The complex nature of the infection appears at times to overcome the vital resistance more effectively than will the presence of even a potent microbe alone. Some of the worst cases follow on a wound, the seat of complex infection, and even saprophytes are to be dreaded in this connection. This may operate in various ways, either by mutual combinations or decompositions of the toxic products of associated germs producing more deleterious products, or by the individual action of one ptomain or toxin on leucocytes, hæmatoblasts, sera, or tissue, laying it more open to the attacks of those of another microbe which by itself would have been comparatively harmless.

Koch’s experiments showed that the attack is violent in ratio with the size of the dose: one-thousandth part of a drop of pyæmic blood was harmless to the rabbit, while one tenth of a drop killed in one hundred and twenty-five hours, and a syringe full in forty hours.

In ordinary cases of pyæmia the occurrence of internal phlebitis or arteritis with the inevitable thrombosis is an important step in causation. Any inflammation of the inner coat of the vessel leads promptly to the formation of a coagulation of the contained blood, and blocking of the lumen. Beginning on the diseased or abraded surface, the clot forms backward along the line from which the blood normally comes (proximal in the arteries; distal, in the veins), until it reaches the next considerable colateral branch. The clot is firmly adherent to the intima except at the free end, which is conical and projects into the blood current.

If small portions are detached from the thrombus and washed on in the blood stream they become arrested when they reach a vessel too small to admit them, it may be a smaller artery, or it may be a capillary, and always in the line of the circulation,—from the systemic circulation to the lungs, or from the lungs to the system at large. This is embolism. Wherever arrested, the contact of the leucocytes and hæmatoblasts with the inner coat of the vessel, leads to metabolic changes and firm adhesion, and the pus microbes in the clot determine suppuration and abscess.

Eberth and Schimmelbusch have shown that the hæmatoblasts, even more than the other blood elements, when acted on by the pus microbes become viscous and stick not only to each other, but to any floating body, and to the inner serous coat of the vessel, particularly when the latter has been abraded or injured. This clumping together of the hæmatoblasts forms white clots which block the smaller vessels, but in the viscous condition they further the coagulation of the fibrine, and again when they come in contact with the intima, instead of passing through, or moving on, they remain adherent and start the formation of thrombi. This is above all common in given tissues, and the medulla of bone has in this respect a bad preëminence, so that acute suppurative osteomyelitis, is a familiar lesion and is liable to become chronic, and determine distant abscesses and general infection long after.

The thrombus thus formed is an infective coagulum, tending to constant encrease, as the clot is a favorable culture-field for the microbes, and the tendency is to coagulate more and more of the adjacent blood. It tends further to disintegration, as the action of the microbes and their toxins on the leucocytes, transforms these into pus cells, inducing softening of the mass, and the washing on of individual infective pus cells and minute portions of the clot to form infective centres and abscesses at distant parts.

If the pathogenesis of the invading microbe is weak and the resistance of the leucocytes potent, such clots may remain circumscribed or may even be absorbed, but in the opposite conditions with potent and numerous microbes and abundant and effective toxins, the disposition is not only to a continuance of infection, but to an acute febrile pyæmia.

Pyæmia does not supervene at once upon a trauma as may septicæmia, but only after a variable number of days, (3 to 8), a peculiarity which is explained by the temporary protection of the clot. By the constant accretions on its exterior, of the new layers of hæmatoblasts and fibrin, the microbes are at first imprisoned, and it is only when softening has taken place, or when the coagulum has extended into the free flowing current passing into a colateral trunk, that the infection is liable to be washed on in dangerous amount.

The mere presence of pus microbes or their toxins in the blood, does not determine pyæmia: a modification of the intima of the vessels leading to local infections with thrombosis or embolism and abscess is an essential condition. This lesion of the vessels may be a trauma, as from bruise, puncture, operation, ligature, or it may be the extension of a disease process as in arteritis, phlebitis, atheroma, the growth of a tumor from adjacent tissues, or parasitism. The seat of the secondary abscess depends primarily on the location of the original suppurating centre. As such centres are most commonly in the systemic circulation (osteomyelitis, omphalitis, wounds, traumas) the lungs are most commonly attacked, the pulmonary capillaries acting as a sieve and arresting the floating infective coagula. When the primary infection comes from the chylo-poietic viscera, the liver is likely to show the first crop of secondary abscesses. When, on the other hand, the primary abscess is in the lungs, the great flow of blood through the kidney renders it especially subject to secondary suppurating foci, though these may form in any part of the body.

Lesions. Pyæmia may result from a wound or abscess in connection with which will usually be found a vein containing a thrombus more or less softened or liquefied. If from a deep seated injury or from osteomyelitis, the same condition is met with. The thrombus and circulating blood furnish abundance of the infective microbes, and at distant points, in the complimentary circulation, most commonly in the lungs the arteries are found to be the seats of embolism from arrested clots. The arrest always takes place where the vessels are diminished by bifurcation, or the giving off of a considerable colateral trunk, and the appearances will depend on the duration of the embolism. If quite recent, a wedge-shaped mass of tissue supplied by the vessel is ischæmic and pale, its blood passing on into the veins without further arterial supply; if later, this tissue forms an infarct being gorged with deep red or black blood which has filtered in from adjacent anostomosing capillaries and distended those of the exsanguine area. This area becomes of a deep red or black color, consolidated by an exudate of lymph, and rapidly invaded by suppuration. The microbes determine suppuration and softening, first in the clot and intima, and next in the outer coats of the vessel and the surrounding exudate, so that an abscess of variable size may result. Abscesses are usually smaller and more numerous in the acute forms of the disease, and larger and less numerous in the more chronic.