The local symptoms are swelling, the testicle being enlarged to two or three times its natural size, dull pain, and moderate tenderness, while in very severe cases there is burning on micturition and a purulent discharge from the urethra. The spermatic cord does not sympathize in the inflammation, and neither the swelling, pain, nor tenderness is so great as in specific orchitis.
The general symptoms are confined to a moderate elevation of temperature and increase in the frequency of the pulse, thirst, and loss of appetite. This fever is separated from that of the parotitis by an interval of two or three days.
The course of bilateral orchitis is longer by forty-eight hours than that of the unilateral form, and the attending fever is more intense.
The rapid return of the testicle to its natural size and shape shows that, as in the parotid glands, the inflammation does not extend beyond the stage of serous exudation.
THE DIAGNOSIS of mumps is easy after the disease is sufficiently developed to produce the characteristic alterations in the facial expression. In the earlier stages the position of the swelling, immediately beneath and in front of the ear, its triangular shape, and the elevation and outward displacement of the lobe of the ear of the affected side, distinguish it from the enlargement of the cervical lymph-glands so liable to occur in strumous subjects. The acute onset and course of mumps are the points of distinction between it and morbid growths, or the very rare condition of chronic hypertrophy of the parotid gland. The metastatic orchitis cannot be mistaken for gonorrhoeal orchitis if the least care is taken to investigate the history in either case.
THE PROGNOSIS is extremely favorable, there being no record of a fatal case of uncomplicated mumps. Suppuration may occur, but it is an exceedingly rare event. In scrofulous children the course may be protracted for several weeks, and in them resolution is occasionally imperfect, a degree of enlargement and induration of one or both parotids remaining for some time.
Metastatic orchitis, as a rule, leaves the testicle in a normal condition, but, according to Vogel, in some epidemics complete atrophy results.
Dogmy reports an epidemic which raged in a garrison of Mount Louis in January, 1828. Of sixty-nine bilateral and eighteen unilateral cases of parotitis, metastasis to both testicles occurred in four cases, all of which resulted in atrophy of the affected testicle.
THE TREATMENT is simple. The patient should be kept in a uniform temperature, confined to one room, or, better still, to bed, until resolution is well established. While the difficulty in swallowing and fever continue the food should consist of milk and beef-tea; later, other nutritious articles of diet may be added as the appetite demands. Water, iced carbonic acid water, or lemonade may be allowed as freely as the patient will take them, to allay the thirst. A daily evacuation of the bowels must be secured by the use of saline laxatives. During the early stage, if the fever be high, tincture of aconite-root should be cautiously administered; afterward liquor potassii citratis will sufficiently fill the indications for a febrifuge. Tonics are required during the decline of the disease; of this class of remedies, syrup of the iodide of iron, bitter wine of iron, and ferrated elixir of cinchona are most useful.
Special symptoms may demand attention. For example, headache and delirium should be relieved by hot mustard foot-baths and moist cold to the forehead; difficult deglutition from enlargement of the tonsils, by the frequent swallowing of bits of ice, or, if possible, by the application of astringent lotions, as tannic acid and glycerine (one drachm to the ounce); sleeplessness, by the administration of bromide of potassium, with or without small doses of hydrate of chloral in children and of some preparation of opium in adults.