The committee appointed by the Pathological Society of London in 1869 report on this subject as follows: "The most common definition of pyæmia is, no doubt, that adopted by the College of Physicians in the nomenclature of diseases. It is as follows: 'A febrile affection resulting in the formation of abscesses in the viscera and other parts.'"
Birch-Hirschfeld includes under the name pyæmia "all cases in which any general infective process is set up as a secondary consequence of a wound."17 Virchow has proposed the name ichorrhæmia. O. Weber uses the name embolhæmia for the condition in which emboli are found in the blood. Hueter in pure cases of purulent infection without metastasis calls the disease pyohæmia simplex; in cases with metastasis, pyohæmia multiplex; and when complicated with septicæmia he designates it as septo-pyohæmia. The term hospitalism has been applied to this disease by Erichsen and Sir James Y. Simpson, and the former remarks that "the term pyæmia is used in a very wide and elastic manner, and by many is made to include various forms of blood-poisoning."18 Billroth says: "Pyæmia is a disease which we believe to arise from the taking up of pus, or of the constituent parts of pus, into the blood." Koch employs the term pyæmia merely to denote a general affection accompanied by metastatic inflammation and suppuration.
17 Trans. Pathological Soc. of London, vol. xxx. p. 22.
18 On Hospitalism, p. 73.
The French definition and nomenclature of pyæmia, according to Guérin, is as follows: "Purulent infection, or pyohæmia, purulent fever, surgical typhus." The purulent infection is a poisoning of the blood, which terminates by the formation of multiple abscesses, which have been improperly known under the name of metastatic abscesses.
From 1820 to 1870 surgeons admitted that these abscesses were the result of a phlebitis having its origin in a wound exposed to the air. Therefore, this disease was variously designated under the name of phlebitis, pyohæmia, or purulent infection. Tessier called it purulent diathesis; "in 1847, I compared it to the typhus, and, as the poison is absorbed from the surface of the wound in the purulent infection, I gave it the name of surgical typhus or purulent fever."19
19 Nouveau Dict. de Méd. et de Chir. pratiques, t. xxx. p. 222.
Having given enough on this subject to answer our purpose, we will consider the nomenclature of another septic complication.
NOMENCLATURE OF SEPTICÆMIA. The term septicæmia was first employed by Piorry, and was applied for a considerable time to all those diseases in which the blood was submitted to a septic influence. Therefore, the term was made applicable to the morbid conditions existing in anthrax, glanders, typhus and typhoid fevers, variola, and also all forms of purulent and putrid infections. Guérin now adds: "Fortunately, for several years the most competent authors seem to have wished to reserve the name of septicæmia for what surgeons call putrid infection, and for the morbid state that the experimenters produce by the injection of putrid material into healthy animal tissues; it is consequently the experimental septicæmia which we aim at first and foremost."20
20 Nouveau Dict. de Méd. et de Chir. pratiques, t. xxx.