—Treatment of pyemia is in large degree unsatisfactory. That which used to be the terror of surgeons in the pre-antiseptic era is now, thanks to Lister and others, almost abolished. Pyemia is a rare disease in modern surgical practice. Its possibility should be borne constantly in mind, however, and the necessity for careful antiseptic or for a rigid aseptic technique is in large degree based upon fear of pyemic consequences.
When once established, the disease is to be treated on lines nearly similar to those laid down for septicemia, including resort to the ichthyol or silver ointments, and to intravenous infusion of silver solution. (See [p. 89].) Amputation or extirpation of the part from which infection has first proceeded may be of avail. Among the most successful measures for surgical treatment of this disease is to expose the infected area, open the involved veins, and either excise them or scrape them out and disinfect them. This treatment has been successful in cases of cranial infection following middle-ear disease, etc. (See chapter on [Cranial Surgery].)
Disinfection of the infected area and immersion in hot water should be practised. Metastatic abscesses should be opened and drained, and every accessible collection of pus evacuated, either by the knife or aspirator needle—e. g., in the liver.
The medicinal treatment is practically the same as in septicemia, while the surgeon’s mainstays are alcohol and strychnine. These, with cathartics and intestinal antiseptics, will practically sum up the drug treatment, the surgeon meantime not neglecting the matter of nutrition, crowding it in every assimilable form.
ERYSIPELAS.
Erysipelas is an acute infectious disease characterized by its tendency to involve the skin and cellular structures, to extend along the lymphatic vessels, to involve wounds and injuries under certain conditions, accompanied by more or less fever of septic type, leading frequently to septic disturbances of profoundest character, yet tending in the majority of instances to spontaneous recovery. It has been observed probably from prehistoric times, but has not found a proper description nor appreciation until perhaps within the past century. It occurs in so-called traumatic and idiopathic form—which latter means that the site of infection is not discovered—and also in a virulent and contagious type, which leads to the appearance of a number of cases over a large territory; it often appears in the epidemic form. On account of the reddening of the skin it goes by the name of the rose among the German laity. It may assume the type of an infectious dermatitis, subsiding without suppuration, or a similar lesion of exposed mucous membrane may be noted, or, occasionally, its virulence seeming greater, its lesions are met with in more deeply seated parts, accompanied by suppuration or even gangrene, and it is then called phlegmonous. In a small proportion of cases the infectious organism appears to be transported from one part of the body to another, and thus we have metastatic expressions of this disease. The most common examples of this are seen in erysipelatous meningitis after erysipelas of the face or scalp, and erysipelatous peritonitis after the disease has manifested itself on the truncal surface. It is of a type which makes itself almost interchangeable with puerperal fever; and when epidemics of erysipelas have involved certain states or areas, it has been noted also that nearly every obstetrical case developed puerperal septicemia.
Etiology.
—There is more than passing interest connected with this last statement. It is now definitely established that the infectious organism is a streptococcus which is allied to, if not identical with, the streptococcus pyogenes, the ordinary pyogenic organism of this form. This specific organism has been separated, studied, and its role assigned by Fehleisen, and the organism is frequently called Fehleisen’s coccus. Preserving always its morphological characteristics, it acts, as do many other pathogenic organisms, within wide limits in virulence. Cultivated from some cases, it scarcely seems infectious, while from others it is fatal.
Pathology.
—The disease manifests a tendency to travel via lymphatic routes. As long as it is confined to the skin and superficial tissues it has the appearance of an acute dermatitis. When it migrates deeper it generally leads to suppuration, another reason for believing that the streptococci of erysipelas and of pus production are the same. In the affected and infected area the minute lymphatics will be found crowded with the cocci, which are seen much less often in the small bloodvessels; also in the tissues beyond the apparently infected area they may be found dispersed less freely. The bacterial activity seems most active along the advancing border of the superficial lesion. Here the phenomena of hyperemia and phagocytosis are most active. Even in the vesicles that are characteristic of the disease the organisms may be found.