This is no theoretical quibble. In the Royal Mineral Water Hospital, Bath, one constantly meets with cases in which the very elect would be puzzled as to whether they should be placed in the category of gouty or in that of infective arthritis. I have at present in my wards a middle-aged man, stout of body, rubicund of face, with well-marked auricular tophi and widespread arthritis. There are no tophi round his joints. On X-ray examination his phalanges show Bruce’s nodes, and his phalangeal joints show changes indistinguishable from those constantly met with in infective arthritides occurring in non-gouty subjects.

Indeed, this overlapping may proceed still further, the gouty and the infective characters neighbouring in such proximity as to suggest actual fusion, a community of origin. What else in truth can be the inference, when one meets with examples in which the peri-articular tissues are the seat of demonstrable uratic deposits, while the X-ray changes within the joint proper, the bone and cartilage, are typically those met with in infective arthritis?

Now, who will deny that if tophi were absent in such a case we should without hesitation hold the case to be one of infective arthritis? My own contention is that even in the presence of tophi the same appellation is indicated. In other words, I submit that acute gouty polyarthritis is itself but a form of infective arthritis which derives its specific character from the associated uratic deposits.

As to differentiation of the latter from these cryptic infective arthritides, this will rest mainly on—

(1) The presence of tophi;

(2) A history of previous attacks in the great toe;

(3) A swift response to colchicum.

In addition, acute gouty polyarthritis is confined to middle-aged males, while no period of life is immune from infective arthritis, and both sexes are equally liable.

Again, acute gouty polyarthritis may be afebrile. Pyrexia when present is moderate in grade, its curve undulating as the paroxysms rise and wane. In infective arthritis the temperature curve is irregular and erratic.

Lastly, the uric acid output in acute gouty polyarthritis drops a day or two before the paroxysm, rises markedly after its inception, then sinks again. Also we may add that occasionally glycosuria or albuminuria is present.