PRIMARY AND SECONDARY INFECTION.
The estimate of the relative, early or late infection of two organs or tissues may often be made with reasonable accuracy from the fact that the lesions in one organ are old, caseated, calcified or sclerosed, while those in the other organ are all recent, with vascular environment and almost devoid of caseation or other degenerative process. We cannot safely predicate our decision on the greater number of old lesions in one organ rather than another, as the disease may have advanced much more rapidly in the one tissue. Still less can we state with certainty that the disease has not entered by a given channel because no lesions are left to show the transit of the bacillus along its supposed course. We frequently find tuberculosis of the bronchial or mesenteric glands, when we can detect no lesion in the lung, nor intestine. The bacillus has been passed on without establishing any lasting lesion in transit.
It is often too confidently asserted that the infected dust inhaled, falls directly on the air cells and determines the extensive pulmonary tuberculosis that ensues. So, on the other hand, it is often too arrogantly assumed that tubercle bacilli ingested with food, must necessarily show their results mainly in the intestines, mesenteric glands and liver. That solid particles can find their way directly into the lungs, has long been demonstrated by the pulmonary anthracosis of the miner, and the deadly phthisis of the stone hewer and cutler. The experiments of Cornet, Tappeiner and others in producing pulmonary tuberculosis, by compelling the inhalation of infected spray, corroborate this experience very satisfactorily. Yet it does not follow that all of the offensive matter penetrated the air cells at once on the air inhaled. The heavy particles of steel, quartz and even of coal dust must be mainly arrested on the surface of the moist air passages, yet, under the irritation caused by their presence and the consequent arrest of the ciliary motion, they would slowly gravitate downward to the pulmonary cells. In the case of the inspired tubercular spray or dust, we must recognize the possibility of the approach of the bacillus to the lungs through the lymph and blood channels as well. The bacilli lodged in the pharynx, and, above all, in the tonsillar follicles, can readily enter the lymph vessels, and are finally poured into the lower end of the jugular vein, but a few inches from the right heart, by which they are instantly propelled into the lungs. If then the lung is the most receptive and least resistant organ, it may easily be that this is the first point where the bacillus can establish a strong and effective colony. Apart from this the colonization of the tonsillar follicles may determine a constant supply of fresh bacilli, which may gravitate down with the abundant mucus toward the lungs.
This tuberculous colonization of the tonsillar follicles is doubtless the main source of the infection of the pharyngeal lymph glands, which is so common in ox, pig and dog. It tends further to intestinal tuberculosis through the frequent swallowing of the products of the infected follicles. Then the infection of the pharynx and tonsils, whether established by inhalation or deglutition, may be the first step toward a secondary infection of the intestines.
Again the bowels can be infected by the frequent swallowing of the expectorations brought up from the diseased lungs or bronchia.
Conversely the lungs may be easily infected secondarily from preëxisting disease of the abdominal organs, and again primarily through the lymph channels. With tuberculosis of the cardia or liver the bacilli can follow the lymph vessels of the œsophagus or vena cava so as to reach the mediastinal glands, and from these glands in a state of disease they can easily pass into the adjacent pleural cavity and reach the lung. Or by following the mesenteric lymphatics they reach the thoracic duct and enjoy what is virtually for them a culture fluid, until discharged into the jugular, which, as already stated, is but a few inches from the right heart and lung.
Extension through the general blood stream usually takes place only when tubercles have already become numerous and extensive in a given region of the body, and its occurrence is the signal for a generalized tuberculosis.
The extension from the gastro-intestinal organs, pancreas and spleen may be considered as a partial exception. Here the infecting blood is not the general blood stream, but has to run the gauntlet of the liver capillaries by which the bacilli may be sifted out and delayed. This arrest subjects the liver to secondary tuberculosis in almost all cases of abdominal tuberculosis, and goes far to explain the extraordinary frequency of the disease in this organ. Ingestion tuberculosis almost necessarily leads to hepatic tuberculosis, and this notwithstanding that the primary lesion may have been very circumscribed.
The tuberculization of such a large vascular organ as the liver, however, paves the way for further extension, and if once extensively diseased, the early generalization of the infection is to be dreaded.