Coma is met with sooner or later in nearly all fatal cases, but rarely in a marked degree until the approach of death. If anything is surprising in epidemic meningitis, it is the absence of that deep and prolonged stupor that characterizes the typhoid state, notwithstanding the pressure of the exudation upon the brain in most cases, and in others such a profound alteration of the blood that it exudes through the tissues as water passes through a porous body. Another striking phenomenon of the disease is that the patient after recovery has generally a complete oblivion of all that happened to him between the beginning of the attack and convalescence. This is true even of cases in which the brain symptoms are far from being conspicuous.
Another symptom closely related to the local lesion and the blood-change in this disease is vertigo. As originally described by Miner in 1823, it occurred from the very commencement of the attack, and was even then regarded as denoting a deficient supply of the blood to the brain, so that when the patient rose to an erect posture it was felt along with uneasiness in the stomach, acceleration of the pulse, dimness of sight, nausea, and fainting. Tourdes, speaking of it as it occurred in the Strasburg epidemic, says that it confused the mind and rendered walking impossible. In two cases patients were seized with a giddiness which compelled them to whirl around, when they fell and did not rise again. According to Moos (1881) unilateral affections of the labyrinth give rise to vertigo, and bilateral lesions to a staggering gait. Bilateral hemorrhage or acute suppuration of the ampullar terminations of the auditory nerve occasions paralysis and staggering. Children, and those who at the same time have the sight impaired, are apt to remain affected for a long time. Otherwise, prolonged and systematic muscular exercise may remove the tottering walk.
To the same causes must doubtless be attributed the debility which is so early and so conspicuous a symptom in this disease, and which gave it one of the names, typhus syncopalis, by which it was first known in this country. It was manifested by the vertigo already noticed, by a sense of sinking in the epigastrium, by a quick, frequent, feeble, and irregular pulse, and by a sudden and extreme loss of muscular power, so that the patient found himself unable to raise his hand before he was sensible of being ill. This state of asthenia is conspicuous throughout the whole of the disease, and is the immediate cause of the slow and irregular convalescence which is characteristic of it.
Of the symptoms peculiar to the digestive apparatus hardly any belong to it directly. They are nearly all the effect of reflex influences. The condition of the tongue is for the most part quite unlike that which belongs to the typhoid state. The fuliginous condition of the tongue, gums, cheeks, and lips which characterizes that state is seldom met with in epidemic meningitis. The older writers agreed that even when the tongue does grow dry and brown the condition is not of long continuance, and later observers have confirmed their statements. Thus, J. L. Smith (1872) says, "Occasionally, in cases attended with great prostration, the fur of the tongue is dry and brown, but only for a few days, when the moist whitish fur succeeds." We have generally found it moist, whitish in the centre and at the tip and edges.
Nausea and vomiting are very constant among the initial symptoms of the disease, and, as already pointed out, are due to irritation of the cerebro-spinal ganglia. Very often the vomiting is not preceded by nausea, and is brought on by the patient's raising himself, etc. The stomach itself undergoes no change. Both symptoms are usually accompanied by faintness or giddiness, and are more decided in the initial than in the later stages of the attack. The matters vomited, varying with the contents of the stomach and the urgency and duration of the symptom, consist of ingesta, mucus, serum, or bile, and in some grave cases of a dark grumous matter taken to be altered blood. In some epidemics, apparently, more than in others, this symptom is very distressing, as it was at Birmingham in 1875.31 The inability of the stomach to retain food necessarily leads to a rapid wasting of the flesh, which is aggravated by the patient's suffering, restlessness, and want of sleep. Nevertheless, no sooner is the vomiting appeased than a desire for food is felt, and when it is retained it generally undergoes digestion. Indeed, in no other disease is the return of a good appetite and digestion so prompt and complete. It is true that the recovery of flesh and strength is not always in proportion to the appetite. As might be expected in a disease in which fever plays so subordinate a part, there is seldom urgent thirst. But epidemics differ in this as in so many other respects. In that which we witnessed in the Philadelphia Hospital in 1866-67 the patients were clamorous for liquids. Constipation is the rule among patients with this disease, as, indeed, might naturally be expected, for no lesion affects the bowels and little or no food is retained by the stomach. Yet in a few cases diarrhoea accompanies persistent vomiting.
31 Hart, St. Bart's Rep., xii. 112.
The fauces appear to have been more or less inflamed in some epidemics; swelling of the parotid glands is an occasional occurrence, and sometimes they undergo suppuration. Aphthæ have also been met with.
The secretion of urine is not affected in any uniform manner. Sometimes it is diminished and sometimes increased in quantity. The latter symptom has occasionally long survived the disease. It retains its normal acidity. In rare cases either albumen or sugar has been detected; the former may have been due to the action of blisters of cantharides used in the treatment of the disease.
One of the most curious and unintelligible phenomena occasionally met with in this disease is a peculiar affection of the joints, which first was observed in this country. Jackson (1810 and 1813) wrote: "In some cases swellings have occurred in the joints and limbs. They have been very sore to the touch, and their appearance has been compared to that of the gout. The parts so affected feel as if they had been bruised. These swellings arise on the smaller as well as on the larger joints, and are often of a purple color." So Collins32 reports: "The joints sometimes become swollen, red, and tender; at other times red and painful without any swelling; while, again, intense pain and rapid enlargement from effusion have occurred unattended with redness. The joints most usually attacked are the knee, elbow, wrist, and the smaller articulations of the fingers and toes." In an epidemic which occurred in Greece in 1869 articular swellings similar to those of inflammatory rheumatism were observed.33 These descriptions, which apply to some cases in most epidemics, are of more than casual interest, for they demonstrate conclusively, as we think, the truth which the whole history of the disease confirms—viz. that it is a systemic and not a local affection, and is dependent for its existence upon a specific poison which is absolutely unlike every other morbid poison known to pathology.
32 Dublin Quart. Jour., Aug., 1868, p. 170.