Microscopically, one striking feature was the erosion of the mucosa, with hemorrhages most marked along the line of rupture but occurring elsewhere in the subjacent tissues. This condition was found in all the sections studied. Another feature was the lack of inflammatory exudate and the very slight attempt to repair the injury, only a very rare polymorphonuclear cell and fibroblast being seen. Sections of the peritoneum showed only a patchy deposit of fibrin with a rare polymorphonuclear cell.

C. MISCELLANEOUS LESIONS

In this series of cases lesions elsewhere in the body are not sufficiently constant or important to merit emphasis.[[13]] Hemorrhages have been found occasionally in other structures, especially the testes. The usual cloudy swelling of the parenchymatous organs is, of course, marked, and in many cases has been associated with actual cellular necrosis both in the liver and the kidney. Such necroses are usually focal, and occasionally mitotic figures in the cells of the renal convoluted tubules or in the liver may be a similar expression of previous damage. Acute nephritis was not found in our series.[[14]] The swollen liver cells often show the bile canaliculi clearly, and this appearance may be associated with a variable degree of jaundice which has been found frequently, although the explanation of the jaundice is, in all probability, an hemolysis of the red cells caused by the infecting microorganisms. The only other lesion encountered and of sufficient importance to mention, has been the congestion of the membranes of the brain and a swelling of the cerebral substance, in all probability dependent upon edema. One example of purulent meningitis was encountered.[[15]] The dilatation of the right side of the heart with a greater or lesser degree of splanchnic engorgement is such a common feature in acute pulmonary diseases that it is hardly worthy of detailed discussion.

FIG. XXXVI. AUTOPSY NO. 133. A SMALL ABSCESS IN AN EDEMATOUS BAND OF INTERLOBULAR CONNECTIVE TISSUE.

FIG. XXXVII. AUTOPSY NO. 114. ILLUSTRATES AN UNUSUAL ANATOMICAL PICTURE IN INFLUENZA—AN EXTENSIVE FIBRINOPURULENT PLEURISY. THE BRONCHIAL LYMPH GLANDS ARE PROMINENT ON ACCOUNT OF THE HEMORRHAGIC INFLAMMATORY PROCESS WHICH HAS INVOLVED THEM.

A striking feature of influenza is the occurrence of abortion in cases complicated by pregnancy. Of the ninety-five cases included in this report, twenty-seven were women of whom three died undelivered (three months, six months, term), three had suffered complete abortion (one, three months, and two, six months), and one (six months) was in process of abortion. It is not our purpose to discuss the relation between pregnancy and this complication. Here it is desirable simply to point out that, although in the non-complicated cases of influenza, pregnancy does not influence the course of the disease, if pneumonia supervenes, the mortality for the mother, as well as for the child, is definitely increased (57, 148, 164).

A specific placental lesion would be difficult, indeed, to establish since hemorrhage is a part of the normal process of placental separation. However, the hemorrhagic lesion of influenza seems a plausible explanation for the frequency of abortions in this disease.

Summary.