To sum up, on statistical, and more cogently, general clinical and pathological grounds, my own conclusions are that—
(1) Gout is always an hereditary disease.
(2) The factors currently regarded as predisposing agencies are in reality merely determining agents, not the cause of gout, but the occasion of its appearance.
(3) In the absence of an hereditary taint, these same are powerless to evoke the specific manifestations of true “gouty” inflammation as estimated by associated uratic deposition.
Bodily Conformation and Individual Temperament.—Of the hereditary character of gout no doubt remains, but as to the influence of physical build and temperament no such certainty prevails. Said Cullen, “Gout attacks especially men of robust and large bodies, men of large heads, of full and corpulent habit, and men whose skins are covered with a thicker rete mucosum, which gives a coarser surface.” Doubtless, in its more sthenic form, gout affects persons like Falstaff, of sanguine temperament and corpulent habit. But its milder or more asthenic manifestations occur often in men like Cassius, of lean and nervous type.[5]
Of objective stigmata, I know of none, save tophi, that can be truly regarded as pathognomonic of the outward semblance of the “gouty.” The skin of the face may be coarse, unctuous, and studded with ramifying venules. Such appearances, though not always, betray the tippler. Indeed, such stigmata as these are only of value as indicating the habits of the individual, favourable or not, to the development of gout.
Again, it has become a tradition with us that gout produces characteristic teeth. The mere fact that they are “ground down” so as to display the dentine in section is held as evidence of a “gouty” diathesis, or of lithæmia. The teeth of the gouty, it is true, often appear long and square-topped; but the gouty, no more than others, are immune from early recession of the gums. Again, we must recollect that there are several causes which may lead to the teeth being worn down more quickly than normally. Thus the formation of the jaw may be such that the upper and lower incisors meet edge to edge instead of overlapping. This so-called “edge to edge bite” subjects the incisors to marked attrition. Also we must recall that these effects may be aggravated by the nature of the diet. All of us are familiar with the fact that in old horses the teeth are ground down to the gums. The same also is observed in races condemned to live on coarsely prepared flour and hard vegetable food.
In conclusion, having regard to the marked frequency with which disorders leading to early recession of the gums are met with in the “gouty,” and the ease with which the early attrition of the teeth is explicable on tangible mechanical reasons, I am inclined to refer such changes to their combined agency, rather than to the nebulous “gouty” diathesis.
Again, despite Duckworth’s assertion that “the gouty throat is like no other,” I am convinced that it presents no specific appearances. Nor have I been able to satisfy myself that striated and fluted nails of, it is usually affirmed, exceptionally brittle nature, are distinctive of gout any more than the premature whitening of the hair so frequently accredited to the subjects of this diathesis.
One point, however, I would emphasise is, the frequency with which potentially gouty persons suffer from local syncopes and asphyxias of the hands. They are precisely similar to those met with in rheumatoid or atrophic arthritis, certain cases of which, as we shall see later, have another affinity with gout, viz., retardation in the output of exogenous purin.