III. EXTRARESPIRATORY LESIONS IN INFLUENZA
In all the fatal cases of influenza which came to autopsy, and this has been the experience of others, the respiratory lesions, as indicated above, occupy the foreground. Indeed, compared with other types of respiratory disease, the lung involvement is so great that expression of the disease need not be sought elsewhere to explain the cause of death. However, there are general systemic changes which, even though quantitatively inconstant, are sufficiently common and widespread to support the view that the disease is a systemic one. The lesions of the hematopoietic organs and those of the vascular system are the most important and will now be taken up.