ACUTE CATARRHAL LARYNGITIS (FALSE OR SPASMODIC CROUP).
BY A. JACOBI, M.D.
PATHOLOGY.—Catarrhal inflammations of the mucous membrane and the submucous tissue of the larynx are of frequent occurrence. They are either general or local; that is, confined to the epiglottis or the vocal cords, etc. The affected parts are red (only less so where the elastic fibres are developed to an unusual degree and capable of compressing the dilating capillaries) and more or less tumefied. Sometimes small hemorrhages occur. The secretion is either changed in character or in quantity. It is either mucous or purulent, or (mainly in passive congestions produced by interrupted venous circulation) serous. The epithelium is either thrown off or accumulated in some spots, particularly on the vocal cords, so as to form whitish conglomerates which may become the abode of schizomycetæ. The muciparous follicles are enlarged and dilated; to this condition is due the granular form of laryngitis, with the nodulated condition of the epiglottis or the fossæ Morgagni or the inferior vocal cords.1
1 Ziegler, Pathol. Anat.
When the catarrhal process is of longer duration, the capillaries and small veins become permanently enlarged; round cells are deposited between the epithelium and cellular tissue; the cellular tissue becomes hypertrophied; papillary elevations are formed on the vocal cords. The disintegration of the epithelium and the bursting of the tumefied muciparous glands lead to the formation of erosions and ulcerations; the chronic swelling and hypernutrition of the muciparous follicles to their destruction by cicatrization or simple induration; and to atrophy of the mucous membrane.
Many of the specific causes of inflammation of the larynx exhibit no peculiar alterations of their own. Scarlatina, measles, and exanthematic typhus are complicated with either a catarrhal (in most cases) or a diphtheritic laryngitis. Variola, however, has a peculiar form of its own, with red, pointed, whitish stains or nodules, consisting of a cellular infiltration or of a deposit upon or into the upper layers of the mucous membrane, composed of necrotic epithelia and pus-corpuscles or of coherent membrane. Hemorrhages or abscesses are but rare, and chondritis seldom results from it. Even syphilis has not always changes which are characteristic. The laryngitis accompanying it is often but catarrhal, without anything pathognomonic about it. But whitish papules consisting of granulation-tissue (plaques muqueuses), gummata often changing into sinuous ulcerations, particularly on the epiglottis and posterior wall of the larynx, also perichondritis with loss of cartilage and deep cicatrization, such as are not found in either carcinosis or tuberculosis of the larynx, are frequently met with. Typhoid fever shows different forms of laryngitis, from the catarrhal to the ulcerous. Epithelium is thrown off at an early period of the disease; erosions and ecchymoses follow; rhagades on the margins of the epiglottis, and a deposit on the anterior wall of the larynx and the vocal cords, consisting of epithelium and round cells, are frequent. That they should be mixed with micrococci and bacteria is self-understood. Not so that these bacteria are to be considered as the cause of the disintegration which is taking place, the less so as no specific typhoid bacterium has been demonstrated, and several varieties of them are found both in the mouth and in these ulcerations. These changes are apt to terminate in ulceration of the epiglottis and false vocal cords; these will extend in different directions, and to the deeper tissue down to the cartilage.
In tuberculosis, laryngitis is a frequent occurrence. In most cases it is secondary to the pulmonary affection, and due to the direct influence of the contagious sputum—according to Heinze, however, not to contagion, but to the influence of the infected blood. In other cases it appears to develop spontaneously, before any pulmonary affection is diagnosticated, and may then be due to some poison circulating in either blood or lymph. Tubercular laryngitis, according to Rindfleisch, commences in the excretory ducts of the muciparous glands. That this is so in a great many cases is undoubted. The first changes visible are small cellular subepithelial infiltrations or real subepithelial tubercles, which, while growing, undergo gaseous degenerations and ulcerate. These ulcerations are either flat and small or deeper with an infiltrated edge, and are apt to terminate in secondary nodulated infiltrations and abscesses. Large tumors are not met with, but oedema and phlegmonous inflammations are by no means rare.
ETIOLOGY.—The predisposition varies according to individuals, ages, and seasons. Some mucous membranes appear to be more sensitive than others. The hereditary transmission of peculiarities of structure of all or some tissues or organs is apparent, in the case of laryngitis, in the fact that many children in the same family or the children of parents who were sufferers themselves are affected. Children are more liable than adults, infants more than children: 20 per cent. of all the cases are met with under a year, 25 from the first to the second, 15 from the second to the third. Not many occur after the twelfth year. The narrowness of the infant larynx and the looseness of its mucous membrane afford full play to injurious influences, such as dust, cold and moist air, changing temperatures, hot vapors and beverages. Colds, though their nature and effects can hardly be said to be understood, are certainly amongst the main causes. Perspiring surfaces afford frequent opportunities. One of the principal causes is insufficient clothing—more amongst the well-to-do than amongst the poor. The latter have this blessing in their misfortune, that they are protected uniformly if at all, and have their skins hardened by exposure. The bare necks and chests, the exposed knees, the low stockings and thin shoes of the children of the rich, old and young, are just as many inlets of laryngeal catarrh, inflammatory disease, and phthisis. Persons suffering from nasal catarrh or pharyngeal catarrh are liable to have laryngitis. Thus, not only rachitis, with its influence on lymphatic glands and the neighboring mucous membranes, but also acute infectious diseases, such as whooping cough, measles, influenza, erysipelas, hay fever, tuberculosis, syphilis, typhoid fever, and variola, are as many causes of laryngitis. That over-exertion of the voice should produce laryngitis seems probable, but experience does not teach that those babies who cry most are most subject to laryngeal catarrh.
SYMPTOMS.—Acute laryngitis is a frequent disease, and has always been. Still, in 1769, Millar mistook it for a sensitive neurosis, considering it as identical with spasm of the glottis, and recommended antispasmodic treatment. Guersant understood its nature better. He first (1829) used the names false croup and stridulous laryngitis. Acute laryngitis is attended with but little fever in the adult, but with a high elevation of temperature in the young. In all, it yields a number of symptoms, part of which are uncomfortable only; others are liable to become dangerous.
Seldom without any catarrhal premonitory symptoms of other parts of the respiratory tract, sometimes, however, without any, there is a burning, tickling, irritating sensation in the larynx—a sense of soreness in it and the lower portion of the pharynx. Sometimes these sensations amount to actual pain, to difficulty of deglutition, and to the sensation of the presence of a foreign body. Speaking, coughing, cold air, increase the discomfort and pain. Hoarseness, sometimes increasing into aphonia, follows soon after, is seldom simultaneous with, the first appearance of cough, but lasts longer than the latter, which is, according to the severity of the case or the stage of the disease, changing between loose and dry, hoarse and barking. Inspiration is apt to become impeded, mainly in infants and children. In these it is often sibilant. It is followed by a reflex paroxysm of cough, with interrupted and brief expirations, during which the forcible compression of the thorax may result in cyanosis. The principal attacks are met with at night amongst children. Quite suddenly they wake up with a dry, barking cough, interrupted by considerable dyspnoea, which is great enough sometimes to give rise to much anxiety. They toss about or cling to a solid body, raise themselves on their knees, breathe with great difficulty, exhibit cyanosis in its different hues, perspire very freely, and yield all the symptoms of the strangulating attacks of membranous croup, its over-exertion of the sterno-cleido-mastoid muscles and supraclavicular and diaphragmatic recessions not excepted. These attacks occur but rarely during the day; on the contrary, well-marked remissions are quite common in the morning. Their occurrence during the night is best explained by the facility with which mucus will enter the larynx from above during the reclining posture, the increasing dryness of the pharynx during sleep, perhaps also the nervous influence depending upon the relative diminution of oxygen and increase of carbonic acid in the respiratory centre, leading to spasmodic contractions.
Some of these grave attacks of sudden dyspnoea are explained by the participation of the submucous tissue in the morbid process. When that occurs, adults also, who as a rule do not suffer from dyspnoea in laryngeal catarrh, are badly affected. The symptoms are rigor, high temperature, pain, hoarseness or aphonia, a barking cough, labored expectoration—which is sometimes bloody—dyspnoea, orthopnoea, cyanosis. In some cases, to which the name of laryngitis gravis or acutissima has been given, the symptoms grow urgent to such a degree that tracheotomy alone is capable of saving life.
Otherwise, the severity of the symptoms does not go parallel with the local lesions. Particularly in children, hoarseness, cough, and dyspnoea are liable to be grave, while the local hyperæmia is not intense at all. A pharyngeal catarrh is very apt to increase the suffering. Complications with tracheitis or bronchitis are liable to prolong the course of the disease and to render respiration—which is not accelerated in laryngeal catarrh—more frequent. Otherwise, the disease runs a favorable course. Remissions of the severe attacks which may occur in several successive nights take place in the morning. Expectoration, which in the beginning was either absent or scanty, becomes soon more copious and mucous; the hard, barking, loud cough grows looser with increasing secretion. In most cases the violence of the affection is broken in from three to five days, and the disease runs its full course in a week or two. But hoarseness may remain behind for some time; in rare cases aphonia has become permanent and relapses are frequent. Not infrequently children are presented who are reported to have had croup five or ten or more times. In some families all the children are subject to laryngeal catarrh, and hereditary influence cannot be doubted.
The very worst complication of laryngitis is oedema of the glottis. It affects both the mucous membrane and the submucous tissue of the larynx. It is met with on the inferior (posterior) surface of the epiglottis, in the ary-epiglottic folds, and on the false (inferior) vocal cords, the submucous tissue of which is of a very loose structure normally. Amongst its causes—which may be various (foreign bodies in the larynx, injuries, mechanical and chemical irritants of any kinds; typhoid, tubercular, variolous, syphilitic ulcerations; erysipelas of the neighborhood, inflammations of the parotids or tonsils, suppuration in the pharynx, thyroid body, and cellular tissue of the neck)—both catarrhal and croupous laryngitis are not at all uncommon. This is particularly so when they are complicated with cardiac and renal anomalies, pulmonary emphysema, and compression of the veins of the neck by glandular swellings; also with changes in the structure of the walls of the blood-vessels. The last-named pathological conditions are alone capable of giving rise to chronic oedema of the larynx, which is by no means so fatal, but still dangerous.
In glottic oedema the dyspnoea is both very great and very sudden. First, it is inspiratory only, but soon becomes both inspiratory and expiratory. The swelling is felt distinctly by the examining finger; the laryngoscope is neither required nor advisable.
DIAGNOSIS.—It is by no means easy in all cases. When laryngeal diphtheria (membranous croup) happens to be frequent, the most experienced diagnostician will meet with occasional difficulties. The sound of the barking, explosive, tickling cough locates its origin in the larynx, but the affection may be very mild or very severe. Expectoration in small children is not pathognomonic; even when it is copious it is not brought up, but swallowed. Fibrinous expectoration would settle the diagnosis of a croupous process. Depressing the tongue with a spoon or spatula and producing the movements of vomiturition often reveals the presence of a tough, viscid mucus rising from the larynx. It renders the catarrhal nature of the laryngitis positively clear. The frequency or volume of the pulse is of no account in diagnosis; it is too variable. Of more importance is the temperature, at least in children. Uncomplicated sporadic croup has no increase, or very little; catarrhal laryngitis is mostly attended with high fever. In very many cases this symptom has guided me safely, in spite of the statements of the books. The stenosis of catarrhal laryngitis comes on very suddenly, in diphtheritic laryngitis mostly slowly. In the former it is not of long duration; remission sets in soon, and is more complete than in membranous croup. An attack of stenosis occurs mostly in the night, and is apt to return with the same vehemence after a fair remission after twenty-four hours. The frequency of relapses in catarrhal laryngitis in children who have been affected before must, however, not prejudice in favor of the catarrhal nature of an individual case, for not infrequently will those who have had many attacks be taken with membranous croup some other time. In the latter the main symptoms—viz. stenosis, hoarseness (or aphonia), and cough—will mostly develop simultaneously and in equal proportion; the unproportionality of these symptoms—for instance, much stenosis and cough, but little hoarseness, or barking cough and hoarseness with little stenosis—would speak for catarrh. The laryngoscope, when it can be used—viz. in the adult and very docile children—reveals redness of the mucous membrane of the pharynx and all or part of the larynx; also tumefaction of the epiglottis or fossæ Morgagni or ary-epiglottic folds. Sometimes the inferior part of the larynx only is affected; Ziemssen has described a severe form under the name of hypoglottic laryngitis. The vocal cords can be watched easily. Their proportionate and parallel contraction is often interfered with.
Tubercular laryngitis, particularly when there is no pulmonary tuberculosis, is not easily diagnosticated by the local changes only. The long duration of hoarseness and fever, increasing emaciation, and the knowledge of the presence of tuberculosis in the family are more conclusive than local examinations can be.
PROGNOSIS.—The termination of catarrhal laryngitis in the adult is almost always favorable. Still, relapses are frequent, and it may become chronic, with permanent tickling of the mucous membrane and submucous tissue. In children it is mostly favorable; still, it is doubtful, because of the frequency of complication with, or transmutation into, bronchitis, pneumonia, or glottic oedema, and because of the facility with which in a prevailing epidemic the catarrhal laryngitis becomes diphtheritic. The elevation of temperature is not a very significant symptom in regard to prognosis. The danger does not increase with the temperature at all. On the contrary, those cases which set in with a high temperature will, as a rule, terminate soon and favorably. When, however, the temperature rises again after having gone down to the normal or nearly normal standard, complications or extension of the catarrhal or inflammatory process must be expected. Catarrhal secretion from the nasal mucous membrane, which was dry in the beginning, is a favorable symptom; so is the looser and moister character of the cough.
TREATMENT.—Whatever plays an important part in the etiology of the disease ought to be carefully avoided. The feet must be kept warm under all circumstances, nothing being more injurious to health in general, and to that of the respiratory organs in particular, than cold and moist feet. Shoes and stockings must be kept dry, the latter changed when wet, and of slowly-conducting material. No part of the body must be kept uncovered, and the dresses of children made the particular object of care on the part of the family physician. Linen must not be in immediate contact with the skin, cotton—or, still better in all seasons, wool—being required for the undergarment. At the same time, the hygiene of the skin requires attention. Regular washing or bathing need not be mentioned as a requisite, as it is self-understood. What, however, cannot be insisted upon too much is this, that the skin must get accustomed to cold water. The whole body must be exposed once a day to cold water—washing or bathing—and well rubbed off afterward with a thick towel. Young infants and those who are very susceptible to colds begin with tepid water, the temperature being lowered from day to day. Even children of three or four years enjoy, finally, a morning bath at sixty or sixty-five degrees F. in winter. Such as do not get easily warmed up under the succeeding friction may mix alcohol with the water they use for washing and sponging purposes, in the proportion of 1:5–8. Sea-bathing also makes the skin more enduring, to such an extent that exposure to cold air has no longer any damaging influence. In fact, cold air without wind is easily tolerated even by those who have a tendency to respiratory disorders, while wind and draught must be avoided. From this point of view the change of climate sometimes required for such as suffer from catarrhal laryngitis must be instituted. It is not always necessary to select a very warm climate; undoubtedly, many of the winter resorts are badly selected, for the very reason that they are too warm. On the other hand, great elevations are not advisable. The sudden atmospheric changes and fogs of high mountains are injurious.
Patients suffering from catarrhal laryngitis or a tendency in that direction must avoid all irritation of the pharynx and larynx. They must not smoke, or talk too much or too loud. Those few clergymen who suffer from clergymen's sore throat in consequence of speaking only will remember that they can speak just as forcibly when speaking less vehemently. The use of alcoholic beverages, unless greatly diluted, is prohibited. Catarrh of the nares and pharynx must get cured. The former will get well in most cases under the use of salt water. A tepid solution of 1 or ½ per cent. of table-salt in water, snuffed up copiously (a tumblerful) from the hand of an adult patient, or a similar solution in a small quantity injected through each nostril of a child, twice or three times a day for weeks and months in succession, will often remove a laryngeal as well as a pharyngeal catarrh. Care must be taken that the fluid passes the whole length of the nasal canal. It must be applied in the fauces, and will then be ejected through the mouth or a small portion of it swallowed. Many a severe nasal catarrh requires no other treatment. Some chronic ones require the use of a spray of nitrate of silver in a solution of ½–1 per cent. every other day, or of a 2 per cent. solution of alum daily. Where both the pharyngeal and nasal catarrh are complicated with, or kept up by, enlarged or ulcerated tonsils, these organs must be resected. The combination of these two measures, exsection of the tonsils and nasal injections, has proved very beneficial in a great many cases.
The treatment of an acute case requires great care. Avoid injurious influences. The patient must keep silent and quiet in bed. The temperature of the room is to be about 70° F., the air moistened by vapor, which must not be allowed to get cold before it reaches the patient.
When swelling and dyspnoea are considerable, particularly in those grave cases attended with swelling of the submucous tissue, the application of an ice-bladder or ice-cloths will be found beneficial and agreeable. But the cases in which these applications are indispensable are but few. In most of them the necessity of subduing intense inflammation is less urgent than the advisability of increasing the secretion of the congested larynx. For that purpose warm poultices, but of light weight, act very favorably. Inhalation of warm vapors either constantly or at short intervals, or of muriate of ammonium or spirits of turpentine, will prove beneficial. The latter is evaporated from the surface of boiling water, on which a small quantity, from a teaspoonful to a tablespoonful, may be poured every one or two hours. The hydrochlorate of ammonium is evaporated, 10 or 20 grains (1.0 gramme), every one or two hours by heating it on a hot stove or otherwise. The white cloud penetrates the air of the whole room, and, while not uncomfortable to the well, serves a good purpose in liquefying the viscid and tough secretion of the mucous membrane. The internal administration of liquefying and resolvent remedies may properly accompany the external applications and inhalations. Amongst them I count the alkalies, mainly bicarbonate and chlorate of potassium or sodium and the hydrochlorate of ammonium. A child of two years will take daily a scruple (gramme 1.0–1.5). The iodide of potassium will also have a good effect and counteract many a predisposition to chronicity. A child may take from 8 to 15 grains a day (gramme 0.5–1.0). Hydrochlorate of apomorphine, gr. 1/50–1/30 (0.001–0.002), dissolved in water, a dose to be given every two hours or every hour, is quite sufficient to act as a fair expectorant without being enough to produce emesis. Antimonii et potassii tartras has been used more extensively in former times than at present. An adult would take gr. 1/20–1/15 every two hours. Children ought to be spared the drug, as it is depressing, produces unnecessary vomiting now and then, even in small doses, and, what is still worse, diarrhoea. The other antimonial preparations, such as kermes mineral and the oxysulphuret of antimony, are less depressing and less purging, but also less effective; and there are but few cases where a good substitute could not be found. For the purpose of increasing secretion the hydrochlorate of pilocarpine has been recommended. It certainly has that effect, but its indications become doubtful in many cases where the saving of strength is of paramount importance. I shall return to this subject in my remarks on the therapeutics of membranous laryngitis.
Derivation is of great service when well directed. Local depletion must be avoided. A purgative in the beginning is beneficial—a dose of calomel as good as, or mostly better than, anything else. Diaphoretics and diuretics act quite well; the best of them all are warm beverages of any kind. They need not come from the apothecary's nor be very unpleasant to take—water not too cold, Apollinaris, Selters, or Vichy, hot milk, tepid lemonade in large quantities and very often. Sinapisms have a good effect. When not kept on longer than a few minutes—long enough to give the surface a pink hue—they may be applied every hour or two.
Some urgent symptoms may require symptomatic treatment. When secretion is copious, but too tough, and expectoration insufficient because of both the character of the mucus and the incompetency of the respiratory muscles, ipecac in small doses or camphor is indicated. A child's dose of the latter would be gr. ¼–½(gramme 0.015–0.03) every one or two hours. In these cases the hydrochlorate of ammonium may be combined with the carbonate (ammon. chlorid. drachm ss. (2.0); ammon. carbonat. scruple j (1.25); extr. glycyrrh. pur. scruple ij (2.5); aq. pur. fluidounce iij (grammes 100.0)—teaspoonful every hour). When the difficulty of expectoration is excessive an emetic may be resorted to. It is true that infants and children vomit with less straining and difficulty than adults, but, still, the practice of flinging emetics around is too common. The unpleasantness of getting up in the night because of a pseudo-croup in a distant patient's baby is not a correct indication for encouraging the indiscriminate use of emetics. When they are required, antimonials ought to be excluded from the list. Ipecac, sulphate of zinc, sulphate of copper, turpeth mineral are preferable.
In urgent cases the hydrochlorate of apomorphia may be used hypodermically (six or ten drops of a 1 per cent. solution in water). Cases of such urgency, and so excessive dyspnoea coupled with cyanosis, as to necessitate tracheotomy are but very rare. But once in thirty years and in many more than four hundred tracheotomies have I been compelled to operate for a case of catarrhal laryngitis. Still, a few such cases are on record. The best-known amongst them is that of Scoutetten, who operated successfully on his own daughter six weeks old.
Narcotics prove quite beneficial, particularly in complications with pharyngeal catarrh. A dose of gr. j–jss of Dover's powder (gramme 0.05–0.1) at night will secure rest for several or many hours to a child of two or three years; an adult is welcome to a dose of 10 or 12 grains (0.6–0.75). When the irritation is great during the day, it is advisable to add a narcotic (acid. hydrocyan. dil., min. j; vin opii, min. viij–xij; codeine gr. 1/3–½, or extr. hyoscyam. gr. ij–iij—daily) to whatever medicine was given. I am partial to the latter, giving it up to gr. viij–x (0.5–0.6) to adults daily in their mixture, retaining the single dose of opium or morphine to be taken for the night. At that time a single larger dose is rather better than several small ones. Narcotics cannot be dispensed with in all those cases in which—as, for instance, in tubercular laryngitis—deglutition is very painful because of the catarrhal and ulcerous pharyngitis. Bromide of potassium has a fair effect, but frequently fails, and the administration of morphia before each meal is sometimes an absolute necessity.
That complications, such as bronchitis, have their own indications is self-understood. The general rules controlling the treatment of laryngitis are not interfered with by them. Oedema of the glottis, however, when occurring during an attack of laryngitis, has its own indications, and very urgent ones indeed in all acute cases. In chronic cases a causal treatment is required according to the etiology of the affection as specified above. In acute cases it is not permitted because of want of time. The danger of immediate strangulation is often averted only by a deep scarification or the performance of tracheotomy.
Chronic cases require all the preventive measures enumerated above and the internal use of iodide of potassium or sodium (scruple j–scruple iiss = gramme 1.25–3.0 daily, for adults), and tincture of pimpinella saxifraga three or four teaspoonfuls daily. When it is given it ought to have an opportunity to develop its local effect on the pharynx also by giving it but little diluted, and not washing it down afterward (tinct. pimpinella saxif., glycerin. aa, teaspoonful every two hours). In these cases, while the local salt-water treatment recommended above is indispensable, the nitrate-of-silver spray mentioned in that connection is here again referred to as very beneficial indeed. But the solution of 1 per cent. is the highest degree of concentration allowable. Conducted through the nose, it will reach the larynx better than through the mouth. When both accesses are rather difficult the application must be made directly to the larynx.