NEUROSES OF THE HEART.
FUNCTIONAL DISORDERS OF THE HEART'S ACTION; ANGINA PECTORIS; EXOPHTHALMIC GOITRE.
BY AUSTIN FLINT, M.D.
The neuroses of the heart are those affections relating to this organ which do not necessarily involve either inflammation or structural lesion of any of its component parts. The larger proportion of these affections may be grouped under the name functional disorders of the heart's action. The affection called angina pectoris is characterized by pain more or less intense. It is generally associated with disordered action of the heart, and also with cardiac lesions. It may, however, exist without either disordered action or lesion, and hence it is with propriety included among the neuroses of the heart. Exophthalmic goitre is invariably associated with disordered action of the heart, but it has other very marked symptomatic traits which give to it a distinctive character. The name of the affection refers to these. The cardiac disorder is, however, the most constant, and, pathologically, the most important, and therefore the affection may be considered as one of the neuroses of the heart. In this article the functional disorders of the heart's action, irrespective of angina pectoris and exophthalmic goitre, will be first considered, and afterward these two affections will receive separate consideration.
Functional Disorders of the Heart's Action.
The disorders of the heart's action which agree in respect of their functional character present marked variations as regards the manner in which the action is disordered. An account of these will be given under the name Varieties, together with the symptomatology.
VARIETIES AND SYMPTOMATOLOGY.—The term palpitation denotes a violent or tumultuous action of the heart. A type of this variety of disorder is afforded when the heart is much excited by fear or some other intense mental emotion. The fact that emotional excitement will produce in some persons notable palpitation, and in others little or no disturbance of the heart's action, illustrates differences inherent in the organ itself as regards susceptibility to disorder. These innate differences are exemplified in cases of disease. In certain persons the heart readily takes on a morbid functional disorder from causes which in other persons do not produce this effect. A peculiar susceptibility to disorder is expressed by the term irritable heart, a term introduced by DaCosta. Instead of the violence which characterizes palpitation, there may be irregularity, with notable feebleness of the heart's action. The patient often describes this variety of disorder as a fluttering of the heart. The consciousness of the disorder is less distinct than when the disordered action is violent. With irregularity are generally associated increased frequency of the heart's action and præcordial distress. The degree of disorder as respects either violence or feebleness and irregularity of action differs in different cases within wide limits. Intermittence is another variety of disorder. The intermission may extend over a period of one, two, three, or more beats. It is sometimes preceded or followed by increased frequency of action, and it sometimes occurs without any other rhythmical disturbance. The patient is usually conscious of the intermittence, and it is apt to occasion great alarm, especially before the mind has become accustomed to it. The intermissions occur more or less frequently in different cases and at different periods in the same case. In the cases of palpitation in which the heart acts with violence it is not probable that the power of the heart's action is increased. The systolic ventricular movements are quick and have a spasmodic violence, without actual increase of force. The first sound of the heart over the apex under these circumstances is short and its quality valvular. The valvular element of this sound is predominant and intensified in consequence of the quickness of the systolic movements and the small quantity of blood in the ventricles when the ventricular systole takes place. Owing to the latter physical condition the range of movement of the auriculo-ventricular valves is greater and the valvular sound proportionately increased. The systolic movements of the apex against the chest-wall sometimes give rise to a ringing or metallic sound (cliquetis métallique).
A rare variety of functional disorder which has received but little attention is notable infrequency of the heart's action. The revolutions of the organ were reduced to sixteen per minute in a case reported by Thornton.1 In 1876, I reported 5 cases, the reduction in frequency varying from 26 to 40 per minute.2 In one of these cases there was marked intermittency, and in another case the action of the heart was irregular. With these exceptions the rhythm was regular. I have met with a few additional instances since these cases were reported. In this variety the disorder continues for several successive days, and it may be for a much longer period. A persistent infrequency sometimes remains as a sequel, recovery in other respects being complete. In one of my reported cases the revolutions were 36 for several weeks after recovery. In these instances the infrequency of the heart's action, which is sometimes a congenital peculiarity, is acquired. Hewan has reported his own case as an illustration of this fact. His normal frequency had been 72, but after a period of intense study the frequency gradually decreased, and finally remained at from 28 to 32 per minute.3 This variety of disorder will claim distinct consideration with reference to diagnosis and etiology. It may or may not be accompanied by præcordial distress.
1 Trans. Clinical Society of London, vol. viii., 1875.
2 American Practitioner, January, 1876.
3 London Med. Times and Gazette, March, 1875.
The more frequent varieties of disorder of the heart's action occur in most instances in paroxysms. The paroxysms differ widely in duration as well as in their intensity. They may last for an instant only or for many continuous days. Exceptionally the duration is much longer. I have known a persistent and very great increase of frequency of the heart's action with irregularity, and such a degree of weakness that the pulse could with difficulty be counted, to continue for several weeks, leading to oedema of the lower limbs, prostration, and pallor, so that the patient's appearance was that of one moribund. In this case before the attack and after recovery there was no evidence of any other affection than functional disorder of the heart, and to this the patient had long been subject. In another case an extremely irregular action of the heart continued unceasingly for more than two months, there being no signs of either an inflammatory or a structural affection of the organ, and the functional disorder at length ceasing. As a rule, an attack of functional disorder of the heart implies a liability thereto; other attacks occur after variable intervals. This fact involves a peculiar susceptibility, or, in other words, an irritable heart.
The symptoms referable to the heart may be combined with those of coexisting affections. Disturbances of digestion are frequently associated. Paroxysms of disordered action of the heart are often accompanied by gastric flatulence, and gaseous eructations afford relief. Patients are apt to endeavor to eructate by voluntary efforts. Other evidences of indigestion are not infrequent. The mind is much disturbed, especially if previous paroxysms have not occurred. The facial expression shows anxiety. The apprehension is of organic disease of the heart and of sudden death. This apprehension is excited in a marked degree by intermittence of the heart's action. It is often extremely difficult to convince patients of the absence of immediate danger. They require to be assured of this fact over and over again, and whenever a paroxysm occurs. This statement applies even to medical men who suffer from functional disorders of the heart's action. The surface is usually cool or cold. It is sometimes bathed in perspiration—a symptom probably due, in a great measure, to the condition of mind. Exclusive of angina pectoris, paroxysms of functional disorder are not attended by præcordial pain. The paroxysms may cease either suddenly or after a gradual improvement. The cessation is abrupt in the instances in which the paroxysms last but an instant or but a few moments, and not infrequently when the paroxysms are of much longer duration the normal rhythmical action is at once resumed.
The variety of disorder characterized by diminished frequency of the heart's action is often associated with cerebral disturbance. In 2 cases cited in my paper there were severe epileptiform seizures, together with frequent epileptoid attacks; in 2 cases there was mental excitability amounting to delirium; and in 1 case there was great mental and physical prostration with gastric irritability, the latter due apparently to cerebral disturbance. In 1 case only there was no evidence of disorder of the brain. Of 3 cases which have fallen under observation since the publication of my paper, in 1 there was notable mental disturbance, the mind remaining intact in the other 2 cases.
DIAGNOSIS.—Certain facts pertaining to functional disorders of the heart's action in their ordinary paroxysmal forms render the diagnosis probable. One of these is the occurrence in paroxysms, the action of the heart being normal in the intervals. Another fact is the occurrence of the paroxysms at night oftener than in the daytime. The ability of the patient to take active exercise without exciting a paroxysm and without discomfort is evidence that the paroxysmal affection is functional. A diagnostic feature of a purely functional disorder is great apprehension connected with the disordered action of the heart. The patient is apt to feel that there is imminent danger of sudden death. So strong is this apprehension that it is sometimes difficult to overcome it by positive assertions of the absence of danger. On the other hand, disordered action of the heart, when incident to structural affections, occasions comparatively little mental disturbance; the patient suffers chiefly or exclusively from the physical ailments. In a purely functional affection the patient generally is vividly conscious of the disordered action, whereas the action in structural affections may be greatly disordered and the patient take no cognizance of it. The existence of certain causes to be mentioned under the head of the Etiology bears upon the diagnosis. The liability to functional disorders, as evidenced by previous attacks, is also to be taken into account. These facts, however, are not fully adequate for the exclusion of structural affections of the heart. Moreover, the persistence in some cases of notable disorder for days, weeks, or even months, would seem to render highly probable the existence of some structural affection. The basis of a positive diagnosis is the exclusion, by the absence of their physical signs, of inflammatory affections and lesions of structure.
The physician who undertakes to diagnosticate functional disorders of the heart by symptoms alone—that is, without physical exploration—must often be in doubt, and if not prudently distrustful of his ability as a diagnostician, he is liable to commit errors which are sometimes extremely unfortunate. I was requested to see a young woman who was represented as suffering from a disease of the heart from which she might die at any moment. It was stated to me that her situation was perfectly understood by herself and her family, and that the object of my visit was simply to satisfy some of her friends. I found her in a dark room, with every arrangement to prevent the least mental excitement and physical exertion. Fearing that my questions and the examination of the chest might occasion disturbance which would prove fatal, it was proposed that one of her family be made the medium of the former, and that the latter be dispensed with. This was of course objected to on my part. My questions she answered in a feeble whisper. The examination of the chest showed the absence of all physical signs of disease. The affection was purely functional and wholly devoid of danger. I could cite from cases which have come under my observation not a few in which the error of imputing functional disorders to organic lesions has occasioned the loss of years as regards the duties and pleasures of life, together with the unhappiness incident to living in daily expectation of sudden death. With a degree of practical knowledge of auscultation and percussion sufficient to recognize the signs of inflammatory and structural diseases, and self-confidence sufficient to decide upon the absence of these signs, there is but little liability to error in the diagnosis of functional disorders.
If the apex-beat be in its normal situation, and the areas of the superficial and deep cardiac regions be not extended, the heart is not enlarged; and if there be no endocardial murmur it may be inferred that the valves and orifices are normal. The exclusion of structural lesions under these circumstances is almost positive. It is open only to the exception that certain occult lesions may exist, such as fatty degeneration and obstruction of the coronary arteries. Aside from the infrequency of these, the history and symptoms may render their existence extremely improbable. A hæmic murmur at the aortic or the pulmonic orifices or at both orifices is not uncommon. That the murmur is inorganic may generally be determined by other evidences of anæmia, by an arterial murmur in the neck, and by the venous hum. With the results of physical exploration as just stated, whatever may be the form of disorder, whatever may be its intensity, whatever may be its duration, and whatever may be the associated symptoms, it may be declared to be purely functional.
The diagnosis is less simple and easy when functional disorders occur in connection with structural lesions, but without any relation of cause and effect. Lesions affecting the valves or orifices of the heart often exist without giving rise to any appreciable disturbance. They are either innocuous or their effects do not occasion any inconvenience of which notice is taken. How often is it that an examination of the chest reveals the signs of cardiac lesions which had not been suspected by either the patient or the physician! How often are applicants for life insurance astonished when told that they are not insurable on account of the signs of a cardiac affection! Now these persons are liable to functional disorders of the heart from the causes which produce them in those with perfectly sound organs, the cardiac lesions having no part in the etiology, but perhaps contributing to render the disorders more intense. The problem of diagnosis in these cases is to determine that the functional disorders are not dependent on the lesions. Were they thereon dependent they might denote grave disease, but if not thus dependent they have little or no gravity. This diagnostic problem is to be solved, in the first place, by attention to the inquiry whether the lesions are in proportion to the disturbance of the heart's action. Valvular lesions, if the heart be but little or not at all enlarged, are either innocuous or occasion small inconvenience. This fact will often suffice for the solution of the problem. Moreover, the physical signs may show that the lesions involve neither valvular insufficiency nor obstruction, or, at all events, not in a degree adequate to account for the disturbed action; in the second place, the symptoms are to be considered with reference to the inquiry whether they belong to the clinical history of structural affections or of functional disorders; and, in the third place, the existence of any of the well-known causes of functional disorders is to be taken into consideration. The error is not uncommon of attributing functional disorders to coexisting lesions when the connection is one of mere coincidence. This error may be as unfortunate as that of supposing that functional disorders denote structural affections when the latter are entirely wanting.
Certain considerations, aside from the exclusion of organic affections of the heart, apply particularly to the diagnosis of that variety of functional disorder characterized by infrequency of the heart's action. It is to be ascertained that the infrequency is not a normal peculiarity, either congenital or acquired. Napoleon the Great was a well-known instance of normal infrequency, the number of beats being 40 per minute. As a rule, if an intelligent adult person has habitually a notably infrequent pulse he becomes acquainted with the fact, and therefore if he be ignorant of such a peculiarity it may be inferred that it is not normal.
There is a curious form of functional disorder which would lead to the error of inferring infrequency of the heart's action from the pulse. The disorder is characterized by the regular alternation of a ventricular systole giving rise to a radial pulse, with one too feeble to be appreciated at the wrist. Assuming the number of ventricular systoles to be 70 per minute, in such a case the radial pulse would be 35 per minute. I have met with several examples of this form of disorder in which, as may be said, there is a regular irregularity of the heart's action. The carotid pulse in these cases represents each ventricular systole, and on auscultation of the heart's sounds there will be found to be four sounds to each radial pulse. This form of disorder is liable to lead to the error of supposing reduplication of both the first and the second sound of the heart. It is hardly necessary to add that in cases of obstructive and regurgitant lesions with feebleness of the heart's action the diminished quantity of blood expelled from the left ventricle, with some of its contractions, may be too small to produce an appreciable radial pulse. The existence of these cardiac lesions is easily ascertained by auscultation.
Infrequency of the heart's action is a well-known symptom in cases of injury of the skull and in certain intra-cranial affections. Cerebral hemorrhage, embolism, and thrombosis are easily excluded by the absence of paralysis, but the exclusion of subacute or chronic meningitis is not so easy. But infrequency of the heart's action, when a symptom of the latter affection, is accompanied by cerebral symptoms denoting compression of the brain—symptoms which are wanting when the infrequency is the characteristic of a functional disorder of the heart's action. Moreover, the absence of fever, of increased sensibility to light and sounds, and of the symptoms embraced in the clinical history of cerebral meningitis, will render the exclusion of that affection positive. The heart's action is abnormally infrequent in some cases of cholæmia and of uræmia, but these affections are easily excluded. Certain drugs—namely, aconite, digitalis, and veratrum viride—diminish the frequency of the heart's action. These drugs, given to a person in health, produce, in fact, a transient effect which is equivalent to the functional disorder of the heart thereby characterized.
PATHOLOGY AND ETIOLOGY.—The neuroses of the heart are functional disorders involving the relations of this organ to the nervous system. The functional disorders of the heart's action affect the frequency, the rhythm, and the force of the cardiac movements. The pathology of these disorders would be more fully understood were our knowledge of the physiology of the heart's movements more complete. We know that contractions of the heart continue when it is separated from all its nervous connections and after removal from the body, especially in cold-blooded animals. The rhythm, frequency, and force of its normal movements are evidently dependent on influences derived through the sympathetic and pneumogastric nerves. Experiments show that the movements continue, but with increased frequency and with irregularity, after division of the pneumogastrics; hence this nerve is regarded as exercising an inhibitory and regulating influence over the action of the heart. Disorders of the heart's action from causes which pertain to the brain doubtless involve especially this nerve. Other causes act through the relations with the different organs of the body by means of the sympathetic system of nerves.
Impoverishment of the blood occasions disorder, probably by affecting the nutrition of the heart. Toxical agents in the blood enter into the pathology in certain cases.
The etiology of functional disorders of the heart's action involves, as an important factor, a predisposition inherent either in the organ or in its nervous connections. A peculiar susceptibility to the causes which induce disorder is an idiosyncrasy. Causes which produce disorder in those who have this idiosyncrasy are inoperative upon others. Some persons are liable to functional disorders of this organ all their lives, whereas some appear to be exempt from any liability thereto. In this respect the cardiac muscular fibres are analogous to those of the pulmonary bronchi. A peculiar susceptibility of the latter is requisite for the capability of having bronchial asthma. The susceptibility of the heart-muscle varies in different persons, and a reasonable supposition is that in proportion to the degree of this susceptibility will the causes of functional disorder be more readily and actively operative.
Clinical observation furnishes evidence of various causes giving rise to functional disorders of the heart. The more prominent are—over-exertion of the faculties of the mind, prolonged mental anxiety, the use of tobacco, tea and coffee taken in excess, too great indulgence in venery, the unnatural abuse of the sexual system, dyspeptic ailments, uricæmia, and anæmia. These causes are often combined in individual cases. With reference to effective treatment, inquiries should be directed in every case to facts relating to these several causes.
Long-continued violent muscular exertions are supposed to lead to functional disorders of the heart. DaCosta has described cases occurring among soldiers during the late Civil War in which the cardiac disorder seemed to him referable to severe marches. He applied the name irritable heart to the condition in these cases.4 It is probable that mental excitement had more or less to do with the causation. Albutt, Seitz, and other observers have attributed functional disorders to over-straining of the heart by occupations which call for severe exercise of the muscles.
4 Medical Memoirs of the United States Sanitary Commission, 1867. See Address before the Philadelphia Medical Society, by A. Stillé, 1883, p. 18. See also Diseases of the Heart among Soldiers, by A. B. R. Myers, London, 1870.
Paroxysmal disorder of the heart belongs among the multifarious symptoms referable to the nervous system in cases of hysteria. It is among the toxical manifestations embraced in the clinical history of gout, being referable, when it occurs in this pathological connection, to uricæmia. It may have this causation in cases in which the ordinary gouty manifestations do not occur.
In the variety of disorder characterized by infrequency of the heart's action it may be assumed that the causative agency is exerted through the pneumogastrics. The inhibitory function of this nerve is affected in the same way as by the galvanic current in the experimental observations on animals in illustration of this function. This view is corroborated by the frequent association of this variety of disorder with notable cerebral disturbance.
PROGNOSIS.—A purely functional disorder of the heart's action may be said to be devoid of danger to life. This is a remarkable fact, taking into view the importance of the organ, together with the degree and the duration of disordered action in some cases. Of many thousand cases which have come under my observation, I am not aware of having met with a single instance in which death was fairly attributable to an uncomplicated functional disorder. It is readily understood that functional disorders superadded to, albeit not dependent upon, organic affections of the heart may contribute to a fatal termination. But the tolerance of functional disorders under these circumstances is often very remarkable.
The assurance of the absence of all danger frequently lifts from the minds of patients a heavy load of anxiety and apprehension. To be able to give such an assurance is one of the delights of medical practice. Patients often find it difficult to believe that the disorder from which they suffer can take place while the heart is organically sound. Many require very positive and repeated assurances in order to secure their belief. The question is many times asked, "How is it possible that I should suffer so much, and yet the heart be free from disease?" Another question which is apt to be asked is, "How can you ascertain so quickly that there is no disease?" In anticipation of the latter question, in order to ensure the desirable moral effect, it is sometimes good policy to prolong the examination, inasmuch as for the exclusion of all the physical signs of organic disease a few moments only are required. Another question, still, is, "Will not organic disease be likely to be produced by the functional disorders?" The physician is fully warranted in giving a negative answer. Exclusive of the cases of exophthalmic goitre, functional disorders of the heart do not involve liability to either inflammatory or structural affections.
Recurrences of functional disorders of the heart constitute the rule rather than the exception. Their frequency will depend much on the degree of the predisposition, but of course more or less on the causes therewith associated. The mental anxiety and apprehensions which they at first occasion after a time wear away, and they are at length reckoned as belonging among those annoyances of life to which may be applied the common expression, "What cannot be cured must be endured."
TREATMENT.—Prompt relief or palliation of suffering is often the immediate object of treatment when cases first come under observation. The medicinal remedies for this object are the ethereal or alcoholic stimulants, the different antispasmodics, and opium. Chloric ether and the compound spirit of ether (Hoffman's anodyne) often act efficiently. An eligible prescription is the combination of one of these with an equal part of the compound tincture of lavender, of which a teaspoonful, properly diluted, may be given after short intervals. Brandy, whiskey, or some other form of spirit in many cases will afford prompt relief. It should be given not much diluted. These remedies are especially indicated in paroxysms of irregular or intermittent and enfeebled action of the heart. They are less adapted to cases in which the heart's action is violent. Of antispasmodics, valerian, the valerianate of ammonia, camphor, and asafoetida are appropriate. Some one of the preparations of opium is to be employed if the disorder be not relieved by other remedies. Of the different forms of opiate, codeia is the least objectionable, and perhaps as efficient as any other. With a view to promptness of relief in certain cases of severity, morphia may be administered hypodermically. Other palliative measures are a sinapism to the præcordia, and, if the extremities be cold, a mustard pediluvium. Of the efficacy of the ice-bag applied over the heart, which is recommended by German writers, I cannot speak from personal observation. The testimony in behalf of its usefulness is, to say the least, sufficient for resorting to it without apprehension of doing harm. In some cases of obstinate persistence of disorder the opportunity is afforded for trying in succession the various remedies which have been named. Digitalis is sometimes useful. Concomitant disorders which may have originated or which tend to keep up the disordered action of the heart are to be appropriately treated. Flatulence and other ailments referable to indigestion and constipation not infrequently are in this category. Paroxysms may be sometimes arrested by certain mechanical means, such as pressure upon the abdomen, holding the breath after a deep inspiration, and compression of the vagus and sympathetic nerves in the neck.
In some cases of functional disorder there is a persistent increase of the frequency of the heart's action without irregularity in rhythm. The action of the heart in these cases is the same as in cases of exophthalmic goitre, the enlargement of the thyroid body and the prominence of the eyeballs which characterize the latter affection being wanting. In these cases aconite in small doses is to be recommended. From one minim to three minims of the tincture of the root may be given, repeated after intervals of four or six hours and continued indefinitely. In cases the opposite to the foregoing—namely, those in which the disorder is characterized by infrequency of the heart's action—a rational indication is to give remedies with a view to excite the heart. In the cases which have come under my observation alcoholics have had but little effect upon the heart, although apparently useful as regards the nervous symptoms which are apt to accompany this variety of cardiac disorder. As this disorder does not, as a rule, occasion distress, the patient perhaps not being conscious of any disturbances of the heart's action, and as the infrequency does not appear to involve danger, the treatment may be directed to fulfilling other symptomatic indications.
Positive assurances of the absence of danger have often a potential influence in relieving paroxysms of functional disorder. The disorder is not infrequently increased and kept up by mental apprehension, and these assurances therefore do away with an active causative agency. They are also useful in the way of preventing the recurrence of paroxysms. It is evident that in order to exert this moral influence the physician must be competent to decide that the disorder is purely functional. He can so decide only if he have confidence in his ability to exclude inflammatory and structural affections or to determine that the disorder is not dependent on lesions which may coexist. If he have not sufficient confidence in his opinion, he will naturally and properly not give positive assurances, and a lack of positiveness will be likely to lead the patient to infer that the disorder is not devoid of danger. The good effect of certain measures of treatment is in part attributable to a mental influence. This is legitimately a therapeutic object here as in other affections.
The more important part of the treatment in the majority of the cases of functional disorders of the heart's action is that which relates to prevention. The preventive treatment, in addition to the moral influences already referred to, consists chiefly in removing as far as practicable the causes of the disorder. The predisposition cannot be removed, but the causes which are auxiliary thereto in producing disorder are, to a greater or less extent, controllable.
Prolonged mental anxiety is often inseparable from the events of life. "Therein the patient must minister unto himself" The voluntary exercise of the mental faculties, however, can be restrained within physiological limits. Tobacco can be abstained from, and, as a rule, total abstinence is easier than moderate indulgence. Tea and coffee can be used moderately if at all. Dyspeptic ailments are amenable to appropriate dietetic and medicinal treatment. On no account should the diet be reduced below the requirements for ample nutrition. Anæmia, which exists in a large proportion of cases, especially in women, calls for chalybeate tonics, to be continued persistently as long as the blood remains impoverished. It is needless to add that in these cases the causes of the anæmia are, if possible, to be removed, and that chalybeates are to be supplemented by proper dietetic and regiminal treatment. Sexual excess and abuses are to receive adequate attention. There can be no question as to unnatural sexual excitation. But a question often arises in individual cases concerning the physiological limitations of natural indulgence. These limitations probably differ widely in different persons. They are, however, always exceeded if the indulgence exceed the instinctive demand—that is, if its increase be made an object for voluntary efforts. Long-continued and violent muscular exertions should be interdicted. Uricæmia or the gouty diathesis claims appropriate remedies and hygienic regulations.
Several of the various causes just recapitulated are frequently combined, so that the preventive treatment is by no means always limited to the removal of a single cause. The treatment will prove successful in proportion as the efforts to remove the causes are effectual.
Angina Pectoris.
The name angina pectoris was introduced by Heberden in 1768 to designate a group of symptoms which from that date has been regarded as constituting an individual affection. The word angina, signifying strangulation, has but little pertinency in this application of it, and various other names have been proposed in its stead. For the most part these are based on pathological views which are either erroneous or hypothetical, and at the present time the name angina pectoris is generally adopted in all countries.
The affection may be defined as a paroxysmal neuralgia, the pain of which is seated within or near the præcordia, shooting thence in most cases into the left shoulder, and extending downward to a greater or less extent into the left upper extremity, the right upper extremity being sometimes similarly affected. In some instances the pain extends to the lower limbs; the paroxysms often accompanied by a feeling of anguish and of impending death, the affection in the great majority of cases being incident to organic disease of either the heart or the aorta and involving liability to sudden death.
SYMPTOMATOLOGY.—The foregoing definition embraces the prominent traits of a severe paroxysm. The pain may extend into situations other than those mentioned—namely, in different directions throughout the chest, into the neck, the jaws, and the temples, the abdomen, and the groin. In describing the pain patients use such terms as constricting, tearing, burning, etc. Perhaps in its most severe form there is no disease attended with more intense suffering. It is related that the description of the affection by Heberden led to a communication to him from an unknown correspondent who gave an account of his own case, and bequeathed to Heberden his body to be examined after death. The examination was made by John Hunter, who himself fell a victim to the affection. An analogous instance occurred in my own experience. A patient was led by the intensity of his sufferings to request that I should make a post-mortem examination in his case, with the hope that something might be thereby ascertained which would prove useful to others. This request was complied with. Associated with the pain in severe paroxysms is what has been called a breast-pang, giving rise to a sensation as if death were at hand. A choking sensation, which is implied in the name angina, is an occasional symptom, resembling the globus hystericus. Respiration is not obstructed, but the patient may voluntarily restrain the respiratory movements lest they increase the suffering. Dyspnoea, if present, is thereby produced. During the continuance of the paroxysm the patient refrains from movements of the body or limbs, keeping a fixed position and grasping some firm support in order better to remain motionless while the pain lasts. A sensation of numbness in the affected limbs accompanies the pain. The circulation is usually more or less disturbed. There is sometimes increased and sometimes diminished frequency of the pulse. The action of the heart is often intermittent and otherwise irregular. It may be strong, but oftener it is weak. At the beginning the arterial tension has been found to be increased, but later is diminished. The face is generally pallid, but sometimes livid. The disturbances of the circulation are often modified by coexisting organic disease of the heart, but superadded are those of functional disorder incident to the paroxysm. The countenance is haggard and anxious. The surface of the body is cold, and may be bathed in perspiration. The mind remains unaffected. The paroxysms usually commence suddenly, and, as a rule, so end. Eructations of gas are apt to follow their cessation, together with a free discharge of limpid urine. The duration of a paroxysm may be but a few seconds; it is rarely longer than a few minutes. When it appears to be protracted for a considerable period, there is generally a series of attacks occurring in quick succession, instead of one continuous paroxysm.
There is much variation in different cases as regards the severity of the paroxysms, and the mildest offer a striking contrast to the severest, the essential symptomatic characters of the affection, however, being preserved. In mild paroxysms the pain is comparatively slight, the anguish or heart-pang is less, and the heart's action may be but little or not at all disturbed. Such paroxysms occasion annoyance without great suffering. Different cases, and the same case at different times, exemplify varying degrees of severity.
Recurrences of angina take place as a rule, to which there are but few exceptions. The intervals between the paroxysms vary in different cases, and often in the same case. Their recurrence is not governed by any law of periodicity. Generally, they are at first infrequent, and their frequency increases slowly. With increase in frequency their severity is apt to be increased. At first, and for a certain length of time, they are occasioned by some apparent exciting cause. A common cause is the exertion of walking, especially against a current of wind. Often for a considerable period patients are exempt whenever they are at rest. Sooner or later, in most cases, attacks are produced by other causes, such as a fit of anger or other mental emotion, and finally without any appreciable existing cause. I have known attacks to be caused by the act of swallowing solid food, so that eating became a source of terror to the patient. They occur in some cases during sleep. Occurring after intervals of a few moments, the affection in this respect resembling certain cases of tic douloureux, it doubtless would be difficult by any description to convey an adequate idea of the lamentable condition of the patient.
On account of the wide range of the gradations as regards the degree of severity or mildness, of the diversity of symptoms referable to the different forms of disease of the heart with which the affection may be associated, and of the varied disorders which may be accidentally connected, the clinical picture of angina is by no means uniform. There is, however, no practical advantage in making formal varieties of the affection. Eulenberg makes four different types, their differential characters being based on the different nerves supposed to be especially affected, as follows: 1st, excito-motor cardiac angina; 2d, regulator angina; 3d, excito-motor sympathetic angina; and 4th, vasomotor angina. Assuming that there is ground for these pathological distinctions (which, to say the least, admits of doubt), in a practical point of view they involve difficulties not compensated for by important bearings on diagnosis and treatment. One point of distinction, however, has important bearings—namely, the existence of angina with or without organic disease of the heart. It cannot be doubted that in the vast majority of cases angina is incident to some form of cardiac lesion. That it may exist without any appreciable lesion is admitted. The propriety of recognizing it as a functional disorder rests on the latter fact.5 Practically, the coexistence of organic disease of the heart or otherwise, and, if organic disease exist, its nature and extent, are points which it is important to take into account in the diagnosis with reference to prognosis and treatment.
5 Of 71 cases analyzed by Gauthier, in 3 only was the affection to be regarded as purely functional. Vide Eichhorst.
DIAGNOSIS.—The diagnostic points in cases of angina are the præcordial seat of the pain, its radiations thence into the shoulder and upper extremity, generally of the left side, the character of the pain, the accompanying anguish and sense of impending death, the coexisting disorder of the heart (which occurs as the rule), and the voluntary immobility of the body. These are positive criteria which, if marked, render the diagnosis easy and certain. The diagnosis is further substantiated by finding the signs of organic disease of the heart, especially if there be lesions at the aortic orifice or within the aorta. Well-marked angina is in itself strong presumptive evidence of organic disease of the heart. Not infrequently the existence of the latter is for the first time discovered by an examination suggested by the occurrence of an attack of angina. The cases in which the diagnosis involves difficulty are those in which certain of the above-mentioned diagnostic points are either wanting or not well marked.
The affections which may be mistaken for angina are gastralgia and intercostal neuralgia. In gastralgia the pain is seated below the præcordia. It may radiate in different directions, but does not extend to the upper extremities, and is not accompanied by irregularity of the heart's action. The patient writhes and changes the position of the body in the effort to obtain relief. There is not a sense of impending death. The paroxysms are of much longer duration than those of angina. These differential points should suffice for the discrimination.
An acute attack of intercostal neuralgia does not differ so widely from angina, but the differential points are generally distinctive enough for a positive diagnosis. The pain in intercostal neuralgia is not seated in the præcordia. It does not shoot into the upper extremities; it is increased by the act of inspiration; the peculiar anguish of angina is wanting; the action of the heart is likely to be regular; and the diagnosis is confirmed by finding tenderness over circumscribed areas in the intercostal spaces anteriorly, laterally, and posteriorly.
Cardiac lesions in cases of angina are to be excluded by finding no physical signs of their existence. But it is to be remembered that angina is not infrequently associated with lesions not readily recognized by signs—to wit, obstruction of the coronary arteries and fatty degeneration of the heart. Persistent feebleness of the heart's action and symptoms other than angina incidental thereto render it probable that one or the other or both of these lesions exist. It is probable that these lesions have been overlooked in examinations after death in some of the cases in which angina has been reported as not connected with any organic affection of the heart.
PATHOLOGY AND ETIOLOGY.—The paroxysms of angina have the distinctive traits of neuralgic affections as regards the character of the pain, its extension in the course of sensory nerves, the occurrence of intermissions, the absence of fever, the functions of digestion and assimilation remaining often unaffected, and the attacks not always being referable to any exciting cause. The association of the affection, as a rule, with organic disease of the heart is evidence of course of some pathological connection. What is this connection? A difficulty in answering this question arises from the fact that the affection is associated not with any one lesion, but with different lesions. It may be associated with obstruction (usually from calcification) of the coronary arteries, with insufficiency of the aortic valves, with rigidity from calcareous degeneration of the aorta, with aortic aneurism, and with fatty degeneration of the heart, these different morbid changes existing either singly or more or less of them in combination. The question then resolves itself into another—namely, What is the pathological condition common to these different lesions which stands in a special etiological relation to angina? It is a logical conclusion that the affection must depend upon some condition which is common to these lesions. The association with the lesions is too frequent to be explained by mere coincidence. The etiological relation involves evidently a condition which exists only in a small proportion of the cases of these lesions. This statement is a logical deduction from the great infrequency of angina and the frequency of these varieties of organic disease of the heart. I submit, as the most rational theory, that the pathological condition on which the angina depends is ischæmia of the heart. This theory is supported by the frequency of the instances in which in cases of angina the coronary arteries are obstructed; by the fact that not very infrequently this is the only lesion found after death (two instances having fallen under my own observation within the past year); by the association with aortic insufficiency and rigidity of the aorta, lesions which interfere materially with the supply of blood to the heart if it be admitted that the blood is driven into the coronary arteries, not during the ventricular systole, but by the recoil of the arterial coats in the ventricular diastole; and by the association with fatty degeneration of the heart when, owing to the weakness of the heart's action, the supply of blood to the muscular structure of the heart must be diminished. That the sudden withdrawal of a supply of blood to a part may occasion neuralgia is shown by the intense pain in the limb which directly follows embolism of the femoral artery. Moreover, general anæmia, as is well known, favors the recurrence of neuralgia in various situations.
The cardiac nerves in which the pain is seated are doubtless sensory fibres of the pneumogastrics. Their anatomical connections with the brachial plexus will explain the extension of pain to the left upper extremities. To account for the pain in parts which have no direct connection with the cardiac nerves, it may be assumed that in angina, as in other neuralgic affections, a centripetal influence conveyed to the nervous centres may occasion pain referable to different situations. This explains the shifting of pains which is one of the diagnostic traits of neuralgia. The explanation of the disturbed rhythm of the heart's action so often coexisting with the neuralgic pain is not more difficult than in cases of functional disorder disconnected from angina. For what is to be said of the rationale the reader is referred to that portion of this article which treats of Functional Disorders of the Heart.
Angina, as a purely functional affection—that is, not symptomatic of any organic lesion of the heart, and not due to any structural change in, nor mechanical pressure upon, nerves—is obscure as regards its pathology and etiology, but not more so than many other neuralgic affections. As already stated, cases in which it is thus purely functional are few in number—fewer even than has been supposed, because there is reason to believe that lesions have been overlooked. Moreover, cases which have been reported render it probable that in some instances in which the heart has been found free from appreciable lesions nerves entering into the cardiac plexuses may be the seat of structural changes or may be subject to pressure from a morbid growth. But there are cases in which no lesions are discernible during life, and in which the existence of lesions is disproved by complete recovery. The affection under these circumstances must be regarded as purely functional. There is no positive knowledge of the etiology in these cases. The affection has been attributed to gout, to hysteria, to the action of cold, to the use of tobacco, and to other causes. These causes may have a certain amount of agency, but there is an unknown intervening link in their etiological connection concerning which, in the present state of our knowledge, it is useless to speculate.
Age and sex have an undoubted influence in the etiology. The affection very rarely occurs under middle life, and it occurs in men much oftener than in women.
PROGNOSIS.—As a very rare exception to the rule, a single paroxysm only may occur, the patient living for many years without any recurrence. Recurring paroxysms sometimes are separated by long intervals—weeks, months, and years. In the majority of cases, however, paroxysms recur with more and more frequency and with increasing severity. Under these circumstances death may take place after a long period of suffering.
The liability to sudden death is an important point in the prognosis. This may occur in the first paroxysm. An instance has fallen under my observation within a few months, there having been no signs previously indicative of disease of the heart. Calcareous obstruction of the coronary arteries was the lesion found after death. A person subject to paroxysms of angina must be considered as in more or less danger of sudden death with the recurrence of each paroxysm. The physician should be sufficiently impressed with the importance of this fact. While it is doubtful whether it be the physician's duty to apprise the patient of the fact, the danger should always be communicated to some discreet relative or friend. To do this is a duty which the physician owes to himself as well as to the patient. If he omit it, he exposes himself to censure should sudden death unexpectedly take place. The mildness of the paroxysms which have already occurred does not afford a positive security against the liability to a severe and fatal paroxysm. But it is a hopeful consideration that paroxysms may recur more or less frequently for an indefinite period without proving fatal. At this time I am cognizant of three cases in which paroxysms have recurred frequently for several years, the patients, with that exception, having had fair health. Let not the physician, therefore, predict with positiveness that a patient with angina will die sooner or later in a paroxysm. The uncertainty is a ground of encouragement as well as for apprehension.
The coexistence of organic disease of the heart and the nature of the cardiac lesions have a very important bearing on the prognosis. The danger is in proportion to the importance of these. Recovery is never to be expected when the affection is associated with well-marked cardiac lesions, and there is always great danger in the recurrence of paroxysms when the associated lesions are in themselves dangerous. Lesions which give rise to free aortic regurgitation and to fatty degeneration of the heart involve more or less danger of sudden death, irrespective of angina. It is evidence of greatly increased danger if paroxysm of angina be superadded.
During a paroxysm of angina the immediate danger is to be estimated by the symptoms denoting disturbance of the heart's action. The danger is great in proportion as the action of the heart is feeble, irregular, or intermitting. Per contra, the danger is less in proportion as the deviation from the normal force and rhythm is small. It may be said that there is no danger so long as the heart's action remains unaffected, but the disturbance may be slight or wanting at the outset of a paroxysm and afterward become fatally great.
A favorable prognosis may be entertained when there are no signs of cardiac lesion, and when there is little or no disturbance of the heart's action during the paroxysms. Let it be borne in mind that such cases are exceptional and extremely rare. Let it also be borne in mind that lesions especially apt to be associated with fatal paroxysms may be latent—namely, obstruction of the coronary arteries and fatty degeneration. The latter fact renders it proper that a favorable prognosis should always be formed with a reservation, while the fact that recovery takes place in a few well-marked cases of angina renders it improper to withhold encouragement whenever lesions are not discoverable and the paroxysms are not accompanied by alarming symptoms referable to the heart's action. The long tolerance of the affection in some cases is not to be lost sight of with reference to the encouragement which may be fairly derived therefrom.
The immediate cause of sudden death in a paroxysm is probably an arrest of the heart's action in diastole, or such a degree of diminution of the force of its action that the accumulation of blood within its cavities induces paralysis from distension.
TREATMENT.—It is important that a paroxysm of angina be treated as soon as possible, not alone with a view to the relief of pain, but to remove immediate danger. If the physician be present, an opiate in a form to act promptly should be given either by the mouth or hypodermically; the latter mode is to be preferred. Laudanum or a solution of a salt of morphia is the most eligible form if given by the mouth. If the heart's action be weak and irregular, a diffusible stimulant is indicated. If at once available, chloric ether, Hoffman's anodyne, and the compound tincture of lavender act efficiently. If these be not at hand, an alcoholic stimulant should be given, diluted but little, and the doses repeated at short intervals until the paroxysm ends and the disturbed action of the heart has ceased. The duration of paroxysms is generally so short that a physician is rarely present unless they recur after brief intervals. A patient, therefore, subject to angina should be provided with remedies and instructions as to their use at the instant a paroxysm occurs. The amyl nitrite, first recommended in this affection by Brunton, is a remedy of signal benefit in some cases. From two to five minims may be inhaled at the commencement of the paroxysm. It is especially indicated when the characters of the pulse denote arterial tension. Caution is to be exercised in its use if there be notable weakness of the heart's action. Sinapisms, stimulating embrocations, and fomentations applied to the chest have a certain measure of utility, but they should not take the place nor delay the use of remedies which are more efficient.
A still more important object of treatment than relief in the paroxysms is their prevention. During the intervals this object claims assiduous attention. First in importance is the avoidance of all exciting causes. Bodily exercise is to be kept within the limits required in order to incur no risk of a paroxysm being produced. The same precaution applies to mental excitement. Unhappily, this is not as easy as the avoidance of muscular exertion. John Hunter's saying, that his life was at the mercy of any scoundrel who chose to insult him, proved a prediction. He fell dead on receiving an insult from one of his colleagues at St. George's Hospital. Sexual intercourse I have known to prove an exciting cause. Excesses in eating and drinking are in this category. The diet, however, is not to be reduced below the full requirements for nutrition, and wine or spirits, as conducive to digestion, are in some cases serviceable. The use of tobacco is to be interdicted.
Coexisting affections which have no special pathological connection with the angina may act as auxiliary causes, and therefore claim attention. Gout is to receive appropriate treatment. Anæmia especially is to be removed. This condition strongly conduces to the development and the continuance of neuralgic affections. Chalybeate remedies and the dietetic treatment are called for if this condition coexist. It is a rational indication to supply the heart with good blood if it be true that angina depends on an ischæmic condition of this organ.
Associated cardiac lesions are to be treated according to symptomatic indications, as in cases in which angina does not occur. Digitalis may be used under the proper restrictions. I have known this remedy to prove highly useful in preventing the recurrence of paroxysms. Nux vomica is sometimes useful as a cardiac tonic.
Various drugs have had repute as empirical remedies. Of these may be mentioned the preparations of zinc, arsenic, the nitrate of silver, phosphorus, the bromine salts, the iodide of potassium, and quinine. There is no proof that these remedies have any special therapeutical effect in this affection, but that they are sometimes useful there is abundant testimony. Trial should be made of them, with proper care in their administration. Electricity in the form of the induced and of the constant current has been advocated as not only serviceable, but as effecting in some instances a permanent cure.6 Beard and Rockwell have found general faradization useful in a few cases.7
6 Vide Eulenburg in Ziemssen's Cyclopædia, vol. xlv. p. 54.
7 Vide Medical and Surgical Electricity.
Exophthalmic Goitre (Graves' Disease; Basedow's Disease).
This affection is characterized by three striking symptomatic events—namely, persistent increase of the frequency of the heart's action, enlargement of the thyroid body, and protuberance of the eyeballs. The name exophthalmic goitre relates to the last two of these three events. It is defective, inasmuch as it does not include the increased frequency of the heart's action, which is the primary one of the three events, and the only one which is never wanting. As an individual affection it was first described by Graves in 1835, although cases in which these events were associated had been previously reported. Parry collected 7 cases in which the affection of the heart was associated with thyroid enlargement, and in 1 of these cases exophthalmia existed. An account of these cases was published in 1825. The name Graves' disease, proposed by Trousseau, has been adopted by French, English, and American writers. Basedow's disease is the name given to the affection by German writers. The affection was described by Basedow in 1840 under the name Glotz augenkrankheit.
There are cases in which one of the events in this symptomatic triad is wanting, the cases in other respects corresponding to the affection. The exophthalmia is the event oftenest wanting, the goitre, the functional disorder of the heart, and the associated phenomena being the same as if protuberance of the eyeballs coexisted. In some instances the goitre alone is wanting. The name exophthalmic goitre is not strictly applicable to these cases, but that the affection is essentially the same as when the three events are present cannot be doubted. It is a chronic affection, being in the great majority of cases of long duration. Exceptionally, it is developed suddenly and disappears after a few days. In these cases the affection has been distinguished as acute, but its claim to be so called rests exclusively on the shortness of its duration.
SYMPTOMATOLOGY.—Of the three cardinal events, the increased frequency of the heart's action is the first in the order of time. This precedes the other events usually for several weeks or even months. The frequency varies in different cases within wide limits—namely, from 90 or 100 to 150 beats, and even more, per minute. There is notable variation at different times in the same case. Generally, the frequency is greatly increased by exercise and mental emotions. In other words, irritability of the heart is in most cases a marked feature. As a rule, there are none of the disturbances of action, in other respects than frequency, which are found in cases of functional disorder not associated with exophthalmic goitre. The action may be intermittent or in other respects irregular, but in most cases the rhythm is not disturbed. The patient is conscious of the heart's action, and is annoyed by it, especially under any excitement; but there is not that distressing sense of the disorder which is felt in the paroxysms of palpitation with irregularity of action considered in the first division of this article. At the outset and for a considerable period there are no signs of any organic disease of the heart, or if the latter be present the association is accidental; the disordered action, as far as it relates to the affection under consideration, is purely functional. At a later period there may be enlargement of the heart as a result of long-continued increased activity of function. From the first cardiac murmurs are generally present at the base and over the body of the heart. These are blood-murmurs due to coexisting anæmia.
Following the increased frequency of the heart's action, after a variable period enlargement of the thyroid body occurs. The enlargement may be rapid, but in most cases it takes place slowly, and ceases when it has reached a moderate degree. Cases are exceptional in which the degree of enlargement is such as to occasion any obstruction to respiration. Almost invariably both lobes of the thyroid body are enlarged, but the enlargement is generally not equal on the two sides, and, as a rule, it is greater on the right side. The enlarged lobes are soft at first, afterward becoming hard. The subcutaneous veins over them are often distended. Pulsation of their arteries is apparent to the hand and to the eye. A systolic arterial blowing murmur and a continuous hum are heard when the thyroid region is auscultated. In some instances the murmur is like that of an aneurismal varix. As a rule, murmurs are heard over the carotid artery and the jugular vein. A thrill or fremitus is often felt by the hand placed upon the thyroid body. The thyroid enlargement is due at first chiefly to dilatation of the arteries and veins. Hyperplasia of the fibroid tissue occurs afterward, and then the enlarged gland becomes hard to the touch. The size of the enlarged thyroid body is often found to vary considerably at different times—a fact attributable to varying degrees of the dilatation of the vessels and of the consequent hyperæmia.
A notable protuberance of the eyeballs has sometimes been observed to take place suddenly, but, as a rule, it is at first slight and increases slowly. The degree of protuberance varies considerably in different cases. When marked, the patient has a remarkable staring expression. Both eyeballs are alike protuberant with very rare exceptions.8 The pupils are unaffected and vision is not impaired. The protuberance is sometimes so great that the globes cannot be covered by the eyelids. Under these circumstances inflammation of the conjunctiva ensues, and perforation of the cornea has been known to occur. The eyeballs can be pressed backward into the sockets without a degree of force which occasions pain, but the protuberance returns directly the pressure is discontinued. In most, but not in all, cases the consensual movements of the upper eyelid and the globe, when the latter is moved upward or downward, are impaired; that is, the movements of the lids do not follow those of the globes. That this symptom is not to be accounted for by the exophthalmia is shown by the fact that it is not a symptom when the protuberance of the eyeball is caused by an intra-orbital tumor. The symptom therefore has diagnostic significance. The ophthalmoscope shows the veins of the retina to be dilated and tortuous, with, in some instances, visible pulsation of the retinal arteries. Anatomical conditions to which the exophthalmia is, in a measure at least, referable, are enlargement of the intra-orbital vessels by hyperæmia and an increased amount of post-ocular fat. Paresis of the straight muscles, induced by stretching, is probably an important factor when the protuberance is great. These muscles have in some instances been found to have undergone fatty degeneration.
8 Allan McLane Hamilton, in his work on Nervous Diseases, cites a case reported by Yeo, in which the exophthalmia effected only the left eye, and the goitre was limited to the right thyroid body. Cases of unilateral goitre with bilateral exophthalmia have been observed.
Anæmia is usually associated with the foregoing cardinal symptoms. It is sometimes wanting. This was true of a case recently under my observation. If anæmia does not exist, the blood-murmurs referable to the heart and vascular system may be absent. If anæmia exist in a marked degree, there are present certain symptomatic phenomena referable thereto—namely, neuralgic pains in different situations, want of physical and mental endurance, hysterical manifestations, depression of spirits, etc. Mental irritability is apt to be a prominent trait of the affection. This may in a great measure be referred to sensitiveness occasioned by the exophthalmia. Owing to this, patients often avoid observation as much as possible. They naturally, women especially, are led to brood over the calamity of such a singular and conspicuous deformity. Breathlessness on exercise is a symptom more or less marked according to the increase in the frequency of the heart's action and the impoverishment of the blood. The appetite and digestion may or may not be impaired, and hence there may or may not be emaciation. It cannot be said that the affection is accompanied by fever, although in a certain proportion of cases the temperature of the body is half a degree or a degree above the normal range. Reports of cases embrace a considerable number of concurrent symptoms which are occasionally present, such as cephalalgia, insomnia, vertigo, amenorrhoea, neuralgia, unilateral sweating, etc. These have no special connection with the affection, but are incident to associated pathological conditions.
DIAGNOSIS.—The three phenomena which distinguish this affection are so obvious as well as characteristic that a diagnosis cannot well be avoided, after a description derived from books or lectures, when the first case presents itself in practice. The wonder is that the affection had not been clearly pointed out prior to the writings of Graves and Parry. Any difficulty in diagnosis relates to cases in which either the exophthalmia or the enlargement of the thyroid body is wanting, or to the incipiency of the affection when its characteristics are not fully developed. The bilateral protuberance of the eyeballs, the absence of local symptoms other than those caused by the exposure of the conjunctiva when the eyelids fail to cover the globes, the mobility and normal size of the pupils, the want of the normal consensus in the movements of the eyelids and the globes, and the replacement of the latter by moderate pressure, are the diagnostic points which distinguish the exophthalmia in this affection from that incident to intra-orbital tumor. The moderate increase of the thyroid body, its softness to the touch, its notable variations in volume at different times, its pulsation and the auscultatory murmurs which it generally furnishes, are diagnostic points distinguishing the enlargement in this affection from that of bronchocele. The persistent frequency of the heart's action is not less marked when either of the two phenomena just referred to is wanting than when both are present. The degree of frequency varies, but more or less increase is a constant symptom; and it is a symptom not likely to be present in either exophthalmia or in goitre unassociated with Graves' disease.
Aside from the symptomatic triad, the clinical history offers in different cases considerable diversity. The diverse inconstant symptoms as they occur in other pathological conditions are without diagnostic significance. A large proportion are incident to the anæmia so often associated with the affection under consideration.
PATHOLOGY AND ETIOLOGY.—Inasmuch as the persistent frequency of the heart's action is the first event in the order of time, the thyroid enlargement and the protuberance of the eyeballs being epiphenomena, it seemed a rational supposition that the latter events were dependent on the cardiac disorder. This view was held by Graves and his colleague, Stokes. A supposition much more rational is that the three events are united by a common causation. Anæmia has been supposed to be the causative condition. This supposition is disproved by the fact that anæmia does not exist in all cases. Moreover, anæmia is a pathological condition of frequent occurrence, whereas the affection under consideration is extremely rare. It is, however, very probable that anæmia may play an important auxiliary part in the causation, as it does in all the neuroses. With the knowledge of the sympathetic and vaso-motor nerves which has been acquired since the date of Graves' discovery, the pathology seems clearly to involve these components of the nervous system. This pathological view is perhaps generally held at the present time. But to interpret all the phenomena satisfactorily by reference to the known functions of these nerves is not easy. Vaso-motor paresis will account for the dilatation of the vessels, which is an important anatomical element in the enlargement of the thyroid body and the exophthalmia. On the other hand, acceleration of the heart's action is not an effect of paresis, but of excitation. To account for this incongruity there have been different hypotheses, which it does not fall within the scope of this article to discuss. Some autopsies have shown anatomical changes in the cervical sympathetic and its ganglia, but in others no morbid appearances have been found. Whether the pathology involves peripheral nerves alone or a central morbid condition in the spinal cord or the medulla oblongata is an undecided question. For facts and arguments bearing on the different points of inquiry relating to the pathological seat and character of the affection the reader is referred to other works.9 I will only add that in view of the fact of the exophthalmia and the goitre being, in the vast majority of cases, bilateral, it seems rational to suppose the pathological nervous condition to be central rather than peripheral. This is assuming that the three cardinal events involve a common causative condition, and not that the exophthalmia and goitre are dependent on the cardiac disorder. The termination in a certain proportion of cases in recovery goes to show that the affection does not necessarily involve structural lesions, and hence that it is properly included among the neuroses. The constancy and prominence of the disordered action of the heart render it proper to consider the affection in connection with the neuroses of that organ.
9 For a résumé, vide article by Eulenburg in Ziemssen's Cyclopædia, vol. xiv.
In the etiology of Graves' disease sex and age have a decided influence. In very much the larger proportion of cases the patients are women. The proportion of 2 to 1, which is stated by some writers, is not sufficiently large. Out of 20 or more cases which have fallen under my observation, in 1 only was the patient of the male sex. The disease is extremely rare under puberty and after middle age. Between these extremes of age there is no special predilection of the disease for any particular period of life.
Of causes which are independent of sex and age we have no positive knowledge. In particular cases the disease has been attributed to traumatic causes, to fright or other kinds of mental excitement, to sexual excess, etc. The evidence of a causative relation in these cases is simply a post-hoc connection which obtains in but a single instance or at most in a few instances. Etiological speculations, in the absence of ascertained facts, are, to say the least, useless, and it is the most politic as well as the fairest statement to say that in the present state of our knowledge we have no adequate data for determining the causation of the affection.
PROGNOSIS.—Graves' disease has no direct fatal tendency. It may not interfere with fair health for a long period. It diminishes the ability to tolerate other diseases, and in this way indirectly it threatens life. If it supervene upon organic disease of the heart, the gravity of the latter is thereby increased and its progress hastened. It induces, as a result of long-persistent increased activity of the action of the heart, enlargement of this organ. Sooner or later, if the disease continue, dilatation predominates over hypertrophy of the heart, and then occur the evils incidental to the inability of this organ to carry on the circulation adequately. Want of breath on exercise, and at length constant dyspnoea, become sources of suffering. Generally, dropsy finally ensues, and thus, indirectly, the affection leads to a fatal result. In most cases, however, death is caused by some intercurrent malady before the effect upon the heart is sufficient to occasion grave symptoms. Aside from the effect upon the heart, the affection does not seem to involve an intrinsic tendency to any particular complication.
The affection tends to long continuance. I have not met with an instance of its rapid development and its disappearance after a brief duration. Instances of complete recovery are rare; that is, the exophthalmia and the goitre do not disappear entirely, and the action of the heart does not become perfectly normal. A close approximation to complete recovery is not very infrequent, and in some instances all traces of the affection disappear.
The cases offering most in the way of a favorable prognosis are those in which there is not great acceleration of the action of the heart, this organ being free from organic disease, and those in which, exclusive of the affection under consideration, there are no marked unhealthful conditions. Impaired appetite, lack of digestive power, defective nutrition, and persistent anæmia are unfavorable prognostics. Any important antecedent disease affects of course the prognosis unfavorably.
TREATMENT.—From what has been stated in relation to the etiology of Graves' disease, it follows that there are no known special causative indications in the treatment. It is, however, a rational consideration that anything in the habits and surroundings of patients which is prejudicial to health has perhaps some agency either in causing or in maintaining the affection. It is therefore an important part of the treatment to remove all causes of ill-health which can be ascertained. The treatment, in this point of view, will embrace injunctions respecting mental occupations and excitement, a proper proportion of time devoted to out-of-door life, an adequate diet, avoidance of dietetic excesses, moderation in the use of alcohol, the disuse of tobacco, the regulation of sexual indulgence, etc. Without going farther into details, the object, in general terms, is to place the patient under the best attainable hygienic conditions.
Any disorders which coexist may possibly be involved, if not in the causation, in the persistence of the affection. They claim, therefore, appropriate treatment. Diminution of appetite and difficulties relating to digestion are to be treated by measures which must vary according to the circumstances in each case, and which need not be here considered. Uterine troubles are to be removed. These have been supposed to stand in a special causative relation to the affection. The anæmic condition which is so frequently associated (in addition to the removal of its causes, if these be ascertained and if they be removable) calls for the long-continued use of chalybeate preparations in conjunction with dietetic and regiminal treatment. In a case under my observation in which recovery took place the patient took two grains of reduced iron three times daily for three years. It is generally advisable to change from time to time the preparation of iron, partly for the moral effect of giving a new remedy in order to secure perseverance on the part of the patient, and in part because, irrespective of this effect, changes seem to be of use. The prevalent idea that iron is not well tolerated is to be overcome by assurances, argument, and, if necessary, by stratagem. It is certain that in most, if not all, instances this idea is a delusion. The anæmia in this affection, as in other pathological connections, is only to be overcome by the long-continued, uninterrupted employment of chalybeates conjoined with the other measures of treatment. This should be clearly stated to patients in order to forestall discouragement and neglect of the treatment advised.
Hydropathic packing and the needle-bath have been highly recommended. A patient of mine who has recovered apparently derived benefit from daily sea-bathing. The propriety of these measures is to be determined by the glow and feeling of invigoration to which they give rise if they be useful. Should these effects not follow, daily sponging of the body with cold or tepid water, to which may be added sea-salt or alcohol, may be substituted. Mental diversion is an important hygienic measure. The patient should be urged to conquer the feeling of mortification which prevents social enjoyments and disposes to brooding over the malady.
The enlargement of the thyroid body naturally suggests the employment of iodine. This local affection, however, is very different from bronchocele or goitre occurring independently of Graves' disease. Experience shows that iodine employed either topically or for its constitutional effect is useless if not injurious. Many years ago a case was related to me by a non-medical friend in which thyroid enlargement had been treated by the application of iodine. Remarkable prominence of the eyes soon followed, which was attributed to the iodine, and the physician fell under censure which, as I suspect, he was not prepared to meet by an acquaintance with Graves' disease. If the thyroid enlargement be sufficient to occasion tracheal obstruction or give rise to great deformity, the injection into the gland of a solution of ergotin may be resorted to. William Pepper has effected a complete reduction of the thyroid enlargement by this measure, in addition to ergot given internally. He employed a solution of ninety-six grains of ergotin to an ounce of distilled water, of which from six to ten minims were injected weekly by means of a needle introduced from half an inch to an inch in depth.
For the relief of the exophthalmia, gentle compression upon the eyes by a compress and bandage during sleep has been recommended. Aside from this, the indications for local treatment relate to the inflammation which is liable to be produced by insufficient covering of the eyeballs by the eyelids and by the impaired consensual movements of the latter with the former. The patient should, as far as practicable, abstain from reading, writing, and other uses of the eyes which involve strain.
Insomnia and general nervous irritability may call for palliative treatment. Opiates should if possible be withheld, owing to their effect upon appetite and digestion, and also on account of the risk of forming the opium habit. Other hypnotics and nervines are to be preferred, but it is best to be chary in the use of these. The bromides are perhaps the least objectionable of the remedies given to tranquillize the nervous system and promote sleep, but their prolonged use is detrimental.
The most important part of the remedial treatment relates to the accelerated action of the heart. Cardiac sedatives are rationally indicated, and experience confirms their usefulness. All writers recommend digitalis in order to diminish the frequency of the heart's action. A difficulty pertaining to this drug is its liability to disturb the stomach, and the consequent necessity for discontinuing its use. It is proper to give it a fair trial. In my experience aconite has proved more satisfactory. In a case already referred to two grains of reduced iron and one minim of the tincture of aconite constituted the medicinal treatment. These remedies, without any increase of dose, were continued for three years. At the end of this period the patient was in excellent health and had gained in weight forty pounds; slight exophthalmia and goitre only remained. In another case the treatment consisted exclusively of the tincture of aconite in doses gradually increased to seven minims three times daily. Chalybeates were not given in this case, because the patient was not anæmic. The remedy was continued most of the time for two years. The recovery is complete except that the heart is irritable and moderate prominence of the eyeballs remains. The treatment has been discontinued in this case for the past two years. Of veratrum and gelsemium as cardiac sedatives, which have been recommended in this affection, I have no practical knowledge. In paroxysms of unusual violence of the heart's action German writers recommend the application of cold to the præcordia by means of the ice-bag.
Galvanization of the sympathetic is strongly advocated by German writers—namely, Eulenburg, Dusch, Guttmann, Von Chvostok, Meyer, Leube—and in this country by Bartholow and others, as not only useful, but sometimes effecting a cure. The following extract from a treatise by Bartholow embraces rules for the employment of this therapeutic agent: "Recent cases treated efficiently by galvanism are relieved permanently or their course and progress much modified. During exacerbations, which constitute a prominent feature of the clinical history, the passage of a sufficient galvanic current through the pneumogastric immediately lessens the cardiac excitement. In the treatment for curative results a mild current is held to be most efficient (Chvostok). An electrode—the anode—is placed in the angle behind the jaw, and the cathode on the epigastrium, and a stabile current is allowed to flow for three to five minutes. The cervical spine should also be galvanized. It may be included in a circuit by placing the anode over the vertebræ in turn whilst the cathode rests on the epigastrium. Stabile may be varied by labile applications. The faradic current may be used successfully. An instance of this kind has come under my notice. The first published cases illustrating the curative value of galvanism were those of Chvostok (1871), who followed with a series of examples the next year, when Meyer also reported several cases. In 1874, I read a paper before the medical section of the American Medical Association advocating this plan of treatment, and illustrated its advantages by the details of five cases. In 1878, Vizioli, in a paper on electropathy, amongst others narrated several cases of Basedow's disease cured. In making the claim for the curative power for electricity the reader should understand that uncomplicated cases only are referred to."10 Rosenthal gives the following directions: "The ascending stabile galvanic current, from one to ten elements, is passed through the cervical sympathetic (the anode in the mastoid fossa and the cathode upon the upper cervical ganglion) for eight to ten minutes at a time. The current is also directed transversely across the thyroid tumor, or an ascending current may be applied to the cervical and upper dorsal vertebræ."11 Guttmann states that temporary reduction of the frequency of the heart's action is first produced, but by persisting in the electrical treatment the reduction becomes permanent, together with progressive improvement as regards the exophthalmia and the thyroid enlargement.12
10 Medical Electricity, by Roberts Bartholow, M.D., LL.D., etc., Philadelphia, 1881.
11 Clinical Treatise on the Diseases of the Nervous System, by M. Rosenthal, translated by L. Putzel, M.D., New York, 1878.
12 Vide article entitled "Basedowsche Krankheit," in Real-Encyclopedie, Wien and Leipzig, 1880.