CHAPTER III.

CHAPTER III.

Of Synochus: Division into Synochus Mitior and Gravior. Succession of Phenomena in Synochus Mitior. Indications afforded of Disease in the Nervous, Circulating, and Excreting Systems. Progress of Disease consisting in progressive Increase in the Derangement of these Functions. Phenomena of Recovery. On what the Transition of Synochus Mitior into Synochus Gravior depends. Classification according to the different Organs in which the several Affections have their Seat. Hence Synochus Gravior with Cerebral Affection—Subacute—Acute: with Thoracic Affection: with Abdominal Affection: with Mixed Affection.

It has been stated that, for the purpose of forming into distinct groups certain assemblages of symptoms which it is important to distinguish, because they bear an important relation to practice, it will be convenient to divide the synochus, the term by which we propose to designate the common fever of this country, as it presents itself in its mild aspect, into two sections, namely, synochus mitior and synochusgravior. For reasons already assigned, it will likewise be important, in treating of these different modifications of fever, to notice in each both the phenomena which form the assemblage, and the order in which they succeed each other.

On careful examination it will be found that the first symptom which denotes the commencement of the ordinary fever of this country, in its mildest form (synochus mitior), is a loss of mental energy. This is by no means the first symptom which attracts attention: it is commonly overlooked for some time, and excites little notice until it has become distressing. Patients in general are incapable of analyzing their sensations or of determining the order of their succession; but if medical men, who are but too subject to be attacked with this disease, will take the trouble to reflect on the order of events as they occurred to themselves, they will probably be satisfied, after the most attentive consideration, that the first indication of disease they felt was a want of power to conduct their ordinary mental operations with ease and vigour. Such at least, perhaps I may be permitted to mention, was the fact in my own case; for, having suffered a severe attack of fever, I have a distinct and vivid recollection of the dulness, confusion, and want of mental energy which I experienced for a considerable time before I was conscious of any corporeal debility.

This affection of the mind consists particularly inindistinctness and consequent confusion in the trains of ideas; in inability to attend to their relations; and, as a necessary result, in the loss of power to think clearly. The individual feels that he is not in a state to form a sound judgment on any subject upon which he may be called to decide.

Closely connected with this mental weakness is the loss of energy in the muscles of voluntary motion. Lassitude is the result. The patient cannot move with his usual vigour, nor even sit without the feeling of weariness. The debility thus seizing upon both body and mind, sometimes occurs in each so nearly simultaneously that, it must be owned, it is difficult to determine in which it appears first.

The next symptom in the order of succession is still more characteristic: it consists in an uneasy sensation which is quite peculiar to this state of the system. No description can convey any idea of it to one who has not felt it; and to him who has felt it the word fever recalls this uneasy feeling so instantaneously and vividly that I apprehend most unprofessional persons conceive it is this very feeling that constitutes the essence of the disease. It is much more distressing than pain: the mere restlessness which accompanies and which forms so large a part of it, any one would gladly exchange for intense pain. In all diseases it is this which makes the sufferer on his midnight pillow exclaim, “oh! that it were morning!” and in the day, “would that itwere night!” Though it is so frequent in its occurrence, and so peculiar in its nature, yet I am not aware that it has received any distinct name: it may be called, until a better is suggested, febrile uneasiness.

It is seldom that these symptoms exist long before positive pain is felt. With very few exceptions pain is first felt in the back or loins and then in the limbs. It is rare that this symptom is absent in the commencement of this form of fever, and it often occasions more uneasiness to the patient than any thing else during the first stage of the disease.

Already a remarkable change is commonly visible in the countenance. Its expression is that of dejection: it is often strikingly similar to that of a very weak person suffering from fatigue. The colour of the face is pallid, and the features are somewhat shrunk; but its general aspect is so peculiar and characteristic that an experienced eye can distinguish the disease even at this early period, and without asking a single question.

The skin partakes in a remarkable degree of the debility which so early shows itself in the muscles of locomotion. This is indicated in a striking manner by its increased sensitiveness to the physical agents by which it is surrounded, and by its inability to resist their influence. Ordinary degrees of temperature produce a sensation of cold which is sometimes intolerable: chilliness is felt even in aheated room, or in a warm bed: hence the sensation of cold, sometimes increasing to shivering, which has been considered one of the most constant signs of fever. But this feeling of chilliness by no means depends on external temperature: it is increased by cold, but it exists in spite of an elevated temperature: it arises from an internal cause, and is not to be counteracted by external heat.

While the patient experiences the sensation of cold, there is no diminution of the quantity of caloric in the system. The thermometer applied to any part of the body commonly rises as high as in the state of health, and the skin, touched by the hand of another person, communicates not the feeling of cold, but often, on the contrary, that of preternatural heat. There is no positive abstraction of caloric from the body nor any failure in the process, whatever it be, by which animal heat is generated; there is only altered sensation, in consequence of derangement in the function of the skin. In this form of fever, the chilliness in many cases never amounts to shivering; in others, there is an attack of well-marked rigor, and in others, again, there is either no feeling of cold, or it is so slight that it escapes observation.

The symptoms now enumerated are all clearly referrible to derangement of the function of the spinal cord and brain. There is as yet no affection of anyother organ obviously or, at least, much developed. The circulating system, it is true, is just beginning to be affected. The pulse is no longer perfectly natural. It is more languid than in the state of health; sometimes it is also quicker: at other times it is slower; now and then it is scarcely changed in frequency, but its action is invariably weaker than in its sound state.

At the same time the respiration is affected in a corresponding degree: it is shorter and quicker than natural; the chest does not expand so freely, and compensation seems to be sought in an additional number of respirations. Oftentimes neither the pulse nor the respiration appears to be much altered, if the patient remain perfectly still; but if he rise and walk across the room, the pulse instantly becomes rapid, and the respiration is quickened almost to panting.

The transition from the affection of the nervous and sensorial to that of the circulating and the respiratory systems is thus clear and striking. Physiology teaches us how closely these systems are connected, and how mutually they are dependent one upon the other, the closest observers and the ablest experimentalists candidly confessing that they are scarcely able to determine which is the least dependent, or the action of which is the least necessary to the others performance of its functions. The nervous system being first deranged, it is thus consonantto what we know of the healthy function of the animal economy, that the circulating and the respiratory systems should be the next to suffer.

How long the nervous system may continue thus deranged, before any other organs are involved, excepting the circulating and the respiratory, to the extent just stated, is uncertain. There can be no doubt that in this mild form of fever, the range of the duration of this isolated state of disorder, if we may so express it, is from a few hours to several days. The rapidity or the slowness with which other systems of organs become involved seems to depend very much upon the acuteness of the attack. In general, the more acute the fever, the more rapidly the individual phenomena succeed each other, and the entire series becomes complete. But this is not, and it is important to bear in mind that it is not invariably the case: for experience teaches us that the severity and danger of the disease are not diminished by the slowness of its approach; and that cases occur, which are slow in forming, and which do not for awhile excite alarm, that ultimately become truly formidable.

It has been stated that the circulation languishes with the diminished energy in the sensorial faculties, and the loss of power in the muscles of locomotion. After awhile, the pulse which was feebler than natural becomes more full, more strong, and generally more quick than in a sound state; and now the skin, whichwas cold, becomes preternaturally hot. The previous cold consisted, for the most part, of altered sensation, there being little or no loss of caloric: but the feeling of heat, on the contrary, is the result of an actual increase of temperature; for the heat in the interior of the body, as well as on the surface, rises in some cases several degrees, as is ascertained by the thermometer; the range of increase being from the natural standard 98° to 105°, beyond which it is seldom found to augment in this form of fever. The heat is at first not uniform over the entire surface of the body: it often happens that some parts are cold while others are burning hot. The heat is oftentimes particularly intense over the forehead, or over the back part of the head, or over the whole scalp, while the cheeks are commonly flushed. All these symptoms denote a morbid condition in the action of the heart and arteries. Since the generation of animal heat is so intimately connected with the circulating and the respiratory functions, it is probable that the increase of temperature is the result of some morbid action of the capillary vessels belonging to these systems. What the disordered action of these vessels is, which produces increase of temperature, we do not know, because we do not know what their natural action is which produces the temperature of health: but the object of scientific observation is in some degree accomplished, when it is ascertained that one condition of thesefunctions is invariably connected with a morbidly-diminished temperature; another with a morbidly-augmented temperature; and another with the temperature of health.

Immediately the circulation is thus excited, the functions of secretion and excretion become deranged. The mouth is now dry and parched; the tongue begins to be covered with fur; thirst comes on; the secretion of the liver, probably also of the pancreas, and certainly of the mucous membrane lining the whole alimentary canal, is vitiated, as is proved by the unnatural quantity, colour, and fetor of the evacuations; the urine likewise is altered in appearance, and the skin is not more remarkable for the sense of heat, than for that of dryness and harshness which it communicates to the touch. With the excitement of the pulse and the increase of the heat, the pain in the back and limbs and the general febrile uneasiness are much augmented.

At this period, then, the fever is fully formed; the series of morbid phenomena is complete: any thing more that happens is referrible to degree and to duration, and must be the result of one or other of these circumstances, or of their combined operation. And we now see that the organs affected, constitute precisely that system of organs which has been described as forming the febrile circle: that the symptoms which denote the fever are just the symptomswhich indicate a derangement in the several functions performed by these organs; and that the order in which they become successively involved is exactly that which has been assigned.

As soon as the preternatural heat comes on, pain begins to be felt in the head. Dr. Clutterbuck, in describing the general character of the ordinary fever of London states[23]that “thefirstsymptom almost invariably complained of is more or less of uneasiness of the head.” If by uneasiness he meant pain, there is, if there be any truth in the preceding observations, a long train of symptoms to intervene before this symptom occurs. That it does ultimately occur is certain: but commonly its place in the series is much later than is here assigned: it is disordered function of the brain, indicated by loss of mental energy, that appears to form the first symptom in this morbid train.

The pain, when it does come, is sometimes slight at first, and occasionally it remains slight throughout the disease; at other times it is pretty severe. Cases sometimes occur, in which, instead of pain, there is only a sense of giddiness, and now and then the uneasy feeling is described as that of lightness: or, on the contrary, as that of heaviness or weight. But whether the feeling be pain, and that pain be slightor severe, or whether it be giddiness, or lightness, or heaviness, it indicates a similar condition of the organ, and requires a similar treatment.

With the accession of pain of the head there is a manifest increase in the disturbance of the sensorial functions. The inability to think, to compare, to reason, to judge, great as it was at the commencement, is now much greater. Instead of being more dull, there are certain states of the mind which now become more acute and vigilant even than in health. Sensation itself, at this period, is invariably acuter than natural, as is indicated in all the organs of sense. The eye cannot well bear the light: there are few cases in which the full glare of day does not excite uneasiness, while in many the ordinary light of a room cannot be borne: in these cases the opening between the eye-lids is frequently observed to be contracted, as if from an involuntary effort to exclude a portion of that stimulus which in health excites no inconvenience, and this state of the eye-lids assists in giving to the eye its dull and heavy expression, so characteristic of fever. The increase of sensibility in the organ of hearing is equally striking. Sounds which were not noticed during health become acutely and even distressingly sensible, while accustomed noises, such as that of a crowded street, are always painful and often intolerable. The skin, considered as an organ of touch, is in a like morbid state. An impression barely sufficient in the stateof health to produce sensation excites the feeling of tenderness, and alternations of temperature, which in ordinary states are scarcely perceptible, are painful. The senses of taste and smell, on the contrary, are nearly obliterated, owing to the altered condition of the membranes upon which the sensitive nerves are distributed.

From the earliest attack of the disease the sleep is disturbed and unrefreshing; now scarcely any is obtained; the febrile uneasiness will not allow of repose; the patient cannot remain in any position long, incessantly shifting his place, never eluding his pain. At this stage the sense of uneasiness in the limbs, oftentimes the severity of the pain over the whole body, is peculiarly distressing.

With this progressive increase in the affection of the spinal cord and the brain, the derangement in the circulating system is proportionally augmented. The pulse is invariably altered, both in frequency and character. Generally it rises to 90, sometimes to 100; but in this form of fever it seldom exceeds this number; and occasionally it never rises above 80. The stroke of the pulse is usually stronger and fuller than natural, though it commonly retains its softness, and does not impress the finger with that sensation of sharpness which is characteristic of ordinary inflammation. Occasionally, however, a degree of sharpness may be perceived in it, and it is not easily compressed.

The thin white fur which already had begun to appear on the tongue progressively increases in extent and thickness. The colour of the fur usually changes, as the disease advances, from a dirty-white to an ash-colour; but in this form of the disease the tongue always remains moist, and never becomes brown. This state of the tongue is almost always accompanied with thirst, but it is never urgent. There is always a loss of appetite. The bowels are generally constipated, and the secretions of the whole alimentary canal are vitiated.

Thus we perceive that the progress of the disease consists in increasing mental and corporeal weakness; increasing pain in the back, loins, and limbs; increasing heat of skin, acceleration of pulse, and general febrile uneasiness, together with the occurrence of pain in the head, and progressive derangement in the functions of secretion and excretion.

The fever in this mild form is now at its height. It remains stationary, or at least with very little change for an indefinite period, generally for some days. The cerebral affection does not increase beyond what has been described: there are no greater indications of disease in the respiratory organs, and the mucous membrane of the stomach and intestines does not denote any progressive advancement in disease.

One of the most remarkable circumstances connected with the ordinary fever of this country, in thepresent day, is the uninterrupted and perfect continuity of its phenomena. As long as the febrile state remains, nothing deserving the name of a remission is in general to be perceived. Occasionally, it is true, a slight increase in the symptoms may be observed towards evening, especially in the heat of the skin; but even this is not common, and it is scarcely ever great enough to deserve the distinction of being called an exacerbation. Much less is there any regularity in the accession and decline of such excitement. In the great majority of cases not the slightest approach to an exacerbation and a remission can be distinguished from the commencement to the termination of the disease. Yet the older writers speak of these events as if they were as palpable as the paroxysms of intermittent and as constant as the return of morning and evening. There cannot therefore be a doubt that the character of the ordinary fever of this metropolis is greatly changed from the character of that which prevailed two centuries ago; and the circumstances which have contributed to produce this change will be considered hereafter.

In the great majority of patients in whom the symptoms continue thus moderate, the disease disappears about the end of the second week; that is, they are convalescent at that period; but it usually requires eight or ten days longer before they have regained sufficient strength to leave the hospital.Sometimes, although there is no greater severity in the symptoms, the disease is more protracted, and the recovery is not complete until the fourth or even the fifth week. Beyond this period it is very rare for this form of the disease to be protracted.

Almost all who are attacked with the malady in this, its mildest form, recover: but now and then it happens that the symptoms go on with this degree of moderation until about the end of the second week. Then at the period when it is usual for convalescence to take place there is no perceptible improvement; the patients seem even to grow weaker; they lie more prostrate in the bed, and they are soon incapable of moving; still they complain of no pain or uneasiness, and it is not easy to detect any trace of disease in any organ; yet it is but too evident that they grow worse, and ultimately they sink exhausted. In these cases, on examination after death, it is commonly found that disease has been preying on some vital organs, although its presence could not be detected during life; and this termination of the milder type of fever rarely happens, excepting in aged persons, whose constitutions have been enfeebled by previous diseases, or worn out by the various causes which depress and exhaust the powers of life.

With an occasional exception of this kind the disease in this form always terminates favourably; and the first indication of returning health is remarkably uniform: it is almost always marked by longerand more tranquil sleep. Instead of that restlessness which is so characteristic of fever, and which forms the most distressing part of it, the patient is observed to lie more still, and on waking for the first time from an undisturbed slumber, he often spontaneously says that he feels better. Better he may well feel, for his febrile uneasiness is gone; the load that oppressed him is shaken off; he is a new being. The pain of the head and of the limbs is so much diminished that often he cannot help expressing his thankfulness at the change. The countenance becomes more animated; its natural expression returns; the tongue begins to clean; and after this state of the system has continued for two or three days, the appetite returns. While these favourable changes are going on, the pulse usually sinks about ten beats below its highest point at the height of the fever; it is not uncommon, however, for it to remain quick during the entire period of convalescence; and for some considerable time it is easily excited on any movement of the body, or any emotion of mind. In some cases, on the contrary, when the attack has been very mild, it sinks considerably below the natural standard, and is intermittent, a sign which I have uniformly observed to be attended with a sure and steady convalescence. In the mean time the appetite becomes keener than natural; the strength gradually improves; and in a short time the patient is restored to his usual health and vigour.

What the condition of the brain and of the organs correlatively affected is, in these the mildest cases, we do not positively know, because we have no opportunity of inspecting them, their favourable termination being nearly without exception. But the more all the phenomena are considered in their entire series, in the order of their succession, in the uniformity, nay, even in the exclusiveness of their seat, as well as in the unchanging sameness of their effects, the more clear the evidence will appear of the soundness of the induction, that the condition of all the organs in all the types of fever is the same in nature, although there be no two cases of any type perfectly the same either in the degree of the affection or in the stage of the morbid process which it excites. If this induction be really just, we must conceive that, in the synochus mitior, while the morbid affection of the organs is slight, the diseased process which it sets up in them stops before it produces any change in their structure.

However this may be, and to leave for the present all matter of inference, and to keep strictly to the matter of fact, we do positively know that the mild forms of fever become severe in consequence of the supervention of inflammation in certain organs. Perfectly unknown as the nature of the primitive febrile affection at present is, yet that in the progress of the disease it does ultimately pass into inflammation is a fact, the evidence of which it is impossible toresist; although the same observation which teaches us this most important truth, teaches us also that the inflammatory action is always considerably modified by the febrile state. How it is so modified, and to what extent, we shall consider hereafter. I have spent much consideration and some labour in the effort to combine the symptoms which attend these severer forms of the disease with the ascertained conditions of the organs upon which such symptoms depend. But since it is of paramount importance that the events which actually take place should be known, and that the order in which they succeed each other should be stated with clearness and exactness; and since I have been able by no method that I could think of to combine the pathology with the history without breaking too much the continuity of the latter, I have been under the necessity of separating these two most intimately connected subjects, and of treating of them under distinct sections. In giving the history of the events, I have detailed them strictly, as far as I am acquainted with them, in the order in which they occur: and I have endeavoured to arrange the cases that constitute the pathology in such a manner, that they shall closely correspond to these events, and clearly illustrate the order of their succession. If I have succeeded according to my wish, the reader in studying the cases will be reminded, as he proceeds, of the successive stages of the history, and if he again revert to the history, after havingstudied the pathology, he will be reminded of the morbid appearances in the organs which are there described. To afford a clear perception of the connexion between the successive events, as indicated by the symptoms during life, and the progressive changes of structure in various organs, as demonstrated by inspection after death; and thus to establish a strong and indissoluble association in the mind between the morbid condition and its sign, are the objects at which I have aimed. If I have succeeded, I shall have accomplished one of the chief objects of my undertaking.

The transition of a mild case of fever into a severe one, or the progress of a case severe from the commencement, is accompanied with, or depends upon, as will abundantly appear hereafter, certain changes that take place in certain organs. These changes occur with great regularity; the organs in which they take place are always the same; and the symptoms by which they are denoted are uniform. The organs affected are the spinal cord, the brain, the membranes of both, the mucous membrane of the lungs, and the mucous membrane of the intestines. For the reason just assigned the nature of these affections cannot be described in this place, but must be postponed to that part of the work which treats of the pathology. Since however the symptoms are nothing but the signs of these conditions, and the history of the succession of the former, isnothing but an account of the indications of the successive changes that take place in the latter, all the important symptoms must necessarily have their seat in the head, in the thorax, and in the abdomen. Mixed and blended as they appear in the different cases which the practitioner is called upon to treat, nothing can appear more complex or more variable: when analyzed, nothing is more remarkable than their simplicity and their uniformity. In order to perform that analysis with exactness, and to render it really instructive, these symptoms must be contemplated as they arise in the affected organs. These organs, as we have seen, are the cerebral, the thoracic, and the abdominal; the symptoms therefore divide themselves into cerebral, thoracic, and abdominal: there is, indeed, a fourth order, in which all the organs appear to be equally involved; in which the general affection is intense, and which therefore may be appropriately termed mixed. We shall see that cases of this kind constitute by far the most dangerous form of the disease.

occurs under two degrees of intensity: when the cerebral affection is moderate, it may be termed subacute; when great, acute.

1.Synochus with Subacute Cerebral Affection, may be attended for several days with no symptom which has not been already enumerated in the accountof the mildest form of the disease. The accession is the same as in synochus mitior: the progress up to a certain period is also the same. But at the time when the pain of the head diminishes in the latter, it increases in the former. Still the pain is often not severe. He who looks for intense pain, and suspects no cerebral affection, unless accompanied with this symptom, will be surprised by what will appear to him the sudden occurrence of new symptoms, such as are immediately to be stated, which will at length open his eyes to the danger of the case, and excite his wonder, which it is not unfrequent to hear expressed, that an affection hitherto so mild, should, without any previous warning, become so formidable, and show but too manifestly that it is beyond control, and will certainly proceed to a fatal termination. The warning was given, but the sign was not understood. The descriptions of disease are commonly taken from its most acute form; and it was long the practice to derive them from this form alone, and the consequences were truly fatal. Even with the best care that can be taken in drawing up the history, these descriptions are exceedingly apt to become ideal, and not real entities: to consist of a collection of all the circumstances that exist in all cases, and not of that particular combination only which is found in any one case: and thus to be not the portrait of any individual, but a fancy picture bearing a general resemblanceto all individuals without being the true likeness of any. The consequence is, that at the bed-side of the sick the original from which the picture is supposed to be taken is not to be seen, and the practitioner remains in doubt, if he do not fall into error. Error serious and fatal many have fallen into, and, on this very account, still continue to fall into, with regard to the existence of cerebral disease in fever. Abundant evidence will be given in the pathology, that it is not uncommon for the most unequivocal and extensive changes of structure to take place in the brain and its membranes without severe pain having ever been felt. Pain, however, though it be not great, is almost always present. It is seldom that the pain extends over the whole head; the patient generally points to some particular part where it is peculiarly felt. In the majority of cases the seat of the pain is either in the forehead, or at the temples, or over the eyes; but occasionally it is in the occiput, and extends down the neck, and in these instances it is often severe between the shoulders.

Now and then no pain whatever is felt. Question the patient as much as you please, and he will tell you that he never has felt any pain. In this case giddiness is the substitute. Giddiness in the commencement, and in the early stage of fever, is as certain a sign of cerebral affection as pain. Striking illustrations of this are afforded by several cases detailed inthe pathology; by consulting which, the reader will see that precisely the same morbid changes take place in the structure of the brain, although nothing but giddiness be complained of, as occur in those which are attended with the acutest pain. The practitioner will therefore fall into a fatal error who is seduced into security because pain is absent; and who neglects the remedies proper for inflammation of the brain, because the patient complains only of giddiness. If giddiness be combined with pain, or alternate with it, which is not uncommon, the giddiness being slight if the pain be severe, and the pain being slight if the giddiness be distressing, it indicates a more severe affection than if either exist alone.

2. In the majority of cases, as long as the pain continues, the heat of the skin remains considerably above the natural standard. But often the heat over the general surface of the body is not great. Commonly, however, it is hotter than natural over the head, and it is hottest wherever the seat of the pain be fixed: so that the contrast is often striking between the temperature over the forehead or at the occiput, and the heat of the body in general.

3. The dull and heavy expression of the eye is greater than in the milder form of fever. The conjunctiva generally becomes brighter and more glistening than natural: though instead of this the vessels are often more numerous and more turgid than usual, and give it the appearance which is termed“muddled.” The eye at the same time is commonly preternaturally sensible, and cannot bear a strong light, although sometimes no complaint is made if the curtains of the bed be withdrawn, or the window-blind be drawn up.

4. There is usually a corresponding increase in the general sensibility; and what is remarkable, this is quite as much indicated by the increased sensibility to sound as to light. A loud noise is invariably distressing to the patient, and a continuance of it greatly aggravates all the symptoms. Exposure to a glare of light and a loud noise, would alone rapidly change a slight into the severest cerebral affection.

The expression of the countenance is now very peculiar: it cannot be described, but the experienced eye can seldom fail to recognize it. It is indicative of suffering without the strength to bear it: it is not anxious; that expression does not come on until a later period. The face is sometimes flushed, but it is often pallid, which does but add to the peculiar character of its expression.

5. As long as the pain of the head, the giddiness, and the increased sensibility continue, there is invariably a want of sleep. The degree of sleeplessness is not always in proportion to the head-ache or to the other symptoms; but while the latter are present, the former is never absent. That condition of the brain upon which sleep depends appears to beeasily disturbed by a great variety of causes; but whatever be capable of affrighting this heavenly visitant, “tired Nature’s sweet restorer,” whether in the mansion, the palace, or the prison, and whether from the bed of healthful slumber or from the couch of sickness, nothing so effectually and so constantly banishes it as that febrile uneasiness of which we have already spoken; and which, instead of declining, as in the milder form of fever, now increases in strength and activity, and will scarcely allow the restless body to remain in one position for a moment. He who has felt its influence in this stage and degree of fever, will admit that there is nothing comparable to the wretchedness it produces, except it be the sweetness of the first waking moment after the first tranquil slumber of returning health.

6. And now, sometimes closing this train of symptoms, but more frequently being the first harbinger of another, delirium appears. Delirium is usually first observed when any slight sound rouses the patient from that disturbed slumber which is the only substitute allowed for sleep. The delirium is seldom violent or long-continued, but, when present, is like the talking of a person during sleep in a disturbed dream. This symptom, however, is by no means invariably present, and when it does come, it often postpones its visit to a somewhat later period.

7. The pulse, during all this time, may not be much quicker than in the mild form; and the stateof the tongue and of the evacuations does not materially differ.

Such is the train of symptoms when the brain becomes prominently affected. These symptoms continue without intermission, and with little change, for several days. The period of their duration, when only in this degree of violence, is commonly from eight to ten days: when their character is still milder or more subacute, or when they have been mitigated by appropriate remedies, it may be protracted fifteen days.

About this period a remarkable change takes place; an entirely new train of symptoms supervenes, which is different, and which, indeed, presents a striking contrast, according as the patient is destined for life or death.

If it be for life, that sleep, of the long absence of which we have already spoken, returns; and nothing can more truly express its character than its familiar name, “balmy;” and healing is its influence. From two or three hours of such slumber, the patient awakens a new being. Not that the change is at first striking to an inexperienced eye; but there is no fever nurse who does not recognize it in a moment, and it is not long before the patient tells you that he feels it. The febrile uneasiness is now much diminished: the headache is greatly relieved; and the skin is cooler and softer. The pulse may not yet be altered, or it may be a few beats slower than before,but there is almost always already an improved appearance in the tongue, which shews a beginning disposition to clean. These favourable changes gradually increase. If the sleep the next night be longer and more refreshing, which it generally is, on the following morning a decided improvement is visible in the countenance. The eye is clearer and more lively, and the expression of the countenance is more natural. The skin continues cooler and softer; the tongue is still cleaner, and the pulse, perhaps, slower by a beat or two; and from this period, if no untoward event happen, the convalescence proceeds just as has been described in the return of health in the milder form of fever.

If, on the contrary, the case proceed unfavourably, a totally new train of symptoms at this period sets in.

1. In the first place, the pain of the head obviously, and sometimes strikingly, diminishes. Often it disappears altogether, or, if any uneasiness remain, it is rather a sense of dullness and heaviness than pain. In like manner the giddiness, if that were urgent, is no longer perceptible: but it is remarkable that the pain in the back and loins not unfrequently continues for some time after the headache has disappeared: but, ultimately, that also ceases. The period at which this important change takes place depends upon the severity of the attack, and is materially influenced by the activity or inertness of the treatment. In the subacute form, itusually takes place about the tenth day from the commencement of the disease.

2. Simultaneously with the disappearance of the head-ache, there is a remarkable diminution of the sensibility. The mind is duller and more heavy. The patient may still be roused to answer with tolerable coherence if spoken to; but when left to himself he is confused and stupid. The eyes now become injected: often suffused; and the heaviness and dullness of their expression is increased.

3. It is at this time that delirium, if it appear at all, most commonly comes on. The increasing insensibility, if not attended with decided delirium, is almost always accompanied with moaning or incoherent muttering, especially during the short and interrupted slumbers which form the substitute for sleep.

4. Striking as these changes are in the functions of the spinal cord and brain, those which take place in the number and character of the pulse are no less important. Even in cases the most decidedly subacute, it is seldom that it does not rise ten beats, so that if before it were 90, it will now be 100, and it is always weaker.

5. Now, too, signs of disease in the chest and abdomen are almost always to be distinguished. A case purely cerebral, from the commencement to the termination of the disease, is rarely to be met with. If there be not cough, there is almost always a shortand hurried respiration, and more or fewer of the indications of abdominal affection hereafter to be stated. Even in cases the most purely cerebral the tongue always becomes more loaded and often dry; and it is strikingly characteristic of the state of the nervous system, that while the tongue becomes dry, the thirst diminishes.

Thus far it is possible that the disease may proceed towards a fatal termination without proving mortal. It is not often that its course is turned back or stayed after it has made this progress; but still such an event is sometimes witnessed. When it does occur, the amendment, both in its origin and progress, is very similar to that of the favourable change which has already been described. More tranquil and longer-continued sleep is almost always the earliest sign that, in this severe struggle, life has obtained the victory. If, on awaking from such sleep, there be less delirium, were delirium present, or greater tranquillity, were the restlessness urgent; and if there beanyincrease, although slight, in the sensibility, or any improvement in the expression of the countenance, hope may be entertained that that victory will be won; and hope may become assurance, if the tongue which had been loaded become clean at the edges, or the dry tongue become moist. Even under apparently the most desperate circumstances, if these three symptoms concur, a favourable prognosis may be pronouncedwith tolerable certainty. Two or three daysmayelapse after their occurrence, before any remarkable change is observable in the pulse; but it is seldom that they continue twenty-four hours before the pulse falls at least ten beats. Now and then, on leaving a patient in the evening with a pulse at 120, we are surprised and delighted to find it in the morning as low as 100. When the pulse has thus fallen towards the natural standard, when the tongue has begun to clean, and when the skin has become cool and soft, however desperate his condition but a few days before, the patient may be said to be convalescent.

But though this favourable change is sometimes witnessed, yet, from the point at which we left off the description of the progress to a fatal termination, the too common history is, increasing restlessness and sleeplessness; insensibility lapsing into coma; further acceleration of the pulse; greater dryness of the tongue and decreasing strength, until, at length, the powers of life receiving less and less supply from the great systems in which they have their seat, become completely exhausted.

Those who have been placed in situations which have afforded them opportunities of witnessing much of the disease will, I trust, acknowledge that the account now given is an accurate narrative of the symptoms that occur, and of the order in which they succeed, in the great majority of cases. Uponwhat conditions of what organs they depend will be illustrated in the pathology.

Sometimes to these, other trains of symptoms are added—namely, muscular tremor, frequent and sudden screaming; rolling of the head upon the pillow; constant tossing of the hands about; picking at the bed-clothes or other surrounding objects; partial paralysis of the upper eyelid, so that one or both of the eyes remain half or almost wholly closed; the ball of the eye unsteady or constantly rolling; the expression of the eye and countenance at one time wild and anxious, at another fatuous; squinting; the respiration now slow and laborious, now exceedingly rapid; the pulse either slow, full and regular, or slow and intermittent, or so quick that it cannot be counted, or these states succeeding each other or alternating with each other at short intervals; convulsions; involuntary and unconscious stools—all these symptoms are never found combined in any one case; but certain assemblages of them occur with some degree of constancy, and depend upon certain conditions of the brain and spinal cord. Since, however, the description of these conditions cannot be given here, the further account of the signs which denote them must be postponed until we treat of the pathology of the disease.

2.Synochus Gravior with Acute Cerebral Affection.—Such is the history of the synochus graviorwith cerebral affection in its subacute form. When its attack is the most acute, the history is precisely the same, excepting that the symptoms are more severe, and their progress quicker. The head-ache is much more intense; the giddiness is more violent; the sensibility is excessive; the least noise is intolerable; the slightest motion either of the head or of the body aggravates all the symptoms; the eye is muddy, and very soon becomes injected, and is perfectly intolerant of light; the pain in the back, loins, and limbs, is nearly as great as it is in the head. The skin is intensely hot, and sometimes impresses the hand with the sense of pungency; but though every where thus hot and dry, its temperature is peculiarly great over the scalp, so that if the head be shaved, and wet clothes applied, they are quite dry in a minute or two. The febrile uneasiness is excessive; the patient can scarcely remain a moment in the same posture, and he is wholly without sleep. The pulse at one time is strong, full, bounding, and not easily compressed, but even in this acute form it is almost always soft; at least it is very different from the hardness characteristic of an acute attack of pure phrenitis; at another time it is oppressed, the stroke giving an impression directly opposite to that produced by the free and bounding pulse.

But one of the most remarkable modifications of the pulse, one that is characteristic of an exceedingly acute attack of cerebral disease, and one withthe import of which it is of the highest consequence to the life of the patient that the practitioner should be perfectly acquainted the moment he meets with it, is the slow and intermitting pulse. Whenever, in the onset of fever, a patient is found with intense head-ache or intense pain in the back and loins, anda slow pulse, the physician ought to be greatly alarmed at the severity of the symptoms that are to follow, and if he do not take the most active measures to break the violence of the disease at this early period, it will be beyond all control in a day or two, and the patient will be dead before the fever is well formed in milder cases. The affection of the brain is sometimes so violent and sudden that the pulse is not only slow, but intermitting, and the respiration is suspirious. Frequent and deep sighing is not uncommon in severe cerebral cases, and it is highly characteristic of intense cerebral affection; but in such a violent attack as that of which we are now speaking, the suspirious breathing, even in the very commencement of the disease, is so great that it cannot be overlooked. This happened in the case of my friend Dr. Dill, whom I saw a few hours after the commencement of an attack of one of these intense forms of fever. I saw him in the afternoon at a public meeting. I met him an hour afterwards at his own apartment. He was still going about engaged in his ordinary occupations; but his countenance was pale as death; his eye was dull andheavy; his mind was confused, and as it seemed to him paralysed; he had other sensations, which were new to him, and which were most distressing;but he had no pain: at that time there was not the slightest pain either in his head or his back or loins: there was only that general and undefined uneasiness which gave to him sufficient warning of what was coming, as the slow and labouring pulse, coupled with the uneasy sensations of which he complained, and the peculiar aspect of his countenance, afforded to me an abundant confirmation that his apprehensions were just. He was bled immediately to the extent of twenty ounces: the blood then drawn was not sizy: he passed a wretched night. I saw him early the following morning: he had now intense headache; his eye was already injected; his skin was not hot but burning; his respiration was suspirious; almost every breath was a sigh, and his pulse wasstill slowerthan on the preceding evening, and was nowintermittent: blood being drawn to a large extent, the crassamentum was now buffed and cupped; but the detail of the progress of this instructive case must be postponed until we speak of the treatment of fever, because it is still more illustrative of the effects produced by the vigorous application of the appropriate remedies than of the peculiarity of the symptoms which usher in the attack. It may suffice for the present to observe that this case affords not only a striking example of the concurrence of these peculiarsymptoms, but also a decisive proof that pain of the head is far from being thefirstsymptom that occurs even in the most intense cerebral attack.

In these acute forms of the disease, if the proper remedies be not vigorously employed, the pain ceaseswithin the fourth day; it rarely extends beyond the fifth; the pain passes into insensibility; delirium comes on, sometimes so violent as to require restraint, but delirium is by no means an invariable concomitant of the other symptoms, even when these are the most violent: when it is present it is almost always rapidly followed by muscular tremors, and these by subsultus tendinum, which now and then usher in general convulsions; but this last event is rare, and I have never yet seen convulsions unaccompanied with a particular condition of the brain hereafter to be described. Sometimes the muscular tremors succeed immediately to the transition of the pain into insensibility, while the insensibility rapidly increases to stupor, and that to profound coma. The breathing is occasionally as stertorous as it is in apoplexy, but this is also rare, and when it does occur, is probably dependent on a peculiar condition of the brain hereafter to be pointed out. Together with these there is a concurrence of a greater or a lesser number of the symptoms enumerated at page 107, but the particular combinations that are found most usually to accompany particular conditions ofthe brain, it will be most instructive to state in connexion with the pathology.

In synochus with acute cerebral disease there is less indication of thoracic and abdominal affection than in the subacute form, because the intensity of the cerebral disease obscures the signs of derangement in the other organs; but the signs of their derangement are never absent, although they are less obtrusive, and they trace in indelible characters proofs of their activity in the ravages they commit upon their structures in which they have their seat.

Such is the course of synochus under different degrees of violence. When it is combined with subacute cerebral affection, that course is usually terminated in from three to six weeks; when with acute cerebral affection, in from seven to ten days.

As an illustration of each form of the disease, as it is commonly met with in practice, I subjoin the following cases.


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