Meanwhile, the issue remains in doubt, and may continue uncertain for several days before any improvement in the symptoms can be observed, or, the stupor passing into coma, the case may speedily terminate in death. When death is the result, it usually takes place about the close of the second week or a little later, but it may occur earlier in consequence of the violence of the fever, or, when due to a complication, may be postponed until after the end of the third week. Fortunately, however, recovery is the rule in this disease. The beginning of convalescence is often as abrupt as that of the attack itself. The temperature will often be found to have fallen to the normal or below the normal, the pulse and respiration to have returned to a healthy condition, and all confusion of the intellect to have disappeared in the course of a few hours. Occasionally, however, its approach is more gradual, and a slight fall in temperature and a corresponding improvement in the other symptoms may be observed before it actually occurs. Diarrhoea, an excessive secretion of urine, with a tendency to the deposition of urates, and moderate sweating, often take place simultaneously with the cessation of the fever, and were formerly regarded as critical discharges. The return to health is usually rapid, and very rarely retarded by the occurrence of complications or relapses, as in typhoid fever. The disease itself leaves no tendency to any other disease.

DESCRIPTION OF SPECIAL SYMPTOMS.—The appearance of a patient with typhus fever is pathognomonic, and is often alone sufficient to enable a physician or nurse familiar with it to recognize the disease when brought in contact with it. The surface generally is congested; the face is flushed, and in bad cases dusky red or even livid in hue; the expression is dull and vacant, except during delirium, when it may be wild or even fierce; the conjunctivæ are injected, the eyes watery, and the teeth encrusted with sordes. The skin is generally hot and dry, except toward the close of bad cases, when it may be cool and bathed in a profuse sweat.

The symptoms connected with the nervous system are among the most characteristic of the disease, and of them none is more marked than prostration. It shows itself early, the patient usually taking to his bed immediately after his seizure or within a few days of it. It is much rarer than in typhoid fever to meet with walking cases of typhus, but Buchanan22 mentions that patients with the rash already out upon them do occasionally present themselves at the out-door department of the London Fever Hospital. It generally increases as the disease progresses, and is often accompanied by a tendency to syncope. It may attain such a degree that the patient is unable to turn himself in bed or to help himself in any way. Among the most distressing sensations which attend this condition of excessive feebleness is a feeling as if he were sinking into the earth with nothing to support him. Headache is also an early symptom. It is often observed among the prodromata of the disease, and when these are absent supervenes directly after the chill. It is usually frontal, but may be diffused. It is generally dull and heavy, but is sometimes acute, and may be accompanied by a tendency to vertigo, increased by sitting up, and by pains in the back and limbs. It becomes more severe with the progress of the disease until the occurrence of delirium, when it is, as a rule, less complained of. With the headache there is generally some dulness of intellect, except in mild cases. This may be slight at first, and may continue so throughout the whole course of the attack, exhibiting itself principally in some confusion as to dates. In more severe cases it is much more marked, and may finally pass into actual stupor. On the other hand, it may be entirely absent, even in severe attacks, as in a case reported by Da Costa and in some cases recently observed by myself. It is usually soon replaced by delirium, which may be low and muttering or wild and noisy, the former being the more common. Delirium is said to occur most frequently among the educated classes and those oppressed with care and anxiety, but is not rare among those who occupy a lower position in the social scale, especially the intemperate. It is, as a rule, most marked at night, and in mild cases may occur only at that time or upon waking in the morning. When the delirium is active the patient may shout and scream, or leave his bed and attempt to throw himself from the window, being endowed apparently for the moment with strength sufficient to enable him to commit these acts of violence. After the paroxysm is over he sinks back in bed exhausted. The confusion of intellect or delirium continues in bad cases until death supervenes or until the establishment of convalescence. Indeed, the mental disturbance does not always end with the latter, and it is not rare for feebleness of intellect to persist for some time after the patient has in other respects regained his usual health, and in a few cases insanity has followed an attack of typhus fever. Among the most formidable of the symptoms of typhus are convulsions, which are fortunately of infrequent occurrence.

22 Loc. cit.

The patient generally suffers from wakefulness, except during the first few days. When sleep is obtained it may be unrefreshing or broken and disturbed by dreams. In other cases the opposite condition of somnolence may be present. Occasionally, after having apparently slept for hours, he may deny having been asleep at all. This condition, which constitutes the coma vigil of Chomel, is entirely distinct from that described by Jenner under the same name, in which the patient lies with his eyes wide open, gazing into vacuity, his mouth only partly closed, his face pale and devoid of expression, and which is invariably fatal. Muscular tremor is more or less present in all cases of the disease, and in bad cases may be a prominent symptom. The disease, when this symptom is marked, especially if there is at the same time low, muttering delirium and a moist skin, presents a considerable degree of resemblance to delirium tremens. There is very often intolerance of light, tinnitus aurium, and loss or perversion of the senses of taste and smell. Deafness is also not uncommon, and is regarded by many authors as a favorable symptom. In bad cases, in addition to subsultus tendinum, there are carphologia, incontinence or retention of the urine, and paralysis of the sphincter ani.

Some discrepancy is found to exist in the statements of different authors in regard to the temperature curves of typhus fever. They all agree, however, in assigning them certain characters, the knowledge of which is often of great assistance in diagnosis. One of these is a rapid rise of temperature immediately after the invasion of the disease. Wunderlich23 asserts that he has observed a temperature of 104.9° F. on the evening of the first day, and Lebert has found it as high as 106.4° F. on that of the second. Such temperatures, occurring so early in the disease, must be infrequent, as Murchison has never met with them. Usually, the temperature attains its maximum on the third or fourth day. The maximum is about 104° or 105° F. Murchison says it scarcely ever reaches 106°, except in children, in whom it rarely is as high as 107°, but Lebert states that he has known it to be as high as 107.8°. On the other hand, it may never exceed 103°, even in fatal cases. When the maximum is attained early in the disease there may be for several days, or until defervescence takes place, very little variation in the evening temperatures, but, as a general rule, they are slightly less elevated in the second than in the first week. This usually occurs from the tenth to the fourteenth day, but it may be postponed until the eighteenth, or even until much later. In some cases on the day before the crisis a slight fall, and in others a considerable fall with a subsequent rise of temperature, are observed. Defervescence is often very rapid, the temperature falling five or six degrees in the course of twelve hours. A true lysis is rarely observed. The occurrence of a complication in the course of a disease will not only cause a decided rise of temperature and a modification of the temperature curve, but may also postpone defervescence beyond the usual time. Not infrequently the thermometer indicates subnormal morning temperatures with slight evening rises for several days after the crisis, unless complications arise, when fever of the hectic type may occur. A very slight cause will also often produce a considerable, although temporary, elevation of temperature in this condition. The morning remissions are less decided than in typhoid fever, especially in the first week. As a rule, they do not exceed 1°, but Lebert lays stress upon the fact that in the same curve variations from 0.3° to 1.8° and from 0.6° to 2.1° often occur. Cases which terminate fatally are generally characterized by high fever, with absence of the morning remissions, which may continue uninterruptedly through the second and even the third week. During the death-agony there is frequently a rise of temperature of two or more degrees. A very high temperature in the first week is often the forerunner of severe cerebral symptoms in the second, and a fall of temperature unaccompanied by an improvement in the other symptoms is not always indicative of the approach of convalescence.

23 On the Temperature in Disease, New Sydenham Society's translation, London, 1871.

Anorexia is generally present in typhus fever from the beginning of the attack, and may persist until its close. It is not, however, usually attended by the same repugnance for food as in other fevers. Patients can generally be persuaded at first to take nourishment. Indeed, Dr. Gerhard asserts that the negroes who fell under his care in 1832 frequently asked for solid food. Nausea and vomiting are rare symptoms; the latter may occur late in the disease, and then, not infrequently, is caused by irritation of the brain. Thirst is present in all cases. In the later stages of the disease, when the senses are blunted, water may not be asked for, although urgently called for by the condition of the system. The bowels are, as a rule, constipated in this disease. The exceptions to this rule are, however, more numerous than is usually thought. Wood24 says that he has frequently seen diarrhoea in typhus fever when it occurs in recently-arrived immigrants. Da Costa25 mentions that it has occurred in several of the cases which have come under his care, and Buchanan26 says that he has observed it in at least one-third of the patients admitted into the London Fever Hospital in recent years. When there is no diarrhoea the stools are of normal color and consistence. When it exists they are watery and usually dark greenish in color, and never present the peculiar ochrey-yellow appearance seen in typhoid fever. They are said to be alkaline in reaction. Tympanites is rare in typhus fever. It may be present in cases in which there is diarrhoea, and may then be associated with gurgling in the bowels, but rarely attains the degree common in typhoid fever. Gurgling when present is, moreover, not confined to the right ileo-cæcal region, but may be produced in different parts of the abdomen by pressure. There may also be tenderness in the epigastric and hepatic regions, but the enlargement of the spleen so constantly observed in typhoid is generally wholly wanting in this fever.

24 Loc. cit.

25 Loc. cit.