Influenza sometimes, Murchison says, when epidemic, closely simulates typhoid fever, but as the two diseases occur in this country the resemblance between them is not often sufficiently strong to lead the careful observer astray. In both there are fever, prostration, sleeplessness, delirium and sweating, and occasionally deafness, diarrhoea, epistaxis, and a dry red tongue; but the onset of the attack in the former is more abrupt, its duration shorter, and subsequent convalescence more rapid than in typhoid fever. The prostration, too, is more decided in proportion to the degree of fever present. Coryza and bronchial catarrh are much more marked symptoms in the former than in the latter, while hyperæsthesia of the surface, which is present in almost every case of influenza, is only rarely met with in typhoid fever.
Remittent and typhoid fevers often prevail together in the malarious districts of this country, and, as they present many points of resemblance, they are sometimes with difficulty distinguished from each other. They both may begin with nausea and vomiting; abdominal and cerebral symptoms are common to both, and so is enlargement of the spleen. The typhoid state may supervene in either, and in both the febrile movement is remittent in character. In remittent fever, however, the remissions are more marked, and are usually accompanied with more profuse sweating, than in typhoid fever. Jaundice and other symptoms of hepatic derangement are also more common, and the pains in the back and limbs are more frequent and more severe. The effect, too, of quinine in producing a permanent reduction of the temperature, is generally more decided. On the other hand, the rose-colored eruption of typhoid fever is never present in pure remittent fever. Occasionally, in cases of the variety of typhoid fever known as typho-malarial fever, the symptoms of the latter may be so prominent as entirely to mask those of the former. In such cases the discovery of a few rose-colored spots somewhere on the surface will clearly reveal the true nature of the disease.
Epidemic cerebro-spinal meningitis differs from typhoid fever by its more abrupt invasion, by the retraction of the head which rapidly supervenes, and by the appearance a short time afterward upon different parts of the body of petechiæ, which are not likely, even at first, to be mistaken for the rose-colored spots of typhoid fever. The fever has, moreover, no constant character, but is remarkable, on the contrary, for its great irregularity. The duration of the disease is in fatal cases much shorter, death taking place not infrequently within the first week, and occasionally as early as the second or third day. On the other hand, the duration in cases which recover may be even longer than in typhoid fever.
Simple continued fever may readily be mistaken in the beginning for typhoid fever, especially in those cases complicated by diarrhoea, but, as a general rule, the different character of the febrile movement, its more abrupt commencement and termination, and its shorter duration, together with the absence of the rose-colored eruption, will usually serve to distinguish it.
The eruptive fevers are always readily distinguishable at the period of invasion from typhoid fever, and the mistake of confounding them with the latter disease may generally be avoided by a close study of the character of the pyrexia. In the eruptive fevers the temperature rises abruptly, frequently attaining its maximum in the course of twenty-four hours, and sometimes in very much less time. There are also in all of them early symptoms which indicate pretty clearly their true nature, as, for instance, the sore throat of scarlatina, the naso-pulmonary catarrh of measles, and the rachialgia of small-pox. The uncertainty, moreover, is of short duration, as the characteristic eruption appears in all of them before the fourth day.
Acute tuberculosis of the lungs is the condition which in my experience has been the most difficult to distinguish from typhoid fever. Indeed, in some cases which have come under my observation physicians of recognized skill as diagnosticians have been unable to make the discrimination until after the death of the patient. Muscular prostration, a dry brown tongue, delirium, stupor, bronchitic râles, dyspnoea, and even cyanosis, are symptoms frequently met with in both diseases, so that when the rose-colored eruption and enlargement of the spleen happen to be wanting in typhoid fever, or diarrhoea and tympany present in acute tuberculosis, as they may be, the distinction is often impossible. The diagnosis may, however, even in these cases, be sometimes made after a careful study of the temperature range, which in acute tuberculosis is irregular and rarely presents any resemblance to that which is typical of typhoid fever.
Acute tubercular meningitis has also many symptoms in common with typhoid fever, such as high fever, headache, vomiting, delirium, and stupor, but in the former disease the rose-colored eruption, epistaxis, enlargement of the spleen, and intestinal hemorrhage do not occur. Diarrhoea is also rare, and the abdomen, instead of being tympanitic, is flat, and in many cases even scaphoid. The headache, too, is much more acute than in typhoid fever, and is very apt to be associated with retraction of the head. Here, again, the frequent use of the thermometer will yield very important results in diagnosis, as the temperature range in tubercular meningitis is always irregular and does not present any resemblance to that usually observed in typhoid fever.
Several of the inflammations, especially when associated with the typhoid state, have so many symptoms in common with typhoid fever that they may very readily be mistaken for one another by a careless observer. I have known, for instance, the general disease to be entirely overlooked in a case of typhoid fever complicated by pneumonia, and, on the other hand, it has sometimes been supposed to be present in a case of pure typhoid pneumonia. Gastro-enteritis is another disease which is also occasionally confounded with typhoid fever. The diagnosis in these cases will rest principally upon the presence or absence of epistaxis, enlargement of the spleen, tympanites, the rose-colored eruption, and of a temperature range presenting some similarity to that usual in typhoid fever.
Trichiniasis is not likely to give rise to much difficulty in diagnosis, for although vomiting, diarrhoea, and the typhoid state occur in it as well as in typhoid fever, the former disease may usually be recognized by the severe muscular pains and the local oedema which are constant accompaniments of it, and by the absence of the characteristic symptoms of the latter.
PROGNOSIS.—There is no other disease in which the physician should be more careful in making a positive prognosis than in typhoid fever. On the one hand, accidents of a fatal character frequently occur in cases which are apparently progressing favorably, and, on the other, recovery has often taken place after all hope of it had been abandoned. But, although it is impossible to foretell with absolute certainty the result in any particular case, there are certain symptoms which furnish very important indications for prognosis, and the proper appreciation of which will generally enable us to arrive at a correct conclusion as regards the gravity of the disease. Prominent among these is the character of the pyrexia. A fever characterized by high temperature should always give occasion for great anxiety. This is very fully shown by the statistics of the hospital at Basle. Thus of those patients in whom the temperature did not reach 104°, only 9.6 per cent. died; of those in which it reached or exceeded 104°, 29.1 per cent. died; and, finally, of those in whose axilla the temperature rose to or above 105.8°, more than half died. Wunderlich has arrived at very nearly the same conclusions, for he says that the prognosis is very unfavorable when the temperature rises to 106.16°, that the deaths are almost twice as numerous as the recoveries when it rises to 107.06°, and that recoveries are rare when it rises to 107.24°. Murchison has, however, known recovery to follow a temperature of 108°. The highest temperature recorded in any of my cases was 106° F. In this case, which proved fatal, the temperature reached 105° F. five times. In three other cases, in all of which recovery took place, a temperature of 105.5° F. was observed. In twelve cases the temperature reached 105° F. on more than one occasion. Six of these ended fatally; in the others the patients recovered.