38 Deut. Arch. f. klin. Med., xlii. 1874.
The chill, the sudden and high fever, the acid sweat, the high-colored urine, the intense pains and soreness, and the occasional murmur over the heart, will in some cases of relapsing fever suggest the idea of severe rheumatic fever, with illy-developed articular inflammation and with a tendency to hyperpyrexia. The urgent danger presented by the latter condition and the necessity for immediate recourse to cold baths and large doses of quinine or of the salicylates, render it highly important that no such error of diagnosis should be made. It will usually be avoided readily by observing that in relapsing fever there are great nausea, repeated vomiting, insomnia, peculiar formication of the extremities, jaundice, early enlargement of the liver and spleen, with abdominal pain and soreness, and a tendency to epistaxis; and, further, that despite the high temperature, cerebral symptoms such as result from rheumatic hyperpyrexia are not threatened, except in grave typhoid cases or just preceding the crisis.
The onset of relapsing fever may suggest forcibly the invasion period of small-pox, with its marked rigors, high fever, lumbar pain, aching in the head and limbs, nausea and vomiting, and if the patient is known to have been exposed to the contagion of both diseases a diagnosis would be impossible until the third day. But such a dilemma can rarely occur, and under ordinary circumstances the patient's antecedents will enable a correct opinion to be formed.
Severe cases of simple febricula with marked gastric disturbance may, as remarked by Jenner, closely simulate relapsing fever; and the same is true of attacks of acute gastro-hepatic catarrh, with severe headache, sharp fever, cholæmic eye, epigastric tenderness, and frequent vomiting. Of course there is no danger under ordinary circumstances of these simple conditions being regarded as relapsing fever, but when the latter is prevalent in epidemic form it is probable that the mistake is frequently made. Although an immediate diagnosis might be possible only by microscopic examination of the blood, the peculiar clinical symptoms of relapsing fever would soon be found wanting, and suitable treatment would bring the simpler affection under control.
Acute yellow atrophy of the liver occurs chiefly in pregnant women, though it is also met with in men and children; but it is so rare that should a case of it come under observation during the prevalence of relapsing fever there is considerable danger that its nature would be overlooked. It resembles relapsing fever in the occurrence of jaundice and other signs of hepatic disorder, of delirium, and of a tendency to hemorrhage from various surfaces. The temperature, however, is more moderate, and does not exhibit the sudden remission of relapsing fever; the liver is usually demonstrably diminished in size; severe nervous disturbances, such as convulsions followed by stupor and then by coma, are more constant; while the occurrence of spirilla in the blood of relapsing fever and of leucin and tyrosin in the urine of acute yellow atrophy serves to distinguish completely the two diseases. Acute yellow atrophy is, moreover, invariably fatal.
With ordinary care there is but little danger that any of the local complications of relapsing fever will so absorb attention as to lead to a neglect of the specific general disease, so that the cerebral symptoms should be readily distinguished from the onset of any acute intracranial affection; the parotitis which occasionally appears early in the disease should not be confounded with idiopathic mumps; and so for other complications. There is far more danger, indeed, lest some of the complications may be overlooked; and this is especially true of pneumonia, one of the most frequent and most important of them all. Its occurrence is the cause of the supervention of grave typhoid symptoms or of the modification of the normal course of the pyrexia in so many cases that nothing but a systematic daily examination of the lungs will avert serious oversights.
MORTALITY AND PROGNOSIS.—The rate of mortality has varied in different epidemics from 2 or 3 to 24 per cent. Murchison shows that out of 2115 cases admitted to the London Fever Hospital during a period of twenty-two years, and embracing two distinct outbreaks, only 39 proved fatal, making 1.84 per cent. mortality. Adding to these the results of Scotch and Irish epidemics, a total of 18,859 cases, with 761 deaths, is reached, giving the rate of mortality for Great Britain as 4.03 per cent. The great Indian epidemics studied by Carter gave 111 deaths out of 616 cases, equal to 18.02 per cent. Recent German epidemics have given from 5 to 10 per cent. The above rates are obtained where all the cases observed during an epidemic are included. If, however, the mortality of the ordinary form of relapsing fever is computed separately from that of the bilious typhoid form, it does not exceed 2 to 5 per cent., whilst the mortality of the latter form rises to from 33 to 50 per cent., or even higher.
In the Philadelphia epidemic, out of a total of 1174 cases there were, as nearly as can be ascertained, 169 deaths, giving a rate of mortality of 14.4 per cent. Taking all the cases admitted to the hospital under our observation, many of which entered at a late period of the disease and not a few when moribund, the mortality was not less than 13 per cent. The mortality among the negroes who were attacked with the disease was considerably greater than among the whites. Finally, if the mortality of the bilious typhus form be considered separately—although from the frequency of jaundice in this epidemic and the numerous gradations of severity presented it is difficult to form a sharply defined group of this character—it was certainly not less than 50 per cent.
The date of death varies with the epidemic, the form of the disease, and the previous condition of vitality of those attacked. Ordinarily, by far the larger proportion of deaths occur during the first relapse or the second interval, but in bilious typhoid cases, presenting grave complications, especially pneumonia or severe hemorrhages at an early date, or in cases occurring in intemperate subjects, or in those previously in impaired health, the mortality is much heavier in the initial paroxysm or the first interval than at later periods.
Youth exerts the same favorable influences upon the result of relapsing fever as it does in the case of typhus and typhoid. Murchison states that of 717 male patients under twenty-five years of age admitted into the London Fever Hospital, not one died, and in most epidemics similar, though not equally marked, results have been noted. In some epidemics the mortality among young children has been considerable. As a rule, the percentage of deaths increases with each decade after thirty years.