(1) The prevalence of filarial diseases is proportional to the prevalence of Mikrofilaria bancrofti in the blood. Thus in four villages examined by him he got the following figures:—
Village A | Village B | Village C | Village D | ||||||
| Mf. bancrofti | 12 | ·5 | per cent. | 25 | per cent. | 31 | per cent. | 33 | per cent. |
| Filarial diseases | 29 | " | 39 | " | 58 | " | 34 | " | |
| Total population | 168 | 114 | 425 | 222 | |||||
(2) Out of 257 people with Mf. bancrofti in the blood, 153 were suffering from filarial diseases, i.e., 59 per cent.
(3) Whereas of 672 people without Mf. bancrofti in the blood, only 263 were suffering from filarial diseases, i.e., 37·6 per cent.
(4) Again out of 416 people suffering from filarial disease, 153 showed Mf. bancrofti in their blood, i.e., 36·7 per cent.
It is generally assumed that all people suffering from filarial disease show at some (presumably early) stage larvæ in the blood; but we do not consider that this must necessarily be so. It appears to us quite possible that living adult filariæ may be present in the body, producing disease, without their larvæ appearing in the blood. The absence of larvæ from the blood in 63·3 per cent. of persons suffering from filarial disease is, however, generally explained otherwise. The adults which occur in enlarged glands, etc., get eventually destroyed by inflammatory reaction, so that larvæ are no longer being produced, while the enlarged gland, etc., which the adults have produced remains. This explanation assumes that the larvæ of the original worm die in the circulation or elsewhere, e.g., kidney, but we have no evidence as to the duration of life of larvæ in the human body; but also it assumes that a person cannot be reinfected with filaria, for otherwise there is no reason why the diseased should not be infected in the same proportion as the non-diseased. But assuming the explanation to be true, it would explain why a diseased population show larvæ in only about one-third of the cases. It must be borne in mind also that the figures are rather small.
Pathology.—In order to explain the effects which do or may be expected to occur from obstruction of lymphatics, it is necessary to have an accurate knowledge of the distribution and connections of lymphatic vessels (and glands) and the anastomoses of these vessels. We can only briefly summarize our knowledge here.
We should recall also that considerable destruction or obstruction of lymphatics or glands may occur without necessarily producing any lymphatic obstruction, at least, of a permanent nature, e.g., when a mass of lymphatic glands is destroyed by a bubo in the groin or, again, when a carcinomatous mass of glands is removed from the axilla. Again, to take the case of chyluria—where it is generally assumed that obstruction must occur higher up than the point at which the intestinal lacteals enter the juxta-aortic glands—this disease may occur, e.g., in temperate regions, quite apart from such obstruction. It is true that some of these cases of chyluria are not cases of chyle in the urine, but, as little or no fat is present, lymphuria. These do not require the above assumption, but seeing that true chyluria may apparently occur without such obstruction, we should be cautious about explaining this and other symptoms on the basis of obstructions which theory may demand, for only too often there are no post-mortem facts at our disposal.
Lymphangitis: What this is due to is unknown. There is no actual evidence of the occurrence of adults in the inflamed vessel. Complete disappearance, not to reappear, of (non-periodic) mikrofilariæ from the blood has been shown by Bahr and others to occur within twenty-four hours after an attack of lymphangitis, orchitis adenitis or simply a high temperature. This mysterious phenomenon requires explanation. If the mikrofilariæ were being killed by the attack, their dead bodies should still be found in the blood; or if the adults were being killed, for all we know to the contrary, the larvæ might well survive. We consider there is no evidence that either are affected, but that for some reason, as little understood as in periodicity, the larvæ now remain in the organs.
Abscess: In Fiji, by Bahr, they have been found in the substance of various muscles, e.g., quadriceps extensor, latissimus dorsi, serratus magnus, in the popliteal space, groin, axilla, and over the internal condyle of the humerus, and in the upper extremity they are frequently infected with cocci. They not infrequently contain fragments of dead adult filariæ. Their mode of origin is not clear. They form nearly 30 per cent. of cases of filariasis in Fiji. Of 95 cases, 41 showed mikrofilariæ in blood, 54 did not.