the wadding somewhat longer than the trans- verse diameter of the eyelids, is brought opposite the palpebral aperture, and gently pushed up beneath the upper ^elid by means of the little finger or a large probe. Some cases are rela- ted as examples of the manner in which a disease often so tedious in its progress, may, upon these principles, be rapidly cured. [Annales d ] Oculistique, &nd Brit. & For. Med. Chir. Rev. Six Cases of Successful Operation in one family, on Children Born Blind. By Henry W. Williams, M. D., Boston. In February, 1857, I visited a German family, residing near the southern boundary of the city, of which five members, the mother and four children, were affected with cataract in both eyes, evidently of congenital origin. The mother was not aware of any cases among her eight brothers and sisters, or among her ancestors. In her, the lens exhibited in each eye a disseminated, dotted opacity, the cloudy spots being most numerous near the centre, while the margin of the lens was comparatively clear. Consequently, in a bright light she was almost entirely blind, but in a moderate light saw sufficiently well to perform, in a slovenly manner, the house- duties of a laborer's wife. The capsule of the lens, in her eyes, and also in those of the children, was transparent. Her hair and irides were dark ; the children had light hair and a grey or blue iris. She has two other children, whose eyes as yet exhibit no trace of cataract. The order of succession in the cases was as follows : The oldest girl had cataract ; the second child, a girl, 1858.] Successful Operation on Children Born Blind. 841 was free from the disease ; the third and fourth children, a boy and girl, were affected ; the fifth, a girl, was free ; the sixth a boy, was affected. The eyes of the children presented nearly similar appearances, and one description may answer for the whole. Nearly the en- tire field of the pupil was occupied by opacities, consisting of dots of various sizes, and evidently occupying different planes of the lens. In a bright light, reflections from crystals of chol- esterine could be plainly seen. All the patients had sufficient vision to enable them to find their way in a moderate light, when the pupil was so far expended as to allow of vision through the margin of the lens ; but in a bright sunlight they were nearly blind, and their sight was at no time sufficient to enable them to learn to read, or to gain a livelihood by ordinary pursuits. Six operations were performed, on the afternoon of the 5th of February, on the oldest girl, aged about 17, the boy about 12, and girl about ten years. As I believed the entire lens might be safely broken up in these cases, the same method was pursued in operating on all the eyes, the lens and capsule being freely divided by means of a needle introduced through the sclerotica. Sparkling reflections from crystals of cholesterine were distinct- ly seen in the posterior chamber, by several physicians who were present. The eyes were covered with a dry compress and bandage, and the pupils were kept well dilated by the use of a solution of atropia. The oldest girl had very little pain or in- jection of the eyes, and no nausea. The boy had considerable pain in and around his left eye, and some nausea, continuing for two days. His right eye gave him no pain whatever. The youngest girl had considerable pain in the right eye, with in- tolerance of light, continuing four days. Her left eye gave her no pain at this time; but, the absorption of the lens going on slowly, a second operation was performed some months after, which caused some pain and nausea, but was followed by imme- diate absorption of the residue of the lenticular substance. As the size and density of the fragments diminished, the ab- sorption of the lenses went on more and more rapidly ; but it was several months before the pupil became perfectly clear in all the six eyes. The children have now perfect vision, with the aid of the ordinary cataract glasses, and they will be able to fol- low any occupation they may prefer. The mother and the child of two years have not yet been operated on, the mother being timorous as regards her own eyes, even with the brilliant results before her obtained by the operations on her children, and wish- ing to have the little one left undisturbed till he is older. There is nothing in either of their cases less favorable than those which have already been relieved. 842 On the Absorption of Abscesses. [December, I have seen another instance, in a family residing in this State, of no less than seven cases. Other children in the same family were free from the disease. Some of the eyes had been operated on, but I think without much success, on account of portions of the capsule which were left behind and had become tough. These might, however, be readily removed by the small canula- forceps. Mr. Streatfeild also reports an example, in the third number of the "Ophthalmic Hospital Reports," of six cases- of double cataract, five children and their mother. Three other children exhibited no defect of vision. Two of this family had been operated on, with partial success. The cases now reported are interesting from the rare occurrence of such a group, and the rare occurrence of such a group, and the still more rare perfor- mance of so many operations at one time in a single family ; and the results are particularly gratifying, as they have given almost a new existence to those, who, but for the resources of our art, must have been unfortunate and helpless during their whole lives. [Boston Med. and Surg. Journal. On the Absorption of Abscesses. M. Chassaignac brought this subject recently under the notice of the Paris Surgical Society, stating his belief that purulent collections are never absorbed, at least the solid globular portions, although the serum may sometimes be so removed. Abscesses said to be so removed were in fact non-purulent col- lections or lymph. M. Richard pointed out the error of suppos- ing that pus-globules were not absorbable because they were solid, inasmuch as tumours, effusions of blood, &c, are known to undrgo such absorption. It is by no means rare to find small axillary or peri-mammary abscesses becoming absorbed; ab- scesses the size of a pigeon's egg, will in chronic farcy disappear in twenty-four hours ; and congestive abscesses not unfrequent- ly heal without any aperture having been made. M. Huguier thinks every one must have seen examples of the spontane- ous disappearance of abscesses, a by no means rare circum- stance, in inguinal bubo. M. Yerneuil referred to a case that came under his care, in which an undoubted abscess, as large as the fist, situated in the middle of the thigh, entirely disappeared after three weeks local application of iodine. In another case, two abscesses in the axilla were opened, while two others, just as manifestly fluctuating, being left to themselves, were sponta- neously absorbed. In a case of hygroma, M. Morel-Lavellee obtained a few drops of fluid by means of an exploratory punc- ture. This was shown to be pus, and the rest of the fluid being left in the collection, flying blisters were applied, and entire ab- 1858.] Carbonic Acid Gas in Diseases of the Womb. 843 sorption was induced. M. Chassaignac observed that this was the only demonstrative fact advanced in the discussion, and he must wait for others to be convinced. At present he does not believe that properly-characterized abscesses are capable of ab- sorption. Many cases are, it is true, mentioned by authors, but with insufficient proofs. Fluctuation and other symptoms men- tioned are not sufficiently rigorous ones. Thus, in a case of an- gioleucitis, in which he opened two collections apparently alike, one contained pus and the other plastic lymph ; and from some inguiual bubos he has opened, he has only removed such lymph. M. Broca, however, desired to know what M. Chassaignac de- signates as " collections of plastic lymph ;" for if he means those masses of yellowish concrete, semi-solid matter found in the centre of commencing bubos, M. Broca can assure him that this substance, which is susceptible of absorption, contains an enor- mous quantity of pus globules. M. Collerier declares, that since he has treated bubos by the method recommended by Dr. Sirus- Pirondi viz., blistering, followed by tincture of iodine, he has obtained a cure by absorption of the pus in nine-tenths of his cases. Even when the blister does not succeed, it still exerts a great influence upon the absorption of the globules ; and if the bubo has afterwards to be opened, pus containing a large pro- portion of serum is discharged. [Gaz. des Hojoitaux, and British and Foreign Med. Chir. Rev. On Injection of Carbonic Acid Gas in Treatment of Diseases of the Womb, and their Influence upon the System. By Dr. Bereaed. The application of carbonic acid gas in cases of painful uterine disease, as recommended by Drs. Hardy and Simpson, has been tried and found successful by the author in several instances. He records eight cases, four of carcinoma uteri far advanced, and four of a simple congestive but very painful character. In almost all of them the carbonic acid gas had an anaesthetic in- fluence, without producing any alarming symptoms, with the exception of one case. The mode of application is very simple ; a bottle, the cork of which is pierced by an elastic canula, is fill- ed with twenty -five grammes of bi-carbonate of soda, and twen- ty grammes of bi-sulphate of potash, with a sufficient quantity of water. The development of the gas begins immediately, which is brought up to the diseased portion by means of the elastic tube. The first case proves much in favor of these injections. The patient suffered from carcinomatous ulcerations of the neck, with a foetid discharge and violent pains. After application of the gas, the pains not only disappeared entirely, but even the 844 Operation in Obstinate Vomiting. [December, ulcers began to look better, and the patient improved considera- bly in health, so that she was discharged as cured after two months, because only two or three red excrescences could be detected on the neck when she left the hospital. The second case shows an old carcinoma, with violent hemor- rhages and deep ulcerations of the neck, while the body of the womb and the neighboring organs were not affected. In this instance, the gas only showed its anaesthetic influence, having no influence upon the disease itself. In a third case of ulcerated carcinoma, the injections at first stopped the discharge, and diminished the pain ; but afterwards symptoms of intoxication were remarked, and when these injec- tions were tried again after some time, they had a very bad in- fluence upon the disease, so that their use had to be discontin- ued. The fourth case is one of far advanced carcinoma, with violent pains in the lower part of the abdomen, which disappear- ed very rapidly after the first injections. The disease itself was not influenced in its course. The fifth observation is one of inflammatory induration of the neck, with violent pains. The gas had a local quieting in- fluence, but produced such violent symptoms of intoxication, that, its application had to be suspended. In the sixth case, which was similar to the former one, the pains disappeared very soon, and the swelling diminished, but signs of intoxication were observed also. In a seventh case, signs of absorption of the gas were observed, but the pains disappeared, while the ulcerations remained un- changed. The patient remained only a short time under treat- ment. Eighth case. Metritis, engorgement of the neck, violent pains, against which a great number of remedies were applied, without the least benefit. They disappeared after the first injections. The anaesthetic influence of the gas only remains a short time, therefore the injections have to be repeated several times in a day. [Archiv. Generates, and New York Jour, of Medicine. Report of a Case in which the Operation of Paracentesis Thoracis was performed for the relief of Obstinate Vomiting. The particulars of the case, communicated to the Society, through the President, by Mr. Heslop, of Birmingham were as follows : The patient was a girl aged 20, who had been for two months affected with effusions into the left pleural cavity. Extreme emaciation, night sweats, etc., were present, but in addition to these, no food of any kind was retained by the 1858.] Menstruation in Austria. 845 stomach. No relief followed ordinary measures, and it being evident that the patient was dying of inanition, Mr. Heslop advised the performance of the operation. Two pints of fluid were drawn off, and the relief which followed was immediate and complete. The patient rapidly recovered. Mr. Heslop added that, in advising the performance of the operation, he took the same general line of argument as that pursued by the ac- coucheur in inducing artificially premature labor, when the in- terference with important functions, as that of low stomach, calls for that proceeding [Proc. of Path. Soc. of London.. Menstruation in Austria. By Dr. Fred. Szukits. Of 665 women born in Vienna, and menstruating there for the first time, the mean age for its first appearance was fifteen years and eight and a half months; in 210 cases, in the begin- ning of the fifteenth year; in 87, in the eighteenth year: in 84, in the sixteenth ; 6 women menstruated first at the age of eleven years, 3 at twenty- two. The period during which menstruation may primarily occur in Vienna comprises twelve years. In Paris, in the same latitude, it occurs one year earlier. Of 1610 women from the country, the age of first menstrua- tion averaged about sixteen years and two and a half months. 418 menstruated during the fifteenth year, 251 in the sixteenth ; then followed in order the seventeenth, eighteenth, and nine- teenth. More than half, 888, menstruated after the fifteenth year ; less than one-fifth 304 before it. Two menstruated at ten, and the oldest two likewise first menstruated at twenty- five. The period during which menstruation may primarily occur, comprises therefore sixteen years in the country four more than in the town of Vienna. Of these 1610 women, a. 603 were from Upper and Lower Austria Proper ; of them, the mean age of first menstruation was sixteen years and three months ; here also the greatest number, 142, menstruated in the fifteenth year, 88 in the seventeenth, 81 in the sixteenth, and 72 in the eighteenth year ; the youngest, 5, were eleven, and the oldest, 2, twenty-five years old ; the period of primary menstruation com- prising thus fifteen years, or three more than in Vienna, b. 430 were Bohemians, of whom the mean age of primary men- struation was sixteen years and two months ; 148 menstruated first at fifteen, 51 at seventeen, 49 at sixteen, and 46 at eigh- teen ; the youngest was, ten, and the oldest twenty-four, at her first menstruation ; the period of primary menstruation com- prising fifteen years, c. 273 came from Moravia, the mean age of primary menstruation being sixteen years and three and three- quarter months ; 69 menstruated first at sixteen, 59 at fifteen, 846 Menstruation in Austria. [December, and 32 at seventeen ; the youngest, 8 in number, were twelve, and the oldest, 8, twenty-two years old ; the period of primary menstruation comprising thus only eleven years ; one year less than in Vienna, and four less than in Behemia and the rural districts of Austria Proper, d. 180 women came from Hungary ; and of them the average age of primary menstruation was fifteen years; 39 menstruated first at fifteen, 19 at fourteen, 16 at thir- teen, 12 at seventeen ; the youngest was ten, the oldest twenty- two ; the period of primary menstruation comprising twelve years, e. 67 women came from Silesia ; the mean age of their primary menstruation was sixteen years and one and a half months; 21 menstruated first at sixteen, 14 at fifteen, 8 at sev- enteen, 87 at 18 ; the youngest was twelve, the oldest twenty- two years old ; the period of primary menstruation comprising eleven years. /. 66 women came from Bavaria ; their average age for primary menstruation was sixteen years and ten months ; 17 menstruated first at seventeen, 15 at 16, 9 at eighteen, and 8 at fifteen; the youngest was eleven, the oldest twenty-three; the period of primary menstruation comprised thirteen years. Brierre de Boismont fixed in Paris the age of primary men- struation at fourteen years and ten months for the poor, fourteen and five months for the middling classes, and thirteen years and eight months for the rich ; and with this the observations of Chomel, Andral, and Eecamier agree. Of our author's 2275 cases, 136 were of the middling classes in them the average age of primary menstruation was fifteen years and two months; 730 handworkers medium age fifteen years and ten months at their first menstruation ; 1207 female servants, of whom the mean age of primary menstruation was sixteen years and two months ; and 202 day labourers, whose mean age at their first menstruation was sixteen years and one and a half month ; these results agreeing with Boismont's observation, that menstruation is earliest among the rich, and latest among the poor. Among the 2275 women, the ages at which menstruation first occurred are thus divided : At 10 years 2 women menstruated. n i 15 " 12 ' 36 " 13 ' 149 " 14 * 204 " 15 ' 628 " 16 * 335 u 17 < 283 At 18 years 259 women menstruated. 19 " 147 20 " 95 21 " 34 22 " 30 23 " 4 24 " 2 25 " 2 The average age of primary menstruation in Austria being thus fifteen years and seven and a half months. As influential agents in hastening or retarding menstruation, Sz. enumerates geogra- phical position, climate, populousness of a town, nationality, 1858.] Menstruation in Austria. 847 mode of life, occupation, food, clothing, dwelling, training, mor- als, and bodily organization ; according to some authors, heredit- ary tendency is also influential. Although in Austria menstrua- tion most commonly occurs between the fifteenth and seventeenth years, many cases have been recorded of its much earlier occur- rence. Wilson observed a case in which it occurred in the fifth year; the breasts being as large as those of a marriageable fe- male. Scanzoni records one case at eight years; D'Outreport, one at nine months ; she had protuberant breasts, and menstrua- ted every four weeks till her death in her twelfth year. Bois- mont records two cases in one menstruation commenced in the third month, in the other in third year. Similar observations are recorded by Mad. Boivin, Dieffenbach, and Martin Wall. In France, early menstruation is more common than in Austria ; as Boismont, in 1200 cases, found fourteen who had menstrua- ted before their tenth year. According to Szukits' observation, in scarce one-third was primary menstruation painful ; while in France, according to Boismont, this was the case in more than two-thirds. In one case of dysmenorrhcea our author observed trifling acne rosacea on the chin and sides of the nose the woman was twenty-seven years old. In three cases, each men- strual period was attended by an eruption of uricaria over the entire body ; and in two girls, one fifteen, the other seventeen, the molimina of primary menstruation were attended by inflam- mation of the cellular membrane, which again disappeared on its cessation in three to five days after. Strong, healthy women generally menstruate more sparingly than feeble, anasmic, or tu- berculotic females; the latter, if not labouring under amenor- rhea have profuse watery menstruation, lasting from ten to fourteen days. Of 1013 women, 240 menstruated sparingly, 560 moderately, and 187 profusely ; of the latter, 26 passed clots without there being any uterine lesion present. Of 1013 women Sz. found that only 642 menstruated regularly every twenty- eight to thirty days, 371 menstruated irregularly, 269 menstrua- ted from every eight days to every three weeks, 128 only every five or six weeks. The duration of menstruation is influenced by the same causes which influence its early appearrnce its medium duration is 3f days. Three times, Sz. saw menstrua- tion occur for a shorter or longer period during pregnancy ; also during lactation it was frequently seen. Trustworthy cases are recorded in which menstruation only occurred during pregnan- cy or after delivery. During fourteen years, and in 8000 cases, 14 occurred of total absence of menstruation ; four of these had borne children repeatedly, the others never ; most of them had from time to time, every three or four weeks, molimina menstrua- tionis ; in none was there any vicarious menstruation ; in two 848 Pepsine in Obstinate Vomiting of Pregnancy. [December, cases, imperfect development of the uterus was discovered. Of 263 women, menstruation ceased in 99, between forty-six and fifty years; in 77, between forty-one and forty-five; in 42, be- tween fifty-one and fifty-five ; in 26, between thirty-six and forty ; in 15, between thirty and thirty five ; and in 6 cases, between fifty -six and sixty years. The youngest woman who had ceased to menstruate was thirty-two, the oldest sixty -one, at the period of cessation. This may occur suddenly, without interruption to the general health, or it may take several years for its comple- tion. Boismont reckons the average of this at two years. Sz. found the mean duration of uterine power to be thirty years. 125 women menstruated from twenty-one to thirty years ; 106, from thirty-one to forty years. The shortest peried of menstrua- tion was twelve years, and happened in two cases ; the longest, forty-five years, likewise occurred twice. Boismont found one case with a duration of only five years, and another with a du- ration of fortj^-eight. Of 863 women, 64 were never pregnant; 124 conceived once; 73, five times; 63, six times; 74, seven times; 38, eight times; 32, nine times; 27, ten times; 11, eleven times ; 15 twelve times ; 13, thirteen times ; 5, fourteen times ; 2, fifteen times; 7, sixteen times; 2, seventeen times; 3, eigh--. teen times; 1, twenty times; 2, twenty-two times; 4, twenty- four times 863 women, of whom 61 aborted ; each woman averaging about five conceptions. The most usual period of conception in Europe is between the fourteenth and fiftieth year ; but cases of child-birth in the sixteenth year ; are recorded by Meissner, Bernstein, Osiander, Mende, and Busch. Haller saw one case of childbirth at sixty-three, and another at seventy ; as also Labatt in Dublin, and Capuron, in Paris. \_Zeitschrift d. Wien Aerzte, and Ed. Med. Jour. Beneficial Effects of Pepsine in the Obstinate Vomiting of Pregnan- cy. By L. Gros, M. D. In the great majority of cases the vomiting of pregnancy may safely be left to the influence of time ; but there are some cases in which females are scarcely able to retain in their digestive system a sufficient amount of nourishment to support their ex- istence, and are therefore reduced to the last degree of emacia- tion. In some, also, the shocks occasioned by this obstinate and repeated vomiting become the source of abortions, which might have been prevented by moderating the activity of the morbid phenomenon. A very remarkable case was related in 1856, by M. Teissier, Professor of Clinical Medicine at Lyons, showing the immediately beneficial effect of a dose of pepsine in a case of vomiting during pregnancy. In this case the symptoms resist- 1858.] Animal Charcoal an Antidote for Cantharides. 849 ed all the ordinary methods which were employed, and the patient was unable to retain in her stomach any substance whatever. Under these circumstances, the patient was brought to M. Teissier, who found her in the following condition : The vomiting had continued for two months, and she was at the end of the fourth month of her pregnancy ; she presented the appearance of a skeleton, having the aspect and the cough of a phthisical subject; the pulse .was 140, and M. Teissier thought at first that the case was one of pulmonary tubercle. Finding that all treatment had been hitherto inefficacious, and that the lady was actually dying of inanition, he was seriously meditating upon the propriety of inducing abortion as a means of saving her life: but as a last resource before operating, he determined to employ pepsine. He accordingly prescribed one gramme, to be divided into two doses, and take every day in a spoonful of broth. At the very first dose the broth was retained, and from that moment the vomiting never returned. On the third day the lady ate some chicken, and then some beef-s'eak. The treatment was continued in the same manner for three weeks, and at the end of that time the cure was complete : the emacia- tion was replaced by embonpoint, the fever and the cough ceased with the vomiting, and at the end of the ninth month the lady was safely delivered. Dr. Gros then relates six other cases in which the pepsine was employed with the samesuceess, and he thinks himself warrant- ed in concluding that pepsine undoubtedly produces good effects in the vomiting which attends pregnancy. He explains the re- sults by supposing that, although in the first instance the vomit- ing is due only to the sympathy existing between the uterus and the stomach, yet subsequently the stomach itself becomes affected, as is proved by the fact that in the beginning of preg- nancy the vomiting occurs only in the morning or the evening ; but in aggravated cases it supervenes after every meal, and all alimentary matters are rejected. In such cases, therefore, when the stomach has taken on a morbid habit, and exhibits an alter- ation of secretion, the pepsine appears to be really iudicated ; although in a merely sympathetic .action between the uterus and stomach it would be difficult to explain the efficacy of its action. Brit, and For. Med. Chirurg. Itev., from Bull. Gen. dc Therapeut. Animal Charcoal an Antidote for Cantharides. By M. Thouery. It is generally known that charcoal possesses proprieties which are most interesting ; that it removes most of the metallic salts from water; combines with oil to such an extent that it cannot be separated by ether, and fixes certain of the vegetable princi- 850 Inversion of the Body for Renal Calculus. [December, pies. M. Thouery, in 1851 and 1852, made a series of experi- ments, from which he concluded that animal charcoal possesses real efficacy in combatting poisoning by cantharides. These ex- periments were 54 in number, and were performed on dogs. Lately M. Thouery has published the details of an experiment made on men. During the night of the 12th-13th of December, 1856, An- toine B. experienced very acute suffering after having taken an infusion of centaurea from a vessel which contained powdered cantharides. Being called to see him, M. Thouery recognized it immediately as a case of poisoning by an irritant corrossive poison, but none of the liquid remaining for examination, he could not determine the nature of the poison ingested. He con- fined himself to the administration of general remedies, uniting, however, calcined magnesia and animal charcoal, and giving them in large doses. The condition of the patient did not seem to improve at first, but, after two days of intolerable suffering, re- lief was obtained and health was restored. Thouery afterwards found that the poisoning had been pro- duced by cantharides. He does not doubt, then, that animal charcoal largely contributed to the cure ; and he regards this observation as confirmative, in a certain measure, of the results of his previous experiments. The only objection which we can adduce against this theory of Thouery is, that it does not neces- sarily follow from the fact reported*. [American Med. Monthly. Inversion of the Body for the Relief of the Symptoms produced by the Passage of a Renal Calculus along the Ureter. Professor Simpson exhibited to the Edinburgh Medico-Chir- urgical Society (May 5, 1858) a small oblong renal calculus, from a patient who had passed them at different times, and always suffered terribly during their transit from the kidney to the bladder. This patient had been now twice relieved of the agonizing symptoms accompanying the passage of the calculus by inversion of the body. Prof. S. had subjected her to this treatment in consequence of his belief that the passing calculus, falling down into, and becoming impacted in the ureter, acted at its point of arrestment as a pea- valve, and by its accumula- ting the urine above, or in the pelvis of the kidney and higher portion of the ureter, led to the accompanying distress by the morbid distension of these portions of the urinary ducts. When * We have translated this notice from the French, not because we consider the claims of charcoal as an antidote for cantharides to be established as a certainty, but with the view of calling attention to it, and obtaining from our own country- men some additional facts bearing upon the subject of cantharides as a poison. 1858.] Treatment of Diabetes. 851 the body was inverted, and the affected side manipulated, the calculus probably fell backward, and consequently upwards, by its own gravity. At all events, whatever be the explanation, the practice in this and in one other case had immediately re- lieved the patient. He had seen partial relief from changed position in one case also of gallstones. Position was a more important therapeutical agent than was generally supposed, not only in medicine, but also in surgery and therapeutics. Several years ago and shortly after the famous case of Mr. Brunei Dr. S. saw, with Dr. Patterson and Dr. James Duncan, a case in which a shilling passed into the windpipe, and where upon inversion of the patient the shilling fell back into his mouth, thus saving the patient from the operation of tracheotomy. Dr. Duncan has published a full account of the case. In prolapsus of the umbilical cord in labour, the mere gravity of the cord in the usual supine position of the patient was no doubt one great cause of the difficulty of retaining it in utero, above the head or presenting part of the child, when once returned. But some late cases and observations proved that the return and retention of the cord could be effected with comparative facility, if the aid of position was called in, and the patient was placed upon her face, or upon her hands and knees, till the presenting part filled the brim of the pelvis ; for in this prone position the cord gravi- tated toward the fundus uteri, instead of towards the os. [Edinburgh Med. Jour., and Amer. Jour, of Med. Science. Rationale of the Saccharine Treatment of Diabetes. Dr. John Sloane, in a paper read before the Leicester Medical Society (April 20, 1858), gives the following rationale of the sac- charine treatment of diabetes : "Glucose, the variety of sugar found in the urine of diabetes, is generated in the livers of animals throughout the animal king- dom, almost wholly irrespective of the nature of their food. The glucose secreted by the hepatic cells passes into the hepatic veins, thence into the inferior vena cava, and through the right side of the heart to the lungs, where, being exposed to the atmosphere, it sometimes completely disappears. M. Bernard has found sugar in the livers of mammals, of birds, of reptiles, of fishes, of molluscs, and of articulated animals. He has found it in omnivorous, her- bivorous, and carnivorous animals. That the secretion of sugar is independent of the nature of the food, he proves by many ex- periments, of which I shall mention the following. He fed dogs exclusively on flesh for six or eight months ; and when they were killed, at the expiration of that period, he found as much sugar in their livers as in those of dogs fed upon a mixed diet. Owlets n. s. vol. xrv. NO. XII. 50 852 Treatment of Diabetes. [December, taken in their nests were fed exclusively on raw bullock's liver for three months, and were then killed; their livers always con- tained the normal quantity of sugar. Two dogs were fed solely on flesh, three on both flesh and bread, and two on amylaceous or saccharine food ; they were all killed at as nearly as possible the same period of digestion, and the results of the chemical ex- amination of their livers showed that the quantity of sugar secret- ed did not depend on the nature of their diet. " Rollo recommended the use of fat for diabetes. M. Thenard and Dupuytren made them eat lard. We have fed dogs with lard and axunge ; and we have found this very curious fact, that, under the influence of this alimentation, the sugar diminished in the liver absolutely in the same manner as if the animal had been kept fasting. In dogs to which M. Bernard has given nothing but pure water, he has fouud the secretion of sugar kept diminish- ing, and it ceased to appear about three or four days before their death. For the first thirty-six hours, the quantity continues con- siderable, but during the following days it diminishes very rapidly. " A dog, having fasted thirty-six hours, had a copious repast of boiled sheep's head, and three hours afterwards, was killed. The, blood in the portal vein, previous to its entrance into the liver, contained no trace of sugar ; whereas, in the blood from the he- patic veins, there was a considerable quantity. This experiment, writes Bernard, would alone suffice to cause one to admit, as a natural and necessary conclusion, that the sugar is produced in the liver; yet we have accumulated proofs of every kind about this proposition ; and wTe have shown that the hepatic tissue con- stantly contained sugar, and that it was the only tissue of the body which offered this character. "In an animal fasting, the blood which arrives at the liver pre- sents no trace of sugar ; that which leaves it contains a considera- ble quantity. Inversely, the blood which arrives in the lung contains sugar ; and that which leaves it presents no trace of this substance. The sugar in this physiological state remains hidden between the liver and the lung, and does not show itself at the exterior. This statement is true only in an animal fasting. When the digestion commences, the quantity of sugar gradually augments ; yet during the two or three hours following the inges- tion of aliment, notwithstanding the increase of the saccharine secretion, all the sugar can be destroyed before it arrives at the arterial system; and it is only after the lapse of time that the production of sugar surpassing the limits of destruction becomes temporarily excessive in the organism. At this period of diges- tion, one finds sugar in all the vessels of the body, arterial and venous, and even in the renal arteries; but the proportion is too slight for any of the sugar to pass in the urine. Yet we shall see, that under certain physiological circumstances, the quantity of 1858.] Treatment of Diabetes 853 sugar can be increased to the point that it passes off in the urine without the animal being diabetic. Under the ordinary circum- stances of digestion, this species of saccharine overflowing is manifested equally with animal or amylaceous diet, and it lasts about three or four hours. It is not less than six or seven hours after a meal that the excess of sugar in the blood commences to disappear, and that the equilibrium between its production and its destruction tends to re-establish itself as before digestion. This species of oscillation, which the glycogenic function presents, it is very important to know ; for in the pathological state (diabetes) we find exactly the same phases, with the exaggerations we should expect in this malady. Different observers Raver in France, and Traube in Germany have remarked that there are diabetics who do not pass sugar in their urine, except at the time of their digestion ; and that, in the interval, their urine does not contain sugar. This phenomenon can be reconciled very naturally with the physiological fact which has been pointed out to you. There is nothing essentially different between the normal state and the pathological symptom, save the intensity of the phenomenon caused by a deviation of vital activity. " The sugar is formed from the albuminous substance ; and this sugar is the result of the physiological action of the liver upon those principles, which are divided so that their oxygen, hydrogen, and carbon, are grouped so as to form sugar, while their azote enters into other combinations, and probably into the azotized principles of the bile. One does not know, indeed, any other origin for the saccharine matter, which cannot be produced in the intestine by digestion. Experiment has shown us that, during alimentation, by means of albuminous substances, the in- testine and the blood of the portal vein never contain saccharine matter of any kind. Neither gelatine nor flesh produce sacchar- ine matter in the intestinal tube by the known digestive pro- cesses. The amylaceous matters taken as food enter as sugar into the portal vein, and, arriving at the liver in this state, are then destroyed by this organ, and changed into another matter, which has every appearance of a fatty substance converted into an emulsion par une mature proteque speciale. We have said that the sugar introduced into the intestinal tube does not augment the quantity of this matter contained in the liver, but that it is there destroyed, and causes the appearance of an emulsive sub- stance. That the sugar introduced into the intestinal canal does not augment the quantity of this matter contained in the liver, M. Bernard shows by the following experiments. He takes two rabbits, whose urine he first finds, by testing, to be free from sugar. Into the stomach of one he injects a quantity of sugar in solution, with some ferrocyanide of potassium. Beneath the cellular tissue of the other he injects half the quantity of an exactly similar solu- 854 Treatment of Diabetes. [December, tion. He examines their urine an hour afterwards, and he finds in that of the first not the least trace of sugar, while the urine of the second presents it in considerable quantities. But you may say that this difference may be accounted for by the intestinal absorption being less rapid than the subcutaneous; but in both the ferrocyanide of potassium was readily detected in the urine. This will prove that the absorption is equally effectual in the in- testine as under the skin, but that, in the first case, the solution has abandoned one of its constituents, the sugar, in traversing the liver; whereas this has not taken place in the second instance. He arrives at similar results in the following experiments. Through a small opening in the abdomen of a rabbit, he injects a quantity of the same solution into one of the branches of the portal vein; and into the jugular vein of another rabbit he injects the same quantity of the same solution. It is clear that, in this mode of operating, we cannot have any difference in the absorp- tion, as in both cases we introduce the substances directly into the blood. Nevertheless, we obtain exactly the same result ; that is to say, that in the rabbit, in which we injected by the jugular, the sugar has passed into the urine with the ferrocyanide of potas- sium, and with very great rapidity ; whilst in the rabbit injected by the portal vein, the ferrocyanide of potassium alone will have passed into the urine, where one cannot find the least trace of sugar. These experiments are very conclusive. Bernard proves by experiment that starch, taken as food in the intestine by the influence of the pancreatic juice, becomes converted into sugar; and this passes into the portal vein. That sugar is destroyed by the liver, receives further confirmation, he states, by the facts known in the fattening of cattle. You all know that animals fat- ten most by the use of food in which starch predominates; that the geese and the ducks, in which the fat livers are artificially produced, are gorged with a pate of maize or other amylaceous food ; that the fat formed by an animal is not in pro- portion with the adipose matter which it takes ; that, on the con- trary, the animals which only eat fat, far from becoming fat, get lean rapidly. Hereafter it is not only the biliary secretion which we shall have to look upon in the liver ; it has two other func- tions of capital importance one the production of sugar, which is dependent upon the aliment containing albuminous matters ; the other, the production of fat, which is dependent upon the amylaceous and saccharine matters in the food. " Cane-sugar is never destroyed; it is constantly eliminated by the urine when it is injected directly into the blood ; but this sugar, when in the intestine, is in part, at least, transformed into glucose. The latter, on the contrary, injected into the blood, can be destroyed in certain proportions. " When we prick the mesial line of the floor of the fourth ven- 1858.] Treatment of Diabetes. 855 tricle, in the exact centre of the space between the origins of the auditory and pneumogastric nerves, we produce an exaggeration of the hepatic (saccharine) function, and of the renal secretion ; if the puncture be effected a little higher, we very often only pro- duce an augmentation in the quantity of the urine, which then frequently becomes charged with albuminous matters ; while, if the puncture be below the indicated point, the discharge of sugar alone is observed, and the urine remains turbid and scanty. Hence it appears that we may distinguish two points of which the inferior corresponds to the secretion of the liver, and the supe- rior to that of the kidneys. As, however, these two points are very near to one another, it often happens that, if the instrument enters obliquely, they are simultaneously wounded ; and the animal's urine not onlv becomes superabundant, but at the same time saccharine. The urine becomes saccharine in from one to two hours after the operetion, but seldom continues for more than a day. " The secretion of sugar is not under the direct influence of the pneumogastric nerve ; for if it be divided before irritating the floor of the fourth ventricle, sugar still appears in the urine. Bernard believes that the influence is transmitted by reflex action through the ganglia of the sympathetic. " There is a phenomenon which is manifested, for example, when, after fasting a certain time, a great quantity of sugar is taken. The intestinal absorption then proceeds with extreme rapidity. A great quantity of sugar arrives in mass in the liver ; the mechanical circulation much prevails over the chemical ; the sugar is poured into the general circulation in proportion much greater than occurs in the normal state; and it passes then into the urine, where its short-lived presence can be found for a certain time. ' M. Bernard, after a great many experiments in reference to the subject, has proved that there is a species of election in the excretion of matters which pass out of the organism. Sugar is eliminated in two ways only by the kidneys, and by the mucous membrane of the stomach. When sugar is injected into the blood of an animal to saturation, and puts it for a time into a state of diabetes, we do not find sugar in the saliva, in the tears, pancreatic juice, bile, nor perspiration ; whilst the urine and _ trie juice contain it in proportions more or less notable. These results entirely resemble those obtained in diabetic patients. Lehmann states, however, that he has obtained sugar from the saliva of a diabetic. The presence of sugar has been pointed out in the expectoration of diabetes. Bernard admits that sugar can be had in notable quantity in the expectoration. But, he writes, we must not confound the bronchial mucus which these patients, almost always phthisical, in the last stage of the disease expel in 856 Treatment of Diabetes. [December, abundance, with the salivary secretion properly so called ; it is the mucosities formed in the lung which contain the saccharine mat- ter. Nevertheless, this fact is not constant ; for M. Rayer has reported to the Society of Biology a case in which the expectora- tion of a phthisical patient examined by M. Wurtz did not contain sugar. Bernard proves by the following experiments the state- ments regarding the election in excretion of matters which pass out of the organism. " He takes a dog with a parotidean opening, into which he in- serts a tube. Nothing flows by this tube, which proves that the secretion is not continuous. By putting in the mouth some vine- gar he excites the flow of saliva, which passes out of the tube rapidly in large drops. He next injects into the jungular vein of the animal a solution containing sugar, prussiate of potash, and iodide of potassium. Immediately after this injection the saliva- ry secretion is again excited in the same way. The saliva is received into three glasses. One is examined for sugar, and none is found. The sugar therefore does not pass in the saliva. The second is examined for prussiate of potash, and it is not present. The third is found to contain iodide of potassium. This substance then passes immediately into the saliva, whilst the prussiate of potash and the glucose, equally soluble, cannot be found. In the saliva extracted before the injection, none of the substances exist. In the urine of the same animal after the injection the prussiate of potash is found in considerable quantity, and the iodide of potassium in small proportion. As regards the sugar, there is none yet, but we shall find it presently. It requires an hour or more for the sugar to appear in the urine. "The urine then eliminates all these substances in a manner more or less rapid. The prussiate of potash appears first and the glucose last. " There is another secretion in which the presence of sugar can be found ; this is the gastric. The passage of the sugar into the stomach has surprised most of the observers who have seen long since that when diabetics vomited, although they had eaten nothing but flesh, the vomited matters were saccharine. When it was believed that diabetes proceeded from a perversion of the digestive functions, it was considered that the flesh was changed into sugar in the stomach. But one need not now be mistaken; the flesh is not saccharine. Bernard himself has ob- served that, in diabetics who vomit fasting, in the vomited matters the presence of sugar could be found. But this has only occurred when the disease is at its greatest intensity ; and in all those cases, even in the animals which have been rendered artificially diabetic, it is much more difficult to obtain the passage of glucose into the gastric juice than into the urine. " The sugar is formed, as we have seen, at the expense of the 1858.] Treatment of Diabetes. 857 albuminous substances. In the healthy man it is clear that a part only of these matters is consumed for this purpose. The diabetic who forms much sugar expends a very large quantity of azotized material ; the blood is impoverished ; and, although the patient eats enormously, he gets thin like a man badly nourished. The liver takes in a manner the ration of the other organs, which un- dergo a considerable attenuation, because the albuminous elements are transformed into sugar. " M. Bouchardat has proscribed the use of amylaceous and saccharine matters in the food of dibetics. The facts which Ber- nard has himself witnessed in the practice of M. Raver proves clearly the utility of azotized aliment. In the regimen of these patients, writes Bernard, vegetable aliments ought to be forbid- den, as it is evident that they augment the functional activity of the liver. You know, also, that they are excitants of the kidnevs ; that they are much more diuretic than animal matters. Thus all the herbivora pass much more urine than carnivorous animals. In the azotized regimen diabetics have the advantage of food which is nut diuretic. " I have at great length reminded you of M. Bernard's views regarding the formation of sugar in the animal economv. As some of them are of so novel a character, and so little in accord- ance with the notions formerly held, I have thought it advisable to mention the experiments upon which he founds his opinions. That they will, upon further investigation, be more or less modi- fied, is not improbable ; but they have been very generally receiv- ed by the most distinguished physiologists and pathologists. " From M. Bernard's investigations, we learn the following facts of importance in reference to the saccharine plan of treating diabetes : " 1. Sugar may be rationally administered to diabetic patients, inasmuch as the sugar found in the general circulation is almost always secreted by the liver, and as sugar introduced into the intestinal tube in its passage through the liver is there altered and converted into an emulsive substance, which serves to fatten these patients, and thus to counteract their tendency to emaciate. iim2. Substances which contain glucose such as honey and fruits, should be given to diabetics in preference to those contain- ing cane-sugar, because the latter is not destroyed when injected into the blood, but is constantly eliminated by the kidneys; whereas glucose can be destroyed in certain proportions. "3. Cane-sugar would be beneficial to a certain extent ; as when taken into the intestine it is in part at least transformed into glucose ; but if given in too large proportions to be thus com- pletely transformed, the disease would be probably aggravated by the presence in the blood, and subsequent excretion by the kidneys, of the former variety of sugar. 858 Editorial. [December, <;4. The glucose should be given in moderate quantities at a time, and frequently, rather than in large quantities at long inter- vals; because, when much sugar is taken fasting, it is absorbed too quickly to admit of its complete destruction in the liver, and it passes into the general circulation, whence it is eliminated in urine." British Med. Jour., and American Jour, of Med. Sciences. EDITORIAL AND MISCELLANEOUS. End of the Fourteenth Volume. The present number closes the Fourteenth Volume of the Southern Medical and Surgical Journal. While carefully reviewing the accumulated results of our labors during the past year, as we have been obliged to do in the preparation of the final Index, we can but feel encouraged by the high style, practical char- acter and great value of many of the original papers kindly furnished by contributors. The true intent and purpose, of a medical journal, as we conceive them, are never so fully carried into effect as when its original communications present a clear, full and reliable exposition of the Pa- thology and Therapeutics peculiar to the region in which it is published. There is perhaps no circumstance which strikes the mind more forcibly, when opportunity for observation is allowed, as the difference impressed upon the type and progress of disease, and no less on the treatment re- quired, by the change of locality. The fevers of the Northern climates would, we opine, but illy bear the active medication found necessary at the South, while our endemics would fare badly, if the temporizing pre- cepts of our northern brethren were not mended to meet the dangerous, and often fatal tendencies, impressed upon them by our peculiar climatic and thermotic influences. Medical journals, then, must record these differences, if they would attain their full degree of usefulness in their own region, or supply to other and more distant regions a faithful report of the history of disease in their immediate vicinity. But a restricted record of local medical facts and precepts would not fully answer all the demands of even, a local journal ; the neglect to embody in its pages a portion of the vast amount of valuable information accumulating in other portions of the world, would deprive its readers of much which justly belongs to them. The Eclectic department there- fore, becomes no less important than the Original, and when this is carefully and judiciously conducted, a monthly medical journal can be made to supply a greater variety of practical and useful information 1858.] Editorial and Miscellaneous. 859 than can be made available by the practitioner, who is actively engaged, even from the largest and best selected library. To such a purpose, we have earnestly endeavored to devote the pages of the Southern Medical and Surgical Journal, and to the same end, we shall endeavor to labor during our connection with it in the forthcoming fifteenth volume. "With this view, we ask the assistance of the Profession, not only in extending the encouragement of prompt pay- ments to our faithful and liberal Publisher, but also, we, as Editors, invite contributions, which shall enhance its scientific value, and keep it, as it has heretofore been, a store-house, full of valuable practical information for readers, not only at home, in the South, but in the North, the East, and the West wherever its pages may be perused. Ocr present number has been detained somewhat beyond its usual time in the preparation of the Index to the volume. For the delay, the Editors are alone responsible ; the work of the publisher was fully ready at the usual time of issue. Book notices, and much other Editorial matter, are necessarily delayed for our next number. Chloroform in Dentistry. There is an impression abroad amongst dentists that every man is his own keeper, and that his life is in his own hands. Lamartine says that it is strongly characteristic of the weakness and imperfection of humanity, and typical of our earthly nature, that man comes into the world impotent to save himself, or to add one day to his life when beneath the edge of the mortal shears, destitute and helpless, but armed with the power of annihilation and self-destruction. This privilege the dentists of some sort are disposed to grant freely to their dupes. Chloroform is undoubtedly a mortal agent, an agent which may become inimical to life. Its risks have but too frequently and too fatally been shown by many recent accidents, and especially by the un- happy death at Epsom on the 27th ult, of a person, to whom it was ad- ministered by a druggist. There is a moral as well as an intellectual side to our art, and to the art of the true dentist. It is time that the ethics of chloroformization were established. The extraction of a tooth is not an operation which in any way bears upon life; it is not in itself attended with any risk. The deaths which chloroform has occasioned, when administered to facilitate this process, are unbalanced by any cor- responding gain of equal import. The moral duty of the dentist is there- fore clear. He has not the right to risk the patient's life for the extrac- tion of teeth. The timidity of the patient or her pressing entreaties are not more germane to this consideration of duty than her rank or her wealth would be. In the cause of life everything is permissible. It is justifiable to refute the arguments of her ladyship ; it is right to give a flat denial to her grace. However crooked those cruel fangs, they are less pitiless than the fangs of death ; and though the patient turns rebel- lious from the door, it is better than that she should have found there 860 Miscellaneous. " that bourne whence no traveller returns." It is chiefly our fashionable ladies who demand chloroform. This time it was a servant girl who was sacrificed ; the next time it may be a duchess. If a patient should press urgently for any dangerous poison it would not be administered to her, notwithstanding her own personal responsibility. Nor should chloroform, although only probably dangerous to life. Henceforward we think that this must be looked upon as a matter of conscience amongst operators. To our thinking they are bound to withhold Chloroform for the extrac- tion of teeth by every consideration of right and moral responsibility. [London Lancet. Castration for Malignant Disease. The diseases which may lead to the necessity for castration, as given in Mr. Curling's work on " The Testis," are the different forms of carcinoma, incurable struma, abscesses, and tedious sinuses consequent on inflammation, and cystic disease. We have given clinical records of most of these from time to time ; but the most common form which demands this operation is carcinoma, and not unfrequently the medullary form. We saw the right testicle removed on the 10th ult., at Guy's Hospital, by Mi*. Cock, from a man twenty -five years of age, who was married and the father of a family. His general health was good; but eight months ago he first noticed an enlargement, and this gradually increased, until latterly it has become rapidly much larger. There was no history of having received a blow, and there was no pain ; there was a degree of fluctuation about it which indicated a surface of fluid. A needle was introduced a few days before, which gave exit only to a little blood. Mr. Cock suspected it to be malignant ; for besides the suspicious character of the nature of the swelling, the cord was enlarged. An incision was made over it, and then a section into the body, when the gland was found to be completely disorganized from soft cancer. It was, therefore, removed, the vessels of the cord being tied before the tumour was detached. The cord consisted principally of a mass of tortuous veins in a varicose condition, but was not otherwise affected, and therefore held out a favorable prospect of cure from the operation. In Mr. Coulson's case, the testicle was extensively diseased, as a result of inflammation, and removal was equally imperative, as in the foregoing instance. [Ibid. Traumatic Diabetes. Dr. Plagge relates the case of a young man who received a blow upon the occiput, and the following night complained of strangury. Three days after he suffered from excessive hunger and thirst, and passed large quantities of urine, of the sp. gr. of 1*043, containing much sugar. His condition remained stationary in spite of the employ- ment of opium, tannin, and an annualized diet. A drachm of the bicar- bonate of soda (the urine being slightly acid) was then given to him daily, and he considerably improved. Nevertheless, the quantity of urine continued in excess during two months. \Gaz. des Hop., and Virginia Med. Journal. INDEX TO VOLUME XIV. PAGE. Abdominal Typhus in children. . . . Absorption of Medicines by large intestine , 762 Abscesses, absorption of 842 Aconitum Xapellus aconite 706 Acclimation of Xegroes 452 After treatment of Surg, operations, 488 Albumen, discrimination of 506 Amaurosis of Laziness 645 American Med. Association 417, 283 American Med. Monthly, notice of. . 2S7 American Medical Gazette? 287 American Dentists in Europ'e 792 Ampelopsis quinquifolia or Virgin- ia creeper 358 Anaesthesis by Projection 216 Anaesthetic, a new 433 Animal Heat, influence of Surgical affections on 760 Anderach bark, a new febrifuge. . . 357 Antony, Dr. E. L. Method of remo- val of fish-hook 214 Analysis of human excrements. ... 766 Antagonism of opium and quinine . . 77^ Animal Charcoal antidote for Can- tharides 849 Appropriate Treatment of Dysente- ry. Robert Campbell, M.D. .107, 147 Aphonia, treated with electricity. . 564 Apoplexy, intellect in 326 Appointment of Prof. Jos. Jones 282 Apparent death during paroxysms of fever 838 Armor, Prof. S. G 57 3 Arthritis, clinical lecture on 555 Artificial rupture of amniotic sac in labor 35 Artesian Wells in Sahara 218 Asthma, influence of atmosphere on 486 Atlanta Medical College, resigna- tions, 7, 147 Dysmenorrhea, valuable remedy in 642 Ear, Human, Physiology of, 47 Eczema of Face in children, local applications in 432 Editorial 350 Edinburg celebrities Dr. Simpson, 362 Effects of poisoning upon the Foetus, 629 Electricity in extracting Teeth, D. S. Chase, M.D, D.D.S 433 Elimination, doctine of. 482 Empyema, injections of water into pleural cavity in 175 " treated by injections. . . 261 Emulsions, Robert Battey, M.D. . . 538 End of Fourteenth volume 858 Epidemic Fever and Pharyngitis. . 252 Epithelial Cancer of Anus & Rectum 681 Epilepsy Lactate of zinc in 478 " Ligation of common Car- otid in 346 Epidemics & Topography of Geor- gia, J. F. Posey, M.D 106, 191 Epidemics investigated by experi- ment 705 Ergot in Menorrhagia 479 Errors in relation to Hysteria 461 Erysipelas, new local application in 578 " tobacco in 713 " perchloride of Iron in. . . 483 Escharotic treatment of Cancer. . . 262 " collodian and corrosive sublimate as an 361 Eve, J. A., M.D., Notes on Cervix Uteri 92 Eve, Dr. Paul F., President's Ad- dress Amer. Med. Asso., at "Wash- ington, D. C 498 Excision of the Hip-jtoint 69 Exsection of 2d branch of 5th nerve, 526 INDEX. 863 PAGE. Facial Neuralgia, cautery to helix, 798 Farell, W., M.D., Formula', remarks on. . . '. 8<)6 Fatal disease of Appendix Vermi- form is 467 Fatty degeneration of the heart death from the inhalation of the Tinct. Chloroform 691 Felder, W. I*, M.D., remarks on the chlorate of potash 227 Fenner, E. D., M.D., new remedies in yellow fever 772 Fenner, E. D., M.D., acclimation of negroes 452 Fenner, E. D., M.D., valuable rem- edy in dysmenorrhea 642 Fevers, their identity and treatment 827 Fever, Malarial, observations on, by Jos. Jones, A.M., M.D.,. .363, 435 507, 579, 651, 723 Fistula in ano 326 Paralysie generale 819 Pathology of Convulsions 210 Pennsylvania Medical College 650 Penin. & Ind. Med. Jour., notice. . 288 IXDEX. 865 PAGE. Perehloride of Iron in Erysipelas. . 483 Pertussal Glucosuria Phagedenic Clcen treated by irri- gation Phytolacca Radix, W. C. Musffrove, M.D .....800 Physicians and Lawyers, technical- ities before juries, H. F. C 142 Phosphates in Tuberculosis Platinized Charcoal 505 Pleuropneumonia, treatment of. . . 475 Pneumonia after Laryngotomy. . . 414 Polypus, uterine, ecraseurin Poison census 362 Practice per capita 646 Pregnancy, influence of tubercles siting of, pepsine in. . 710 " signs of 216 " watery discharge of Ute- rus in 770 Pressurein Phlegmasia Dolenus. . . .434 Prevention of ill consequences of Surgical operations Professional candor, excision of the Tongue 213 Professional changes, 450 Temperature of patients, observa- tions on 831 Temperature of body in Intermit- tent Fever * 215 for saccharine Urine 465 Test for Quinine and Morphine 70 Tetanus 794 Tetanus, Traumatic, relieved by amputation 341 Tetanus, treatment of. 74 Traumatic 339 The Indigenous Races of the Earth, L, A. Dugas, M.D 18 The Divine unconscious in Medicine nonsense 361 The "' Sands of life played out" The Uses of Pain * 763 Thyroid Body, functions of. 348 Tobacco in Erysipelas 713 Tongue, hypertropy and amputa- tion of . * ". 359 AGE. 248 361 574 216 650 7-1 360 675 721 57S 350 711 713 254 a 480 650 290 320 215 783 576 10 486 209 65 360 263 366 INDEX. PAGE. To Readers and Correspondents. .. 113 Treatment of Diseases without Al- cohol 639 Transfusion of Blood 343 " successful case, 73 Tracheotomy, statistics of 768 Trismus and Tetanus, treatment. . 709 Tubercles, influence pregnancy on, 487 Tuberculosis, proximate cause and specific remedy 208 Tuberculosis, Bronchial 281 " Phosphates in 207 Typhoid Fever, letter on treatment of, by Robert Campbell, M.D. . . 487 Typhoid Fever, Thoracic form, its treatment. Translation, by J. J. West, M.D 178 Typhoid Fever, ulcerated larynx in 359 Typical Diseases, normal course of, 834 University of Louisville 573 University of Louisiana, professori- al change 497 Upas Antiar, poison of 697 Urea and other substances injected into the blood 703 Urethral Intermittent Fever 562 Urine, saccharine, various tests for, 465 Uses of Chlorate of Potash 202 Vaccination in Hooping Cough... 717 Value of a young lady's teeth. . . . 290 PAGE. Valuable remedy in Dysmenorrhea, 642 Varicose subcutaneous operation. . 780 Venereal Badge 359 Virginia Creeper, Ampelopsis Qnin- quefolia 358 Vomiting of pregnancy, pepsine in, 710, 848 " Puerperal cured by indu- cing labor 45 " Paracentesis Thoracis in. 844 "Watery discharge from the "Womb in Pregnancy 770 Water drinking, its influence upon the metamorphosis of the system, 714 West, J. J., M.D., Thoracic Form of Typhoid Fever 178 West's Lectures on Diseases of Wo- men, notice of 68 Westmoreland's Syllabus 285 Wilson's Anatomy, notice of 790 Wind of a shot 650 Wines, the medical uses of 809 Womb, Carbonic acid gas in dis- eases of 843 Woorara. properties of 71 Wright, Prof. Daniel F 572 Yeast in Scarlet fever 367 Yellow Fever, new remedies in. . . 772 treatment of 261 1399 Pi Southern Medical Mnd Surgical Journal . Vol. U, 1858 _