Under this line of treatment it may be possible to cure the majority of cases of gonorrhea in from two to five or six weeks. This by no means indicates that the lesion is actually cured, for trifling evidences, such as adhesion of the lips of the meatus, with the retention of a drop or so of mucopus, and the presence in the urine of the so-called “clap threads,” i. e., threads of flocculent material that consist of mucus and epithelial debris loaded with bacteria, will for a long time be noted. These appearances indicate that there are still areas along the urinary tract which are infected, and are sources of possible danger.
The vesiculitis which often follows deep urethritis, as shown by the enlargement of the vesicles, detected by rectal examination, requires physiological rest, hot sitz baths, hot enemas, and opiates, the latter usually by suppository. After a short time the vesicles should be “milked” with a finger in the rectum, gentle pressure being made toward the prostate in the direction of their outlet. This will frequently cause an outflow into the urethra of pus and debris and give great relief. Should the infection persist and the above manipulation prove insufficient, the vesicles may be opened through the rectum, washed out, and packed with gauze.
CHRONIC GONORRHEA, OR GLEET.
Gleet is the name given to gonorrhea which persists, being only partly influenced by treatment, and which has extended over an arbitrary period placed usually at six weeks to two months. Strictly speaking the term gleet should be restricted to cases where there is a mucopurulent discharge from the meatus, often complicated by formation of strictures in the anterior urethra; on the other hand, a chronic gonorrhea may for a long time persist in the deep urethra and the glands and ducts adjoining, whence will issue a discharge which appears anteriorly, but, nevertheless, comes from the depths of the genito-urinary tract.
It is possible to have a chronic gonorrhea with little or no true gleet, the infection being latent, but nevertheless persisting. In gleet the discharge varies from a thin watery flow to one which is profuse and purulent, most noticeable in the morning on rising, when the meatus may be occluded by adhesion of the surfaces and there appears the so-called “morning drop.” Careful investigation of the urethra will generally disclose at least some constriction, with tender areas along the anterior urethra. To successfully treat the disease these areas and constrictions should be determined and suitably medicated. For this purpose two instruments especially are necessary—the bulbous bougie, for which a sound of the same size is an unsatisfactory substitute, and the endoscope, through which the lesions may be not only viewed but suitably treated.
The peculiar discharge comes from a lesion of one of the following varieties—either from isolated areas of inflamed mucous membrane with underlying exudate, from follicles and vesicles which fail to completely empty themselves, or from preëxisting strictures. The endoscope will easily reveal the first and second of these; the bulbous bougie the first and third, while further examination by the rectum may be necessary to decide in regard to the seminal vesicles.
Fig. 28
Bulbous sound.
The bulbous bougie is an instrument of great importance in urethral work. It should be carefully sterilized before introduction, and the urethra should be cleansed before its use. The instrument should be gently passed into the urethra; its course will be obstructed by any constriction which will give rise to stricture of smaller caliber than the bougie itself, while the discomfort or pain which it will excite as it passes over a tender or ulcerated area will be significant. The urethra is most distensible at its bulbous portion, while its caliber varies in different individuals, ranging ordinarily from 30 to 35 of the French scale, while the urethral diameter is about four-tenths of the circumference of the penis. We owe more to the studies of Otis in this matter than to any other investigator. He also showed that the size of the meatal opening is not a criterion as to the size of the urethra; that the contracted meatus often produced a certain degree of reflex and spasmodic stricture behind it, and that when the meatus is too small to permit the introduction of such an instrument as the urethra should take it should be enlarged, the operation for its enlargement being known as meatotomy, which may be easily effected with a blunt bistoury under the local use of cocaine. The meatus having been enlarged to suitable size, any consistent and organic constriction which then prevents the passage of the bougie should be considered a stricture and treated accordingly. Such a constriction may be of recent origin, when it will be found easily dilatable, or it may be old, resillient, and tough. Otis also devised an instrument known as the urethrometer, which is of value in the accurate estimation but not necessary in the treatment of many cases.