Chloroform is one of the most appropriate, as it may be taken by inhalation, though with much excitement to the patient, and it at once relieves the oppressed breathing and pharyngeal and other spasms, while it acts as a cerebral sedative and anæsthetic; and if it cannot be held up as a curative agent, it at least secures euthanasia. Chloral given as an injection, so as to induce its soporific action, is equally soothing, though nothing more. Curare injected hypodermically overcomes the spasms, but does not usually, if ever, retard death. Three cases of hydrophobia in man treated in this way recovered, but we have no proof that even these exceptional cases were rabies. Pilocarpine has been used in a number of cases, but, with the exceptional case of a young man reported by Denis Dumont, all terminated fatally. The committee of the Paris Academy of Medicine reported in 1874 that in three experimental cases "it hastened death by the fits it brought on." Morphia is often of great value in calming the excitement and giving rest and sleep during the intervals of the paroxysms. Daturia and atropia, administered hypodermically, are somewhat less effectual. Inhalation of oxygen is said to arrest the convulsions and delirium, but not to retard death. Vaccine virus and the venom of the viper have each been tried, but with no good effect.
Of non-medicinal therapeutic measures the following are among the most promising: Perfect seclusion, quiet, and darkness serve to abate the hyperæsthesia, the painful acuteness of the senses, and the convulsive and delirious paroxysms. It can no longer be doubted that a very few cases of genuine rabies recover, but those that do so have almost all had special advantages in the way of quiet and seclusion, and few have had the excitement of medicinal treatment. Eight cases of the recovery of rabid dogs are reported by Menecier, Decroix, Laquerriere, Rey, Harold Leiney, and Pasteur. The two first were attested by successful inoculation on other animals; Decroix's second case was caused by inoculation with the saliva of a hydrophobous man; the next three had been bitten by dogs undoubtedly mad; while Pasteur's was inoculated with the brain-matter of a rabid cow. All in due time presented the characteristic symptoms of rabies, yet all recovered, without any record of medicinal treatment. Pasteur's case, when again inoculated, resisted the disease. A certain number of recoveries of men from pronounced hydrophobia under medicine and without it are on record, but in the absence of successful inoculations it is impossible to tell how many were cases of infecting rabies. The parallel between rabies and tetanus in the intensity of the reflex excitability would demand darkness and quiet as a sine quâ non of any rational treatment. Faradization has produced a temporary relief, but no permanent improvement. Warm baths, steam baths, and hot-air baths serve to abate excitability and spasm, and have been lauded as specific in hydrophobia, but have proved useless in the lower animals.
Intravenous injection of warm water (two pints) in a hydrophobous man reduced the pulse from 150 to 86 and restored the power of deglutition. Life was prolonged for nine days, but in great agony, from the supervention of suppurative arthritis (Majendie). In another case the dread of water disappeared, but death ensued in fifty-four hours. In the hands of Youatt and Mayo it proved equally unsuccessful in dogs. A cold bath with submersion to unconsciousness is an old remedy now abandoned. Venesection to fainting, with or without mercury, mitigated the symptoms, but seemed to hasten paralysis and death. The excision and cauterization of the cicatrix, or the cutting of the nerves proceeding from it, has been useful in delaying, or even absolutely preventing, the paroxysms. When, therefore, the premonitory symptoms of hydrophobia have set in, and when an aura or shooting pain is felt proceeding from the seat of the wound toward the heart, one or other of these measures may serve to prevent the immediate occurrence of reflex convulsions. When the poison has actually invaded the brain, this can be looked on as a palliative measure only, but in the many cases of lyssophobia it may put an instant stop to the affection.
GLANDERS (EQUINIA GRAVIOR, FARCY).
BY JAMES LAW, F.R.C.V.S.
SYNONYMS.—Greek, [Greek: malis]. Latin, Malleus, Equinia Nasalis, E. Apostimatos, Farcinia. French, Morve, Farcin. German, Rotz, Lungenrotz, Hautrotz, Wurm, Hautwurm. Italian, Morva, Moccis, Cimurro. Spanish, Cimorro, Lamparones.
DEFINITION.—An infectious, bacteridian disease occurring in the horse, ass, or mule, and communicated by inoculation to various other animals, including man. It is usually ushered in by rigors, followed by articular pains, lameness, and the formation of a specific deposit in the lymphatic system of some part of the body, with a tendency to destructive degeneration and ulceration. In the form known as glanders these deposits and ulcers take place mainly in the nasal mucosa, in the lungs, and in adjacent glands, while in that known as farcy the deposits occur in the cutaneous and subcutaneous lymphatic plexuses and the dependent glands.