He then proceeds to inquire as to the nature of the toxic principles in the blood, and the factors that influence their passage thence into the tissues. In connection with these queries he emphasises the necessity of envisaging the all-important part played by the alimentary canal, holding that herein doubtless resides the clue to the solution of the problem.
Post-mortem examination of the fowl revealed marked catarrh of ileum, duodenum and large intestine, while the pancreatic duct was filled with catarrhal products. The congested spleen, apart from proliferation of its endothelial elements, exhibited a marked increase in the number of granular leucocytes in the capillaries and sinuses as compared with the features of the control sections, which, as Chalmers Watson observes, is the characteristic reaction of this organ to invasion by bacteria or their products. The kidneys on examination revealed here and there uratic deposits surrounded by inflammatory tissue. The relationship of these to the inter-lobular arteries was such as to suggest an infection by the blood stream.
The collecting tubules in the deeper part of the cortex and medulla were markedly dilated and choked with granular leucocytes. Sections of the organs were examined bacteriologically by Muir, the necrosed areas revealing the presence of “rod-like bodies of the size of large bacilli massed together in dense clusters; the appearance suggested that these rods were either degenerated cell products of an unusual character, degenerated bacteria, or crystalline in nature.” Examination of the same by polariscope by Marshall disposed of the possibility that they were crystalline. Finally it was thought that the appearances generally favoured the view that the rods in question were bacteria which had lost their reaction to bacterial stains owing to bacteriolytic or other changes.
As to the inference that the defunct fowl fell a victim to acute gout, Watson based it on the existence of the uratic deposits in the tissues, the changes in the synovia, the widespread thromboses, and the renal necroses. As to the other lesions, the chief interest centres in those located in the intestine, pancreas and kidney. The state of the pancreatic duct raises the question as to whether it points to any connection between these changes and the common occurrence of glycosuria in gouty subjects. The alteration in the leucocytes merits notice in that similar changes were found by Watson in the blood in acute gouty polyarthritis, the same, moreover, being subsequently confirmed by Bain.
Chalmers Watson’s final conclusion was that “the clinical features of gout—regular or irregular, acute or chronic—are more adequately explained by the light of our present knowledge of infections, relapses, and immunity than by any other theory. The distinctive feature of this infection in gout is that the toxin or toxins have a special property of disturbing nitrogenous metabolism in a manner favourable to the deposit of uric acid in certain tissues.”
Suggestion of a Specific Infection
It will have been noted that, despite the growing number of adherents to the infective theory, no attempt had been made to saddle any particular organism with the responsibility of initiating gout. But in 1905 Trautner, holding mucous colitis to be one of the initial manifestations of gout, affirmed his belief that the bacillus coli communis was the responsible microbic agent.
He claimed that this particular organism, during its passage through the system, gives rise to a reducing agent which is subsequently transmuted into xanthin and uric acid. This is, of course, but a variant of Gore’s original view that the toxin of gout is a product of certain bacteria normally present in the intestine, but which under certain conditions take on a pathogenic action.
The microbic theory fast gained ground. Thus Luff, who in the first edition of his work advocated the renal origin of gout, subsequently renounced the same in favour of its infective origin. To sum up, the opinion generally was that it was more than probable that gastro-intestinal derangements, with their altered secretions, exert an influence on the intestinal flora with resultant formation of toxins, and that these same, acting chiefly on the liver, put in motion those obliquities of metabolism which eventuate in gout.
Sikes, however, in 1907, discussing the rôle of gastro-intestinal disorders, expressed a doubt as to whether the same are primarily or secondarily related “to the actual chemical processes at the base of the disease.”