According to Parkes,27 the changes in the urine are those usual in ordinary pyrexia. During the fever it is generally diminished in quantity, dark in color, and of high specific gravity. It contains an increased amount of urea and of uric acid, the latter of which is not infrequently spontaneously precipitated. Sulphuric acid is also in excess. On the other hand, the chlorides are diminished in amount or entirely absent. This diminution cannot be ascribed to a decrease in the quantity ingested, for when they are administered with the food they are not found to be eliminated by the kidney. The amount of phosphoric acid does not appear to be affected by the disease. The urine is acid in reaction at first, but its acidity soon diminishes, and it may become alkaline toward the close of bad cases. It may also contain albumen, or even blood, the former being present oftenest in cases characterized by high temperature. According to Da Costa, tube-casts are more often present than absent in severe cases. Those seen by this observer were either coated with rather opaque epithelial cells, many of which were finely granular or covered with granules, which, when tested with reagents, were sparingly soluble in acetic acid, and which with very high magnifying powers did not present the round shape of oil, and were probably the urinary salts collected in the tube-casts. The crisis is sometimes marked by a copious deposit of urates. During convalescence the urine is usually increased in quantity, is pale and limpid, and of low specific gravity, and is found to contain the chlorides in gradually increasing quantity.
27 The Composition of the Urine, etc., by Edmund A. Parkes, M.D., London, 1860.
VARIETIES.—Many of the varieties of typhus fever recognized by authors—as, for example, jail fever, ship fever, camp fever, and hospital fever—really differ in nothing but name and the circumstances under which the disease has arisen. Others are mere modifications of it, due to the predominance of one symptom or of a certain set of symptoms or to the intercurrence of a particular complication, and likewise do not need a full description here. To this latter class belong the inflammatory typhus, the nervous or ataxic typhus, the adynamic typhus, and the ataxo-adynamic typhus of Murchison. The first variety occurs in young and robust subjects, and, it is also said, in persons of the upper class. It is characterized by high fever, intense headache, and active delirium. In the second variety the nervous symptoms, such as delirium, somnolence, stupor, and muscular tremblings, are the most prominent. The most marked feature of the third variety is the excessive prostration, which is shown in the feebleness of the heart's action and the loss of muscular strength and of control over the sphincters. In this form the eruption is dark colored. Purpura spots and vibices also are very apt to appear, and even hemorrhages from the gums, nose, or other parts to occur. In the ataxo-adynamic form the symptoms of the ataxic and those of the adynamic form are found united. In addition to these there are certain other varieties, arising from differences in degree. These differences are sometimes owing to diversities in the constitution and habits of the patient, sometimes to variations in the character of the epidemic, and are sometimes not readily explainable. One of these is the mild form, in which the symptoms are those of moderate fever, and in which the disease may run its course in seven days. In this form the temperature may never rise above 102° F., the eruption be absent or very scanty, and the characteristic stupor or dulness be wholly wanting. Unless complications arise recovery invariably takes place. A walking form of typhus fever, as has already been said, is much rarer than of typhoid, but it does sometimes occur, Dr. Buchanan having often seen the eruption out upon patients who have walked to the London Fever Hospital to seek admission. In this form the disease, however, does not always run a mild course, as alarming prostration is very apt to come on later in its course. Another variety, the abortive form, has been described by authors. In this an individual, in due time after exposure to the contagion, may present all the characteristic symptoms of typhus fever, but the disease, instead of running its usual course, may terminate abruptly with a critical discharge of some kind. This form occurs during epidemics, and is analogous to the abortive attack of scarlet fever or some other diseases which are occasionally met with. On the other hand, a very severe form, the typhus siderans of authors, also sometimes occurs. In this variety the temperature rises rapidly, and soon attains its maximum; there are frequent pulse and respiration, severe headache, and early delirium and stupor. The mortality in this form is very great. Very frequently death takes place so rapidly as often to leave the physician in some doubt as to the nature of the disease in those cases in which exposure to the contagion cannot be positively traced.
COMPLICATIONS AND SEQUELÆ.—The complications of typhus fever often exercise a decided influence upon the course of the disease, for they not only retard convalescence, but are often the immediate cause of death. Their early detection, therefore, becomes a matter of the greatest importance. They will be found to vary in different years, one epidemic being characterized by complications which are entirely wanting in the next. Among the commonest of them are several different conditions of the respiratory organs. Bronchitis, if not quite so frequent as in typhoid fever, occurs in a large number of cases. It may come on at any stage of the disease, either immediately after the beginning of the attack or in its course, or not until convalescence. In cases accompanied by prostration mucus may accumulate in the bronchial tubes, and be the cause of the patient's death by preventing the due aëration of the blood. It would seem to be an especially frequent complication in Ireland, and it is rather surprising that so acute an observer as Graves appears not to have been aware of its real relation to typhus, and speaks of it as if it were a predisposing cause. "Nothing can be more remarkable," he says, "than the facility with which a simple cold, which in England would be perfectly devoid of danger, runs into maculated typhus in Ireland, and that, too, under circumstances quite free from even the suspicion of contagion; in truth, except when fever is epidemic, taking cold is its most usual cause." A much more serious complication than bronchitis is the form of pneumonia already alluded to as liable to occur in the course of typhus. This may often occur so insidiously that it may be considerably advanced before its presence is even suspected; hence the necessity for examining carefully the lungs of every patient with this disease who comes under our care. Generally, however, it makes itself known by giving rise to rapid breathing and great lividity of the surface, but, as has already been said, both of these symptoms may exist in cases in which there is no chest complication. This pneumonia, if it does not immediately prove fatal, may, by becoming chronic, retard the convalescence. It occasionally is followed by gangrene, and sometimes by phthisis, which may then run a very rapid course. Phthisis is, however, a much less frequent sequela of typhus than of typhoid fever. Pleurisy may also complicate typhus fever, but it is much more rarely met with than pneumonia.
Perhaps next in frequency to pneumonia and bronchitis are diseases of the kidneys. These are very serious complications, whether they antedate the fever or have occurred in its course. Careful examination of the urine will generally lead to the discovery of a small amount of albuminuria in bad cases, but this is fortunately, in the majority of them, only temporary. The urine should, however, always be re-examined before the discharge of the patient, as there is good reason to believe that many otherwise inexplicable cases of chronic albuminuria have originated in an attack of typhus. The presence of albumen and of casts in the urine of a patient apparently convalescent from this disease should therefore make us careful in our prognosis as to his future health. The occurrence of diarrhoea may also very seriously affect the patient's chances of recovery. Dysentery has also been observed in certain epidemics in Ireland, and is not infrequent when the disease breaks out in besieged towns or when it occurs in summer. In grave cases or those complicated with scurvy the blood may be so broken down as to escape readily from the vessels. Under these circumstances, in addition to the purpura spots beneath the skin, we may have epistaxis, hæmoptysis, hæmatemesis, intestinal hemorrhage, or hemorrhage from any other part. Erysipelas, too, may be a troublesome complication, for not only does it exhaust the strength, but, when it invades the mucous membrane of the larynx, as it sometimes does, it may prove rapidly fatal by producing oedema of the glottis. Degeneration of the muscular structure of the heart may also take place. This gives rise to a slow and feeble pulse and to a disposition to syncope. Bed-sores are not so frequent as in typhoid fever. They do, however, sometimes occur, as does also gangrene of the toes and of other parts not subjected to pressure.
Less common complications are jaundice, peri- and endo-carditis, meningitis, local and general paralyses, cancrum oris, a diffuse cellular inflammation ending in purulent infiltration, and inflammatory swellings of the glands, or buboes. The salivary glands—and especially the parotid gland—are very apt to be affected by this inflammatory swelling. This occurs rapidly, is very tender, and in most cases soon runs on to suppuration, although it occasionally in children spontaneously subsides. It may occur at any time during the course of the fever, or not until convalescence, and sometimes affects the glands of both sides of the face. These buboes form a connecting link between typhus fever and the Oriental plague, and Murchison says that the distinguished Egyptian physician Clot Bey, on seeing some cases of the former disease complicated with parotid swellings, declared that in Egypt they would be regarded as examples of the latter.
Many of the above-named complications may occur also as sequelæ, and in addition to these we may have pyæmia, giving rise to purulent collections in the joints and phlegmasia alba dolens. The last named is not in itself serious. Its chief danger is from the breaking down of the clot and the subsequent occurrence of embolism.
Menstruation is said not to be uncommon in the early stages of typhus fever, and may be so profuse as to greatly increase the prostration or even to cause death. According to Murchison, miscarriage does not inevitably occur when pregnant women are attacked with the disease, and if it does occur it is not necessarily fatal to either mother or child.
POST-MORTEM APPEARANCES.—Emaciation when death has occurred early in the course of the disease, and is due solely to the violence of the fever, is usually not well marked, but in those cases which have been protracted through the intercurrence of complications it may sometimes reach an extreme degree. Bed-sores, except under the circumstances just mentioned, are also rare. Rigor mortis is generally not well developed, and is of short duration. In a few cases it would seem, however, to have been well marked. The typhus maculæ are persistent after death, and so are any purpura spots and vibices which may have been present during life, but the subcuticular mottling usually disappears. The skin of the dependent portions of the body is discolored by the settling of blood in it, and putrefactive changes are apt to set in rapidly.
The only constant lesion observed is a profound alteration of the blood, which is darker in color and abnormally fluid. If clots are found at all, they are large, soft, and friable. The fibrin is diminished in amount. In the early part of the disease the red blood-corpuscles are said to be slightly increased in number, but later they are diminished, and under the microscope are observed to be crenated and not to form themselves readily into rouleaux. The white corpuscles are increased in number. No accurate chemical examination of the blood appears to have been made. Many of the post-mortem appearances which have been described as characteristics of typhus fever are really the consequence of this abnormal condition of the blood.