16 Richmond Med. Jour., ii. 1.
Dr. Purcell of Cork17 furnished a classification which is one of the best for practical and clinical purposes—viz. 1, the rapid variety, attended with purple blotches, embarrassed respiration and circulation, followed by sopor, insensibility, and coma; 2, the cerebro-spinal form, with retraction of the head, pain and cramps of the muscles, hyperæsthesia of the skin, delirium, etc., accompanied by fever, herpetic eruptions, etc. These two forms are apt to be more or less associated in the same case.
17 Dublin Quarterly Jour., Aug., 1870, p. 243.
Of the various forms admitted by different authors, and of which we have seen examples, we would class together—(a.) The abortive, in which the characteristic phenomena are often faintly defined, and yet to the practised eye distinctive. (b.) The malignant, in which the symptoms, of whatever kind, are exaggerated, the attack sudden, the course short, and the issue fatal. (c.) The nervous, including 1, the Ataxic—viz.—1, the delirious; 2, the cephalalgic; 3, the neuralgic; 4, the convulsive; 5, the paralytic; and 6, the adynamic (comatose and typhoid). (d.) The inflammatory. (e.) The intermittent. Of these the abortive and intermittent call for a brief explanation. Abortive meningitis is observed only during the prevalence of the disease in a more characteristic form. Thus, the mother of a boy who had died of the fully-developed disease "complained of the head and back and limbs, and of chilliness, and presented a petechial eruption. After active purgative and counter-irritant treatment she was about her work on the second day."18 The late Dr. Burns of Frankford, Philadelphia, while attending patients affected with the disease suffered from headache, severe pains along the spine and in every joint of the body, and a general languid feeling.19 Kempf during the decline of an epidemic observed "a great number of individuals, especially adults, who complained of headache, malaise, neuralgic pains in various parts of the body, and pain in the nape of the neck or other parts of the spine."20 In a case observed by the writer (June, 1867) most of the characteristic symptoms were present in a mitigated form, and the pulse was at 60. Within five days restoration was complete.21 The intermittent and remittent types are apt to be quotidian or tertian, and in fatal cases the former has been taken for malignant intermittent fever, which it resembles by a periodical febrile movement, with pains, cramps, delirium, etc. This type sometimes first manifests itself during the decline of an attack.
18 Sargent, Amer. Jour. of Med. Sci., July, 1849, p. 35.
19 Amer. Jour. of Med. Sci., April, 1865, p. 339.
20 Ibid., July, 1866, p. 55.
21 Epidemic Meningitis, p. 42.
SUMMARY OF THE SYMPTOMS.—Like other fatal epidemic diseases, meningitis is sometimes sudden and sometimes gradual in its development. In the former case the patient, who has gone to bed apparently in perfect health, awakes suddenly from a sound sleep about the small hours of the night to find himself in a severe chill. In the case of young children a convulsion attends the awakening. Or the patient, while pursuing his ordinary avocations, may be seized with a chill, prostration, vomiting, and headache, of which symptoms the last is often intensely distressing. In this, as in other epidemic diseases, such violent seizures are most common during the earlier periods of its prevalence, but later in its course premonitory symptoms are more frequently observed. They may last for an hour or two, or may extend to several days; and, in general, it may be stated that the longer their duration the milder will be the subsequent attack. But the symptoms in either case are essentially the same—prostration, chilliness, feverishness, and sometimes vomiting and sharp pains in the head, back, and limbs. The character of the vomiting, as well as the absence of all gastric lesions in fatal cases, proves that it is occasioned by an irritation of the central nervous system.
In the cases which are regularly developed these phenomena more or less gradually assume a graver aspect or usher in a heavy chill, which in its turn is followed by alarming symptoms, and especially by an excruciating pain in the head, a livid or pale and sunken countenance, and extreme restlessness. The pulse is as often slow as frequent, and the skin is rarely hot, and, indeed, is generally but little, if at all, warmer than natural. The vague pains that began with the attack are now concentrated, and seem to dart in every direction from the spine, which is also, at its upper part, the seat of severe aching; and in some cases hyperæsthesia of the skin is very marked. In a large proportion of cases the spinal muscles become more or less rigidly contracted, so that the head is drawn backward or the whole trunk is arched as in tetanus. Trismus is not uncommon, and clonic spasms frequently affect the limbs. Even general convulsions are occasionally observed. As these phenomena grow more decided delirium of various degrees is often manifested, from mere wanderings and hallucinations during the sleepless watches of the night to violent maniacal ravings or incoherent mutterings, or the stertor of coma. Frey and others have noted a remission of the symptoms occurring on or about the third day in cases of a regular type. The rigidity of the cervical muscles becomes relaxed, the headache subsides, and the mental condition improves. But this amelioration lasts but a short time, and then the normal course of the symptoms is resumed.