Sugar is sometimes present in small quantity as a transient symptom; and diabetes has been observed as a sequel.28
28 Tyson, Phila. Med. Times, 1871, i. 418.
Metastatic inflammation of the kidneys, with centres of suppuration, was observed by Wyss and Bock.
When menstruation occurs during relapsing fever, as it may do at any time, it is apt to be excessive, and may amount to severe hemorrhage. Crisis has been known to occur in this manner.
The numerous cases reported by various observers of relapsing fever occurring in pregnant women establish the rule that abortion almost invariably occurs, whatever may be the stage of the pregnancy. In a large majority of cases the mother recovers, but the child, if viable, is stillborn or dies in a few hours. Only two of our patients were pregnant women, and the result in each was unusual. In one, the patient, already the mother of several children, was in the fifth month of gestation; the initial paroxysm was severe, with delirium, but no symptoms of abortion occurred; the intermission lasted six days, during which she felt very well; the relapse was also severe, and crisis occurred on the fifth day, the temperature falling below normal, and the case promising to do well; but on the following day there was a sudden rebound of temperature, pulse 140, severe præcordial pain, and death occurred in twenty-four hours, the contents of the uterus being partially expelled during the act of dying. In the other case, a girl of eighteen years, who had aborted at the third month of gestation eight months previously, and who was again three months advanced in pregnancy when attacked with relapsing fever, went safely through a bad attack and carried her baby successfully to full term.
MORBID ANATOMY.—The surface of the body often presents patches of livid discoloration, and jaundice persists in cases where it has been present during life. There is but little appearance of emaciation, except in cases where it has been present before the attack.
When death occurs while the temperature is high the body remains warm an unusual length of time. Thus, in one case where death occurred at 11.30 P.M., the temperature at 12 was 103°, and at 1 A.M. it was 101.6°, that of the room being 73°; at 6 A.M. it remained at 93°, the room being at 73°; between 9 A.M. and 2 P.M. the room was kept at 55°, but the body was still at 82° at the latter hour.
The voluntary muscles are often jaundiced, and in prolonged cases they may be found flabby and having undergone marked granular degeneration. In many cases, however, they remain quite dark and firm. Ecchymoses of the muscular substance are met with occasionally.
In one case, where during life there had been painful swelling of the left parotid region, with fistulous openings on the cheek, and where death occurred on the twelfth day of the disease, the masseter muscle was swollen, with patches of dark, almost black, discoloration from ecchymosis, and was studded throughout with small collections in its substance. The fluid from these contained very numerous cells indistinguishable from leucocytes. The muscular fibrils were friable and granular, and there was multiplication of the nuclei of the sarcolemma. These unusual lesions seemed to have originated in interstitial disintegrating thrombi, with consequent inflammation of the muscle.
The muscle of the heart is more frequently affected, and in the fatal cases our attention was particularly drawn to those lesions. Ponfick29 has also described them minutely. The degree of change varies from a partial loss of transverse striation, with slight granular appearance, up to a very high degree of granulo-fatty degeneration. The organ is then flabby, its substance pale gray or brownish, either wholly or in streaks, and microscopic examination shows an extreme degree of fatty granular change. It must not be forgotten, however, that many of the subjects of relapsing fever have been leading irregular and dissipated lives, and that in some instances the lesions of fatty degeneration detected in their organs may have been the result of their previous habits.